The East Kentucky Power Cooperative (EKPC) is making moves to introduce thousands of megawatts to its portfolio, through new construction and retrofits, in part to better address high demand during extreme weather events like winter storms.
In late December, the Kentucky Public Service Commission (PSC) granted EKPC Certificates of Public Convenience and Necessity (CPCNs) for the construction of two solar power facilities. EKPC would construct a 96 MW facility in Marion County (Northern Bobwhite Solar Project), north of Lebanon, Kentucky; and a 40 MW facility in Fayette County, Kentucky (Bluegrass Plains Solar Project).
EKPC also plans to invest more than $2 billion in order to build around 2,000 MW of new generation, and to convert around 1,700 MW of existing coal-based units to co-fire with natural gas, according to the The National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA).
The cooperative has filed with with Kentucky PSC to approve several projects meant to come online before 2030, including:
The cooperative has also planned for around 757 MW of new renewables by 2031, NRECA said. Tony Campbell, president and CEO of the generation and transmission cooperative, said EKPC is still on track to reduce its carbon dioxide emissions by 35% by 2035, and these investments are intended to help safeguard its supply under the Environmental Protection Agency’s power plant rule, which would have otherwise caused the coal plants to close by 2032.
Don Mosier, EKPC’s chief operating officer and executive vice president, told NRECA that several multiday winter storms, including Winter Storm Gerri in 2024 and Winter Storm Elliott in 2022, caused the cooperative to discover 300 MW of “hidden load” as demand for home heating rose.