Archive: https://archive.today/gR4F5
From the post:
>One of our more memorable trips was to a geothermal power plant that was close to the Þríhnúkagígur volcano in Iceland. I remember looking at the huge plumes of hot steam emerging from the ground and thinking about how amazing it was that people could harness heat thousands of feet below the surface to keep the lights on. That feeling came back to me earlier this year during a visit to Cape Station, the future home of the world’s largest enhanced geothermal power plant, in Beaver County, Utah.
Archive: https://archive.today/gR4F5
From the post:
>>One of our more memorable trips was to a geothermal power plant that was close to the Þríhnúkagígur volcano in Iceland. I remember looking at the huge plumes of hot steam emerging from the ground and thinking about how amazing it was that people could harness heat thousands of feet below the surface to keep the lights on.
That feeling came back to me earlier this year during a visit to Cape Station, the future home of the world’s largest enhanced geothermal power plant, in Beaver County, Utah.
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