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Microsoft modernizes the Midwest power grid with a major US electric grid operator

Microsoft and the U.S. Midwest Grid have teamed up, according to an announcement made on Tuesday. This is just one of many examples of Big 'Tech turning to collaboration in order to ensure that massive amounts of energy needed for artificial intelligence can be available.

In the past two years, U.S. tech companies have deepened their ties with the energy sector. They have signed long-term supply agreements and provided AI assistance in order to maximize the supply as the demand for power in the U.S. skyrocketed due to the energy-intensive data centers. Google partnered last year with PJM Interconnection, the largest power grid operator in the United States, to use artificial intelligence to speed up the process for connecting 'new electricity supplies' to the PJM regional grid.

Microsoft's latest partnership will see Microsoft technologies deployed on the Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) grid. This grid covers 42 million people in 15 U.S. States and Manitoba, Canada. These technologies will be used to predict and respond to weather-related power disruptions and transmission line planning, as well as accelerate certain operations.

Nirav Shah is Vice President and Chief Information and Digital Officer for MISO. He said that such acceleration was critical due to a variety of factors, including electrification, the rise in demand, and the expansion of data centers. "Now is the right time to partner up with organizations that have a shared interest in modernizing grid operations for the future."

The statement on Tuesday did not include any financial information. (Reporting and editing by Barbara Lewis in New York, Laila Kearney is reporting from New York)

(source: Reuters)