HomeIndustryEnergy & UtilitiesPJM becomes first regional grid operator to utilize ambient-air ratings for transmission...

PJM becomes first regional grid operator to utilize ambient-air ratings for transmission under FERC order

Grid operator PJM said March 9 that it is the first regional transmission organization to utilize the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s requirement to maximize the usable capacity of existing grid infrastructure by employing more granular and precise thermal ratings. PJM went live with hourly “ambient air” adjusted transmission line ratings March 4.

PJM, which serves all or part of 13 states and the District of Columbia, dispatches electricity across its transmission system to flow within safe transfer limits, or ratings, designated for all energized equipment, such as power lines, circuit breakers and transformers. PJM said it has been at the forefront of more sophisticated ratings systems, having used temperature-adjusted ratings, day/night switches and seasonal study ratings for years before FERC Order 881.

PJM said it strictly uses hourly ratings from real-time to 10 days out and monthly seasonal ratings for longer-term studies 12 months out.

The flow of current across high-voltage transmission lines generates heat. Accordingly, weather conditions at any given time affect transmission lines’ physical ability to safely convey that electricity without overheating.

Overheated lines can expand in length and droop to the ground and short out, or the lines can “anneal,” permanently losing tensile strength to stay taut while suspended. Before these potentially dangerous events occur, PJM manages the transmission congestion or overloads by re-dispatching generation to reduce flow on the lines.

Cold weather or wind cools transmission lines so they may carry more power without overheating. In contrast, transmission line capacity contracts during hot days with little wind. Sometimes, cold or windy weather can dramatically increase a line’s capacity.

Cold and windy weather can increase a line’s usable transmission capacity by 10% to 40%, researchers for the U.S. Department of Energy found.

In 2021, FERC Order 881 ordered all transmission owners within grid operator regions like PJM, or standalone entities, to change how they rate transmission line capacity to incorporate weather impacts to make the grid more efficient. FERC said more power could be safely conveyed over power lines using more granular and precise thermal limits, also known as ambient-adjusted ratings (AARs).

The results, FERC reasoned, would save on costs to ratepayers by conveying more power safely where it is needed, easing transmission constraints and expanding the efficient use of the existing transmission system.

A few minutes past midnight on March 4, PJM’s systems switched over to monitoring and dispatching the grid based on the new AARs. Now, rating sets are adjusted hourly according to ambient temperatures forecast 10 days ahead for 47 separate regions with a shared weather forecast within the PJM footprint. 

The switchover was the result of a multiyear effort to adapt multiple PJM systems to AARs required by FERC Order 881. Affected systems included many PJM operations functions governing real-time monitoring and reliability studies.

PJM systems now leverage new, complex and dynamic data sets of line ratings that update every hour according to a stream of weather data of ambient air temperatures with forecasts up to 10 days ahead. PJM system changes also synchronized market functions to adapt to the new advanced data structures and dispatch methods.

“This was an enterprise-wide effort, involving a comprehensive stakeholder process and operations, markets and IT working with three vendors on the design, deployment and go-live event on March 4,” said Darlene Phillips, executive director – operations engineering support.

Related Articles

AAA: N.J.’s gallon of gas average jumps to $3.53 — 16th-highest in the nation

Voorhees-based AAA reports that the average price for a gallon of regular gasoline in New Jersey rose 33 cents over the last week to...

Cape May County MUA combines with Waga Energy to upgrade landfill gas to renewable natural gas

Cape May County Municipal Utilities Authority is partnering with Waga Energy to upgrade its landfill gas into pipeline-quality renewable natural gas (RNG) in Southern...

Clearway Energy to seek shareholder vote to convert to single share class

Princeton-based Clearway Energy Inc. said its board has approved a proposal that would simplify the company’s public share class structure into a single class,...

Maple Shade receives over $1M to replace Kings Highway water plant

Maple Shade has received $1,092,000 in Community Project Funding (CPF) to help construct a new water treatment plant to replace the aging Kings Highway...

PSEG posts income increase for all of 2025, says it’s focused on minimizing utility rate hikes

Public Service Enterprise Group, parent of PSE&G, said Feb. 26 that net income for 2025 rose 19% to $2.11 billion, or $4.22 a share,...

Small businesses tell NFIB how energy impacts their livelihood   

The small business advocacy group National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), with thousands of members in the Garden State, released its first energy survey...

Latest Articles

Assembly bill supporting nuclear energy expansion in N.J. advances

As electricity demand grows and pressure on the regional grid continues to mount, the Assembly Telecommunications and Utilities Committee advanced Bill A4528. Sponsored by Assemblymen...

RWJBarnabas Health appoints Giantomasi to board, honors late Chair Berson

RWJBarnabas Health has appointed Francis J. Giantomasi, Esq., as a new member of its board of trustees, effective immediately, while also posthumously honoring late...

Spencer Savings Bank adds Coppola to commercial real estate team as client manager

Spencer Savings Bank said Chris Coppola was added to its commercial real estate team as vice president, commercial real estate client manager. Coppola is...

Marcus & Millichap manages sale of self-storage development site in Ridgefield

Marcus & Millichap announced March 16 the sale of a self-storage development site in Ridgefield. Financial details were not disclosed. Located at 1099 Hendricks Causeway, the fully...

Freedom Bank welcomes Union’s Taylor as VP and regional manager

Maywood-based Freedom Bank announced that Union resident Trevor A. Taylor has joined the organization as vice president and regional manager, where he will oversee...

Bill to refund application fees for delayed permits advances in Senate

The Senate Commerce Committee advanced legislation sponsored by state Sen. Troy Singleton that will establish a fee refund program for individuals and businesses applying...

Latest Articles

Assembly bill supporting nuclear energy expansion in N.J. advances

As electricity demand grows and pressure on the regional grid continues to mount, the Assembly Telecommunications and Utilities Committee advanced Bill A4528. Sponsored by Assemblymen...

RWJBarnabas Health appoints Giantomasi to board, honors late Chair Berson

RWJBarnabas Health has appointed Francis J. Giantomasi, Esq., as a new member of its board of trustees, effective immediately, while also posthumously honoring late...

Spencer Savings Bank adds Coppola to commercial real estate team as client manager

Spencer Savings Bank said Chris Coppola was added to its commercial real estate team as vice president, commercial real estate client manager. Coppola is...

Marcus & Millichap manages sale of self-storage development site in Ridgefield

Marcus & Millichap announced March 16 the sale of a self-storage development site in Ridgefield. Financial details were not disclosed. Located at 1099 Hendricks Causeway, the fully...

Freedom Bank welcomes Union’s Taylor as VP and regional manager

Maywood-based Freedom Bank announced that Union resident Trevor A. Taylor has joined the organization as vice president and regional manager, where he will oversee...