Penn Renewables, LLC v. PA PUC

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 13, 2026
Docket337 C.D. 2025
StatusUnpublished
AuthorDumas

This text of Penn Renewables, LLC v. PA PUC (Penn Renewables, LLC v. PA PUC) 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
Penn Renewables, LLC v. PA PUC, (Pa. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Penn Renewables, LLC, : Petitioner : : No. 337 C.D. 2025 v. : : Argued: February 4, 2026 Pennsylvania Public Utility : Commission, : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE DUMAS FILED: March 13, 2026

Penn Renewables, LLC, (Penn) has petitioned this Court to review the opinion and order (Opinion) issued on February 20, 2025, by the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (Commission). Through this Opinion, the Commission adopted a recommended decision issued by two administrative law judges (ALJs), denied Penn’s exceptions thereto, and granted a non-unanimous settlement approval petition (Settlement Petition) that authorized a modified version of UGI Utilities, Inc. – Electric Division’s (UGI) proposed default service plan (DSP). We affirm. I. BACKGROUND1 UGI is a Commission-regulated public utility that generates electricity and provides electrical service to approximately 62,000 customers in Luzerne and Wyoming Counties. Under the Electricity Generation Customer Choice and Competition Act (Competition Act),2 UGI is considered both an electric distribution company (EDC)3 and a default service provider (Provider).4 Per Section 2807(e)(3.6) of the Competition Act,5 UGI is required to periodically file and gain approval of DSPs covering the area in which it is the Provider. Such a plan must articulate how UGI will accomplish its Provider-based duties and must include “a strategy for procuring generation supply, a schedule for implementation, and a rate design to recover [its] reasonable costs.” Op. at 3. As for Penn, it “is a solar development company that utilizes solar voltaics and whose business plan is to develop many small scale, distribution level solar arrays throughout the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.” Op. at 24. It “has over 300 solar arrays in development across the Commonwealth, including twelve arrays under development in UGI’s service territory.” Id. Penn qualifies as a

1 We draw the substance of this section from the Commission’s Opinion, as well as the Recommended Decision that was issued by the Commission’s ALJs. See generally Op., 2/20/2025; Recommended Decision, 12/3/24. 2 66 Pa.C.S. §§ 2801-2812. 3 An EDC is defined in the Competition Act as “[t]he public utility providing facilities for the jurisdictional transmission and distribution of electricity to retail customers, except building or facility owners/operators that manage the internal distribution system serving such building or facility and that supply electric power and other related electric power services to occupants of the building or facility.” 66 Pa.C.S. § 2803. 4 A Provider is defined in the Competition Act as “[a]n electric distribution company within its certified service territory or an alternative supplier approved by the commission that provides generation service to retail electric customers who: (1) contract for electric power, including energy and capacity, and the chosen electric generation supplier does not supply the service; or (2) do not choose an alternative electric generation supplier.” 66 Pa.C.S. § 2803. 5 66 Pa.C.S. §§ 2807(e)(3.6).

2 customer-generator under both Section 2 of the Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards Act (AEPS Act)6 and the Commission’s administrative regulations. As a customer-generator, Penn “participate[s] in a program known as net metering, which is a billing mechanism that allows residential and commercial customers who generate their own electricity from renewable resources to feed excess electricity back into the grid and to be compensated for the excess.” Op. at 23 n.6 (citing 52 Pa. Code § 75.12).7 Cognizant of the impending expiration of its then-active DSP IV, UGI filed a petition (DSP V Petition) with the Commission on May 31, 2024, through

6 Act of November 30, 2004, P.L. 1672, as amended, 73 P.S. § 1648.2. This provision defines “customer-generator” as: A nonutility owner or operator of a net metered distributed generation system with a nameplate capacity of not greater than 50 [kW] if installed at a residential service or not larger than 3,000 [kW] at other customer service locations, except for customers whose systems are above three [MW] and up to five [MW] who make their systems available to operate in parallel with the electric utility during grid emergencies as defined by the regional transmission organization or where a microgrid is in place for the primary or secondary purpose of maintaining critical infrastructure, such as homeland security assignments, emergency services facilities, hospitals, traffic signals, wastewater treatment plants or telecommunications facilities, provided that technical rules for operating generators interconnected with facilities of an electric distribution company, electric cooperative or municipal electric system have been promulgated by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers and the . . . Commission. 73 P.S. § 1648.2; accord 52 Pa. Code § 75.1. 7 “[U]nder Section 5 of the AEPS Act, [73 P.S. § 1648.5,] EDCs are mandated to purchase all excess energy from net-metered customer-generators.” Hommrich v. Com., 344 A.3d 121, 132-33 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2025) (Hommrich II).

3 which it sought approval of DSP V.8 Penn responded by filing a formal complaint regarding the DSP V Petition with the Commission. The Commission’s ALJs then held an evidentiary hearing on October 1, 2024, in which both Penn and UGI fully participated, as did the Office of Consumer Advocate (OCA) and the Office of Small Business Advocate (OSBA). During the course of this hearing, the ALJs were informed that OCA, OSBA, and UGI had agreed in principle to file the Settlement Petition, but that Penn was opposed thereto. The ALJs issued their recommended decision on December 3, 2024, to which Penn responded by filing exceptions;

8 In its original DSP V [P]etition, UGI submitted that its DSP V establishes the terms and conditions under which [it] will acquire default service supplies, including Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards (AEPS) credits, from June 1, 2025, through May 31, 2029[]. UGI also represented that its DSP V employs a prudent mix of electric supplies (i.e., spot market purchases, short-term contracts, and long-term contracts) obtained through competitive bid solicitation processes (i.e., auctions, requests for proposals and/or bilateral agreements). Consequently, UGI asserted [its] default service customers will receive adequate and reliable service at the least cost over time. UGI also represented that through its DSP V Petition [it] will: (1) implement a procurement schedule designed to obtain these supplies at the least cost; (2) issue Requests for Proposals . . . seeking default supply in accordance with the agreements and forms included with its DSP V Petition; (3) adopt a contingency plan that addresses any procurement target shortfalls; (4) recover all incurred default service costs on a full and current basis through a specified default service rate design; (5) adopt revised tariff rules clarifying the application of its Generation Supply Rate (GSR)-1 and GSR-2 default service rate classifications; and (6) continue the retail enhancement programs adopted in its DSP IV. Finally, UGI explained that it is clarifying its GSR-1 and GSR-2 rate groupings to classify customers according to their supply peak load impact (SPLI). [UGI] submitted that this approach will better align larger net-metering customer- generators with larger customers that have similar grid impacts. Op. at 3-4 (cleaned up).

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Bluebook (online)
Penn Renewables, LLC v. PA PUC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-renewables-llc-v-pa-puc-pacommwct-2026.