Sustainability
Most large-scale geothermal developments in New
Zealand extract water and heat at a greater rate
than the natural recharge to the system , and
are therefore "heat mining". However,
where pressures have been reduced significantly
by exploitation, as at Wairakei, in some cases
the rate of replenishment from depth has increased
several-fold to match the discharge rate.
This,
combined with the ability to recycle fluids through
reinjection, means that it can be difficult to
define what is meant by renewability and sustainable
management of a geothermal resource.
Although some geothermal resources have been over-exploited and had to reduce their generating capacity, as at Ohaaki, no geothermal field has ever been run to exhaustion. In practice, all resource consents to take and reinject are framed in terms of fluid mass withdrawal, and in some cases there are limits on how much energy can be extracted. The fact that Wairakei has been operating for 50 years, resource consents for a further 25 years at the same generation capacity have been given, and reservoir modelling indicates that the resource will remain viable for at least another 25 years beyond that all demonstrate the longevity of geothermal resources.