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Priority review Rule Amended Final

Commission Approves $226 Million for Consumers Energy Grid Reliability

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Published March 27th, 2026
Detected March 28th, 2026
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Summary

The Michigan Public Service Commission approved a $276.6 million rate increase for Consumers Energy to fund grid reliability improvements, including $226 million for specific programs aimed at reducing power outages. The decision authorizes rate adjustments that will result in a typical residential customer seeing a monthly bill increase of $6.46.

What changed

The Michigan Public Service Commission (MPSC) has approved a significant rate increase for Consumers Energy, authorizing $276.6 million in higher rates to fund crucial grid reliability improvements. This includes $226 million allocated to programs like Lines Reliability Low-Voltage Distribution, Resiliency Fractionalization, and System Protection, designed to enhance grid stability and reduce customer outage minutes. The Commission also approved $21.7 million for operations and maintenance related to tree trimming and $14.6 million for cloud computing costs associated with an IT project. Notably, the MPSC reduced the company's original request by nearly 40%, cutting projects not fully supported by evidence of prudence.

This decision will result in a typical residential customer experiencing a monthly bill increase of approximately $6.46, effective May 1, 2026. Compliance officers should note the approved investments are tied to specific reliability metrics, and Consumers Energy must demonstrate the proper expenditure of funds in future reconciliation cases, with potential refunds to customers for unspent amounts. The MPSC's order reflects a continued focus on balancing reliability enhancements with customer cost management, building on recent improvements in outage restoration times and cost controls relative to inflation.

What to do next

  1. Update customer billing systems to reflect the new rates effective May 1, 2026.
  2. Monitor Consumers Energy's progress on approved reliability programs and future reconciliation filings.
  3. Review IT project expenditures related to the SAP S4/HANA implementation.

Source document (simplified)

Commission approves additional investments to advance Consumers Energy’s significant reliability improvements



March 27, 2026

Customer Assistance: 800-292-9555

The Michigan Public Service Commission today approved a rate increase for Consumers Energy to support the utility’s continued improvements in making its power grid more reliable, with fewer power outage minutes per customer and faster service restoration times, continuing the progress of recent years (Case No. U-21870).

Among the investments, the Commission approved an additional year of Consumers’ investment recovery mechanism (IRM) that tracks and funds electric distribution upgrades that enhance reliability for customers. The Commission approved $226 million for the utility’s Lines Reliability Low-Voltage Distribution, Resiliency Fractionalization, and System Protection programs, which support improvements to distribution reliability, targeting upgrades to reduce interruptions. The IRM allows for reconciliation of the investment, requiring Consumers to prove the money was spent on approved projects in a future reconciliation case, with any unspent funds potentially subject to being refunded to customers.

The Commission also approved the company’s Repetitive Outages Low-Voltage Distribution program, which will identify locations on its grid where customers experience frequent outages and target improvements and repairs to trouble spots.

The Commission authorized Consumers to raise rates by $276,607,000, as well as $21.7M in deferral costs for operations and maintenance associated with ramping up efforts to trim trees, and $14.6 million for cloud computing costs associated with the company’s SAP S4/HANA information technology project. The deferrals approved in this case spread the recovery of larger operations and maintenance costs over time, reducing the immediate rate impact for customers. This approval cuts out projects that were not fully supported or shown to be prudent investments, removing almost 40% of the company’s original proposed request.

A typical residential customer using 500 kilowatt-hours (kWh) a month will see an increase of $6.46, or 6.1%, in their monthly bill. The new rates will take effect May 1, 2026.

The Commission maintained the company’s current return on common equity of 9.9% and a capital structure of 50% equity and 50% debt. The utility had sought a return on equity of 10.25% and a capital structure of 50.75% equity and 49.25% debt.

The additional investments approved today continue the MPSC’s focus on improving reliability while responsibly managing customer costs.

Consumers Energy’s average customer experienced 21 fewer power outage minutes in 2024 compared to 2023. More than 93% of its customers experiencing power outages had their power restored in less than 24 hours in 2024 in all weather conditions, up from 87% in 2023. The Consumers improvements come as Michigan reduced the average number of outage minutes per customer by nearly an hour — 52.6 minutes — between 2019 and 2024, a greater reduction than any other state.

The Commission’s focus on cost-effective reliability solutions has kept customer energy costs to 5.3% below the rate of inflation between 2020 and 2025. Michigan’s average monthly electric bill in 2024 was $119.31, almost $23 below the national average of $142.16, and lower than what neighbors pay in Ohio ($135.16) and Indiana ($133.06).

The Commission’s order today also authorized measures that align with the Commission’s moves to implement recommendations of the first-ever comprehensive, third-party audit of Consumers and DTE Electric Co., the state’s two largest electric utilities, released in 2024. The Commission approved:

  • $186 million for Consumers’ line clearing program — trimming trees and other vegetation around power lines, the largest source of outages — as the company moves toward a cycle of clearing the entirety of its low-voltage distribution grid every five years by 2030-2031, from an effective clearing cycle of 10.2 years. The Commission directed Consumers to conduct new analyses of the costs and benefits of moving to a four-year trimming cycle and the costs and benefits of removing 100% of the tree canopy in zones with the highest consequences of failure in its next rate case.
  • $30 million for the company’s Vulnerable Communities Resiliency Plan to reduce system average interruption duration index minutes during outages and directed the utility to show how the investments improved reliability and how the Vulnerable Communities Resiliency Plan fits into the company’s broader distribution improvement goals.
  • The Commission approved Consumers’ amended requested investment amount in Underground Cable Rejuvenation to improve degrading underground cables in downtowns of areas it serves to reduce failure risks. Participants in the case included the Michigan Department of Attorney General; Michigan Cable Telecommunications Association; Michigan Environmental Council; Natural Resources Defense Council; Sierra Club; Citizens Utility Board of Michigan; Environmental Law and Policy Center; Ecology Center; Union of Concerned Scientists; Vote Solar; Energy Michigan; the Foundry Association of Michigan; Michigan Energy Innovation Business Council; Institute for Energy Innovation; Advanced Energy United; Urban Core Collective; Michigan Electric Transmission Co.; the Association of Businesses Advocating Tariff Equity; Great Lakes Renewable Energy Association; Hemlock Semiconductor Corp.; Solar Technology LLC; The Kroger Co.; Walmart Inc.; and MPSC Staff.

The MPSC serves as an expert, impartial regulator committed to consumer protection, fairness and transparency. For information about the MPSC, visit www.michigan.gov/mpsc , sign up for its monthly newsletter or other listservs . Follow the MPSC on Facebook , X/Twitter , LinkedIn or Instagram .

To look up cases from today’s meeting, access the MPSC’s E-Dockets filing system.

Watch recordings of the MPSC’s meetings on the MPSC’s YouTube channel .

DISCLAIMER: This document was prepared to aid the public’s understanding of certain matters before the Commission and is not intended to modify, supplement, or be a substitute for the Commission’s orders. The Commission’s orders are the official action of the Commission.

#

MI Newswire Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs News Media Contact

Matt Helms

Public Information Officer

HelmsM@michigan.gov

517-284-8300


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Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
MPSC
Published
March 27th, 2026
Compliance deadline
May 1st, 2026 (34 days)
Instrument
Rule
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
Case No. U-21870
Docket
U-21870

Who this affects

Applies to
Consumers Energy companies
Industry sector
2210 Electric Utilities
Activity scope
Utility Operations Information Technology
Geographic scope
US-MI US-MI

Taxonomy

Primary area
Energy
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Protection Information Technology

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