Call for abstracts – 52nd Stanford Geothermal Workshop, 8-10 February 2027

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Abstracts are now being accepted for the 52nd Stanford Geothermal Workshop, taking place on 8-10 February 2027. Remote participation is also possible.
Abstract submission is now open for the 52nd Stanford Geothermal Workshop, taking place on 8-10 February 2027 at the Stanford University. Abstracts will be accepted until 8 October 2026. For accepted abstracts, full papers will be due on 29 January 2027.
Click here to submit your abstract/s.
Those who wish to attend can also register now.
Papers will be presented on recent research relating to geothermal reservoirs including:
- Case Studies: reservoir response to production, effects of injection, scaling characteristics
- Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS): current and future activities
- Engineering Techniques: reservoir simulation, empirical methods, well tests, tracers
- Field Management: strategies for exploitation, injection, scale inhibition
- Exploration: geophysics, geochemistry, geology, heat flow studies, outflows
- Drilling and Well Bore Flows: well stimulation, bore flow modeling, hydro-fracturing, scaling
- Low Enthalpy Systems: applications of heat pumps, hot dry rock technology
- Geosciences: application of geophysics, geochemistry, thermodynamics and fluid mechanics.
Just as in 2026, remote attendance will be provided as an option for the upcoming Stanford Geothermal Workshop. Remote attendees must be logged in and registered to access the live sessions. Those attending remotely can view all the presentations in real time, but will not be able to participate in the Q&A. However, all speakers must be present in person.
The event is also open to sponsors that would like to offer financial support for the workshop. Support from sponsors helps keep the registrations fees for the workshop modest, thus allowing more people to attend, especially students and international participants. Please contact Prof. Roland Horne for more information about becoming a sponsor.
RELATED: What a Stanford study reveals about EGS and clean grids
Source: Stanford University