News LG&E and KU issues request for renewable projects over 75 MW Sean Wolfe 5.3.2024 Share LG&E and KU’s research wind turbine rises to 165 feet. (Photo courtesy of LG&E and KU) Louisville Gas and Electric Company and Kentucky Utilities Company (LG&E and KU), a subsidiary of the PPL Corporation, announced the company is issuing a Request for Proposals (RFP) for new projects from solar, wind, and hydroelectric providers to begin in 2026. Proposals being considered must provide at least 75 MW and can include bids for purchasing power, purchasing new or existing renewable power generating facilities, and build-transfer transactions. “We have an all-of-the-above approach that’s balanced and flexible for our power generation fleet, and achieved last year power reliability for our customers that was among the best in the nation,” said John Crockett, president of LG&E and KU. “We, with our parent company PPL, are pursuing a comprehensive clean energy strategy to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, while preserving reliability and affordability for our 1.3 million customers. We are continually evaluating a number of energy resources and exploring innovative solutions that will continue to best serve Kentucky and our customers’ needs and interests.” Join us at GridTECH Connect California, June 24-26, 2024, in Newport Beach, CA! With some of the most ambitious sustainability and clean energy goals in the country, California is at the cutting edge of the energy transition while confronting its most cumbersome roadblocks. From electric vehicles to battery storage, microgrids, community solar, and everything in between, attendees will collaborate to advance interconnection procedures and policies in California. The projects may also be considered as an energy supply source for LG&E and KU’s Green Tariff program when the company partners with businesses and industrial customers to create custom renewable energy solutions, combining the Green Energy and Business Solar programs and Renewable Power Agreements for those customers interested in purchasing renewable power. These proposals represent energy supplies that would be in addition to LG&E and KU’s generation investment plans approved last fall by the Kentucky Public Service Commission. LG&E and KU received regulatory approval to build a 640-MW natural gas combined-cycle generating unit at Mill Creek Generating Station and add more than 1,000 MW of solar energy and battery storage while retiring two aging coal-fired generating units and several gas-peaking units. In April, the company also launched Kentucky’s first utility wind turbine at E.W. Brown Generating Station’s Renewable Integration Research Facility. The research project is designed to collect data and is meant to help determine the potential for wind to contribute to renewable energy production in Kentucky. Parties interested in participating in the RFP can submit proposals by June 21, and LG&E and KU currently expect to have evaluations completed by October 31. Related Posts Sun, water, federal dollars power new energy projects in Kentucky As Michigan’s clean energy industry expands, the state is helping workers with the transition How the Inflation Reduction Act is playing out in one of the ‘most biased’ states for renewables DOE WPTO seeking facilities to join Hydropower Testing Network