Public Service Commission of State of New York v. Federal Power Commission

463 F.2d 824
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 1972
DocketNos. 71-1197, 71-1198 and 71-1281
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 463 F.2d 824 (Public Service Commission of State of New York v. Federal Power Commission) 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
Public Service Commission of State of New York v. Federal Power Commission, 463 F.2d 824 (D.C. Cir. 1972).

Opinion

WILKEY, Circuit Judge:

This case has returned to us after a remand to the Commission for reconsideration of its original decision to issue the Chandeleur Pipe Line Company a certificate of public convenience and necessity to transport natural gas from offshore Louisiana federal leases to Pascagoula, Mississippi. The gas is there consumed in a petroleum refinery owned by Standard Oil Company of California (Socal), of which Chandeleur (one of the intervenors here) is a wholly-owned subsidiary.1

When this case was last before this court we directed the Commission to reconsider and articulate its views more precisely with respect to four areas of controversy: (1) the comparative value of end uses to which the natural gas might be put; (2) the incentive for exploration and development of natural gas which might result from permitting So-cal and other refinery operators to use their own natural gas; (3) the benefit to the public created by this incentive; and (4) whether there would be a diversion of the natural gas to interstate commerce if the instant certificate should be denied.

The Commission proceeded with dispatch, designating the matter for rehearing before an examiner, but omitting the usual examiner’s recommended decision in favor of immediate consideration by the full Commission. The resulting opinion is thorough, comprehensive, and convincing. Although it reaches the same result on certification, it [826]*826does not appear as a rehashed and elaborated justification for a predetermined verdict. We affirm the Commission's action in granting the certificate at issue here.

1. End Use

The task which we set for the Commission in this area was to analyze the claim advanced by petitioner New York Public Service Commission (New York) that use by interstate residential and commercial consumers is a use superior to the industrial use contemplated in Socal’s Pascagoula refinery.2 Much of New York’s reliance in this area appears to rest on FPC v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp. (1961),3 to support the contention that the end use by Socal, and particularly any use for “boiler fuel” purposes, is an “inferior” use of natural gas which ought not be permitted in this time of critical gas shortage.4 We think that the Commission’s analysis and ultimate refusal to accept this claim, as set forth in its Opinion No. 560-A,5 is correct.

To take first things first, in Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp. the Supreme Court did not hold that certain industrial uses of natural gas, such as boiler fuel use, were per se inferior, and we are not now prepared so to hold. What the Court did say was that the particular end use was among the factors that the Commission might consider in determining the public convenience and necessity of a certificate application.6 In different certificate applications the factor of end use will have varying importance. In the case at bar the end use factor is not, by itself, of decisive importance. While it may be true that as to the particular natural gas involved, it would be desirable to have this gas go into the hands of residential rather than industrial users, there is no assurance that this would happen if the certificate were not granted.7 Of greater importance, we think that satisfaction of the public convenience and necessity would be enhanced by giving more weight to the factor of the “incentive” to natural gas exploration and development, which the Commission hopes to achieve by permitting natural gas producers such as Socal to use their own gas in their refineries.8

Secondly, it appears from the record that any use for “boiler fuel” would probably represent a very small proportion of the natural gas to be used at the Pascagoula refinery,9 and any characterization of this small proportion as an “inferior” use could hardly be decisive. Apparently the largest proportion of the gas would be used for processes at the refinery for which there is no physical substitute for the natural gas fuel, or for which conversion to a different fuel would be extremely expensive or physically impossible.10 If such a conversion were made necessary by a denial of the certificate, the Commission has determined that other fuels, such as low-sulfur fuel oil, which are also in short supply, would have to be substituted for natural gas, and this substitution would itself have undesirable effects on the [827]*827fuel market.11 These undesirable effects are not different in kind from the effect on the fuel market if natural gas is used in the refinery, and would be substantially lessened if the Commission’s incentive theory proves to be correct.

Thirdly, we agree with the Commission that even if the natural gas here in question were to be given to the pipelines presently located near the Chandeleur line (as petitioners have urged) there is nothing in the record that would give assurance that this natural gas would not, by displacement, be devoted to another industrial use.12 Since, as explained infra, the industrial use by the refinery may bring with it increased development of scarce natural gas, there are reasons for favoring this industrial use over others.

In final analysis, by implication from the facts and argument in this case, what the petitioners are asking for is a rule of universal application that producers cannot use their own newly discovered gas in their own refineries, because refinery use is always an inferior use compared to the interstate residential (and industrial) users petitioners represent. We fail to comprehend the merits of such a rule, and without laying claim to any expertise in the intricacies of oil and gas economics, we are doubtful if such a policy would have any but the most discouraging effects.

We thus approve of the reasons articulated for the Commission’s decision with respect to end use, and move on to the next area of controversy.

II. Incentive

The Commission’s theory, articulated but not adequately so in its previous opinion, is that by allowing Socal to utilize its own gas in its Pascagoula refinery there would be created an incentive for this oil company, as well as other oil and gas producers, to undertake exploration and development for both oil and gas.13 While no particular exploration venture can be guaranteed success, it is well recognized that totality of exploration efforts inevitably bears a direct relationship to the augmentation of the total national petroleum and natural gas reserves.

The incentive argument rests not alone on the hopefully inspired search for gas, but also on the well known geological phenomenon, not disputed by the petitioners, that deposits of natural gas are often to be discovered with or near deposits of crude oil. Thus, if the Commission’s policy encourages companies such as Socal to search for additional crude oil, given the usual geological arrangement, they will also be discovering new deposits of natural gas, deposits which it is hoped will eventually find their way into the interstate market.

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463 F.2d 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-service-commission-of-state-of-new-york-v-federal-power-commission-cadc-1972.