According to a recent LinkedIn post from Sage Geosystems, CEO Cindy D. Taff appeared on Bloomberg Television’s Wall Street Week alongside Ormat Technologies, Inc. CEO Doron Blachar to discuss next‑generation geothermal power. The post frames geothermal as a potential large-scale resource, suggesting it represents an energy endowment many times larger than the current U.S. electric grid.
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The company’s LinkedIn post highlights that so‑called next‑generation geothermal could expand viable development areas by 130 times compared with traditional hydrothermal regions, using methods adapted from oil and gas. The post also notes that more than $1.5 billion in private capital has flowed into advanced geothermal since 2021, which it presents as evidence of accelerating commercialization.
As shared in the post, Sage Geosystems and Ormat Technologies are working together on commercial-scale projects targeted as early as 2027, combining Sage’s subsurface expertise with Ormat’s existing geothermal footprint. For investors, this timeline, if realized, could position both companies to benefit from increasing demand for “clean firm” baseload power, especially as data centers drive an anticipated ~20% rise in U.S. electricity demand over the next decade.
The post suggests that next‑generation geothermal could play a role in an “all of the above” energy strategy by providing 24/7 power that complements intermittent renewables. If these projects progress as implied, Sage Geosystems could enhance its standing in the emerging advanced geothermal segment, potentially attracting additional capital and strategic partnerships, while also increasing competition with other clean‑firm‑power providers.

