San Diego Gas & Elec. Co. v. Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm'n
This text of 913 F.3d 127 (San Diego Gas & Elec. Co. v. Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm'n) 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.
Opinion
Dissenting opinion filed by Senior Circuit Judge Randolph.
Pillard, Circuit Judge:
*130
Petitioner San Diego Gas & Electric Company (SDG&E) seeks review of a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC or Commission) declaratory order applying FERC's cancelled or abandoned electricity transmission facilities incentive,
I.
A. Regulatory Context
In an effort to bolster investment in "reliable and economically efficient" energy transmission infrastructure, Congress in 2005 amended the Federal Power Act (FPA),
*131
The Commission adopted its Incentive Rule the following year,
see
Transmission Infrastructure Investment (Incentive Rule),
The Incentive Rule establishes eight categories of incentive-based rate treatments for public utilities.
The applicant must demonstrate [1] that the facilities for which it seeks incentives either ensure reliability or reduce the cost of delivered power by reducing transmission congestion consistent with the requirements of section 219 [of the Federal Power Act], [2] that the total package of incentives is tailored to address the demonstrable risks or challenges faced by the applicant in undertaking the project, and [3] that resulting rates are just and reasonable.
(i) A rate of return on equity sufficient to attract new investment in transmission facilities;
(ii) 100 percent of prudently incurred Construction Work in Progress (CWIP) in rate base;
(iii) Recovery of prudently incurred pre-commercial operations costs;
(iv) Hypothetical capital structure;
(v) Accelerated depreciation used for rate recovery;
(vi) Recovery of 100 percent of prudently incurred costs of transmission facilities that are cancelled or abandoned due to factors beyond the control of the public utility;
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Dissenting opinion filed by Senior Circuit Judge Randolph.
Pillard, Circuit Judge:
*130
Petitioner San Diego Gas & Electric Company (SDG&E) seeks review of a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC or Commission) declaratory order applying FERC's cancelled or abandoned electricity transmission facilities incentive,
I.
A. Regulatory Context
In an effort to bolster investment in "reliable and economically efficient" energy transmission infrastructure, Congress in 2005 amended the Federal Power Act (FPA),
*131
The Commission adopted its Incentive Rule the following year,
see
Transmission Infrastructure Investment (Incentive Rule),
The Incentive Rule establishes eight categories of incentive-based rate treatments for public utilities.
The applicant must demonstrate [1] that the facilities for which it seeks incentives either ensure reliability or reduce the cost of delivered power by reducing transmission congestion consistent with the requirements of section 219 [of the Federal Power Act], [2] that the total package of incentives is tailored to address the demonstrable risks or challenges faced by the applicant in undertaking the project, and [3] that resulting rates are just and reasonable.
(i) A rate of return on equity sufficient to attract new investment in transmission facilities;
(ii) 100 percent of prudently incurred Construction Work in Progress (CWIP) in rate base;
(iii) Recovery of prudently incurred pre-commercial operations costs;
(iv) Hypothetical capital structure;
(v) Accelerated depreciation used for rate recovery;
(vi) Recovery of 100 percent of prudently incurred costs of transmission facilities that are cancelled or abandoned due to factors beyond the control of the public utility;
(vii) Deferred cost recovery; and
(viii) Any other incentives approved by the Commission ... that are determined to be just and reasonable and not unduly discriminatory or preferential.
The incentive at issue here-the cancelled or abandoned transmission facilities incentive,
The Commission developed the Abandonment Incentive against the backdrop of its standard, burden-sharing treatment of costs of abandoned transmission infrastructure projects. An order the Commission issued in 1988 authorized utilities to split the costs of cancelled projects 50-50 with their consumers through rate increases, provided the utilities demonstrated the need to recover the investment, and that the costs at issue were prudently incurred.
See
New Eng. Power Co.
, Op. No. 295,
The Abandonment Incentive is just one of an open-ended set of incentive rate treatments the new Incentive Rule authorizes, entitlement to which depends on an order of approval from the Commission. Each utility that proposes to enhance transmission infrastructure may apply for a package of incentives customized to its particular circumstances. The Commission then determines whether and how the requested incentives are warranted before it approves any corresponding rate authority.
Transmission upgrades vary in size, complexity, and the risks and challenges they face, so no one-size-fit-all package of incentives is-or could be-secured by the Rule itself. The Incentive Rule "does not grant incentive-based rate treatments or authorize any entity to recover incentives in its rates," but only "informs potential applicants of incentives that the Commission is willing to allow when justified." Order No. 679,
All of the incentives share the common overall objective of facilitating improvements to transmission infrastructure, but they do so in a range of ways. Two of the incentives encourage investment in infrastructure projects by providing a way to ease a developer's cash flow in advance of the project coming on line, which in turn can improve "the overall financial health of a company and its ability to attract capital at reasonable prices."
See
Order No. 679,
Additional incentives can address the timing of cost recovery after a project is in use. The Commission may authorize a utility to accelerate depreciation in order to recover costs more quickly than over the life of the project-effectively charging ratepayers in the near term for facilities that will be in use far into the future.
See
An application to qualify for any of the rate treatments authorized by the Incentive Rule must meet the Rule's "nexus test" by demonstrating that "the total package of incentives" the utility seeks is "tailored to address the demonstrable risks or challenges faced by the applicant in undertaking the project."
The Commission identified two ways for utilities to apply for incentive-based rate treatments. Under the one-step option, a utility may seek a specified increase in its rates under Section 205 of the FPA.
See
Order No. 679,
The Commission takes the position that the Abandonment Incentive supports recovery of 100 percent of costs prudently incurred only insofar as those costs were incurred after the effective date of the order approving the utility's application.
See
*134
PJM Interconnection, LLC
,
B. The Declaratory Order
SDG&E is a public utility that provides energy services in California. It brings electricity to approximately 300,000 residents in Southern Orange County through a single substation. Around 2008, the utility grew concerned that its customers would be at risk of service unreliability and even prolonged power outages should the sole substation falter. SDG&E therefore proposed the South Orange County Reliability Enhancement (SOCRE) Project to rebuild and upgrade the substation, and replace and relocate several transmission and distribution line segments.
The California Independent System Operator (CAISO) is a public entity that manages electricity transmission in California and operates transmission facilities owned by utilities such as SDG&E. In May 2011, the CAISO included the SOCRE Project in its 2010-2011 Transmission Plan.
SDG&E thereafter applied for various federal, state, and local permits for the SOCRE Project, including a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity from the state regulatory authority, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC). According to SDG&E's Vice President, obtaining a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity is "[a]s a general matter ... a lengthy and complex process" that includes an environmental review of the project proposal. Test. of David Geier, J.A. 64. SDG&E later claimed that the California Public Utilities Commission's approval process presented "the greatest level of risk and uncertainty" for the SOCRE Project. Incentive Petition 12, J.A. 40. SDG&E applied for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity in May 2012.
In September 2015, SDG&E sought a declaratory order from FERC establishing its eligibility for the Abandonment Incentive. SDG&E's petition stated that it had "already expended substantial resources, both direct spending and internal labor" on the project, to the tune of approximately $31 million.
See
Incentive Petition 16, J.A. 44. It noted that it had spent that much-and presumably procured whatever financing required to do so-"without assurance of cost recovery for these development costs."
The Commission filed a Federal Register notice inviting interventions and protests regarding SDG&E's petition for the Abandonment Incentive.
See
San Diego Gas & Electric Co.; Notice of Petition for Declaratory Order
,
In its March 2, 2016, declaratory order, the Commission determined that, should the SOCRE project be cancelled or abandoned for reasons beyond SDG&E's control, the utility would be eligible to recover all of its prudently incurred costs associated with the SOCRE project going forward.
See
San Diego Gas & Elec.
,
The Commission denied SDG&E's request for rehearing.
See
San Diego Gas & Elec.
,
This petition for review followed. PG&E and Southern California Edison Company intervened in support of SDG&E. The Six Cities, the City of Santa Clara, California, *136 the M-S-R Public Power Agency, and the Transmission Agency of Northern California intervened in support of the Commission.
II.
A. Standing
We begin by assuring ourselves of jurisdiction over the petition.
See
Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env't
,
The Commission's orders concern SDG&E's eligibility to recover a benefit in the event of a future project cancellation or abandonment that may or may not occur. But its claimed harm is not speculative insofar as SDG&E suffers a concrete and immediate economic injury stemming from the demonstrated risk of project cancellation. The abandonment may never occur, but there is a concrete dispute over the scope of the current beneficial assurance due to SDG&E. In its declaratory order, FERC recognized that SDG&E faces real and present costs due to the risk of a future halt to the project, and FERC determined that those costs justified application of the Abandonment Incentive. No party disputes that determination; all agree that project-cancellation risk makes SDG&E's SOCRE project a less attractive investment for outside funders and partners, increasing costs to SDG&E.
See
Pet'r Br. Addendum B, Decl. of David Geier ¶¶ 11-15. We have previously held this sort of current economic injury from identified risk of future harm sufficient to support standing,
see
Great Lakes Gas Transmission v. FERC
,
B. Analysis
In the declaratory order under review, the Commission held that SDG&E had shown a nexus only between the Abandonment Incentive and the utility's expenditures on the SOCRE project going forward.
See
Declaratory Order,
SDG&E challenges the order, claiming that the Incentive Rule itself makes an "offer" of incentive treatment, Pet'r Br. 12, and that any utility's qualifying application thus constitutes binding acceptance entitling it to all prudently incurred costs. SDG&E insists that, for the Abandonment Incentive, the rule establishes a "fixed 100 percent recovery rate" of costs of the entire "transmission facilities" subject to abandonment. Pet'r Br. 13, 23, 34. It thus claims a right, in the event the SOCRE project should in the future be abandoned for reasons beyond SDG&E's control, to recover all development costs from the Project's inception, including those costs incurred before the Commission deemed it eligible for the Abandonment Incentive. Pet'r Br. 31.
The Commission responds that the Rule sets the general terms, but a utility's entitlement depends on FERC's approval. It could hardly be otherwise. Electricity transmission development projects tend to be complex, varied, and expensive-costing many millions or even billions of dollars and taking years to complete. The Incentive Rule provides for an array of incentive rate treatments, including a catchall "other incentives" category,
see
The Commission's approach comports with both the Federal Power Act and the Incentive Rule. When Congress amended the Act in 2005, it called on FERC to promulgate a rule to "benefit[ ] consumers by ensuring reliability and reducing the cost of delivered power by reducing transmission congestion." 16 U.S.C. § 824s(a) ;
see
The Commission's order aligns with its "longstanding policy that rate incentives must be prospective and that there must be a connection between the incentive and the conduct meant to be induced."
Cal. Pub. Utils. Comm'n v. FERC
,
The Incentive Rule makes a palette of incentive rate treatments available to utilities. Transmission infrastructure investment projects may be eligible for one or more of the seven types of incentives the Rule describes,
The logic of the incentive rate treatment at issue here-the Abandonment Incentive-supports the Commission treating it as unwarranted for SDG&E's pre-order costs. In the ordinary course, utilities recover costs through the rates they charge for delivered power. A transmission infrastructure project that is abandoned never delivers power, so its costs might not ordinarily be chargeable to ratepayers. Project-abandonment risk can, however, impede major, cost-effective transmission upgrades that are in ratepayers' interests. Investors hesitate to invest in large, expensive projects that may fail before they ever earn a dime. And developers of projects facing abandonment risk-a kind of risk that, by definition, is major and uncontrollable-will pay more for capital. FERC's Abandonment Incentive reflects the recognition that that, given the elevated capital costs ratepayers shoulder for all infrastructure investment projects at risk of abandonment, ratepayers benefit by, in effect, paying to insure potential investors against such risk. Specifically, the Abandonment Incentive serves ratepayers' interests when the aggregate savings (from all qualifying projects' lower ex ante capital costs, producing more needed reliability improvements) more than offset losses (from projects that must be abandoned and billed to ratepayers). In other words, the logic of authorizing utilities to charge ratepayers for the occasional abandoned project is that ratepayers enjoy offsetting benefits from improved access to capital on better terms for all other qualified transmission infrastructure upgrades.
SDG&E acknowledges that it incurred substantial costs on the SOCRE project before it secured eligibility for the Abandonment Incentive. Where, as here, a project faces abandonment risk, investors would ordinarily charge risk premiums unless they had assurance of abandoned-plant rate recovery. Yet there is no evidence that SDG&E's four years' worth of investment in the project was beneficially affected by any assurance provided
*139
through the Abandonment Incentive. Indeed, as FERC recognized, SDG&E's claim that the Incentive Rule facilitated its $31 million in expenditures before FERC authorized it to charge incentive rates is belied by SDG&E's own acknowledgement that it incurred those costs "without assurance of cost recovery." Incentive Petition 16, J.A. 44; Declaratory Order,
By insisting that the timing of a declaratory order matters in granting the Abandonment Incentive, FERC reasonably accounts for ratepayers' interests. Where FERC commits ratepayers to cover costs of abandoned projects, it should at least demand that utilities maximize ratepayers' benefits from those commitments. The longer a utility waits to secure abandoned-plant rate authority and the more it spends before doing so, the higher its costs of capital in constructing successful projects-costs that ultimately are passed on to ratepayers. Nothing in the statute or Rule requires that FERC authorize charging ratepayers ex post (via rate-recovery for failed projects) in the name of generating ex ante benefits (capital availability at lower cost) for a portion of those ex ante benefits (superior investment terms during the first four years of the project) that they never enjoyed. Put differently, ratepayers who stand to be billed for risk premiums paid over several years should not also be called on to pay for a retroactive hedge against the very same risk.
SDG&E raises several objections, none of which we find persuasive.
First
, SDG&E asserts that the regulation itself, rather than the Commission's project-specific declaratory order, amounts to a legally binding "offer" of rate treatment.
See
Pet'r Br. 43-46; Pet'r Int. Br. 3. Insisting that "[t]he text of Order No. 679 could not be clearer," Pet'r Br. at 44, SDG&E quotes the preamble's assertion that "this [Incentive] Rule ... provides incentives for transmission infrastructure," Order No. 679,
SDG&E is simply wrong that the Incentive Rule by itself "guarantees" any rate treatment or entitles a utility to any specific incentive. As the Rule's preamble squarely announces: "The Final Rule does not grant incentive-based rate treatments or authorize any entity to recover incentives in its rates. Rather, it informs potential applicants of incentives that the Commission is willing to allow when justified." Order No. 679,
*140
Second
, SDG&E argues that the Incentive Rule's recognition of two distinct procedural pathways for seeking Commission authorization for incentive rates means that the timing of a declaratory order that a utility seeks under the two-step option cannot affect the scope of eligibility for the Abandonment Incentive. As described above, a utility may apply for at least some of the incentives in a one-step process, by seeking a rate adjustment under Section 205 of the FPA. Or, the utility may follow a two-step procedure by first seeking a declaratory order establishing its eligibility for one or more incentives, and later seeking a corresponding rate adjustment.
See
Order No. 679,
Not so. Nothing in the Rule requires that both one-step and two-step pathways be equally appropriate for every type of incentive. SDG&E appears to be correct that the Abandonment Incentive is only available through the two-step pathway, which involves securing a declaratory order in advance and later, after project abandonment, petitioning for a rate under Section 205. That is because, in order to justify it as a spur to investment, the Abandonment Incentive will ordinarily need to be in place at the relevant time, when uncontrollable future risks would otherwise deter potential investors and put a risk premium on capital-
i.e.
, before the relevant costs have been successfully financed.
See
Policy Statement,
Third,
SDG&E contends that we must reject the Commission's approach because the Incentive Rule requires a showing of a nexus to "the project" as a whole, or the entire "transmission facilities" under development, rather than separately to the utilities' costs incurred before and after the declaratory order.
See
Pet'r Reply Br. 11-12. SDG&E points to the Incentive Rule's introductory language directing applicants to demonstrate how the package of incentives they seek is "tailored to address the demonstrable risks or challenges
*141
faced by the applicant in undertaking
the project
,"
Fourth
, SDG&E similarly contends that the declaratory order conflicts with the Incentive Rule by authorizing less than the "100 percent" recovery stated in
Rather, the Commission grants incentive rate authority "when justified" on a "case-by-case basis" in orders tailored to the demonstrated needs of each project.
See
Order No. 679,
Finally
, we see no merit to SDG&E's argument that the Commission's treatment of the Abandonment Incentive in prior cases renders the orders below arbitrary and capricious. The dissent objects that FERC twice granted pre-order costs "without imposing the limitation it applied to San Diego." Diss. Op. 147 (citing
*142
Pac. Gas & Elec. Co.
,
SDG&E also contends that several other cases in fact granted pre-order costs pursuant to the Abandonment Incentive. But in most of its cited cases, no party filed a protest objecting on this ground, as the Six Cities did here.
See, e.g.,
NextEra Energy Transmission W., LLC
,
* * *
Because the Commission's application of the Abandonment Incentive is consistent with the Rule and supported by substantial evidence, SDG&E's petition is denied.
So ordered.
Randolph, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I will begin with a hypothetical.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission at the beginning of the year announces that any employee who provides exceptional service will be eligible for a cash award at year's end. During the year several employees provide what the agency deems exceptional service: these employees manage to convince a panel majority of the D.C. Circuit of a quite dubious proposition - namely, that the prospect of recovering 100 percent of an investment even if the project fails is not an incentive to invest.
In its annual awards ceremony, FERC adopts the reasoning it employed in the case before us. And so it passes over these *143 employees although they have rendered exceptional service. Why? Because the employees have already performed. No need to provide them with a cash award. After all, the employees went the extra mile with no assurance of being deemed exceptional and receiving any award. See Maj. Op. 138-39.
There is no difference between this hypothetical and FERC's decision here and the treatment of this case in the lengthy majority opinion, an opinion confirming the adage that sometimes the more you explain it the less anyone can understand it.
The regulation at the center of this case is not complicated. A utility is entitled to recover "100 percent of prudently incurred costs of transmission facilities that are cancelled or abandoned due to factors beyond the control of the public utility."
Although the regulation provides for the recovery of all prudently incurred costs, FERC decided that San Diego Gas & Electric could only recover some of those costs. According to FERC, the "Abandonment Incentive" applies only to costs the utility incurs after FERC has issued an order declaring the utility eligible for the incentive.
I will discuss three basic problems with FERC's decision. These are that the theory on which FERC relies is invalid; that the language of the regulation does not support the decision; and that FERC's ruling is an unexplained departure from its precedents. I will begin with the theory.
FERC's idea is that "incentives cease to be incentives if the action they are intended to promote has already occurred."
San Diego Gas & Elec. Co.
,
The fallacy in this theory is its failure to recognize that FERC created the incentive when it promulgated the regulation in 2006,
2
well before San Diego began incurring costs for its transmission project. As any economist knows, although incentives "must be known to the agent in advance of his choice," they need not be awarded in
*144
advance of the choice; rather, they function as "an offer" and "a discrete prompt expected to elicit a particular response." Kristen Underhill,
When Extrinsic Incentives Displace Intrinsic Motivation
,
The prompting effect is generated by the announcement of the incentive even if the ultimate award is conditioned on some later showing and paid after some or all of the performance.
See
Pub. Serv. Comm'n of N.Y. v. FERC
,
The majority opinion tries to skirt this problem. It points out that San Diego never offered evidence showing that it relied on the Abandonment Incentive in deciding to build its transmission facility. Maj. Op. 138-39. This is a red herring. Under the regulatory regime FERC established, San Diego had no obligation to provide such evidence. In the 2006 rulemaking on the incentive rules, FERC "reject[ed] arguments that an applicant must show that, but for the incentives, the expansion would not occur." Order No. 679,
The majority opinion also relies on San Diego's statement that some of its pre-order costs were expended "without assurance of cost recovery." Maj. Op. 139. FERC went even further. It decided that San Diego's project was not "rationally related" to the incentive because the utility had no guarantee of recovering its costs. Rehearing Order,
The Abandonment Incentive grew out of a preexisting system under which FERC generally awarded 50 percent of all prudently incurred costs for abandoned facilities.
See
*145
New Eng. Power Co.
,
Tying eligibility for the Abandonment Incentive to the date of FERC's order is particularly arbitrary, given that the date of the order is untethered to the development of the transmission facility in question. The result is that the amount of an applicant's recovery will depend on FERC's caseload and its efficiency in issuing declaratory orders. Here, San Diego lost out on more than five months' worth of Abandonment Incentive costs for the period during which its petition was pending before the Commission.
See
Rehearing Order,
This brings me to the text of the regulation. The majority defers to FERC's interpretation.
See
Maj. Op. 137-38, 139. It presumably grants this deference pursuant to
Auer v. Robbins
,
Nothing supports FERC's distinction between pre- and post-order spending. The regulation and the preamble to it in the rulemaking are unambiguous. The text of the Abandonment Incentive shows that it applies on a project-to-project basis, regardless of when or how a utility seeks authorization from FERC. Thus, FERC
*146
"will authorize" a utility to recover "100 percent of prudently incurred costs of transmission facilities that are cancelled or abandoned due to factors beyond the control of the public utility,"
In the face of this unambiguous directive - 100 percent - FERC granted San Diego some $15 million less than 100 percent of the costs of the project. FERC explained that it had a "policy that a public utility may only recover up to 50 percent of prudently incurred abandonment costs for costs that are incurred before the date of the order granting the incentives." Rehearing Order,
The structure of the regulation also cuts against FERC's view. An applicant may seek a determination of its eligibility for incentives in two ways. As San Diego did here, an applicant may seek a pre-abandonment declaratory order, followed by a post-abandonment filing for a rate adjustment under section 205 of the Federal Power Act.
Even for those applicants seeking a declaratory order in advance of abandonment, under FERC's policy few if any will obtain the elusive 100 percent of costs called for by the Abandonment Incentive. In order to show that its project meets the regulation's substantive requirements of reliability and nexus, an applicant must necessarily have expended funds in planning and development. Those costs would pre-date the declaratory order and would therefore be excluded from the Abandonment Incentive according to FERC's decision in this case.
FERC's counsel tries to escape the consequences of the administrative decision here by asserting that the agency is merely proceeding on a "case-by-case basis." 6
*147
The assertion is either meaningless or capricious, even though the majority opinion seems to endorse it. If all it is intended to describe is the process of deciding cases, we already have a word for it - adjudication. On the other hand, it may signify that FERC has discretion to treat other applicants seeking pre-order costs differently than it treated San Diego. But an agency's discretion is not "inclination," but its "judgment; and its judgment is to be guided by sound legal principles."
United States v. Burr
,
In short, FERC's policy runs contrary to the text, structure, and purpose of the regulation. FERC's interpretation is not "fairly supported by the text of the regulation itself," and applicants lack "adequate notice of that interpretation ... within the rule itself."
Drake v. FAA
,
FERC's policy also departs from the agency's precedent. The majority's attempt to write off FERC's prior orders is contrary to the law of this circuit.
In
NextEra
, for example, the utility sought to recover an Abandonment Incentive of 100 percent of its prudently incurred costs, "including costs related to the Projects that have been incurred prior to the date of filing."
NextEra Energy Transmission W., LLC
,
The majority discounts these prior orders because "no party filed a protest objecting on this ground, as the Six Cities did here" and because the issue of pre-order costs was not specifically discussed. Maj. Op. 142. Our court has rejected this very argument. In
ANR Storage
, FERC attempted to distinguish its prior orders from the one under review on the basis
*148
that the former had been unopposed and lacked a reasoned discussion.
ANR Storage Co. v. FERC
,
In the case the majority quotes, the court recognized that incentive awards can apply to conduct that both pre- and post-dates the award.
See
Me. Pub. Utils. Comm'n
,
In the years leading up to the Energy Policy Act of 2005, Pub. L. No. 109-58,
Consider a common federal incentive: the tax deduction for charitable contributions. Announced decades ago by Congress, that incentive encourages contributions made before the taxpayer applies for the deduction in that year's return.
See
The Supreme Court recently granted certiorari to consider whether to overrule
Auer
's rule of deference to agency interpretations of ambiguous regulations.
See
Kisor v. Wilkie
, --- U.S. ----, --- S.Ct. ----, --- L.Ed.2d ----,
The applicant must show (1) that "the facilities for which it seeks incentives either ensure reliability or reduce the cost of delivered power by reducing transmission congestion consistent with the requirements of section 219 [of the Federal Power Act]" and (2) that "the
total
package of incentives is tailored to address the demonstrable risks or challenges faced by the applicant in undertaking the project."
Auer
deference is especially unwarranted where, as here, the agency's interpretation is adopted post hoc as a litigating position and conflicts with its prior reasoning.
Christopher
,
The majority's recitation of FERC's rule adopts the categorical approach. See Maj. Op. 133-34 (noting that the Abandonment Incentive is available for costs "only insofar as those costs were incurred after the effective date of the order" and identifying that date as "the separating point between" eligible and ineligible costs). It ignores that FERC repeatedly renounced that position in this appeal. See, e.g. , Resp't Br. 12-13 ("But the Commission did no such thing. ... [S]uch [pre-order] costs could be recovered if the applicant established the requisite nexus."); id. at 28 ("The Commission Did Not Bar All Retroactive Recovery"); id. at 30, 37.
Gas Transmission
, cited by the majority, is not to the contrary.
See
Gas Transmission Nw. Co. v. FERC
,
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
913 F.3d 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-diego-gas-elec-co-v-fed-energy-regulatory-commn-cadc-2019.