CAISO Unveils Principles for Western Seams Coordination

CAISO has released a set of guiding principles for upcoming discussions about seams between the ISO, SPP and other entities as the Extended Day-Ahead Market nears its opening in May.

In November, FERC staff urged Western electricity industry stakeholders to get ahead of seams issues before EDAM and Markets+ begin. (See FERC Report Urges West to Address Looming Market Seams Issues.)

CAISO’s eight principles focus on how to ensure the continued strength of the Western Energy Imbalance Market, which has provided significant reliability and financial benefits to its participants and their customers, CEO Elliot Mainzer said in a blog post Feb. 23.

“We hope all WEIM participants will carefully consider the unprecedented and fortuitous combination of physics, economics and fully independent governance of WEIM and EDAM before leaving the seamless real-time market we have worked so hard to build together,” Mainzer said.

WEIM currently includes 22 balancing authorities from 11 states that account for 80% of electricity demand in the Western Interconnection. The market has proven that balancing areas can function seamlessly in a real-time market, providing reliability benefits and economic value to participants and customers across the West, CAISO’s document says.

“Breaking up the WEIM footprint risks unwinding these benefits,” CAISO says. “Market-to-market seams arrangements are a poor substitute for seamless real-time operation of the grid and can only limit the loss of efficiency and reliability that results from fragmented footprints.”

One principle is that the seams issue is not a venue for market design advocacy.

“Market-to-market seams discussions are not a forum to relitigate transmission service [and] transmission rights, or a vehicle to redesign market rules,” CAISO says. “Seams discussions are predicated on sufficiently defined market protocol[s], transmission tariffs and market boundaries.”

Another principle is ensuring seams protocols minimize the risk of gaming or manipulation. Instead, protocols should support market power monitoring at interfaces to maintain competition.

CAISO’s EDAM will open in May, and SPP’s Markets+ is scheduled to begin in 2027. These markets could cause issues at their borders because of their different policies and dispatch processes. (See CAISO, SPP Explore Using Existing Tools to Manage DAM Seams.) The grid operators had made “significant progress” on adapting existing tools to tackle seams between their respective day-ahead markets, a CAISO representative said in December.

Seams negotiations are not solely between CAISO and SPP, Mainzer said. Instead, these discussions include balancing authorities, transmission providers, transmission operators, reliability coordinators, market operators and others when scoping procedures, agreements, discussions and solutions.

DOE Extends Eddystone Emergency Order Through May

The U.S. Department of Energy has ordered PJM and Constellation Energy to keep the 760-MW Eddystone Generating Station online through May 24, extending an emergency order that has been in place since the plant’s final two gas-fired units were to deactivate May 31, 2025.

In an announcement of the Federal Power Act Section 202(c) order, Energy Secretary Chris Wright said the units helped PJM keep the grid reliable during the late January 2026 winter storm — dubbed Fern by The Weather Channel — during which Eddystone ran for 124 hours. The order states the generator, which is outside Philadelphia, must remain online because of “a shortage of facilities for the generation of electric energy and other causes.”

“The energy sources that perform when you need them most are inherently the most valuable — that’s why natural gas and oil were valuable during recent winter storms,” Wright said. “Hundreds of American lives have likely been saved because of President Trump’s actions keeping critical generation online, including this Pennsylvania generating station which ran during Winter Storm Fern. This emergency order will mitigate the risk of blackouts and maintain affordable, reliable and secure electricity access across the region.”

The order is the third 90-day mandate for PJM and Constellation, which owns Eddystone, to keep Units 3 and 4 online. DOE has also ordered Consumers Energy to keep its 1.45-GW J.H. Campbell coal generator in western Michigan to stay online until May 18 under a similar order. (See DOE Reups Campbell Coal Plant Emergency Ops; Losses Top $135M.)

The department wrote that the need for additional generation has continued to grow in PJM, pointing to the RTO’s Reliability Resource Initiative, which is expediting the interconnection studies for 51 projects. (See PJM Selects 51 Projects for Expedited Interconnection Studies.)

The order states Eddystone is needed for both near- and long-term emergency conditions, the latter of which would be hard to address if the units were allowed to deactivate.

“Practical issues, such as employment, contracts and permits, may greatly increase the timeline for resumption of operations during the period they are needed,” DOE wrote. “If Constellation Energy were to begin disassembling the units or other related facilities, the associated challenges would be greatly exacerbated. Thus, continued operation is required in such cases so long as the secretary determines that an emergency exists.”

Constellation Stock Jumps off Reported $2.32B in 2025 Profit

Constellation Energy on Feb. 24 reported net income of $2.32 billion ($7.40/share) in 2025, down from the $3.75 billion ($11.89/share) it made in 2024 despite a $1.96 billion increase in operating revenue.

While GAAP earnings were 38% lower in 2025 than in 2024, they were 8.3% higher after adjustments. This was attributed in part to the $26.6 billion acquisition of Calpine, completed on Jan. 7. The deal brought together the largest nuclear power operator and largest gas generation owner in the U.S. to form a 55-GW behemoth that now calls itself the world’s largest private-sector power producer. (See FERC Denies Rehearing Requests on Constellation-Calpine Merger.)

Other major developments in 2025 included license renewals for the Clinton and Dresden nuclear plants; a 1,121-MW power purchase agreement with Meta at its Clinton nuclear plant; and a $1 billion federal loan guarantee for the effort to restart Unit 1 of the Crane nuclear plant. (See Constellation, Meta Sign 20-year Nuclear PPA.) In early 2026, Constellation announced a 380-MW agreement for a new CyrusOne data center adjacent to the Freestone gas-fired plant.

Constellation did not deliver a 2026 business outlook with the results — that has been pushed back to March 31, a common corporate move after a major acquisition or merger — but the newly enlarged company is faced with a U.S. electricity landscape in which demand projections are rising quickly while policymakers are taking steps to slow price increases.

Data centers are one of the drivers of the expected increase in U.S. power demand, and Constellation CEO Joe Dominguez said the company is ready to meet the moment.

“We’re pairing the grid’s most reliable power with flexible resources to meet accelerating demand driven by electrification and the data economy,” Dominguez said in a statement. “Our long-term agreements with Microsoft, Meta and most recently CyrusOne demonstrate how we’re putting that expanded portfolio to work while maintaining reliability for customers and keeping costs stable.”

Positive factors in the company’s full-year earnings included favorable market and portfolio conditions, higher banked zero-emissions credit revenues and favorable nuclear outages; counterbalancing these were unfavorable nuclear production tax credit portfolio results.

Constellation’s stock price jumped more than 6% on the release of the earnings report, closing at $312.58 on Feb. 24. The stock, however, is still down nearly 13% in 2026 and about 23.5% from its peak of $404 in October 2025.

Crane Clean Energy Center

Microsoft has contracted to buy 835 MW for 20 years from Constellation’s Crane Clean Energy Center to power some of its data centers.

Work is progressing on the $1.6 billion restart of the facility formerly known as Three Mile Island planned for mid-2027, a team of Constellation managers said at a community meeting Feb. 19.

Inspections so far have revealed minimal to no impact on the major systems of Unit 1 resulting from its 2019 shutdown for economic reasons, they said. Some systems do need to be upgraded or hardened; replacements for two transformers, for example, were ordered and are expected to be delivered later in 2026.

Thirteen of 88 system restorations have been completed at the facility, which started construction in 1968 and began commercial operation in 1974.

Constellation is not worried about obsolescence or availability of replacement components for the aged facility: The size of the company’s nuclear fleet gives it relationships with many suppliers and the ability, if needed, to reverse-engineer solutions.

The company has hired 600 permanent staff for the facility, about 350 of them experienced nuclear workers and about 150 of them former Three Mile Island employees.

The control room simulator has been fully restored, and two operator classes are underway with a combined 57 students, most of them having previous nuclear experience.

House Hearing Examines Ways to Cut Wildfire Risk on Federal Lands

Permitting delays can exacerbate risks for electric transmission lines to spark wildfires, experts told the House Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife and Fisheries.

Midstate Electric Cooperative CEO Jim Anderson opened his testimony by stating a previous CEO of the Oregon co-op had testified at the same committee 30 years ago on the same subject.

“In that case, Midstate Electric requested permission to trim hazard trees along our rights of way on U.S. forest land,” Anderson said. “The Forest Service denied the request. Predictably, a tree fell into the powerline, sparking a wildfire for which Midstate was held strictly liable for a cost of $327,000.”

Decades later, the co-op was facing the same issues: bureaucratic delays and regulations that slow down wildfire mitigation work, said Anderson, who was speaking on behalf of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.

Nearly 70% of the land in Midstate’s territory is federally managed. Anderson argued that vegetation management is one of the most cost-effective ways to address risks.

“Our members pay the equivalent of two months [of] power bills just to fund wildfire mitigation,” Anderson said.

NV Energy inspects 14,000 poles a year, trims 15,000 trees annually and clears 2,000 miles of lines in its efforts to cut wildfire risk, said Jesse Murray, senior vice president of energy delivery. “This year, NV Energy will invest $500 million in the program.

“Ultimately, our customers do pay this cost; we must invest that money as efficiently as possible to reduce the risk. The process to permit work on federal lands is a noteworthy cost driver that can have an impact on customers’ bills depending on what requirements actions and timelines the utilities must follow.”

NV Energy’s territory covers multiple federal forests, and each can apply the rules differently, adding additional work for little benefit, he said.

“I think these divergent requirements result from local staff having to interpret risks and considerations based on unclear, complex rules that translate into an approach that cover ‘all the bases,’” Murray said. “Combining these complex requirements with limited resources, timelines get extended that generate more risk due to the inability to complete the work.”

House Natural Resources Committee Chair Bruce Westerman (R-Ark.) and other Republicans urged the Senate to pass his Fix Our Forests Act (H.R. 471), which cleared the House of the Representatives early in 2025.

“FOFA would allow utilities to remove hazardous trees within 150 feet of the right of way,” Westerman said. “The legislation also included a new categorical exclusion for approval of vegetation management plans and activities carried out consistent with those plans. This new categorical exclusion would significantly reduce wildfire risk and keep electricity reliable and affordable in the West.”

Vegetation management can be improved if companies start developing stable, native habitats with their transmission lines that can discourage tree growth, said Pennsylvania State University professor Carolyn Mahan.

“Integrated vegetation management is something that is recognized and approved by U.S. Forest Service, EPA and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,” she added. “It’s written as a recommended practice, but it really hasn’t been put into policy yet.”

The Sacramento Municipal Utility District has used the technique on federal land in its territory, using low-growing vegetation dominated by native species. For example, it has planted native loop pines that are too small to interfere with its power lines but provide good habitats for native species, Mahan said.

Permitting reform would help deal with wildfire risk, which has raised costs for utilities with major impacts on their credit risks, said Christina Hayes, executive director of Americans for a Clean Energy Grid. But permitting laws need to change to get new, major interstate transmission lines that offer major reliability benefits during extreme weather events.

“High-capacity, multistate transmission lines — the lines most critical to achieving reliability and affordability, particularly during extreme events — should have a one-stop shop for siting and permitting just like natural gas pipelines do,” Hayes said. “Streamlining multiple rounds of permitting for infrastructure that is in the national interest will ensure that it is built faster and cheaper.”

Company Briefs

Tesla Fined for Operating Battery Recycling Equipment Without Permit

Tesla will pay the state of Nevada $200,000 for operating battery recycling equipment at its gigafactory without a permit, according to a settlement signed by the company and the Division of Environmental Protection (DEP).

In February 2023, DEP staff visited the Tesla Gigafactory and discovered a “cell recycling” line, including a shredding unit and a module dissection unit, operating without a permit. Records later indicated the equipment had been built in late 2020 and operating since at least May 2021. The equipment was the subject of a draft permit being reviewed by the EPA because it emits pollutants.

More: The Nevada Independent

OMPA Names Hans New GM

The Oklahoma Municipal Power Authority announced Brad Hans as its new general manager, effective Feb. 23.

Hans most recently served as director of wholesale electric operations at the Municipal Energy Agency of Nebraska. He will replace Dave Osburn, who will retire on Feb. 26.

More: American Public Power Association

Idaho Power Sells Oregon Service Area to OTEC

Idaho Power announced it has sold its service area in Oregon for $154 million to the Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative.

The region represents 20,000 residential, commercial, irrigation and industrial customers throughout Baker, Grant, Harney and Union counties.

The sale will be final upon federal and state approval.

More: Idaho Business Review

Microsoft Eyeing PPAs to Match Electricity Needs

Microsoft said it intends to continue purchasing enough renewable energy to match its demand. 

The company said it met that goal for the first time in 2025 by contracting 40 GW of new renewable energy supply, mainly through power purchase agreements. It said 19 GW has already been supplied, with the rest to follow over the next five years in 26 countries.

More: Reuters

Expand Energy to Move HQ to Houston

Expand Energy, the largest independent natural gas producer in the U.S., will move its headquarters to Houston.

The gas giant, formerly known as Chesapeake Energy, said it will move to take advantage of Houston’s proximity to LNG export terminals.

The move is expected in mid-2026 and will primarily involve the leadership team.

More: Houston Chronicle

State Briefs

GEORGIA

Pridemore Won’t Seek PSC Re-election

Public Service Commissioner Tricia Pridemore announced she will not run for re-election in the fall.

Pridemore said her decision came after “deep reflection” and “thoughtful conversations with my family, colleagues and trusted advisers.”

Pridemore was originally slated to run for re-election in 2024, but her term was extended by the General Assembly after a legal challenge delayed elections.

More: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ILLINOIS

Pritzker Signs Order to Accelerate Nuclear Development

Gov. JB Pritzker signed an executive order directing agencies to begin identifying sites and crafting regulatory framework for the first new nuclear reactors in the state in nearly 40 years.

Pritzker cast the decision as part of a broader effort to lower utility costs and protect families, saying “producing even more energy is vital to keep up with increasing demand and bring down prices.”

Illinois is the nation’s largest producer of nuclear energy with 11 reactors across six sites.

More: WTVO

MICHIGAN

PSC Approves DTE Rate Hike

The Public Service Commission approved a $242.4 million electric rate hike for DTE Energy.

The hike, which was less than half of the $574.1 million originally requested by the utility, represents a 4.1% increase for the average residential bill.

The increase follows a $217 million rate hike approved by the PSC in January 2025.  

More: Planet Detroit

NORTH CAROLINA

Stein Appoints Gajda to Utilities Commission

Gov. Josh Stein appointed John Gajda, a professor at North Carolina State University, to the Utilities Commission.

Gajda teaches courses on power systems engineering and previously led transmission planning efforts for the DOE’s Grid Deployment Office.

More: WFAE

NORTH DAKOTA

PSC Approves Battery Storage Sites

The Public Service Commission unanimously approved two large battery storage sites.

The 140-MW Emmons-Logan Energy Storage project will cost $181 million, while the 100-MW Northern Divide Energy Storage project will cost $128.6 million. Both projects will be connected to NextEra wind farms.

More: North Dakota Monitor

RHODE ISLAND

Judge Reverses Storage Facility Permit Denial

Superior Court Judge Jeffrey A. Lanphear vacated the Smithfield Zoning Board’s rejection of a special use permit application to construct a battery storage facility, finding the board’s decision was founded on an incorrect interpretation of the state’s vesting statute.

In 2024, the board rejected the application, saying Smithfield’s zoning ordinances had been amended to prohibit energy storage systems in all districts so no special use permit could be issued, and the company should file for a use variance or zoning amendment.

“The Master Plan Application is unmistakably an application for development, was submitted to the appropriate review agency and was deemed certifiably complete. This entitled the project to the protections of §45-24-44, not merely the Master Plan Application,” Lanphear said.

More: Rhode Island Lawyers Weekly

SOUTH DAKOTA

PUC Approves State’s Largest Wind Farm

The Public Utilities Commission approved a permit for a $750 million, 333-MW wind farm.

The wind farm, developed by Philip Wind Partners, will include up to 87 turbines and 5.5 miles of transmission line.

More: South Dakota Searchlight

TEXAS

State Sues Company for Dumping Turbine Blades, Components

Attorney General Ken Paxton and the Commission on Environmental Quality sued Global Fiberglass Solutions, a fiberglass recycling company, for dumping and abandoning thousands of turbine blades and components and creating two unauthorized parts graveyards.

The state claims the company illegally accumulated and abandoned more than 3,000 blades and parts and failed to appropriately dispose of the materials. Neither Global nor its affiliates are authorized by the environmental commission to handle industrial solid waste, which is what the materials are considered, according to the state.

More: Houston Chronicle

WASHINGTON

Columbia Generating Station Back Online

Energy Northwest’s nuclear Columbia Generating Station was ramped back to full power and reconnected to the grid after being offline for six days.

The unexpected shutdown, which was done by workers after both recirculation pumps shut down, caused no power issues for consumers. Had they not shut down the plant, it would have detected the issue and automatically shut down. After repairs were made, workers performed testing and verified the performance.

More: Seattle Times

WEST VIRGINIA

Utilities Seek PSC Approval for Gas, Solar Projects

Monongahela Power and Potomac Edison are seeking Public Service Commission approval to construct a gas plant and three solar projects.

The proposed $2.48 billion, 1.2-GW gas facility would be built next to the site of the existing coal-fired Fort Martin Power Station in Monongalia County. The solar projects would be in Weirton, Davis and Albright with a combined capacity of 70 MW. The plan also calls for the continued operation of the existing coal power plant.

If approved, construction of the gas plant would begin in 2027, and it would become operational in late 2031.

More: West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Federal Briefs

DOJ, PacifiCorp Reach Wildfire Settlement

PacifiCorp agreed to $575 million settlement with the Department of Justice over six wildfires in Oregon and California in 2020.

The DOJ accused PacifiCorp of negligence, alleging poorly maintained equipment sparked multiple fires that burned 93,000 acres of national forests. The settlement resolves those claims, though PacifiCorp continues to deny liability.

The fires include four that burned over the Labor Day weekend in Oregon: the Archie Creek Fire, the Echo Mountain Complex Fire, the 242 Fire, and the South Obenchain Fire.

More: Oregon Public Broadcasting

EPA ‘Revamps’ Clean School Bus Program

EPA announced a plan to revamp the Clean School Bus Program to give school districts more options for replacing older buses and strengthening oversight.

The agency said it will seek public input on a broader range of fuels and technologies — including biofuels, compressed natural gas, liquefied natural gas and hydrogen — rather than focusing predominantly on electrification. EPA will not award funding under the 2024 rebate program and will use feedback from prior funding rounds to reshape the new grant program for the 2026 cycle.

The agency will hold a 45-day public comment period on its request for information, which will include a webinar on March 3.

More: EPA

PJM MRC/MC Briefs: Feb. 19, 2026

Committees Endorse 2028/29 Auction Parameters

Stakeholders endorsed PJM’s recommended installed reserve margin (IRM) and forecast pool requirement (FPR) for the 2028/29 Base Residual Auction (BRA), values that are core to determining the RTO’s reserve requirement.

The Markets and Reliability Committee approved the values with 85% sector-weighted support, and the Members Committee endorsed them by acclamation.

Stakeholder support is advisory to the Board of Managers, which ultimately holds approval over the parameters.

Compared to the parameters for the 2027/28 BRA, the analysis was affected by diminished winter risk and higher resource accreditation, PJM’s Josh Bruno told the MRC. Those forces counterbalanced to keep the IRM the same at 20%, while the FPR increased by 0.0141 to 0.9401.

The concentration of loss-of-load expectation shifted from a 75.6% skew toward winter for the 2027/28 analysis to 60.5%. Effective load-carrying capability ratings followed a similar trend, with resources tending to perform better in the winter, wind in particular, seeing falling accreditation, while most technologies saw 1 to 3% increases. Gas saw the greatest increase, increasing by 4% for combustion turbines and 6% for combined cycle units.

Much of the difference was attributed to the use of PJM’s 2026 Load Forecast, which predicted a slower pace of load growth over the next few years — though it is still expected to grow by 30 GW over five years. Relative to the 2025 forecast, the growth fell by a greater share in the winter than in the summer; for 2028 the expected 147.8-GW winter peak was 3.8% lower in the latest forecast, while the 165.6-GW summer peak was 2.6% lower. (See Pessimistic PJM Slightly Decreases Load Forecast.)

Several stakeholders questioned why the recommended values were brought for first read and endorsement on the same day, leaving little time for review before the vote. The IRM and FPR for the 2026/27 Third Incremental Auction were also presented as a same-day endorsement in January, leading several consumer advocates to abstain. (See PJM Stakeholders Endorse 2026/27 Third Incremental Auction Parameters.)

PJM’s Andrew Gledhill said the RTO is operating on a tightened auction schedule.

Quick Fix to Allow Self-scheduling Resources to Meet Must-offer Requirement

The MRC endorsed a quick-fix proposal from Old Dominion Electric Cooperative to specify that gas resources that self-schedule and provide energy that at least matches their capacity commitments have met the requirement that capacity resources offer into the energy market.

The proposed tariff and Operating Agreement language is specific to actions during cold weather alerts. The quick-fix process allows a problem statement and issue charge to be considered alongside a proposed solution.

Mike Cocco, ODEC senior director of RTO and regulatory affairs, said the timelines of the gas trading market can mean generation owners must decide whether to purchase fuel before PJM assigns energy commitments. Self-scheduling can ensure the resource is able to avoid purchasing fuel that it does not consume, especially when entering into “take or pay” gas contracts.

The issue is especially pronounced on holiday weekends, when the gas market does not transact for three days. These gas trading practices may require generation owners to purchase fuel in advance of a potential PJM commitment to ensure they are able to operate. PJM implemented the conservative operations procedure in part to provide advance commitments for resources that may have trouble procuring fuel under such circumstances. Unlike those advance commitments, Cocco said self-scheduling puts the risk on the generation owner and can reduce the amount of uplift on the system.

The language would allow resources that purchase gas ahead of the day-ahead energy market during a cold weather alert and “produce energy at or above [their] committed installed capacity” to be considered as meeting their reserve must-offer obligations.

PJM COO Stu Bresler said the RTO’s interpretation of the governing documents already considers gas generators as satisfying the reserve must-offer requirement under such circumstances, but staff recognized ODEC’s desire to codify that understanding in the language and worked with it to do so.

Independent Market Monitor Joe Bowring said the changes would be a reasonable way of recognizing the needs of gas resources and the particularities of the pipeline system. He said the broader issue of how resources self-schedule warrants further consideration.

PJM Seeking to Reduce Uplift

Bresler said PJM is exploring how the amount of uplift paid during winter storms and other strained system conditions can be reduced by accounting for emergency actions in market prices.

More than half of the days in January were classified as high uplift days exceeding $2.25 million paid, according to the RTO’s markets report. All but one of the 16 high uplift days were because of a pair of winter storms.

During the Feb. 5 Operating Committee meeting, PJM said there were $797.6 million in uplift payments during the Jan. 24-27 storm, named “Fern” by The Weather Channel. (See PJM: Lower Load than Expected During Winter Storm.)

Bresler said staff have heard concerns about the scale of the uplift from stakeholders; those concerns are shared by PJM, he said. While the goal is not to eliminate uplift entirely, the significant amount seen during storms is a sign that operator actions taken to maintain reliability are not being reflected in transparent price signals.

“We feel very strongly we need to make more progress there,” he said.

Vitol’s Jason Barker said the amount of uplift is unconscionable and presents significant challenges for consumers. The firm has asked PJM to provide a report on how uplift has been affected by operator assessments, demand forecasts, fuel availability and temperatures. The intention is to evaluate whether PJM is delivering reliability at least cost.

Susan Bruce, representing the PJM Industrial Customers Coalition, said there has been progress at the Reserve Certainty Senior Task Force to consider how operator actions are reflected in the energy and ancillary services markets. Understanding the consequences of the changes being considered by the task force is an important part of the conversation, as there could be a significant impact on LMPs if the costs are simply shifted to those markets.

Bowring presented data on the increase in the total costs of wholesale power over 2025 as part of the Monitor’s report to the committee. He said uplift is an expected and appropriate result of advance scheduling for extreme cold weather.

“Advance scheduling contributes to reliability and is a much better approach than the approach taken by PJM during Winter Storm Elliott,” Bowring told RTO Insider, referring to the December 2022 weather event. “In addition, a significant part of uplift is paid to specific units with specific issues. Simply raising energy prices to reduce uplift would be inefficient and extremely expensive. It could cost billions in additional energy costs to customers to reduce uplift costs by hundreds of millions.

“Those who complain about uplift have not been clear about whether the cure is worse than the disease. There are ways to minimize uplift, including approaching the advance scheduling process more analytically. The IMM has proposed ways to do that, which are being considered by stakeholders.”

PJM Stakeholders Begin Discussions on Reliability Backstop Design

PJM and stakeholders laid out their initial thoughts on the structure of the in-development reliability backstop procurement as the RTO looks to meet a September target set out by the White House and all 13 member states’ governors.

During the Feb. 19 Members Committee meeting, PJM Board of Managers Chair David Mills, who is serving as interim CEO, said the board met at the White House with the National Energy Dominance Council (NEDC) to discuss the backstop. He said the council was adamant that the backstop be a one-time measure to secure the stability of the market and allow PJM to return to meeting its needs using market structures as quickly as possible. He added that the request to return to market forces was not specific to the existing Reliability Pricing Model design.

Mills said the council said the backstop should be designed to procure PJM’s capacity needs, rather than the needs of specific customers. The quantity PJM aims to purchase should be limited by the ability to bring new supply online, not the appetite for supply. Mills said council members mentioned a figure of about 12 GW during the meeting, which he took as indicative rather than a specific target to reach. He said there was clarity that existing generation should not be able to bid into the backstop.

Senior Vice President of Market Services Adam Keech said the eligibility of repowered deactivated resources will have to be considered further.

Design Workshops

While PJM is still in the process of drafting a proposal, Charles River Associates presented several designs during a Feb. 18 workshop. The firm was hired by PJM to share its expertise managing competitive procurements in other regions. Several stakeholders presented initial thoughts on how the backstop could be designed in a separate Feb. 17 workshop meeting.

The early sticking points emerging include what resources should be eligible, how much capacity should be procured and whether PJM should act as a “matchmaker” helping pair data centers with new resources or procure multiyear commitments for the expected capacity shortfall.

During the Feb. 18 workshop, PJM Senior Director of Market Design and Economics Rebecca Carroll said staff are firm on using a one-time design but are considering splitting it into two stages: one focused on shovel-ready projects already at some stage in PJM’s interconnection queue, the other a window for greenfield projects PJM doesn’t already have an “eye on” through existing planning processes. While they could be run concurrently, the second window is expected to take longer because of the additional design and engineering needed; possible time frames she mentioned are four to six months for existing projects and nine to 12 months for new submissions. She presented a working paper describing the broad strokes of how a backstop could function.

Stakeholders said having multiple backstop windows open at the same time PJM is administering capacity auctions could create opportunities for gaming. Carroll said the RTO is not considering changing the auction schedule but that it’s something for stakeholders to think about during future workshops.

PJM’s “strong preference” is for there to be demand-side participation around the amount the backstop should procure, Carroll said, adding that the RTO is not in the best position to define that quantity if the procurement does not have a bilateral approach.

“We’re trying to get to the people who have more certainty about what this load forecasting is supposed to be,” she said.

Keech said one roadblock to a bilateral design, in which PJM is a matchmaker between data centers and capacity developers, is most new resources will take five or more years to build, while projects on the demand side are much faster to construct. That difference in development timelines could make it difficult to identify a single customer for a bilateral arrangement.

PJM Senior Counsel Chen Lu said PJM plans to ask FERC for a waiver to substitute the one-time procurement for the existing backstop.

Generation Coalition Proposal

A joint proposal from independent power producers Constellation Energy, Vistra, Alpha Generation and Earthrise would trigger a reliability backstop auction (RBA) offering multiyear commitments up to 15 years.

It would be triggered when a Base Residual Auction (BRA) clears below 98% of the reliability requirement. The proposal would extend the price collar on the BRA, limiting the maximum price to about $420/MW-day.

Offers would receive the same clearing price as the BRA and would be selected with priority for shorter commitment periods and earlier commercial operation dates. The backstop would award enough commitments to meet the reliability requirement. New and reactivated resources would be eligible to submit offers, as well as generation not committed in the BRA because their offers exceed the maximum price, projects to uprate existing resources and demand response resources taking multiyear commitments.

Constellation’s Erik Heinle said a uniform clearing price between the RBA and BRA would avoid undervaluing existing resources, which could see a retirement signal if they receive a lower price than new resources. Pairing a multiyear commitment with the $420/MW-day clearing price cap would provide the incentive needed for new resources without creating price shock for consumers, he argued.

The RBA is designed to be a one-time measure to procure enough capacity for the 2028/29 auction, with the expectation that development will catch up with supply in future auctions, Heinle said.

E-Cubed Policy Associates President Paul Sotkiewicz said efforts to incorporate affordability into the backstop design are misguided and intertwine state retail issues with wholesale market design. Affordability for consumers is not in any of the FERC orders laying out the scope and responsibilities of RTOs.

“This is a state matter; we have no business addressing this,” he said.

Consumer Advocate Priorities

The consumer advocates of Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland presented their priorities for a backstop procurement, which center around new resources being paired with data center load.

Data centers or load-serving entities supplying them would submit buy offers by eligible new resources for terms between 10 and 20 years. New resources could include reactivated resources and uprates, but units in the process of deactivating or fuel switching would not qualify.

The backstop would be an alternative for data centers who do not bring their own generation or agree to curtailment under PJM’s proposed connect-and-manage process. Without participation in one of the three pathways, data centers would not be able to come online starting in June 2028.

Monitor Proposal

The Independent Market Monitor presented a proposal that would require data centers above 5 MW to purchase capacity through a backstop auction in which they are paired with new generation to serve their load, including the reserve margin.

While PJM would coordinate the auction, the data centers and generation owners would be counterparties to the bilateral contracts arranged by the auction. Data centers could avoid having to participate in the auction by bringing their own generation; the connect-and-manage approach would not be implemented under the Monitor’s proposal.

Monitor Joe Bowring said proposals in which PJM would be the counterparty to the capacity sellers in a backstop design would shift risk to the rest of the RTO’s load if the data centers fail to come online or use less than the forecast capacity.

“PJM should not be the counterparty of these deals and should not impose the risk of these deals to all other members,” he said.

Bowring also argued that electric distribution companies and LSEs should not be counterparties to capacity sellers for similar reasons. If the data centers fail to come online, the costs would be imposed on the other customers of the EDCs/LSEs who had nothing to do with the costs of the capacity.

Bowring said both points are fully consistent with one of the key principles advanced by the NEDC and the governors of PJM states: The costs resulting from the addition of data center load should be paid by the data centers themselves. Bowring asserted that the Monitor’s proposal is the only one that fully implements that principle.

The relatively low 5-MW threshold for being subject to the backstop is intended to prevent data centers from splitting their load into several smaller customers, Bowring said. Large loads other than data centers would not be subject to the proposal, and PJM would be able to act against data centers believed to be breaking large sites into increments smaller than 5 MW.

Several stakeholders argued the proposal would unduly discriminate against one class of consumers by focusing on the type of customer the load is for, rather than characteristics such as size.

Bowring said there has not been a large influx of other categories of large loads, leaving data centers as the drivers of the imbalance between supply and demand. He acknowledged it would be discriminatory to focus on data centers, but if they are the cause of the issue stakeholders are focused on, it should be considered due discrimination.

“For better or worse, data centers are the cause of the problem,” he said. The Monitor has documented the impacts of data centers on PJM markets and found data centers have added $23 billion to the costs of capacity over the past three BRAs.

Amazon Proposal

A proposal from Amazon Web Services, Talen Energy and Competitive Power Ventures would create a pay-as-bid procurement in which participants would submit offers to supply capacity to PJM for 15-year terms to meet the shortfall in the 2028/29 BRA plus the expected amount the RTO expects to be short in the subsequent auction.

Bid selection would be based on when the project could enter service and the price, weighted 75% in favor of the former. The bid price would be capped at 25% above the RTO-wide net cost of new entry, though higher offers would be allowed with Monitor evaluation while the bidding window is open.

PJM would conduct expedited network impact studies for submitted projects, and the price and construction time for transmission upgrades identified would be accounted for in the bid evaluation.

Projects that do not come into service by their commercial operation date would forgo capacity payments for that delivery year and face penalties if the cause was within the developer’s control. The resources would be subject to Capacity Performance penalties if they did not meet their obligations during emergency conditions, although the penalty rate would be based on the bid price they were awarded rather than the BRA clearing price.

The procurement costs would be allocated to the relevant LSE for large loads, leaving it up to state regulators to determine how they are accounted for in consumer rates.

PJM Consults MC on Price Collar Extension, Expedited Interconnection Track

PJM consulted with the Members Committee on two proposals to revise its tariff to extend the collar on capacity prices for two more years and implement an expedited interconnection track for large projects to bring new capacity online quickly.

The price collar extension would apply to the 2028/29 and 2029/30 Base Residual Auctions (BRAs), a change PJM’s Board of Managers asked stakeholders to comment on at the conclusion of the Critical Issue Fast Path (CIFP) process in 2025. Board chair and interim CEO David Mills noted the extension also was requested in a letter from the National Energy Dominance Council and governors of all 13 PJM member states, though he said the letter was not determinative in the board’s decision to proceed with the changes. (See PJM Board of Managers Selects CIFP Proposal to Address Large Load Growth.)

Stakeholders were divided on the announcement. Generation owners pointed to PJM’s statements that the price collar was a one-time measure to allow supply to catch up to ballooning demand. State officials said it supports the discussions around implementing a reliability backstop auction to procure resources outside the capacity market.

Mills said the market conditions that originally led PJM to implement the collar still are present.

The expedited interconnection track (EIT) proposal would allow 10 projects with at least 250 MW of unforced capacity to undergo a 10-month study process. It would require readiness deposits of $15,000/MW and $500,000 study deposits from the developer and notice from the state’s primary siting authority indicating support for the project timeline. The EIT was one of several changes the Board of Managers approved through the CIFP process.

The 250-MW threshold has been a core point of contention between stakeholders, with some arguing it should be lower to allow a wider range of projects to qualify, especially if large resources take longer to complete. PJM lowered the threshold from 500 MW during the CIFP process based on those comments. (See “PJM Proposal,” PJM Stakeholders to Vote on Large Load CIFP Proposals.)

PJM’s Jason Shoemaker said if the same network upgrades are identified for projects in the general interconnection queue and EIT, the costs would be assigned to the EIT on the grounds there are stricter timelines for that resource coming online. Shoemaker said the intention is to avoid having costs split between two processes and neither proceeding with their end.

Once an application is submitted, no changes would be permitted to site control or characteristics such as fuel type or output.

Shoemaker said if there were fewer than 10 projects submitted in a delivery year, PJM would not revise the eligibility requirements, adding that the EIT is designed to have a large impact on system reliability while minimizing disruption to the interconnection queue. In response to stakeholders saying the entry requirements could prove so onerous that there will be no applications, Shoemaker said if a project is going to be allowed to jump the rest of the queue, the requirements to do so should be steep.

Mills said stakeholders should not assume a one-size-fits-all approach will be taken for how states will signal their support for the timeline on project siting and permitting. He said there will be a full range of responses across the 13 states within the RTO, with some states supportive of projects while others may seek to limit or prohibit data centers.