Altamont Gas Transmission Company v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Great Lakes Gas Transmission Limited Partnership, Intervenor

92 F.3d 1239, 320 U.S. App. D.C. 98, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 21740
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 1996
Docket91-1369, 93-1241, 93-1295, 93-1308, 93-1309 and 93-1317
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 92 F.3d 1239 (Altamont Gas Transmission Company v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Great Lakes Gas Transmission Limited Partnership, Intervenor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Altamont Gas Transmission Company v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Great Lakes Gas Transmission Limited Partnership, Intervenor, 92 F.3d 1239, 320 U.S. App. D.C. 98, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 21740 (D.C. Cir. 1996).

Opinion

GINSBURG, Circuit Judge:

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission authorized petitioner Pacific Gas Transmission to build and operate a pipeline from the Canadian border to the Oregon-California border at Malin, Oregon, where it connects to the intrastate facilities of PGT’s parent, Pacific Gas & Electric. The Califor *1242 nia Public Utilities Commission, also a petitioner, authorized PG&E to expand its facilities in order to receive the new gas from PGT for distribution within California.

Because it determined that the rate structure proposed by PGT-PG&E discriminated against interstate shippers seeking access to the California market via PGT-PG&E’s facilities, the Commission initially postponed the start of PGT’s construction. In order to meet increased demand for gas, however, the Commission subsequently authorized PGT to begin construction but lowered the pipeline’s allowed rate of return to 10.13% from 12.75% until PGT could demonstrate that its rates and policies no longer discriminated against interstate shippers.

Petitioners Altamont Gas Transmission and other interstate shippers (collectively, the Expansion Shippers), which compete with PG&E to sell gas in California, support the Commission’s exercise of jurisdiction in this case. They contend, however, that the PGT-PG&E arrangement is unduly discriminatory; the Commission should not have certificated PGT’s expansion in its present form; and the rate of return adjustment ordered by the Commission is arbitrary and capricious.

Both PGT and the CPUC contend that by imposing the rate of return condition the Commission exceeded its jurisdiction, and they deny that the CPUC’s rate orders sanction anticompetitive or unduly discriminatory acts. For its part, PGT supports the Commission’s. decision to lift the. original construction ban but argues that the rate of return condition is an unreasonable penalty that is unsupported by the record and unconnected to PGT’s allegedly discriminatory acts.

We hold that the Commission did indeed overstep its jurisdictional bounds, interfering in an area that the Congress has expressly reserved to the states. Accordingly, we do not decide whether the PGT-PG&E arrangement is unduly discriminatory, nor whether the Commission should have certificated PGT’s expansion in its present form, nor whether the Commission’s decision to adjust PGT’s rate of return is arbitrary and capricious. *

I. Background

In January 1991 the Commission preliminarily authorized PGT to build and operate a pipeline from the Canadian border to Malin, Oregon, subject to two conditions: First, PGT would have to offer its new transportation capacity to all shippers rather than allocate the bulk of the capacity to California utilities before offering it to interstate shippers. Second, PGT would have to revise its contractual relationships with the Expansion Shippers to eliminate a “tie-in” that required them to use PG&E’s expansion facilities within California. The tie-in subjected the Expansion Shippers to circuitous routing and higher overall rates in order to transport their gas to its final destination. Expansion Shippers serving northern California could not take delivery of their gas at Malin; instead, they had to pay for transportation to PG&E’s Kern River Station in southern California and then pay a separate charge on PG&E’s intrastate system for transportation back to northern California.

The Commission agreed that once PGT satisfied the two conditions, it could proceed with construction under an approved rate structure that included a return on equity of 12.75%—not far from the midpoint of the 10.13-15.80% “zone of reasonableness.” Sub *1243 sequently, PGT did in fact comply with both conditions, altering its initial capacity allocation and making gas available for delivery at Malm by eliminating the contractual requirement that Expansion Shippers use PG&E’s expansion facilities.

In August 1991 the Commission issued PGT a certificate, but the certificate did not authorize PGT to begin construction immediately. Rather, the FERC expressed continuing concern over decisions of the CPUC that, in the Commission’s view, effectively perpetuated the tie-in between the new PGT pipeline and PG&E’s expansion facilities. First, the CPUC had required the Expansion Shippers to use PG&E’s expansion facilities before they could “cross over” to its pre-ex-isting facilities. Second, the Expansion Shippers had to pay PG&E a flat (so-called postage stamp) rate for use of its expansion facilities regardless of the distance over which they shipped and then pay an additional demand charge to reserve delivery capacity on the existing system from Kern River to northern California (a so-called double backbone transmission charge). The Commission concluded that these state regulatory requirements embedded in PG&E’s rate structure were anticompetitive, just as PGT’s original contractual tie-in had been. The Commission refused to allow PGT to go forward with construction until the pipeline guaranteed nondiscriminatory treatment to interstate shippers.

PGT and several of its customers then requested that the Commission allow construction to begin so that PGT could meet the increasing market demand for gas. The CPUC also asked the Commission to allow construction to proceed, but on the ground that the FERC could not lawfully condition PGT’s certificate upon a change in PG&E’s intrastate rates. The Expansion Shippers, however, opposed the Commission’s lifting the condition until PGT provided assurance that the tie-in would be eliminated. In October 1991 the Commission permitted construction to go forward in order to satisfy the growing demand for gas but it reduced PGT’s return on equity to 10.13%, the low end of the zone of reasonableness, until PGT eliminated undue discrimination against interstate shippers.

PGT, the CPUC, and Altamont, an interstate natural gas pipeline, all requested rehearing of the August order; PGT and the Expansion Shippers requested rehearing of the October order. In March 1993 the Commission denied all rehearing requests. Although the CPUC had by then eliminated the double backbone portion of PG&E’s transmission charge, the Commission concluded that this change alone “d[id] not provide a sufficient remedy.” The Commission expressed particular concern that, because of the crossover prohibition and PG&E’s postage stamp rate, an interstate shipper that used PGT’s new pipeline could not get the benefit of the lower rate PG&E charged for use of its pre-existing facilities even if capacity became available.on those facilities. In conditionally lowering the return that PGT was authorized to earn on its new pipeline, the Commission hoped to “accommodate and balance conflicting objectives by permitting construction to go forward along with providing an appropriate incentive to continue to work to eliminate undue discrimination.”

Section 7 of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717f

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92 F.3d 1239, 320 U.S. App. D.C. 98, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 21740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/altamont-gas-transmission-company-v-federal-energy-regulatory-commission-cadc-1996.