Apline Energy, LLC v. Matanuska Electric Association

369 P.3d 245, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 22, 2016 WL 852475
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 2016
Docket7085 S-15696
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 369 P.3d 245 (Apline Energy, LLC v. Matanuska Electric Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Apline Energy, LLC v. Matanuska Electric Association, 369 P.3d 245, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 22, 2016 WL 852475 (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

BOLGER, Justice,

I. INTRODUCTION

Federal law requires electric utilities to purchase power generated by cogeneration facilities that meet certain standards and provides a method of calculating the purchase rate that the utilities must pay: To qualify for this treatment, a facility must be certified that it meets the standards. It may self-certify, by filing a form describing the project and asserting that it believes it meets the standards, or it may, request a formal determination that it meets the standards. The Regulatory Commission of Alaska implements this certification scheme on the state level, but the determination whether a facility qualifies falls within exclusive federal jurisdiction. vo

-The main issue presented in. this appeal is whether a self-certification constitutes.a federal determination that a facility meets the standards and whether the Commission must defer to this self-certification. We conclude that a self-certification does not constitute a federal determination and that the Commission's broad discretion to implement the federal scheme means it has the power to require a developer to formally certify its projects.

*247 II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Regulatory Background

Congress enacted the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA). in 1978 to increase conservation of energy, make electric utilities more efficient, and encourage equitable rates for electric customers. 1 Section 210 of PURPA 2 seeks to accomplish this by "en-couragling] the development of cogeneration and small power production facilities." 3 Co-generation facilities produce electric energy along with some other types of useful energy, such as heat. 4 PURPA encourages development of these facilities by requiring electric utilities to purchase electric energy from and sell electric energy to "qualifying" cogeneration and small power production facilities, 5 and by exempting these qualifying facilities from state and federal regulation as utilities. 6

PURPA charges the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) with implementation, 7 and directs state regulatory authorities to implement FERC's rules in turn. 8 In Alaska, this task falls to the Regulatory Commission of Alaska (the Commission). 9

Under FERC's regulations implementing PURPA, "qualifying facilities" are facilities that both meet certain efficiency, operating, and use standards, and are certified. 10 Facilities can become certified in two different ways: They may file a notice of self-certification with FERC, asserting that they meet the relevant standards, or they may apply to FERC for cortification. 11 If a certified facility is "substantial{ly] alter[ed] or modififed]," it must recertify, 12 Self-certification is free," while formal certification carries a filing fee 13 of $24,070 for cogeneration facilities. 14 Other parties may challenge a self-certified or formally certified facility's qualifying-facility status; 15 a challenge carries a filing fee of $24,970. 16

FERC's regulations implementing PURPA also control the rates that utilities must pay qualifying facilities for energy,. Purchase rates must not exceed the utility's "avoided costs," 17 which are "the incremental costs. to an electric utility of electric energy or capacity or both which, but for the purchase from the qualifying facility ..., such utility would generate itself. or purchase from another source. 18 In other words, ,the utility is obligated to purchase a qualifying facility's energy, but it is not obligated to pay any more fot that energy than it would have paid if it obtained the energy from a different source.

' Because potential qualifying facilities and investors need to predict purchase rates to *248 be able to estimate the return on a potential investment, FERC's regulations require utilities to "make available data from which avoided costs may be derived. 19 These data are not.the same as a purchase rate; rather, they are "the first step. in the determination of such a rate." 20 .

B. Facts

In May 2008, Alpine Energy self-certified five proposed cogeneration facilities. Only two of these facilities are at issue in this case: Pioneer Energy #1, later renamed "Goose Creek Energy Project," and Pioneer Energy # 4, later renamed "Pioneer Energy Project." Alpine anticipated selling the thermal energy from Pioneer Emergy # 1 to local businesses, residences, and greenhouses for the purpose of space heating.: It intended to sell the thermal energy from Pioneer Energy # 4 to the Alaska State Fair and to various commercial customers and greenhouses, again for the purpose of space heating.

Shértly after filing the notices of self-certification, Alpine requested the local electric utility, Matanuska . Energy Association (MEA), to interconnect with its facilities-that is, to physically connect the cogeneration facilities with MEA's utility network to facilitate the purchase of electric energy. 21 Alpine also requested MEA to provide certain avoided-cost information required by the Commission's regulations, and to open good-faith negotiations for the purchase of power from 'Alpine's facilities.

Under Alaska regulations, a qualifying facility's request for interconnection triggers a 60-day period within which the utility must provide the qualifying facility with a tariff setting out rates for interconnection, purchases, and sales. 22 Accordingly, in its reply to Alpine, MEA requested certain engineering information from Alpine that it stated was necessary to determine the costs of interconnection. MEA also stated that the avoided-cost information Alpine. had request'ed was available in its then-effective tariff, on file with the Commission.

' Alpine did not provide the requested engineering information in its response. Instead, Alpine reiterated its request to enter negotiations for the purchase of energy. As a result, MEA filed a petition with the Commission requesting a waiver of the 60-day period.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
369 P.3d 245, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 22, 2016 WL 852475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/apline-energy-llc-v-matanuska-electric-association-alaska-2016.