Process Gas Consumers Group v. United States Department of Agriculture

657 F.2d 459, 212 U.S. App. D.C. 1
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 1981
DocketNos. 80-1558, 80-1603
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 657 F.2d 459 (Process Gas Consumers Group v. United States Department of Agriculture) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Process Gas Consumers Group v. United States Department of Agriculture, 657 F.2d 459, 212 U.S. App. D.C. 1 (D.C. Cir. 1981).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WILKEY.

WILKEY, Circuit Judge:

At issue in this case is the meaning of the term “process fuel” as it is used in section 401(f)(1)(B) of the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978 (NGPA or the Act).1

I. BACKGROUND

The Natural Gas Policy Act creates a system of priorities for the allocation during times of shortage of natural gas distributed through interstate pipelines. Whenever there is an insufficient supply, under the Act first in line to receive gas are schools, small businesses, residences, hospitals, and all others for whom a curtailment of natural gas could endanger life, health, or the maintenance of physical property.2 After these “high-priority” users have been satisfied, next in line are those who will put the gas to “essential agricultural uses,”3 followed by those who will use the gas for “essential industrial process or feedstock uses,”4 followed by everybody else. We are concerned in this case with what can properly be included within the second priority category, that of “essential agricultural uses.”

The NGPA provides a list of natural gas uses which are candidates for the “essential agricultural use” priority.5 But to qualify, a candidate use must also meet two additional requirements: first, there must be no substitute fuel both “economically practica[3]*3ble” and “reasonably available.”6 And second, the Secretary of Agriculture must certify the application as “necessary for full food and fiber production.” 7

Finally, uses within a disfavored subcategory of “essential agricultural uses” defined in section 401(f)(1)(B) of the Act are required to meet one more test before qualifying for the priority. Whereas most applications of natural gas can qualify for the priority without restriction as to how the gas is used, these disfavored applications of natural gas (“in the production of fertilizer, agricultural chemicals, animal feed, or food”)8 qualify for the priority only if the gas is used “as a process fuel or feedstock.” 9

To summarize, to qualify for the “essential agricultural use” priority, a use in this disfavored subcategory 401(f)(1)(B) must: (1) be without an “economically practicable” and “reasonably available” substitute; (2) be certified by the Secretary as “necessary for full food and fiber production”; and (3) be a use as a “process fuel or feedstock.” The dispute in this case concerns the meaning of the term “process fuel” in this third limitation.

The petitioners are users of natural gas who are not entitled to the first priority available, for example, to schools and hospitals, or to the second priority available for “essential agricultural uses.” In the event of a natural gas curtailment, these users will begin to receive natural gas only if the “high-priority” users and' the “essential agricultural” users have been satisfied. They thus have an interest in ensuring that the “essential agricultural use” category is limited to the uses specified in the statute, because any expansion would come at their expense.

In the present action they challenge the interpretation the Secretary of Agriculture has given to the statutory limitation of the priority for the disfavored section 401(f)(1)(B) uses to uses as a “process fuel.” Their challenge in large measure is based on a widely used definition of “process gas” promulgated by the Federal Power Commission (FPC) in 1973. That definition, which was in common use during the enactment of the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978, was part of a division of natural gas uses into three categories as follows:

Process gas: Is defined as gas use for which alternate fuels are not technically feasible such as in applications requiring precise temperature controls and precise flame characteristics. For the purposes of this definition propane and other gaseous fuels shall not be considered alternate fuels.
Boiler fuel: Is considered to be natural gas used as a fuel for the generation of steam or electricity, including the utilization of gas turbines for the generation of electricity.
Feedstock gas: Is defined as natural gas used as raw material for its chemical properties in creating an end product.10

Under the FPC definition, then, boiler fuel used to generate steam can almost never, if ever, be considered to be process gas, because “process gas” is a term restricted to uses requiring the rapid response, flame uniformity, and precise temperature control achievable only with natural gas, while in principle anything that will burn can be used to heat a boiler.

In interpreting section 401(f)(1)(B) of the Act, however, the Secretary of Agriculture, contrary to the older FPC definitions, has included within the definition of process fuel “natural gas used to produce steam which in turn is directly applied in processing of products and for compression of products so that processing may take place.” 11 In other words, under the Secretary’s definition, some boiler uses of natural gas are process fuel uses.

[4]*4The petitioners contend the Secretary’s definition of “process fuel” is too expansive, unlawfully augmenting the size of the “essential agricultural use” priority, and thereby endangering their natural gas supply should a natural gas curtailment occur. More fundamentally, they challenge the Secretary’s authority even to promulgate a definition of “process fuel.” According to the petitioners, while the ' Secretary is charged with the responsibility .for certifying which “essential agricultural uses” are required for “full food and fiber production,” it is the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), not the Secretary of Agriculture, who is charged with the responsibility fpr defining the technical and trade terms used in the Act.

We are thus confronted with a question of statutory construction: under the provisions of the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978, does the Secretary of Agriculture have the authority to define the statutory term “process fuel,” and, if so, is the definition he has given the term consistent with the intent of Congress?

II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

After the passage of the Natural Gas Policy Act in 1978, the Secretary of Agriculture became responsible for certifying to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission those uses which the Secretary deemed to satisfy the requirements of section 401(f)(1) for “essential agricultural uses.” To discharge this duty, the Secretary began rule-making proceedings to determine which uses would qualify for the agricultural priority. On 26 February 1979 the Secretary issued an Interim Final Rule which excluded the use of natural gas to fuel boilers for the production of heat from the section 401(f)(1)(B) priority, on the basis that use of natural gas as a boiler fuel is not use as a “process fuel.” 12 In May of 1979 the Secretary issued a Final Rule which certified “essential agricultural uses” without providing any further discussion of the question whether boiler fuel could ever be process fuel.13

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694 F.2d 778 (First Circuit, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
657 F.2d 459, 212 U.S. App. D.C. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/process-gas-consumers-group-v-united-states-department-of-agriculture-cadc-1981.