In re Petition of Vermont Gas Systems, Inc. (Catherine Bock, Appellant)

2024 VT 2, 312 A.3d 519
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 12, 2024
Docket23-AP-084
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 VT 2 (In re Petition of Vermont Gas Systems, Inc. (Catherine Bock, Appellant)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Petition of Vermont Gas Systems, Inc. (Catherine Bock, Appellant), 2024 VT 2, 312 A.3d 519 (Vt. 2024).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.

2024 VT 2

No. 23-AP-084

In re Petition of Vermont Gas Systems, Inc. Supreme Court (Catherine Bock, Appellant) On Appeal from Public Utility Commission

October Term, 2023

Anthony Z. Roisman, Chair

James A. Dumont, Law Office of James A. Dumont, PC, Bristol, for Appellant.

Owen J. McClain and Matthew J. Greer of Sheehey Furlong & Behm P.C., Burlington, for Appellee Vermont Gas Systems, Inc.

Eric B. Guzman, Special Counsel, Montpelier, for Appellee Vermont Department of Public Service.

PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Eaton, Carroll, Cohen and Waples, JJ.

¶ 1. COHEN, J. This appeal concerns an order of the Vermont Public Utility

Commission approving a contract under 30 V.S.A. § 248(i) for the purchase of out-of-state

renewable natural gas by petitioner, Vermont Gas Systems, Inc. (VGS). On appeal, intervenor

Catherine Bock disputes the Commission’s findings with respect to the contract’s contribution

towards satisfying emissions reductions under the Vermont Global Warming Solutions Act of

2020, 2019, No. 153 (Adj. Sess.) (GWSA). Intervenor also challenges the Commission’s finding

that the contract, with a condition imposed by the Commission, will comply with least-cost

planning principles. For the reasons that follow, we affirm. I. Facts & Procedural History

¶ 2. The following facts are drawn from the Commission’s decision adopting the

hearing officer’s findings of fact and are undisputed unless otherwise noted. In June 2022, VGS

petitioned the Commission, pursuant to 30 V.S.A. § 248(i),1 for the approval of a contract with

Archaea Energy Marketing LLC (Archaea). The contract, which has an initial term of fourteen-

and-a-half years, requires VGS to purchase a minimum volume of renewable natural gas (RNG)

that will be produced and transported from a landfill operated by Archaea in Waterloo, New York.

The contract was part of an effort by VGS to invest in nonfossil gas (such as RNG) and incorporate

RNG into its gas supply for the purpose of meeting regulatory requirements and reducing

greenhouse gas emissions.

¶ 3. Among its many provisions, the contract allows VGS to annually increase the

purchase volume of RNG from Archaea by a specific amount. It also allows VGS to either retain

RNG it purchases or designate volumes of RNG for Archaea to resell through renewable

transportation fuel markets.2 If VGS exercises its option to resell RNG into those markets, its

share of the proceeds would be applied towards the total cost of the RNG purchased, thereby

reducing the cost for its customers.

¶ 4. In response to the petition, and upon the recommendation of the Department of

Public Service, the Commission initiated an investigation into the contract pursuant to § 248(i)(3)

1 In general, 30 V.S.A. § 248(i) requires a company to obtain the Commission’s approval of certain types of contracts. This includes any contract for the purchase of out-of-state gas and exceeds a period of five years. Id. § 248(i)(1)(B). 2 Although not entirely clear based on the record and briefing, the resale option apparently does not simply concern the resale of physical RNG through renewable transportation fuel markets. Rather, it appears that the resale option contemplates the sale of carbon credits that are associated with RNG. In essence, RNG is assigned a carbon intensity which translates into one ton of carbon avoided, and the amount of carbon avoided through RNG is assigned a value that entities can purchase as a credit. Entities purchasing RNG-associated credits do so to meet both federal obligations and state-mandated caps on carbon emissions. For the purpose of simplicity, however, we refer to resales of any type pursuant to the contract’s option as the resale of RNG. 2 and appointed a hearing officer to conduct proceedings. Intervenor, a ratepaying customer of VGS,

successfully moved to intervene. According to intervenor, the purpose of her intervention was to

protect her interest, as a ratepayer, of any increase to rates for an energy source that intervenor

claimed has no environmental benefit.

A. Hearing Officer’s Proposal For Decision and Findings of Fact

¶ 5. After receiving prefiled testimony, exhibits, and public comments, and after

conducting an evidentiary hearing, the hearing officer submitted a proposal for decision containing

findings of fact and recommending that the Commission approve the contract subject to the

Department’s proposed condition. Relevant here, the hearing officer determined that, for any

volumes of RNG resold into the transportation fuel markets, VGS would apply its share of the

proceeds against the overall cost of RNG within its supply portfolio. This would allow VGS to

“buy down” the cost of the RNG volumes delivered to VGS’s retail customers.

¶ 6. The hearing officer found that the contract would provide meaningful and

appreciable environmental benefits, relying on a host of supportive predicate findings. In

particular, the hearing officer found that VGS had a three-pronged strategy for reducing

greenhouse gas emissions and for responding to regulatory and legal requirements (including the

GWSA): (1) weatherization and efficiency; (2) in-home installations of devices such as heat pump

water heaters, hybrid heating systems, and geothermal systems; and (3) supply of low-carbon

alternative energy sources such as RNG. The contract was intended to further VGS’s third

strategy. The hearing officer found that RNG has a carbon intensity of twenty-six percent to forty-

three percent less than its geologic gas counterpart. As such, each unit of geologic gas displaced

by RNG in VGS’s supply portfolio would result in a reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by

those amounts. Thus, the hearing officer found that if VGS replaced ten percent of the geologic

gas contained in its supply portfolio with RNG, it would reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by

approximately four percent.

3 ¶ 7. The hearing officer found that the contract was also consistent with the Vermont

2022 Comprehensive Energy Plan, which itself was intended by the Department to effectuate the

emission reduction goals required under the GWSA. Underlying that finding was evidence

concerning not only the environmental benefits associated with the contract, but also the contract’s

cost-effectiveness. The hearing officer determined that the best method for assessing the cost-

effectiveness of the contract’s environmental benefits would be to compare the cost paid for RNG

under the contract with the “social cost of carbon.” This method provides a dollar estimate of the

future damage caused by a metric-ton increase in carbon dioxide emissions or, equivalently, the

benefits of reducing those emissions by the same amount in a given year. The hearing officer

found that the contract would be consistent with the Comprehensive Energy Plan and the GWSA

if the cost paid for emission reductions resulting from RNG remained below the calculated social

cost of carbon.

¶ 8. The proposed decision also detailed the regulatory backdrop of the contract,

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2024 VT 2, 312 A.3d 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-petition-of-vermont-gas-systems-inc-catherine-bock-appellant-vt-2024.