Kansas
Energy entrepreneur: Kansas wind power, underground storage fuels optimism of hydrogen’s potential – Kansas Reflector
TOPEKA — People drink it day-after-day, however a central component of that substance may ultimately energy manufacturing crops or gasoline autos whereas shifting the nation towards a way forward for diminished reliance on oil and pure fuel.
That’s the optimistic view of hydrogen’s potential from Joe Spease, chief govt officer of WindSoHy, an Overland Park firm devoted to mixing low cost electrical energy from Kansas wind energy, an unlimited community of underground storage caverns and expertise to separate hydrogen from the oxygen in water. The bundle may considerably cut back reliance on fossil fuels contributing to local weather change and rising greenhouse fuel concentrations, he stated.
“The potential for inexperienced hydrogen for automobile gasoline and producing electrical energy is our best financial and environmental hope, as a result of it’s going to be cheaper than all fossil fuels when it’s made accurately and goes to do extra to cease local weather change than every other technological supply on this planet,” Spease stated. “There’s nothing to not like about it.”
Spease stated on the Kansas Reflector podcast advances in use of nitrogen within the power financial system would decrease utility prices and create thousands and thousands of jobs. Nevertheless, he estimated just one/tenth of 1% of individuals appreciated potential of hydrogen — a lightweight, extremely reactive gasoline derived by a chemical course of often called electrolysis. Utilizing nature’s most plentiful chemical component for power would decrease emissions of carbon dioxide into the ambiance, however would necessitate a rise in photo voltaic and wind property to achieve environmental objectives.
Corporations and governments all through the world have elevated investments in hydrogen growth. There’s rising curiosity by Congress and President Joe Biden in acceleration of analysis resulting in reasonably priced, plentiful and clear hydrogen manufacturing and consumption in the US.
In 2021, the U.S. Division of Vitality’s Earthshot program included an initiative designed to hurry deployment of hydrogen at scale. The company plans to take a position billions of {dollars} in decreasing the price of producing hydrogen from renewable power akin to photo voltaic and wind.
A Kansas angle
Spease stated the good information was that making hydrogen with the greatest pure property may end in a product cheaper than any fossil gasoline.
At present, a lot of the price of producing inexperienced hydrogen was the worth of energy to run electrolyzers that cut up hydrogen from oxygen in water by way of electrical present. A key to success of a hydrogen trade in Kansas, he stated, can be the acquisition of wind energy generated at evening when demand and price had been lowest.
Spease stated this inexperienced electrical energy would to run industrial electrolyzers in Kansas to create large portions of hydrogen. The hydrogen can be saved within the state’s underground salt caverns till moved to business companies by PVC pipelines.
Heavy trade — suppose metal or cement crops — ought to decrease emissions by drawing hydrogen from inexperienced sources relatively than the so-called grey or blue hydrogen constituted of pure fuel or different fossil fuels that contain carbon sequestration, Spease stated. He pushed again towards fossil gasoline advocates enthusiastic about mixing hydrogen with pure fuel within the nation’s present pure fuel pipeline community.
“That’s going to be a dangerous thought,” Spease stated. “There are some folks in the hydrogen trade who insist that it’s okay. All they’re doing is actually making an attempt to lengthen the use of pure fuel.”
Gas pump station
In some unspecified time in the future, he stated, companies ought to have the ability to set up electrolyzers and underground storage tanks at gasoline stations for the manufacturing and sale of hydrogen for autos.
Spease stated vehicles or vans may very well be transformed to run on hydrogen — a technique embraced by Amazon in a contract with hydrogen gasoline cell producer Plug Energy for long-haul vans. The excellence from present apply can be that hydrogen have to be pumped into automobile or truck gasoline tanks underneath stress, he stated.
“As a result of hydrogen gasoline cells are actually, actually efficient they’re far far superior to batteries. With a battery, you can go a couple 100 miles, and then you have to spend a lot of time to recharge the battery. And with a hydrogen gasoline cell automobile, you will go 500 or 600 miles on with one tank,” he stated.
Spease stated the way forward for hydrogen, given economies of scale, may result in a revolution in the way in which energy was provided to particular person residences. The science was shifting in the path of making it doable to have electrolyzers put in wherever hydrogen was wanted, he stated.
“We’re gonna get to the level ultimately every particular person family will be in a position to make their personal,” he stated.
Kansas
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Kansas
Kansas Republicans ask state agencies what they would drop if budget is cut 7.5%
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Kansas Republicans are asking agencies to report on what they would cut if they had to reduce their budgets by 7.5% in the upcoming fiscal year.
The Kansas House Appropriations Committee reported that it would distribute the request to state agencies at its meeting on Wednesday. The request comes after the committee submitted its own budget for the first time in decades, rather than tweaking the budget provided by the governor.
“It’s an opportunity for any agency or any department to set their priorities and say, here are some things that, if we needed to make reductions, this is where we would like to see those reductions,” said Rep. Kristy Williams, R-Augusta, and the committee vice chair.
The request isn’t uncommon in budgeting processes, and Gov. Laura Kelly made the same ask from state agencies in 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic caused a bleak revenue forecast. Budget director Adam Proffitt said Thursday that when it has been done in the past, agencies are typically given more time to decide where they would make cuts than they would with Wednesday’s request.
“We send the guidance out in usually June, when budget instructions go out, and we give agencies about three months to work through the process to more accurately and strategically identify where the supports might come from,” Proffitt said. “The exercise itself is not a bad exercise. It just needs to be done appropriately and strategically.”
Profitt said when reducing a budget, you want to use a scalpel and not a sledgehammer because some government programs leverage federal dollars that may be jeopardized if cut too deep.
“You want to make sure that you’re maybe not touching headcount or critical programs. It just takes a lot of time to work through these,” he said.
Not about new tax cuts
Kansas Republicans said the 7.5% isn’t necessarily to make space for tax cuts this session, but rather from a sense the government is wasting money after forming its own budgeting process.
“We’ve been able to see some areas where we really have a lot of work to do. And we also think there’s areas where maybe money is not being spent appropriately,” House Speaker Dan Hawkins, R-Wichita, told reporters.
Senate President Ty Masterson, R-Andover, added that it’s important to cut after years of COVID-era stimulus starts to phase out of the state’s budget.
“It’s more about avoiding the cliff. You’re seeing all that massive amount of stimulus money that was in our system start to fade away,” Masterson said. “We ballooned to the cost of the administrative part of our government incredibly high. I mean, just under Laura, I think it’s up 60% on the executive side.”
What’s not facing a 7.5% cut?
There are some exceptions to the reduced resource proposal. The Legislature is only asking for the projection from agencies that are paid for by the State General Fund.
Dylan Dear, a fiscal analyst with the Kansas Legislative Research Department, said the State General Fund accounts for about half of the state’s all-fund budget. In fiscal year 2026, the request is $12 billion to the state general fund and a $24 billion all-fund budget.
That means certain state agencies that fund themselves through fees like the state’s highway fund will go untouched. There is also an exception for the state’s per-pupil funding it provides to school districts.
The 7.5% reduction doesn’t factor in any additional asks any agency might have for the year, which the Legislature can elect to reject or only grant a portion of. It also exempts debt service from the reduction because it’s a contractually required expenditure that can’t be reduced.
Kansas
Victim of double shooting in Kansas City identified as 36-year-old man
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) – The victim of an early-week double shooting has been identified by investigators as a 36-year-old man.
The Kansas City, Missouri, Police Department announced on Thursday, Jan. 16, that the man who passed away due to injuries sustained during a double shooting has been identified as Colton J. Stock, 36.
Law enforcement officials noted that around 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 14, emergency crews were called to the area of 38th and Lister Ave. with reports of a disturbance. While en route, the call had been updated to a shooting.
When first responders arrived, they said they found Stock lying outside a nearby home with an apparent gunshot wound. He was taken to a nearby hospital where he succumbed to the injuries and was pronounced deceased.
Investigators indicated that they also found a second adult male victim inside the home suffering from another gunshot wound. He was taken to an area hospital with life-threatening injuries.
A preliminary investigation revealed that the shooting most likely started due to an argument. Investigators continue to work to determine the relationship between both shooting victims and find a person of interest.
As of Thursday, no one had been taken into custody in connection with the investigation. No further information has been released.
A $25,000 reward has been offered for information that leads to a conviction in the case. Those with information about the shooting should report it to the TIPS Hotline at 816-474-TIPS.
Copyright 2025 KCTV. All rights reserved.
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