Working every day for a more sustainable tomorrow.
We’re transitioning to cost-effective, reliable, renewable sources* of energy generation. The benefits are many, as you’ll see below. But it all comes down to this one, simple goal: Doing our part to ensure a brighter future for Northern Indiana.
Customer Benefits
We’re well into the process of adding wind, solar and battery technology to our electric generation portfolio. As demonstrated by NIPSCO’s Integrated Resource Plan process in 2018, 2021 and 2024, making these investments now is the best option for customers in terms of affordability and reliability over the long term.
Environmental Benefits
NIPSCO expects to retire all coal-fired generation by the end of this transition. In doing so, we would achieve a host of important goals, including a reduction in carbon emissions that moves NIPSCO’s parent company, NiSource Inc., closer to its goal of Net Zero Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2040.
Economic Benefits
The long-term savings from NIPSCO’s electric generation transition helps to position our region for a stronger future. It’s expected to bring affordable energy and drives local investments in the communities we serve across Northern Indiana.
* NIPSCO has sold in the past, and in the future may sell, the Renewable Energy Credits from this generation to a third party because this helps keep our energy more affordable for our customers.
Progress Underway
View Transcript
Informed by NIPSCO’s Integrated Resource Plan process, our electric generation is a multi-year, multi-site initiative with big goals – and big benefits that will positively impact our state. Check out a short feature on the construction of our Rosewater Wind Farm and solar energy efforts in Northern Indiana.
An Evolving Energy Solution

NIPSCO's Electric Generation Transition Process
NIPSCO is working with its renewable energy partners to bring these projects to life. By moving to a full-ownership model for many of its renewable energy and energy storage projects, NIPSCO is expected to claim tax credits and pass the benefits of those tax credits on to its customers. Customers are expected to realize the benefits of these tax credits for a 10-year period starting in 2025.
* NIPSCO has sold in the past, and in the future may sell, the Renewable Energy Credits from this generation to a third party because this helps keep our energy more affordable for our customers.
Good Question!
Why renewable?
Results from our previous Integrated Resource Plans (updated [at least] every three years) continue to show that renewable energy sources*, supported by our natural gas Sugar Creek Generating Station and proposed natural gas peaking resource, are the most affordable and reliable additions to NIPSCO’s generating portfolio over the long-term.Is it reliable?
Reliability is our fundamental obligation. Beyond the power NIPSCO generates, we are able to pull additional energy from the nation’s interconnected electric grid, a vast system with ample power available, as well as drawing on battery storage and a proposed natural gas peaking resource, should we need to supplement during high demand periods.Why are you moving away from coal?
Coal, a long-standing part of the nation’s energy mix, now struggles to compete with renewable technologies’ dramatic increases in efficiency and affordability. NIPSCO’s decade-long transition to a more balanced, diversified generation portfolio is driven by economics and our goal: providing affordable, reliable energy to customers.Why is this addition of a natural gas peaking resource needed?
In order to support the retirement of 100 percent of its remaining coal-fired electric generation and the addition of a significant amount of renewable energy resources, a natural gas peaking resource plays an essential role in ensuring system reliability, resiliency, and stability as part of a balanced generation portfolio.
Peaking resources run only when needed, acting as a bridge for the generation gaps of more intermittent energy sources like wind and solar. They play a critical role during peak customer usage periods and extreme weather conditions throughout the summer and winter months. The peaking resource will operate only when called upon to support NIPSCO’s other generating resources, and it has the added flexibility to convert from operating on natural gas to operating on zero carbon fuels in the future, such as hydrogen.
What’s “Renewable Natural Gas”?
When organic matter, such as in a landfill or livestock operation, breaks down, it releases gases. And through the right process, we are able to repurpose that gas to generate heat and electricity. Learn more.
* NIPSCO has sold in the past, and in the future may sell, the Renewable Energy Credits from this generation to a third party because this helps keep our energy more affordable for our customers.
Stories
Meet Jerrod, Dale, Jon and LaJuan – Four Hoosiers whose work improving their communities inspires us to do the same. NIPSCO featured these individuals at the launch of the Your Energy, Your Future initiative as a way of honoring the ideals behind the larger effort. We celebrate those who “Leave things better” than they found them.
View Transcript
On Screen: LaJuan Clemons
Voiceover, LaJuan Clemons: This was supposed to be a soup kitchen. Because my grandmother worked at a soup kitchen on Thursdays at the church. And so, I wanted a soup kitchen because I wanted to serve food. But… I bought round tables instead of long tables. And when I put the round tables out, it looked kind of… classy!
It's $6 for a meal, but if you can't afford it, just pay what you can.
My wife is... she does the heavy cooking. She's the chief executive cook. My daughter Mariah is the hostess, maintenance, you name it. The children... all of the children... they’re the, the staff, in a sense. Their smiles is what gives people this... joy. I see it, they come in and they, when they see the children, they perk up.
Gary has a stigma about it. What I see is a landscape. And now we can redraw. We can paint a portrait of what we want Gary to look like. In the Bible it says, “Can these dry bones live again?” Brick by brick, we can build... anything we want to. And it don’t cost a lot. So if you have a loved one at home that needs something, we have someone that’s willing to go out there.
The first ingredient with anything is love. You gotta first love the place that you’re in, before we do anything.
So our mission is to show that. But I see a place where people can come together and enjoy a meal. When you come here, weights just fall off your shoulder because there’s love... in the place. That’s what we’re all about.
LaJuan Clemons is #LeavingItBetter by feeding his community and meeting them where they’re at. Check out his story.
View Transcript
On Screen: Dale Cooper, Michigan City
Voiceover, Dale Cooper: If you think about it, a lot of children, especially in the inner city, they don’t get to see food grow. Uh, you ask them where French fries come from. They're going to tell you, you go through a drive through and you order them. I started a program called “Growing up Green.” We got Master Gardeners from our area to go in and talk to the kids and explain to them what was going to go on with growing and it taught them how to water the plants, and then the kids got to see the basil growing and then they got to a watch as it was put into their school lunches. So, it was pretty cool! I actually named it “Growing up Green” because it’s about... the cycle of life, in my opinion. Watching plants grow, watching children grow — that's the connection for me.
I wake up every morning and I think about, “What can I do to make it better?” That’s just what I want to do. Creating something is so important to me. And leaving something for everybody else. Something that’s going to outlast me.
That's one of the reasons that I love fundraising — so every child can have art in their lives. I know TV is fine, games are fine... but to be able to create something yourself is just totally different. And I want every child to be able to experience that. That’s all my job is, is creating with friends. Whether I know you or not, we’re going to become friends, if we’re talking. That’s what I love to do. It's never too late to start. Get out there and do it. Every day that you wake up, that's another opportunity to get out and help somebody in your community.
Dale Cooper is #LeavingItBetter by showing local kids how to grow nutritious food - and how to discover their inner artist. See what inspires her.
View Transcript
On Screen: Leaving It Better.
Voiceover, Jerrod Tobias, local artist:
I was born in Fort Wayne and it’s just been a really great and affordable place to be an artist and raise a family and do it all within reason.
We have a daughter and two boys. They have been more of a catalyst for me than anything because I’m responsible for keeping this world spinning so they can just live in it.
We are just one tiny piece of this magical tapestry that we’re lucky to be a part of. My challenge is how do I make artwork that speaks to people in a way that uplifts them – that they want to be a part of that.
The difference between public art – mural paining – and traditional gallery work is that the gallery system caters to a minority of the community. So, public work, kind of breaks down those barriers and makes it accessible to the entire community. So people who might not engaged with an art scene are then presented with an opportunity to have an experience without any of the economic barriers or educational barriers. This is something that’s just supposed to be a reflection of the community and it is an offering to the community.
I’m putting the best work I can do out there, and I’m trying my hardest to make it inspire people and challenge people -- and if I can do that, that’s like the most rewarding experience.
Jerrod Tobias is #LeavingItBetter by looking at a building wall and seeing a blank canvas. See what inspires him.
View Transcript
On Screen: Leaving It Better.
Voiceover, Jon Groth, Director of Career and Technical Education, Porter County Schools: I follow the philosophy of Christa McAuliffe, "I touch the future, I teach." And that's what I think makes us all feel good about what we're doing. At one time, this was an alternative school program where you sent kids that weren't successful in other schooling so you sent them to vocational school. But since then, we've become kind of an elite school where kids find it hard to get into our programs because we have full enrollment. The initiative for our solar project was 10 years ago when the state cut our education budget by $300 million. We had one solar panel in our electronics lab that was being used as a demonstration. I thought, "That's good. Let's put that up on the roof and let's operate a light so that it's very tangible, it's not just theoretical." And then we thought, "Well we'll throw a few more solar panels on the roof and we'll start operating some of the lights in our hallways." If you walk down our hallway today, half of those lights are operated by solar panels on the roof and a couple of wind generators that we built also. We have a video camera that's focused on that wind generator that the kids built because they want to see how it functions. And when they log into our web cam, they do it during storms to make sure that wind generator is working the way it's supposed to be. They do that to solve these problems, they want it to work. My teachers, too, have a passion for this subject. Whether it's repairing automobiles, building parts for machines, or doing electronic work, the kids learn that and they develop a passion and expertise for it. For me, it's reaching a challenge or goal I set for myself. I do translate that back into what I do for a living with my students. I really force them to set goals, and I really think that's important for all of us.
Jon Groth is #LeavingItBetter by inspiring the next generation to embrace renewable energy - and to build it themselves.
Have an emergency?
Natural Gas: If you smell gas, think you have a gas leak, have carbon monoxide symptoms or have some other gas emergency situation, go outside and call 911 and thenour emergency number 1-800-634-3524.
Electric: For any electric emergency including a power outage or other electric-related situation, please call 1-800-464-7726. If you see a downed power line, stay away and immediately call 911 and then our emergency number.