November 21, 2024
Market Monitor’s Recommendations
Below are the new market monitor recommendations included in the PJM Market Monitor’s State of the Market report for the first half of 2013.

Below are the new recommendations included in the Market Monitor’s State of the Market report for the first half of 2013.

HIGH PRIORITY

Addresses a market design issue that creates significant market inefficiencies and/or long lasting negative market effects.

  • Operating Reserve — Reexamine allocation of operating reserve charges to participants to ensure payment by all whose market actions result in the incurrence of such charges:
    • Eliminate the use of internal bilateral transactions (IBTs) in the calculation of deviations used to allocate balancing operating reserve charges.
    • Reallocate the operating reserve credits paid to units supporting the Con Edison – PSEG wheeling contracts.
  • FTRs — Fix the Financial Transmission Rights overallocation issue:
    • Eliminate cross geographic subsidies.
    • Improve transmission outage modeling in the FTR auction models.
    • Reduce FTR sales on paths with persistent underfunding including clear rules for what defines persistent underfunding and how the reduction will be applied.

MEDIUM PRIORITY

Addresses a market design issue that creates intermediate market inefficiencies and/or near term negative market effects.

  • Ancillary Services — Remove the distinction between Tier 1 and Tier 2 synchronized reserve, remove the ability to offer MW of synchronized reserve capability, remove the ability to make reserve unavailable, and automatically dispatch primary reserve co-optimized with energy. In the interim, enforce a must-offer requirement for synchronized reserve based on physical capability and increase penalties for non-compliance during spinning events.

LOW PRIORITY

Addresses a market design issue that creates smaller market inefficiencies and/or more limited market effects.

  • Energy Market — When generator is offline, treat as load (not negative generation) the energy drawn from PJM by those generators for calculating average hourly real-time and day-ahead load.
  • Demand Response — Load management resources whose load drop method is designated as “Other” should explicitly record the method of load drop.
Ancillary ServicesDemand ResponseEnergy EfficiencyEnergy MarketFinancial Transmission Rights (FTR)

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