Soda Lake Geothermal No I II is a 21 MW geothermal power plant in the United States, operated by Cyrq Energy Corp since 1990. Ranked #48 of 65 geothermal plants in the United States, it contributes 0.54% of the country's total geothermal capacity of 3,889 MW. The largest geothermal plant in the United States is Geysers Unit 5-20 at 1,163 MW, making Soda Lake 55.4 times smaller. Nearby plants within 50 km include Fort Churchill (230 MW, Gas), Stillwater Facility (69.2 MW, Geothermal), and Patua Acquisition Project LLC (58.6 MW, Geothermal). The facility is located in Nevada, approximately 150 km east of Reno.
36 years old
United States of America, North America
- Primary Fuel Type
- Geothermal
- Energy Source
- Renewable
- Country
United States of America- Continent
- North America
- Data Source
- Global Power Plant Database
Geothermal power generation harnesses the Earth's internal heat to produce electricity. This renewable energy source exploits the thermal energy stored beneath the Earth's crust, which can be accessed through geothermal power plants. These plants typically utilize steam or hot water from geothermal reservoirs to drive turbines that generate electricity. The process begins by drilling wells into geothermal reservoirs, often located in tectonically active regions, where the temperature gradient is favorable for energy extraction. The steam or hot water extracted is then channeled to turbines, converting thermal energy into mechanical energy, which is subsequently transformed into electrical energy by generators.
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