Building the grid of the future
DTE is building the grid of the future, one that is smarter, stronger, and more resilient.
DTE customers experienced a nearly 70% improvement in time spent without power between 2023 and 2024. Additionally, we expect another significant reduction in 2025 compared to 2024.
These improvements were due to the impact of our enhanced work — investment in the electric grid — coupled with less extreme weather.

How are we getting there?
With a plan that is well underway and focused in four key areas:
Quickly transitioning to a smarter grid
- With our new Systems Operations Center and recent launch of our state-of-the-art grid management system, DTE has laid the foundation of investing in smart grid devices.
- Now, the company is adding significantly more devices to the system, effectively automating the entire system by 2029.
- How will this make a difference? It allows DTE to locate damage so crews can get to the damaged area and make repairs faster. It enables damage to be isolated and power to be rerouted during an outage so many customers can be restored within minutes while crews make repairs.
Aggressively updating existing infrastructure
- Crews are in the field every day, replacing and upgrading poles, cross arms, transformers, and other pole top and substation equipment. In 2025, DTE inspected and upgraded pole top equipment across nearly 2,000 miles.
Rebuilding significant portions of the grid
- While updating equipment is important, just like you can only repair a car for so long, before it needs to be replaced, DTE is completely rebuilding the older portions of the electric grid. This is critical work where entire substations are rebuilt from scratch and entire circuits replaced – the equipment that delivers power to customers’ homes.
Trimming trees
- Tree trimming remains one of the most effective methods to improve electric reliability. Trees account for half of the time our customers are without power.
- We have trimmed every inch of our 31,000 miles of overhead equipment since we began our tree trimming surge in 2019.
- We will continue to keep the trees away from our equipment to ensure that they don’t grow back into the wires and poles that deliver power to your home.

As a result, customers can expect and DTE is committed to reducing power outages by 30% and cutting outage duration time in half by the end of 2029.
We’ve made significant investments in the grid, but we’re not done yet. We plan to invest more than $1 billion annually to make our grid safer and more reliable for customers.
Building a world-class grid of the future for our customers will take time – but that investment is happening now and critical for Michigan’s future.
Interested in seeing the work being done in your community? Visit our power improvements map online.