XGS Energy says its advanced geothermal tech is ready to scale up

XGS completed its first pilot project in late 2024 with a 100-meter-deep well in central Texas. Earlier this year, the startup began operating a full-scale prototype using an idled well at the Coso geothermal field in the Western Mojave Desert region of California. The well runs more than 1,000 meters deep — a standard depth for commercial geothermal wells — and reaches subsurface temperatures of around 200 degrees Celsius (392 degrees Fahrenheit).

For 3,000 hours, or 125 days, XGS continuously ran its closed-loop system while adjusting key variables, such as the rate at which liquid flows and the amount of heat extracted at the surface. The idea was to simulate how the technology performs in different operating conditions, in order to prove it can withstand various types of stress while also demonstrating the company can accurately predict the system’s performance.

An illustration of an XGS geothermal well, with a pipe-in-pipe system surrounded by the startup’s Thermal Reach Enhancement material. Arrows show working fluid flow within the fully cased system. (XGS)

The startup claims the prototype’s actual performance fell within 2% of its predictions, results that XGS later verified with independent engineers, Prueher said. Being able to accurately predict how a project will perform — and for how long — is an essential step for the company to be able to raise the many millions of dollars in debt financing it needs to build its first geothermal power plants, he added.

This unlocks a huge commercial pipeline that has been accumulating in parallel,” Prueher said of the test results. Along with the 150 MW it’s developing with Meta, the startup has lined up over 3 gigawatts of projects mostly in the Western United States, where water sensitivity is a huge issue, and where there’s a strong demand signal from data centers and other types of clean energy consumers to build this as quickly as we can.”

XGS has raised $55 million so far from private investors to develop its heat-harvesting technology. One of its biggest backers is VoLo Earth Ventures, which focuses on early-stage climatetech companies.

Joe Goodman, a managing partner for VoLo, said his firm identified XGS as one of the leading geothermal solutions” about a year and a half ago after reviewing its experimental lab data, and Goodman later joined XGS’s board of directors.

By boosting the system’s overall energy output, XGS’s thermally conductive materials could be the key to making closed-loop geothermal more economically viable, he said, adding that the technology also sidesteps the concerns around water-supply constraints facing enhanced geothermal systems.

We’re quite optimistic about what we’ve seen,” Goodman said.

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