11/06/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/06/2025 13:21
Topeka, Ks - The unanimous settlement reached by Evergy, the Sierra Club, Google, and several other intervenors was approved today by a 3-0, unanimous vote, at the Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC). The Sierra Club's intervention substantially improved the terms of the original proposal, changes that will provide additional protections to existing Evergy customers amid data center development. Those changes include:
Evergy is delaying coal plant retirements and building new gas-burning power plants in the name of increased energy demand from data centers. The monopoly utility recently received approval to increase rates in both Kansas and Missouri, as well as new approvals in both states to charge customers in advance for new gas-burning power plants. Evergy and Ameren each proposed substantially similar large load tariff plans in Missouri.
The Sierra Club was represented in the docket by Great Rivers Environmental Law Center .
Statement from Ty Gorman, Sierra Club's Beyond Coal Campaign Senior Organizing Strategist in Kansas :
"This large load tariff is a step in the right direction to protect Kansas ratepayers from the negative impacts of data centers, and ensure that speculators aren't driving the utility toward rash decisions. Evergy is going in the wrong direction by delaying coal plant retirements that are increasingly expensive and less reliable, but we joined this agreement alongside tech companies and the utility because it places reasonable protections on existing customers while enabling new investments in clean energy."
Statement from Sarah Rubenstein, Staff Attorney with Great Rivers Environmental Law Center:
"Without clear protections, families and small businesses would be left footing the bill for the massive energy appetites of data centers. This settlement ensures that large energy users share responsibility for the infrastructure they require while also creating new opportunities to move the grid toward clean, renewable energy."