What's happening at PGV

Saturday August 1, 2009

On a clear day, you can see Kalapana...

On any given day, operations at Puna Geothermal Venture (PGV) look pretty quiet. This is often a disappointment to those expecting to see derricks pumping and boilers boiling. State-of-the-art technology has made geothermal energy production a clean, quiet and generally uneventful process. But a lot goes on behind the scenes.

At least twice per 12-hour shift, operators make the rounds of five production wells and 10 turbines. It’s a technical job, monitoring all plant activities and making adjustments needed to maintain a continuous flow of power for our island residents and businesses. Electronic data from all areas is fed into a bank of computers where technicians also monitor any unusual signs.

PGV employs about 30 people, contributing $3 million in tax revenues as well as royalties to the state. We maintain our own workshop on site where welding crews build and repair most of the pipes and precision equipment used at the plant. A lot of this work is done by our local contractors: Fukunaga Electric, Airgas Gaspro, G.W. Construction, and others.

We are good neighbors.

Surrounded by wild cane and papaya fields, in the Puna District south of Hilo, the plant has a small footprint, low emissions, and is relatively noise-free. Once the water and steam from the Earth are spent generating electricity, any excess is returned underground. The closed system never reaches the air, uses no fossil fuels and produces no greenhouse gasses.

If we anticipate any maintenance or construction work, we notify our neighbors. There’s a 24-hour call line for questions. In case of emergencies, such as the 2006 quake off the Big Island, a PGV team arrives within minutes—many of them live nearby.

Since PGV’s acquisition in 2004 by Ormat Technologies, Inc., a global leader in geothermal production, we’ve spent millions upgrading our technologies.

The vision began in the 1881 when Hawai‘i’s visionary King David Kalakaua, known for his interest in new things, traveled to New York to meet with Thomas Edison about generating electricity from Earth’s heat.

Today Hawai‘i is one of the most advanced states in harnessing volcanic hot spots to produce electricity—and has a potential for much more. Interest extends beyond our shores. A BBC News team visited PGV last year and filmed the operation from a small rise overlooking the plant. In the distance, clouds of steam rose along the coastline south of Kalapana as crimson hot lava from Kilauea exploded into the cool ocean waters.

We at Puna Geothermal Venture consider this a precious local resource, to be used wisely.

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