Big Island Geothermal Projects Drawing Much Interest

More and more people are looking into the possibility of doing geothermal projects. Mililani Trask and the Honolulu-based Innovations Development Group, a Native Hawaiian renewable-energy development firm, are interested in pursuing a geothermal model that benefits the local community, not only the developer. They have been doing just that in New Zealand.

Ku‘ulei Kealoha Cooper-Springer, trustee of the Kealoha Estate, told me that Jimmy and Miulan Kealoha, her grandma and grandpa, told her many, many years ago that she should pursue geothermal. She said the trust has 89 acres in the geothermal subzone, and that now the time seems to be right.

I have spoken with a representative of another group that is very interested, too, as well as another landowner.

If HELCO were ready to purchase geothermal power, many people would step forward right now.

There has been a major change in how geothermal is perceived by the native Hawaiian community, compared to in the 1970s, when it was done in a heavy-handed, “top-down” manner. The old technology that existed in the 1970s has been replaced by much safer production methods. Puna Geothermal has been in operation for many years now as a good neighbor.

And the world around us has changed since then. The evidence is everywhere – it’s indisputable – that oil will soon start to decline, and that we must find alternatives to fossil fuel oil. The cost of electricity made with fossil fuel oil will rise with increasing oil prices. And it will be the poor folks whose lights will be turned off first. Too often, those folks will be native Hawaiian.

Geothermal is the cheapest form of “base power.” Base power is approximately 85 percent of the electric utility’s needs – it’s the dependable power that prevents our lights from flickering. Geothermal gives off no greenhouse gases, and it has a small footprint compared to solar and biofuels.

And off-peak geothermal power, which would otherwise be wasted, can be used to make H2 and NH3 for use in internal combustion engines. All that takes is electricity, water and air. We have everything we need right here in Hawai‘i to help future generations.

The tide is turning.

One thought on “Big Island Geothermal Projects Drawing Much Interest”

  1. The tide is turning…..
    Inspiring post about an available technology and abundant energy source.
    Time is running out…..
    Unfortunately this the real situation we face here in Hawaii.
    The US dollar based financial system of floating currencies, that has been successfully manipulated (to our advantage), for the last forty years since Nixon severed the relation with gold and the dollar – is unraveling faster than it takes the tide to change.
    Deficit budgets and deficit trade imbalances are destroying the dollar. Sooner than we would expect, or wished for, the price of imported oil and food is going to skyrocket – this could even happen overnight with a declaration of a devaluation of the dollar from Washington.
    Why – Because the US has more debt than it can repay.
    Expensive imported oil means everything we can’t produce is going to cost a whole bunch more. Equally disturbing is that most water on this island depends on electric pumps that use oil.
    I believe that changes in the way we live will not be in gradual like the incoming tide. None of us like sudden change. That is why this is uncomfortable to hear.
    I think there should be more of an urgency in our preparations for this inevitable new world we will be faced with.
    I also think that while our Mayor is busy prancing around in front of his new expensive TV screen, he will not be an effective leader to help us face our future.
    What do you think?

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