Summer Peak Hours definition

Summer Peak Hours means the hours beginning 14, 15, 16, and 17 during the three-month period from June 1 through August 31, inclusive.
Summer Peak Hours means the hours beginning 14, 15, 16, and 17.

Examples of Summer Peak Hours in a sentence

  • Starting in the seventh year of operation, we assumed the US Wind Project would be entitled to 71.9 MW of UCAP (29.0% performance during Summer Peak Hours) and the Skipjack Project would be entitled to 41.3 MW of UCAP (34.4% performance during Summer Peak Hours).

  • Thus we assumed the Skipjack Project would have a UCAP value of31.2 MW for the first six years, increasing to41.3 MW (based on a 34.4% net capacity factor during Summer Peak Hours) starting in the seventh year of operation.

  • According to PJM, a plant’s UCAP value cannot exceed its CIR that is based on Summer Peak Hours.

  • Once a plant has one year of operating data, its owner may request a higher UCAP value based on the plant’s generation during the specified Summer Peak Hours up to the plant’s Capacity Interconnection Rights value PJM utilizes for planning studies.37 Our six year lag accounts for PJM’s three-year forward capacity market and PJM’s two-year interconnection review process.

  • We forecasted the zonal wholesale capacity price for the EMAAC Locational Deliverability Area (LDA), which includes DPL where the projects would be interconnected.35 We also forecasted the change in wholesale capacity prices for EMAAC and the other Maryland LDAs that take into account each Project’s expected generation during Summer Peak Hours under PJM’s Capacity Performance construct.

  • Although US Wind proposed a higher UCAP value thereafter (based on its expected 42.1% net capacity factor during Performance Assessment Hours), we assumed the US Wind Project would have a UCAP value of 71.9 MW (based on a 29.0% net capacity factor during Summer Peak Hours) starting in the seventh year of operation.

  • Once a plant has at least one year of operating data, the operator could request a higher UCAP value based on the plants generation during the specified Summer Peak Hours.

  • The Summer Availability Percentage is calculated at the end of the Summer Months and equals the quotient of Summer Output divided by Summer Potential where Summer Output equals the sum of Hourly Output for all Summer Peak Hours and Summer Potential equals the sum of Hourly Potential for all Summer Peak Hours.

  • The members of the new government declared their assets upon entry into the government.

  • The Asked Price shall equal the sum of the Transaction Fee, Marginal Operating Cost, Normal Delivery Cost and, during RTP Summer Peak Hours, Marginal Capacity Cost.

Related to Summer Peak Hours

  • Peak Hours or “Peak Period” means the period with the highest ridership during the entire transit service day as determined by the transit operator. Must include at least one hour during the morning commute hours and one during evening commute hours, Monday through Friday. Each Peak Period cannot be longer than three hours.

  • On-Peak Hours means Hour Ending (“HE”) 0800 through HE 2300 EPT, Monday through Friday, excluding Saturday, Sunday and PJM holidays.

  • Off-Peak Hours means those hours which are not On-Peak Hours.

  • Clock hours means the actual number of hours or time a participant spends attending the instructional portion of a training designed to develop or enhance early care and education or school–age care competencies.

  • Clock hour means either of the following:

  • Core Hours means the period beginning at 8am and ending at 6.30pm on any day from Monday to Friday except Good Friday, Christmas Day or bank holidays;

  • Peak tube potential means the maximum value of the potential difference across the x-ray tube during an exposure.

  • Operating Hours means the hours listed in an early learning program parent handbook when the program is open and providing care and services to children.

  • Base Hours means the hours of work for which a staff member receives compensation. Base hours shall include overtime hours for which a staff member is paid additional or overtime compensation, and hours for which a staff member receives workers’ compensation benefits. Base hours shall also include hours a staff member would have worked except for having been in military service. Base hours do not include hours for when a staff member receives other types of compensation, such as administrative, personal leave, vacation, or sick leave.

  • Support Hours means between 8:30am and 5pm during Monday to Friday excluding standard UK Bank Holidays.

  • Labor hours means the total hours of workers receiving an hourly wage who are directly employed on the site of a building improvement or public works project. "Labor hours" includes hours performed by workers employed by the general contractor and all subcontractors working on the project. "Labor hours" does not include hours worked by foremen, superintendents, project managers, project engineers, and owners.

  • Peak-Hour Dispatch means, for purposes of calculating the Energy and Ancillary Services Revenue Offset under Tariff, Attachment DD, section 5, an assumption, as more fully set forth in the PJM Manuals, that the Reference Resource is committed in the Day-Ahead Energy Market in four distinct blocks of four hours of continuous output for each block from the peak-hour period beginning with the hour ending 0800 EPT through to the hour ending 2300 EPT for any day when the average day-ahead LMP for the area for which the Net Cost of New Entry is being determined is greater than, or equal to, the cost to generate (including the cost for a complete start and shutdown cycle) for at least two hours during each four-hour block, where such blocks shall be assumed to be committed independently; provided that, if there are not at least two economic hours in any given four-hour block, then the Reference Resource shall be assumed not to be committed for such block; and to the extent not committed in any such block in the Day- Ahead Energy Market under the above conditions based on Day-Ahead LMPs, is dispatched in the Real-Time Energy Market for such block if the Real-Time LMP is greater than or equal to the cost to generate under the same conditions as described above for the Day-Ahead Energy Market. Peak Market Activity:

  • Peak flow means the maximum instantaneous rate of flow of water at a particular point resulting from a storm event.

  • SOFR Observation Shift Days means the number of U.S. Government Securities Business Days as specified in the applicable Pricing Supplement; and

  • Operational Hours for the Facility means the total across all Generating Units of the number of hours each of the Facility’s Generating Units are potentially capable of producing power at its Nameplate Capacity Rating regardless of actual weather, season and time of day or night, without any mechanical operating constraint or restriction, and potentially capable of delivering such power to the Point of Delivery in a Contract Year. During up to, but not more than, 200 hours of Planned Maintenance during a Contract Year for each Generation Unit and hours during which an event of Force Majeure exists, a Generation Unit shall be considered potentially capable of delivering such power to the Point of Delivery. For example, in the absence of any Planned Maintenance beyond 200 hours on any Generation Unit of Event of Force Majeure, the Operational Hours for a wind farm with five separate two MW turbines would be 43,800 for a Contract Year.

  • After Hours means any time that falls outside the Parties’ normal Business Hours;

  • Service Hours means the amount of time (measured in hours or fractions thereof) a Unit is Delivering Energy or Ancillary Services pursuant to a Dispatch Notice.

  • Peak Season means the weeks containing the 24th through 36th Wednesdays of the calendar year. Each such week shall begin on a Monday and end on the following Sunday, except for the week containing the 36th Wednesday, which shall end on the following Friday.

  • Peak means the Morning Peak and the Evening Peak;

  • Summer means the season commencing on May 1 and ending on October 31 for any given calendar year.

  • Summer Session means the time including all academic offerings during the pre-session, the regular four- week and eight-week sessions, and the post-session.

  • Seller Excuse Hours means those hours during which Seller is unable to deliver Delivered Energy to Buyer as a result of (a) a Force Majeure event, (b) Buyer’s failure to perform, or (c) Curtailment Period.

  • Summer Season in any year, means the Season commencing on 01 April in that year;

  • Hours means clock hours.

  • Observation Shift Days means the number of London Banking Days specified in the relevant Final Terms; and

  • Ambient air means that portion of the atmosphere, external to buildings, to which the general public has access.