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Webinar – What 50 Years of Enhanced Geothermal Teaches Us Today, 17-18 September 2025

Webinar – What 50 Years of Enhanced Geothermal Teaches Us Today, 17-18 September 2025 Small scale ORC module installed in the Soultz-sous-Forêts geothermal power plant. The module is composed by Gasket Plate Heat Exchanger, an Enogia ORC and an internal cold loop with a dry cooler (source: MEET)
Carlo Cariaga 10 Sep 2025

Registration is open for a series of webinars hosted by the CATF that looks at the past 50 years of enhanced geothermal (EGS) development in Europe and the U.S.

Registration is now open for a series of webinars organized by the Clean Air Task Force (CATF) that looks at the past 50 years of enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) projects around the world. There will be two webinars – one focusing on the U.S., and other focusing in Europe. The webinar details and registration links are below:

U.S. –  17 September, 2:00pm – 3:00pm ETClick here to register

  • Over view of EGS trends report (Angela Seligman, CATF)
  • Overview of U.S. policies and their impact on geothermal development (Ann Garth – CATF)
  • State of the industry in the U.S. from Fervo Energy (Mary Dhillon – Fervo Energy)

Europe – 18 September, 3:00pm – 4:00pm CETClick here to register

  • Overview of EGS trends report (Angela Seligman – CATF)
  • Overview of European policies and their impact on geothermal development (Alessia Virone – CATF)
  • State of the industry in Europe (Tony Pink – Pink Granite Consulting)

Over the past five decades, enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) have transformed from a novel concept into a key pillar of clean, firm energy innovation. From the past experiments at Fenton Hill in New Mexico, and Soultz-sous-Forêts in France, to today’s cutting-edge, high-temperature applications in both Europe and the U.S., EGS has evolved dramatically, thus paving the way for scalable, reliable geothermal energy.

These webinars will serve as a preview of a global trends report commissioned by CATF that captures the  technical, economic, and geographic trajectory of more than 100 EGS projects worldwide.

Source: Email correspondence