Colleges Explore Geothermal Power Systems
By wchung | 20 Apr, 2026
More college campuses are exploring geothermal power as a way to reduce energy costs that can add up to millions of dollars each year.
Schools from Wisconsin to New Mexico have geothermal projects in the works, and 46 schools are sharing millions in federal stimulus money to advance technology that uses the Earth’s temperature to heat and cool buildings.
A typical geothermal system works like this:
On a warm day, the system draws heat from buildings and pumps it underground where the soil absorbs it. On a cold day, systems reverse, extracting heat from the earth and returning it to buildings.
Systems can chill water to 45 degrees or heat it to 170 degrees even though the underground temperature remains about a constant 55 degrees.
12/6/2009 1:48 PM MILWAUKEE (AP)
Recent Articles
- Samsung SDI Inks EV Battery Deal with Mercedes-Benz
- Psychedelic Drug Developer Shares Soar on Expedited FDA Approval
- Tesla's Energy Storage Division to Offset Weak EV Margins
- Jamie Dimon, Big Banks Grumble at Uneven Impact of New Bank Capital Rules
- Hormuz Shipping Reverts to Near Standstill
- Homebuilders Face Another Gloomy Year As War Adds to Hardships
- India and South Korea Ink Broad-Based $50 Billion Trade Deal
- 50 Days of Iran Conflict Cost $50 Billion Loss of Oil
- US Seizes Iranian Cargo Ship, Tehran Vows to Retaliate
- Asian Airlines See European Flight Demand Surge Amid Gulf Disruptions
