Bucks County Board of Commissioners v. Commonwealth

313 A.2d 185, 11 Pa. Commw. 487, 2 P.U.R.4th 396, 1973 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 490
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 12, 1973
DocketAppeals, Nos. 298 C.D. 1973 and 783 C.D. 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 313 A.2d 185 (Bucks County Board of Commissioners v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bucks County Board of Commissioners v. Commonwealth, 313 A.2d 185, 11 Pa. Commw. 487, 2 P.U.R.4th 396, 1973 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 490 (Pa. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Rogers,

There are before us two appeals from orders of the Public Utility Commission (PUC). The first is the appeal of the Bucks County Board of Commissioners and its Planning Commission; the Montgomery County Board of Commissioners and its Planning Commission; the Trustees of the Reading Railroad; an ad hoc committee using the acronym STOPS1; a regional environmental committee; and of one individual, from an order granting a Certificate of Public Convenience to Interstate Energy Company (IEC) to supply service by pipeline in the transportation of petroleum products, principally low sulfur residual and crude oil, for the purpose of electric generation. The second appeal is that of the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation from an order denying its petition for rehearing of lEC’s application after the PUC’s order came down.

Pennsylvania Power and Light Company (PP&L) is an electric public utility company which supplies electric power to more than 843,000 customers in 10,-000 square miles of territory in the area of Pennsylvania drained by the Delaware and Susquehanna Rivers. [490]*490Most of its generating capacity is located in the Susquehanna basin in the central and western part of its system. PP&L’s total sales of electrical energy were 14.7 billion kilowatt hours in 1970. It estimates that sales in 1975 will be 20.3 billion kilowatt hours, and in 1980, 29.5 billion kilowatt hours. Its present winter peak load is 3.2 million kilowatts. This is estimated to increase to 4.4- million kilowatts by 1975, and to 6.4 million kilowatts by 1980. These predictions convinced PP&L that its installed capacity should be doubled by 1980. The company’s planning to meet this demand included the planned installation in 1975 and 1977 of two 800,000 kilowatt generating units at its present Martins Creek terminal near the Delaware Biver in Northampton County. The company further planned that its new units at Martins Creek should be oil-fired and that the tAvo existing 151,000 kilowatt coal burning units there located should be converted to oil. The company’s decision to burn oil was based primarily upon considerations of the reduction of air pollution, the excessive cost of other means of fueling its generators and the desirability of diversifying its fuel sources. Conventional hydroelectric generating capacity of the available rivers are fully developed; nuclear facilities could not be completed in time to meet the demand; and pump storage Avas ruled out because base load capacity is required and pump storage is dependent on poAver produced by other generating capacity.

PP&L Avould have preferred to haAre constructed a coal fired plant in the Avestern part of its system. This, however, Avould have required the construction of 80 miles of transmission lines in new rights-of-Avay at a cost of 20 million dollars. The company rejected such a plan for, among other reasons, esthetic and environmental reasons.2

[491]*491PP&L’s studies indicated that a coal-fired plant in the eastern part of its area would increase fuel delivery costs by about 10 million dollars per year. They also revealed that a workable commercial system to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions from the type of coal available in the eastern part of the United States would not be available until after 1975. On the other hand, low sulfur fuel oil was available and would have the additional desirable effect of increasing the amount of the company’s capacity provided by oil, presently about 10% of the company’s capacity.

Having thus determined on oil and on the Martins Creek logatiou3 the remaining question was how to bring the oil from the lower Delaware to Martins Creek. The company considered tank trucks, rail and pipeline. The two 800,000 kilowatt units and the converted existing units would consume approximately 20 million barrels of oil per year. To provide these requirements by truck would require the arrival at Martins Creek of forty-four 7000 gallon trueles per hour during an eight hour day, 3G0 days a year. None of the appellants suggests that this would be an acceptable means of supplying Martins Creek with oil. The delivery of oil by rail would require the daily arrival at Martins Creek of a train of 110 cars. Because of a necessary two day turnaround two such 110 car trains would be required. PP&L would be required to supply not only the trains but the loading and unloading facilities at both ends. The company concluded that while the total shipping-cost per barrel by rail would be about the same as by [492]*492pipeline, the additional considerations of prospective increased labor costs of railroad operations, the danger of strikes and the additional labor which would be required for housekeeping at both ends of the lines, compelled the decision to use pipeline delivery.

Having completed its studies and decided to use oil transported by pipeline, PP&L solicited from enterprises experienced in the business invitations to supply Martins Creek by an oil pipeline. One of the bidders was Gulf Interstate Engineering Company, which proposed the formation of a common carrier pipeline company to construct and operate the proposed pipeline. PP&L accepted this proposal, IEC was formed and IEC made the application which is the subject of this appeal.

IEC proposes an intrastate pipeline facility 80 miles long between Marcus Hook in Lower Chichester Township, Delaware County, on the south, and Martins Creek on the north, with an extension of nine miles to serve Metropolitan Edison at Portland, north of Martins Creek, a lateral 6.8 miles long to serve New Jersey Power and Light on the east bank of the Delaware River south of Martins Creek, and a takeoff point to serve Philadelphia Electric Company at the latter’s Cromby terminal near the Chester-Montgomery County boundary line.

PUC preliminary to hearings, defined its inquiry into the project by four questions, upon which it solicited information, as follows:

“A. Is the furnishing of low sulfur fuel to the Martins Creek area necessary for the public convenience?
“B. Is the transmission of low sulfur content residual oil by pipeline the best means, from the public viewpoint, to deliver the required fuel to the area?
“C. Has the carrier exercised great concern for the public interest and safety in transmission pipeline route selection?
[493]*493“D. Are adequate provisions made for review and supervision of design and construction?”

Eighteen days of hearing produced almost 3000 pages of testimony all of which, together with appellants’ 117 page brief, and the Commission’s 47 page order, we have reviewed. Our inquiry is as to whether the Commission’s order granting the Certificate of Public Convenience should be vacated or set aside for error of law or lack of supporting evidence or for violation of constitutional rights. Public Utility Law, Act of May 28, 1937, P. L. 1053, §1107, as amended, 66 P.S. §1437. The scope of our review is narrow. As we wrote in Erie Lackawanna Railway Company v. Pa. Public Utility Commission, 2 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 396, 399, 278 A. 2d 188 (1971) : “The Public Utility Law, infra, Article XI, Section 1107, as amended, 66 P.S.

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Bluebook (online)
313 A.2d 185, 11 Pa. Commw. 487, 2 P.U.R.4th 396, 1973 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bucks-county-board-of-commissioners-v-commonwealth-pacommwct-1973.