What states does PJM serve?
What states does PJM serve?
PJM Interconnection coordinates the movement of electricity through all or parts of Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia and the District of Columbia.
How many states in PJM?
13 states
PJM covers at least parts of 13 states—Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia—and the District of Columbia.
What is a transmission zone?
The Influenza Transmission Zones are geographical groups of countries, areas or territories with similar influenza transmission patterns. Below is a map showing the borders of the Influenza Transmission Zones as well as the list of countries, areas or territories by zone.
What is an LMP contour map?
Wholesale power price maps reflect real-time constraints on transmission of electricity. Source: Midwest Independent System Operator. These maps are updated often, usually every five minutes (see Midwest above). Locational Marginal Prices, or LMPs, are location-specific prices developed within the RTO.
Who owns PJM Interconnection?
PJM Connext L.L.C.
PJM Environmental Information Services, Inc. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of PJM Connext L.L.C.
Is DC in PJM?
All 2016 emissions in Washington, D.C. hold flat from 2015. PJM Service Area – Maryland and Washington, D.C. Summary: Overall in PJM, natural gas and coal are relatively even at 35 percent and 34 percent respectively.
Is Dominion part of PJM?
Dominion’s load and generation will continue to participate in the PJM energy and ancillary service markets. Dominion will also continue to both support and benefit from the reliable operations of the grid operator.
How many zones are in PJM?
During 007, the PJM geographic footprint encompassed 7 control zones located in Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia and the District of Columbia.
Is Chicago in PJM?
PJM is now offering high-resolution transmission maps that include PJM’s transmission infrastructure from 69 kilovolt to 765 kilovolt facilities. These maps contain detailed inserts of Philadelphia/Jersey City Corridor, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Dayton/Columbus Metro, Cleveland, Norfolk, and Baltimore/DC Metro.
What is MISO LMP?
Locational Marginal Price(LMP) is the cost of providing the next MW of electrical energy at a specific location on the grid. It is posted hourly for the Day-Ahead Market and is weighted and posted every five minutes for the Real-Time Market. Restaurants, similarly to the energy grid, have busy times and slower times.
When did ComEd join PJM?
May 2002
ComEd applied to the FERC in May 2002 to join PJM.
How does PJM make money?
The simple answer is that PJM does not make money. PJM recovers its administrative costs – the costs of operating the electric transmission system and the wholesale electricity markets – through fixed rates billed to members based on their activity levels.
What’s new with PJM’s transmission maps?
This map shows hourly net imports and exports in and out of the portions of the states in which PJM operates. PJM is now offering high-resolution transmission maps that include PJM’s transmission infrastructure from 69 kilovolt to 765 kilovolt facilities.
What is the PJM queue map?
This map displays up-to-date information on queues and generation deactivations across the PJM footprint. Advanced filtering capabilities allow viewing the data by fuel type, status, state, zone and more. The map also shows the location of substations, transmission lines and transmission zones.
Are there any high resolution transmission maps available?
High-Resolution Transmission Maps PJM is now offering high-resolution transmission maps that include PJM’s transmission infrastructure from 69 kilovolt to 765 kilovolt facilities. These maps contain detailed inserts of Philadelphia/Jersey City Corridor, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Dayton/Columbus Metro, Cleveland, Norfolk, and Baltimore/DC Metro.
What is PJM doing to support interconnection?
As the federal government advances potential policy to drive needed infrastructure investment, clarify climate strategies and meet the challenge of reliably integrating renewable resources, PJM has set out with stakeholders to articulate priorities and concerns as Interconnection Policy Workshops continue this fall.