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METC®
Michigan Electric Transmission Company, LLC (METC) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of ITC Holdings Corp., the nation’s largest independent electricity transmission company. Based in Novi, Michigan, METC owns, operates and maintains approximately 5,500 circuit miles of transmission line in the western and northern portions of Michigan’s Lower Peninsula, serving a population of 4.9 million.
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ITCTransmission
International Transmission Company (d/b/a ITCTransmission) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of ITC Holdings Corp., the nation’s largest independent electricity transmission company. Based in Novi, Michigan, ITCTransmission owns, operates and maintains approximately 2,800 circuit miles of transmission line in southeast Michigan, serving a population of 5.1 million.
Featured Project
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Gratiot County Wind Farm Interconnection
In order to facilitate the integration of renewable energy resources into the high-voltage transmission system, ITC Holdings Corp., through its subsidiary, Michigan Electric Transmission Company (METC®), is constructing two new substations and making system upgrades in Midland and Gratiot counties. This project will connect a wind farm in Gratiot County to the new Redstone substation being built in Porter Township, Midland County.
Latest News
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ITC Sponsors WJR Pure Michigan Tour Radio Show in Bad Axe
May 15, 2012
Gregory Ioanidis, president of ITC Michigan, was a guest on the Paul W Smith show during a recent broadcast as part of the station’s Pure…
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ITC Holdings Corporation earns DEQ Clean Corporate Citizen Award
May 8, 2012
The DEQ today presented one of its highest environmental stewardship honors – the Clean Corporate Citizen Award – to ITC Holdings Corporation at the company’s…
What's Happening
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ITC Turns on Michigan-Ontario Power Transformers
ITC Holdings Corp turned on power transmission equipment along the Michigan-Ontario border in hopes of making the power flow more reliably and efficiently. The long-awaited phase angle regulator (PAR) transformers are designed to control unscheduled flows of power around Lake Erie. Grid operators have said stopping the Lake Erie loop flow could save millions of dollars in electric costs for consumers in Ontario, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York.
