Demand Bid Screening definition

Demand Bid Screening means the process by which Demand Bids are reviewed against the applicable Demand Bid Limit, and rejected if they would exceed that limit, as determined pursuant to Operating Agreement, Schedule 1, section 1.10.1B, and the parallel provisions of Tariff, Attachment K-Appendix.
Demand Bid Screening means the process by which Demand Bids are reviewed against the applicable Demand Bid Limit, and rejected if they would exceed that limit, as determined pursuant to Operating Agreement, Schedule 1, section 1.10.1B, and the parallel provisions of Tariff, Attachment K-Appendix, section 1.10.1B.
Demand Bid Screening means the process by which Demand Bids are reviewed against the applicable Demand Bid Limit, and rejected if they would exceed that limit, as determined pursuant to Operating Agreement, Schedule 1, sSection 1.10.1B, and the parallel provisions of Tariff, Attachment K-Appendix of Schedule 1 of the Operating Agreement.

Examples of Demand Bid Screening in a sentence

  • Using Demand Bid Screening, the Office of the Interconnection will automatically reject a Load Serving Entity’s Demand Bids in any future Operating Day for which the Load Serving Entity submits bids if the total megawatt volume of such bids would exceed the Load Serving Entity’s Demand Bid Limit for any hour in such Operating Day, unless the Office of the Interconnection permits an exception pursuant to subsection (d) below.

  • A Load Serving Entity whose Demand Bids are rejected as a result of Demand Bid Screening may change its Demand Bids to reduce its total megawatt volume to a level that does not exceed its Demand Bid Limit, and may resubmit them subject to the applicable rules related to bid submission outlined in Tariff, Operating Agreement and PJM Manuals.

  • The Office of the Interconnection shall apply Demand Bid Screening to all Demand Bids submitted in the Day-ahead Energy Market for each Load Serving Entity, separately by Zone.

  • Using Demand Bid Screening, the Office of the Interconnection will automatically reject a Load Serving Entity’s Demand Bids in any future Operating Day forwhich the Load Serving Entity submits bids if the total megawatt volume of such bids would exceed the Load Serving Entity’s Demand Bid Limit for any hour in such Operating Day, unless the Office of the Interconnection permits an exception pursuant to subsection (d) below.

  • If S+ is greater than the critical value, the null hypothesis is rejected and the SU meets the established criteria.

  • Examples of such circumstances include, but are not limited to, changes in load commitments due to state sponsored auctions, mergers and acquisitions between PJM Members, and sales and divestitures between PJM Members.• A LSE whose Demand Bids are rejected as a result of Demand Bid Screening screening may change the Demand Bids to reduce the total megawatt volume to a level that does not exceed the Demand Bid Limit.


More Definitions of Demand Bid Screening

Demand Bid Screening means the process by which Demand Bids are reviewed against

Related to Demand Bid Screening

  • Demand Bid means a bid, submitted by a Load Serving Entity in the Day-ahead Energy Market, to purchase energy at its contracted load location, for a specified timeframe and megawatt quantity, that if cleared will result in energy being scheduled at the specified location in the Day-ahead Energy Market and in the physical transfer of energy during the relevant Operating Day.

  • Demand Bid Limit means the largest MW volume of Demand Bids that may be submitted by a Load Serving Entity for any hour of an Operating Day, as determined pursuant to Operating Agreement, Schedule 1, section 1.10.1B, and the parallel provisions of Tariff, Attachment K- Appendix.

  • Bid sample means a sample to be furnished by a bidder to show the characteristics of the item offered in the bid.

  • Competitive Bid Request means a request by the Borrower for Competitive Bids in accordance with the provisions of Section 2.2(b).

  • Competing Proposal means a proposal, offer or invitation to the Company, any Party or any of a Party’s Affiliates (other than the Proposal), that involves the acquisition of Control of the Target, a sale of all or a substantial part of the assets of the Target, a restructuring or recapitalization of the Target, or some other transaction that would adversely affect, prevent or materially reduce the likelihood of the consummation of the Transaction with the Parties.

  • Passive RFID tag means a tag that reflects energy from the reader/interrogator or that receives and temporarily stores a small amount of energy from the reader/interrogator signal in order to generate the tag response. The only acceptable tags are EPC Class 1 passive RFID tags that meet the EPCglobal\TM\ Class 1 Generation 2 standard.

  • Opt-Out Period means the period that begins the day after the earliest date on which the Notice is first mailed, and that ends no later than 30 days before the Final Approval Hearing. The deadline for the Opt-Out Period will be specified in the Notice.

  • Unsolicited proposal means a written proposal for a public-private initiative that is submitted by a private entity for the purpose of entering into an agreement with the department but that is not in response to a formal solicitation or request issued by the department.

  • Bid threshold means the dollar amount set in N.J.S.A. 18A:18A-3, above which a Board shall advertise for and receive sealed bids in accordance with procedures set forth in N.J.S.A. 18A:18A-1 et seq.

  • Proposal / Bid means the technical proposal and the commercial/financial proposal.

  • Massive Multiauthor Collaboration Site (or “MMC Site”) means any World Wide Web server that publishes copyrightable works and also provides prominent facilities for anybody to edit those works. A public wiki that anybody can edit is an example of such a server. A “Massive Multiauthor Collaboration” (or “MMC”) contained in the site means any set of copyrightable works thus published on the MMC site.