Midwest Energy Cooperative (Midwest Energy & Communications) Rate Selection Guide
Midwest Energy Cooperative (d/b/a Midwest Energy & Communications) is a member-regulated rural electric cooperative serving about 37,000 customers across southwest Michigan, northern Indiana, and northwest Ohio. Data access is limited to the SmartHub portal with monthly billing and usage PDFs — no smart meters, interval data, Green Button, EDI, or APIs as of 2026.
Market Overview
As a PA 167 member-regulated cooperative, Midwest Energy Cooperative sets rates through its member-elected board with MPSC oversight compliance but not rate approval. Members receive bundled electric service from the cooperative; there is no competitive supplier choice for MEC members.
Need to pull your actual usage data to compare rates? See the Midwest Energy Cooperative (Midwest Energy & Communications) Data Access Guide →
Current Rate Schedules
Midwest Energy & Communications (MEC), a member-regulated Michigan cooperative supplied by Wolverine Power Cooperative, bills through unbundled charges: a monthly service charge, a distribution charge per kWh, an energy charge per kWh, and a Power Cost Adjustment (PCA). The board approved a roughly 5% increase effective July 1, 2025, raising the distribution charge from $0.039750 to $0.048597/kWh while holding the energy charge at $0.078500/kWh. Rate classes span General Service, General Time-of-Use, Irrigation, Large Power (with a separate class over 200 kW), Large Power TOU, Large Power Primary, and Industrial, plus load management variants. See MEC's rate summary for current charges by class.
Effective: July 1, 2025 · Full Tariff Book →
| Schedule | Type | Applicability | Structure | Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| General Service | commercial | Small commercial accounts — shops, offices, farms without large demand. | Monthly service charge plus distribution and energy charges per kWh (standard energy charge $0.0785/kWh) and PCA. A General Time-of-Use variant offers off-peak pricing. See rate summary for current charges. | $0.0785/kWh energy + distribution + PCA |
| Large Power / Large Power Over 200 kW | commercial | Demand-metered commercial and industrial accounts; a separate class applies above 200 kW. | Higher monthly service charge, per-kW demand charge (standard demand charge ~$10.65/kW as of late 2024), plus energy, distribution, and PCA charges. Large Power TOU and Large Power Primary (primary-voltage) variants available. See tariff for current charges. | —+ ~$10.65/kW standard (load-managed irrigation pays $6.05/kW); see tariff |
| Irrigation Service | agricultural | Agricultural irrigation pumping loads, heavily concentrated in MEC's farm territory. | Demand-billed service with a load management option that cuts the demand charge from $10.65/kW to $6.05/kW (October 2024 figures) in exchange for control during 6–9 p.m. peak windows. | —+ $10.65/kW standard; $6.05/kW with load management |
| Time-of-Use (Residential & General) | commercial | Members able to shift consumption away from the 6–9 p.m. system peak. | Off-peak energy at $0.035269/kWh versus the $0.0785/kWh standard charge, with on-peak pricing around $0.18/kWh during peak demand periods (October 2024 figures). | $0.035/kWh off-peak / ~$0.18/kWh on-peak |
| Industrial Service | industrial | MEC's largest loads, served under the Industrial class (maximum authorized service charge $5,000/meter/month tier). | Demand and energy billing at primary or transmission-adjacent voltages with PCA passthrough; charges negotiated/structured per the member-regulated tariff. See rate summary. | — |
Rate Recommendations by Use Case
Manufacturing and large facilities over 200 kW
MEC's largest C&I loads bill under Large Power (Over 200 kW), Large Power Primary, or Industrial classes with demand charges around $10.65/kW.
Demand charges dominate large-power bills, and MEC's system peak is a predictable 6–9 p.m. window — making peak shaving unusually targetable. Primary-voltage service earns a further discount for facilities owning transformation.
- Schedule energy-intensive processes outside the 6–9 p.m. peak window
- Evaluate the Large Power TOU variant if production can flex daily
- Ask about the Primary Metering and Customer Transformation Discount if taking primary voltage
Agricultural irrigation
Irrigators can nearly halve their demand charge by enrolling pumps in MEC's load management program.
Load-managed irrigation pays $6.05/kW versus $10.65/kW standard (October 2024) — a 43% demand-charge reduction — with control events concentrated in the 6–9 p.m. window when pumping can usually pause without agronomic impact.
- Enroll pivots and pumps in load management before the irrigation season
- Use soil moisture scheduling so a 1–3 hour evening interruption doesn't force daytime re-pumping at peak
- Verify VFD compatibility with MEC's control switches
Small commercial with shiftable load
Shops, offices, and farms that can move consumption off the evening peak should compare General TOU against flat General Service.
Off-peak TOU energy at $0.035269/kWh is less than half the $0.0785/kWh standard charge; the trade is ~$0.18/kWh during peak periods. Businesses closed or quiet from 6–9 p.m. capture the discount with little exposure.
- Pull hourly usage from the SmartHub portal to model TOU vs. flat before switching
- Pre-cool or pre-heat space before 6 p.m. to coast through the peak window
- Watch the July 2025 distribution charge increase ($0.048597/kWh) when budgeting — it applies across classes
Cost Optimization Strategies
MEC's pricing concentrates cost in two places: per-kW demand charges on large-power classes and the 6–9 p.m. system peak that drives the cooperative's wholesale costs from Wolverine Power. Its load management and TOU programs pay members directly for flexibility, making demand-side strategies unusually well-compensated for a co-op this size.
Load management enrollment
For: Commercial, agricultural, and dual-fuel accounts with controllable equipment
Enroll water heaters, electric heat, AC, and irrigation pumps in MEC's load management programs for reduced kWh and kW charges — e.g., $0.066/kWh versus $0.0785 standard, and $6.05/kW versus $10.65 for irrigation.
Evening peak avoidance (6–9 p.m.)
For: All demand-billed and TOU accounts
MEC's coincident peak lands between 6 and 9 p.m. Shift batch processes, EV fleet charging, and pumping outside this window to cut demand charges and qualify for TOU savings.
Time-of-use rate election
For: Businesses with flexible schedules or off-hours operations
TOU off-peak energy at $0.035269/kWh rewards facilities with overnight or midday-weighted load profiles; model against ~$0.18/kWh on-peak exposure using interval data before switching.
Demand charge management
For: Large Power and Industrial accounts
On Large Power classes, sequence motor starts, manage HVAC recovery, and consider controls or batteries to cap the monthly kW peak that sets the ~$10.65/kW charge.
Rate-increase-aware budgeting and bill audits
For: All C&I accounts
The July 2025 distribution charge increase (to $0.048597/kWh) plus the floating PCA mean unit costs shift even with flat usage. Audit bills against the published rate summary and re-verify rate class fit annually.
To implement these strategies, you need your 15-minute interval data. Learn how to download Midwest Energy Cooperative (Midwest Energy & Communications) interval data →
Frequently Asked Questions
How do commercial customers access billing data from Midwest Energy Cooperative?▾
Register the account in SmartHub at https://teammidwest.smarthub.coop/ using the account number and billing zip code. SmartHub shows current balance, monthly statements (PDF download), monthly kWh/therm usage, and payment history. There is no CSV/XML export — energy teams download PDFs and digitize them for analysis.
Does MEC have interval or smart meter data?▾
No. MEC has not deployed AMI smart meters as of 2026; only monthly aggregate consumption is available. The cooperative built a 243-mile fiber communications ring (2013-2015) that could support future smart metering, but no deployment timeline is published. Demand analysis must rely on monthly bill data.
Can a consultant or aggregator get MEC customer data automatically?▾
No automated path exists — no Green Button, API, EDI, or aggregator partnerships. The practical workflow: obtain a signed customer authorization letter, submit it to MEC at 1-800-492-5989 (ask for Customer Service Manager or Regulatory Affairs), and receive monthly PDF data in 5-10 business days. Alternatively, have the customer download SmartHub PDFs directly.
Will Michigan's Green Button mandate apply to MEC?▾
Not yet. MPSC Case U-20959 ordered regulated utilities to implement Green Button-interoperable data exports (Dec 2023, extended Apr 2025), but MEC is member-regulated under PA 167 and has filed no Green Button progress reports as of May 2026. Industry expectations suggest possible extension to co-ops in 2026-2027, but nothing firm is documented.
Can MEC members shop for a competitive electricity supplier?▾
No. MEC members take bundled service from the cooperative, whose board sets rates under Michigan PA 167 member regulation. Michigan's limited retail open access applies to IOU territories, not co-op members, so cost optimization focuses on rate schedule review via the MPSC rate book and load management.
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