Utrecht Centre for Sustainable Use of the Subsurface

We contribute to safe, responsible, and sustainable use of the subsurface, supporting the global energy transition

Increasing and evolving use of the subsurface is crucial for ensuring a stable supply of energy and drinking water in the short and long term future. Subsurface use involves storage of energy, exploitation of geothermal energy, mining of raw critical materials, and groundwater extraction. Additionally, the subsurface is increasingly being used for urban infrastructure development, and subsurface solutions will be needed for the permanent disposal of radioactive waste, CO2 sequestration, and remediation of contaminated soil and groundwater. We provide a fundamental and multi-scale understanding of the processes involved in these subsurface activities, ensuring safety and minimising environmental impact, while balancing societal demand.

Increasing and evolving use of the subsurface is crucial for ensuring a stable supply of energy and drinking water in the short and long term future. Subsurface use involves storage of energy, exploitation of geothermal energy, mining of raw critical materials, and groundwater extraction. Additionally, the subsurface is increasingly being used for urban infrastructure development, and subsurface solutions will be needed for the permanent disposal of radioactive waste, CO2 sequestration, and remediation of contaminated soil and groundwater. We provide a fundamental and multi-scale understanding of the processes involved in these subsurface activities, ensuring safety and minimising environmental impact, while balancing societal demand.

Mission and vision

Our mission

The Utrecht Centre for Sustainable Subsurface Use contributes to sustainable, responsible, and safe use of the subsurface, supporting the global energy transition.

Our vision

We integrate fundamental understanding with monitoring of subsurface processes to make evidence-based and accurate assessments of both beneficial use of the subsurface and potential hazards associated with these activities. The key to this is a multidisciplinary collaboration among researchers with complementary expertise, enabling inclusive solutions to complex subsurface challenges. We train students to work in multidisciplinary teams, equipping them to tackle societal challenges related to subsurface use and the energy transition.

Research

We bring together expertise from a range of Earth Sciences disciplines to conduct problem-driven fundamental research on subsurface processes including: 

  • The impact of subsurface activities on (bio)geochemical reactions, including bacterial activity, in altering subsurface characteristics
  • Quantifiying risks (e.g. subsidence, earthquakes, and leakage) due to subsurface activities
  • Monitoring and managing changes due to subsurface activities

Integrated expertise

Our research focuses on addressing three coupled fundamental challenges in subsurface use: 

Research facilities

Our state-of-the-art research facilities are housed in the GeoLab, the Earth Simulation Laboratory (ESL), and the Electron Microscopy Centre in the David de Wied building. Funding and access is available through and . 

Our lab units include:

Partners

Our research aligns with Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ’s strategic theme Pathways to Sustainability and its thematic community Science for Sustainability focusing on sustainability solutions based on fundamental research. We share facilities and expertise through , , and . Our fundamental research complements applied research on use of the Dutch subsurface at our strategic partners and and stakeholders such as , , , , , , and . 

Education

Scientists of the Utrecht Centre for Sustainable Subsurface Use coordinate the ‘Solid Earth’ track in the BSc programme Aardwetenschappen (Earth Sciences), as well as the MSc programmes Earth Structure and Dynamics, Earth Surface and Water,  and Earth Life and Climate. Within these MSc programmes our researchers address the role of solid Earth structure and subsurface processes in relation to geo-energy and mineral resources, geological storage, groundwater remediation, and induced geohazards resulting from human activity. Moreover, scientists from the Utrecht Centre for Sustainable Subsurface Use also supervise BSc and MSc theses and internships on subsurface use. 

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