Carolina Power & Light Co. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

716 F.2d 52, 230 U.S. App. D.C. 248
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedAugust 26, 1983
DocketNos. 82-1442, 82-1567
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 716 F.2d 52 (Carolina Power & Light Co. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission) 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
Carolina Power & Light Co. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 716 F.2d 52, 230 U.S. App. D.C. 248 (D.C. Cir. 1983).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge JOHN W. PECK.

JOHN W. PECK, Senior Circuit Judge:

The Carolina Power & Light Company (Carolina Power) seeks review of a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC or Commission) decision denying the utility’s request for a change in its rate schedule. Carolina Power sought to include as a cost expenses associated with the permanent disposal of spent nuclear fuel used by its nuclear generating facilities to produce electricity. In Opinion No. 132 FERC denied Carolina Power’s request.1 A subsequent petition for rehearing was also denied.2 Carolina Power appealed both decisions to this court.3

Carolina Power is a large wholesaler and retailer of electricity with a service area of 30,000 square miles located in eastern and central North Carolina, and the northeastern portion of South Carolina. At the end of 1976 Carolina Power had a generating capacity of some 6,878,000 kilowatts.

Joining the national trend among large utilities, Carolina Power had invested substantial funds towards the development of nuclear plants, believing that nuclear generation of electricity would eventually be cheaper and more efficient than traditional methods. By early 1977 approximately 22% of the utility’s generating capacity was derived from nuclear generating facilities.4

Carolina Power’s nuclear plants were powered through the use of nuclear fuel consisting of large fuel assemblies of stainless steel or zirconium alloy tubing containing enriched uranium. When the elements in the fuel assemblies were allowed to interact, heat and electricity were produced. After a period of time, however, the fuel assemblies become ineffective as the uranium is “poisoned” by the bombardment of other metals. As a result, the uranium loses its ability to sustain the nuclear chain reaction and the production of electricity slows. At this point the spent nuclear fuel must be replaced with new, fresh nuclear fuel to sustain the production of electricity. The replacement process must occur several times a year. Initially most operators of nuclear generating facilities believed so-called spent nuclear fuel could be revitalized or reprocessed. This process extracts useable fissionable material from spent nuclear fuel and fabricates them into fresh fuel assemblies. As a result, spent nuclear fuel was stored temporarily in anticipation of being reprocessed, and it was considered an asset by electric utilities and assigned a positive salvage value.

As time progressed, however, difficulties with reprocessing became evident. In April, 1977, President Carter, in a policy statement on reprocessing halted indefinitely commercial development of reprocessing facilities, citing the proliferation of plutonium, a by-product of the process, as a major concern. At the same time hearings before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on the feasibility of commercial reprocessing and its impact on the environment were terminated indefinitely. This action foreclosed the possibility of licensing the Barnwell, South Carolina facility for the foreseeable future. By the summer of 1977 no reprocessing facility was operating in the United States, and none had been licensed.

Determining that reprocessing was no longer a viable option, Carolina Power filed with FERC revised tariff sheets to its Electric Tariff seeking to include costs associated with permanently disposing of its accumulated nuclear fuel. Specifically, the utility amortized its accumulated positive salvage value of $5,038,150 over five years. Carolina Power also added approximately $14,000,000 for costs associated with the permanent disposal of its accumulated spent nuclear fuel during its twelve-month test period ending July 31, 1977, calculating such cost at $114 .per kilogram of spent [250]*250nuclear fuel. Invoking its fuel adjustment clause on the ground that the costs were obvious and inevitable, Carolina Power immediately included the added costs in rates charged its customers.5 An immediate protest was filed and various wholesale and retail customers of Carolina Power sought to intervene in the proceeding.6

At the hearing various witnesses for Carolina Power and FERC, as well as for Intervenors, testified on the foreseeability of reprocessing as a viable alternative to permanent disposal of spent nuclear fuel. For instance, Michael J. Lawrence and Dr. Thomas S. Elleman, testifying for Intervenors, stated that reprocessing was still a possibility, but that there was little chance it would begin until the 1990’s at the earliest. A Department of Energy study introduced at the hearing stated that the cost of permanently disposing of spent nuclear fuel would be approximately $100 to $250 per kilogram. Staff experts, testifying for FERC, declared that reprocessing was foreseeable, but that it would not begin until the 1990’s.

R.A. Watson, Manager of Carolina Power’s Fuel Department, stated that reprocessing was an outside possibility but that it would take years for reprocessing plants, even if they began operation, to catch up with the annual production of spent nuclear fuel, let alone begin reprocessing the tremendous backlog of spent nuclear fuel already accumulated by nuclear generating facilities all over the country. In time the valuable fissionable material in spent nuclear fuel decays. As a result the potential salvage value of the spent nuclear fuel swiftly declines. If and when reprocessing facilities begin operation, recently produced spent nuclear fuel would be processed first. It is highly unlikely, therefore, that Carolina Power’s aging spent nuclear fuel at issue would ever be reprocessed.

After carefully weighing the evidence presented, the ALJ allowed Carolina Power to amortize, over five years, the accumulated positive salvage value it had incorporated in its rate base. He further granted Carolina Power’s request for approximately $14,000,000 for costs associated with permanent disposal of spent nuclear fuel, stating that the uncertainty over whether reprocessing is a possibility was not sufficient to justify additional delay in charging present customers for the benefits they derive from nuclear production of electricity.

On review, FERC agreed with the ALJ that Carolina Power could amortize the positive salvage value of spent nuclear fuel, but refused to allow Carolina Power to pass on costs associated with permanent disposal.7 In Opinion No. 132, released November 5, 1981, FERC stated that Carolina Power had failed to present enough evidence that costs would be incurred associated with permanent disposal of its spent nuclear fuel since reprocessing was a reasonably foreseeable possibility. FERC declared that it would allow costs associated with interim storage of spent nuclear fuel, as it had done in the recent VEPGO case, but that Carolina Power had failed to demonstrate such [251]*251costs. Virginia Electric & Power Co., (“VEPCO”) Opinion No. 118, 15 FERC ¶ 61,052 (April 10, 1981).

In its petition for rehearing, filed December 4,1981, Carolina Power made two arguments. First, it argued that FERC had failed to consider that backlogging of spent nuclear fuel would preclude reprocessing of this particular accumulated spent nuclear fuel. Alternatively, it argued that FERC, without explanation, had altered the burden of proof necessary to show costs associated with disposal of nuclear fuel.

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Bluebook (online)
716 F.2d 52, 230 U.S. App. D.C. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carolina-power-light-co-v-federal-energy-regulatory-commission-cadc-1983.