According to a recent LinkedIn post from Nira Energy, interconnection pressures in MISO’s DPP-2025 Phase 1 appear significant, with 54% of queued projects reportedly withdrawing and a median exit cost of about $998K per MW. The post suggests that only 62% of projects advanced to Phase 2 across the studied pool.
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Within that context, the company’s LinkedIn post highlights that 81% of Nira Energy customer projects reportedly progressed to Phase 2, implying a materially higher survival rate than the broader set. The post attributes this performance gap to more selective site evaluation before entering the queue and scenario modeling tools used once projects are under study.
The post also points to a forthcoming DPP Phase 2 process and frames its analysis as guidance for developers preparing for the next stage of MISO interconnection. For investors, these figures may indicate growing demand for analytical and siting tools that can mitigate interconnection risk, potentially strengthening Nira Energy’s value proposition within the renewable development and grid-planning ecosystem.
If the reported survival differential is sustained over time and across markets, Nira Energy could be positioned to capture a larger share of developers’ planning and software budgets. However, the LinkedIn content does not disclose revenue, pricing, or client concentration, so the financial impact remains uncertain and would depend on the scale of customer adoption beyond the highlighted DPP-2025 cohort.

