In Re Application of Consumers Energy Company to Increase Rates

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 28, 2023
Docket356793
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Application of Consumers Energy Company to Increase Rates (In Re Application of Consumers Energy Company to Increase Rates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Application of Consumers Energy Company to Increase Rates, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re APPLICATION OF CONSUMERS ENERGY COMPANY TO INCREASE RATES.

RESIDENTIAL CUSTOMER GROUP, UNPUBLISHED December 28, 2023 Appellant,

v No. 356793 Public Service Commission MICHIGAN PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION, LC No. 00-020697

Appellee,

and

CONSUMERS ENERGY COMPANY,

Petitioner-Appellee.

Before: M. J. KELLY, P.J., and CAMERON and HOOD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Intervenor Residential Customer Group (RCG) appeals as of right the Michigan Public Service Commission (PSC) order granting petitioner, Consumers Energy Company (Consumers Energy), authority to increase electric rates. RCG challenges the PSC’s approval of a projected test year that was forward looking, consisting of 12 consecutive months in the future, for the purpose of determining electric rates. It argues that the test year (and that any such test year) is unlawful and unreasonable. We have rejected similar arguments raised by RCG in other cases, including In re Application of Consumers Energy Co to Increase Rates, 338 Mich App 239; 979 NW2d 702 (2021). We therefore disagree and affirm PSC’s order.

I. BACKGROUND

-1- This case started with Consumer Energy’s February 2020 application before the PSC seeking to increase its electric rates by $244 million. When proposing its rate increase, Consumers Energy used a 12-month period ending on December 31, 2021 (in other words, the 12 consecutive months of calendar year 2021), as the projected test year.

For the purposes of this appeal, the facts relating to the increase in electric rates are irrelevant; rather, the critical facts relate to the methodology for the proposed rate increase. Relevant to the contested methodology, Consumers Energy filed with its application written testimony of Heidi J. Myers, Consumers Energy’s Director of Revenue Requirements and Analysis. According to Myers’s written testimony, although Consumers Energy proposed using the 2021 calendar year as the projected test year in this case, it also looked at “the 2018 calendar year as the historical year because it is the most recent historical calendar period with final regulatory financial statements that could be used for the filing.” There was no revenue deficiency for the 2018 historical year. Rather, Myers, “calculated a historical year jurisdictional electric revenue sufficiency for the 12-month period [that] ended December 31, 2018[,] of $21,835,000.” Myers written testimony also indicated that Consumers Energy “selected the 12 months ending December 31, 2021[,] as the projected test year in this proceeding.” Financial analysis of the projected test year of 2021 indicated a revenue deficiency of $244,357,000.

Following Consumers Energy’s application, in March 2020, RCG, a nonprofit corporation and group association comprised of residential electric customers of Consumers Energy, moved to intervene. Without opposition, the administrative law judge (ALJ) granted RCG intervenor status, along with several other organizations not part of this appeal.

Over multiple days from late July 2020 to August 2020, the ALJ held an evidentiary hearing. During the hearing, the parties had an opportunity to cross-examine witnesses who provided direct examination testimony in written form, a common process in PSC cases. Again, the substantive testimony and discussion at the evidentiary hearing is not critical to this appeal. Notably, no party presented testimony countering Consumers Energy’s use of the 2018 calendar year as the historical period or contesting its use of the 2021 calendar year as the projected test year.

Following the hearing, RCG filed its initial brief in the PSC. As on appeal, it characterized the projected test year as lasting 22 months because the test year ended on December 31, 2021, approximately 22 months after Consumers Energy filed its application in February 2020. RCG argued that the 2018 historical period should be used to determine rates or that, if a projected test year was to be used, it must be “anchored” or begin either at the end of the historical year, i.e., December 31, 2018, or on the date of the filing of the application to increase rates, i.e., February 27, 2020. RCG argued that such an “anchoring” requirement for a projected test year would harmonize MCL 460.6a(1) with other timing requirements in utility rate cases (as will be discussed in more detail later). It further argued that using a projected test year too far in the future would fail to comply with the principle that a utility’s rate base must consist of capital invested in plants that are “used and useful” or that investments or other costs must be reasonably and prudently incurred. Noting that there was a revenue sufficiency or excess for the 2018 historical year, RCG asserted that using the 2021 projected test year to raise rates would result in unreasonable and unjust rates. It did not present any testimony or evidence to support its argument or counter the evidence presented by Consumers Energy at the evidentiary hearing.

-2- Consumers Energy responded arguing that RCG’s proposal to use the 2018 historical period would not result in just and reasonable rates because Consumers Energy was undertaking significant investments in its electric system. It contended that use of the 2021 projected test year better reflected business conditions during the period when the rates were expected to take effect. It further argued that RCG failed to present any testimony or evidence to support its proposal to use the 2018 historical period to establish rates. Although Consumers Energy had presented information regarding the 2018 historical period, this was done in order to comply with the PSC’s filing requirements; Consumers Energy did not offer the 2018 historical information for the purpose of setting rates.

The ALJ issued her proposal for decision, which among other recommendations, proposed accepting Consumers Energy’s test year. It noted that Consumers Energy had used the 2021 calendar year as the projected test year and that no party had presented testimony supporting an alternative test year. It rejected RCG’s argument in its initial brief that rates should be based on the 2018 historical year and that a projected test year consisting of a future consecutive 12-month period as referenced in MCL 460.6a(1) must be anchored by the end of the historical period or the date that the application was filed, stating:

Based on a review of the arguments of the parties and the [PSC’s] decisions in recent rate cases, which rejected the use of an historical test period raised for the first time in briefs and lacking supporting evidence, the ALJ finds that RCG’s request should be rejected, and the projected test year ending December 31, 2021, should be used in this case.

It nonetheless observed the benefits of the “used and useful” principle, considering that ratepayers are asked “to prepay a return of and on assets that may not be used in the provision of utility service for a year (or more, in the case of a project that has a multi-year timeline from the beginning to competition) . . . .” The ALJ further stated that there was no legal requirement that items be used and useful to be included in the rate base, the “used and useful” principle has been employed to protect ratepayers from unreasonable and excessive costs, and the principle was consistent with MCL 460.6a(1), which allowed a utility company to base its request for increased rates on projected revenues and costs. Finally, the ALJ stated that “concerns regarding the reliability of the company’s projections are considered in the context of specific challenges to the company’s presentations.”

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Bluebook (online)
In Re Application of Consumers Energy Company to Increase Rates, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-application-of-consumers-energy-company-to-increase-rates-michctapp-2023.