In re Block Island Power Company Petition for Declaratory Judgment

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 10, 2023
Docket20-115
StatusPublished

This text of In re Block Island Power Company Petition for Declaratory Judgment (In re Block Island Power Company Petition for Declaratory Judgment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Block Island Power Company Petition for Declaratory Judgment, (R.I. 2023).

Opinion

Supreme Court

No. 2020-115-M.P. (Docket No. 4688)

In re Block Island Power Company : Petition for Declaratory Judgment.

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone (401) 222-3258 or Email opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published. Supreme Court

In re Block Island Power Company : Petition for Declaratory Judgment.

Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, Long, JJ.

OPINION Chief Justice Suttell, for the Court. This Court issued a writ of certiorari to

review a decision and judgment of the Public Utilities Commission (the PUC)

regarding the Town of New Shoreham Project, enacted by G.L. 1956 § 39-26.1-7.

The petitioner, Block Island Utility District d/b/a Block Island Power Company

(BIPCo), requests a reversal of the PUC’s decision to deny BIPCo’s petition for a

declaratory judgment. BIPCo sought a declaratory judgment declaring that the

enabling act, specifically § 39-26.1-7(f), requires the costs for BIPCo’s

interconnection facilities and backup transformer to be socialized across all electric

ratepayers in Rhode Island, not just those in the Town of New Shoreham (Block

Island or the town).1 As an intervening party, Narragansett Electric Company d/b/a

National Grid (National Grid) argued before the PUC that § 39-26.1-7(f) does not

1 This opinion will use the terms Block Island, the Town of New Shoreham, and the town, interchangeably.

-1- encompass BIPCo’s interconnection facilities or backup transformer and, therefore,

BIPCo and its ratepayers are solely responsible for those costs. The PUC issued a

decision and judgment against BIPCo. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the

decision of the PUC.

I

Facts and Travel

We glean the facts in this case from the PUC’s decision and judgment, the

transcripts of both open meetings held before the PUC, and the submissions of the

parties.

The Town of New Shoreham Project

In 2009, the Legislature enacted § 39-26.1-7 (the enabling act), which

authorized the Town of New Shoreham Project (the project). The enabling act

greenlit the construction of a five-turbine wind farm off the coast of Block Island,

which is twelve miles south of Rhode Island’s mainland. Specifically, the enabling

act declared that the project would “facilitate the construction of a small-scale

offshore wind [farm] * * * including an undersea transmission cable that

interconnects Block Island to the mainland[.]” Section 39-26.1-7(a).2 Within the

2 The Block Island wind farm was completed in 2016 and BIPCo interconnected to it in May 2017. There is no dispute among the parties that the interconnection exists and operates today. The matter before this Court concerns the allocation of certain costs between BIPCo and National Grid, according to the terms of the enabling act.

-2- statute, the Legislature described its vision for this small-scale wind farm to be a

“demonstration project[.]” Section 39-26.1-7(a). As the first of its kind in the nation,

the Block Island wind farm was meant to symbolize Rhode Island’s unique role

pioneering solutions for renewable energy across the United States.

Section (a) of the enabling act enumerated four public-policy goals driving

the project; namely, to (1) “position the state to take advantage of the economic

development benefits of the emerging offshore wind industry”; (2) “promote the

development of renewable energy sources that increase the nation’s energy

independence from foreign sources of fossil fuels”; (3) “reduce the adverse

environmental and health impacts of traditional fossil fuel energy sources”; and (4)

“provide the town of New Shoreham with an electrical connection to the mainland.”

Section 39-26.1-7(a).

When the Legislature passed the enabling act, Block Island was not at all

connected to Rhode Island’s mainland electrical grid. For many years, without a

hookup to mainland power, Block Island sourced its electricity exclusively from

diesel-powered generators. These generators were operated by Block Island’s sole

electric utility provider, BIPCo.3 One of the imperatives for the enabling act was to,

at last, provide Block Island with an alternative power source that would render its

polluting diesel generators obsolete.

3 At the time the enabling act was passed, BIPCo was a privately owned company.

-3- The vehicle for this new power source—and the subject at the heart of this

case—is an underwater transmission cable. See § 39-26.1-7(f). This cable is but one

piece of the multifaceted project, which includes the five-turbine wind farm, an

underwater transmission cable connecting the wind farm to a National Grid-owned

and -operated substation on Block Island, the substation, and an underwater

transmission cable connecting the substation to the mainland grid in the Town of

Narragansett. Of the two transmission cables involved in the project, the one

relevant to this case is the second—the cable that runs from National Grid’s

substation on Block Island to the mainland. See § 39-26.1-7(a) (contemplating “an

undersea transmission cable that interconnects Block Island to the mainland”).

This system operates by transmitting wind-generated power from the turbines

to the National Grid substation via the first transmission cable, at which point it

diverts energy from the substation to BIPCo’s local distribution system and then

transfers the remaining power, unused by BIPCo’s customers, to the mainland grid

via the second transmission cable. Thus, the substation serves as the juncture—or

interconnection—between BIPCo’s distribution system and National Grid’s network

accessing the mainland.

The two pieces of infrastructure at issue in this case are (1) BIPCo’s

interconnection facilities and (2) the backup transformer. BIPCo’s interconnection

facilities include the “wooden poles, overhead lines, a switch, and circuit breaker”

-4- required to connect its local distribution system to the National Grid substation

where it receives power from the wind farm. The backup transformer would, as the

name suggests, act as a backup for the principal transformer that powers BIPCo’s

interconnection to the substation.4 BIPCo argues that both units—the

interconnection facilities and backup transformer—are covered in the cost allocation

scheme laid out in section (f) of the enabling act.

Section (f) of the enabling act governs the construction, ownership, and cost

allocation associated with the transmission cable project. Section 39-26.1-7(f). In

relevant part, section (f) provides that “the [Division of Public Utilities and Carriers]

shall support transmission rates and conditions that allow for the costs related to the

transmission cable and related facilities to be charged in transmission rates in a

manner that socializes the costs throughout Rhode Island.” Id. (emphasis added).

This portion of section (f) provides the basis for BIPCo’s claim that its

4 Typically, utility servicers retain spare or backup transformers because weather and manufacturing defects commonly cause outages.

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