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Meta Inks a New Geothermal Energy Deal To Support AI (theverge.com) 27

Meta has struck a new deal with geothermal startup XGS Energy to supply 150 megawatts of carbon-free electricity for its New Mexico data center. "Advances in AI require continued energy to support infrastructure development," Urvi Parekh, global head of energy at Meta, said in a press release. "With next-generation geothermal technologies like XGS ready for scale, geothermal can be a major player in supporting the advancement of technologies like AI as well as domestic data center development." The Verge reports: Geothermal plants generate electricity using Earth's heat; typically drawing up hot fluids or steam from natural reservoirs to turn turbines. That tactic is limited by natural geography, however, and the US gets around half a percent of its electricity from geothermal sources. Startups including XGS are trying to change that by making geothermal energy more accessible. Last year, Meta made a separate 150MW deal with Sage Geosystems to develop new geothermal power plants. Sage is developing technologies to harness energy from hot, dry rock formations by drilling and pumping water underground, essentially creating artificial reservoirs. Google has its own partnership with another startup called Fervo developing similar technology.

XGS Energy is also seeking to exploit geothermal energy from dry rock resources. It tries to set itself apart by reusing water in a closed-loop process designed to prevent water from escaping into cracks in the rock. The water it uses to take advantage of underground heat circulates inside a steel casing. Conserving water is especially crucial in a drought-prone state like New Mexico, where Meta is expanding its Los Lunas data center. Meta declined to say how much it's spending on this deal with XGS Energy. The initiative will roll out in two phases with a goal of being operational by 2030.

Meta Inks a New Geothermal Energy Deal To Support AI

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  • by Sique ( 173459 ) on Friday June 13, 2025 @06:40AM (#65446809) Homepage
    Meta is just contracting everything that can in theory provide electricity. They would contract an ICE prison full of alleged illegal aliens on home trainers, if such thing exists.

    It does not mean that all of this has a chance to be a success.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      While true, there is a decent chance this could work. There is a lot of promising new tech in this area, ironically some of it coming from the fracking industry. Geothermal works well, the issue has always been the limited number of places you can install it. A lot like extracting gas, it wasn't practical to access some of it until people figured out how to frack relatively cheaply.

      • by Sique ( 173459 ) on Friday June 13, 2025 @09:30AM (#65447145) Homepage
        The problems are manifold. Basel, Switzerland has had a geothermal project. They had to shut it down because it caused too many earth quakes. Basically, the insurance for all the damage was far larger than the revenue from the energy they provided.
        • Are they doing fracking in Switzerland? That has to be at least as damaging as a geothermal project, and it happens everywhere there are oil deposits in the US. Apparently we are willing to accept a few earthquakes in exchange for energy.

          • by evanh ( 627108 )

            Fracking for oil is a bit batty. It's a US thing. There is far more flowing oil available around the world that we don't need to employ fracking for oil anywhere.

            That said, the mechanism of pumping water into a hot spot could be a way to get geothermal steam. It would be an unusual solution but if Switzerland were needing to "frack" for steam then that could well be disturbing the local geology.

          • by Sique ( 173459 )
            The U.S. is far less dense populated in the places where they are fracking than both Switzerland as a country and even more in the region around Basel. Taking out a policy to cover earth quake damage claims will be much cheaper for the fracking regions in the U.S. than in Basel.
            • I'm not advocating for fracking. I'm merely pointing out that in the USA there are a gigantic number of fracking projects, some of which have arguably caused minor earthquakes, and yet it continues to be employed.

              'As of 2012, 2.5 million "frac jobs" had been performed worldwide on oil and gas wells, over one million of those within the U.S.'
              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

              Therefore I don't expect that a few geothermal sites are going to even make a ripple.

              • by Sique ( 173459 )
                As I said, it's easy to pay some damage in rural areas, where there are only a few buildings, and they are mostly timber frame and can be repaired with some filler and a new coat of paint.

                It's quite different if it's below an area with 1.3 million inhabitants, some very large chemical plants and most of the buildings are made from concrete and stone and not designed to withstand earth quakes.

  • If AI fails, that's more renewable always-available energy.

  • The only advances is in pointless wasting of electricity.

  • Rick gave "gooble box" technology to an intelligent species to generate electricity, but unbeknownst to them he took a majority of the generated power. This leads Morty to question Rick's ethics, calling it "slavery with extra steps".

    Maybe Meta really needs to put hand cranks or foot treadles on Alexa!

Doubt isn't the opposite of faith; it is an element of faith. - Paul Tillich, German theologian and historian

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