What PJM actually is
PJM Interconnection is the regional transmission organization (RTO) and wholesale electricity market operator covering the mid-Atlantic and parts of the Midwest. Think of it as the air traffic controller for electricity — coordinating where power gets generated, how it moves through the transmission network, and what gets paid for capacity that's available when the grid needs it.
What started as "Pennsylvania, Jersey, Maryland" has grown considerably. PJM now covers:
| Illinois | Indiana | Kentucky |
| Maryland | Michigan | New Jersey |
| North Carolina | Ohio | Pennsylvania |
| Tennessee | Virginia | West Virginia |
| Washington, D.C. |
It's the largest wholesale electricity market in the U.S. by served population. And it's the one where capacity prices have moved the most in the past two years.
The PJM energy landscape
PJM is structurally complex. Three features in particular shape how commercial energy procurement works in this market:
The capacity market
PJM runs a Base Residual Auction (BRA) once a year that sets capacity prices three years in advance. Generators bid into the auction; the clearing price becomes the capacity charge for the upcoming delivery year. Capacity is "the second largest item of consideration" after commodity purchasing — and in 2024–2025, it became the line item that defined most commercial bill increases.
The 2024 auction cleared at $269.92/MW-day (up from $28.92 the prior year). The 2025 auction cleared at the price cap of $329.17/MW-day. Even with the FERC-approved temporary price collar limiting the next two auctions to $325 / $175, capacity is now a major component of PJM bills. Full context in our capacity spike piece.
Zonal locational pricing
The same kWh has different delivered cost in different parts of PJM. Each transmission zone (PSEG, BGE, PEPCO, DOM, AEP, ComEd, etc.) has its own commodity prices, capacity allocations, and congestion patterns. New Jersey load (PSEG zone) historically has high transmission costs; Illinois (ComEd) has different cost dynamics; Virginia (DOM) — home to the U.S. data center concentration — has unique demand and capacity stress.
The implication: regional knowledge moves the needle on procurement. A strategy that works in ComEd may be wrong for PSEG, even though both are PJM.
The 5CP capacity tag mechanism
Your PJM capacity charges are determined by your facility's Peak Load Contribution (PLC) — measured as your load during the five highest summer afternoon peaks (the 5CP). PJM looks at the system as a whole, identifies the five summer afternoons where total demand was highest, and your capacity tag for the next 12 months is set by your facility's load during those specific hours.
That's the lever. Reduce load during the 5CP — by running shifts differently, deferring discretionary load, calling on demand response — and your capacity charges for the next delivery year drop. The challenge: forecasting which afternoons will be the 5CP. That requires weather monitoring, regional load forecasting, and operational coordination.
For facilities with operational flexibility, capacity tag reductions of 15–25% year over year are achievable. For high-volume manufacturers with predictable load profiles, tag reductions translate into six-figure annual savings.
What disciplined PJM procurement looks like
Layered commodity hedging
Don't try to time a single market bottom for your full load — that's market timing and it usually loses. Instead, hedge in tranches across months, with predefined trigger prices. A typical structure: start indexed, lock 20–25% in tranche 1 when forwards hit your target, another 20–25% in tranche 2, and so on. Maintain some indexed exposure for flexibility. Mechanics in detail in Hedging 101.
Capacity tag management
The strategies that reduce 5CP exposure for most facilities:
- Energy efficiency — upgrading HVAC, lighting, motor systems reduces baseline load year-round, including during 5CP hours
- Demand response programs — participating in PJM's emergency DR programs and economic DR programs, earning revenue while reducing tag
- Operational load shifting — moving heavy energy use to off-peak hours (overnight, weekends) when the 5CP will not be set
- On-site solar — solar generation reduces grid load during summer afternoons exactly when the 5CP is being set
- Battery storage (BESS) — store power during off-peak periods and discharge during forecasted peak hours; especially powerful paired with on-site solar
Zone-specific strategy
For PJM-wide buyers running facilities in multiple zones, the procurement function should reflect zonal differences. New Jersey facilities benefit from transmission cost reduction strategies that don't apply the same way in Illinois. Virginia data center load needs specific consideration given the demand pressure in DOM. Knowing how regional characteristics differ shapes both contract terms and operational responses.
$329.17
/ MW-day — PJM capacity auction clearing price at the market cap, up ~11× from $29/MW-day just two years prior
What's next for PJM
The PJM market is evolving in response to the demand-supply tightness. Major reforms in motion:
- Capacity market reform — Capacity Performance rules, reserve margin recalibrations, and the temporary FERC-approved price collar all aim to address the recent volatility while preserving market signals for new capacity
- Interconnection queue reform — PJM Fast-Track (RRI) accelerates ~10 GW of shovel-ready projects; surplus interconnection processes expand capacity faster
- Transmission build-out — multi-billion-dollar transmission projects approved to relieve congestion and integrate new generation, especially in the Virginia load corridor
- Demand-side resource integration — expanded DR program design; better integration of behind-the-meter storage
None of these reverse the structural tightness on the timeline that matters for 2026–2027 budgets. But they shape the market PJM will be in by 2028 and beyond — and procurement strategies that account for the trajectory outperform ones built around a single snapshot.
Bottom Line
PJM is structurally complex, currently under stress, and the most consequential energy market in the U.S. for commercial buyers across 13 states. Layered commodity hedging, active capacity tag management, and zonal-aware strategy each matter — and together they define the difference between a PJM portfolio that absorbs volatility and one that gets defined by it. The buyers who treat PJM as a single market miss the opportunities. The ones who understand its specific structure run the procurement function very differently.