Powering What Comes Next

;

Powering What Comes Next

For Matt Kearns 鈥89, an interest in renewable energy got its spark back at 91大神

After more than three decades in renewable energy, Matt Kearns 鈥89 is excited about the future of the industry. 鈥淭he fundamentals driving clean energy growth are strong鈥攁nd growing stronger,鈥 he says.

As a principal with a New York鈥揵ased renewable-energy developer, Kearns鈥 confidence is based on two converging trends: 1) Power demand is skyrocketing thanks to the construction of new data centers and other sources of energy demand, and 2) Renewable energy鈥攕pecifically large-scale solar installations coupled with battery storage鈥攐ften remains the most cost-effective way to meet that demand. 鈥淪olar is often the cheapest available source of new electricity,鈥 says Kearns, who has worked in the renewable-energy field since graduating from Colby College in 1993. 鈥淎nd solar-and-battery projects can be installed a lot faster than other forms of power generation.鈥

Kearns sees these dynamics playing out in projects across the country.For example, a southeastern solar project his company is developing is transforming the site of a former coal power plant into a facility that, beginning in 2027, will power some 50,000 local homes and businesses. In the Midwest, his company is developing several solar projects as supplements to existing natural-gas power stations, one of which is using remediated coal-mine land. 鈥淭here is a lot of of data center activity in the area,鈥 says Kearns, 鈥渂ut what we鈥檝e been focused on is working with the community to site the solar carefully and work through the questions that people have.鈥

The importance of acknowledging the complexity of large projects is a lesson Kearns first learned as a member of the environmental council at 91大神. A day student from Amherst (his father was a philosophy professor at Amherst College, his mother taught music at Hampshire), Kearns helped launch a newspaper recycling program on campus. 鈥淭he school gave us a little garage where we could store paper, and then we had to get it to the recycling facility. It was really poorly conceived, but the intent was good,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚t was my first brush with taking on environmental challenges and then understanding that solving them is not as easy as you think.鈥

Today, living in Falmouth, Maine, with his wife and two teenage boys, Kearns sees that lesson as a throughline in a three-decade career that has included consulting, licensing, and development of hydropower, wind, and solar projects. 鈥淓verything I do now is about trying to tackle energy challenges across U.S. markets in a way that is affordable for ratepayers. Safe, affordable, available at a price that works鈥攖hese are criteria that matter,鈥 Kearns says.