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Geothermal group receives funding for heat flow mapping in Cornwall

Geothermal group receives funding for heat flow mapping in Cornwall Cornish Valleys, Cornwall, UK (source: flickr/ Jack Pease, creative commons)
Carlo Cariaga 28 Jan 2022

Through additional boreholes and more sophisticated modelling techniques, GeoScience Ltd aims to create a more robust 3D model of the Cornwall subsurface temperature.

UK based GeoScience Limited reports having received funding through Deep Digital Cornwall (DDC) to create a new digital heat flow map in Cornwall, UK. The objective of this study is to model the heat flow in the region’s shallower geothermal resources to promote its utilization in low carbon heating.

DDC, launched in 2021, is led by the Camborne School of Mines (CSM) and the Institute for Data Science and Artificial Intelligence at the University of Exeter. Through research and technical expertise, DDC supports SMEs in Cornwall and the Isles of Sicily. The DDC project received grant funding from the European Regional Development Fund.

The heat flow mapping project of DDC will build upon data gathered from the drilling of 23 shallow boreholes in Cornwall back in the 1970s. This data had been re-evaluated in 2016 by Bearnish and Busby to create an early heat flow map that more robustly represents the subsurface temperature distribution.

To generate more comprehensive data, DDC aims for a more even distribution of data points across the county. This will involve the drilling of new boreholes, particularly in the vicinity of towns and other industrial areas where there may be high demand for heating. Subsurface temperature data can then be combined with the digital model of Cornwall geology to create a 3D subsurface digital model.

Source: GeoScience Limited

Note: We adapted the article to reflect that indeed it was GeoScience Ltd. that received the funding through Deep Digital Cornwall.