What is Geothermal Energy?

The sun has always provided heat for the earth. Its energy warms the earth directly, but also indirectly. Its heat evaporates water from the lakes and streams, which eventually falls back to earth and filters into the ground. A few metres of surface soil insulate the earth and ground water below. The warm earth and ground water below  the surface provide a free, renewable source of energy for as long as the sun continues to shine. The earth under an average residential lot can easily provide enough free energy to heat and cool the home built on it.

The free energy has only to be moved from the ground into your home. This is done either by pumping water from a  well (open loop) or by pumping a heat transfer fluid through a horizontal or vertical circuit of underground piping (closed loop). The fluid, called the heat transfer fluid, absorbs the heat in the ground water or soil and transfers it to the heat pump. The heat absorbed by the fluid from the solar-heated ground is extracted from it by the heat pump, and the now-chilled fluid is circulated through a heat exchanger over and over again to extract more heat from the earth.

If your home is located near a suitable pond or lake, you can use a Geo- Exchange System (GXS) to draw on this excellent source of free energy.

Burying a loop in the ground around your home is like owning your own oil well, but instead of pumping oil from an underground pool and burning it to create heat (and greenhouse gases), you tap into clean energy that will be there for as long as there is a sun.

Latest News

CGC Publishes Commercial Designer Accreditation

Montréal, 2012-01-11
The Canadian GeoExchange Coalition (CGC) released a new geothermal qualityprogram designation for commercial geothermal heat pump system designer...Read more

Canada to Host the 11th International Energy Agency Heat Pump Conference

2011-12-12, Montreal
The Canadian GeoExchange Coalition (CGC) has been awarded the organization of the 11th International Energy Agency Heat Pump Conference (IEA-HPC)....Read more

CGC Bursary Winners Announced

2011-12-07, Markham (Ontario)
Five Masters and PhD candidates engaged in original post-graduate studies related to geothermal heat pump technology have been awarded a combined ...Read more

CGC Announces the Winners of the 5th Annual GeoExchange Excellence Awards

2011-12-07, Markham (Ontario)
The Canadian GeoExchange Coalition (CGC) heartily congratulated the 2011 winners of the 5th GeoExchange Excellence Awards here tonight. The prizes...Read more

CGC Invests $10,000 in St. Lawrence College Foundation

2011-12-07, Markham (Ontario)
The Canadian GeoExchange Coalition today proudly announced that its board of directors have approved a one-time $10,000 contribution to the St....Read more