| Abstract |
Based on a review of the Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) developed to date worldwide, numerical simulation of idealized EGS reservoirs, economic sensitivity analysis, and practical considerations of some site characteristics, this paper shows that certain steps can be taken towards minimizing the levelized cost of electric power from EGS systems; these steps are as follows: (a) reduce the operations and maintenance cost; (b) reduce the power plant cost; (c) increase per well productivity by stimulating multiple, “vertically stacked” zones and/or increasing the pumping rate of production wells taking advantage of the evolving advances in pump technology; (d) choose the site with the highest possible vertical temperature gradient and for the thickest possible sedimentary cover on the basement; (e) choose the drilling depth that maximizes a well’s power capacity per unit drilling cost rather than reaches the hottest resource; (f) create the largest possible stimulated volume per well; (g) improve stimulation effectiveness, and particularly, reduce the fracture spacing and heterogeneity in the hydraulic characteristics of the stimulated volume; (h) develop multiple, contiguous EGS units to benefit from the economy of scale; and (i) through reservoir modeling, optimize well spacing and injection rates that minimize the rate of decline in net generation with time. The basis for these conclusions are presented in the paper. |