Microsoft Partners with Midwest Power Grid Operator to Modernize U.S. Infrastructure
Microsoft Corp has partnered with the Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) to modernize the Midwest power grid, the companies announced on January 6. The collaboration aims to ensure that the growing electricity demands of artificial intelligence (AI) data centers and other energy-intensive infrastructure can be reliably met.
Under the partnership, Microsoft technologies will be deployed across the MISO network, which serves 42 million people across 15 U.S. states and Manitoba, Canada. The initiative will leverage AI and digital tools to predict and respond to weather-related power disruptions, optimize transmission line planning, and accelerate certain grid operations.
Nirav Shah, Vice President and Chief Information and Digital Officer at MISO, said the collaboration is critical amid a diversifying energy mix, rising electrification, and growing demand from data centers. “Now is the time to partner with organizations that share a common interest in modernizing the grid operations of the future,” he added.
This partnership follows similar initiatives in the U.S. technology sector, including Google’s collaboration with PJM Interconnection, the country’s largest grid operator, to accelerate the integration of new electricity supplies using AI. Financial details of the Microsoft–MISO agreement were not disclosed.