Deep beneath our feet lies a virtually limitless source of clean energy, yet tapping it has long been prohibitively costly. Now, a surge of British investment is challenging that calculus, as startups and energy giants alike drill deeper into the Earth's crust to harness geothermal power. The technology is not new, but advances in drilling techniques and materials science are driving costs down, making geothermal a tantalising prospect for the UK's net-zero ambitions.
Geothermal energy exploits the Earth's internal heat, typically by pumping water through hot rocks kilometres underground and using the resulting steam to drive turbines. Conventional plants rely on naturally occurring hydrothermal reservoirs, which are rare. However, enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) can create artificial reservoirs in hot, dry rock by injecting water under pressure. This vastly expands the potential resource, but at a price: drilling to depths of five kilometres or more is expensive, and the initial investment can run into hundreds of millions of pounds.
Yet recent breakthroughs are shifting the economic outlook. British startup GeoSciTech has developed a novel drill bit that uses ultra-high-pressure water jets to cut through granite three times faster than traditional mechanical bits, slashing drilling time and cost. Another firm, HeatBelow, is repurposing abandoned oil and gas wells, reducing upfront capital requirements by up to 40%. Meanwhile, the UK government's Geothermal Energy Taskforce has committed £90 million to pilot projects in Cornwall, the Scottish Highlands, and the North East, where geothermal gradients are highest.
Proponents argue that geothermal offers something other renewables cannot: constant, baseload power, regardless of weather or time of day. Unlike wind and solar, it runs 24/7 with minimal land footprint. A single EGS plant can produce 50-100 megawatts, enough to power tens of thousands of homes. Moreover, the heat can be directly used for district heating, reducing gas consumption for heating, which accounts for a third of UK emissions.
But sceptics warn of 'Black Mirror' consequences: induced seismicity, even minor earthquakes, has plagued EGS projects in Switzerland and South Korea. Drilling also risks contaminating aquifers if not properly managed. And the economics remain uncertain: even with innovations, the levelised cost of electricity from geothermal is still around £80-120 per megawatt-hour, compared to £40-50 for onshore wind. Without sustained government subsidies or a carbon price floor, the industry may struggle to scale.
Yet the race is on. Iceland has already shown it is possible, deriving 30% of its electricity from geothermal. The UK, with its ample deep geothermal potential, could follow suit. The question is whether the upfront investment will pay off, or whether this is another tech-hope bubble that will fizzle out. For now, the drilling rigs are turning, and the ground beneath us is no longer just dirt and rock, but a potential energy goldmine waiting to be unlocked.








