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Evergy kept electricity flowing in Kansas with high wind as coal froze


Evergy maintained “normal operating conditions for extreme weather,” despite coal freezing, thanks in part to high winds powering wind farms through the recent blustery conditions.

“The bottom line is we had enough power over the last week or so and in particular through the weekend when we had the coldest weather to meet demands,” said Chuck Caisley, an Evergy executive, about the previous weekend.

He added that with a midweek warming, “I think we are out of the biggest danger of not having adequate supplies.”

Caisley told the House Energy, Utilities and Telecommunications Committee on Tuesday that “the system has held up” and contrasted the current wintry weather with what happened in February 2021 with winter storm Uri.

Cold coal froze in Kansas winter

“Probably the biggest difference for us in this storm versus Uri was about a week to 10 days prior to this event, you’ll recall, we had sleet, ice, snow and even rain in some parts of the service territory,” Caisley said. “And what that means is even though we put sealant on our coal piles, we had a lot of frozen coal — both that’s operating within our coal plants but also just lying on the ground, which makes running those coal power plants a lot more difficult.



Read More: Evergy kept electricity flowing in Kansas with high wind as coal froze

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