MISO
MISO Advisory Committee (AC)MISO Board of DirectorsMISO Market Subcommittee (MSC)MISO Planning Advisory Committee (PAC)MISO Regulatory Organizations & CommitteesOrganization of MISO States (OMS)MISO Reliability Subcommittee (RSC)MISO Resource Adequacy Subcommittee (RASC)
The Midcontinent Independent System Operator is a regional transmission organization that plans transmission projects, administers wholesale markets for its membership and manages the flow of electricity in Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas and Wisconsin.
Xcel Energy said that it will cease to deal in coal nationwide by 2030 with the accelerated retirement of a Texas coal plant.
MISO plans to spend $364.2 million throughout 2023, a 3.2% decrease from this year’s budget.
MISO’s 2022 transmission planning portfolio cleared its first vote before board members, though some stakeholders have lodged complaints over the package.
Electric cat, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Wall Street has reacted to earnings releases from AEP, NextEra Energy and Xcel Energy by increasing their share prices in the following days.
MISO members reopened the idea that the grid operator enact resilience criteria within its footprint.
MISO and SPP prepared stakeholders last week for the possibility they may come up empty-handed in their hunt for smaller interregional transmission upgrades.
DTE Energy executives promised a more aggressive clean energy transition during a third quarter earnings call.
FERC approved an agreement that will keep an Ameren Missouri coal plant online past its planned retirement date to maintain MISO grid reliability.
FERC last week affirmed the Henderson, Ky., municipal utility’s status as a transmission owner in the MISO region.
MISO remains committed to beefing up and making information from its generation retirement studies more public.
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