Curtailment Hours definition

Curtailment Hours means the four (4) consecutive Summer hours and four
Curtailment Hours means the six (6four (4) consecutive hours chosen by the Seller pursuant to the provisions of Article IV during each Curtailment Period during each Curtailment Day.

Examples of Curtailment Hours in a sentence

  • Seller shall have the right at its sole and complete discretion to curtail Interruptible Power and Energy to the Plant for up to four (4) Curtailment Hours in each Curtailment Day during Summer and Winter in accordance with this Section 4.1.

  • The Customer must have a load curtailment capability of at least 25 kW during the Curtailment Season and within designated Curtailment Hours, and must agree to establish Firm Power Levels as set forth herein.

  • The Curtailment Hours associated with a Curtailment Event will be established at the time of the Curtailment Notification.

  • During Summer, Seller shall have the right to curtail Interruptible Power and Energy to the Plant for up to four (4) consecutive Curtailment Hours on those Curtailment Days when the Forecasted Temperature is equal to or greater than the period of record average maximum temperature rounded down to the closest integer as reported by the National Weather Service for the Salt Lake City International Airport for that calendar month.

  • If an interruption or curtailment under this Section 4.3 occurs during Curtailment Hours, the hours of curtailment or interruption under this Section will reduce the Curtailment Hours otherwise available during the same Curtailment Day.

  • During Summer, Purchaser may elect Self Curtailment for up to four (4) consecutive Curtailment Hours on those Curtailment Days when the Forecasted Temperature is less than the period of record average maximum temperature rounded down to the closest integer as reported by the National Weather Service for the Salt Lake City International Airport for that calendar month.

  • If Seller or Purchaser provides Seller’s or Purchaser’s Curtailment Notice under Section 4.1, Purchaser may elect either to physically curtail or to purchase Replacement Power for all or any portion of the Curtailment Capacity during any or all of the Curtailment Hour(s) specified in Seller’s or Purchaser’s Curtailment Notice by giving notice in accordance with Section 5.2 or Section 5.4.

  • Hours of Physical Curtailment may or may not coincide with Curtailment Hours as identified in Section 4.1. Purchaser cannot purchase Replacement Power for hours of Physical Curtailment as required by this Section 4.2.

  • During Winter, Seller shall have the right to curtail Interruptible Power and Energy to the Plant for up to two blocks of 2 Curtailment Hours in any Curtailment Day.

  • Seller’s Curtailment Notice shall specify the Curtailment Hour(s) for that Curtailment Day.

Related to Curtailment Hours

  • Curtailment Any Principal Prepayment made by a Mortgagor which is not a Principal Prepayment in Full.

  • Curtailment Period means the period of time during which Seller reduces generation from the Project, pursuant to a Curtailment Order. The Curtailment Period shall be inclusive of the time required for the Project to ramp down and ramp up; provided that such time periods to ramp down and ramp up shall be consistent with the Ramp Rate designated in the Cover Sheet.

  • Unscheduled Outage means an outage that is not a result of a Scheduled Outage;

  • Curtailment Shortfall For any Distribution Date and for any Curtailment received in the Prior Period, an amount equal to one month’s interest on such Curtailment at the Pass-Through Rate for the applicable Mortgage Loan.

  • Interruption Period shall have the meaning set forth in Section 5 hereof.

  • Continuous monitoring system means the total equipment, required under the emission monitoring section in applicable subsections used to sample and condition (if applicable), to analyze, and to provide a permanent record of emissions or process parameters.

  • Curtailment Service Provider or “CSP” shall mean a Member or a Special Member, which action on behalf of itself or one or more other Members or non-Members, participates in the PJM Interchange Energy Market, Ancillary Services markets, and/or Reliability Pricing Model by causing a reduction in demand.

  • Scheduled Outage has the meaning given to it in the Grid Code;

  • Curtailment Order means any of the following:

  • Outage has the meaning set forth in the CAISO Tariff.

  • Service Switching Point (SSP) is a telephone central office switch equipped with a Signaling System 7 (SS7) interface.

  • Planned Service Interruption means a Service Interruption that has been scheduled to occur in accordance with schedule 5;

  • Unscheduled Downtime means any time when any or all of the applications and Services provided by the Supplier to the Customer shall be unavailable to the Customer due to unexpected system failures other than Scheduled Downtime or the downtime is attributable to events not under the control of the Supplier.

  • Unplanned Service Interruption means any Service Interruption where events or circumstances prevent the timely communication of prior warning or notice to the Trader or any affected Customer;

  • Generator Forced Outage means an immediate reduction in output or capacity or removal from service, in whole or in part, of a generating unit by reason of an Emergency or threatened Emergency, unanticipated failure, or other cause beyond the control of the owner or operator of the facility, as specified in the relevant portions of the PJM Manuals. A reduction in output or removal from service of a generating unit in response to changes in market conditions shall not constitute a Generator Forced Outage.

  • Planned Outage means the removal of equipment from service availability for inspection and/or general overhaul of one or more major equipment groups. To qualify as a Planned Outage, the maintenance (a) must actually be conducted during the Planned Outage, and in Seller’s sole discretion must be of the type that is necessary to reliably maintain the Project, (b) cannot be reasonably conducted during Project operations, and (c) causes the generation level of the Project to be reduced by at least ten percent (10%) of the Contract Capacity.

  • Forced Outage means any unplanned reduction or suspension of the electrical output from the Project or unavailability of the Project in whole or in part from a Unit in response to a mechanical, electrical, or hydraulic control system trip or operator-initiated trip in response to an alarm or equipment malfunction and any other unavailability of a Unit for operation, in whole or in part, for maintenance or repair that is not a Planned Outage and not the result of Force Majeure.

  • Continuous emissions monitoring system (CEMS means all of the equipment that may be required to meet the data acquisition and availability requirements of this section, to sample, condition (if applicable), analyze, and provide a record of emissions on a continuous basis.

  • Service Interruption means the cessation of electricity supply to an ICP for a period of 1 minute or longer, other than by reason of De-energisation of that ICP:

  • Transportation Service means a service for moving people and goods, such as intercity bus service and passenger rail service.

  • Billing Period means (subject to Article 6.1 of the Agreement) the calendar month ending with the Metering Date. The first Billing Period shall commence from the Commercial Operation Date and end with the Metering Date corresponding to the month in which the Commercial Operation Date occurs.

  • Continuous emissions monitoring system or “CEMS” means all of the equipment that may be required to meet the data acquisition and availability requirements of this chapter, to sample, to condition (if applicable), to analyze, and to provide a record of emissions on a continuous basis.

  • Continuous emission monitoring system or "CEMS" means the equipment required under section 11 of this rule to sample, analyze, measure, and provide, by means of readings recorded at least once every fifteen (15) minutes, using an automated data acquisition and handling system (DAHS), a permanent record of nitrogen oxides emissions, stack gas volumetric flow rate, stack gas moisture content, and oxygen or carbon dioxide concentration, as applicable, in a manner consistent with 40 CFR 75*. The following systems are the principal types of continuous emission monitoring systems required under section 11 of this rule:

  • Service Hours means the amount of time (measured in hours or fractions thereof) a Unit is Delivering Energy or Ancillary Services pursuant to a Dispatch Notice.

  • Service Outage means an instance when the Customer is unable to route traffic to one or more Customer Sites via the Network, which results in Service Downtime;

  • Self-service storage facility or "facility" means any real property designed or used for the purpose of renting or leasing individual storage space to tenants who are to have access to that space for the purpose of storing and removing personal property.