Abstract :
By the end of 1995 direct thermal use of geothermal energy in
Germany amounted to an installed thermal power of roughly 323 MW t. Of this
sum, 38.7 MW t are generated in 22 major centralized installations. Small,
decentralized earth-coupled heat pumps and groundwater heat pumps are
estimated to contribute an additional 95 and 190 MWt, respectively. By the
year 2000 an increase in total installed geothermal power of about 144 MWt is
expected: 115 MWt from major central and 29 MWt from small, decentralized
installations. This would bring direct thermal use in Germany close to an
installed thermal power of 467 MW t. At present no electric power is produced
from geothermal resources in Germany, whose annual final energy consumption*
now amounts to about 9000 PJ. This is equivalent to a total consumed
power of 285,000 MW. Almost 60% of this energy is required as heat. The
technical potential for direct thermal use of geothermal energy in Germany is
estimated to be 1622 PJ y r - l for hydrothermal applications and 960 PJ yr - 1 for
earth-coupled and groundwater heat pumps; this is equivalent to a thermal
power generation of 51,400 and 30,420 MWt, respectively. The total, 81,820
MWt, corresponds to about 29% of the countryʹs annual final energy consumption,
or roughly 49% of its demand for heat. However, at present only about
4%o of the existing technical potential for direct thermal use of geothermal
energy meets the demand for heat. If the vast potential of geothermal energy
for direct thermal use was utilized to substitute fossil fuels, roughly 110 million
tons less of CO2 would be released to the atmosphere annually, equivalent to
about 12% of Germanyʹs CO2 output in 1994. t~) 1997 CNR. Published by
Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved
Keywords :
non-electrical uses , direct uses , Geothermal energy , Update , GERMANY.