Assessing the Viability of Geothermal Microgrid Deployment: A Geospatial Analysis Across the United States

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Geothermal microgrids hold a potential of supplying clean and dependable power to communities throughout the United States (US), all while sidestepping the expenses associated with connecting to strained or isolated power grids. Nonetheless, their implementation is still in its early stages in the country. The objective of this analysis is to leverage available data to pinpoint regions across the US that exhibit favorable conditions for the development of geothermal microgrids. Drawing from a variety of sources, including estimates of geothermal resources, the costs associated with geothermal energy generation and electricity transmission, existing microgrid locations, and subsidy programs, we aim to identify promising areas for further exploration. By mapping out the contiguous US, Alaska, and Hawaii, we delineate regions with high relative favorability for geothermal microgrid deployment. Our findings reveal the presence of highly favorable regions across the Western states of the contiguous US, as well as isolated areas in Alaska and Hawaii. Furthermore, we delve into a discussion on state policies and incentive programs, considering their role in fostering favorable conditions or posing barriers to geothermal microgrid development.

Citation Formats

TY - DATA AB - Geothermal microgrids hold a potential of supplying clean and dependable power to communities throughout the United States (US), all while sidestepping the expenses associated with connecting to strained or isolated power grids. Nonetheless, their implementation is still in its early stages in the country. The objective of this analysis is to leverage available data to pinpoint regions across the US that exhibit favorable conditions for the development of geothermal microgrids. Drawing from a variety of sources, including estimates of geothermal resources, the costs associated with geothermal energy generation and electricity transmission, existing microgrid locations, and subsidy programs, we aim to identify promising areas for further exploration. By mapping out the contiguous US, Alaska, and Hawaii, we delineate regions with high relative favorability for geothermal microgrid deployment. Our findings reveal the presence of highly favorable regions across the Western states of the contiguous US, as well as isolated areas in Alaska and Hawaii. Furthermore, we delve into a discussion on state policies and incentive programs, considering their role in fostering favorable conditions or posing barriers to geothermal microgrid development. AU - Witter, Erik A2 - Rane, Jayaraj A3 - Akindipe, Dayo A4 - Smith, Faith DB - C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange DP - Open EI | National Laboratory of the Rockies DO - KW - Geothermal KW - Thermal energy systems KW - TENs KW - District energy KW - Battery energy storage KW - Solar KW - Photovoltaics KW - PV KW - Policy and regulation KW - Policy KW - Regulation KW - Utility integration KW - Bulk-system Integration KW - Local energy resources (LER) LA - English DA - 2024/01/01 PY - 2024 PB - NLR T1 - Assessing the Viability of Geothermal Microgrid Deployment: A Geospatial Analysis Across the United States UR - https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/299 ER -
Export Citation to RIS
Witter, Erik, et al. Assessing the Viability of Geothermal Microgrid Deployment: A Geospatial Analysis Across the United States. NLR, 1 January, 2024, C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange. https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/299.
Witter, E., Rane, J., Akindipe, D., & Smith, F. (2024). Assessing the Viability of Geothermal Microgrid Deployment: A Geospatial Analysis Across the United States. [Data set]. C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange. NLR. https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/299
Witter, Erik, Jayaraj Rane, Dayo Akindipe, and Faith Smith. Assessing the Viability of Geothermal Microgrid Deployment: A Geospatial Analysis Across the United States. NLR, January, 1, 2024. Distributed by C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange. https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/299
@misc{CMIX_Dataset_299, title = {Assessing the Viability of Geothermal Microgrid Deployment: A Geospatial Analysis Across the United States}, author = {Witter, Erik and Rane, Jayaraj and Akindipe, Dayo and Smith, Faith }, abstractNote = {Geothermal microgrids hold a potential of supplying clean and dependable power to communities throughout the United States (US), all while sidestepping the expenses associated with connecting to strained or isolated power grids. Nonetheless, their implementation is still in its early stages in the country. The objective of this analysis is to leverage available data to pinpoint regions across the US that exhibit favorable conditions for the development of geothermal microgrids. Drawing from a variety of sources, including estimates of geothermal resources, the costs associated with geothermal energy generation and electricity transmission, existing microgrid locations, and subsidy programs, we aim to identify promising areas for further exploration. By mapping out the contiguous US, Alaska, and Hawaii, we delineate regions with high relative favorability for geothermal microgrid deployment. Our findings reveal the presence of highly favorable regions across the Western states of the contiguous US, as well as isolated areas in Alaska and Hawaii. Furthermore, we delve into a discussion on state policies and incentive programs, considering their role in fostering favorable conditions or posing barriers to geothermal microgrid development.}, url = {https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/299}, year = {2024}, howpublished = {C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange, NLR, https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/299}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-17} }

Details

Data from Jan 1, 2024

Last updated Mar 30, 2026

Submitted Jun 2, 2026

Organization

NLR

Contact

Jayaraj Vijaykumar Rane

Authors

Erik Witter

NLR

Jayaraj Rane

NLR

Dayo Akindipe

NLR

Faith Smith

NLR
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