Kimberly Svaty

Location of Interview
Collection Name

Energy & Environment

Description

Energy & Environment contains the interviews of individuals who were involved with the development and implementation of state energy and environmental policy from the 1970s through the early decades of the 2000s. The interviews elicit insights about the policy-making process, the assignment of priorities, and the give-and-take involved in reaching final policy decisions. Of special interest are instances in which Kansas developed singular solutions and means for implementing them.  To explore this collection and others, visit the Kansas Oral History Project home page: https://ksoralhistory.org/

Interviewer
Date of Interview
05-14-2024
Principal Investigator
Audio
Video
Abstract

Kimberly Svaty is founder and CEO of Gencur-Svaty Public Affairs. For the last 20 years, she has been working in the field of clean energy. Svaty sees her role as a guide for developers of clean energy on how to do business in Kansas. She emphasized that "how to do business the right way means taking care of the people." She had worked for Aquila, a traditional utility before founding a transmission-only utility in 2007. She formed Gencur-Svaty to provide education to legislators and others in state government, communities considering investing or hosting clean energy sites and also to landowners.

In this 2024 interview Kimberly Svaty describes the development of wind energy in Kansas. One of the early projects was a wind farm in Spearville; the significance of that project to the community was a donation agreement that continues to fund projects for the schools and community. She sees wind farms as the next generation of the Kansas energy economy. There are now 45 operating wind farms that use 60% of what is generated locally. Today, the lowest cost power is wind. She described Kansas is the Saudi Arabia of Wind. The interview covers why the push to build coal-fired powerplant in Holcomb didn't happen-- because markets stopped it. Svaty notes that 90% of energy in the Southwest Power Pool comes from wind--it is very reliable. She also discusses concerns about how the windmills are changing the view and how they dominate the landscape with their red flashing lights. She notes the FAA will be a factor in legislative attempts to change the rules. County commissions also have much control over wind development via zoning. The interview concludes with a discussion of solar energy and its potential impact and other clean energy sources such as Hydrogen. Svaty noted that construction has begun on the first 100-megawatt solar facility located in Barber County and that solar energy complements wind.


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