Kansas City Power & Light Company ("KCP&L”), a subsidiary of Great
Plains Energy Incorporated (NYSE: GXP), is pleased to announce that the
company has received a grant of just under $24 million to help fund a
fully integrated SmartGrid demonstration project in the Green Impact
Zone and Midtown areas of Kansas City, Mo. The grant was funded as part
of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act passed earlier this year.
It is part of the Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Office of Electricity
and Energy efforts to modernize and strengthen the security and
reliability of the nation’s energy infrastructure.
"KCP&L has a long history of innovation, and we’re proud to have this
opportunity to continue developing new tools and programs for
customers,” stated Mike Chesser, KCP&L Chairman and CEO. "This project
is one step on the road to creating the model for the electric utility
of the future. It represents a tremendous opportunity for us to
collaborate with our customers by providing them better service and far
more control over their energy usage.”
Unlike the traditional "one-way” electrical grid, the "two-way”
SmartGrid will allow customers to better manage their electricity
consumption by providing access to actual and predictive usage
information, digital tools and innovative programs. The project will
ultimately help KCP&L identify and improve beneficial energy-efficiency
measures, electricity storage capabilities, sustainable energy
technology and electricity delivery systems. Customers should realize
many benefits as a result, including improved service reliability,
reduced outages and energy delivery costs.
"The Green Impact Zone is an exciting project that will provide an
excellent opportunity to learn the potential for investments in
SmartGrid technologies, energy efficiency and weatherization,
distributed generation and demand response programs,” said PSC Chairman
Robert M. Clayton III. "The Missouri Public Service Commission will
watch, with great interest, this project as it moves forward and the
lessons to be learned from it, including best practices and what
investments bring the most cost-effective return. Congressman Cleaver,
MARC, KCP&L and the other participants should be commended for their
leadership and vision for Kansas City.”
"We are grateful that the Department of Energy saw the unique importance
of this project that seeks to make a series of comprehensive technology
investments in areas that are in the greatest need. The Green Impact
Zone SmartGrid initiative will complement other efforts to weatherize
homes and create jobs in the urban core, while providing a platform for
us to expand SmartGrid technology to other parts of our system,” Chesser
added. "I would like to thank Congressman Cleaver for his vision in
creating the Green Impact Zone and we look forward to partnering with
the community to complete this project.”
KCP&L’s SmartGrid demonstration project will be located in Kansas City’s
Midtown urban core, bounded by Main St. on the west, Swope Parkway on
the east, 37th St. on the north and 52nd St. on the south. It overlays
the innovative Green Impact Zone that Congressman Emanuel Cleaver II
announced last spring, but also extends beyond it to other area Midtown
homes and businesses to gather a larger sampling of customer needs and
preferences.
"Typically, ‘green’ investments have been reserved for those who can
afford the upfront cost. In neighborhoods like these, where the median
income is less than $20,000 a year, ‘greening’ is simply not possible,”
said Congressman Cleaver. "This plan removes that burden and reduces
utility bills for those who need it most. We owe a debt of gratitude to
KCP&L for taking the lead on this initiative and pulling together the
right resources and partners to make the Green Impact Zone SmartGrid a
reality. When you combine the SmartGrid with the job training,
neighborhood stabilization and infrastructure investments also targeted
here, ‘green’ is no longer an academic concept for someone else — it
becomes a means to change people’s lives right here in our urban core.”
The total project is expected to cost more than $48 million, half of
which is being paid for with stimulus funding through the U.S.
Department of Energy. KCP&L, working with a coalition of SmartGrid
industry partners, is planning to contribute an additional $24 million
on the five-year project. Current project partners include Siemens,
OATI, Landis+Gyr, Intergraph, GridPoint and Kokam America Inc. (Dow
Kokam), who will provide equipment, technical expertise and in-kind
financial support. The project is also receiving the support of The
Electric
Power Research Institute (EPRI), an independent, non-profit
company that performs research, development and design in the
electricity sector for the benefit of the public.
About KCP&L
Headquartered in Kansas City, Mo., Great Plains Energy Incorporated
(NYSE: GXP) is the holding company of Kansas City Power & Light Company
and KCP&L Greater Missouri Operations Company, two of the leading
regulated providers of electricity in the Midwest. Kansas City Power &
Light and KCP&L Greater Missouri Operations use KCP&L as a brand name.
More information about the companies is available on the Internet at: www.greatplainsenergy.com
or www.kcpl.com.
Forward-Looking Statements
Statements made in this release that are not based on historical facts
are forward-looking, may involve risks and uncertainties, and are
intended to be as of the date when made. Forward-looking statements
include, but are not limited to, the outcome of regulatory proceedings,
cost estimates of the Comprehensive Energy Plan and other matters
affecting future operations. In connection with the safe harbor
provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, the
registrants are providing a number of important factors that could cause
actual results to differ materially from the provided forward-looking
information. These important factors include: future economic conditions
in regional, national and international markets and their effects on
sales, prices and costs, including, but not limited to, possible further
deterioration in economic conditions and the timing and extent of any
economic recovery; prices and availability of electricity in regional
and national wholesale markets; market perception of the energy
industry, Great Plains Energy, KCP&L and GMO; changes in business
strategy, operations or development plans; effects of current or
proposed state and federal legislative and regulatory actions or
developments, including, but not limited to, deregulation, re-regulation
and restructuring of the electric utility industry; decisions of
regulators regarding rates KCP&L and GMO can charge for electricity;
adverse changes in applicable laws, regulations, rules, principles or
practices governing tax, accounting and environmental matters including,
but not limited to, air and water quality; financial market conditions
and performance including, but not limited to, changes in interest rates
and credit spreads and in availability and cost of capital and the
effects on nuclear decommissioning trust and pension plan assets and
costs; impairments of long-lived assets or goodwill; credit ratings;
inflation rates; effectiveness of risk management policies and
procedures and the ability of counterparties to satisfy their
contractual commitments; impact of terrorist acts; increased competition
including, but not limited to, retail choice in the electric utility
industry and the entry of new competitors; ability to carry out
marketing and sales plans; weather conditions including, but not limited
to, weather-related damage and their effects on sales, prices and costs;
cost, availability, quality and deliverability of fuel; ability to
achieve generation planning goals and the occurrence and duration of
planned and unplanned generation outages; delays in the anticipated
in-service dates and cost increases of additional generating capacity
and environmental projects; nuclear operations; workforce risks,
including, but not limited to, retirement compensation and benefits
costs; the ability to successfully integrate KCP&L and GMO operations
and the timing and amount of resulting synergy savings; and other risks
and uncertainties.
This list of factors is not all-inclusive because it is not possible to
predict all factors. Other risk factors are detailed from time to time
in Great Plains Energy’s and KCP&L’s most recent quarterly report on
Form 10-Q and annual report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission. Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the
date on which such statement is made. Great Plains Energy and KCP&L
undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking
statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or
otherwise.