• A new generation of geothermal

    DryRock goes further

    The advanced geothermal sector is attracting serious capital and producing real results. Two approaches have emerged as leaders, and both carry fundamental limitations that DryRock's design overcomes.

  • Energy from the Earth

    Anywhere

    More recent approaches attempt to solve this through fracking the rock (EGS) or running kilometers of pipe through it (closed-loop conduction). Both carry significant limitations in cost, output, or permitting complexity.

Innovate with Purpose

opportunity

Enhanced and advanced geothermal represents one of the most significant untapped energy opportunities on Earth. The sector is now attracting serious institutional capital, Fervo and Eavor together have raised over $400M validating the category for new entrants with superior technology.

COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE

How it works

Uses hydraulic fracturing to crack open dry hot rock, then circulates water through the artificial fractures between multiple horizontal wells. The fluid contacts the rock directly.

Key limitations

Requires hydraulic fracturing raising induced seismicity risk and complex regulatory permitting in many jurisdictions

Open-loop fluid contact with native rock causes mineral contamination and long-term reservoir degradation

Geographic permitting constraints in seismically sensitive regions

High water consumption and fluid loss through fracture networks

 

How it works

Drills a complex network of multilateral horizontal wells forming an underground radiator. Fluid circulates through sealed pipes, absorbing heat slowly by conduction through pipe walls and rock.

Key limitations

Fundamentally limited by heat conduction rates through steel and rock, lower power output per installation than direct-extraction approaches

Requires 90+ km of total drilled well length per installation — extremely high capital cost and complexity

First commercial project delivered ~0.5 MW against an 8.2 MW Phase 1 target  output per loop remains a demonstrated challenge

Better suited for district heating than high-output electricity due to conduction-only heat transfer physics

DryRock's sealed system never fractures the rock. No induced seismicity. No mineral contamination. No fluid loss. Permittable where EGS cannot operate.

DryRock extracts heat through direct high-pressure fluid contact across the full borehole depth, not slow conduction through pipe walls. Higher output from a single vertical well, without 90+ km of lateral drilling.

A multi-stage power generation architecture high-enthalpy thermal energy maximizes energy recovery per installation
A multi-stage power generation architecture high-enthalpy thermal energy maximizes energy recovery per installation

CORE EXTRACTION AND POWER GENERATION TECHNOLOGY

WHY US

Existing closed-loop approaches extract heat slowly, by conduction through kilometers of pipe. DryRock's technology extracts heat aggressively through direct high-pressure thermal contact across the full depth of the formation delivering higher output from a fraction of the drilling footprint.

No Aquifer required

No dependence on underground water reservoirs.Designed to access geothermal energy without requiring naturally occurring aquifers, potentially expanding deployment opportunities beyond traditional geothermal regions.

No rock fracturing / fracking

No hydraulic fracturing required. Avoids the complexity, costs, and environmental concerns associated with fracturing rock formations to create geothermal reservoirs.

Fluid never contacts native rock

Closed-loop thermal extraction.The working fluid remains isolated from the surrounding geology, reducing scaling, contamination, mineral deposition, and reservoir management challenges.

No seismicity risk

Designed to minimize induced seismic activity.By avoiding rock stimulation and fracture creation, the system aims to reduce risks associated with induced seismic events.

Single Well Drilling footprint

Smaller surface footprint. A simplified well architecture may reduce land use, infrastructure requirements, and drilling complexity compared with multi-well geothermal systems.

Target output per unit 30 MW (design target)

Higher power density per installation. Designed to deliver utility-scale output from a single deployment, potentially improving project economics and reducing infrastructure duplication.

Global geographic flexibility

Broader deployment potential. Not limited to conventional hydrothermal reservoirs, creating opportunities in regions previously considered unsuitable for geothermal development.

Zero CO₂ emissions

Continuous carbon-free energy.Provides reliable baseload power without direct operational carbon emissions, supporting long-term decarbonization goals..

DryRock Energy