Friday, December 6, 2019

Republic of Ireland: Possible Geothermal Energy Reservoir Discovered in Dublin Suburbs

A geothermal aquifer in the dilation zones on the southern margin of the Dublin Basin (Oxford Academic)


We present modelling of the geophysical data from the Newcastle area, west of Dublin, Ireland within the framework of the IRETHERM project. IRETHERM's overarching objective was to facilitate a more thorough strategic understanding of Ireland's geothermal energy potential through integrated modelling of new and existing geophysical, geochemical and geological data. 

The Newcastle area, one of the target localities, is situated at the southern margin of the Dublin Basin, close to the largest conurbation on the island of Ireland in the City of Dublin and surrounds. 

As part of IRETHERM, magnetotelluric (MT) soundings were carried out in the highly urbanized Dublin suburb in 2011 and 2012, and a description of MT data acquisition, processing methods, multi-dimensional geoelectrical models and porosity modelling with other geophysical data are presented.

The deeper conductive layers are interpreted as geothermal-fluid-bearing rocks. Porosity and permeability estimations from the lithological borehole logs indicate the geothermal potential of the bedrock, to deliver warm water to the surface. The fluid permeability estimation, based on Archie's law for porous structures and synthetic studies of fractured zones, suggests a permeability in the range 100 mD–100 D in the study area, which is prospective for geothermal energy exploitation.


A geothermal aquifer in the dilation zones on the southern margin of the Dublin Basin, by Jan Vozar, Alan G Jones, Joan Campanya, Chris Yeomans, Mark R Muller, Riccardo Pasquali. Geophysical Journal International, ggz530, https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggz530 Published: 26 November 2019.