For almost 150 years, visitors have ventured to central Colorado to soak in pools at Mount Princeton Hot Springs Resort, a major tourist attraction benefiting from mineral-rich water heated deep ...
This story is part of the Hotspots series exploring Colorado's geothermal energy industry by CPR's Climate Solutions Team. Explore the series here. Fred Henderson doesn’t expect to live long enough to ...
As Colorado’s leaders look for options beyond wind and solar, the state’s next “hot” energy source could be geothermal power, which can heat and cool buildings as fluid circulates through underground ...
In CUriosity, experts across the CU Boulder campus answer questions about humans, our planet and the universe beyond. Shemin Ge, professor in the Department of Geological Sciences, shares how a source ...
A major question looms over Colorado’s energy future: why does geothermal energy — a natural renewable resource — remain virtually untapped? Professor Bri-Mathias Hodge, based in the Department of ...
Geothermal energy is not new in Colorado. Pagosa Springs’ geothermal heating network has been around for roughly half a century, and it's not the only one. Hot springs pools, such as the Glenwood Hot ...