(Oil & Gas 360) Part 1 – The U.S. power system is entering a period of adjustment that looks less like routine reform and more like a reset.
The immediate catalyst is PJM Interconnection’s move to consider a broad overhaul of how its markets price and procure capacity, a signal that the existing framework is no longer aligned with the demands placed on it.
PJM operates the largest wholesale electricity market in the United States, and its structure has long served as a reference point for competitive power markets.
The pressures now driving change are not isolated to one region. They reflect a broader shift in how electricity is generated, consumed, and valued.
Demand is rising in ways the system was not designed to handle. Data centers, particularly those tied to AI and cloud infrastructure, are adding large, continuous loads.
Electrification across transportation and industry is increasing baseline demand. At the same time, the generation mix is becoming more variable. Wind and solar capacity continue to expand, but output does not always align with peak demand periods.
The result is a system that clears economically but is tightening operationally.
Prices have often been insufficient to support new investment in firm capacity, even as reserve margins decline.
Several grid operators have warned that reliability buffers are narrowing faster than anticipated. Delays in permitting, interconnection, and construction have compounded the issue, while retirements of legacy generation have reduced available capacity.
PJM’s review is an attempt to address this imbalance. While details remain under development, the direction is clear: the market must better reflect the value of reliability.
That includes revisiting how capacity is accredited, how performance is measured, and how scarcity is priced. The shift is subtle but important, from pricing energy output to pricing the ability to deliver when it matters most.
This trend extends beyond PJM. In Texas, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas has already leaned more heavily on scarcity pricing. In California, the California Independent System Operator continues to manage tight supply conditions with a growing reliance on imports, storage, and demand response.
In the Northeast, winter reliability concerns have brought renewed focus to fuel availability and infrastructure constraints.
Across regions, the pattern is consistent. The grid is being asked to operate with less predictability and tighter margins, while the mechanisms for valuing reliability are still catching up.