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How Kit Carson electric engineered a cost-effective coal exit

April 01, 2019
Karl Cates and Seth Feaster
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Key Findings

Part of KCEC’s motivation—and part of the benefits it seeks to reap from redefining its business model—is through ripple-effect local economic development that creates and sustains hometown employment by investing a little more than $1 million construction-wise per megawatt of new solar capacity.

The co-op’s solar program is anchored to a federal initiative that promotes KCEC’s potential for replication through a “Resilient Renewable Energy Roadmap for Rural Electric Cooperatives” that KCEC is developing jointly with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colo.

As KCEC negotiated its Tri-State exit, other Tri-State members took note, and in December of last year, the Delta Montrose Electric Association (DMEA) asked the Colorado Public Utilities Commission (PUC) to require Tri-State to release DMEA from its contract as well.

Executive Summary

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Tri-State G&T members' service areas

In ending its longstanding relationship three years ago with Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association, Kit Carson Electric Cooperative in northern New Mexico struck a path that has simultaneously created greater local control of how electricity is generated and saved the small co-op millions of dollars.

The deal has sparked what may be a larger member revolt against Tri-State, which wields considerable muscle across its four-state reach even as it has remained out of step with market trends that are undermining the economic viability of coal-fired power, a Tri-State mainstay.

The Kit Carson co-op move suggests a model for other rural electric co-ops to follow, not just regionally but nationally as well— the co-op is partnering with the U.S. Energy Department’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) to create a template for other co-ops interested in pursuing solarpowered electricity production.

The economics of the New Mexico co-op’s new business model argue for such changes based on benefits that include greater transparency into wholesale power prices, more local choice on how electricity is generated, and lower long-term retail electric rates.

Press release: Surging energy prices accelerating pace of wind, solar and battery adoption

Please view full report PDF for references and sources.

Karl Cates

Former IEEFA Transition Policy Analyst Karl Cates has been an editor for Bloomberg LP, an editor for the New York Times, and a consultant to the Treasury Department-sanctioned community development financial institution (CDFI) industry.

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Seth Feaster

Seth Feaster is an Energy Data Analyst whose work focuses on the coal industry and the U.S. power sector.

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