Avanzalia Solar, S.L. v. Goldwind USA, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 19, 2023
Docket1:20-cv-05035
StatusUnknown

This text of Avanzalia Solar, S.L. v. Goldwind USA, Inc. (Avanzalia Solar, S.L. v. Goldwind USA, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avanzalia Solar, S.L. v. Goldwind USA, Inc., (N.D. Ill. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

AVANZALIA SOLAR, S.L. and ) AVANZALIA PANAMA, S.A., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 20 C 5035 ) GOLDWIND USA, INC., d/b/a ) GOLDWIND AMERICAS, ) ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER MATTHEW F. KENNELLY, District Judge: Avanzalia Solar, S.L. and Avanzalia Panama, S.A. (Avanzalia) have sued Goldwind USA, Inc. (Goldwind) for tortious interference with prospective economic advantage and tortious interference with contract. Avanzalia Panama—the Panamanian affiliate of the Spanish energy company, Avanzalia Solar—invested several million dollars to construct a solar power plant in Panama with the intention of selling electricity to various customers there beginning in 2017. Avanzalia contends that Goldwind tortiously blocked access to a critical substation owned by its Panamanian affiliate, UEP I, making it impossible for Avanzalia to connect to the national power grid and sell electricity. Avanzalia contends that, as a result, it was unable to perform contractual obligations or obtain the benefit of its expectancies. Goldwind has moved for summary judgment on both of Avanzalia's claims. For the reasons set forth below, the Court grants the motion. Background The following facts are undisputed except where otherwise noted. Avanzalia Panama, S.A. is a Panamanian corporation that owns a 120-megawatt solar power

plant in Panama. Avanzalia Panama is owned by Avanzalia Solar, S.L., a Spanish corporation that also invested in the construction of the power plant. Goldwind is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, with its headquarters and principal place of business in Chicago. UEP I is a company located in Panama that, at times relevant to Avanzalia's complaint, owned an electrical substation in Panama known as the El Coco substation. For purposes of summary judgment only, Goldwind does not contest that it was operating as UEP I's alter-ego. Panama has laws that establish the regulatory and institutional framework for the provision of electricity services in the country. These laws also govern access to substations by "market agents" such as Avanzalia. Empresa de Transmision Electrica,

S.A. (ETESA) is the government-run utility company that manages the planning, maintenance, and expansion of the national grid. ETESA is responsible for issuing a "certificate of viability" to eligible entities seeking to connect to the grid. Entities seeking a certificate of viability are required to submit electrical studies showing the impact of their proposed connection to the grid, which ETESA then sends to the substation owner for comment before issuing a certificate of viability. Autoridad Nacional de los Servicios Publicos (ASEP) is the administrative agency that regulates public services including electricity. Under Panamanian law, ASEP is empowered to promulgate rules, manage compliance with regulations, impose sanctions (payable to the government), resolve 2 conflicts through arbitration, and issue orders and resolutions. ASEP is also the entity responsible for issuing a "definitive license" to market agents wishing to build, operate, and generate electricity from power plants. Avanzalia disputes ASEP's authority to resolve commercial disputes or to award damages.

In 2013, in connection with its solar plant project, Avanzalia consulted an electrical engineer, Alvin Ruiz, to advise it on the licensing requirements and electrical regulations in Panama. By the end of 2014, Avanzalia had obtained what it believed to be all the necessary certificates and licenses needed to operate its solar plant. These included a certificate of viability from ETESA confirming that Avanzalia could connect its solar plant to the national grid through the El Coco substation and a definitive license from ASEP to build and operate the plant. Sometime around August 2015—the parties dispute exactly when—Avanzalia sought to negotiate an agreement to access the El Coco substation with its owner, Mr. Raphael Perez-Pire. Goldwind does not dispute that to connect to the national grid and therefore sell electricity, Avanzalia first had to

connect through the El Coco substation. On August 27, 2015, Mr. Perez-Pire wrote to Avanzalia stating that an access contract could not be granted to Avanzalia because certain regulatory requirements had been violated. He stated that ETESA had mistakenly issued Avanzalia a certificate of viability without first confirming that Avanzalia had successfully obtained an access agreement from UEP I to connect to its substation and sending the electrical studies to UEP I for comment. It is undisputed that Avanzalia did not first approach UEP I about an access agreement before seeking a certificate of viability from ETESA or a license from ASEP. Avanzalia maintains that it was not required to do so because it could not 3 be denied the right to connect if the substation had "remaining capacity" under the terms of the regulations, which ETESA concluded the substation had. Goldwind submits that the regulations state that a substation owner can reject access in the event of non-compliance with the requirements set forth in the electrical regulations. It is also

undisputed that in connection with its 2013 certificate of viability request, ETESA did not provide UEP I with copies of any electrical studies that were performed by Avanzalia. In September 2015, Salomon Behar, an attorney for UEP I, wrote an e-mail to Avanzalia. Behar stated that to move forward with executing an access agreement, Avanzalia needed to rectify the flawed process through which it received its certificate by providing UEP I with copies of the missing electrical studies. On January 19, 2016, Avanzalia filed an administrative complaint with ASEP asking it to intervene in Avanzalia's dispute with UEP I. After several answers and replies were filed in response to the complaint, the parties engaged in a private hearing before ASEP on December 22, 2016. ASEP considered evidence submitted by both

parties but heard no live testimony. The following day, UEP I requested the electrical studies from ETESA that had been provided by Avanzalia, and on December 29, 2016, ETESA sent UEP I the studies. On January 19, 2017, ASEP ordered Avanzalia to provide ASEP with the studies it had submitted to ETESA in 2014, which Avanzalia did. On February 13, 2017, ASEP sent the studies to UEP I for comment. On March 14, 2017, UEP I filed another motion with ASEP contending that the electrical studies and the diagram provided by Avanzalia were outdated because they were based on a database from 2013 that did not include new solar and wind projects that came about later. UEP I argued that both a new set of studies and a new diagram 4 taking the new projects into consideration should be presented. For example, the single-line diagram submitted by Avanzalia to ETESA proposed to connect Avanzalia's solar project through a particular lane of the El Coco substation that had been reserved for the addition of two new UEP I power transformers. Avanzalia filed a reply with an

expert report from its consulting engineer Ruiz disputing the need to update the studies or diagram. On June 5, 2017, ASEP issued an order "Resolving Arbitration brought by Avanzalia Panama against UEP I." Pl.'s Resp. to Def.'s Stmt. of Facts, Ex. 32. The order required Avanzalia to submit updated studies and an updated diagram to UEP I along with a renewed request for substation access. The order further required UEP I to grant Avanzalia the access contract once it had satisfactorily complied with the transmission regulations. The June 5 order was reversed on July 26, 2017 after Avanzalia requested reconsideration, but ASEP's ultimate position was unchanged.

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