Credit: Jan Zakelj from Pexels
Repurposing old oil and gas wells
for geothermal power could significantly reduce environmental harm and unlock
cleaner energy from existing infrastructure, but new research shows the
approach will need targeted support to become economically viable.
A new study led by researchers at
The University of Manchester has carried out the first full environmental life-cycle cost analysis of using abandoned onshore oil and gas wells to
generate geothermal electricity.
Published in Applied Thermal Engineering, the
research assesses not only the financial costs of repurposing old wells, but
also the often overlooked environmental and human health impacts, such as air
pollution and climate damage.
The findings show that while
repurposed geothermal systems currently produce electricity at a higher cost
than conventional geothermal power, they deliver substantially lower
environmental and health costs, particularly by avoiding new drilling and reducing
pollution linked to fossil fuel infrastructure.
Turning legacy fossil assets into clean energy
Across Europe and globally,
hundreds of thousands of oil and gas wells are approaching the end of their
productive life. Safely sealing and monitoring these wells is costly, and
poorly managed sites can pose long-term environmental risks.
Credit: Applied Thermal Engineering (2026). DOI:
10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2026.130469
The Manchester team explored
whether these existing wells could instead be given a second life as geothermal
energy sources, using underground heat to generate electricity.
"Existing oil and gas wells
already reach deep underground areas where heat from Earth can potentially be
used for geothermal energy," said Dr. Jingyi Li, Research Associate at The
University of Manchester. "Our research asks whether we can turn this
legacy infrastructure into part of the climate solution, rather than treating
it solely as a liability."
The study analyzed three
repurposing approaches:
- using two fully
abandoned wells
- converting a single
abandoned well
- turning late-life wells
that increasingly produce water rather than oil and gas
These were compared with a
conventional, purpose-drilled geothermal power plant.
Cleaner, but not yet cheaper
The analysis found that repurposed
well systems can have dramatically lower environmental impacts, particularly
for air pollutants that affect human health. In some cases, environmental
damage costs were reduced by more than 80% compared with a standard geothermal
plant.
However, because the assessed
repurposed systems are typically small and generate relatively little
electricity, their cost per unit of power remains high. Electricity generated
from repurposed wells currently costs more than from large-scale geothermal,
wind, solar or nuclear power.
Dr. Laurence Stamford, Senior
Lecturer in Sustainable Chemical Engineering at The University of Manchester,
said, "The challenge is not that repurposed geothermal is dirty or inefficient—it's that it's operating
at pilot scale. When costs are spread over very small electricity output, the
price per kilowatt-hour inevitably looks high."
Why environmental costs matter
A key innovation of the study is
that it places environmental
damage and
human health impacts into monetary terms, allowing these costs to be compared
directly with financial ones.
When these external costs are
included, repurposed geothermal systems perform particularly well compared to
fossil fuels. The study shows that coal and gas power impose environmental
costs over 100 times higher than repurposed geothermal options.
"This research highlights a
gap in how energy decisions are made. If we only look at electricity prices and
ignore pollution and health impacts, we systematically disadvantage cleaner
technologies," said Dr Alejandro Gallego Schmid, Reader in Circular
Economy and Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment at The University of
Manchester.
What needs to change
The study stresses that repurposing
oil and gas wells is not a silver bullet, but could play an important role in a
diversified, low‑carbon energy system, especially if supported by the right
policies.
Key
recommendations include:
- Targeted incentives for
early‑stage geothermal projects using existing wells
- Scaling up projects by
clustering multiple wells together
- Clear rules on long‑term
responsibility and well integrity
- Better integration of
environmental and health costs into energy policy decisions
- Crucially, the research suggests repurposing could help regions historically dependent on fossil fuels transition skills and infrastructure into clean energy, supporting a fairer, more inclusive energy transition.
Provided by University of Manchester
Source: Abandoned oil and gas wells could help cut emissions, study suggests


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