higher than the California air
quality standard.
To prove that this response was

Mineralized emissions
from cooling towers
Utility companies realize that

the Statewide Air Pollution
Research Center at the University

will inevitably be associated with
geothermal energy production) can
kill off nearby vegetation as it escapes from the cooling towers. At
the Geysers, the Pacific Gas and
Electric Companyhas observed the
death of more and moreplants in
deposition zones downwind from
its powerstations. However, the affected area is of trivial size com-

the rule rather than the exception,

of California, Riverside, screened

many crop and tree species under
laboratory conditions to determine
- their relative sensitivity to hydrogen
sulfide. Later, we used GROW1, an
LLNL-developed computer simulation of the mechanisms of
biochemical transformation of sulfur and energy allocation in plants,

to show that the observed

heavily mineralized water (which

pared to the land area (approx-

imately 5% of the total) required for
roads and well heads.
We have measured mineral
deposition by positioning potted
barley plants and passive aerosol
collectors downwind from The
ozone—is present). Hydrogen sul- Geysers power plants. Boron
fide is thus only a problem from the showed up in the barley and native
point of view of odor. The Califor: plants and in animals. At 100m
nia air quality standard has a more downwind, deposition was
than adequate margin to protect
primarily a result of the drift of livegetation, even when ozone is
quid aerosols (reflected in high flux
also present.
rates onto leaf tissue and the
ground). However, at 1200 m and

physiological responses do not indicate a substantial toss of growth
for any reasonable, worst-case
geothermal emission scenario
(even when urban smog—i.e.,

beyond, we observed higher

deposition of cooling tower
minerals than would be expected
from liquid aerosol transport. Thus,
dry transport and deposition

mechanisms must also be
operative. We observedsignificant
increasesin the levels of minerals in
runoff water collected at the confluence of streams draining the
area. Figure 3 shows boron and sulfate concentrations attributed to
deposition on watersheds surrounding The Geysers.
Although aquatic ecosystemsat
The Geysers may well be adapted
to these relatively minor increases,
it is important that this mode of
transport (and the ultimate fate of
the minera! material chronically
deposited) be investigated because
of the possibility of serious effects

over a period of decades. This

potential problem has only recently
been recognized.
Summary

Concem about hydrogen sulfide

has been a substantial institutional
impediment to the development of
geothermal resources. However,
our research showsthatits actual
impact on ecosystems is minor.

Conversely, the long-range
transport of minerals from cooling
towers has been largely ignored,
but it appears to be worthy of
further investigation.
Key words: boron; geothermal energy; geother-

mal power plants; hydrogen sulfides.

Notes and references
1.

See “Portable Instrumentation for Environmental Field Studies,” in the September
1980 Energy and Technology Reuieu

(UCRL-52000-80-9), pp. 36-41.

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