05/09/2026
They did not just find heat. They drilled straight into liquid rock.
At 2,100 meters below the surface of Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula, engineers hit a magma chamber burning at 1,000 degrees Celsius. Standard geothermal wells tap into underground hot springs. This project tapped into the literal mechanics of the planet. To survive the extreme heat and highly corrosive environment, they lined the drill casing with titanium. It channeled steam exiting at 400 degrees and massive pressure directly into a custom-designed turbine.
The result is 36 megawatts of pure power from a single well. That is ten times more electricity than a conventional geothermal site. Iceland now plans to build a dozen more of these engineered wells at Resvellir. Within a few years, the entire peninsula will be powered by raw volcanic energy ripped straight from the mantle.