Techno-Economic Simulation Results Using dGeo for EGS-Based District Heating in the Northeastern United States
This dataset presents the results of techno-economic simulations performed using the Distributed Geothermal Market Demand Model (dGeo) to evaluate the feasibility of Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS)-based district heating in the Northeastern United States. Developed by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), dGeo is a geospatially resolved, bottom-up modeling framework designed to explore the deployment potential of geothermal distributed energy resources.
The dataset, created as part of the Cornell EGS Ground-Truthing Project, provides census tract-level data that includes inputs and outputs such as thermal demand, road length, energy prices, geothermal system sizing, annual energy contributions from geothermal and natural gas peaking boilers, system capital costs (CAPEX), operation and maintenance costs (OPEX), and the levelized cost of heat (LCOH). Key simulation parameters include geothermal gradients, measured well depths, production temperatures, and district heating piping lengths based on S1400 neighborhood road lengths. The simulations assume a target bottom hole temperature of 80C and the development of new district heating networks in each census tract.
Citation Formats
National Renewable Energy Laboratory. (2024). Techno-Economic Simulation Results Using dGeo for EGS-Based District Heating in the Northeastern United States [data set]. Retrieved from https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/1698.
Pauling, Hannah. Techno-Economic Simulation Results Using dGeo for EGS-Based District Heating in the Northeastern United States. United States: N.p., 30 Sep, 2024. Web. https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/1698.
Pauling, Hannah. Techno-Economic Simulation Results Using dGeo for EGS-Based District Heating in the Northeastern United States. United States. https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/1698
Pauling, Hannah. 2024. "Techno-Economic Simulation Results Using dGeo for EGS-Based District Heating in the Northeastern United States". United States. https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/1698.
@div{oedi_8307, title = {Techno-Economic Simulation Results Using dGeo for EGS-Based District Heating in the Northeastern United States}, author = {Pauling, Hannah.}, abstractNote = {This dataset presents the results of techno-economic simulations performed using the Distributed Geothermal Market Demand Model (dGeo) to evaluate the feasibility of Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS)-based district heating in the Northeastern United States. Developed by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), dGeo is a geospatially resolved, bottom-up modeling framework designed to explore the deployment potential of geothermal distributed energy resources.
The dataset, created as part of the Cornell EGS Ground-Truthing Project, provides census tract-level data that includes inputs and outputs such as thermal demand, road length, energy prices, geothermal system sizing, annual energy contributions from geothermal and natural gas peaking boilers, system capital costs (CAPEX), operation and maintenance costs (OPEX), and the levelized cost of heat (LCOH). Key simulation parameters include geothermal gradients, measured well depths, production temperatures, and district heating piping lengths based on S1400 neighborhood road lengths. The simulations assume a target bottom hole temperature of 80C and the development of new district heating networks in each census tract.}, doi = {}, url = {https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/1698}, journal = {}, number = , volume = , place = {United States}, year = {2024}, month = {09}}
Details
Data from Sep 30, 2024
Last updated Jan 14, 2025
Submitted Dec 31, 2024
Organization
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Contact
Koenraad Beckers
Authors
Original Source
https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/1698Research Areas
Keywords
geothermal, energy, EGS, district heating, dGeo, TEA, techno-economic analsyis, feasibility, EGS feasibility, EGS direct use, deep direct use, DU, DDU, CAPEX, OPEX, LCOH, modeling, geothermal market demand, model, simulation, thermal demand, heating demand, district heating networksDOE Project Details
Project Name Cornell EGS Ground-Truthing Project
Project Lead Zachary Frone
Project Number FY25 AOP 5.4.3.1