DutchNews, May 11, 2017
Work on boring a four-kilometer-deep shaft
below the Westland greenhouse growing region near The Hague has begun, the
Financieele Dagblad reported on
Thursday.
The pilot Trias Westland boring tower will be operative in September
but it will be December before the first geothermal heat will be pumped up to
serve the vast flower and vegetable growing greenhouses in the area. The heat
comes in the form of water heated to 140 degrees.
The €50m pilot project will
be twice the size of other geothermal heating plants in the Netherlands. Trias
Westland director Marco van Soerland said geothermal projects are much more
expensive than solar panels as a heat source.
It remains uncertain whether the
project will succeed, Van Soerland said. The Westland auction as well as 43
growers have committed to buying the geothermal heat which, if succesfull, is
expected to provide between 10% and 20% of annual heating needs.
Van Soerland
said that green energy is increasingly important. ‘Growers, whether they be in
flowers or vegetables, have clients who demand sustainable products.’ The
projected lifetime of a geothermal shaft is 15 years.
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