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Reducing Electricity Use Stretched Power Supplies, Lowered Costs During Heat Wave

Conservation during heat waves not only stretched power supplies, but saved money during the recent heat wave, reports PJM Interconnection, operator of the regional electric power grid.

Reductions in electricity use during the early August heat wave produced price reductions estimated to be equivalent to more than $650 million in payments for energy for the week, according to PJM.

Customers in the 13-state PJM region set a new record for power consumption of 144,796 megawatts on August 2. On that day alone, voluntary reductions in electricity use, known as demand response, resulted in price reductions estimated to be equivalent to more than $230 million in payments for energy.

Demand response involves reducing the use of electricity (demand) to meet a power grid need rather than increasing generation (supply). Customers offer to reduce their usage of electricity in return for being paid the market value of the electricity saved. Demand response can lower the price of electricity by avoiding the use of the most expensive generators.

Customers who curtail their usage receive payments based on the price to generate an equal amount of electricity. PJM payments to demand response providers for the heat wave during the first week in August were about $5 million.

The increase in peak electricity demand in PJM from the summer of 2005 to this summer was more than 10,000 megawatts, enough electricity to power a major city.

PJM Interconnection ensures the reliability of the high-voltage electric power system serving 51 million people in all or parts of Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia and the District of Columbia.

PJM coordinates and directs the operation of the region's transmission grid, which includes 6,038 substations and 56,070 miles of transmission lines; administers the world's largest competitive wholesale electricity market; and plans regional transmission expansion improvements to maintain grid reliability and relieve congestion.

For more information, visit the PJM website.


8/18/2006

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