Another Casualty of Typhoon Haiyan: Geothermal Power 78
necro81 writes "Little known even in environmental circles is a renewable energy success story: five geothermal power plants on Leyte Island in the Philippines — each of which produces enough power for the entire island — that collectively produce more than 10% of the Philippines' total electrical demand. From boreholes deep underground comes pressurized water heated to 280 Celsius. At the surface it flashes into steam, turning one set of turbines, then cools and contracts to spin a second set of turbines. The low-grade steam is then condensed back into water and reinjected into the bedrock. But Typhoon Haiyan destroyed the cooling towers, snapped transmission towers, and scattered the employees."
Shame, but at least they didn't melt down (Score:5, Insightful)
Such a shame, hopefully they plants can be repaired quickly. And hay, apparently they are much safer than the alternatives.
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Yes, because we have many examples of nuclear power plants melting down after getting hit by tropical cyclones.
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So now "problems" means "meltdown"? Did you even read your link?
Re:Shame, but at least they didn't melt down (Score:4, Informative)
It doesn't make much sense to power an island that has a functional alternative in geothermal with nuclear. It's a bit like trying to shoot birds with a machine gun. A massive overkill.
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I was just commenting on the absurdity of AmiMoJo's statement, not arguing that they should have built nuclear. No matter what plant they built, when the transmission towers went down, the plant would have to shut down.
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He does have a point in that nuclear would likely not have to shut down, at least not for long. Both far greater security measures and lack of need for coolant towers, as coast nuclear plants usually use sea water as coolant, would indeed be far more likely to survive disaster intact.
You don't have the same choice with geothermal which is very much tied to the location of the source.
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Look at his subject line - he was implying that if these plants had been nuclear, they would be experiencing a meltdown.
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After Fukushima, a lot of people seem to have that misconception I guess. They never advertise that another plant that was actually closer to epicenter survived it just fine.
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Judging by the sheer stupidity of that comparison, I'm guessing you're currently practicing what you're preaching AC.
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It's not absurd. Japan had the same choice, invest trillions of Yen in geothermal or in nuclear. It chose nuclear for a variety of reasons, like wanting to be part of the nuclear club and have the means to build nuclear weapons at short notice.
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And Japan's nuclear meltdown happened after an earthquake and tsunami that killed 15,000 people - not a hurricane. It might be perfectly reasonable to say that building a nuclear plant in a country that sits within the ring of fire is a bad idea, but implying that this particular storm would have caused a meltdown is pure FUD.
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what is to say the designers of a Filipino nuclear plant would have anticipated the height of the storm surge from such an extraordinary cyclone?
Because it has never happened anywhere in the world, despite nuclear facilities taking hits from hurricanes on a regular basis. I know from memory that a single nuclear plant (St. Lucie) took two direct hurricane hits in a single season, and it sits on a low-lying barrier island in Florida.
A poorly designed nuclear plant could be built anywhere.
LOL, yes, that is certainly true. Some of the early designs were terrifying, and the Russians kept it up until Chernobyl.
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Well, if you were a door to door nuclear power plant and machine gun salesman, you might disagree.
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I've never met that mythical creature, so I can't comment.
Re: Shame, but at least they didn't melt down (Score:1)
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Exactly my point. Read the subject of the person I was replying to.
Renewable Doesn't Mean Invincible (Score:5, Insightful)
Come on NYT! That not paradoxical; it's ironic.
Regardless, this is an odd way to frame the story. Such a storm would (and did) destroy other kinds of power plants. Geothermal power is not a casualty of the typhoon.
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Come on NYT! That not paradoxical; it's ironic.
It's not ironic, it's unfortunate.
Re:Renewable Doesn't Mean Invincible (Score:5, Funny)
It's not ironic, it's unfortunate.
It's like rain on your wedding day.
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It's not ironic, it's unfortunate.
Coming up with examples of "ironic" which are not unfortunate to the subject is pretty hard.
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A wind farm getting blown away by a typhoon is ironic. A geothermal plant getting blown away is not.
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Such a storm would (and did) destroy other kinds of power plants.
My guess is the author feels those other plants DESERVED getting destroyed, and without the green angle there is really not much of a story here.
I'd rather be asking why they are bothering to have cooling towers, and perhaps even why they are bothering to re-inject the water at all. The Island gets 200 inches of rainfall every month, and twice that in their summer months, and its sitting in the middle of the ocean. If it was still felt that injection was necessary, just inject rainwater and dispense with
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Such a storm would (and did) destroy other kinds of power plants.
I rather suspect those will be put back up on poles and towers rather than taking the opportunity to bury a such of the local grid as possible. The lesson will have to be re-learned.
I believe power pretty much always goes up on poles and over land here, not buried. . . Besides being Typhoon-prone, we're in the pacific ring of fire so are earthquake prone. . . Japan does the same thing. . It can get a little messy, though I'm sure it doesn't have to look like this typical manila example: http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTAIMc75zk7cAb0GAzO1u-uhgfJ1c3_ZqvvLPhURmhtJusKhWXh [gstatic.com]
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I believe power pretty much always goes up on poles and over land here, not buried
I have no idea where "over here" is, but walking around where I live I can't see any power poles any where
near my neighborhood. Its all under ground till you get several streets away, and encounter a substation.
You can marshal a bunch of crews to restring high tension lines from the plants, because those aren't
that much line to string. Its all straight line
But when EVERY SINGLE neighborhood's distribution grid is blown down, high-lines really don't matter that much.
This is the part that needs to be undergr
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I'd rather be asking why they are bothering to have cooling towers,
That part was explained in TFS. It is because after the expanding pressurized hot water expands into steam past turbines, they cool it and run the condensing steam past turbines a second time to get even more energy out of it. Clever.
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Not particularly clever, its done that way in every steam plant in the world, but you have the steps mixed up. The cooling towers are the last step before re injection, AFTER all passes through the various turbines.
Solar and wind are very fragiles... (Score:1)
On the contrary, renewables like wind and solar are very fragile. Both on a local scale, and on the extensive grid that they require to deliver some semblance of reliable power. Any typhoon or hurricane will totally destroy wind or solar farms along with the grid, and leave a completely non-functional energy system.
Nuclear plants on the other hand are very robust against natural disaster, and allow for a highly distributed and reliable energy system. Along with small modular reactors there will be an eve
It'll probably be fixed... (Score:4, Insightful)
The Phillipines is poor enough that a storm like kills a lot of people, but it's getting richer fast. I'm not a geothermal engineer, but I'd assume a very expensive bit of building a geothermal plant is creating the boreholes in the first place, and then keeping them from collapsing. If the hole survived it should be much cheaper to repair then it was to build in the first place. IOf there was enough business to justify it then there's probably enough to justify rebuilding it at a lower price.
Hell, if they had a good insurance policy it won't cost them a dime. Their rates will skyrocket in the future, but at least they'll have their electricity back.
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If the hole survived
When was the last time you saw a windstorm destroy a hole?
These all surface through concrete slabs. The company is now testing all of the components of that power plant in the hope of bringing it back into full service and repowering Leyte Island by Dec. 24.
The issue is more about the power grid than these plants.
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of course, as you stated, they hope to be back online in a month, so that was probably not the case.
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Rain causes mudslides, and a hurricane has a lot of rain.
High winds can blow things into holes, and hurricanes tend to spawn tornadoes.
I'll admit it's unlikely, but it could happen.
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Blow thing into holes?
These aren't some random Geyser that they shoved a hose down into, you do know that don't you?
These are man drilled bore-holes with steel casings that terminate in a concrete slab inside a big building.
See the picture: http://www.geothermal-energy.org/pliki/Image/gal/10_4.jpg [geothermal-energy.org]
You might get a mud slide flowing through the plant and have to wash that away, but is not like
palm trees and broken houses are going to flow into the hole.
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I believe the point of the article was that the various big buildings involved have been severely damaged. And if one of the tornadoes that accompanies any Typhoon/Hurricane hit their building in the wrong spot they could easily lose their boreholes. Regardless I didn't bring up the possibility because I thought that they'd definitely have that problem, I brought it up because they theoretically could have that problem.
Mind you I can't actually check any of this, because I refuse to deal with the Times payw
Leave it to corporate media (Score:4, Interesting)
To swiftboat almost any anything that Big Industry (in this case, Big Oil) considers a threat/nuisance. WTF do they think would have happened if an aging TEPCO reactor was in the same storm? I wouldn't like to be there and find out. How would a deepwater oil platform have fared?
I'm pretty much sick of what passes for "news" these days. It's all pretty much shameless puff pieces and hit jobs because that's what corporations pay for.
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Really, what part of the story had anything to do with that?
You didn't even bother to read the story did you?
The plants are expected to be back on line by Christmas, as soon as the employees can make some
arrangements for their families. Whether or not the power grid will be ready is another issue.
But big oils wasn't even involved here, you just took any story as an excuse to rant.
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While the Philippines don't have a nuclear power plant, they do have off shore oil platforms.
We *do* have a nuclear power plant. . . It was just decided never to turn it on. . . thank fuck for that! (Because it was later damaged beyond repair in the Mount Pinatubo eruption of the 90s).
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https://maps.google.com/maps?q=http://toolserver.org/~para/cgi-bin/kmlexport%3Farticle%3DList_of_active_volcanoes_in_the_Philippines%26usecache%3D1 [google.com]
18 active volcanos in the Philippines...
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Fukushima was an exception that proper regulation would have prevented. Other nuclear reactors closer to the epicenter in Japan were hit harder by the tsunami, yet survived without incident. So have reactors survived tornadoes, and they are even built to withstand plane impacts. The plants themselves are virtually indestructible.
Renewables are not, and wind/solar farms will be torn apart in such disasters. Reactors may cost billions, but they survive and produce prodigious amounts of energy. Renewables
Runaway global warning. (Score:5, Funny)
That's it, we've reached the tipping point. The environment is now attacking the environmentally friendly sites first feeding it ever increasing amounts of carbon and making it's stronger.
The scientists did warn us about a runaway chain reaction.
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That explains why climate change deniers all seem to lack intelligence; they're merely trolling apparitions created by Gaia.
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We must kill the environment before it kills us.
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Way ahead of you. I've got a heater and an AC in the room on at the same time. We'll get that damned environment before it gets us.
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And if we had a single coal plant, no one would be worried.
Re:Geothermal power (Score:5, Insightful)
I dunno, it occurs to me that this leads us to a dark place, where any creation of energy is condemned because it has some effect on the environment, without any appreciation of scale. (In this case, the (paltry, in comparison) geothermal energy actually in use by the plant vs the several orders of magnitude higher thermal energy contained within the earth's core.)
It reminds me of a conversation I had several years ago with a Green, regarding fusion power, where I described taking sea water, separating out the deuterium for fuel, heating the water to drive turbines for power, and using a portion of that power to continue the process. (This is probably impractical for several reasons, but it was what I knew at the time and served "for sake of argument".) Her reaction was indignation that I would mine sea water for an isotope and dare to heat water to drive turbines, both of which clearly had an impact on the environment. At that point I realized there would be no solution that would be considered acceptable, and avoided the topic in the future. This was also when I came to realize that regular people often have no sense of scale.
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My experience has been that Greens who suggest mass suicide as a solution for environmental impact, never seem to be referring to themselves.
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American Indians were well-fed and left resources in the same abundant state as when they arrived.
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Uh, no. You only think that because by the time English and French colonists arrived the population had collapsed as 70 to 90 percent of everyone between Point Barrow and Tierra de Fuego died from introduced European diseases. Many Native American cultures collapsed when they exceeded their environment's carrying capacity, such as the Maya, the Mound Builders and the Anasazi.
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No one really knows what happened to the South American Indians. You tell a story that fits with your ideology. But the North American Indians, when the first white men arrived, were well-fed and lived in a land that had abundant resources, which were as abundant as when they arrived. They didn't need gold, for example.
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No one really knows what happened to the South American Indians.
What on earth are you talking about? The Spanish barbarians recorded **exactly** what happened, and seemed to glory in the chaos and destruction they left in their wake. They thought that their vengeful god protected them from the diseases that were killing the heathen native peoples by the millions. When the first Spaniards traveled down the Amazon river they found large, prosperous cities lining the banks. A few years later when the Port
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Any needless consumption of energy whose results are unknown should be abhorred. The endless cycle of having to buy new crap because the old crap failed (as opposed to the endless cycle of buying new crap because the old crap is outdated, which we could at least debate) is really an insufferable lot of shit. And there's just a lot of energy going to waste when it would cost very little to retain more of it. And then of course there's war, which these days is a horrible consumer of energy and producer of pol
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For one thing, the core is much thicker than the atmosphere. And we haven't even dug through the crust. The core is a little farther away.
Either way. (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't like coal. Global warming? Meh who gives a fuck.
But living where alot of coal plants are in use... There's this fine fine black soot on everything.
They seem to crank the plants to 200% at night. And in the morning there's soot everywhere.
Whatever it is it even makes it thru high quality air filters and sticks to everything. Water won't wash it off either.
I don't give a fuck about the planet and global warming. Because really. I won't be alive long enough for us to even admit its a problem.
Better headline (Score:2)
"Massive country is deriving 10% of their electricity from geothermal"
Because if you ask random people, they may have heard of Iceland doing geothermal, and think it only works well there.
for very small values of "massive", but okay (Score:2)
Where "massive" means half the size of Pakistan or Nigeria. How about "Medium sized country built on volcanoes has 10% geothermal power"? I'm guessing you wouldn't care ffor "Geothermal useless for 90% of volcanic island's energy needs".
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It's the 12th most populated country in the world! Essentially 100M people.
The density is huge because the islands are not, but for power, what matters is the millions who live there!
Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa (7th overall), and Pakistan would feel huge if its neighbors weren't so over-the-top (6th overall). Choose your comparison points a bit better...
This ain't no "Medium size" country for this topic.
Electricity reliability in Leyte is rubbish (Score:4, Insightful)
"renewable energy success story" : ha! Power reliability has always been a significant problem in Leyte. All businesses in Tacloban CBD have backup generators which they fire up at least a couple of times a week, sometimes daily. The city is often accompanied by the hum of diesel generators.
I recall articles in National newspapers talking about constant power shortages across Visaya's region, with rolling blackouts where Northern Luzon region (where Manila is) has plenty of supply.
Maybe it is mostly a transmission problem, not a generation problem, but constant rolling blackouts suggests an enduring generation to me. Hardly a success story
Another potential casualty: headlines (Score:2)
The next typhoon might wipe out sensationalist headlines. Yeah I know, that'd be one heck of a storm. It takes a mighty wind to compete with what passes for journalism online. That storm might not be mighty enough to take out Congress though. Wheeeew, Nelly!