MTU uses deep geothermal energy as a source of energy at its site in Munich-Allach. The goal of our company climate action strategy is to reduce our carbon footprint. As a sustainable energy source, geothermal energy is an important component of our climate strategy at this location. We cover up to 80 percent of our heat demand with energy from the earth—saving around 10,000 metric tons of CO₂ per year. The plant was completed in just three years – from the first drilling to the official opening. MTU is already planning the next expansion stage: by 2027, a larger production pump is scheduled to be installed. You can find all the details about the geothermal deposit in Allach and the individual project milestones here on this page.
Project milestones
Geothermal energy officially launched
Munich, 24 November 2025 – Rain from above, water from below – and right in the middle, a truly hot moment: At the end of November, MTU’s geothermal plant officially went into operation, just in time for the upcoming heating season. This marks a new chapter in climate protection at our site. From now on, the plant will cover up to 80 percent of our heating needs – completely CO₂-free and independent of fossil fuels. “We are not only celebrating the start of our geothermal plant today. We are also celebrating the courage to break new ground together – and as an aviation company, to go deep instead of high,” emphasized Dr. Silke Maurer, COO and Site Manager Munich.
The political sphere also praised this pioneering spirit. Bavaria’s Minister of Economic Affairs and Energy, Hubert Aiwanger, who symbolically commissioned the plant together with Silke Maurer, highlighted: “Geothermal energy is a key pillar for a secure, regional and affordable energy supply. It provides continuous heat, regardless of weather or time of day, is renewable and stable in price. MTU Aero Engines has recognized these advantages.”
Submersible centrifugal pump goes into operation
Munich, August 12, 2025 – Summer brings further progress to our geothermal project – and in very tangible terms: the submersible centrifugal pump has been successfully commissioned. This means that the thermal water circuit can now start up – a prerequisite for feeding heat into the grid. The powerful pump is the heart of the geothermal plant and will deliver up to 90 litres of thermal water per second in the first phase.
Following the completion of the underground work and the heat distribution centre, the above-ground thermal water circuit is now also fully operational. Functional tests such as long-term pump trials are scheduled for the coming weeks and will continue into the autumn.
With the submersible centrifugal pump, the heart is installed
Munich, April 14, 2025 – At our geothermal project in Munich, we have reached the next important milestone: the installation of the production pump! In just one week, both the injection string into the injection well and the production string with the approximately 24-meter-long submersible centrifugal pump were installed into the production well. A major challenge was simultaneously lifting and screwing the heavy equipment in the confined space above the open borehole. With each screwed pipe section, the pump gradually moved deeper into the well.
Topping-out Ceremony for the Heat Distribution Center
Munich, February 13, 2025 – Construction of the technical building for deep geothermal energy is progressing well. The project team is celebrating the next milestone with the topping-out ceremony and is on the home stretch for commissioning this summer. The heat distribution center will serve to feed the heat from the earth into MTU's heating network.
For MTU, geothermal energy is not only a forward-looking and particularly sustainable project for self-sufficient energy supply. The building for the heat distribution center also reflects the sustainable approach, for example by using steel produced with particularly low CO2 emissions.
Construction of Heat Distribution Center begins
Munich, 24 September 2024 – The time has come: construction of the heat distribution center at the deep geothermal site has begun. The first prefabricated columns and walls were erected in mid-September. The rectangular technical building will be approximately 35 meters long and 11 meters wide. The parapet, an extension of the outer wall above the flat roof, will be almost 11 meters high.
The main purpose of the technical building will be to feed heat from the deep geothermal energy into MTU’s heating network. Construction of the technical building is expected to be completed by the second quarter of 2025
The first reinforced concrete columns and walls of the heat distribution centre for geothermal energy have been constructed.
Dismantling drilling rig and drilling equipment
Munich, July 22, 2024 - The 43-meter-high drilling rig on the MTU site has been dismantled after completion of the two MTU geothermal wells and transported away with all the drilling equipment - transformer stations, mud pumps, drilling fluid containers, blow-out preventer, noise protection wall, material and workshop containers.
Three mobile cranes (300 tons and two 180 tons) were in continuous use at times to ensure the smooth dismantling of the drilling rig and its peripherals, loading around 41 trucks to date. The dismantling and loading work was carried out in two shifts, each with five employees.
The drilling site will be cleared again by the end of July and construction of the heat distribution center can begin.
Drilling and testing work successfully completed
Munich, July 4, 2024 - The drilling and testing work on the two MTU geothermal wells has been successfully completed. "We were able to complete all the work within the set schedule of just under six months," says project manager Stefan Lange. "The pumping tests on the second borehole also showed an extraordinarily good hydraulic yield of over 100 liters per second." The temperature of the thermal water pumped exceeds the 70°C mark. The derrick will be dismantled and the drilling site cleared in July.
MTU plans to start preparatory work for the construction of the heat distribution center at the end of July.
Start of second drilling path
Munich, April 19, 2024 - Last weekend, the 500-tonne drilling rig, already equipped with the drilling equipment, was successfully moved. Four hydraulic jacks were used to move the derrick from the first well to the second drilling location seven meters away. MTU started drilling the second path this week. The drilling path has a north-facing deflection. The planned drilling length is up to 3,100 meters.
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Important stage reached - successful drilling
Munich, April 9, 2024 - "It was a significant event when we were able to pump water to the surface from a depth of around two kilometers in the first attempt at the end of March," reports project manager Stefan Lange. "We were all very tense after the intensive and careful preparations to see whether we would find what we expected down there." MTU used the pumping tests to test the yield of the borehole via the amount of thermal water. The excitement quickly gave way to joy with the first steam: "The team is thrilled at how much water could be pumped without lowering the water level too much." The data obtained so far indicates a very productive borehole, with a very good flow rate of well over 100 liters per second and a temperature of around 70°C.
MTU starts drilling for deep geothermal energy
Thermal water some two kilometers underground is set to largely replace MTU’s current gas-based heat supply
Munich, January 11, 2024 – MTU has begun drilling work in the northeastern corner of its Munich site, close to Dachauer Strasse. Following the traditional miners’ blessing from a local priest at the beginning of December and the safety inspections and performance tests, the actual drilling can now commence.
During drilling work, different signal tones will sound, water vapor will be released, and flames will appear as any escaping gas is flared. None of this poses any danger.
Traditional miners’ blessing
Munich, December 4, 2023 – On a freezing cold St. Barbara’s Day - St. Barbara being the patron saint of miners - MTU’s geothermal team, site management, representatives of the local authorities, the company works council, and guests from the supporting MTU divisions gathered by the geothermal drilling rig erected last week to witness a local priest bless the drill bit. “Here where we stand, you can see how we as a company are tackling climate change with regard to our infrastructure,” said Dr. Markus Zeis, Senior Vice President Enablement. “We’ve spent the past three years working on this geothermal project, which affirms our commitment to Munich as a location.” Geothermal energy is the biggest step on the way to making the site climate-neutral. The energy will be used to supply the site with emissions-free heat.
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How geothermal energy is working
What is geothermal energy?
Geothermal energy is the heat available below the Earth’s surface in layers of earth and rock. Geothermal energy is unimaginably abundant; for instance, as the engine for plate tectonics, it is responsible for the migration of the continents and the formation of huge mountains and volcanoes. About 99 percent of the material that makes up the Earth’s mass is hotter than 1,000 degrees Celsius. It is assumed that temperatures at the Earth’s core are over 5,000 degrees Celsius. Only in the uppermost three kilometers or so are temperatures below 100 degrees Celsius. The temperature in the Earth’s crust increases by an average of about 3 degrees Celsius per 100 meters of depth.
How does geothermal energy work?
There are different types of geothermal energy and technologies for harnessing it. The process MTU is looking to use in Munich(Allach) is hydrothermal geothermal energy. From a depth of around 2,200 meters, a production well will pump hot water at a temperature of around 70–75 degrees Celsius from a deep groundwater reservoir up to the surface. In a closed thermal water circuit, the heat can be transferred via heat exchangers to MTU’s heating water circuit, causing the water temperature to drop to about 40 degrees. The cooled water will be returned via an injection well to the same deep groundwater reservoir from which it was drawn. There, it will heat up again, and the cycle will begin anew.
Why does MTU want to use geothermal energy?
The use of geothermal energy is part of MTU’s climate strategy. The goal of our climate strategy is to reduce emissions by 60 percent by 2030 (compared to 2019 levels). The use of geothermal energy for heating is a crucial step in this process, because it is a carbon-free energy source. Using the thermal water directly means the efficiency is very high. Only the thermal water pump and the circulation pumps require electrical energy. In addition, compared with conventional energy supplies, this approach eliminates transport routes and storage because the energy source is located directly under the MTU facility.
Where are MTU’s geothermal wells located?
The drilling site is located in the northeastern area of the MTU premises, close to Dachauer Strasse
What path do the boreholes take?
There are two bore paths. Both wells start from a common drilling site (known as a drilling pad). There, they are only a few meters apart. With increasing depth, the horizontal distance between the two wells stretchs to more than 2,000 meters. The production well runs in a southerly direction, the injection well in a northerly direction. Each is about three kilometers long. In total, about six kilometers of drilling pipelines will be used.
How is the hot water used?
Once the thermal water has released its heat into the MTU location’s heating circuit via a heat exchanger, all the location’s buildings can essentially be supplied with heat.
What is the Molasse Basin?
The Molasse Basin is the geological name for the region between the Danube and the Alps. As a result of the uplift and overthrust of Alpine nappes onto the European crust, the weight of the mountains developing on top of the underlying crust pushed it several kilometers downward into the Earth’s mantle. At the same time as the Earth’s crust was sinking, the basin this formed steadily filled up again with debris eroded from the Alps. This geological basin is called the Molasse Basin. At the base of this basin is a water-bearing limestone layer (the Malm karst), which was formerly at the Earth’s surface, but is now encountered at varying depths, depending on the location. By the Danube south of Regensburg, it lies only a few meters deep; on the edge of the Alps, the Molasse Basin is already over 5,000 meters deep. In the Munich area, it is located at a depth of 2,000 to 3,000 meters.
What is the Malm karst?
At the base of the Molasse Basin, the Malm karst forms a deep karst aquifer approximately 500 to 600 meters thick. As a geothermal energy source directly beneath MTU’s Munich location, the company can use this aquifer to supply heat. The characteristics of the Malm karst mean water can circulate well in its pores, fissures and karst cavities and absorb heat from the environment, making it an ideal hydrothermal reservoir. The Malm limestone dates from the Upper Jurassic period and is about 150 million years old. At that time, southern Bavaria was a subtropical shallow sea with reefs and lagoons. The thermal water from the Malm karst is used directly, for example, in spas located in Erding, near Munich, and in Lower Bavaria, Upper Austria and Upper Swabia.
Are there environmental risks associated with building or operating a geothermal system?
In principle, the environmental risks associated with deep geothermal energy are very low. The water is returned to the reservoir without further modification once its heat has been transferred to the heat exchanger. In Germany, the requirements and official specifications for the protection of the environment during the construction and operation of a geothermal plant are very high and are monitored intensively. The geological conditions of the deep subsurface in the Munich area are already thoroughly understood from numerous geothermal boreholes or from former deep wells for oil and gas. This means that in the Molasse Basin, drilling challenges arising from geologic uncertainties can be very well defined. The wells will be drilled in such a way that by means of several telescopically interlocked and concreted-in steel pipes, the boreholes are secured in a stable manner for the long term. This technique prevents the inflow of water or gas from the various strata through which the wells pass. During the drilling process, only substances will be used for which a risk to drinking water can be ruled out. Rocks from the wells, the water brought to the surface and the gases dissolved in it will be regularly tested for their composition during the drilling phase.
At the drilling site, additional structural measures are in place to prevent contamination of the soil even in the event of an accident (e.g. tank leakage). This includes a concrete surface with an appropriate drainage design, temporary storage tanks, inspection chambers and oil separators. The thermal water from the Malm itself is characterized by its low content of dissolved substances. Traces of oil or gas can sometimes be found in some geological strata or even in the Malm water. For this reason, the deep water will be routed in a closed system from extraction through heat exchange to recirculation. This will prevent the escape of any gases or substances that may be hazardous to the environment.
Is geothermal energy consistently available?
Geothermal energy is always available. Unlike other sustainable and carbon-free energy sources, its use is not dependent on time of day, weather or climate.
Is the geothermal plant large?
A geothermal plant is not particularly large. MTU already has a combined heat and power plant on-site at its Munich location, so the geothermal system only needs to be integrated into the existing heat distribution system. The main part of the geothermal plant is located out of sight under the ground. Above ground, only the well heads, two compact pipelines and the heat distribution center are visible.
Is a geothermal system noisy?
The thermal water borehole pump installed for continuous operation hangs at a depth of several hundred meters and cannot be heard at the surface. The network pumps, heat exchangers and power supply are housed in a small building and are also not a source of noise for the surrounding area.
Only during the construction and drilling phases will there be a perceptible level of noise at times; examples include individual components of the drilling rig such as pumps or vibrating screens, the unloading of pipes, or construction site traffic. Potential sources of noise will be enclosed when necessary. Any noisier work or truck transports will be performed during the day, if possible. The drilling process as such, i.e. the sound of the bit drilling through the rock, is neither audible nor perceptible at the Earth’s surface. In continuous operation, the geothermal plant complies with all the requirements of legally regulated noise protection.
Does the use of geothermal energy produce pollutants?
Since no combustion takes place, no exhaust gases are released when geothermal energy is used. At MTU, the thermal water will be used in a closed circuit to supply heat, so the gases or other constituents dissolved in the water will remain in the thermal water circuit. The hydrothermal heat recovery approach taken by MTU is a purely physical process.
Will the plant have an impact on the flora and fauna in the surrounding area?
Deep geothermal energy at MTU’s Munich location will have no impact on flora and fauna, as the plant will have no effect on the near-surface area. Lowering the rock temperature in deeper areas has no effect on the microclimate or the flora and fauna at the surface; this is determined by the temperature down to a depth of around 20 meters—the area where soil organisms or plant roots are found. The soil temperature here is a result of solar radiation and percolating rainwater as well as moving groundwater. This means the geothermal energy present in the shallow subsurface is predominantly stored solar energy and is subject to seasonal temperature fluctuations.
Does deep geothermal energy threaten other aquifers?
No. Detailed borehole planning and proven drilling techniques prevent mutual interference. The near-surface groundwater is already being secured with standpipes (steel pipes reaching down to a depth of about 50 meters) as part of the drilling site construction. Due to their strength and impermeability, these standpipes ensure the stability of the well. This both prevents thermal water from penetrating near-surface groundwater and ensures no groundwater enters the drilling area.
Does the thermal water carry toxic substances to the surface?
Toxic substances, such as hydrogen sulfide or traces of oil, may be present in thermal water. However, since the thermal water cycle is conducted in a closed system and the water is reintroduced into the same deep aquifers after the heat is removed, there is no contamination of the surface with potentially toxic substances. The composition of the Malm water in the Munich area is also known from numerous geothermal wells and generally raises no critical concerns. Some spas also use this water directly for filling their baths.
How long can MTU use geothermal energy as a heat source?
The heat source itself is inexhaustible by human standards. The use of geothermal energy is therefore limited only by the lifetime of the technical equipment and structures. As the water is recirculated back into the reservoir, the hydrogeological balance is maintained. The flow of heat from the Earth’s interior will not end. This means the cooled area around the injection well will also warm up again and can regenerate.
Are there hydrothermal alterations in the deep aquifer?
The thermal water used for MTU’s geothermal energy is drawn from a depth of about 2,200 meters, and the cooled water is reintroduced at a comparable depth into the same geological horizon at a sufficient distance. Harnessing the water’s heat does not involve MTU extracting any substances from the water. Returning the water causes the rock to cool in the immediate vicinity of the injection well. The cooled water is reheated as it flows onward through the rock.
Is there an earthquake risk from geothermal use?
Hydrothermal exploitation in the Molasse Basin can cause microearthquakes. As a rule, this microseismicity is far below the human perception threshold. In the Bavarian Molasse Basin, the occurrence of damaging earthquakes caused by hydrothermal geothermal energy is extremely unlikely. This assessment from two decades of hydrothermal energy production is confirmed in the Bavarian Geothermal Atlas of the State Ministry of Economic Affairs, Regional Development and Energy. In order to accurately record possible microseismic events and also to be able to distinguish possible induced microearthquakes from naturally occurring or perceptible earthquakes, every geothermal project in the Munich area is now accompanied by a seismic monitoring system as standard. The operators in the Munich region have joined together to form a network and thus obtain data of very high accuracy.
A project that combines the art of engineering with a pioneering spirit of sustainability: From now on, MTU will provide heat at its Munich site using deep geothermal energy.