Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Kansas Energy Sources: A Geological Review

January 1, 2012

Kansas produces both conventional energy (oil, gas, and coal) and nonconventional (coalbed gas, wind, hydropower, nuclear, geothermal, solar, and biofuels) and ranks the 22nd in state energy production in the U.S. Nonrenewable conventional petroleum is the most important energy source with nonrenewable, nonconventional coalbed methane gas becoming increasingly important. Many stratigraphic units produce oil and/or gas somewhere in the state with the exception of the Salina Basin in north-central Kansas. Coalbed methane is produced from shallow wells drilled into the thin coal units in southeastern Kansas. At present, only two surface coal mines are active in southeastern Kansas. Although Kansas has been a major exporter of energy in the past (it ranked first in oil production in 1916), now, it is an energy importer. 

Publication Year 2012
Title Kansas Energy Sources: A Geological Review
DOI 10.1007/s11053-011-9164-y
Authors D. F. Merriam, L. L. Brady, K.D. Newell
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Natural Resources Research
Index ID 70032467
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse