popularmechanics.com — At Chena Hot Springs Resort, a visionary owner and an ingenious engineer tap into one of the world's most overlooked energy resources—not fossil fuels—to produce electricity, heat buildings and soon, they hope, generate hydrogen.
Jan 28, 2008 View in Crawl 4
sotlooJan 29, 2008
Go Iceland!!
sponeilJan 29, 2008
But what about global cooling? If we invest heavily in this technology, it may cause the Earth's molten core to freeze. The Earth's magnetic field would probably vanish, and we'd all be killed by solar radiation (in addition to not having any electricity). ;-)
tuntcickleJan 29, 2008
at least energy from saudi arabia can be stored. electricity generated in alaska or by yellowstone doesn't travel very far. distinguish between energy sources (geothermal generation) and energy storage (fossil fuels).when you factor in distribution, geothermal generation is more expensive than paying the saudis
tuntcickleJan 29, 2008
there was no one in alaska in 1904 dumbass
tuntcickleJan 29, 2008
keyword: Alaska
bmnrocksJan 29, 2008
Sadly I don't think he was joking.
energycurrentJan 30, 2008
Geothermal energy is growing across the US. It is estimated that including projects currently under development that 6 million US homes can be powered by geothermal energy.<a class="user" href="http://www.energycurrent.com/?id=3&storyid=8146">http://www.energycurrent.com/?id=3&storyid=8146</a>