scorecardIn 2018, in Cornwall, in the United Kingdom, Geothermal Engineering Limited began to dig two holes, aiming to use the heat from hot rocks as a source of electricity. The company told Business Insider in 2019 that the hole had gone over 16,000 feet into the Earth, and had encountered temperatures up to 195 degrees Fahrenheit.
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  5. In 2018, in Cornwall, in the United Kingdom, Geothermal Engineering Limited began to dig two holes, aiming to use the heat from hot rocks as a source of electricity. The company told Business Insider in 2019 that the hole had gone over 16,000 feet into the Earth, and had encountered temperatures up to 195 degrees Fahrenheit.

In 2018, in Cornwall, in the United Kingdom, Geothermal Engineering Limited began to dig two holes, aiming to use the heat from hot rocks as a source of electricity. The company told Business Insider in 2019 that the hole had gone over 16,000 feet into the Earth, and had encountered temperatures up to 195 degrees Fahrenheit.

Source: The Guardian

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