Met-Ed Industrial Users Group v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

960 A.2d 189, 2008 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 534
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 7, 2008
Docket587 C.D. 2007, 700 C.D. 2007, 701 C.D. 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 960 A.2d 189 (Met-Ed Industrial Users Group 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
Met-Ed Industrial Users Group v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 960 A.2d 189, 2008 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 534 (Pa. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge FRIEDMAN.

Met-Ed Industrial Users Group and Pe-nelec Industrial Customer Alliance (together, Customers), Metropolitan Edison Company and Pennsylvania Electric Company (together, Utilities) and Irvin A. Po-powsky, Consumer Advocate (OCA 1 ), petition for review of the January 11, 2007, order of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC). We affirm.

In April 2006, the Utilities filed with the PUC Petitions for Approval of a Rate Transition Plan. The Customers and the OCA filed Formal Complaints in opposition to certain aspects of the plan, and the PUC ordered that Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) hold hearings on the matters. (PUC op. at 3-4, 6.)

After considering the issues, the ALJs issued a recommended decision addressing the questions raised about the plan. The Customers, the OCA and the Utilities each filed exceptions with the PUC, which disposed of the exceptions in its January 11, 2007, opinion and order. The parties each *193 sought reconsideration, but the PUC denied the requests with respect to the issues before us here. Now, the Customers, the OCA and the Utilities each petition this court for review of the PUC’s determinations. 2

I. Utilities Issues

A. Generation Rate Cap Exception

1. Background

The restructuring of the electric utility industry under the Electricity Generation Customer Choice and Competition Act (Competition Act), 66 Pa.C.S. §§ 2801-2812, separated the three traditional functions of electric utilities, i.e., the generation, transmission and distribution of electricity. With the separation of these functions, Pennsylvania residents were able to choose to purchase their electricity from an electric generation supplier other than the local utility. If consumers did not make a choice, the local utility was required to provide them with electricity as the Provider of Last Resort (PLR). AR-IPPA v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 792 A.2d 686 (Pa.Cmwlth. 2002), appeal denied, 572 Pa. 736, 815 A.2d 634 (2003).

Rate caps were established in exchange for utilities being able to recover their transition or stranded costs from ratepayers. Id, The rate caps for electric transmission and distribution expired on December 31, 2004, but the rate cap for electric generation will not expire until December 31, 2010. (PUC’s op. at 28.) Until that time, a utility may request an exception to the generation rate cap where the “utility is subject to significant increases in the unit rate of fuel for utility generation or the price of purchased power that are outside of the control of the utility and that would not allow the utility to earn a fair rate of return.” 66 Pa.C.S. § 2804(4)(iii)(D).

Here, the Utilities sought an exception to the generation rate cap, claiming that they are subject to significant increases in the price of purchased power that are outside of their control. In support of their request, the Utilities presented evidence showing that they had entered into various long-term contracts for base load PLR power but that those contracts did not cover the Utilities’ peak load PLR supply needs. To meet peak load needs, the Utilities entered into a Partial Requirements Agreement with FirstEnergy Solutions (FES Agreement), an electric generation affiliate of the Utilities’ parent corporation, FirstEnergy Corporation (FirstEnergy). The term of the FES Agreement was one year, after which FES had the ability to terminate the agreement on short notice. The FES Agreement worked well while the market cost of power was below rate cap levels. However, when it appeared that the cost of power would remain above rate cap levels, FES terminated the agreement.

Relying on this court’s holding in ARIP-PA, the PUC denied the Utilities’ request for an exception, ruling that the Utilities failed to establish that the increases in the price of purchased power were outside of the control of the Utilities. The PUC found that the Utilities had control over their decision to enter into the FES Agreement, which allowed FES to terminate the agreement before the rate cap expiration date and to leave the Utilities *194 without sufficient peak load PLR power. Although the Utilities argued that it was not possible for them to enter into long-term contracts for peak load PLR power, the PUC found that the Utilities could have entered into a full requirements contract for both base load and peak load PLR needs, instead of a partial requirements contract with FES.

2. ARIPPA

Before this court, the Utilities first argue that the PUC erred in relying on ARIPPA because the facts in ARIPPA are distinguishable from the facts in this case. We agree that the facts in ARIPPA are not identical to those before the court here; nevertheless, the holding in ARIP-PA is instructive.

In ARIPPA this court affirmed the PUC’s approval of the merger of GPU, Inc. (GPU) with FirstEnergy. 3 This court also reviewed the PUC’s decision to grant GPU’s request for an exception to the electric generation rate cap based on the PUC’s determination that increases in the price of purchased power were outside of GPU’s control.

In seeking an exception in ARIPPA GPU asserted that: (1) GPU was required to provide PLR power to more consumers than envisioned at the time of the restructuring of the electric utility industry; (2) prior to its merger with FirstEnergy, GPU made a reasonable and prudent decision to sell all of its electric generation assets; (3) thus, GPU needed to purchase electric generation on the open market to meet its PLR obligations; (4) wholesale electric prices climbed well above the levels of the capped rates; and (5) GPU had no control over the volatility of those market prices.

This court concluded that GPU failed to establish that it was subject to price increases that were outside of its control. In reaching that conclusion, this court stated:

[T]he term “outside of the control” does not mean[] that ratepayers will act as the surety for companies that act to maximize their return, and not, as other utilities did, to protect their exposure from known and definable obligations.
An event “outside of the control” of a person or group typically refers to sudden illness, fire, theft, acts of God and natural disasters, not situations where a party can take actions to protect himself or herself from risk. Strategic business planning always involves decisions on how much risk to accept and where the burden of risk is placed. In this case, GPU Energy made a choice to divest itself of its generation assets and, unlike other utilities, not to protect itself by entering into long-term contracts within the rate caps to protect itself from PLR costs. Instead, it made a bet that electric rates would remain below the rate caps and chose to maximize its profits. This was not an event outside of its control, but a conscious business decision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
960 A.2d 189, 2008 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/met-ed-industrial-users-group-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pacommwct-2008.