Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tallgrass is a leading infrastructure company focused on safely, reliably, and sustainably delivering energy. Based in Kansas City, Kansas with an operational headquarters in Denver, Colorado, and a large office in Houston, Texas, the company operates over 10,000 miles of energy infrastructure assets across 15 states.
The project was developed by the Kansas-based firm Tradewind Energy, which previously built a strategic partnership with the Italian-controlled firm Enel Green Power North America (EGPNA) that resulted in the construction of several wind farms throughout the state, including the Smoky Hills Wind Farm. [2]
This is a list of electricity-generating power stations in the U.S. state of Kansas, sorted by type and name. In 2022, Kansas had a total summer capacity of 18,427 MW through all of its power plants, and a net generation of 62,197 GWh. [ 2 ]
Kansas saw a 5% increase in clean energy jobs in 2023, adding jobs almost six times faster than the overall Kansas economy, according to Clean Jobs Midwest’s report on 2023.. The number of ...
Kansas City Power and Light Company was an electric utility serving the Kansas City metropolitan area. It was a wholly owned subsidiary, and biggest component, of Great Plains Energy . In November 1881, Joseph S. Chick obtained the exclusive rights to use the Thompson-Houston arc lighting system in the counties of Jackson, Missouri, and ...
The Okeechobee KOA Resort in the city of the same name sports 750 sites over 117 acres and includes amenities like a nine-hole golf course, a pool, hot tubs, tennis courts, mini-golf, playground ...
In 1926 he sold it to the Fitkin Group again which merged with the Missouri Public Service Company. Green retired to Escondido, California where bought a 2,000-acre (8.1 km 2) orange grove. He died in 1930. The Public Utilities Act of 1935 broke up utilities. Green's son Ralph Green bought controlling interest in Missouri Public Service.
Home builders in Kansas City will be required to meet higher energy efficiency standards starting July 1. The Home Builders Association of Greater Kansas City opposed the new building codes.