University of Pennsylvania v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

485 A.2d 1217, 86 Pa. Commw. 410, 1984 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 2094
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 18, 1984
DocketAppeal, No. 1411 C.D. 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 485 A.2d 1217 (University of Pennsylvania v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
University of Pennsylvania v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 485 A.2d 1217, 86 Pa. Commw. 410, 1984 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 2094 (Pa. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Rogers,

A number of customers of tbe PMladelpMa Electric Company — Steam Division (the Utility), including tbe University of Pennsylvania, seek review of an Order of tbe Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (tbe Commission) entered and adopted April 29, 1983. Because tbe brief in opposition to tbe Commission order is that of tbe University of Pennsylvania, we will refer to tbe petitioners collectively as “the University.” Tbe order authorizes tbe Utility to file tariffs or their revisions or supplements designed to produce annual revenues1 not in excess of $69,416,000.00, an increase in annual revenues of $4,407,000.00. Tbe Utility proposed by suspended rates to have become effective on September 28, 1982, a revenue increase of $8,363,000.00. An Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) recommended an increase of $3,822,000.00.

Philadelphia Electric Company provides its customers with steam, electric and gas service.2 Only tbe first is here at issue. Tbe operations of tbe Utility’s Steam Division encompass a five and one-half square mile area in Central and West Philadelphia. In 1982, 563 commercial and industrial customers were served with 5,094 million pounds of steam primarily for use in space beating. Three steam production facilities, primarily low and high [413]*413pressure boilers and plants for water purification, are located along the thirty-six miles of steam distribution mains and laterals constituting the ‘ ‘ downtown loop.” The Willow and Edison Stations are low pressure steam production facilities located at the eastern end of the distribution loop. Schuylkill Station is a dual purpose plant serving primarily as a source of high pressure steam but also as a source of electric generation. This dual nature of the Schuylkill Station has given rise to a number of the issues in this litigation.

By Order of the Commission3 adopted September 17, 1982, an investigation was commenced as to the justness and legality of the Utility’s proposed increase in annual revenues. The matter was the subject of some twelve days of hearings conducted by ALJ Isador Kranzel producing a voluminous record of exhibits, compilations of data, and 1250 pages of transcribed testimony. The recommended decision of the ALJ issued on March 11, 1983, over seventy pages in length, contains detailed justification for the various determinations as to fair value of the Utility’s steam division property, rate of return fairly to be received by the Utility’s investors on the value of that property, and operating expenses necessary to be recovered by the Utility. Thereafter, responding to exceptions and cross-exceptions taken to the ALJ’s decision and embodying fifty-six pages of discourse and analysis exclusive of explanatory tables, the Commission, on April 29, 1983, entered the decision and order here subject to review.

The Issues

The petitioners divide the many questions here presented into two categories. First, the University [414]*414contends that various costs incurred by the Utility' and properly attributable to the provision of electric service have been unfairly and unlawfully included in the expenses to be recovered out of steam consumer charges. Specifically, the University here asserts that the Commission’s decision is inadequate with regard to its rejection of these allegations of unlawful “cost shifting” and, therefore, that the record must be remanded for further proceedings and the production of a more extensive adjudication.

In addition, the University contends that the Commission erred in its specific determinations, including errors in the allocation of the burden of proof, with respect to the Utility’s rate base, operation and maintenance expenses, depreciation schedule, calculation of cash working capital, and claim for necessary fuel inventory. These issues will be considered seriatim.

I. Cost Shifting From Electric to Steam Consumers.

Schuylkill Station

As indicated above, a number of issues here pressed have their origin in the dual role of the Utility’s Schuylkill Station; producing by means of its No. 3 turbine generator both high pressure steam and electricity. Prior to January, 1981, the expenses, including carrying and operating costs, of Unit No. 3 were the subject of an accounting methodology which accomplished an even division of those expenses between electric and steam consumers. Steam consumers were additionally credited for the electric generation provided by the dual operation in an «.mount which, if the credit had been continued in 1981, would have equalled $1,964,000.00. This credit was calculated with reference to the monthly average Philadelphia area steam generating fuel cost.

[415]*415In January, 1981, clue, in part, to the retirement of the last three low pressure turbine generators at Schuylkill Station, the Utility altered the accounting-methodology described above so as to place on steam consumers the whole of the carrying and operating-costs of Turbine No. 3 as well as the related boilers and equipment. Additionally, the Utility replaced the “net generation credit” previously available to offset steam service costs with a reduced “avoided cost” credit calculated with reference to the expense to the Utility in the absence of Unit No. 3 of purchasing additional electric power from the multi-state PJM4 electric generation pool. The record is less than clear as to the precise effect of these changes. However, it appears to be conceded that increased annual carrying costs alone will be in excess of $2.2 million and that the recalculated credit for electric production will reduce by 25%-45% those intra-utility revenues previously available to offset costs of steam production.

The University does not now directly attack the legality of the Utility’s revision of its Schuylkill Station accounting methodology. Rather, it contends that an alternative methology proposed by it received inadequate consideration by the Commission and that we should remand for such consideration.

The University’s proffered resolution of the Schuylkill Station expense division issue is predicated on the applicability of provisions of the United States Public Utility Regulatory Policy Act of 1978 (PURPA)5 which requires compensation to be paid by public utilities to private owners of electric generating facilities (for example, homeowners installing [416]*416domestic photovoltaic arrays or wind or water powered generators) who make excess electricity available to the utilities’ distribution network. PURPA provides that compensation to such private owners of generating facilities is to be calculated with reference to the Utility’s capacity and operating cost of providing electricity by means of the next generation facility to be placed on line, in the instant case, the nuclear Limerick facilities. The University asserts that adoption of its proposal would result in annual revenues to the steam division derived from its electric counterpart in excess of the revenue increase requested by the Utility in these proceedings.

The ALJ rejected the University’s proposal primarily because the electric power produced by Unit No. 3 is not a reliable source of electric generation inasmuch as the electric production of Unit No.

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Bluebook (online)
485 A.2d 1217, 86 Pa. Commw. 410, 1984 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 2094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/university-of-pennsylvania-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pacommwct-1984.