I've been doing some reading on geothermal energy production and I'm having trouble reconciling something, so maybe the geniuses here can help me 
In thermically active areas (Iceland, near volcanoes, etc, etc) the idea of a geothermal plant is easy to see. Some articles say that you can only do geothermal in these areas but I don't understand that.
The idea is that you pump water down a hole, the water gets heated up and comes back up as either steam or superheated water that will produce steam, that will in turn move a turbine, generating electricity. But since what you're doing is using the heat from the earth's crust what difference does it make where you put it? I mean surely its possible from almost any location to drill down far enough to get to an area that's hot enough to do the job. Given how far we can drill for oil, why is it a big deal to create a hole deep enough to find heat?
In thermically active areas (Iceland, near volcanoes, etc, etc) the idea of a geothermal plant is easy to see. Some articles say that you can only do geothermal in these areas but I don't understand that.
The idea is that you pump water down a hole, the water gets heated up and comes back up as either steam or superheated water that will produce steam, that will in turn move a turbine, generating electricity. But since what you're doing is using the heat from the earth's crust what difference does it make where you put it? I mean surely its possible from almost any location to drill down far enough to get to an area that's hot enough to do the job. Given how far we can drill for oil, why is it a big deal to create a hole deep enough to find heat?
