Geothermal Cooling in India: Where It Works, Where It Doesn’t, and the Math

Geothermal (ground-source heat pump, GSHP) cooling uses the earth’s stable temperature 1.5-3 m below grade as a heat sink for cooling. In Indian climates, with ground temperature around 22-26 °C year-round (vs surface air 35-45 °C summer), geothermal cooling can replace cooling tower + condenser water with significantly higher chiller COP.

This guide covers GSHP economics, the Indian climate fit, and where it’s actually viable.

How GSHP works

A GSHP system has three loops:

1. Building loop — chilled water to AHUs (same as conventional)

2. Refrigeration loop — heat pump transferring heat between chilled water + ground loop

3. Ground loop — water/glycol circulating through buried plastic loops in the earth

The ground loop replaces the cooling tower + condenser water loop. Heat absorbed from chilled water transfers to ground via vertical or horizontal loops.

Two ground loop types

Vertical (boreholes)

  • Boreholes 50-150 m deep with U-tubes
  • Footprint: small (typically 10-20 m² per borehole, 1 borehole per 7-10 kW cooling)
  • Capex: ₹25-50 lakh per 100 TR (drilling-dominated)

Horizontal (trenches)

  • Trenches 1.5-3 m deep with serpentine loops
  • Footprint: large (typically 50-100 m² per kW cooling)
  • Capex: ₹15-30 lakh per 100 TR (less expensive than vertical)

Where GSHP works in India

Suitable conditions

  • Ground temperature 22-26 °C (most of India qualifies)
  • Site has space for boreholes (vertical) or trenches (horizontal)
  • Cooling load > 100 TR (economy of scale matters)
  • Owner pursues sustainability rating (IGBC v3 EE points)

Suitable climates

  • Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad — moderate cooling, year-round demand
  • Delhi NCR — high cooling, suitable for vertical
  • Mumbai, Chennai — moderate suitability (high cooling load, but coastal soils variable)

Unsuitable conditions

  • Very high cooling load (> 1,000 TR) — boreholes count too high
  • Compact urban site without yard space
  • Extremely hot soil (rare in India, but found in arid Rajasthan)
  • Saturated clay soils (high resistivity, poor heat transfer)
  • Low-budget projects (capex 2-3× conventional)

Economic comparison

For 200 TR cooling load over 15-year life:

System Capex Annual energy 15-yr LCC
Conventional water-cooled chiller + tower ₹50 lakh ₹15 lakh ₹275 lakh
Air-cooled chiller (no tower) ₹35 lakh ₹20 lakh ₹335 lakh
GSHP (vertical, 200 boreholes) ₹100 lakh ₹10 lakh ₹250 lakh

GSHP wins on 15-year LCC for moderate-cooling loads. Capex 2× conventional but operating cost 30-40% lower due to higher chiller COP (5-6 vs 3.5-4 for air-cooled).

Sizing example: 100 TR Bangalore office

Cooling: 100 TR × 60% load factor = 60 TR average.

Heat rejected to ground: 100 TR × 1.15 = ~404 kW heat.

Vertical loop: 100 m boreholes at 2 kW heat rejection each = 200 boreholes (8 m grid spacing).

Site footprint: 8 × 8 m × 200 = ~1.3 hectares (massive — only viable for campuses with land).

Alternative — Horizontal: 70 m² per kW × 404 kW = 2.8 hectares trenches. Still significant.

Where GSHP doesn’t make sense

  • Multi-storey commercial in compact urban site (no roof/yard space)
  • Cooling-only buildings (no heating recovery to capture)
  • Indian climate above 30°C ground temperature (rare)
  • Sites with rock or saturated clay geology

Hybrid approach

Many Indian projects use hybrid:

  • GSHP handles 50-70% of base load
  • Conventional chiller + tower handles peak

This reduces ground loop size by 30-50% while capturing most operating savings. Typical for 500-1,000 TR commercial.

Common GSHP design mistakes

1. No site geology survey. Soil thermal resistivity unknown; borehole count + spacing wrong.

2. Underestimating drilling cost. Indian drilling rates vary 5× by region; budget significantly.

3. No water-table consideration. Boreholes intercepting groundwater can short-circuit thermal exchange.

4. No corrosion protection. Glycol-water loop with mild steel = corrosion within 5 years.

5. No commissioning of ground loop. Pressure test + flow balancing required.

Quick checklist

  • [ ] Site geology survey (soil thermal resistivity, water table, depth)
  • [ ] Cooling load + ground rejection sizing
  • [ ] Vertical vs horizontal vs hybrid decision
  • [ ] Borehole count + spacing per IGSHPA guidelines
  • [ ] Land/footprint requirement vs available
  • [ ] Capex + LCC analysis vs conventional
  • [ ] Drilling contractor selection (specialized + insured)
  • [ ] Ground loop pressure test + commissioning
  • [ ] Glycol-water + corrosion protection

References: ASHRAE Handbook HVAC Apps 2023 Ch 35 (Geothermal Energy); IGSHPA Closed-Loop GSHP Design Guide; IS 14681 (Geothermal energy guidelines); Indian Bureau of Mines geological maps.

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