FERC approved a MISO proposal requiring owners of load-modifying resources to provide clearly documented commitments regarding their availability before participating in the capacity market.
MISO’s Advisory Committee is deliberating whether state regulators elected to the RTO’s Board of Directors should be subject to the same “cooling-off” period required for industry executives.
MISO estimates that it delivered between $3.2 billion and $3.9 billion in benefits to its members in 2018.
MISO will allow energy storage to compete against all types of transmission projects, scrapping an earlier condition that limited its use.
Benjamin Sloan, a former attorney in the Mississippi Attorney General’s Office, will become the Organization of MISO States’ new director of regulatory affairs.
MISO will this year draw on three sets of contributors to create its load forecast for 2020 transmission planning.
MISO said it will explore whether to alter its long-term planning models to factor in expectations for an increased number of outages.
Stakeholders are urging MISO to slow downits disjointed resource availability and need effort until it can measure the effects of 3 related FERC filings.
MISO’s recent resource adequacy filings with FERC will affect the timeline of an otherwise unremarkable capacity auction in terms of load forecasts.
MISO managed its eighth maximum generation event in six years last month despite the difficulty of pulling together the forecast leading up to the episode.