Green Energy and Sustainability ISSN 2771-1641

Green Energy and Sustainability 2024;4(3):0004 | https://doi.org/10.47248/ges2404030004

Perspective Open Access

Paul Younger — a pioneer in UK geothermal energy

Jon Gluyas 1,2 , Charlotte Adams 1,3

  • Durham Energy Institute, Durham University, Durham DH1 3LE, UK
  • Department of Earth Sciences, Durham University, Durham DH1 3LE, UK
  • UK National Geothermal Centre, Netpark Research Institute, Stockton-On-Tees TS21 3FB, UK

Correspondence: Jon Gluyas

Academic Editor(s): Mina Shahi

Received: Sep 7, 2024 | Accepted: Sep 17, 2024 | Published: Sep 21, 2024

Cite this article: Gluyas J, Adams C. Paul Younger — a pioneer in UK geothermal energy. Green Energy Sustain 2024; 4(3):0004. https://doi.org/10.47248/ges2404030004

Abstract

Paul Younger was an outstanding geologist born and bred in the northeast of England and although he spent time away, his geological umbilical firmly fixed him in the region encompassing the counties of Northumberland and Durham their cities, towns and pit villages; an area for which the geology underpinned the industrial and social development. The linkage between geology and industry is commonly reflected in the groundwater of area and it was this that first stimulated Paul into research. He became a hydrogeologist. But Paul recognised that there is more to adit water outflow than solutes. The water told another story, one of heat below the surface, copious amounts of it. The warm and tepid waters encountered by Paul in the region set him thinking about geothermal energy. In 2004 he became the first person in 20 years to drill a dedicated geothermal appraisal well in the UK at Eastgate in Weardale. He followed up with a second well in Eastgate in 2010 and a third in central Newcastle in 2011. Paul was passionate about the energy transition and saw geothermal energy as a vast resource, easily won and one which could affect a fundamental change in the way we heat our homes and places of work. Sadly, Paul did not live to see the UK National Geothermal Centre formed in 2024. It is nonetheless a product of his vision.

Keywords

Paul Younger, geothermal energy, Weardale, hydrogeology

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