Opinion for the Court by Circuit Judge EDWARDS.
HARRY T. EDWARDS, Circuit Judge:
Under the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982 (“the Waste Act”),1 the Secretary of Energy is directed to prescribe fees for the disposal of spent nuclear fuel (“SNF”). At issue in this case is a Department of Energy (“DOE”) rule setting forth the basis upon which the agency will compute a onetime fee for fuel spent to generate electricity prior to April 7, 1983.
Section 302(a)(3) of the Waste Act prescribes a “1 time fee per kilogram of heavy metal in spent nuclear fuel ... in an amount equivalent to an average charge of 1.0 mil per kilowatt-hour for electricity generated by such spent nuclear fuel.” The Secretary interpreted this language to permit the adoption of a fee schedule which takes into account the variation in the efficiency of the electric fuel burnup. Accordingly, under DOE’s rule, the one-time “fee is designed to recover, on an industry-wide basis, a fee per kilogram of heavy metal which will bring in an average one mill [sic] for each kilowatt hour generated by the fuel discharged from reactors prior to April 7, 1983.” DOE’s Brief at 31-32. Under this approach, “the relatively increased cost of disposal of the spent fuel per unit of electricity generated from low burnup fuel is taken into account.” Id. at 6.2
In this case, General Electric Uranium Management Corporation (“GEUMCO”) claims that the one-time fee established by DOE is contrary to the fee prescribed by Congress in the Waste Act. In particular, GEUMCO argues that Congress intended the one-time fee “to bear a direct relationship to the amount of electricity generated, regardless of any discrepancies in fuel efficiency or in volume.” GEUMCO Brief at 22-23. Thus, GEUMCO complains about the “unjustifiable inequities” produced by the DOE formula, and asserts that it “must pay approximately three mills per kilowatt-hour simply because its spent fuel generated less electricity per volume than fuel with a higher burnup.” Id. at 23.
On October 16, 1983, GEUMCO filed for judicial review in the District Court. On December 13, 1983, DOE moved to dismiss on two grounds: (1) that the District Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because the Waste Act vests exclusive jurisdiction over review of agency action in the courts of appeals, and (2) that the Waste Act permits the one-time fee rule adopted by DOE. GEUMCO moved for summary judgment. The District Court rejected DOE’s subject matter jurisdiction arguments but granted DOE’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, finding DOE’s rule to be consistent with the language, legislative history and purpose of the Waste Act.3
[265]*265GEUMCO then petitioned this court for direct review of DOE’s rule and also appealed from the District Court’s dismissal. By order of May 29, 1984, we consolidated these cases. Since we hold that we have original and exclusive jurisdiction over the subject matter of this case, and therefore that the District Court did not have proper jurisdiction to decide the case, we vacate the District Court’s opinion.
On direct review, we affirm DOE’s rule as a reasonable exercise of its discretion under the Waste Act. The statute clearly delegates to the DOE the authority to prescribe a one-time fee rule and does not specify the precise method of computing that fee. Furthermore, the legislative history is at best ambiguous on this question. Since DOE has acted within an area of its expertise, reached a result that is not contrary to any expressed intent of Congress, and adopted an approach that is a reasonable compromise between conflicting policies, we defer to the agency. This result, we believe, comports with the principles enunciated by the Supreme Court in Chevron.4
I. Background
Through the Waste Act, Congress conceived a comprehensive scheme for the disposal of SNF and other high-level radioactive waste generated by civilian nuclear power reactors. That scheme included the establishment of waste repository facilities under federal auspices to be fully funded by those generating the nuclear wastes. Section 302 of the Waste Act, which provides for the establishment of a Nuclear Waste Fund, authorizes the Secretary to
enter into contracts with any person who generates or holds title to high-level radioactive waste, or spent nuclear fuel, of domestic origin for the acceptance of title, subsequent transportation, and disposal of such waste or spent fuel. Such contracts shall provide for payment to the Secretary of fees ... sufficient to offset expenditures described in subsection (d) of this section [to identify, acquire, develop, license, construct, operate, maintain and monitor nuclear waste storage facilities and to pay the administrative costs of the disposal program].5
Congress expressly contemplated that utilities would be charged two different types of fees for DOE’s disposal services: an ongoing fee for SNF used to generate electricity on and after April 7, 1983, and a one-time fee for SNF used to generate electricity before that date. Under the statute, Congress prescribed a relatively straight-forward cost-rule for the ongoing fee.6 However, the task of promulgating the one-time fee was delegated to the Secretary:
For spent nuclear fuel ... used to generate electricity in a civilian nuclear power reactor prior to the application of the [ongoing] fee ... to such reactor, the Secretary shall, not later than 90 days after January 7, 1983, establish a 1 time fee per kilogram of heavy metal in spent nuclear fuel, or in solidified high-level radioactive waste. Such fee shall be in an amount equivalent to an average charge of 1.0 mil per kilowatt-hour for electricity generated by such spent nuclear fuel, or such solidified high-level waste derived therefrom____7
DOE commenced rulemaking proceedings by publishing a notice on February 4, 1983,8 soliciting comments on a proposed standard form contract to be used for its SNF disposal services. Article VIII.A.2 of the proposed contract specified that the [266]*266one-time fee would “be assessed by applying average dollar per kilogram charges to three (3) distinct ranges of fuel burnup reflecting actual disposal costs for those ranges so that the integrated cost across all discharged fuel is equivalent to 1.0 mill [sic] per kilowatt-hour.”9
DOE received over eighty written comments on its proposed rule, many of which addressed the one-time fee rule. GEUMCO submitted comments on the proposed rule and argued then, as here, that the only lawful method of assessing charges was the first alternative method to that in the proposed contract, which would compute the one-time fee at the rate of one mil per kilowatt-hour of electricity generated by each individual fuel assembly. GEUMCO contended that
[w]hile the [statutory] language for the one-time fee is phrased differently than that for the ongoing fee, it appears to be merely a recognition of the different stages the fuel is at rather than an attempt to have one category of fuel pay fees on a radically different basis than another category. After April 7, 1983, the fee will be collected on a periodic basis as electricity is generated. The fee is related to an ongoing stream of electricity that can be read at the meter. Electricity generation is not ongoing for the fuel prior to April 7, however, and Congress apparently perceived a need to allocate the fee to the physical commodity that remained so as to achieve an equivalent result.10
GEUMCO presented similar testimony at the public hearing that the DOE held on March 3, 1983.
DOE published its final rule on April 18, 1983, essentially adopting the contract set forth earlier in its notice of proposed rule-making. The rule prescribed three different sets of fees: a one-time fee for SNF discharged before April 7, 1983; an in-core fee for fuel which was in the core of an operating nuclear reactor on April 7, 1983; and an ongoing fee for SNF generated on or after April 7, 1983, set, as prescribed by the Waste Act, in the amount of 1.0 mil per kilowatt-hour on electricity generated by a purchaser’s nuclear power reactors. The one-time fee, which is the only fee at issue in this case, was described as follows:
For SNF, or solidified high-level radioactive waste derived from SNF, which fuel was used to generate electricity in a civilian nuclear power reactor prior to April 7, 1983, a one-time fee will be assessed by applying industry-wide average dollar per kilogram charges to four (4) distinct ranges of fuel burnup so that the integrated cost across all discharged (i.e. spent) fuel is equivalent to an industry-wide average charge of 1.0 mill per kilowatt-hour. For purposes of this contract, discharged nuclear fuel is that fuel removed from the reactor core with no plans for reinsertion. In the event that any such fuel withdrawn with plans for reinsertion is not reinserted, then the applicable fee for such fuel shall be calculated as set forth in this paragraph 2. The categories of spent nuclear fuel burnup and the fee schedule are listed below:
[267]*267(In 1982 dollars)
Nuclear spent Dollars
fuel burnup per
_range_:_kilogram
0 to 5,000 MWDT/MTU $ 80.00
5.000 to 10,000 MWDT/MTU 142.00
10.000 to 20,000 MWDT/MTU 162.00
OVER 20.000 MWDT/MTU_184.0011
In explaining its reasons for adopting the burnup range approach, DOE noted that over 80 percent of those commenting on the one-time fee calculation favored this type of approach, including several utilities,
because it avoids extremely low and extremely high fees. It sustains the principle of equity and fairness by requiring all generators and owners of the spent nuclear fuel to bear a reasonable share of disposal costs. Further it corresponds more closely to program costs.12
Although originally proposed as a three burnup range, a four-tier approach was finally adopted as “more appropriate and equitable as it is more representative of the actual industrywide distribution of spent nuclear fuel encompassing low, average and high burnup fuel.” 13
DOE explained that it did not adopt the first suggested alternative approach, the individual assembly approach based on a fee of one mil per kilowatt-hour of electricity generated, because that fee rule would unduly penalize those possessing high burnup spent fuel while benefitting those with low burnup fuel.14 The second alternative formula approach, which was also based on an individual assembly basis, and garnered the support of many commenters who saw it as a straightforward approach, was rejected by DOE because it “weakens the fairness principle by unduly benefiting owners of low-burnup fuel while penalizing those with high burnup fuel [and] ... conflicts with the [congressional intent to have those responsible for generating nuclear waste and spent fuel bear a reasonable share of disposal costs.” 15
. On June 30, 1983, DOE entered into a standard contract with GEUMCO, including the one-time fee provision as it was articulated in the rule.16 At the same time, DOE and GEUMCO entered into a collateral agreement to preserve GEUMCO’s right to seek judicial review of the one-time fee.17
II. Discussion
A. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
As an initial matter, this case raises a jurisdictional question. The Department, relying on sections 119(a)(1)(A) and 111(b)(4) of the Waste Act, contends that the District Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to review the one-time fee rule. Section 119(a)(1)(A) of the Waste Act provides that
(1) [e]xcept for review in the Supreme Court of the United States, the United States courts of appeals shall have exclusive and original jurisdiction over any civil action—
(A) for review of any final decision or action of the Secretary, the President, or the Commission under this part.18
This review provision is located in Part A, “Repositories for Disposal of High-Level Radioactive Waste and Spent Nuclear Fuel,” of Subchapter I, “Disposal and Storage of High-Level Radioactive Waste, Spent Nuclear Fuel and Low-Level Radioactive Waste.” Section 111(b)(4), also contained within Part A of Subchapter I, describes the purpose of the Waste Act as being
to establish a Nuclear Waste Fund, composed of payments made by the genera[268]*268tors and owners of such waste and spent fuel, that will ensure that the costs of carrying out activities relating to the disposal of such waste and spent fuel will be borne by the persons responsible for generating such waste and spent fuel.19
DOE reasons that, because the goal of setting up the Nuclear Waste Fund is found in Part A, which vests the courts of appeals with original and exclusive jurisdiction over matters arising under that part, exclusive jurisdiction includes all matters associated with the creation of the fund.20
The District Court rejected DOE's jurisdictional argument, noting that section 302(a)(3) of the Waste Act, the provision addressing the one-time fee rule, does not fall within the same part as section 119, the judicial review provision. The District Court also was not persuaded by the argument that section 11(b)(4), which defines the establishment of the Nuclear Waste Fund as one of the Waste Act’s purposes, brings this litigation within the purview of the judicial review prescription of section 119(a)(1)(A). On this latter point, the trial court was particularly influenced by the fact that GEUMCO’s challenge to the onetime fee rule rested solely on section 302(a)(3).21
We conclude that DOE’s rule setting the one-time fee to be charged under section 302(a)(3) of the Waste Act is well within the class of agency actions reviewable under section 119(a)(1)(A), and that the reference to “under this part” does not remove this case from the exclusive jurisdiction of the court of appeals. First, despite the statute’s lack of clarity, we find every indication from those sections of the statute relied on by DOE, as well as from related sections, and from the structure of the statute as a whole, that Congress intended that the court of appeals would have original and exclusive jurisdiction in cases of this sort. Second, the legislative history, although not illuminating on this question, certainly does not compel a result contrary to the one we reach here. Third, the policy considerations underlying this case, and articulated in other judicial decisions covering analogous statutes, overwhelmingly support our conclusions.
The only statutory review provisions that exist in the Waste Act vest the courts of appeals with original and exclusive jurisdiction. There are two such provisions, section 119(a)(1)(A), which provides for our original and exclusive jurisdiction over review of any final decision or action “under this part,”22 and section 221, which is contained in Subchapter II, “Research, Development, and Demonstration Regarding Disposal of High-Level Radioactive Waste and Spent Nuclear Fuel,” and which refers back to section 119(a)(1)(A) by providing that
[¡judicial review of research and development activities under this subchapter shall be in accordance with the provisions of section [119] of this title.23
Section 302, which provides for the contracts to be made between private parties and the Government to fund the Government’s waste disposal activities and responsibilities under the Waste Act, including the one-time fee provision at issue in the instant case, is part of Subchapter III, “Other Provisions Relating to Radioactive Waste,” which has no specific review provision. Thus, the only two review provisions in the Waste Act, in Subchapters I and II, vest original and exclusive jurisdiction in the courts of appeals. We find it inconceivable that Congress intended to have review of all actions concerning waste disposal in the court of appeals — including the choice, [269]*269characterization, approval of, and authorization for construction of candidate sites;24 federal agency actions such as coordination and environmental review;25 research and development questions relating to the disposal of high-level wastes and SNF,26 including funding and payments to the states and Indian tribes under the Act27 — except for questions concerning the composition of the Nuclear Waste Fund and a few other matters located in Subchapter III.
The structure of the Waste Act supports our view that it would be singularly incongruous for fee questions to be subject to judicial review in both the district courts and the courts of appeals, while all other matters would go directly to the courts of appeals. The Waste Act has a limited and integral purpose and structure. It focuses only on the disposal of nuclear wastes. Subchapter I addresses permanent repositories for the disposal of high-level wastes and SNF in Part A, an interim storage program in Part B, monitored retrievable storage in Part C, and low-level waste disposal in Part D. Subchapter II provides for research, development and demonstration, and Subchapter III is a catch-all for other necessary provisions. In Part A of Subchapter I, Congress expressed its goal to set up a Nuclear Waste Fund,28 and its intention that generators and owners of nuclear wastes and SNF should bear the costs of disposal.29 The mere fact that Congress granted the Secretary the authority to enter into contracts to provide for the payment of those disposal costs in a different subchapter does not compel the conclusion that Congress thereby intended that there would be entirely different judicial review procedures for those contracts.30
Finally, as we look at the statute as a whole, we note that section 302(a)(1) gives the Secretary the authority to enter into contracts to provide the fees for disposal “[i]n the performance of his functions under this chapter____”31 In this context, the word “chapter” refers to Chapter 108 of Title 42 which, of course, encompasses the entire Waste Act. One of the important “functions” of the Secretary under Chapter 108 is to set up the Nuclear Waste Fund as described in Part A of Subchapter I, wherein we find the provision according original and exclusive jurisdiction in the courts of appeals. Therefore, we find that section 302 incorporates by reference the functional responsibilities of the Secretary under Part A of Subchapter I. By the same token, the purpose to establish the Waste Fund, as explained above, is found in Part A of Subchapter I. This purpose incorporates by reference the contractual provisions of section 302. It thus appears that, from whatever vantage point we approach the statutory construction problem that we address here, we inevitably conclude that Congress intended to vest original and exclusive jurisdiction with the courts of appeals.32
[270]*270The legislative history does not expressly aid us in our construction here. However, there is nothing in that history that compels any different conclusion. Indeed, the evolution of the placement of section 302 in the Waste Act strongly suggests that its physical separation from the judicial review provision in section 119 is pure happenstance and in no way indicates a congressional intent that review under the different subchapters be governed by different standards.33 There simply is no explanation for the separation in the legislative history.
Finally, we believe that there are certain policy considerations that militate in favor of the judgment that we reach on the jurisdictional question. While we do not rely on factors of policy in lieu of statutory construction, we do consider them relevant in a case such as this where the pertinent statutory provisions admit of ambiguity.
First, it frequently has been noted that, in administrative appeals, “where it is unclear whether review jurisdiction is in the district court or the court of appeals the ambiguity is resolved in favor of the latter.”34 A principal reason for this guideline is that exclusive jurisdiction in the court of appeals avoids duplicative review and the attendant delay and expense involved.35 While it is true that the delay associated with district court review already has occurred in this case, this in no way diminishes the legitimacy of the policy favoring exclusive jurisdiction in the court of appeals.
Second, there is no need for an evidentiary hearing in order for judicial review to occur in this case. The DOE rulemaking involved public notice, written comments from eighty-five sources, a hearing and a transcript of the proceedings. This information was fully considered by the Department precedent to the adoption of a final rule.36 Since there are no factual findings to be made, the court of appeals is fully able to consider this administrative record, without input from the district court, in reviewing the merits of GEUMCO’s claim.37 Indeed, even without an extensive record or hearing before the agency, it is rare that the factfinding capacity of the district court is required in judicial review of administrative agency actions.38
[271]*271Third, original and exclusive jurisdiction in the courts of appeals promotes the congressional goals of efficiency and predictability. Although review of the one-time fee for disposal of spent fuel may not require further judicial consideration beyond the disposition of this case, it is but one of many like questions that may arise under the Waste Act. We find it hard to believe that Congress intended to have any of the basic issues surrounding disposal of SNF to be tied up in duplicative litigation for years on end. Nuclear reactors must be refuelled periodically at which time the SNF must be removed and stored. There is already a tremendous accumulation of SNF in short-term storage facilities with limited capacity. Consequently, nuclear facilities may well have to be shut down in the near future, and the matter of establishing safe and adequate disposal facilities is an acknowledged global problem of dramatic urgency.39 In this context, we cannot assume that Congress intended both the District Court and this court to perform the identical review function of the onetime fee rule based on an identical administrative record.40
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the court of appeals has original and exclusive jurisdiction to review DOE’s one-time fee rule and that the District Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to consider the instant case. Therefore, we vacate the opinion and judgment of the District Court and proceed to review DOE’s determination directly. For the reasons set forth below, we deny the petition for review.
B. The One-Time Fee Rule
GEUMCO avers that DOE’s interpretation of the Waste Act violates the intent of Congress, as expressed both in the statutory language and its legislative history, to recover fees based on the amount of electricity generated by the SNF rather than by the volume of SNF deposit[272]*272ed in the federal waste repository. We disagree with these contentions, and find that DOE’s interpretation is a reasonable one which should be upheld. We find the statute and the legislative history to be, at best, ambiguous concerning the one-time fee and, given this lack of clarity, we are guided by recent Supreme Court precedent to defer to the agency’s implementation of the statute.
In Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,41 the Supreme Court held that “if the statute is silent or ambiguous with respect to [a] specific issue [within the general compass of the statute], the question for the court is whether the agency’s answer is based on a permissible construction of the statute.”42 Recently, we have set forth certain guidelines for adhering to the mandate of Chevron:
In determining, whether an agency’s interpretation represents a reasonable accommodation of conflicting statutory purposes, a reviewing court must determine both whether the interpretation is arguably consistent with the underlying statutory scheme in a substantive sense and whether “the agency considered the matter in a detailed and reasoned fashion.” 43
Applying these principles to the present case, we find that the statute is ambiguous with respect to the specific method of calculating the one-time fee, and that DOE’s rule “represents a reasonable accommodation of conflicting policies” served by the Act.44 Furthermore, we find that this is not a case where “it appears from the statute or its legislative history that the accommodation is not one that Congress would have sanctioned.”45 Finally, we are assured, on the record of this case, that DOE fully and fairly considered the matter in issue “in a detailed and reasoned fashion.”
We find, first, that DOE is indubitably entrusted with the administration of the Waste Act. We find, second, that nothing in the language of the statute explicitly states that the one-time fee must be based upon the amount of electricity generated rather than upon the volume of SNF in the repository. Section 302(a)(3) provides in relevant part that, as concerns the one-time fee,
the Secretary shall ... establish a 1 time fee per kilogram of heavy metal in spent nuclear fuel____ Such fee shall be in an amount equivalent to an average charge of 1.0 mil per kilowatt-hour for electricity generated by such spent nuclear fuel, or such solidified high-level waste derived therefrom, to be collected from any person delivering such spent nuclear fuel ... to the Federal Government.46
GEUMCO urges us to find that the statutory prescription in the words “in an amount equivalent to an average charge of 1.0 mil per kilowatt-hour” compels the Secretary to set the fee at a rate of one mil per kilowatt-hour for electricity generated. However, we can find no such clarity in the language because the Secretary is given the discretion to fix a fee based upon an “average charge.” Under GEUMCO’s construction of the statute, the Secretary would be denied all discretion in establishing the method of calculating the one-time fee rule. If that is what Congress intended, then the delegation of authority to the Secretary to fix a fee within the range of an “average charge” would appear superfluous. We decline to submit to such a tortured interpretation of the statute. Rather, it appears to us that Congress, in section 302(a)(3) of the Waste Act, gave DOE the authority to regulate the method [273]*273of calculating the one-time fee for SNF, while stipulating that the method should yield the same result as “an amount equivalent to an average charge of 1 mil per kilowatt-hour.” This does not mean that the method itself must be a charge of 1 mil per kilowatt-hour.
The language of section 302(a)(2), which sets the ongoing fee, confirms this construction. In that section, Congress mandated a fee “equal to 1.0 mil per kilowatt-hour” rather than “equivalent to an average charge of 1 mil per kilowatt-hour.” We believe that Congress well perceived the distinction in its phraseology of these parallel sections of the same statute. Congress intended that the one-time fee would average out to a fee equivalent to one mil per kilowatt-hour, not be equal to one mil per kilowatt-hour. Thus, we are bound to conclude that DOE’s four-tier approach, relating the one-time fee to the fuel bumup ratio but yielding a final amount equivalent to an industry-wide average of 1.0 mil per kilowatt-hour reasonably accords with the language of the statute and should be affirmed.47
GEUMCO devotes a considerable portion of its brief to discussing the legislative history of section 302(a)(2), the ongoing fee rule. That history, although it reflects congressional resolution of the conflicting goals and policies related to the ongoing fee, in no sense compels a certain result in this case, which concerns the one-time fee, not the ongoing fee. While we take notice of the policy accommodation reached by Congress concerning the ongoing fee, we hold that it is not determinative of congressional intention with regard to the one-time fee. Indeed, it would have made no good sense for Congress to adopt two separate and distinct statutory provisions for the ongoing and one-time fees if there was a legislative intention to prescribe precisely the same formula for both fees.
So far as we have been able to determine, the legislative history nowhere clearly indicates that Congress intended that the one-time fee be calculated according to the amount of electricity generated. The fee provisions of section 302 are largely derived from the Senate version S. 1662, which originally contained no provision at all concerning the one-time fee. Following Committee hearings during which this deficiency was identified, the Senate Committee on Environmental and Public Works added the one-time fee provision. Thus, the legislative history relevant to the onetime fee rule is mostly limited to that Committee’s hearings. Noting that earlier versions of the bill had failed to impose a cost for previously generated SNF, but had instead required that “future consumers of nuclear power would be required to bear the cost of storage and disposal for existing waste as well as for future wastes,”48 the Committee added what was later section 302(a)(3) “to cover the cost of long-term storage and disposal of nuclear waste and spent fuel generated as of the date of enactment.”49 While, the Committee intended the two fees to be “comparable” and “equivalent,” these terms do not com[274]*274pel an identical method for computing the ongoing and one-time fees.
We believe that the legislative history of section 302(a)(3) reflects congressional intent to delegate authority to the Secretary to regulate a problem that had been largely neglected during the development of the bill. GEUMCO is correct that the legislative history of the ongoing fee reflects an intent to assess costs on the basis of electricity generated, not on volume of SNF, thus passing on to the consumer the costs of disposal. But Congress was not content to lump the one-time fee with the ongoing fee. At the eleventh hour it created a separate statutory provision delegating the problem to the Secretary. In so doing, Congress did establish the parameters — the final average one-time fee was to be “equivalent ” to the bottom-line ongoing fee. Congress, however, did not establish the method for that one-time fee, either in the statute or the legislative history.
Our review of the statute and its legislative history leaves us unconvinced that the one-time fee rule is an illegal, or an arbitrary and capricious, exercise of the Secretary’s authority under section 302(a)(3) of the Waste Act. Accordingly, under the principles of Chevron, we uphold the Secretary’s determination.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that subject matter jurisdiction over GEUMCO’s claim lies exclusively in the courts of appeals and that the Department’s rule setting the method for calculating the onetime fee due under section 302(a)(3) is neither unlawful nor arbitrary or capricious. Accordingly, we deny GEUMCO’s petition challenging the one-time fee rule.