Emergency capacity definition

Emergency capacity means the generation of electricity by an electric generating unit at a rate in excess of the unit's maximum normal power output rating. This maximum normal power output rating shall be that agreed upon by PJM and the owner or operator of the unit, and published by the owner or operator.
Emergency capacity means capacity requested by and made available to an electric utility under utility dispatch by a qualifying facility, above and beyond the firm capacity agreed to.

Examples of Emergency capacity in a sentence

  • Emergency capacity is not required if there is less than two (2) inches difference in elevation between the invert of the outlet of the septic tank and the invert of the inlet of the pump tank.

  • Emergency capacity in this case means the capacity when the largest import transmission line into the San Diego area, the 500 kV Southwest Powerlink (SWPL) with a rated capacity of 1,900 MW, is temporarily out-of-service.

  • Emergency capacity Building Project, see www.ecbproject.org ECB is a global initiative funded by ECHO and Gates foundation that bring INGOs together around issues that enhance emergency capacity in 5 focus countries of which Bangladesh is one.

  • Generators shall be sized for the full load and starting needs of all connected Emergency Life Safety and legally required Standby loads; provide generator capacity for lower-priority Optional Standby loads only where the required legally required and optional Standby load exceeds the Emergency capacity.

  • Emergency capacity should be tailored to regional shipping requirements (type and size, draft tank sizes, cargo types etc.).

  • Emergency capacity building efforts must start as soon as the possibility of crisis faces a community.

  • Following the evaluation, officers propose to investigate the feasibility of making minor improvements to the bus stop bypass as part of the wider improvements consulted upon and proposed in this report: • To contact TfL to check the positioning of the bus stop flag and to ask them to consider adding an on-board announcement making people aware of the different layout, as is done elsewhere in London.

  • Emergency capacity depends to some extent on the ability to leverage other organizational resources, including (1) the operational capacity of the program line- management structure, (2) the technical capacity in the development sectors, such as agriculture, health, and education, and (3) the capacity of other departments such as Finance, Human Resources, Fundraising, and Information Systems.

  • BSCOSS Fig 5.4: Emergency capacity increase What is the impact of this to the network?The possible impact of changing the configuration means allocating more channels or time slots to the packet switched domain during congestion in respect to circuit-switched voice calls.

  • CIVIL – The Company is a plaintiff in lawsuits disputing the legality of the collection of ECE – Emergency capacity charges, and RTE – “Recomposição Tarifária Extraordinária” charged in electricity bills.

Related to Emergency capacity

  • Contracted Capacity means the capacity (in MW AC) contracted with MSEDCL for supply by the successful bidder at the Delivery Point from the Solar Power Project.