In the Matter of The Application of Grain Belt Express LLC for an Amendment to Its Certificate of Convenience and necessity Authorizing It to Construct, Own, Operate, Control, Manage and Maintain a High Voltage, Direct Current Transmission Line and Associated Converter Station; Missouri Public Service Commission v. Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Soybean Association and Missouri Cattlemen's Association

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 29, 2024
DocketWD86854
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of The Application of Grain Belt Express LLC for an Amendment to Its Certificate of Convenience and necessity Authorizing It to Construct, Own, Operate, Control, Manage and Maintain a High Voltage, Direct Current Transmission Line and Associated Converter Station; Missouri Public Service Commission v. Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Soybean Association and Missouri Cattlemen's Association (In the Matter of The Application of Grain Belt Express LLC for an Amendment to Its Certificate of Convenience and necessity Authorizing It to Construct, Own, Operate, Control, Manage and Maintain a High Voltage, Direct Current Transmission Line and Associated Converter Station; Missouri Public Service Commission v. Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Soybean Association and Missouri Cattlemen's Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri 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 the Matter of The Application of Grain Belt Express LLC for an Amendment to Its Certificate of Convenience and necessity Authorizing It to Construct, Own, Operate, Control, Manage and Maintain a High Voltage, Direct Current Transmission Line and Associated Converter Station; Missouri Public Service Commission v. Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Soybean Association and Missouri Cattlemen's Association, (Mo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

IN THE MATTER OF THE ) APPLICATION OF GRAIN BELT ) EXPRESS LLC FOR AN ) AMENDMENT TO ITS CERTIFICATE ) OF CONVENIENCE AND NECESSITY ) AUTHORIZING IT TO CONSTRUCT, ) OWN, OPERATE, CONTROL, ) MANAGE ) AND MAINTAIN A HIGH VOLTAGE, ) DIRECT CURRENT TRANSMISSION ) LINE AND ASSOCIATED ) CONVERTER ) STATION; ) ) WD86854 MISSOURI PUBLIC SERVICE ) OPINION FILED: COMMISSION, ET AL., ) OCTOBER 29, 2024 ) Respondents, ) ) v. ) ) MISSOURI FARM BUREAU, ) MISSOURI SOYBEAN ASSOCIATION ) AND MISSOURI CATTLEMEN'S ) ASSOCIATION, ) ) Appellants. )

Appeal from the Public Service Commission

Before Division Four: Anthony Rex Gabbert, Chief Judge, Presiding, Mark D. Pfeiffer, Judge, Gary D. Witt, Judge

Missouri Farm Bureau Federation, Missouri Cattlemen’s Association, and

Missouri Soybean Association appeal the order of the Public Service Commission of the

State of Missouri. In their first point on appeal, they claim that the Public Service

Commission erred in relying on testimony because it limited cross-examination of that testimony. In their second point on appeal, they claim that the Public Service

Commission erred in denying an application for rehearing. In their third point on appeal,

they claim the Public Service Commission erred when it ignored expert witness

testimony. The order is affirmed.

Facts

The Public Service Commission (“the Commission”) is the state agency

authorized to regulate public utilities in the State of Missouri. Grain Belt Express, LLC

(“Grain Belt”) is a limited liability company organized under the laws of Indiana. Grain

Belt is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Invenergy Transmission LLC, a Delaware company

and affiliate of Chicago-based Invenergy LLC. The Invenergy companies develop

renewable energy and transmission projects. They control the financing, construction,

and management of the Grain Belt Express Transmission Line. Grain Belt is a public

utility subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission.

Grain Belt plans to build a high-voltage direct current electric transmission line

called the Grain Belt Express. The Grain Belt Express would transmit wind and solar

energy from the plains of Western Kansas to the eastern United States through delivery

points in Missouri and Indiana. Grain Belt’s customers would consist principally of

renewable energy producers and wholesale buyers of electricity, such as utilities,

municipalities, and commercial and industrial customers. The Grain Belt Express would

not provide retail electric service to end-use customers in Missouri.

2 In 2014, Grain Belt applied to the Commission for a certificate of convenience and

necessity for the Missouri portion of the Grain Belt Express. The Commission evaluated

the application under the five criteria known as the Tartan Factors.

The factors considered are: a) there must be a need for the service; b) the applicant must be qualified to provide the proposed service; c) the applicant must have the financial ability to provide the service; d) the applicant’s proposal must be economically feasible; and e) the service must promote the public interest.

Missouri Landowners All. v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 593 S.W.3d 632, 638 (Mo. App. E.D.

2019). The Commission found that Grain Belt did not demonstrate that the project was

needed, economically feasible, or in the public interest. The Commission denied Grain

Belt’s application.

In August 2016, Grain Belt filed a modified application with the Commission for

authorization to build the Missouri portion of the Grain Belt Express. In August 2017,

the Commission rejected Grain Belt’s application on procedural grounds. Grain Belt

appealed the Commission’s decision to the Missouri Court of Appeals, Eastern District.

The Eastern District transferred the case to the Missouri Supreme Court. The Missouri

Supreme Court concluded that procedural grounds did not prevent approving Grain Belt’s

application. It remanded for the Commission to determine whether Grain Belt’s

proposed utility project was necessary or convenient for the public service. Grain Belt

Express Clean Line, LLC v. Public Service Comm’n, 555 S.W.3d 469, 474 (Mo. banc

2018). In March 2019, the Commission found that the project satisfied the Tartan

Factors. It granted Grain Belt a certificate of convenience and necessity (“the

3 Certificate”) and approved Grain Belt’s application to build the Missouri portion of the

proposed transmission line. The Eastern District affirmed that decision in December

2019. Missouri Landowners All., 593 S.W.3d 632.

The Certificate granted in 2019 authorized Grain Belt to construct, own, operate,

control, manage, and maintain a +600kV transmission line and associated facilities. The

line would cross the Kansas River south of St. Joseph and traverse Buchanan, Clinton,

Caldwell, Carroll, Chariton, Randolph, Monroe, and Ralls counties in Missouri. Grain

Belt was authorized to build a converter station in Ralls County with the capacity to

deliver 500 megawatts of electricity to the regional electrical grid. The transmission line

would cross the property of approximately 570 Missouri landowners. The Commission

imposed conditions on the Certificate granted in 2019 relating to financing,

interconnection, nearby utility facilities, construction, maintenance, landowner

interactions, and right-of-way acquisition.

On August 24, 2022 Grain Belt filed an application with the Commission to amend

the Certificate. It proposed relocating the converter station from Ralls County to Monroe

County and increasing the station’s capacity from 500 megawatts to 2500 megawatts. A

modified alternating current tie line called the “Tiger Connector” would link the Monroe

County converter station with points of interconnection to regional transmission facilities

40 miles away in Callaway County.

This expanded version of the Grain Belt Express is known as “the Project.” Grain

Belt proposed constructing the transmission line in two phases. Phase I would begin in

4 Kansas and span most of Missouri. Phase II would extend from the Monroe County

converter station to the transmission line’s terminus in Sullivan County, Indiana. Phase I

is expected to be in service by the end of 2027.

In support of its application, Grain Belt filed written testimony from expert

witnesses regarding how the Project met the Tartan factors. Relevant to this appeal, two

of those witnesses were M.R. (“Valuation Expert”) and Dr. D.L. (“Public Benefit

Expert”). Valuation Expert filed a report and testimony projecting the value of the

transmission line to Missourians in terms of lower energy prices and reduced emissions.

Public Benefit Expert filed a report and testimony calculating the transmission line’s

benefit to Missouri in terms of jobs, worker earnings, and fiscal impacts.

The Commission issued notice of the application and provided an opportunity for

interested persons to intervene. Relevant to this appeal, the Commission granted

intervention to Missouri Farm Bureau Federation, Missouri Cattlemen’s Association,

Missouri Soybean Association, and Missouri Joint Municipal Electric Utility Commission

d/b/a Missouri Electric Commission (“Missouri Electric Commission”).1 The

Commission conducted three public hearings to receive comments from the general

public.

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In the Matter of The Application of Grain Belt Express LLC for an Amendment to Its Certificate of Convenience and necessity Authorizing It to Construct, Own, Operate, Control, Manage and Maintain a High Voltage, Direct Current Transmission Line and Associated Converter Station; Missouri Public Service Commission v. Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Soybean Association and Missouri Cattlemen's Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-application-of-grain-belt-express-llc-for-an-amendment-moctapp-2024.