2009
DOI: 10.1029/2009eo320001
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Enhanced Geothermal Systems: Mitigating Risk in Urban Areas

Abstract: With the global challenge to satisfy an increasing demand for energy while at the same time stabilizing or reducing carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations in the atmosphere, geothermal energy from enhanced geothermal systems (EGSs) increasingly is being recognized as an attractive alternative energy source throughout the world. However, the risks associated with the seismicity necessarily induced during the development of an EGS constitute a significant challenge for the widespread implementation of this technolo… Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…Geothermal sites in the Rhine Graben near Basel , Landau (Grünthal, 2014) and Soultz-sousForêts (Dorbath et al, 2009), however, have experienced 2.5 events due to EGS activities (Table 1). Although this seismicity has been short lived it has attracted public concern due to its proximity to populated areas (Kraft et al, 2009). At other sites, geothermal seismicity is entirely of low magnitudes and then may drop below the detection threshold, possibly due to geologic conditions, e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Geothermal sites in the Rhine Graben near Basel , Landau (Grünthal, 2014) and Soultz-sousForêts (Dorbath et al, 2009), however, have experienced 2.5 events due to EGS activities (Table 1). Although this seismicity has been short lived it has attracted public concern due to its proximity to populated areas (Kraft et al, 2009). At other sites, geothermal seismicity is entirely of low magnitudes and then may drop below the detection threshold, possibly due to geologic conditions, e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fluid injection causes stress field changes and re-activation of the pre-existing joints and slip of nearby faults which consequently can result in larger magnitude events, e.g. local magnitude of 3.4 event in Basel EGS operation (Kraft et al, 2009). These largest events tend to occur on the fringes, outside the "main cloud" of seismicity and are often observed after well shut-in, making them difficult to control (Mukuhira et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both the extraction of hot water in deep boreholes and the reinjection of cold water in distant boreholes can generate a geothermal energy production cycle until the hot rocks deep underground (2-6km) cool down and the thermal energy source ceases. The production cycle, however, can be perturbed when too much fluid is extracted (see figure 5) or injected [65]. Large amounts of water masses can be removed or accumulated during the lifespan of a deep geothermal power plant.…”
Section: Geothermal Energy Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their socioeconomic impacts, however, are disproportionally higher, because human-triggered earthquakes  only occur in regions close to the geoengineering activities, i.e., rural and urbanized areas,  occur mostly in naturally stable continental regions, with >90 percent of the world population,  nucleate in very shallow depths (0 − 20km), while damaging seismic energy can reach the Earth surface,  can create lasting seismic activities in areas that were initially stable (e.g., Australia, Europe) [23,65].…”
Section: How Do Human-triggered Earthquakes Affect Human Security?mentioning
confidence: 99%