This story was originally published by The Nevada Independent. Sign up for its newsletters here.
With highly fractured, permeable ground, the Great Basin’s geology makes it one of the most geothermally rich areas in the world. Hot fluid rises easily toward the surface, ideal for driving power plants, and present-day Nevada is the second-largest producer of geothermal energy in the nation behind California.
Tapping into hot fluids below the ground to spin turbines in power plants that...