The drive to run New Zealand on 100 per cent renewable power could get a boost if scientists discover pockets of energy they suspect are buried between 5km and 7km deep.
Geologists think there may be enough scalding hot water locked in underground reservoirs to power more than half the country's homes - if it can be found and tapped.
They have embarked on a four-year project to plumb the country's main geothermal hot-bed, the Taupo Volcanic Zone in the central North Island, to depths twice what existing geothermal drilling projects can reach.
Project leader Greg Bignall of GNS Science said there could be the equivalent of up to 10,000MW of electricity, every year for 100 years, in fissures deeper and hotter than they ones they have tapped.
"We have the potential with conventional geothermal energy to expand to 20 per cent [of New Zealand's electricity] - that is our target," said Mr Bignall.
"If we can go deeper ... there is quite a potential [for more]."
Geothermal fluid is born when rainwater penetrates deep into the earth's crust and encounters sizzling hot rock.
It flows through underground fissures in the rock and sometimes shoots to the surface as mud pools, hot springs or geysers.
Steam from geothermal fluid drawn from as deep as 3.5km - as far as present drilling has gone - powers seven electricity stations, six of them in the Taupo Volcanic Zone, generating about 640MW a year, or 10 per cent of the country's electricity.
Scientists want to know if there are enough fissures carrying energy-rich fluid below that to justify spending tens of millions of dollars drilling deeper.
GNS will make a three-dimensional computer model of the deep geothermal field with help from fellow Crown scientists at Industrial Research and Auckland and Victoria Universities.
If there are enough "wet, hot" spots, companies such as Mighty River Power or Contact Energy may gain the confidence to drill deeper.
Drilling the deep fields would cost 10 times the $4 million each year allocated for the initial research - but the deeper water could be up to a quarter hotter than the hottest water found so far.
Deeper than 8km, the rock becomes too soft for geothermal drilling.
"Nothing is going to happen overnight," said Mr Bignall.
"But if we don't start looking at it now, in five years' time we'll say, 'Why didn't we look at that five or six years ago?'."
Mr Bignall said New Zealand was lucky to sit on a thin spot in the earth's crust.
"We don't have to drill very far to get very hot [water]."
The cental North Island had all of the ingredients of a top-notch geothermal power source: "[We have had] a lot of rifts, faults, and shakes and a lot of rain.
"Fluid has percolated down to great depths via all these fractures and then, because we are in a part of the earth where the crust is thinner, it has allowed the heat to come closer to the surface."
Geothermal drilling releases some CO2 from underground into the atmosphere, but its emissions are much less than coal and gas-fired electricity generation.
It is considered renewable because the hot water underground replenishes over time - though not as quickly as it is often extracted.
Natural features such as hot springs, mud pools and geysers can be damaged when heat and pressure are taken from under them - so most geothermal power stations pump used fluid back underground to maintain pressure and stop pollutants in it such as arsenic reaching rivers and streams.
POWER OF GEOTHERMAL
* Rain water travels down through deep faults in the earth where it is heated by hot rocks to 300C or more.
* Hot water travels along fissures in the deep rock. Some rises to the surface and makes hot springs, mud pools, and geysers,
* Power companies drill into underground fissures to release hot water and steam, which spins turbines to generate electricity.
* Leftover fluid is injected back into the underground system to slow the rate of depletion and avoid contaminating rivers and streams with toxic chemicals.
Deep water could help fill NZ's energy needs
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