AFP, Baoding :
Chinese state-run energy giant Sinopec has drilled hundreds of wells across the country without finding a single drop of oil. But that was precisely the point: instead of black gold, the almost mile deep holes are providing clean heat for local homes.
While two-thirds of China’s electricity is generated by coal, almost all of the homes in northern Hebei province’s Xiong district-home to 400,000 people — are heated by wells as deep as 1,500 metres (5,000 feet).
In a new apartment in the district, a 60-year-old retiree watched his granddaughters hop about in bare feet, impervious to the frost outside.
“This floor heating works like a dream,” said Li Fuzeng. “And they say it’s clean energy.”
The temperature inside his home was 28 degrees Celsius (82 degrees Fahrenheit) and a citrus tree in the corner showed no signs of winter.
Chen Menghui, director of Sinopec’s geothermal branch in Hebei, said the process depends on a cycle of running water.
“These underground wells are pumped with water, which comes out at a temperature of around 70 C before flowing into the heating system,” he said.
Though experts say there is immense potential in China’s subterranean heat reserves, they remain largely unexploited, accounting for less than 0.5 percent of the Asian giant’s energy consumption.