Hellisheiği: A Geothermal Embarrassment [View all]
Geothermal energy is commonly praised as a green alternative to environmentally unfriendly power sources such as fossil fuels, coals and nuclear energy. As a result of the development of what were once thought to be non-viable resources, a glossy brochure from engineering firm Mannvit states, more and more public and private entities are looking into geothermal power as part of their strategy to mitigate global warming while still meeting growing energy demands. In a promotional text for the Geothermal Energy Exhibition at Hellisheiði, the plant is said to be a striking example of how geothermal energy is harnessed in a sustainable manner in Iceland and a showcase for the rest of the world. Additionally, Reykjavík Energy has not hesitated maintaining that general public opinion of exploiting the geothermal resources in the Hengill region is positive.
So many men, so many minds. Only about ten kilometres away from the plant stands the small town of Hveragerði, wherein one gets to hear a completely different story. We cannot accept that OR will be permitted to continue polluting the atmosphere, Hallgrímur Þ. Magnússon, clinical doctor in Hveragerði said to newspaper DV last June. A few days earlier he had voiced his worries to local newspaper Sunnlenska, encouraging the towns residents to start taking magnesium and iodide supplements to counteract the health impacts of the power plants sulphur (hydrogen sulphide) pollution. I maintain that the pollution is of such quantity that the human body needs those two materials in order to resist the effects, Hallgrímur said to Sunnlenska.
Recent inspection makes it clear that the sulphur pollution, which does not only reach to Hveragerði but also to Reykjavík, often goes far above Icelandic and international standards. In the case of Hveragerði, the quantity of polluting materials in the atmosphere is such that the town should be considered within the plants dilution area (the area in which residential homes are not permitted).
Plus ca change...
From the
Saving Iceland website.
The cited article is
Hellisheiði: A Geothermal Embarrassment
Apparently not all Icelanders are content to live in a renewable energy paradise.