The journalist Stephen Lacey, who podcasts for REW, was caught in the discharge from an electric power station that he was writing about for his magazine.
Oh, did I say trapped in effluent?
What I meant to say was that the effluent from the power station is a tourist trap. Stephen was caught in a tourist trap.
The power station effluent he was caught in was Iceland's Blue Lagoon. Lacey podcasts about renewable energy for Renewable Energy World and so he was visiting this Geothermal plant you see in the background.
...and the Blue Lagoon is the famous tourist trap that this Geothermal power plant feeds with its discharged effluent.
What I meant to say was that it was so nice and warm in the beneficial effluent of the Geothermal plant that Stephen Lacey of Renewable Energy World was caught in a tourist trap.
He was there to learn about renewable power from the experts who pioneered Geothermal power in Iceland. Let's hope America does learn from Iceland.
It took Google blazing into Geothermal investment in EGS this summer (the deeper Geothermal source of power, with global potential) to get any Federal investment at all. Unlike the other fuels that we get out of the ground, Geothermal power is not a fossil fuel and does not have carbon emissions.
Via the Renewable Energy World podcast
Photo credits: Stephen Lacey and Flikr users Bev and Steve, rianklong and frogdog*
Susan Kraemer writes for Gas 2.0 and Cleantechnica. This is a reprint with permission.









