MISO subregional transfer limit
MISO’s plan to extend payment arrangements for market participants that use the Midwest-to-South transmission path is destined for settlement proceedings.
MISO will file at FERC to extend a rate schedule that determines what market participants pay for using its Midwest-to-South transmission path
The MISO stakeholder community appears to support the RTO’s plan to extend the current arrangement on Midwest and South transmission flows.
MISO and SPP regulators are close to asking the RTOs for improvements to transmission operations on their seam as their market monitors wind down a study.
SPP stakeholders once again took a crack to resolve a weighty issue in determining how futures will be considered in the RTO’s 2021 transmission plan study.
MISO will likely extend its settlement agreement for flows on the Midwest-South subregional transmission constraint through early 2023.
The 2020 MISO Transmission Expansion Plan contains 510 proposed projects at a combined $4.06 billion, the priciest since the RTO's 2011 MVP portfolio.
MISO is looking into a forward market mechanism and improvements to its scarcity and emergency pricing under its resource availability and need project.
SPP staff shared a draft congestion study with the RTO's Seams Steering Committee on the effect of MISO’s contract path to its southern footprint.
A mild winter across the Midwest footprint made for an easy January for MISO operators, stakeholders heard at the Reliability Subcommittee meeting.
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