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A resource for New Zealand Science and Physics students.
Water
being discharged to the Waikato River has physically eroded the cement,
exposing the larger stones. This process has been accelerated
by acids that are formed when Hydrogen sulfide gas dissolves in the
condenser water - Image: Heurisko Ltd.
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Excess hot water is disposed of by Discharge
or Re-injection. The proportions of each have
changed over time.
Discharge
Discharge is when water is drained into the
Waikato River. Originally this was the only method
used at Wairakei.
Currently about 60 000 tonnes per day is discharged
into the Waikato River.
Reinjection
The
pipeline in the foreground carries hot water that will be used to recharge
underground water at the edges of the geothermal field. The ponds
behind are part of a prawn industry made possible by the use
of waste heat energy - Image: Heurisko Ltd.
Re-injection is when hot water is pumped deep
underground either within the geothermal system
itself or outside the system into cold groundwater.
Re-injection investigations began in 1978, twenty
years after generation began in an attempt to
avoid the contamination of the Waikato River
by elements such as arsenic in geothermal water.
Currently
about 46, 000 tonnes per day is re-injected.
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