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Iceland will drill magma on purpose: the project that promises energy 10 times more powerful…

Written by Douglas Avila
Published on 25/04/2026 at 05:52
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Imagine a group of scientists who, by accident, opened a hole directly into the incandescent heart of a volcano — and, instead of retreating, decided to go back and do it all over again. Only this time, on purpose. That’s exactly what’s happening in Iceland with the Krafla Magma Testbed (KMT), the most audacious project in the history of geothermal energy.

While most renewable energy projects seek predictable sources like sun and wind, an international team is preparing to drill directly into magma — the molten rock at nearly 1,000 °C that fuels volcanoes and earthquakes. The goal? To produce clean energy up to 10 times more powerful than a conventional geothermal plant.

The accident that changed everything: when the drill met magma

It all began in 2009, during drilling for the Iceland Deep Drilling Project (IDDP). The team intended to reach supercritical conditions at 4,500 meters deep in the Krafla volcano, in northeast Iceland. But at 2,096 meters, the rock fragments rising through the drill changed appearance: they were pieces of fresh volcanic glass. The drill had hit a pocket of rhyolitic magma at about 900 °C.

Incandescent magma during drilling in the Krafla volcano
Artistic representation of incandescent magma found during drilling in the Krafla volcano

It was only the second recorded instance in history where a drill hit magma — the first had occurred in Hawaii in 2007. Instead of abandoning the well, engineers decided to investigate. They installed a perforated steel casing at the bottom and transformed IDDP-1 into the world’s first magma-enhanced geothermal system.

The result was surprising: the well produced superheated steam at 450 °C with an estimated power of 36 MW — about ten times more than conventional wells at the Krafla plant. The accidental discovery proved that proximity to magma could revolutionize clean energy generation.

Back to the volcano: the Krafla Magma Testbed enters the scene

If the 2009 accident was the spark, the KMT is the planned fire. Officially launched as an international consortium with over 40 research institutes and companies from 11 countries, the Krafla Magma Testbed has three ambitious objectives:

  • Study magma in situ — how it interacts with surrounding rock and transfers heat to the Earth’s crust
  • Monitor a volcanic system from within — which can radically improve eruption forecasting
  • Explore the direct use of magma heat to generate geothermal energy on an unprecedented scale

The project is divided into two phases. The first well, named KMT-1, will be drilled in 2026. It is a volcanological research and monitoring well, which will descend to approximately 2,100 meters — the same point where magma was found in 2009. The big difference? This time, temperature and pressure sensors will be placed directly inside the magma.

Scientists installing sensors in volcanic terrain for the KMT project
Scientific teams develop sensors capable of withstanding temperatures above 500 °C

The second well, KMT-2, is planned for 2028 and will be dedicated to energy research. If all goes as planned, it will demonstrate that it is possible to safely and efficiently extract energy directly from the vicinity of the magma.

Why drilling into magma can change the clean energy game

Conventional geothermal energy works by drilling wells 1 to 3 km deep to access hot water reservoirs heated by the Earth’s internal heat. The typical temperature is between 150 and 300 °C — enough to generate electricity, but limited.

What KMT proposes is to access what geologists call superhot conditions: fluids above 400 °C, close to the supercritical state. Under these conditions, water behaves completely differently — neither liquid nor vapor — carrying an absurd amount of thermal energy.

Geothermal power plant in Iceland with steam rising
Conventional geothermal plants in Iceland already produce clean energy, but wells near magma could multiply this capacity tenfold

The practical result? A single well operating under superhot conditions can generate the same energy as ten conventional wells. This means:

  • Fewer wells drilled for the same output
  • Lower environmental impact on the surface
  • Significantly lower cost per megawatt
  • Baseload energy, available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year — something solar and wind cannot guarantee

The challenges of placing sensors inside a volcano

If the idea seems simple — drill into the magma and harvest the heat — the execution is anything but trivial. The main obstacle is the survival of the equipment. At 970 °C, most metals soften, conventional electronics melt, and even drilling fluids decompose.

To address these challenges, the KMT consortium has worked with the sensor community to develop extreme-temperature resistant technologies. Sensors need to operate in environments above 500 °C — and, ideally, survive long enough to transmit data from inside the magma.

In addition to sensors, KMT aims to recover rock cores from the transition zone between the hydrothermal system and the magma. It will be the first time scientists have direct samples of this interface, allowing them to understand how heat migrates from magma to the geothermal reservoirs that are already commercially exploited.

More than energy: volcanic eruption forecasting

KMT is not just an energy project. By placing instruments inside an active volcanic system, scientists will have unprecedented access to magma behavior in real time. This could transform how we predict and prepare for eruptions.

Currently, eruption forecasting relies on indirect signs: seismic tremors, ground deformation, gas emissions. These are valuable but imprecise indicators. With sensors operating directly in the magma reservoir, it will be possible to detect pressure and temperature changes at the source, potentially anticipating volcanic events with much greater accuracy.

For a country like Iceland — which deals daily with volcanic activity and is still recovering from recent eruptions on the Reykjanes Peninsula — this monitoring capability can save lives and protect critical infrastructure.

The future of geothermal energy is in magma

The Krafla Magma Testbed is not an isolated experiment. It is part of a global movement to unlock the potential of superhot geothermal energy. Countries like Japan, Italy, New Zealand, and the United States are also investigating extreme heat sources — but none are as close to drilling directly into magma as Iceland.

If KMT succeeds, the implications will extend far beyond the Arctic. The technology developed could be applied in any volcanically active region of the world — and there are many. From the Pacific Ring of Fire to the East African Rift, billions of people live above heat reservoirs that could be transformed into sources of clean, reliable energy.

In 2009, Iceland stumbled upon magma by accident. In 2026, it is returning to the same volcano with a plan. And if that plan works, the way the world produces energy may never be the same.

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Douglas Avila

I've been working with technology for over 13 years with a single goal: helping companies grow by using the right technology. I write about artificial intelligence and innovation applied to the energy sector — translating complex technology into practical decisions for those in the middle of the business.

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