The Kansas Power and Light Company v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Williams Natural Gas Company, Atlas Powder Company, Intervenors

891 F.2d 939, 282 U.S. App. D.C. 69, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 19080
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 1989
Docket89-1160
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 891 F.2d 939 (The Kansas Power and Light Company v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Williams Natural Gas Company, Atlas Powder Company, Intervenors) 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
The Kansas Power and Light Company v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Williams Natural Gas Company, Atlas Powder Company, Intervenors, 891 F.2d 939, 282 U.S. App. D.C. 69, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 19080 (D.C. Cir. 1989).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS. ■

STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge:

Kansas Power & Light, a local distribution company, appeals from a decision of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission amending the certificate under which the Williams Natural Gas Company, an interstate pipeline, sells gas to Atlas Powder Company. Before the amendment Williams and KPL each supplied portions of Atlas’s demand, KPL using gas in turn supplied by Williams. The amended certificate allows Williams to meet all of Atlas’s gas needs directly, bypassing KPL. FERC rested the decision largely on the interest in providing customers the benefits of competition. KPL challenges the order as an unexplained “swerve” from a prior Commission policy against allowing bypass. In fact, however, the pro-competitive shift in Commission policy occurred well before its consideration of this case, was not so radical as to clearly qualify as a swerve at all, and required little explanation in light of other Commission moves to afford gas consumers the benefits of competition. Moreover, the facts of this particular bypass are such that the Commission could have rejected the amendment only under a policy of resolute indifference to the advantages of competition; any defects in the Commission’s elaboration of its current approach are in context immaterial.

Atlas owns a nitrogen plant and an explosives plant on the same property. In 1961 Williams’s predecessor obtained a cer *941 tificate to sell gas to the nitrogen plant; KPL’s predecessor had for some time supplied the explosives plant. In 1987 Atlas built a short pipe connecting the two plants. It cancelled its contract with KPL and began taking all its gas directly from Williams, but not more than the amount certificated in 1961.

KPL filed a complaint with FERC, alleging that Williams’s sales of gas for use at the explosives plant were not covered by its certificate, and were thus in violation of § 7 of the Natural Gas Act of 1938, 15 U.S.C. § 717f (1988). Williams argued that the 1961 certificate covered the sales, but in the alternative filed to amend the certificate. The Commission found that Williams’s sales exceeded the original authority, but amended the certificate; it dismissed KPL’s complaint as moot. 45 FERC 1161,272 (1988) (“Order”), 46 FERC 11 61,216 (1989) (“Order on Rehearing”).

In allowing bypass, the Commission relied almost exclusively on its view that “competition best serves the public interest.” Order, 45 FERC at 61,854. KPL argues that in doing so the Commission departed from a longstanding policy of favoring service to end users by local distribution companies (“LDCs”). Indeed, at one point the Commission did embrace such a policy, see, e.g., Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co., 36 FPC 1107, 1109 (1966), modified, 37 FPC 314 (1967), aff’d, 386 F.2d 607 (3rd Cir.1967), albeit only in the form of a rebuttable presumption, Michigan Consol Gas Co. v. FERC, 883 F.2d 117, 122-23 (D.C.Cir.1989). For over three years, however, FERC has consistently shown a preference for allowing competition:

In a competitive market environment, the parties are at risk for their own decisions, and the need to provide competitive services is the factor that leads to improved service at lower cost for consumers. ADC-Alabama [an interstate pipeline] perceived a market opportunity to provide gas service at a lower rate than Mobile Gas [the current supplier, an LDC]. Mobile Gas, on the other hand, passed up an opportunity to retain Kerr-McGee as a customer. Under these circumstances, and in the absence of any suggestion of unfair competition, we believe that the public interest is best served by our sustaining the result of that competition.

American Distribution Company (Alabama Division) (“ADC”), 37 FERC ¶ 61,281 (1986) at 61,854-55. Before its decision in this case the Commission applied the pro-competition policy in three additional cases, Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co., 40 FERC ¶ 61,220 (1987), reh’g denied in relevant part, 42 FERC 1161,076 (1988), aff’d sub nom. Michigan Consol. Gas Co. v. FERC, 883 F.2d 117 (D.C.Cir.1989), Williston Basin Interstate Pipeline Co., 40 FERC ¶ 61,131 (1987), aff’d, 42 FERC ¶ 61,269 (1988), and CNG Transmission Gorp., 43 FERC ¶ 61,500 (1988). And it has done so since, in Northwest Pipeline Corp., 46 FERC ¶ 61,078 (1989), and Northern Natural Gas Co., 46 FERC ¶ 61,270, reh’g denied, 48 FERC H 61,232 (1989). KPL has identified no FERC decisions since ADC out of line with this viewpoint.

We have considerable doubt whether petitioner can challenge the application of a three-year-old orthodoxy merely because it resulted from a prior “swerve.” But even if it may, ADC itself appears to reflect merely an increased focus on the benefits of competition, not the sort of total about-face seen by petitioner. The Commission pointed in ADC to its own prior statement that it did not adhere to the pro-LDC policy “with uncompromising rigidity,” 37 FERC at 61,855 (internal quotations omitted), and to its limitation of the earlier policy in a 1984 decision:

While the Commission has stated a preference for service through a local distributor in these cases, the circumstances were different. In those cases, Panhandle was improperly attempting to supplant the distributors’ sales. This was attempted by means such as proposing duplicate lines to serve a distributor’s existing customers, withholding gas supply from a distributor in order to sell the gas directly to the end-users, or by committing all interruptible capacity directly *942 to industrials, thereby reducing distributors’ load management flexibility. These facts are not present here.

Id. (quoting Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co., 29 FERC 1161,338 at 61,709 (1984) (footnotes omitted)).

Thus the Commission appears not to have swerved, but to have moved from a tilt against bypass to a tilt in its favor. More important, however, the Commission’s bypass policy (to the extent that it was new) was merely part of a broader policy change at the Commission. In an array of roughly contemporaneous decisions the Commission explained that the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978, 15 U.S.C. § 3301 et seq. (1988), had in part created, and certainly made possible the development of, a competitive market in natural gas from the wellhead to the burner tip. It identified the benefits that it believed competition throughout that market would afford consumers, and adopted industry-transforming rules aimed at securing them. See, e.g., Order No. 380 (Elimination of Variable Costs From Certain Natural Gas Pipeline Minimum Commodity Bill Provisions), Statutes & Regulations [1982-1985] ¶ 30,571 at 30,965 (1984); Order No.

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891 F.2d 939, 282 U.S. App. D.C. 69, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 19080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-kansas-power-and-light-company-v-federal-energy-regulatory-commission-cadc-1989.