The power grid is increasingly unreliable, and NERC officials say it is not clear how the trend will be reversed.

“In recent years, we’ve witnessed a decline in reliability, and the future projection does not offer a clear path to securing the reliable electricity supply that is essential for the health, safety, and prosperity of our communities,” John Moura, NERC’s director of reliability assessment and performance analysis, said in a statement.

“We are facing an absolute step change in the risk environment surrounding reliability and energy assurance,” Moura said.

The Midcontinent Independent System Operator faces a projected 4.7 GW shortfall beginning in 2028 “if expected generator retirements occur,” NERC found. The grid operator is adding more than 12 GW to shore up a previously identified reserve deficit but more will be needed.

NERC also noted that there are 50 GW of generation in MISO with signed generation interconnection agreements that are not yet online, “and another 200+ GW of new resources within the interconnection queue that are still being evaluated.”

A spokesperson for MISO said the grid operator “concurs with NERC’s key conclusions and recommendations,” and is taking steps to address potential resource shortfalls. A new seasonal resource adequacy construct, changes to resource accreditation, development of a long-range transmission plan and adoption of a reliability-based demand curve will help, they said.

In the Southeastern Electric Reliability Council-Central region, NERC identified a potential shortfall in planned reserves over the 2025 to 2027 period, “as demand forecasts increase faster than the transitioning resource mix grows.” The region is adding gas and solar generation, and retiring coal plants.

“The period of projected shortfall is occurring in a mid-point of the assessment period from generator retirements that are currently slated to take place before new resources are added,” NERC said.

Retrieved from North American Electric Reliability Corp..