Geothermal Steam Production Fields

Geothermal wells need to undergo a test program before they are used. This is so that the baseline conditions of both the wells and the geothermal aquifers that they tap can be determined. This baseline data are critical because all future information is compared against them.

After drilling has been completed and before the initial discharge, the well downhole conditions are measured. The temperature and pressure are measured by using a clockwork Kuster gauge or electronic logging tools. Standard practice is to initially do an injection (or completion) test, that is, sometime at a series of flows, where the temperature, pressure, and possibly flows using a spinner tool are measured at intervals down the open hole section of the well. (more…)

Geothermal Energy - Its Types and How It Works

geothermal-energy-works
Geothermal energy is energy created by the heat of the Earth. Under the Earth’s crust lies a layer of thick, hot rock with occasional pockets of water. This water sometimes seeps up to the surface in the form of hot springs. Even where the water does not travel naturally to the Earth’s surface, it is sometimes possible to reach it by drilling. This hot water can be used as a virtually free source of renewable energy, either directly as hot water, steam, or heat or as a means of generating power. Geothermal energy as renewable energy is nonpolluting, inexpensive, and in most cases the sources is renewable. (more…)