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Page 1: Crystal Hot Springs

Crystal Hot Springs• Located in Draper, Utah, near Point-of-

the Mountain

• Series of natural warm springs and ponds

• Used since pioneer times for stock watering, recreational swimming, log floating, beaver raising

• Area has been rural in nature since pioneer times, now facing heavy urban development pressure

• Crystal Hot Springs is in a good geographic position for more intensive use – the prison might be relocated

Page 2: Crystal Hot Springs

• Geo-Exchange vs Geothermal– Heat pump to take advantage

of differential temperature of air or soil

– Not considered renewable energy

– Not considered geothermal energy

• Direct Use vs Indirect Use– Deep circulation of meteoric

water through terrestrial heator

– Water arising from cooling of a magma body – possibly Roosevelt and Cove Fort

Page 3: Crystal Hot Springs

• Crystal Hot Springs is located in Intermountain fault system

• The spring system is located between two closely spaced range-front faults that are intersected by a north-northeast striking fault.

• The geothermal system is fed by mountain rain and snowfall that descend through fractured bedrock

• Geothermal heat is from normal terrestrial heat flow rather than from igneous rock

• Geothermal water quality meets secondary drinking water standards

• Deep well temperature reaches 195ºF• Artesian flow varies from 600 to 1,000

gallons per minute• A long-term decline in ground water

table is due to regional well pumping• The groundwater system may be

limestone that produces corrosive CO2

Page 4: Crystal Hot Springs

Regional Drought Conditions

Summer pond level is usually higher than winter

Page 5: Crystal Hot Springs

Crystal Hot SpringsSalt Lake County

N

Bluffdale Flowers

Utah Prison

High Tech Fisheries

I-15 Freeway

Ponds

Oquirrh 4

To Jordan River

Future Wetland

Scale: ¼ mile

Page 6: Crystal Hot Springs

Utah Department of Corrections – Draper Prison

Collaborative Effort and Performance Contract ---- Utah Department of

Corrections- Utah Department of Facilities

Construction and Management (DFCM)

- Johnson Controls, ESCO- Utah Energy Office

Page 7: Crystal Hot Springs

Reduce facility operation and maintenance costs

• Prison totals 1.1 million square feet

• Base year total annual energy cost of $2.0 million

• Project includes measures for:– Electric load– building heat load– Water demand– Solid waste

• Maximum overall cost of $5,800,000

• Minimum annual savings of $228,000

Page 8: Crystal Hot Springs

1983 Geothermal Heat Project

• Original project supplied space heat and hot water to the Oquirrh 4 dormitory, gymnasium, cafeteria and offices

• Heavy corrosion shut down equipment after about one year of operation

• Failure caused by intrusion of air into system, CO2, minerals and lack of adequate system materials

• System abandoned in place

• One well site lost to memory

Page 9: Crystal Hot Springs

2003 Phase I Geothermal

• Supply building heat and hot water to Oquirrh 4 buildings totaling 40,000 square feet

• Hollow masonry, single pane windows, dampers fixed

• Use existing circulation system with automatic back-up to campus steam system

• Installation cost $519,000

• $68,000 minimum annual savings in avoided cost of fossil fuel

• 7.6 year payback on investment

• 17 year equipment life

Page 10: Crystal Hot Springs

• New plate and frame heat exchanger

• Variable speed drive on the building side for heat control

• Constant speed pump on geothermal side to prevent air intrusion supply 240 to 300 gallons per minute

• Digital controls

• Existing fan and coil space heat distribution system

• No holding tank, few strainers and limited entry of valves and sensors

• Improved materials such as fiberglass reinforced plastic pipes

• Geothermal temperature of 185ºF and maximum 40 ºF drop across exchanger

• Outfall water can reach 160ºF, usable for additional downstream use

• Initial savings in avoided natural gas use are estimated at $17,000 per month for winter months

• Use of 100 percent make-up air to meet indoor air quality standard and poor insulation quality of Oquirrh 4 buildings suggest that savings in avoided natural gas may be under-estimated

Page 11: Crystal Hot Springs

Phase II Geothermal - 2005

• Replace the fixed speed 10-horsepower geothermal well pump by a 25-horsepower variable speed drive that can potentially deliver up to the full water right of 750 gpm

• Add a second heat exchanger

• Expand building heat and hot water to the prison furniture shop, sewing shop and Special Service Dormitory that may total 252,350 square feet of building area.

• Geothermal system success may require improved fan-coil heaters, upgraded insulation and digital controls and improvements to the existing back-up boiler to better fit the geothermal system

Page 12: Crystal Hot Springs

Bluffdale Flowers

• Formerly known as “Utah Roses” began business in 1981

• Clearfield commercial greenhouses were formerly in Clearfield and Sandy

• Natural gas and fuel oil were used for heating greenhouse space

• Geothermal well in Sandy, 5,000 feet deep, 120º F water

• Initial geothermal system provided 250 gallons per minute

• Current greenhouse space totals 250,000 square feet

Page 13: Crystal Hot Springs

• Buildings and equipment from other sites have been moved to Draper site

• An expansion of greenhouse space is tentatively underway, totaling 80,000 to 250,000 square feet

• Production of fish for culinary use is being considered

• Temporary elimination of heat exchanger resulted in immediate corrosion of distribution system

• Plate and frame heat exchanger intake is at 185ºF, discharge at 160ºF

• No back-up heating system existing – greenhouse space may descend to near freezing in winter

Page 14: Crystal Hot Springs

• Bluffdale circulates heated water both above and below the growing tables

• City water is used for heat exchanger and irrigation due to poor quality well water

• Drilling of wells east of freeway may prove successful, as done by the prison

• Re-heating of geothermal flow by natural gas may be needed to heat that new space.

• Natural gas may augment geothermal for space heat and provide for on-site power generation due to high electrical load for fan and pump motors

Page 15: Crystal Hot Springs

• - At present, foreign competition in the flower business is complicating the decision to expand

• - Drought conditions are evident in lower spring flow, but were not a factor in the 2004-05 winter due to mild weather conditions.

• - There is some indication that the drought may be easing

Page 16: Crystal Hot Springs

There is some question about the long term adequacy of geothermal flow due to:

• long-term water table decline

• potential loss of flow caused by prison use of geothermal water, especially with Phase II

• potential commitment of surface discharge from prison to wetland development

• Persistent regional drought conditions

• Other water rights issues

Page 17: Crystal Hot Springs

• Corrosion in pipes from geothermal chemistry resulted in replacement of the main pump shaft last fall and the main heat exchanger was replaced a couple of years ago

• At present, Bluffdale Flowers uses a 40-horsepower line-shaft pump running at constant speed to supply geothermal water from a well depth of about 200 feet.

• Reinjection of geothermal flow to preserve water right was not successful due to poor soil conditions. State of Utah removed requirement

Page 18: Crystal Hot Springs

High Tech Fisheries• 25-year old aquaculture

business

• Tropical fish production is for aquarium use

• The most successful of many attempts in the area

• Drought conditions have hampered operations

Page 19: Crystal Hot Springs

• Geothermal flow is marginally adequate for aquaculture due to temperature loss in transit

• Geothermal flow has been re-routed to boost volume

• Labor is provided by prison inmates

Page 20: Crystal Hot Springs

• 300 varieties of fish have been raised

• Crystal Lake has hosted many until recently

• Uncertainty over water rights affects business outlook

Page 21: Crystal Hot Springs

- Geothermal conditions resemble Africa’s Lake Malawi

- Fish propagation area totals 4,500 square feet

- commercial vegetables have been tried, but not done at present

- tropical plants for aquariums may prove successful again

- water rights issues are emerging as prison geothermal use expands and wetland development is planned

Page 22: Crystal Hot Springs

• 7 natural ponds are fed by artesian flow, going dry unpredictably

• Regional groundwater pumping and geothermal development limit pond size and flow

• Careful use and development could expand commercial uses and natural environment

• Heavy urban development may encroach on, or enhance the resource

• Water rights issues will become more important

Long Term Outlook for Crystal Hot Springs


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