| Bloomberg: Homes in Unterhaching, a German town of 22,000 south of Munich, will be warmed by hot water piped from 3,300 meters underground starting in May. They're at the leading edge of a shift toward geothermal power generation that may swell Germany's capacity 1,000-fold within a decade. ``All the experts told us this was not possible,'' said Christian Schoenwiesner-Bozkurt, manager of the community-owned project. Clean-energy subsidies introduced in 2004 made geothermal a cost-effective ... |