| Title | Developing Large Scale, Base Load EGS Power - The Paralana Project, South Australia |
|---|---|
| Authors | Peter W. Reid, Betina R. Bendall, and Louise McAllister |
| Year | 2010 |
| Conference | World Geothermal Congress |
| Keywords | EGS, heatflow, drilling |
| Abstract | The Paralana EGS Project, located 600km north of the city of Adelaide in South Australia, provides a natural laboratory for the development of an Engineered Geothermal System. Anomalously high heat production basement rocks outcropping in the Mt Painter Inlier provide the local heat source and are overlain by a thick sedimentary package of Mesozoic to NeoProterozoic age in the adjacent Poontana Sub-basin, within a favourable in situ stress regime. Early exploration drilling indicates an elevated geothermal gradient and heat flow at the project site.Petratherm Limited in joint venture with a major oil and gas (Beach Petroleum) and power industry energy utilities (TRU Energy) are intially seeking to build a 7.5 MWe commerical power development to supply a local mine. A local microseismic monitoring network has been deployed to record background seismicity prior to drilling of the first deep well into the resource, scheduled to commence in May 2009. An innovative strategy for development of the EGS reservoir is planned, involving massive hydraulic stimulation of multiple target zones within the sedimentary overburden. This paper will provide an update on progress at the Paralana EGS site. |