City of Chicago, Illinois v. Federal Power Commission, Pipeline Production Group, Intervenors

458 F.2d 731
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 17, 1972
Docket23740
StatusPublished
Cited by148 cases

This text of 458 F.2d 731 (City of Chicago, Illinois v. Federal Power Commission, Pipeline Production Group, Intervenors) 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
City of Chicago, Illinois v. Federal Power Commission, Pipeline Production Group, Intervenors, 458 F.2d 731 (D.C. Cir. 1972).

Opinion

MacKINNON, Circuit Judge:

This case is before us on a petition under Section 19(b) of the Natural Gas Act 1 to review a decision issued by the Federal Power Commission on October 7, 1969 2 directing that gas produced by natural gas pipeline companies from leases acquired after October 7, 1969 and which is used on-system 3 should be val *734 ued for ratemaking purposes at the area rate applicable to independent producers. 4 For reasons to be discussed below, we affirm the Commission’s decision with two reservations.

I.

Background

In order to place the instant controversy in its proper perspective, a brief discussion of the FPC’s recent regulatory effort with respect to natural gas is necessary. Three sections of the Natural Gas Act give the Commission its primary tools for regulating natural gas rates. Under Section 7(e), 5 a producer of natural gas must obtain from the Commission a certificate of convenience and necessity before it can make sales in interstate commerce. In the so-called CATCO case, 6 the Supreme Court held that before such certificates are issued, the Commission must insure that the rates to be charged by the producer are “in line” with those being charged for gas sold by other producers and extracted from the same general area. The Commission thus has some measure of responsibility for the initial prices a producer sets for his gas. When price increases are effected, the second of the Commission’s three major tools comes into play. Under Section 4(e) 7 of the Act, the Commission has the power to suspend any proposed rate increases for a maximum of five months while it conducts an investigation to determine whether the proposed rates will be “just and reasonable”. If five months elapse before the investigation is completed, the new rate goes into effect, but the producer must post a bond conditioned upon refunds being made in case the increase is held unlawful and a refund is ordered by the Commission. Finally, under Section 5(a), 8 the Commission may at any time commence an investigation into whether a given rate is “just and reasonable.” If it finds that the rate does not meet this standard, it may fix an appropriate rate for the future, but Section 5(a) dobs not'empower the Commission to order refunds.

The Natural Gas Act became law in 1938 and was initially applied by the Commission only to pipeline companies, i. e., those companies which were engaged in the interstate transmission of natural gas. While the methods used by the Commission to determine which rates were just and reasonable underwent some changes over the years, the concept that rates should be based on each individual company’s “cost of service” remained at the heart of the regulatory scheme.

[I]n essence [cost of service] includes, in addition to operating costs, depreciation, etc., the “return” to the company which the Commission calculates by providing a fair rate of return on a rate base equal to the amount prudently invested in utility property, and the “expense” of Federal income tax payable on the allowed return. 9

In 1954, however, in the case of Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Wisconsin, 347 U.S. 672, 74 S.Ct. 794, 98 L.Ed. 1035 (1954), the Supreme Court held that the Natural *735 Gas Act applied to all independent producers of natural gas who made sales in interstate commerce. This was the first application of the regulatory features of the Act to independent producers. The effect of this decision on the Commission’s regulatory effort was both immediate and spectacular, for Phillips, in effect, recognized that 3000 additional companies were under the Act. The practice of making independent cost-of-service calculations for each of these companies rapidly proved to be so time-consuming that for a while it appeared that the regulatory process itself would be brought to a halt. 10

In addition to the length of time required for the necessary calculations, rates based on individual company cost of service exhibited certain other deficiencies. First of all, largely speculative cost allocations made the rates obtained somewhat unrealistic. 11 Secondly, because oil and gas wells were typically the product of joint ventures in which several independent producers had an interest, rates based on individual company cost-of-service resulted in great anomalies in the prices paid to producers for gas by both pipeline companies and consumers. 12 Finally, unlike the case with the “traditional” public utilities, there was little relationship between an individual producer’s expenditures and his income, for luck is an important factor in the discovery of gas as a result of any particular exploratory effort. 13 Together, the above factors made questionable the wisdom of attempts to regulate the natural gas industry on the traditional basis of cost of service in a test year.

Recognizing the above deficiencies and spurred by the increasingly large administrative burden with which it was faced, *736 the Commission announced in a statement in 1960 that in the future all natural gas produced and sold by independent producers would be priced at the just and reasonable “area rate”. It divided the country into twenty-three geographic areas and set initial or “guideline” prices for all gas produced from wells within each of the areas. 14 Full hearings were to be held to determine the just and reasonable rate for each area and the guideline prices were to be used until such determinations were made.

In the Permian Basin Area Rate Cases, 390 U.S. 747, 88 S.Ct. 1344, 20 L.Ed.2d 312 (1968), the Supreme Court reviewed the Commission’s first area rate determination, giving approval to both the area rate method of regulation and the prices which had been set. 15 As developed in the Permian proceeding, an area rate is essentially a rate predicated on a composite rather than an individual cost-of-service. Cost data are gathered from all producers engaged in natural gas production in a given area and weighted average costs plus an appropriate rate of return are used to derive a price for gas produced in that area and sold in interstate commerce. 16 In addition to alleviating many of the problems associated with individual company cost of service, area rates were designed to spur the search for new deposits of natural gas.

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458 F.2d 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-illinois-v-federal-power-commission-pipeline-production-cadc-1972.