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Energy Profile

Kansas

vs

Georgia

Side-by-side comparison of electricity costs, generation mix, and renewable energy data.

KansasMetricGeorgia
14.56¢/kWhResidential14.73¢/kWh
11.35¢/kWhCommercial11.50¢/kWh
8.03¢/kWhIndustrial7.81¢/kWh
#19Price Rank#20
52.0%Renewable %12.5%

Generation Mix

Kansas

Coal
22.7%
Gas
9.2%
Nuclear
16.0%
Wind
51.6%
Solar
0.2%

Georgia

Coal
12.8%
Gas
40.7%
Nuclear
34.3%
Hydro
2.1%
Solar
6.6%

Frequently Asked Questions

Kansas has cheaper residential electricity at 14.56¢/kWh. The difference is 0.17¢/kWh between the two states. Kansas ranks #19 and Georgia ranks #20 cheapest among all states.

Kansas gets 52.0% of electricity from renewables, while Georgia gets 12.5%. Kansas leads in renewable energy adoption.

Electricity rates from EIA retail sales data. Generation mix from EIA electric power operational data.

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, 2026.

The side-by-side above pulls the the EIA Open Data API and State Electricity Profiles data for both entity A and entity B. What follows is the interpretation — which specific axes carry the most weight for entity A versus entity B, and which differences are large enough to influence a real decision.

For households or analysts using this comparison as a decision input, the right framing is usually not "which is better" in aggregate but "which is better for the specific decision in front of you." the EIA Open Data API and State Electricity Profiles captures the raw data; the framing depends on whether the question is investment, residency, planning, or research.