Transmission Access Policy Study Group v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

225 F.3d 667, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 15362
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 2000
DocketNos. 97-1715, 98-1111 to 98-1115, 98-1118 to 98-1120, 98-1122, 98-1124 to 98-1129, 98-1131, 98-1132, 98-1134, 98-1136, 98-1137, 98-1139 to 98-1143, 98-1145, 98-1147 to 98-1150, 98-1152 to 98-1156, 98-1159, 98-1162, 98-1163, 98-1166, 98-1168 to 98-1176, 98-1178 and 98-1180
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 225 F.3d 667 (Transmission Access Policy Study Group v. Federal Energy Regulatory 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
Transmission Access Policy Study Group v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 225 F.3d 667, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 15362 (D.C. Cir. 2000).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed PER CURIAM1:

Table of Contents

I. Introduction. . 681

II.FERC’s AuthoRity to Require Open Acoess. M OO CO

A. Statutory Challenges: FPA §§ 205 and 206 . lO OO CO

1. §§ 205 and 206 and Otter Tail Power Company. lO OO CO

2. § 206(a) Procedural and Evidentiary Requirements. cOO CO

3. Discriminatory Effect of Order 888 . CO OO CO

B. Constitutional Challenge: Fifth Amendment Takings Clause O Q CO

III. Federal versus State Jurisdiction over Transmission Services O O* ZO
A. Bundled Retail Sales. Oj Ci ZD
B. Local Distribution Facilities. LO OS CO
IV. RECIPROCITY. C5 CO
A. Indirect Regulation of Non-Jurisdietional Utilities. C5 CO
B. Limitation on Reciprocity. OO 05 CO

[680]*680V. Stranded Cost Recovery Provisions. as C£> OO

A. Wholesale Stranded Costs . cs <£> CD

1. FERC’s Authority to Provide for Stranded Cost Recovery. -q O M

a. Reasonable expectation of continued service. -q O to

b. Sections 206 and 212 of the FPA. -q O CO

c. Implications of Cajun. ~q O ^

2. Natural Gas Precedent and Conformance to Cost Causation Principles. ©

a. Natural gas precedent: AGD, K N Energy, and UDC. lO ©

b. Conformance to cost causation principles. 1> O

3. FERC’s Mobile-Sierra Findings . O O

a. FERC’s authority to make a generic public interest finding_ O rH

b. FERC’s stranded cost public interest finding. H rH

c. FERC’s public interest finding regarding customers. (M rH !>

4. Availability of Stranded Cost Recovery to Nonjurisdictional Utilities and G & T Cooperatives.

5. Challenges to Technical Aspects of Order 888’s Stranded Cost Recovery Provisions. tH

a. POSCR’s challenges to the stranded cost formula. rH

b. Inclusion of known and measurable

c. Treatment of energy costs in the market option. io rH

d. Rescission of notice of termination provision . cd rH

e. Provision for benefits lost. (D rH

B. Retail Stranded Costs. rH

1. Stranded Costs Arising from Retail Wheeling. rH

a. FERC’s jurisdiction over retail stranded costs. t — I

b. FERC’s refusal to assert jurisdiction over all retail stranded costs . as rH

2. Stranded Costs Relating to Retail-Turned-Wholesale Customers ... cq Cq

VI. Credits for Customer-Owned Facilities and Behind-The-Meter Generation. ^ Cq t>

VII. Liability, Interface Allocation, and Discounting ~q to ~q
A. Liability and Indemnification. -q to -q
B. Interface Allocation. -q to <co
C. Delivery-Point^Speeific Discounting. -q CO o
VIII. Tariff Terms and Conditions. 733
A. Headroom Allocation. 733
B. Headroom Prioritization. 733
C. Duplicative Charges. 734
D. Multiple Control Areas. 734
E. Right-of-First-Refusal. 735

IX. National Environmental Policy Act and Regulatory Flexibility Act Compliance. CO cn

A. NEPA Compliance. <1 CO cn

1. Adequacy of Base Case . -*q CO oí

2. Failure to Adopt Mitigation Measures. -3 CO os

B. Regulatory Flexibility Act Compliance. -q CO •q

PER CURIAM:

Following two notices of proposed rule-making, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission issued Orders 888 and 889 on April 24, 1996.2 Reflecting the Commis[681]*681sion’s effort to end discriminatory and anticompetitive practices in the national electricity market and to ensure that electricity customers pay the lowest prices possible, these orders represent, as the Commission described in a later order not before us, “the foundation necessary to develop competitive bulk power markets .... ” Regional Transmission Organizations, Order No.2000, 65 Fed.Reg. 810, 812 (2000).

Open access is the essence of Orders 888 and 889. Under these orders, utilities must now provide access to their transmission lines to anyone purchasing or selling electricity in the interstate market on the same terms and conditions as they use their own lines. By requiring utilities to transmit competitors’ electricity, open access transmission is expected to increase competition from alternative power suppliers, giving consumers the benefit of a competitive market. Most fundamentally, FERC’s open access policies, combined with parallel action now occurring on the state level, are intended to create a market in which customers may purchase power from any of a number of suppliers. A municipality or factory in Florida, for example, will no longer have to purchase power from its local utility but instead may seek cheaper power anywhere in the country. A customer in Vermont may purchase electricity from an environmentally friendly power producer in California or a cogeneration facility in Oklahoma.

All key players in the electricity market have challenged various provisions of Orders 888 and 889. Their claims range from the hypertechnical to arguments that FERC lacks authority to order open access transmission at all. Finding few defects in the orders, we uphold them in nearly all respects.

I. INTRODUCTION

Historically, vertically integrated utilities owned generation, transmission, and distribution facilities. They sold generation, transmission, and distribution services as part of a “bundled” package. Due to technological limitations on the distance over which electricity could be transmitted, each utility served only customers in a limited geographic area. And because of their natural monopoly characteristics, utilities have been heavily regulated at both the federal and state levels.

Since enactment of the Federal Power Act in 1935, the electricity industry has undergone significant change, both economically and technologically. Economies of scale have justified the construction of large (greater than 500 MW) generation facilities, such as nuclear power plants. Technological advances in the 1970s and 1980s have permitted small plants to operate efficiently as well. See Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, Promoting Wholesale Competition Through Open Access Nondiscriminatory Transmission Services by Public Utilities; Recovery of Stranded Costs by Public Utilities and Transmitting Utilities, FERC Stats. & RegsY 32,-514 at 33,059-60, 60 Fed.Reg. 17,662 (1995) (“Open Access NOPR”). Technological improvements also made feasible the transmission of electric power over long distances at high voltages. See id. ¶ 32,-514 at 33,060.

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