News

MISO territory map. Photo source: FERC. Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO), which spans the central U.S., should have adequate generating capacity next summer but faces “significant ...
A view looking southeast in Marseilles, Illinois, shows the MISO power grid territory, and in the distance, wind turbine towers and the nuclear plant, which are in the PJM power grid, April 23 ...
Entergy and MISO blame each other for surprise blackouts affecting over 125,000 customers in Louisiana. ... While Entergy’s territory covers most of MISO South, ...
Ørsted is partnering with Mission Clean Energy to develop 1 GW of standalone energy storage projects in the Central and Northern regions of the Midcontinent Independent System Operator’s ...
MISO, which operates and plans the bulk power grid across all or parts of 15 central states, estimated this week that electricity demand across its territory could increase 60 percent by 2040.
Electricity demand and prices have soared, especially in the MISO territory of Illinois, where customers this week began paying about 20% more for power. Since the Clinton rescue, ...
Newport Solar is a 180-megawatt project designed to source renewable electricity for General Motors’ operations in the Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) territory including Lansing ...
Louisiana’s electric grid was missing a huge amount of power last weekend because of unplanned outages at power plants, contributing to MISO's decision to order forced blackouts.
The NRDC study showed that Indiana ratepayers bore the second-highest burden in MISO, paying $338 million for uneconomic coal power from 2021-2023, just behind Louisiana’s $341 million.
As of 1 p.m. EST on June 24, natural gas was providing 45.5% of generating capacity in PJM territory. Nuclear and coal followed with 20.8% and 19.6%, respectively. Solar represented 7%.
Employees in a cavernous facility in Carmel, Indiana, MISO’s headquarters, sit in front of a huge array of screens showing information about the electric grid in its territory.
Louisiana’s electric grid was missing a huge amount of power last weekend because of unplanned outages at power plants, contributing to MISO's decision to order forced blackouts.