Utility Dive
intl_tech
D1
Entergy’s gas projects are one-third of MISO’s fast-track interconnection process
发布:2026-05-30
· 事件:2026-05-30
An article from Entergy’s gas projects are one-third of MISO’s fast-track interconnection process Roughly 70% of Entergy’s proposed capacity additions would serve planned data centers in Louisiana and...
An article from
Entergy’s gas projects are one-third of MISO’s fast-track interconnection process
Roughly 70% of Entergy’s proposed capacity additions would serve planned data centers in Louisiana and Mississippi.
Published May 29, 2026
Ethan Howland
Senior Reporter
Share
Copy link
Email
LinkedIn
X/Twitter
Facebook
Print
License
Add us on Google
A gas-fired power plant being built in the Midwest in February 2023. The Midcontinent Independent System Operator’s fast-track interconnection queue has grown to roughly 30 GW, the grid operator said May 27, 2026.
Getty Images
Listen to the article
3 min
This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have
feedback
.
Entergy power projects — all gas fired — make up nearly a third of the roughly 28 GW in the Midcontinent Independent System Operator’s fast-track interconnection queue, according to a Utility Dive analysis of the updated list released on Wednesday.
About 70% of Entergy’s proposed capacity additions, spread across Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas, are designed to serve planned data center complexes, according to MISO’s summary of the
projects in its Expedited Resource Addition Study
process.
Entergy expects its retail sales will grow by 8.5% a year through 2030, partly driven by industrial load growth, according to the New Orleans-based company’s April 29 earnings presentation. The utility company said it expects to spend about $27 billion on
new generation and $7 billion on renewables and storage
through 2029.
Entergy projects in the ERAS process total nearly 9 GW in requested network interconnection, followed by Northern Indiana Public Service Co. at nearly 5 GW, or about 18% of the total, and Alliant Energy at about 3.3 GW, or about 13% of the total, according to MISO’s data.
Overall, gas-fired network interconnection capacity in the ERAS review totals 20.3 GW, or about 72%
of the total. Battery, solar and wind capacity total 4.3 GW, 2.3 GW
and 1.2 GW, respectively.
As part of the fourth cycle in its ERAS program, MISO is beginning to conduct interconnection reviews for about
3.7 GW of planned gas-fired, solar and storage capacity
, the grid operator said Wednesday.
“ERAS continues to deliver meaningful progress by moving viable projects forward with greater speed,” Aubrey Johnson, MISO’s vice president of system planning and competitive transmission, said in a statement. “Each cycle reinforces its value as part of a coordinated strategy to meet evolving system needs.”
Entergy, NIPSCO and Alliant account for about 60% of capacity under MISO's fast-track interconnection review
The 58 projects in MISO's Expedited Resource Addition Study process.
MISO said it has accepted or is reviewing 58 projects totaling almost 28 GW into ERAS, which aims to bring power supplies online quickly to meet near-term grid needs. The process allows planned resources that meet eligibility criteria to sidestep MISO’s standard interconnection queue reviews.
Under the ERAS process, MISO is studying up to 15 projects per quarter on a first-come, first-served basis. MISO will study up to 68 projects before the program ends on Aug. 31, 2027.
So far, 25 projects totaling about 11 GW have completed generator interconnection agreements, with another 15 projects totaling 8 GW nearing completion, MISO said. The projects that have completed the ERAS process are expected to begin operating in 2027 or 2028, according to the grid operator.
Recommended Reading
MISO capacity prices fall as new supply outpaces demand growth
By
Ethan Howland
•
April 29, 2026
MISO pushes back on utility complaint over competitive transmission bidding
By
Ethan Howland
•
May 28, 2026
Groups sue FERC over MISO, SPP fast-track interconnection programs
By
Ethan Howland
•
Nov. 19, 2025
Add us on Google
Share
Copy link
Email
LinkedIn
X/Twitter
Facebook
Print
purchase licensing rights
Filed Under:
Generation