Tuesday, November 27, 2012

USA, Oregon, California:

In Lukewarm Water: New Geothermal Energy is Now a Strong Possibility in Klamath Basin (Herald and News)

Ron Cole (left), the Klamath Basin National
Wildlife Refuges Complex manager, and Mike
Noonan (right), farmer and president of Entiv
Organic Energy, stand on geothermal drilling
equipment. (Courtesy Herald and News)
By the end of 2013, the Klamath Basin could be one of four sites in the world using a new type of geothermal energy.

Final drilling to check temperatures and potential kilowatts took place last week for two possible plants. One is in the Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge. The other is situated a bit north on private land owned by Mike Noonan, a Klamath Basin farmer and president of Entiv Organic Energy, a company formed to pursue such projects.

Read More....