Fact 4: Iceland Powers Daily Life with Heat from the Earth
If Iceland seems unusually good at making dramatic geology useful, that is because it really is. Official government sources say renewable energy provides almost all of Iceland’s heating and electricity generation, mainly through hydropower and geothermal energy. The government’s energy pages note that renewable sources account for nearly all electricity production, while geothermal energy heats about 85% of houses. In other words, Iceland is not simply a country with volcanoes and hot springs for tourists to photograph. It is a country that figured out how to channel its natural forces into the plumbing, heating, and power supply of ordinary life. That is a pretty spectacular flex.
The everyday result is what really sets Iceland apart. In many places, energy is something people barely think about until the bill arrives. In Iceland, it is woven into the national identity because the landscape itself helps keep homes warm and lights on. Government and financing documents have described the country as producing about 99.98% of its electricity from renewable energy and supplying the vast majority of heating through geothermal systems. That helps explain why geothermal water shows up everywhere from household heating to public pools.
Iceland also uses its abundant geothermal energy for some wonderfully practical things: heating greenhouses to grow tropical fruits, warming outdoor swimming pools that stay open year-round even in the dead of winter, and powering aluminium smelting operations that attract energy-hungry industries from around the world. It’s a reminder that geography, when you work with it rather than against it, can be the greatest asset a nation has. It also gives Iceland a slightly science-fiction quality: a place where steam rising from the ground is as practical as scenic. Many countries talk about the energy transition as a goal. Iceland, in several key ways, has been living that reality for years.