VEPCO v. SCC

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 2021
Docket201172
StatusPublished

This text of VEPCO v. SCC (VEPCO v. SCC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
VEPCO v. SCC, (Va. 2021).

Opinion

PRESENT: Lemons, C.J., Mims, Powell, Kelsey, McCullough, and Chafin, JJ., and Russell, S.J.

VIRGINIA ELECTRIC AND POWER COMPANY OPINION BY v. Record No. 201172 JUSTICE TERESA M. CHAFIN JULY 15, 2021 STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION, ET AL.

FROM THE STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION

Virginia Electric and Power Company (“VEPCO”) appeals from a declaratory judgment

of the State Corporation Commission (“SCC” or “Commission”) in which the Commission found

that a pumped storage hydroelectric facility (or “pumped storage”) generates “renewable energy”

under the former definition in Code § 56-576, and that the amended definition would not apply

to contracts executed before the amendment’s effective date. VEPCO argues that the

Commission erred in its interpretation of the former definition and in refusing to apply the

amended definition prospectively from its effective date. For the reasons that follow, we

disagree and affirm the Commission’s decision.

I.

Constellation NewEnergy, Inc. (“Constellation”) is a competitive service provider

participating in the retail choice program of Code § 56-577(A)(5) (“Subsection (A)(5)”).

Subsection (A)(5) permits individual retail customers to “purchase electric energy provided 100

percent from renewable energy” from licensed suppliers if the incumbent electric utility does not

offer the same. Code § 56-577(A)(5)(a).

In December 2019, Constellation began contracting with customers to provide electricity

from renewable energy as permitted by Subsection (A)(5). “Renewable energy” is a defined term within the statutory scheme, as set out in Code § 56-576. At the time Constellation entered

into its contracts, renewable energy was defined as

energy derived from sunlight, wind, falling water, biomass, sustainable or otherwise, (the definitions of which shall be liberally construed), energy from waste, landfill gas, municipal solid waste, wave motion, tides, and geothermal power, and does not include energy derived from coal, oil, natural gas, or nuclear power. Renewable energy shall also include the proportion of the thermal or electric energy from a facility that results from the co-firing of biomass.

Code § 56-576 (2019). In contracting with its retail customers, Constellation agreed to provide

“100% Renewable Electricity Supply,” which was set out as being sourced from a “facility . . .

that generates electricity using [wind, solar, falling water (pumped storage hydroelectric or

hydroelectric) or any other resource that generates electricity that meets the definition of

‘Renewable Energy’ under . . . Code § 56-576] (collectively, ‘Renewable Generation

Facilities’).” (Brackets in original.) The provision further specified, “Seller reserves the right to

substitute supply from any other Renewable Generation Facilities without prior notice to

Customer.”

That same month, Constellation notified VEPCO of its Subsection (A)(5) customer

enrollment, and VEPCO requested documentation confirming that Constellation would provide

customers with electricity sourced “100 percent from renewable energy.” Constellation

responded that it intended to supply its customers with energy sourced from wind and pumped

storage hydroelectric facilities, contending that pumped storage “generates electricity from

falling water,” consistent with the statutory definition. 1 Attached to its response, Constellation

1 A pumped storage hydroelectric facility is “a configuration of two water reservoirs at different elevations that can generate power (discharge) as water moves down through a turbine” and then “draws power as it pumps water (recharge) to the upper reservoir.” U.S. Department of

2 provided copies of its wholesale contracts, including the contract with the pumped storage

hydroelectric facility that took effect on February 8, 2020. On April 1, 2020, VEPCO replied

that it disagreed with Constellation’s position regarding pumped storage, asserting that pumped

storage did not meet the statutory definition of renewable energy “except in the case of any run-

of-river production that can be quantified and verified.”

In the meantime, the General Assembly enacted the Virginia Clean Economy Act

(“VCEA”) during its 2020 session. 2020 Acts chs. 1193, 1194. As part of the VCEA, and to

become effective July 1, 2020, the General Assembly amended the definition of renewable

energy in Code § 56-576. The definition maintained the language referenced above, but added a

new sentence: “‘Renewable energy’ does not include waste heat from fossil-fired facilities or

electricity generated from pumped storage but includes run-of-river generation from a combined

pumped-storage and run-of-river facility.” Code § 56-576 (current).

On April 17, 2020, Constellation petitioned the SCC for a declaratory judgment that

procuring electricity from a pumped storage hydroelectric facility qualified as renewable energy

under the definition in Code § 56-576 in effect at the time, such that Constellation could rely on

that electricity to meet its load requirements under the retail choice program of Subsection

(A)(5). Constellation further requested a finding that the revised definition, which would

become effective on July 1, 2020, “applies prospectively” and would not prohibit Constellation

from relying on pumped storage “for the duration of its retail contracts.” Constellation asserted

that the issues raised in its petition could be decided without an evidentiary hearing and

Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy, Pumped-Storage Hydropower, https://www.energy.gov/eere/water/pumped-storage-hydropower (last visited Mar. 31, 2021).

3 requested an expedited review in order for the Commission to consider the issues before the

VCEA’s effective date.

VEPCO filed a notice of participation and a subsequent response to Constellation’s

petition. VEPCO asserted that a pumped storage hydroelectric facility did not generate

renewable energy under Code § 56-576 because it was more akin to a battery that stores energy,

unlike the rest of the sources in the statute which generated kinetic or potential energy. VEPCO

further argued that if the Commission found that pumped storage was renewable energy under

the former definition, Constellation should not be allowed to rely upon the former definition

where the amendment was a valid exercise of the Commonwealth’s police power.

By order on May 29, 2020, the Commission granted Constellation’s petition for

declaratory judgment. Applying rules of statutory interpretation, the Commission found that

there was no ambiguity in the phrase “derived from . . . falling water,” and that electricity

generated from a pumped storage hydroelectric facility is therefore “renewable energy” because

it is derived from water that falls from a higher point to a lower point. Thus, pumped storage

satisfied the statutory definition of renewable energy in effect at the time Constellation executed

its contracts. With respect to the amended definition, the Commission declined to find that the

amendment would apply “retroactively” to Constellation’s 2019 contracts where the amendment

would not take effect until July 1, 2020. The Commission relied on Bailey v. Spangler, 289 Va.

353, 358 (2015), for the proposition that retroactivity is generally disfavored absent a manifest

legislative intent to the contrary. VEPCO appealed to this Court, assigning error to both

findings.

4 II.

VEPCO presents two primary arguments on appeal.

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