Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO)
FERC said MISO’s Tariff was silent on the issue of whether a generation project can switch from wind to solar while in the RTO’s interconnection queue.
FERC left MISO transmission owners’ ability to self-fund network upgrades intact over a protest from AWEA and the dissent of Commissioner Richard Glick.
MISO members are urging the RTO to implement dynamic line ratings, saying the benefits would outweigh the costs.
The pandemic continues to clamp down on MISO’s spending, with the RTO again predicting to be millions under budget by the end of the year.
Uneconomic self-commitments of coal resources in MISO’s footprint are not occurring at the clip that critics imagine, the RTO’s Monitor said.
MISO’s and SPP’s state regulators gave the RTOs’ staffs an opportunity to respond to their monitors’ suggestions for improving interregional coordination.
MISO and SPP announced a yearlong transmission study to identify projects with “comprehensive, cost-effective and efficient upgrades.”
MISO expects adequate resources for the fall, though planned generator outages are expected to be higher this year.
MISO staff continue to keep advisories in effect and compile data on the emergency and subsequent rolling blackouts caused by Hurricane Laura.
The Sustainable FERC Project has released an interactive map of MISO’s interconnection queue, highlighting many renewable gigawatts the footprint has lost out on.
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