GPU Industrial Intervenors v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

628 A.2d 1187, 156 Pa. Commw. 626, 1993 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 415
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 8, 1993
Docket1332 C.D. 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 628 A.2d 1187 (GPU Industrial Intervenors v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) 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
GPU Industrial Intervenors v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 628 A.2d 1187, 156 Pa. Commw. 626, 1993 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 415 (Pa. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

*629 McGINLEY, Judge.

This case involves the relationship between two separate proceedings before the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC or Commission). In the earlier proceeding, Metropolitan Edison Company (Met Ed or the utility) filed a petition in 1989 seeking Commission approval to establish a “Competitive Procurement Program” (bidding program) relating to a 200-Megawatt (MW) block of electric generating capacity (the bidding program proceeding). Under the proposal Met Ed ■would fulfill its obligation under Section 210 of the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA), 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3, to purchase power from “qualifying facilities” (QFs) by means of competitive bidding among them. 1 Such a competitive procedure has advantages over negotiating separately with each QF or waiting for an order from the PUC to purchase. On January 5, 1990, the Commission authorized Met Ed to initiate a bidding program and referred the matter to the Office of Administrative Law Judge for hearing and analysis of Met Ed’s capacity needs and of the specific design of the bidding program. 2

Met Ed submitted its proposal for the design of the program, which included “Ceiling Prices” that were developed unilaterally as the maximum acceptable rates for bids. Al *630 though hearings before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) had been initiated in that proceeding, they were suspended as negotiations approached settlement. The ALJ issued a recommended decision urging the Commission to accept the “Joint Petition for Settlement” submitted by most of the parties, which included “Section IV, Terms and Conditions of Settlement” (Bidding Program Settlement). A listing of the Ceiling Prices was incorporated as an exhibit to the Joint Petition for Settlement. By order of December 12, 1991, the PUC approved the Joint Petition for Settlement, with slight modifications, subject to a period of twenty days for parties other than the Joint Petitioners to file exceptions. GPU Industrial Intervenors (GPUII), an ad hoc organization of large industrial customers of Met Ed, 3 had been granted intervenor status but was not a signatory to the Joint Petition for Settlement. When neither GPUII nor any other party filed objections, the PUC closed the docket in the bidding program proceeding.

In the later proceeding, from which the present petition for review arises, Pyropower Development Corporation (Pyropower) and Community Central Energy Corporation (Community Central) filed a petition in April of 1991 requesting a declaration that the order in the bidding program proceeding did not prohibit Met Ed from entering into a contract for purchase of power from Pyropower’s proposed Scranton Energy Project (Scranton Project) and an order directing Met Ed to negotiate and execute such a contract (the Scranton Project proceeding). The Scranton Project was described as a 100-Megawatt (MW), anthracite-culm-fired cogeneration plant, which is to be a QF for purposes of Section 210 of PURPA. 4 Pyropower’s petition alleged that Met Ed would have need for electric *631 generating capacity around the time of the expected completion of the Scranton Project. Although Scranton is not in Met Ed’s service territory, the utility located there agreed to wheel the purchased power to Met Ed. Community Central owns and operates the Scranton District Heating System (Scranton Heating System), a PUC-regulated supplier of steam heat in Scranton, whose remaining customers are primarily commercial and governmental entities. The petition also asserted that constructing the Scranton Project would have the ancillary effect of salvaging the Scranton Heating System, which allegedly is in danger of imminent failure due to technical inefficiencies and severe financial problems. Included in the Scranton Project is a proposal to rebuild the steam distribution system.

Met Ed opposed Pyropower’s petition for the same reason that it refused to negotiate with Pyropower — Met Ed maintained that Pyropower must submit its proposal as a bid under the prospective bidding program. By opinion and order of August 15, 1991, the PUC concluded that the Scranton Project is “overwhelmingly in the public interest” both because of its own inherent value and because of the benefits relating to the Scranton Heating System. The PUC declared that a separate agreement with Pyropower was not barred. It directed Met Ed to negotiate an agreement with purchase rates at or below FAC as calculated according to a formula provided for this purpose in 52 Pa.Code § 57.34(c) and to submit the agreement for approval within sixty days. The Commission stated that, after an agreement was submitted, ratepayers would have an opportunity to be heard regarding a comparison of the contract rates to Met Ed’s avoided costs, and that the order did not constitute rate recovery approval of amounts that Met Ed will be paying to Pyropower for capacity and energy.

Met Ed and Scranton Energy Partners (SEP), the successor in interest to Pyropower, negotiated an agreement (Scranton Project Agreement or contract), and Met Ed petitioned the Commission in October of 1991 to approve its terms and to approve full and current recovery from ratepayers for Met Ed’s payments under it. The rates for the purchase of power, *632 including both energy and capacity components, were set at 99.86% of the Ceiling Prices from the bidding program proceeding. Met Ed’s calculation of the net present value of payments to be made to SEP under the contract totalled approximately $1,485 billion. Comparing contract payments to payments of the full Ceiling Prices, Met Ed calculated an ultimate savings to ratepayers of $700,000, to be realized in the last year of the twenty-year contract.

Met Ed provided bill-insert notice to its ratepayers of the filing of the petition. GPUII filed an answer in opposition, asserting (1) that the proposed recovery of costs on an energy-only basis through the Energy Cost Rate mechanism was improper; 5 (2) that the contract prices of 99.86% of Ceiling Prices were too high because the price would be lower if the Scranton Project were subjected to bidding; (3) that front-end-loaded payments under the contract were improper; and (4) that the use of a “suspense account” rather than a “tracking account” to provide security for Met Ed against failure by SEP to deliver power was incorrect. GPUII requested a full evidentiary hearing on the petition. Other groups and individuals filed formal and informal objections as well.

In an opinion and order of May 26, 1992, the Commission approved the Scranton Project Agreement and Met Ed’s full and current recovery of costs under it. Concerning the propriety of the contract prices, the PUC stated that it had examined the Ceiling Prices in the separate bidding program proceeding and, by approving the bidding program, had “acknowledged” that those prices were at or below avoided costs.

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Bluebook (online)
628 A.2d 1187, 156 Pa. Commw. 626, 1993 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gpu-industrial-intervenors-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pacommwct-1993.