As part of the 2021 redevelop Geothermal Challenge, Canadian geothermal technology firm Eavor Technologies’ Jeanine Vany mentored students to assess geothermal greenhouses as a way to address food insecurity in the Yukon using clean energy. The Yukon is the smallest and most westernmost of Canada’s three territories in the North of Canada bordering British Columbia to the South and the U.S. state of Alaska to the west. With a cold climate, geothermal has been looked at over the years as a potential for heat and power. We reported on the possibility of using greenhouses heated by geothermal, as well as efforts on geothermal exploration before.
The study on geothermal greenhouses showed that geothermal energy presents strong opportunities for optimization. It considered the use of ground-source heat pumps (GSHPs) and showed that vegetables grown in these local geothermal greenhouses were effective in reducing carbon emissions from produce shipping. It further looked into using heat from a geothermal power plant.
Lonn Brown, one of the students who worked on the Geothermal Challenge with Redevelop says, “Geothermal is really interesting, I think that a lot of the difficulties that geothermal faces is due to the fact that people don’t really know much about it. If you say geothermal to most people, you’re met with “Oh I know about hot springs, how is that an alternative energy source?” And there’s so much energy down there. [People] don’t really have an understanding of how geothermal translates into the energy that our society needs.”
“Challenges associated with affordable, nutritious food security for Indigenous communities in Northern Canada have been documented for decades. In cold and remote climates, the limiting factor for economical food production is adequate energy to maintain the temperature, light, and humidity needed for plant growth. Geothermal energy extracted from internal planetary heat is a low-carbon form of energy-on-demand. This work explored the feasibility of greenhouse agriculture supported by geothermal energy to improve food security in Yukon.”, so the abstract of the student group.
Read the complete article at www.thinkgeoenergy.com.