SECTION I GENERAL PROVISIONS
CHAPTER 1 OBJECTIVE OF THE BALANCING MARKET RULEBOOK
Article 1.3 Definitions

Apart from the definitions contained in the current legislation, and, in particular, in Law 4425/2016 and Law 4001/2011, in EU legislation, in the Day-Ahead & Intra-Day Markets Trading Rulebook, in the Clearing Rulebook for Balancing Market Positions and in the HETS Grid Code, the terms below, whether stated in the singular or plural, shall have the following meaning, for the purpose of implementation of this Rulebook.

  1. Energy Balancing Market: It shall have the meaning of Article 5(l) of Law 4425/2016, i.e., the market where Participants offer electricity, which is used by the HETS Operator to maintain the System frequency within a predetermined range, as well as the balance between electricity generation and demand, while observing the electricity exchange programs with neighbouring countries.

  2. Balancing Market: It shall have the meaning of Article 5(j) of Law 4425/2016, i.e., the Electricity Balancing Market, which includes the Balancing Capacity and Balancing Energy Markets and the Imbalance Settlement procedure.

  3. Day-Ahead Market: It shall have the meaning of Article 5(g) of Law 4425/2016, i.e., the Electricity Market, in which electricity purchase and sale transactions are performed with the obligation of physical delivery on the day ahead (Delivery Day) and in which the transactions performed on Energy Financial Instruments with physical delivery are declared.

  4. Balancing Capacity Market: It shall have the meaning of Article 5(k) of Law 4425/2016, i.e., the market in which capacity is offered to cover the System's reserve requirements, which (capacity) is retained by the Participants for a predetermined period of time.

  5. Market Time Unit: It shall have the meaning of Article 2(19) of Regulation (EU) 543/2013. i.e. the period for which the market price is established or the shortest possible common time period for the two bidding zones, if their market time units are different.

  6. Trading License: The license granted to carry out the activity of electricity trading.

  7. Production License: The license granted to carry out the activity of electricity generation.

  8. Supply License: The license granted to carry out the activity of electricity supply.

  9. RES Aggregator Licence: The licence issued for the purpose of representing producers or consumers of electricity in accordance with Article 13 of Law 4001/2011.

  10. Direct Clearing Member: The Clearing Member, as defined in the Clearing Rulebook for Balancing Market Positions, which participates in the clearing procedures of the Clearing House and is responsible for the fulfillment of obligations arising from the Positions it represents in accordance with the Clearing Rulebook for Positions on Balancing Market.

  11. Upward Balancing Energy: The Balancing Energy that corresponds to more generated energy or less consumed energy in relation to the Market Schedule.

  12. Balancing Capacity Offer Maximum Price: The upper limit on the pricing of Balancing Capacity Offers, which is imposed for technical reasons, in accordance with Article 11.2 of this Rulebook.

  13. Balancing Energy Offer Maximum Price: The upper limit on the pricing of Balancing Energy Offers, which is imposed for technical reasons, in accordance with Article 12.2 of this Rulebook.

  14. Safety Maximum Reservoir Level: The maximum level per reservoir, above which the owners of Dispatchable Hydro Generating Units connected to the Reservoir may submit mandatory hydro injection declarations for the above Units to avoid overflow.

  15. Force Majeure: It shall have the meaning referred to in Article 3.1 of this Rulebook.

  16. Imbalance: It shall have the meaning of Article 2(8) of Regulation (EU) 2017/2195, i.e., the energy volume calculated for a Balance Responsible Party and representing the difference between the allocated volume attributed to that Balance Responsible Party and the final position (Market Schedule) of that Balance Responsible Party, including any imbalance adjustment applied to that Balance Responsible Party, within a given Imbalance Settlement Period.

  17. Demand Response: This has the meaning ascribed to it in Article 2 (3)(41) of Law 4001/2011, that is, the changes in electrical load by end customers compared to their regular or current consumption habits, based on market signals, including the response to fluctuating electricity prices or economic incentives, or the response following the acceptance of an offer by the end customer, either individually or through aggregated representation, with the aim of selling the reduction or increase in demand at a given price in organized markets, as determined in Article 2(4) of the implementing Regulation (EU) 1348/2014 of 17 December 2014 ‘on the reporting of data for the implementation of Article 8(2) and (6) of Regulation (EU) 1227/2011 of the European Parliament and of the Council on the integrity and transparency of the wholesale energy market’ (L 363).

  18. Initial Settlement: It shall have the meaning of Settlement specified in Article 23.1(2) of this Rulebook.

  19. Auto-producer: This has the meaning attributed to it under Article 2(3)(e) of Law 4001/2011, i.e., the producer that generates electricity mainly for its own use and injects any surplus energy into the Transmission System or the Distribution Network.

  20. Self-Supplied customer: It shall have the meaning of Article 2(3)(o) of Law 4001/2011, that is, the market participant that chooses to purchase energy directly from the Energy Markets for their own exclusive use.

  21. Automatic Generation Control (AGC): The automatic load-frequency control procedure, which aims to reduce the frequency restoration control error to zero in accordance with the provisions of Regulation (EU) 2017/1485.

  22. RES Producer Certificate: The certificate provided for in Law 4685/2020.

  23. Soak Trajectory: This is the generation profile of the unit during the soaking phase, between the synchronization state and minimum generation state of each Dispatchable Generation Unit, which is determined in steps according to the Integrated Scheduling Process (ISP) Technical Decision. A different soak trajectory is determined for each start-up state (cold, warm, hot). It is expressed in MW.

  24. General Clearing Member: The Clearing Member, as defined in the Clearing Rulebook for Balancing Market Positions, which participates in the settlement procedures of the Clearing House and is responsible for the fulfillment of obligations arising from the Balancing Market Positions of contracted Participants or the HETS Operator in accordance with the above Rulebook.

  25. Declared Characteristics: The characteristics defined as a combination of the following technical and operational elements of the Balancing Service Entity and constitute the actual technical capacity of the Balancing Service Entity for a specific Dispatch Period and Dispatch Day: (a) Registered Characteristics, (b) Techno-Economic Declaration, (c) Non-Availability Declaration (total or partial), and (d) Major Outage Declaration.

  26. Major Outage Declarations: The declarations submitted by the Balancing Service Providers pursuant to Article 10.7 of this Rulebook.

  27. Non-Availability Declarations: The declarations submitted by Balancing Service Providers pursuant to Article 10.6 of this Rulebook for each Dispatch Day during which the Available Capacity for a Balancing Service Entity is reduced.

  28. Techno-Economic Declarations: The declarations submitted by Balancing Service Providers for each Dispatch Day pursuant to Article 10.3 of this Rulebook regarding the Techno-economic data of the Balancing Service Entities they represent.

  29. Integrated Scheduling Process (ISP): It shall have the meaning of Article 2(19) of Regulation (EU) 2017/2195, i.e., an iterative process that uses at least integrated scheduling process bids that contain commercial data, complex technical data of individual power generating facilities or demand facilities and explicitly includes the start-up characteristics, the latest control area adequacy analysis and the operational security limits as an input to the process.

  30. Inter-Zonal Corridor: A virtual link between two Bidding Zones, which is used to model the flow between the Bidding Zones.

  31. Available Capacity: The capacity of the Balancing Service Entity as per Article 10.2 of this Rulebook.

  32. Automatic Frequency Restoration Reserve (aFRR) Cross-Border Clearing Price: This is the clearing price sent by the European aFRR Platform, as set out in the Decision of the Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators (ACER) on the ‘Methodology for pricing Balancing Energy and Cross-Zonal Capacity used for the exchange of Balancing Energy or operating the imbalance netting process’ and adopted pursuant to Article 30 of Regulation (EU) 2017/2195.

  33. RES and Guarantees of Origin Operator (DAPEEP): The public limited company provided for in Article 118 of Law 4001/2011.

  34. Settlement or Cash Settlement: The process implemented by the Clearing House for the fulfillment of cash obligations and the collection of the corresponding claims from the Clearing of Positions in accordance with this Rulebook and the terms of the Clearing Rulebook for Balancing Market Positions.

  35. Distribution Network Operator: It shall have the meaning of Article 2(3)(j) of Law 4001/2011, that is, any natural or legal person who is responsible for k) the operation, maintenance, and provision of access to customers and producers connected to it, as well as the development, if necessary, of the distribution network in a given area and its interconnections with other distribution networks and transmission systems, and l) the long-term capacity of the network to meet reasonable demand for electricity distribution services. Where reference is made to Distribution System Operator, it means the Distribution Network Operator and vice versa.

  36. Hellenic Electricity Distribution Network Operator (HEDNO): The public limited company provided for in Article 123 of Law 4001/2011.

  37. HETS Operator: The public limited company provided for in Article 97 of Law 4001/2011.

  38. Corrective Settlement: It shall have the meaning of Settlement specified in Article 23.1(3) of this Rulebook.

  39. aFRR Correction Signal: An energy signal in MW sent from the European aFRR Platform to the HETS Operator concerning necessary adjustments to the local aFRR requirement in accordance with the Platform's results.

  40. Test Dispatch Instruction: The instruction for activation of a Manual FRR issued by the HETS Operator to the Balancing Service Entities, whenever necessary and without prior notice, by which the Maximum Available Capacity and the ability of the Entities to provide full reserves in accordance with their Registered Characteristics can be certified.

  41. Testing operation: The status of a Balancing Service Entity, which is registered with the HETS Operator Registry, during tests or operational controls.

  42. Commissioning operation: The status of a pre-registered Balancing Service Entity in the course of the tests or operational controls that are conducted for its connection to the HETS, as set out in the connection contract and the relevant provisions of the HETS Grid Code, so that it can be registered with the HETS Operator Registry.

  43. Demand Facility: It shall have the meaning of Article 2(1) of Regulation (EU) 2016/1388, that is, a facility which consumes electricity and is connected at one or more connection points to the transmission or distribution system. A distribution system and/or auxiliary supplies of a power generating facilities do not constitute a demand facility.

  44. Offtake Facility: The Demand Facilities and auxiliary supplies of power generating modules.

  45. Imbalance Settlement: It shall have the meaning of Article 2(9) of Regulation (EU) 2017/2195, i.e., a financial settlement mechanism for charging or paying Balance Responsible Parties for their Imbalances

  46. Clearing of Positions: The processes of notification of Positions by the HETS Operator to the Clearing House and their finalization by the Clearing House, calculation of net cash obligations and claims arising from the Positions, valuation of collateral, calculation and coverage of Margin requirements, as well as the announcement of Clearing results to Clearing Members, management of the Clearing Capital, management of cases of defaulting Clearing Members and any other similar issue in relation to credit risk management as set out in the Clearing Rulebook for Balancing Market Positions.

  47. Balancing Market Settlement: The transparent calculation of the quantities of Balancing Energy and Balancing Capacity and the relevant Imbalances, and the calculation of the monetary value of the debits and credits to Participants, as detailed in Article 18.2 of this Rulebook.

  48. Clearing Member: An undertaking, as defined in the Clearing Rulebook for Balancing Market Positions, which participates in the Clearing House System for the clearing of the Positions it represents and is responsible to the Clearing House for the fulfilment of cash obligations arising from the relevant Positions in accordance with the provisions of Law 4425/2016 and the provisions specified in the above Rulebook.

  49. Load Representative: Balance Responsible Parties representing Entities that offtake energy from the HETS or the electricity Distribution network, other than Demand Response Aggregators.

  50. Trader: The natural or legal person who engages in the commercial trade of electrical energy, in accordance with Law 4001/2011.

  51. Minimum Available Capacity: The capacity defined in Article 10.2 of this Rulebook.

  52. Safety Minimum Reservoir Level: The minimum level per reservoir, above which the Dispatchable Hydro Generating Units Providers connected to the Reservoir may submit declarations of maximum daily energy injection constraint for the above Units.

  53. Minimum up time: The minimum time of operation, as set out in the Registered Characteristics of the Balancing Service Entity, between a start-up and the next shut-down.

  54. Minimum down time: The minimum lost operating time between a shut-down and the next start-up, in accordance with the Registered Characteristics of the Balancing Services Entity.

  55. Balancing Energy: The energy provided by a Balancing Service Provider and used by the HETS Operator to make a balance, i.e., to cover the generation/demand imbalances. It is divided into upward and downward Balancing Energy.

  56. Priority Price-Taking (Sell/Buy) Orders: Buy/sell orders with price acceptance and execution priority, which are One-Step Hourly Hybrid Orders (buy/sell) submitted at a price equivalent to the (maximum/minimum) acceptable price in the Day-Ahead Market, that is, at the Upper/Lower Buy Order Price, respectively. 

  57. Dispatch Instruction: The instruction issued by the HETS Operator, determining active power generation, active power increase or decrease, synchronization or desynchronization, provision of reserves and other Ancillary Services and, in general, the mode of operation of Balancing Service Entities.

  58. Ancillary Service: This has the meaning of Article 2(3)(case 17) of Law 4001/2011, that is, all services necessary for the management of a transmission system or a distribution network, including balancing services and non-frequency-related ancillary services, excluding congestion management.

  59. European aFRR Platform: The European Platform for the International Coordination of Automated Frequency Restoration and Stable System Operation (PICASSO), as provided for in Article 21 of Regulation (EU) 2017/2195.

  60. European Imbalance Netting Platform: The European platform facilitating the imbalances clearing procedure provided for in Article 22 of Regulation (EU) 2017/2195 (Imbalance Netting Platform — IN Platform).

  61. Frequency Restoration Reserve (FRR): It shall have the meaning of Article 3(7) of Regulation (EU) 2017/1485, that is, the active power reserves available to restore system frequency to the nominal frequency and, for a synchronous area consisting of more than one load frequency control area, to restore power balance to the scheduled value. A distinction is made between FRR with automatic activation and FRR with manual activation (aFRR and mFRR).

  62. Frequency Containment Reserve (FCR): It shall have the meaning of Article 3(6) of Regulation (EU) 2017/1485, that is, the active power reserves available to contain system frequency after the occurrence of an imbalance.

  63. Bidding Zone: Bidding zone is defined under Article 2(3) of Regulation (EU) 543/2013, i.e., the largest geographical area within which market participants are able to exchange energy without capacity allocation. Bidding Zones are approved by decision of the RAEWW, subsequent to a proposal from the Transmission System Operator and a relevant study as provided for in the HETS Grid Code.

  64. Physical Delivery Day: This has the meaning ascribed to it under Article 5(case f) of Law 4425/2016, i.e. it is the day on which the quantities of energy traded on the Electricity Markets are delivered.

  65. Dispatch Day: It has the meaning specified in Article 8.2 of this Rulebook, that is, the day to which the ISP refers, which coincides with the Physical Delivery Day of the Day-Ahead Market and the Intra-Day Market. Dispatch Day D shall start at 01:00 EET of calendar day D and shall end at 01:00 EET of calendar day D +1.

  66. Termination Date: The date referred to in Article 4.4(3) of this Rulebook.

  67. Positions: The monetary claims and corresponding obligations of the Participants and the HETS Operator arising in relation to the Balancing Market, excluding non-Compliance Charges, as calculated by the HETS Operator in accordance with Article 18.2 of this Rulebook and entered into the Clearing House system on the basis of the relevant notifications to the HETS Operator, under the terms of the Clearing Rulebook for Balancing Market Positions.

  68. Balancing Capacity: A volume of reserve capacity that a Balancing Service Provider has agreed to hold in each Dispatch Period and in respect to which the Balancing Service Provider has agreed to submit bids to the HETS Operator for a corresponding volume of Balancing Energy for the duration of the contract.

  69. Downward Balancing Energy: The Balancing Energy that corresponds to less generated energy or more consumed energy in relation to the Market Schedule.

  70. Clearing Rulebook for Balancing Market Positions: The Rulebook issued by the Clearing House and approved by accordance with in Law 4001/2011 in accordance with Article 13(2) of Law 4425/2016.

  71. Consumer: This has the meaning ascribed by Article 2 (1)(16) of Law 4001/2011, i.e. 1) a natural or legal person who purchases natural gas or electricity or thermal energy exclusively for their own use and 2) a natural or legal person who purchases electricity for the purpose of providing charging services for electric vehicles (EV).

  72. Dispatchable Generating Units: The power generating units with a valid production license, which are located on the mainland or on the interconnected islands, have made and activated a connection to HETS, have submitted an operating license and have an installed capacity over 5 MW, for which the HETS Operator may issue Dispatch Instructions, provided they are not RES Units, Emergency Reserve Units, and only during the period for which an Ancillary Service Contract or a Supplementary System Energy Contract is not in force or is not implemented, in accordance with the HETS Grid Code.

  73. Dispatchable Generating Units with Alternative Fuel: Dispatchable Generating Units having the obligation or the ability to operate both with primary and alternative fuels.

  74. Dispatchable HECHP Units: Partial cogeneration units with an installed capacity of over 35 MWe which, by decision of the Regulatory Authority for Waste, Energy, and Water, have been designated as Dispatchable High Efficiency CHP Units.

  75. Multi-Shaft Combined Cycle Dispatchable Generating Units: Combined Cycle Dispatchable Generating Units in which gas turbines and steam turbines are located on different axes and are connected to distinct generators.

  76. Emergency Situation: The Situation described in the HETS Grid Code.

  77. Registered Characteristics: The technical and operational characteristics of Balancing Service Entities that remain stable every Dispatch Day, unless modified by the Balancing Service Providers. They are submitted as provided for in the HETS Grid Code.

  78. Balancing Energy Offer Minimum Price: The lower limit on the pricing of Balancing Energy Offers, which is imposed for technical reasons, in accordance with Article 12.2 of this Rulebook.

  79. Balancing Capacity Offer Minimum Price: The lower limit on the pricing of Balancing Capacity Offers, which is imposed for technical reasons, in accordance with Article 11.2 of this Rulebook.

  80. Central Counter Party: It shall have the meaning specified in Article 2(42) of Regulation (EU) 2015/1222, i.e., the entity or entities with the task of entering into contracts with market participants, by novation of the contracts resulting from the matching process, and of organising the transfer of net positions resulting from capacity allocation with other central counter parties or shipping agents.

  81. HETS Grid Code: The Code specified in Article 96 of Law 4001/2011.

  82. Maximum Available Capacity: The capacity defined in Article 10.2 of this Rulebook.

  83. Maximum Available Capacity in AGC mode: The Maximum Available Capacity of the Entity while operating under AGC. It is expressed in MW. The Maximum Available Capacity in AGC mode is lower or equal to the Maximum Available Capacity.

  84. Maximum Net Capacity: The maximum level of capacity that a Balancing Service Entity can maintain for any period of time provided that it operates under ISO conditions, it is not constrained by any equipment, technical or other limitations pertaining to the institutional or financial framework governing the Entity’s operation, and that the internal service, as well as any other auxiliary load have been taken into consideration.

  85. Maximum Net Capacity in AGC mode: The Maximum Net Capacity of the Entity while operating under Automatic Generation Control (AGC). It is expressed in MW. The Maximum Net Capacity in AGC mode cannot exceed the Maximum Net Capacity.

  86. Maximum contribution to FCR: The technical capacity of a Balancing Service Entity to offer Frequency Containment Reserve, as derived from the test results and specified in the Registered Characteristics. It is defined separately for upward and downward Frequency Containment Reserve. It is expressed in MW.

  87. Maximum contribution in aFRR: The technical capacity of a Balancing Service Entity to offer automatic Frequency Restoration Reserve, as derived from the test results and specified in the Registered Characteristics. It is defined separately for upward and downward automatic Frequency Restoration Reserve. It is expressed in MW.

  88. Maximum contribution in mFRR: The technical capacity of a Balancing Service Entity to offer manual Frequency Restoration Reserve, as derived from the test results and specified in the Registered Characteristics. It is defined separately for upward and downward manual Frequency Restoration Reserve. It is expressed in MW.

  89. Maximum number of Activations per Dispatch Day: The maximum number of Activations of a Dispatchable Load Portfolio for Balancing Energy and Capacity on a Dispatch Day.

  90. Maximum up time: The maximum number of consecutive Dispatch Periods during which a Dispatchable Load Portfolio can provide Energy and/or upward/downward Balancing Capacity.

  91. HETS Operator Registry: The Registry provided for in Article 4.1 of this Rulebook.

  92. Balancing Market Generating Units Registry: The Registry provided for in Article 5.2 of this Rulebook.

  93. Balancing Service Providers Registry: The Registry provided for in Article 4.2 of this Rulebook.

  94. Balance Responsible Parties Registry: The Registry provided for in Article 4.2 of this Rulebook.

  95. Dispatchable RES Units Portfolio Registry: The Registry provided for in Article 5.3 of this Rulebook.

  96. Dispatchable Load Portfolio Registry: The Registry provided for in Article 5.4 of this Rulebook.

  97. RES Unit: A unit generating electricity from Renewable Energy Sources (RES) as defined in Law 3468/2006.

  98. Controlled RES Production Units: Non-Intermittent RES and CHP units, within the meaning of Law 4414/2016, i.e. power units that use biomass or biogas, plants that use geothermal potential, solar thermal plants and CHP plants.

  99. Intermittent RES Generation Units: Intermittent RES units, within the meaning of Law 4414/2016, i.e. RES power units that are not of controlled production, in particular wind, photovoltaic and small hydroelectric power plants.

  100. RES Units with Market Participation Obligation: The RES Units for which a Contract for Differential State Aid Support has been concluded in accordance with the provisions of Law 4414/2016, as well as the RES Units covered by Article 3(19) and Article 12A of Law 4414/2016.

  101. RES Units without Market Participation Obligation: RES Units for which a Feed-in Tariff Agreement has been concluded in accordance with the provisions of Law 4414/2016, as well as the RES Units for which a Power Purchase Agreement has been concluded in accordance with the provisions of Article 12 of Law 3468/2006 or a similar electricity purchase and sale agreement prior to the entry into force of Law 3468/2006.

  102. Balance Responsible Entities: The entities represented by Balance Responsible Parties in accordance with Article 5.1 of this Rulebook.

  103. Balancing Service Entities: The units or portfolios that are in a position to provide Balancing Services to the HETS Operator which are represented by the Balancing Service Providers in accordance with Article 5.1 of this Rulebook.

  104. Final Settlement: It shall have the meaning of Settlement as laid down in Article 23.1 (4) to (6) of this Rulebook.

  105. Producer: The holder of a Production License or a relevant exemption from the obligation to obtain a Production License.

  106. Parallel Connection: The connection of at least one generation or consumption facility with the HETS on the one hand and a Direct Line on the other.

  107. Balancing Service Provider – BSP: This shall have the meaning ascribed to it under Article 2(6) of Regulation (EU) 2017/2195, that is, a market Participant with units or portfolios able to provide Balancing Services to the HETS Operator.

  108. Imbalance Settlement Period: This has the meaning of Article 2(4) of Regulation (EU) 2019/943, that is, the unit of time used to calculate the Imbalance of the Balance Responsible Parties.

  109. Dispatch Period: It shall have the meaning specified in Article 8.2 of this Rulebook, that is, a period of time that lasts for half an hour. The first Dispatch Period of Dispatch Day D is 01:00 – 01:30 EET.

  110. Electricity Supply Volume via Direct Line: The volume of electricity supplied to a Demand Installation with a Parallel Connection via Direct Line, to the extent that such energy is generated by generating units connected to the Direct Line, as calculated in accordance with Article 18.4.

  111. Shipping Agent: This has the meaning specified in Article 2(43) of Regulation (EU) 2015/1222, that is, the entity or entities tasked with transferring net positions between different central counterparties.

  112. Market Schedule: The net energy schedule (net position) resulting from all transactions of the entity on the wholesale market (i.e. transactions on the Energy Financial Market, the Day-Ahead Market or the Intra-Day Market) as defined in the Day-Ahead Market & Intra-Day Market Trading Rulebook.

  113. ISP Schedule: The indicative generation/ consumption schedule for each Balancing Service Entity and for each Dispatch Period of the Dispatch Day as it derives from the ISP solution system.

  114. Supplier: The natural or legal person who engages in the commercial trade of electrical energy, in accordance with in Law 4001/2011.

  115. Default Supplier: The electricity Supplier as defined in Article 58 of Law 4001/2011.

  116. Supplier of Last Resort: The electricity Supplier as defined in Article 57 of Law 4001/2011.

  117. Adjusted Dispatch Instruction: The Dispatch Instruction modified in such a way as to take into account the availability of the Balancing Service Entity as laid down in the “Activated Balancing Energy Calculation Methodology”.

  118. Balancing Energy Deficit Premium: A price determined by decision of the Regulatory Authority for Waste, Energy, and Water, which increases the Upward Balancing Energy Price (mFRR) in cases where, during an Imbalance Settlement Period, energy was injected from Contracted Generating Units, Supplementary Energy from Emergency Imports or Load Shedding was performed.

  119. Balancing Energy Offer: A Balancing Energy Offer corresponds to the intention to provide upward or downward Balancing Energy in relation to the Market Schedule of the respective Balancing Service Entity. Balancing Energy Offers are described in Article 12.1 of this Rulebook.

  120. Balancing Capacity Offer: A Balancing Capacity Offer corresponds to the intention to provide reserves for Reserve Capacity products. Balancing Capacity Offers are described in Article 11.1 of this Rulebook.

  121. Regulatory Authority for Energy, Waste and Water (RAEWW): The independent authority which was established with Law 2773/1999 and is the national regulatory authority for issues of Electricity and Gas, Water services, and Municipal Waste management, as defined in Directives (EU) 2019/944 and 2009/73/EC.

  122. Ramp Up Rate: The rate of increase of the active power of a Balancing Service Entity, expressed in MW/min, when the Entity is committed and not in the start up or shut down phase.

  123. Ramp Down Rate: The rate of decrease of the active power of a Balancing Service Entity, expressed in MW/min, when the Entity is committed and not in the start up or shut down phase.

  124. Ramp Up Rate in AGC mode: The rate of increase of the active power of a Balancing Service Entity, expressed in MW/min, when operating under AGC.

  125. Ramp Down Rate in AGC mode: The rate of decrease of the active power of a Balancing Service Entity, expressed in MW/min, when operating under AGC.

  126. Balance Responsible Party (BRP): It shall have the meaning specified in Article 2(7) of Regulation (EU) 2017/2195, i.e., a Market Participant or its chosen representative responsible for its imbalances.

  127. Balancing Service Contract: The contract concluded with the HETS Operator upon registration of the Participants in the Balancing Service Providers Registry, in accordance with Article 4.2 of this Rulebook.

  128. Balance Responsible Party Contract: The contract concluded with the HETS Operator upon registration of the Participants in the Balancing Service Providers Registry, in accordance with Article 4.2 of this Rulebook.

  129. HETS Operator Transactions Contract: The contract between the HETS Operator and the Participants registered with the HETS Operator Registry, which is concluded as provided for in the HETS Grid Code.

  130. Contracted Generating Units: The Dispatchable Generating Units that have concluded Supplementary System Energy Contracts or Ancillary Services Contracts with the HETS Operator in accordance with the HETS Code.

  131. Participant: The participant in the Balancing Market, either as a Balancing Service Provider or as a Balance Responsible Party.

  132. Supplementary Settlements: The Corrective Settlement or the Final Settlements.

  133. Participant subject to Deletion: The Participant who has submitted a declaration terminating the Balancing Service Provision Contract/Balance Responsible Party Contract, for the period from the day after the last active participation date until the termination takes effect, the termination of their Contract and the final deletion from the HETS Operator Registry, in accordance with the provisions of Article 4.4 this Rulebook.

  134. Supplementary Energy from Emergency Imports: It shall have the meaning of the HETS Grid Code, i.e. the active power quantity which the System Operator is responsible for providing to the System in order to cover the needs in Supplementary System Energy.

  135. Balancing Market System: A system that performs all the processes and all the necessary calculations and records all the data and the results of the Balancing Market in terms of ISP, Balancing Energy Market and Balancing Market Settlement. The Balancing Market System is described in Article 2.2 of this Rulebook.

  136. Emergency Plan: It means a plan that is drawn up in accordance with Article 73 of Law 4001/2011.

  137. Technical Decisions: The technical decisions provided for in Article 18 of Law 4425/2016 and Annex I of this Rulebook.

  138. Technically Minimum Generation: The minimum level of capacity that a Balancing Service Entity can maintain for any period of time, provided that it operates under ISO conditions, it is not constrained by any equipment, technical or other limitations pertaining to the institutional or financial framework governing the Entity’s operation, and provided that the internal service and any other auxiliary load have been taken into consideration.

  139. Technically Minimum Generation under Automatic Generation Control (AGC). The Technically Minimum Generation of an Entity when it is operating under Automatic Generation Control (AGC). It is expressed in MW. Technically Minimum Generation under Automatic Generation Control (AGC) may be higher or equal to Technically Minimum Generation.

  140. mFRR Upward Balancing Energy Price: The price calculated in accordance with Article 19.2 of this Rulebook, whereby the Balancing Service Providers that provide upward Balancing Energy for mFRR are remunerated.

  141. Imbalance Price: The price calculated in accordance with Article 19.6 of this Rulebook based on which the Balance Responsible Parties are debited or credited for their respective Imbalances.

  142. mFRR Downward Balancing Energy Price: The price according to Article 19.2 whereby Balancing Service Providers providing downward mFRR Balancing Energy are compensated.

  143. Standardized Product: The harmonized balancing energy product determined by all of the Transmission System Operators (TSOs) for the purpose of exchanging balancing services as part of their participation in the European Platforms, in accordance with Article 25 of Regulation (EU) 2017/2195 (Electricity Balancing Regulation). 

  144. Balancing Services: They must be interpreted according to the meaning of Article 2(3) of Regulation (EU) 2017/2195, i.e., Balancing Energy or Balancing Capacity, or both.

  145. Clearing House: It shall have the meaning of case (ist) of Article 5 of Law 4425/2016.

  146. RES Aggregator: It has the meaning of the Cumulative Representation Body of Power Plants from Renewable Energy and Power Plants of Part 22 of Article 2 of the Law. 4414/2016.

  147. Last Resort RES Aggregator: It shall have the meaning of Article 2(case 23) of Law 4414/2016.

  148. Demand Response Aggregator: This has the meaning attributed to in Article 5(case 15)(o) of Law 4425/2016 and in particular refers to the holder of a respective licence to carry out the activity of aggregated representation in relation to the Demand Response Service.

  149. Dispatchable Load Portfolio Baseline: The load which corresponds to the electricity that would have been consumed by the Dispatchable Load Portfolio if it hadn’t received a Dispatch Instruction to activate a Balancing Energy Offer.

  150. Baseline of Portfolio of Intermittent Dispatchable RES Production Units: The production calculated by the HETS Operator, which corresponds to the electricity that would have been produced by the Portfolio of the Intermittent Dispatchable RES Units if it had not received a Dispatch Instruction to activate a Balancing Energy Offer.

  151. Physical Transmission Right: The right ascribed to the holder for physical delivery of a specific quantity of electricity within a specified time unit between two bidding zones and in a specific direction.

  152. Dispatchable Load Portfolio: A load portfolio that includes one or more Demand Facilities which are connected to a specific Bidding Zone and which, based on their technical capacity, offer Balancing Services to the HETS Operator. A Dispatchable Load Portfolio is represented by a Demand Response Facility or, in the case of one or more Demand Facilities owned by the Consumer themselves, by a Consumer. Each Dispatchable Pumped-Storage Hydro Generating Unit is treated as a separate Dispatchable Load Portfolio.

  153. Load Portfolio: The load portfolio, which includes one or more Offtake Facilities connected to a specific Bidding Zone. Each Load Portfolio shall be represented by one Supplier or one Consumer.

  154. RES Units Portfolio without Market Participation Obligation: The RES Units Portfolio for which either a Feed-in Tariff Agreement has been concluded in accordance with the provisions of Law 4414/2016, or a Power Purchase Agreement has been concluded in accordance with the provisions of Article 12 of Law 3468/2006 or a similar electricity purchase and sale agreement prior to the entry into force of Law 3468/2006 which (Units) are connected to a specific Bidding Zone. RES Units Portfolios without Market Participation Obligation shall be represented by DAPEEP. DAPEEP has balancing responsibility for the RES Units Portfolios without Market Participation Obligation.

  155. Dispatchable RES Units Portfolio: The RES Units portfolio that includes one or more RES Units with Market Participation Obligation which are connected to a specific Bidding Zone and which, based on their technical capacity, offer Balancing Services to the HETS Operator. A Dispatchable RES Units Portfolio shall be represented by one RES Producer or by one RES Aggregator.

  156. Non-Dispatchable RES Units Portfolio: The RES Units portfolio that includes one or more RES units with Market Participation Obligation connected to a particular Bidding Zone and which do not offer Balancing Services to the HETS Operator. Each Non- Dispatchable RES Units Portfolio shall be represented by one RES Producer or by one RES Aggregator.

  157. Non-Compliance Charges: The charges provided for in CHAPTER 22 of this Rulebook.

  158. Energy Exchange: A public limited company that manages one or more Energy Markets and/or Energy Financial Markets.

  159. Direct Line User: The customer or the holder of a Production License, Electricity Producer Certificate, Special Project Certificate, or Certificate for Exempted Stations, whose facilities are already connected or will be connected to a Direct Line.