MISO Board of Directors
MISO's board may be coming around to the idea of using a sloped demand curve to price capacity as the RTO confronts the possibility of resource shortages.
MISO and its membership said they’re experiencing firsthand the national trend of employee churn that picked up in the latter half of the pandemic.
MISO’s board of directors gathering covered concern over slipping capacity reserves as heat blistered the footprint and forced emergency preparations.
MISO’s June listening session with its Board of Directors will concentrate on how the RTO and its members are tackling the nationwide Great Resignation.
MISO’s ongoing market platform replacement project is focusing on a one-stop model manager, new energy management system and day-ahead market clearing engine.
MISO leadership met with staff from Memphis Light, Gas, and Water, who are mulling a split with the Tennessee Valley Authority.
At a quarterly review of markets, MISO said an increasingly precarious load-supply balance is here to stay.
MISO's first in-person meeting since COVID-19 surfaced covered its budget, its ongoing market platform replacement and how to handle future meetings.
Stakeholders at MISO Board Week offered a few tips on how the footprint can weather a tough winter, a day after the RTO elevated wintertime risk levels.
MISO directors Nancy Lange, Mark Johnson and Phyllis Currie will keep their seats into 2022 after a vote of the RTO's membership.
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