Load Factor Sharing or LFS definition

Load Factor Sharing or LFS. A type of billing methodology applicable to a Customer’s Allocation which determines how a Customer’s total Native System Load is apportioned between the power and energy supplied by the Allocation and the Customer’s other source of electricity supply, if any. LFS is used to determine the amount of Firm Energy supplied and billed on the basis of the Customer’s actual total Native System Load per the monthly billing cycle as follows:

Related to Load Factor Sharing or LFS

  • Car sharing period means the period of time that commences

  • Enrollee point-of-service cost-sharing or "cost-sharing" means amounts paid to health carriers directly providing services, health care providers, or health care facilities by enrollees and may include copayments, coinsurance, or deductibles.

  • High global warming potential hydrofluorocarbons means any hydrofluorocarbons in a particular end use for which EPA's Significant New Alternatives Policy (SNAP) program has identified other acceptable alternatives that have lower global warming potential. The SNAP list of alternatives is found at 40 CFR part 82, subpart G, with supplemental tables of alternatives available at (http://www.epa.gov/snap/).

  • CAFRA Planning Map means the map used by the Department to identify the location of Coastal Planning Areas, CAFRA centers, CAFRA cores, and CAFRA nodes. The CAFRA Planning Map is available on the Department's Geographic Information System (GIS).

  • Super Top Heavy Plan means a plan described in Section 2.2(b).