Geothermal energy can play an important role in decarbonizing the heating sector, however, a limiting factor is
that heat demand in urban areas does not usually coincide spatially with geological settings favorable to the
extraction of geothermal energy. Long-distance heat transport could enable the direct use of geothermal resources
even in areas with low or no geothermal potential. This paper proposes the cost-optimal coordinated
deployment of geothermal heating plants together with heat transport and distribution networks to simultaneously
supply geothermal heat to multiple urban areas. To this end, a holistic approach comprising the mapping
of geothermal potential for direct-use, the estimation of district heating potential, and a two-step optimization
model to calculate cost-optimal large-scale geothermal district heating systems, is presented and applied to the
Free State of Bavaria in Germany. As a result, heat supply costs can be reduced by 15% if fewer geothermal wells
are drilled in more geologically favorable areas at greater distances from heat sinks. Calculated levelized costs of
heat without local distribution networks of 33–39 €/MWh show that geothermal energy could transition from a
local to a regional use if utilized in in scenarios with high full-load hours. The proposed methodology can be adapted to develop expansion strategies for deep geothermal energy in other similar regions worldwide.
«Geothermal energy can play an important role in decarbonizing the heating sector, however, a limiting factor is
that heat demand in urban areas does not usually coincide spatially with geological settings favorable to the
extraction of geothermal energy. Long-distance heat transport could enable the direct use of geothermal resources
even in areas with low or no geothermal potential. This paper proposes the cost-optimal coordinated
deployment of geothermal heating plants together with heat t...
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