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December 7, 2025

Public Interest Orgs. Scold, Praise PJM

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, WV — Public interest groups Tuesday scolded PJM for excluding them from the MOPR stakeholder process and for setting its annual meeting at the exclusive Greenbrier resort here.

At their annual meeting with the PJM Board of Managers, the public interest groups and state regulators also praised PJM for its handling of generation retirements and lobbied it to increase use of demand response and energy efficiency.

The meeting included about a dozen representatives from state consumer advocate offices and regulatory commissions as well as several environmental organizations. Others listened via phone.

Robert Mork, attorney in the Indiana Office of Utility Consumer Counselor, said he was able to attend the meeting thanks to funding from the newly formed Consumer Advocates of PJM States (CAPS) because there was no state funding available.  He said the location of the event also created image problems for state officials like him.

While he said the setting “probably isn’t extravagant by private industry standards,” he said the cost and reputation of the Greenbrier — which advertises itself as “one of the finest luxury resorts in the world” — made it difficult for consumer advocates to get approvals to attend.

The Greenbrier
The Greenbrier

Rooms at the hotel cost $315 a night at PJM’s discounted rate. A take-out sandwich set you back $12.

“At the Table”

“I think any concept of RTO inclusiveness needs to have people like us at the table,” Mork said, asking the RTO to consider a less expensive, more accessible location for future meetings.

Board Chairman Howard Schneider told the organizations that the annual meeting with them is important to the board. “Anything we can do to make your job easier, we’re certainly open to suggestions.”

Asked after the meeting whether he had a comment on the criticism of the meeting location, however, Schneider said simply, “no comment.” Would the board discuss the matter later? “I said: `no comment,’” he repeated.

Asked for his response, board member John McNeely Foster reacted like he had been tossed a live grenade: “Nah, I don’t have a comment, sorry.”

Board Member Jean Kinsey was more expansive: “I could have been sympathetic to their plight, but it is what it is,” she said. “Everybody is cost-conscious. But they have smaller resources. I applaud them for doing what they can to get here.”

Room for 500

PJM CEO Terry Boston said PJM staff “will take [the criticism] into consideration for future meetings.”

“There’s very few places in our footprint that can handle our size,” he added, noting that 480 attendees registered.Greenbrier-Interior

Actually, there are more than 50 facilities in the PJM territory with facilities to host 500 people, according to the Cvent Supplier Network, which has an online database. But few of them have a noted golf course like the Greenbrier’s Jack Nicklaus-designed links –- a big draw for the mostly-male attendees at an event that is at least as much social as substantive.

The locations for the next two annual meetings are already set:  next year at the Hyatt Regency in Cambridge, Md., and 2015 at for the Borgati Hotel Casino and Spa in Atlantic City.

Boston added that staff got an “attractive price” for the Greenbrier conference space with a multi-year contract for this year’s event and the one in 2010. He noted that the leisure activities — including free spa treatments and golf — were paid for by sponsors.

The state officials, not allowed to participate in the free activities, were offered a training session Wednesday afternoon instead. Most of them stayed in cheaper lodging off of the resort’s gated grounds.

MOPR Still Rankles

PJM also came under criticism for the stakeholder process that resulted in changes to its minimum offer price rule (MOPR), a tool for preventing buyer-side market power in PJM’s capacity market auctions.

Con­sumer advo­cates and state reg­u­la­tors were out­raged when they learned last September that PJM and the mar­ket mon­i­tor had par­tic­i­pated in con­fi­den­tial set­tle­ment nego­ti­a­tions among seven gen­er­at­ing com­pa­nies and five load-serving enti­ties over more than two months. The result­ing set­tle­ment won an 89% sector-weighted vote.

On May 2, the Fed­eral Energy Reg­u­la­tory Com­mis­sion issued a split decision on the changes, allow­ing the RTO to exempt two cat­e­gories of resources but deny­ing its request to elim­i­nate its cur­rent unit-specific review. FERC rejected state officials’ complaints that the process vio­lated PJM’s Code of Conduct. (See “FERC Upholds PJM Exemptions; Rejects End to Unit-Specific Review.”)

“We felt that the stakeholder discussions were not adequate,” said Bill Fields, an attorney in the Maryland Office of People’s Counsel. “It creates at least an appearance of a lack of independence to announce simultaneously that PJM has a concern about an issue and that a proposed solution to that problem has been agreed to by a group of stakeholders.”

Praise for Staff

The groups praised PJM’s staff for its professionalism and expressed relief that the board had agreed to seek a new three-year contract with Independent Market Monitor Joseph Bowring and his firm Monitoring Analytics.

Attorney Will Burns, who represents environmental groups, praised PJM’s transmission planners for their “herculean job of dealing with a lot of retirements dumped on them all at once.” He also gave PJM credit for its implementation of FERC Order 745 on compensation for demand response and increasing the cap for demand response’s share of the synchronized reserve market from 25% to 33%.

“Thanking PJM is really unlike us,” he said, drawing laughter — a rare light moment in the cordial but tense meeting.

Relief over Market Monitor Contract Extension

The meeting would have been far more contentious had the board not backed off from its original plan to open the monitoring role to competitors.

The board announced last month it was nego­ti­at­ing a new con­tract with the mar­ket mon­i­tor and drop­ping plans to put the con­tract out for bid. The board acted after receiving letters of protest from state reg­u­la­tors, indus­trial con­sumers and coop­er­a­tives, who said the draft request for proposals con­tained terms that would under­mine the inde­pen­dence and qual­ity of the mon­i­tor­ing function. (See “PJM Working on New Deal with Monitor; Backs Down on RFP.”)

“If [a new contract] comes to fruition it will ensure the continued well functioning of the PJM markets,” said Dave Evrard, an attorney in the Pennsylvania Office of Consumer Advocate.

Jackie Roberts, Deputy Consumer Advocate for the West Virginia Public Service Commission, said she was relieved that PJM would not repeat the turmoil of 2007, when Bowring accused PJM’s then-pres­i­dent of attempt­ing to muz­zle him by squelch­ing his reports and cut­ting his budget.

“It was a very difficult time for all of us,” Roberts said. “I think I did a happy dance when I heard [about the board’s decision to extend the contract]. I think we may have avoided some uncertainty in bringing in a new market monitor.”

Environmental Groups Lobby for DR and EE

Environmental groups in attendance pressed their case for energy efficiency and demand response as alternatives to new transmission and generation.

“We believe PJM has an affirmative obligation to identify and evaluate non-transmission alternatives under the Federal Power Act,” said John Moore, senior attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council’s Sustainable FERC Project.

The Regional Transmission Expansion Plan (RTEP) doesn’t “capture fully all the locational benefits” of non-transmission alternatives, Moore said. “We think waiting for developers to propose these solutions is insufficient.”

Moore said PJM’s requirement that generators provide 90-days notice of plant retirements is too short for energy efficiency and demand response providers to offer alternatives to new transmission lines.

Debate over DR “Saturation”

Environmentalists also said PJM was premature in worrying about the potential for demand response “saturation” – the fear that DR providers will reduce participation as their resources are called on more often.

“We shouldn’t assume there’s a problem until we see some more evidence of it,” said attorney Will Burns.

Board members Sarah Rogers and Ake Almgren insisted their concerns were well founded. “Subscription to DR can fall off and fall off very rapidly,” Rogers said.

Boston said he had seen DR participation decline in Florida. “We found that DR did not stay with us during the boom times” when it was called on more, he said.

Stephen Whitley, president and CEO of the New York ISO, provided his own testimonial in a speech to the Members Committee Thursday. Whitley said New York has lost some of its demand response since calling on those resources five times last year.  “After the fifth time, I got a lot of phone calls from DR participants asking, `What’s going on?’ So that’s a big concern to me.”

PJM Year in Review: Storm Recovery, Lower Prices, Continued Growth

Storms provided challenges, but a bounty of cheap natural gas brought consumers lower prices in 2012, PJM officials said in their Year in Review presentations at the annual meeting.

“The weather was relentless, but PJM and its members rose to the occasion,” said CEO Terry Boston.

Derecho approaches
Derecho approaches

The June 29 derecho, a 600-mile series of storms, took out 90 high voltage and extra high voltage transmission lines, leaving 4.2 million customers without electricity.

Hurricane Sandy, Oct. 29, was even more damaging, causing 40 generators to trip and knocking out 142 transmission lines and interrupting service for 5 million. “The system is rated for N-1,” said Boston. “We ended up with N-142 elements out on the transmission system.”

Load in the MidAtlantic dropped to 15,000 MW, 6,000 MW below normal. In 25 years at PJM, said PJM Senior Vice President of Operations Michael Kormos, it was the first time he ever saw power flowing west to east over PJM’s high voltage lines.

The good news? “We’re much better at emergency planning than we were before the storm,” Boston said. “Drills are one thing. Actually doing it is something else.”

 

Prices, Emissions Lower from Cheap Gas
Flooded switchyard post-Hurricane Sandy
Flooded switchyard post-Hurricane Sandy

The PJM markets, meanwhile, were driven by the natural gas’s increasing market share.

Gas rose to nearly 20% of the fuel mix for electricity production, while coal dropped to 42%. The shift helped reduce PJM’s CO2, SO2 and NOX emissions per MWh to new lows.

PJM membership rose to a record 797 as of Dec. 31, 2012, up from 738 the year before. But PJM Market settlements volume dropped to $29.18 billion in 2012 from a record $35.89 billion in 2011 as the average wholesale cost dropped to about $48/MWh from almost $63.

“Is that sustainable?” Andy Ott, Senior Vice President of Markets asked. “I leave that to you.”

emissions-per-MWh
Source: PJM Interconnection, LLC

Market Monitor Joseph Bowring gave his answer in his own presentation, noting that power prices rose 20% in the first quarter of 2013 versus the same period in 2012, pushed by increasing gas costs.

PJM Keynotes: Humility, Efficiency Needed for Fracking’s Future

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, WV — Natural gas’ growing role in electric generation was a recurrent theme at PJM’s annual meeting last week, with author Michael Levi warning that overconfidence could threaten the fracking boom and gas executive Steven L. Mueller calling for increased efficiency to protect the “national treasure” in U.S. gas

Michael_Levi
Michael Levi

“If we don’t set our standards high enough we could have more than a few high profile accidents … that could put a lot of land off limits” to drilling, said Levi, director of the Council on Foreign Relations’ Program on Energy Security and Climate Change, and author of the forthcoming book “The Power Surge: Energy, Opportunity, and the Battle for America’s Future.” “There’s a bit too much certainty in a lot of the messages we hear and not enough humility,” Levi said. “And people don’t buy that.” In his own speech, Mueller, president and CEO of Southwestern Energy Co., conceded: “I can’t tell you [U.S. producers will] never have a problem drilling 12,000 wells a year.” But he said his company, one of the largest North American natural gas producers, is “doing to everything we can not to screw it up.”

“Unsustainable” Practices

Mueller said that the fracking boom will be “unsustainable” unless drillers find ways of decreasing their water use. He noted that drillers currently require 900 truck trips per well, including deliveries of equipment and supplies. About 400 of the trips are deliveries of water. “The constraint becomes the roads you have,” he said. Mueller said drillers also will increase their productivity, predicting that unconventional wells — which now collect about 30% of the gas present — will increase their yield to 70% to 80% within three decades. “Today if you can’t get 80-90% from a conventional well you’re not doing it right.”

Mueller
Steven Mueller

Another challenge, Mueller said, is finding enough pipeline and storage capacity to ensure adequate supplies of gas to meet both heating and electric loads. “We need to continue building our pipeline infrastructure out. We’re about two-thirds of the way there. We need to build overcapacity; if we have overcapacity, we’ll have that storage.” Levi said he did not expect the federal government to limit natural gas exports because exports won’t cause a significant price rise for most energy and chemical companies. “The place that really gets hurts by exports is fertilizer” companies, he said.

Solar to Challenge Utility Model

Turning to the electric industry, Levi predicted distributed solar generation will grow and present “some tough challenges for the traditional utility model.” What’s the next big thing in energy? Batteries, said Levi. “If you wanted a sort of killer app in the energy world that cuts across all areas like fracking — it’s storage,” he said. “There’s some real breakthrough chemistry that can still happen.”

Members Committee Approvals

The Members Committee approved the following changes by acclimation last week:

System Restoration Strategy

The committee approved updates to the system restoration strategy, including updates to cost allocation.

Rea­son for Change: The System Restoration Strategy Task Force has been researching ways to ensure sufficient black start capability. Environmental regulations, NERC reliability standards and the increasing cost of black start generation raised reliability concerns.

Impact: Deletes references to transmission owner. Adds conditions for involuntary termination of black start service. Adds reference to performance capabilities in PJM manuals; deletes reference to 90-minute response time. Adds cost allocation provision for black start units designated to serve multiple zones.

Provision of E-Tag Data

The committee approved revi­sions to the con­fidentiality pro­vi­sions of its tar­iff to com­ply with FERC Order 771, requir­ing pro­vi­sion of e-Tag data to Inde­pen­dent Sys­tem Oper­a­tors, Mar­ket Mon­i­tor­ing Units and FERC. The new lan­guage extends con­fi­den­tial­ity pro­tec­tions to coun­ter­par­ties that are not PJM mem­bers.

Up-To Congestion Transactions – Trading Limits

The committee approved volume limitations for up-to congestion transactions.

Rea­son for Change: PJM pro­posed the cap because high bid vol­umes can make it dif­fi­cult for the RTO’s day-ahead mar­kets soft­ware to reach solutions.

Impact: PJM can limit mar­ket par­tic­i­pants to no more than 3,000 UTC trans­ac­tions each in the day-ahead mar­ket when nec­es­sary for mar­ket oper­a­tions. (A sim­i­lar cap also applies to incre­ment offers and decre­ment bids.) The def­i­n­i­tion of mar­ket par­tic­i­pant includes all sub-accounts estab­lished under the mem­ber. Affil­i­ates will be treated as sep­a­rate par­tic­i­pants and have their bids counted individually. The cap includes changes to the tar­iff, Oper­at­ing Agree­ment and Man­ual 11.

Up-To Congestion Transactions – FTR forfeiture rules

Rea­son for Change: The rule is intended to pre­vent mar­ket manip­u­la­tion — in this case, the sub­mis­sion of UTCs that boost the value of a participant’s FTRs.

Impact: The rule is applied when those UTCs result in a higher LMP spread in the day-ahead mar­ket than in the real-time market.

PJM Settlement Reconciliations

The committee approved revisions to Schedule 9-PJMSettlement of the Open Access Transmission Tariff to adjust the quarterly rate for the cumulative over or under collection of Schedule 9-PJMSettlement funds.

Reason for Change: Section c of Schedule 9 requires the quarterly 9-PJMSettement rate be adjusted for prior quarter revenues in excess of expenses. The formula does not provide for a reconciliation of prior period balances.

Impact: Section c is revised to adjust the quarterly rate for the cumulative over or under collection of Schedule 9-PJMSettlement funds relative to cumulative costs.

Tx Planning Standard OK’d on Second Try

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission last week approved a revised transmission planning reliability standard it had previously rejected as “vague and unenforceable.”

The North American Electric Reliability Corp.’s proposed reliability standard TPL-001-2 would have allowed transmission planners to plan for non-consequential load loss following a single contingency as long as the plan was the result of an open and transparent stakeholder process.

The commission said the revised standard TPL-001-4 will improve reliability “by providing a blend of specific quantitative and qualitative parameters for the permissible use of planned non-consequential load loss to address bulk electric system performance issues.” The commission said the new rule defines the stakeholder process and criteria that must be followed and includes safeguards, including a review process to ensure the procedure does not hurt reliability.

The commission’s approval, a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, will be open for 30 days after its publication in the Federal Register. In a concurring statement, Commissioner John R. Norris praised the rule for balancing the need to protect system reliability and minimize costs.

“NERC’s proposal goes a long way towards empowering local communities to consider the economic tradeoffs between incurring costs to avoid shedding firm load versus planning to shed firm load, while still ensuring that the decision-making process is more open and transparent and building in a safeguard for NERC to review decisions for possible adverse reliability impacts,” Norris said.

PJM Chooses Continuity over New Voices for Board – UPDATE

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, WV –  “I don’t want to put the board on the spot,” said Robert Mork, doing just that at the PJM Board of Managers annual meeting with public interest groups and state regulators Tuesday. “But I think it’s the case that none of you have worked in a consumer advocate’s office or served on a state commission.”

There was an awkward silence in the wood-paneled Eisenhower conference room at the opulent but mostly empty Greenbrier resort here. No one corrected Mork, an attorney in the Indiana Office of Utility Consumer Counselor.

Would the 10-member PJM benefit from the presence of at least one board member with a state ratemaking perspective? It will have to wait at least another year to find out.

The PJM Members Committee this morning approved the re-election of three long-serving members to the PJM Board of Managers: Jean Kinsey, William Mayben and Richard Lahey. Given the absence of any other candidates, reelection was all but certain.

Kinsey, a Ph.D. economist, has served on the board since 2003. She is a Professor Emeritus in the Department of Applied Economics at the University of Minnesota and an expert on food consumption trends, obesity issues, consumer buying behavior, and food industry organization.

Lahey, who has a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering, is an expert on nuclear reactor safety technology, power engineering, and the use of advanced technology in industrial applications. A Professor Emeritus at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, he has served since PJM’s independent board was created in 1997.

Mayben, who joined the board in 2007, worked as a management consultant serving utilities and is former president and CEO of the Nebraska Public Power District. He holds a B.S. in electrical engineering.

The three were selected for new three-year terms by the nominating committee, comprised of Board Chair Howard Schneider; also a member of the original board; board members John McNeely Foster and Susan Riley, and five PJM members. The members represent the Electric Distributor, Generation Owner, Other Supplier, End Use Customer and Transmission Owner sectors.

Lahey and Mayben, who both serve on the board’s reliability committee, told PJM Insider that maintaining the security of the PJM grid against physical and cyber attacks would be among their priorities in their next terms.

“I’m concerned about people getting into our system,” said Mayben, who is also on board’s audit committee.

Lahey also is a member of the human resources and finance committees. He said had he had no specific goals. “It’s hard to predict the future,” he said. “At every meeting there’s some new challenges.”

Kinsey is a member of the competitive markets and audits committees.

She declined to comment on her pending election Wednesday. “I think they [members] know what I’m doing and what I will be doing,” she said.

MIC OKs UTC Credit Requirement

The Market Implementation Committee endorsed a first-ever credit requirement for up-to-congestion transactions. The new rule, a consensus resulting from 12 Credit Subcommittee meetings since December 2011, will be brought before the Markets and Reliability Committee May 30.

Reason for Change:

UTC trading volumes have grown dramatically since 2010 but there are no credit requirements to protect market participants against defaults.

Impact: Bid screen and cleared portfolio credit requirements are based on a percentile of the difference between each member’s bid or cleared price and the two-month rolling average of real-time value per path.

Bid Screen Credit:

  • Prevailing flow paths: 70th percentile
  • Counterflow paths: 80th percentile

Cleared Portfolio Credit:

  • Prevailing flow paths: 70th percentile
  • Counterflow paths: 95th percentile

Minimum Financial Participation Requirements — the same minimum requirements as for increment and decrement transactions:

  • tangible net worth of at least $500,000 or
  • tangible assets of at least $5 million, or
  • posting $200,000 of financial security against which the member may not trade, plus a 10% reduction in additional collateral.

UTC-credit-requirement-performance-vs.-4-scenariosPJM analyzed the impact of the proposals against trading results for April 2011, July 2012, and Jan. 2013 to evaluate shoul­der, summer and winter periods. It also looked at how they fared against the largest losses in the 10-month period between Jan. 1 and Oct. 31, 2012.

The proposal covered 95% or more of bid exposure for each scenario except for January 2013, when it covered 82%. Excess collateral ranged from a low of $1.9 million (January 2012) to a high of $8 million (July 2012). Excess collateral is concentrated in members with high bid volumes. (See chart.)

Substation Sabotage Raises Concerns over NERC Alerts

NERC’s delayed and muted response to the sabotage of a Pacific Gas & Electric Co. substation April 16 has some electric industry officials concerned.

One or more gunmen breached a security fence and shot and damaged seven of eight transformers at PG&E’s Metcalf substation near San Jose about 2 a.m. The shooting prompted the California Independent System Operator to issue an alert asking residents in the region to cut their electricity use.

But the seriousness of the sabotage was slow to spread elsewhere in the electric industry. PJM didn’t receive an alert from the North American Electric Reliability Corp. until two days later, Mike Bryson, executive director of system operations, told the Operating Committee last week. The incident “was a lot worse than it appeared to be when we got the alert,” Bryson said.

Bryson said the NERC official who authored the alert believed “it went out later than he would like and didn’t get the reaction it should have.” An alert sent the following day by the SERC Reliability Corp. made clear the seriousness of the incident, Bryson said.

NERC and SERC told PJM Insider the alerts are confidential and would not be made public. The shooting occurred minutes after someone cut underground fiber optic cables a half mile from the substation, briefly knocking out phone and 911 service in the area. Law enforcement officials believe the two incidents are related.

Bryson said the industry gets more than 10 reports annually of shootings at transmission lines but most incidents are far less serious than the April 16 event.

The incident underscored a risk raised last year by Jon Wellinghoff, chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. Wellinghoff told Bloomberg News that he feared saboteurs with guns could target transformers. Transformers, which are usually protected only by chain-link fences, are often custom built and can take 18 to 36 months to replace, Wellinghoff said.

An attacker “could get 200 yards away with a .22 rifle and take the whole thing out,” Wellinghoff said. The physical security of the grid “is an equal if not greater issue” than cybersecurity, he added.

Cyber Threat Raised

Separately, the Department of Homeland Security warned last week of a heightened risk of a cyber attack on water and electric utilities.

DHS’s Industrial Control Systems Cyber Emergency Response Team (ICS-CERT) reported “increasing hostility” against “U.S. critical infrastructure organizations,” The Washington Post reported, quoting from the alert. “Adversary intent extends beyond intellectual property theft to include the use of cyber to disrupt … control processes.”

The alert included indicators that companies can use to detect attacks and recommended countermeasures. Industry officials told the Post that the level of detail in the alert was evidence that President Obama’s February executive order — which directed the executive branch to increase information sharing with industry — was having an impact.

PJM Outlines ‘Crisper’ Approach to Stakeholder Initiatives

PJM last week announced a two-step process for defining new initiatives and tools prioritizing its growing stakeholder workload.

The Market Implementation Committee will be the first to implement the new procedure, which will separate the voting on problem statements (defining the problem, situation or opportunity to address) from voting on issue charges (defining which body will study the issue, their goals and deadlines).

MIC Chairwoman Adrien Foley said it will result in a “crisper” process than the current practice, in which the two votes are combined, generally a month after the issue is presented on first reading. The new process will allow a vote on the problem statement on first read; those that are approved will have a vote on the issue charge a month later.

If stakeholders assign the issue to a new task force or work group, it will also require a charter to set the objectives and milestones for the group.

The process will be rolled out to other committees after testing in the MIC.

Work Plan

Foley also presented the MIC with its first “Work Plan,” listing the status and projected schedule of 21 current issues being pursued by MIC and nine subcommittees, task forces and work groups. The work plan, which includes a meeting schedule, is intended as a way to set priorities and budget stakeholders’ time.

The first issue considered under the plan was a problem statement by Market Monitor Joseph Bowring that was approved by MIC in April. It called for inves­ti­gating whether traders could be manip­u­lat­ing PJM’s inter­face pric­ing points by break­ing sched­ules into mul­ti­ple “back-to-back” transactions. (See “MIC to Probe ‘Sham Scheduling’.”)

After receiving comments from stakeholders and Bowring, Foley said the issue would be started “as soon as practical.”

Voting App, Self-Serve Registration

MIC also heard about enhancements that will allow members to cast votes with their smartphones, a capability that was offered to tablet users in February. The changes are expected to be complete this summer.

PJM also is developing a self-service web application that will allow members to update the names of their voting representatives on committee rosters without filing forms with the RTO. The improvements also will allow the use of the committee voting application in additional committee meetings (e.g., Operating Committee, Market Implementation Committee). PJM plans to solicit member feedback on the changes this summer.

CIP Audit Finds 4 Potential Violations

Last month’s audit of PJM’s adherence to Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) standards may result in up to four potential violations, PJM officials told the Operating Committee May 7.

Two of the issues were reported by PJM before the audit by ReliabilityFirst Corp. and SERC Reliability Corp. and may not result in violation notices, PJM spokesman Ray Dotter said. Dotter said the other two were minor issues that posed no risk to the system. “In fact, it was noted that PJM’s strong compliance program and its commitment to compliance allowed” completion of the audit in only two and one-half days, half the time scheduled, Dotter added.

The draft report detailing the violations has not been released.

Correction: In its April 16 edition, PJM Insider incorrectly referred to a ReliabilityFirst/SERC audit that had no findings as a CIP audit. That reference was to a separate RFC/SERC audit focused on transmission system operations and planning.