10/09/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/09/2025 08:09
News media contact: Matt Helms 517-284-8300
Customer Assistance: 800-292-9555
The Commission will hold a public hearing Oct. 27 in Auburn Hills. It's your chance to have your say on the state's assumptions for long-term plans for electric utility reliability and affordability, incorporating Michigan's new clean energy standard and factoring in renewable energy goals, environmental compliance, electric vehicles, potential data centers and more.
The Michigan Public Service Commission will hold a public hearing later this month in Auburn Hills to hear from the community about how certain factors should be included in the state's electric utilities' long-range plans for producing electricity to meet customer energy needs.
The hearing will be 6-7:30 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 27, at Oakland Community College's Auburn Hills Campus, in Building F, Room F123, at 2900 Featherstone Road. The hearing will be in-person, and anyone may attend and share their thoughts on how different electricity generating technologies should be analyzed to ensure utilities can meet their customers' electricity needs in the long term. A previous hearing was held Sept. 9 in Grand Rapids.
The upcoming hearing in metro Detroit is about what are officially called Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) planning parameters. These are guidelines that establish what Michigan's electric utilities must consider in their required long-term modeling of future electricity demand, essentially a roadmap for ensuring they'll have enough electricity over a period of up to 20 years to meet residential and business customer demand while also meeting clean energy standards.
IRPs tackle a range of issues, including the planned retirement of current electricity generation resources, the planned or anticipated need for new power generation, the appropriate mix of different electricity generation technologies to meet customer needs, laws and regulations, and the timing for building or acquiring those new resources. An IRP can also address programs that impact utility customer pocketbooks in other ways, such as home or business energy efficiency efforts that can reduce utility bills and programs to address utility affordability.
IRP planning parameters answer important issues like:
IRPs are required under Public Act 341 of 2016, which directs all rate-regulated utilities to submit IRPs to the MPSC for review and approval. Public Act 235 of 2023 establishes a clean energy standard of 80% by 2035 and 100% by 2040 and directs the incorporation of Michigan's clean energy standard in IRPs.
More information, including a draft report on the IRP planning parameters and how to submit comments in the case docket on this matter (Case No. U-21867), is available in the MPSC's public notice about the hearing.
Anyone needing an accommodation to attend the meeting or to inquire about accessibility may call 517-284-8090.
For information about the MPSC, visit https://www.michigan.gov/mpsc, sign up for its monthly newsletter or other listservs. Follow the MPSC on Facebook, X/Twitter, LinkedIn or Instagram.
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