The following is a contributed article by Jigar Shah, co-founder of the clean-energy and clean-tech investment firm Generate Capital, and Timothy Latimer, co-founder of Fervo Energy.
Big Oil came into 2020 with big promises: big drops in greenhouse gas emissions, big investments in carbon-capture technology, big steps to make oil and gas a viable part of the global effort to slow climate change.
Like so many of the industry’s ambitious claims over the years, the efforts have proved to be little more than a glossy public relations fantasy — and the sector’s supposedly solid market fundamentals were exposed to be as flimsy as Hollywood set-dressing.
Even before the spread of COVID-19 oil investors were running for the exits — dropping holdings in fossil fuel companies and proclaiming the start of a “death-knell phase.” In our carbon-constrained future, with viable clean-energy alternatives ready to be deployed, the economics for oil and gas no longer add up. But with the spread of COVID-19 and the abrupt drop in global demand, the sector is now in free-fall — with tens of thousands of American workers bound to bear the brunt of the impact.
It doesn’t have to be this way. We already know that just a fraction of oil and gas jobs will return once the economy recovers: The bulk lost in the 2014-’16 crash simply vanished as companies found ways to do more with less. Business-as-usual won’t work.
We need to think bigger, to harness this opportunity to launch a bold energy transition, one powered by a ready-to-scale, off-the-shelf solution that will put America’s idled oil and gas workforce back into the field almost immediately: clean, abundant and renewable geothermal energy.
Producing geothermal energy involves deep-well drilling, just like oil and gas. But instead of producing hydrocarbons, geothermal wells release steam that is captured, funneled into pipes to spin turbines that generate electricity, then pumped back underground. The only emission is water vapor, while carbon-free electricity is generated around-the-clock.
Geothermal power plants currently account for a small portion of U.S. electricity generation, but a surge is underway. Three companies in January alone signed contracts to build new geothermal plants in California, spurred by the state’s renewable-energy initiative, recent cost reductions, and the long-term value gained by geothermal’s 24-7 electricity generation. The U.S. Department of Energy projects that the share of electricity produced by geothermal plants could swell to 16%, rivaling the aging U.S. nuclear sector as well as all renewable energy sources combined.
Achieving the kind of growth that the Energy Department envisions will require dedicated focus, but it would put drilling rigs and oil field service companies to work almost overnight and for the long-term, free of the boom-bust cycle dictated by the global oil market. It would catalyze $219 billion in new investment, roughly the same amount of money invested by U.S. fracking companies over the last 10 years.
The government can help capitalize on this once-in-a-generation moment: Passing the Advanced Geothermal Innovation Leadership Act, for example, expanding U.S. Department of Treasury grants for renewable energy, and prioritizing regulatory reform would dramatically accelerate geothermal investment.
But oil and gas firms also have much to gain — and the tools and institutional expertise are already at their disposal. We should know: both of us got our start in the oil and gas industry, Tim at BHP Billiton and Jigar at BP. Many areas of the clean energy industry, from carbon capture to offshore wind, hydrogen, and especially geothermal, require the same skills as the oil and gas industry.
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