Ameren Services Co. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
Opinion of the Court
Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge Rogers.
When new sources of power generation connect to the existing transmission grid, the grid often requires new construction beyond the point of interconnection in order to accommodate the increased flows of electricity. FERC issued a series of orders empowering incoming generators within the Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) region
The Commission justified the orders on two grounds. First, it found that allowing transmission owners to choose between funding options—and thus, potentially, to impose subsequent charges to generators via transmission owner funding—could allow the transmission owners to discriminate among generators. Secondly, it held that the charges to generators would be (or could be) unjust and unreasonable under the Federal Power Act. Petitioning transmission owners challenge both grounds. We conclude that Petitioners are correct regarding the discrimination point: there is neither evidence nor economic logic supporting FERC’s discriminatory theory as applied to transmission owners without affiliated generation assets.
FERC’s second ground raises a unique and important conceptual issue. Petitioners argue that involuntary generator funding compels them to construct, own, and operate facilities without compensatory network upgrade charges—thus forcing them to accept additional risk without corresponding return as essentially non-profit managers of these upgrade facilities. We
I.
We have previously explained the' series of steps FERC took to unbundle the electric power system, enabling and encouraging new independent generators to create a competitive market for power generation.
For independent generators to utilize the grid, they must first connect to it. FERC thus used its rulemaking powers to issue Order No. 2003, which standardized the procedures for generator interconnection and directed each transmission network to maintain a pro forma generator interconnection agreement.
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As we have also explained, FERC encouraged the creation of Regional Transmission Organizations (RTOs) to integrate the fragmented transmission grid.on a regional basis, along- with Independent System Operators (ISOs) as non-profit entities which would control access to the grid within their respective regions. Wisconsin Public Power, Inc., 493 F.3d at 247. In Order No. 2003, the' Commission set a default rule that transmission owners would bear responsibility for the network upgrades, but gave ISOs “flexibility to customize its interconnection procedures and agreements to meet regional needs.” Order No. 2003 at P 827; id. at P 676. In this case, we encounter MISO, which qualifies as both an RTO and an ISO.
Originally, MISO had allocated the costs equally between the incoming generator and the transmission owner. As such, under transmission owner funding—which it could choose—the transmission owner
But a problem arose: this 50/50 arrangement placed most of the cost burden on the pricing zone where interconnection occurred, but the power from the new generation sources often exceeded the load within those local zones in which they connected. Midwest Independent Transmission System Operator, Inc.,
To remedy this problem, MISO proposed (and FERC approved) a new allocation of capital costs: for network upgrades rated at 345 kilovolts or above, the interconnecting generator bears 90 percent of those costs, and transmission owners (and their local customers) bear 10 percent. -In' other , words, the 10 percent would be included in ■ the transmission owner’s rate base. For projects rated below 345 kilo-volts, the interconnecting generator bears 100 percent of the costs. This reallocation was intended to comport with FERC’s “principle that network upgrades should be paid for by the parties that cause and benefit from such .upgrades.” MISO Tariff Amendment at P 3.
The manner in which the incoming generator and transmission owner .actually pay these capital costs depends upon the way the network upgrades are funded. Originally, the MISO tariff contained three options for providing the capital required to construct the network upgrades. We need not discuss the first because it was removed by the Commission in its E.ON decision.
Under the second alternative, Option 2 or “generator funding,” the interconnecting generator would’ provide the funding for the network upgrades prior to construction. The transmission owner would not refund this capital to the interconnecting generator, and would neither include the capital in its rate base nor charge the interconnecting generator a return on that capital.
Following the Commission’s E.ON decision, then, it was clear that the transmission owner could choose between two options—generator funding or transmission owner funding—to finance construction of network upgrades when an incoming generator, sought to directly interconnect with its network.
To further complicate the matter, however, the addition of new generation sources can cause second-order effects across the grid. Sometimes, in order to support flows of power from a new source, network upgrades must be made by transmission owners that do not connect directly to the incoming generator. And in other instances, the coincidence of multiple interconnection requests can create a need for a set of common network upgrades, which enable the grid to support the several incoming generators. In these two situations, MISO’s tariff did not initially permit transmission owners to choose between funding options.
It was that disparity between the treatment of direct and indirect network upgrades which gave rise to this case. In 2014, when faced with the prospect of building network upgrades to support an indirectly connected incoming generator, a transmission owner named Otter Tail requested that MISO offer it the same choice (between generator funding and transmission owner funding) enjoyed by directly connected transmission owners. MISO consented, and submitted an agreement to FERC that would allow Otter Tail to elect transmission owner funding.
Otter Tail also filed a complaint under Sections 206 and 306 of the Federal Power Act. It contended that the disparity between directly connected transmission owners (who could choose to fund the upgrades to their networks) and indirectly connected transmission owners (who could not choose transmission owner funding) rendered MISO’s tariff unjust and unreasonable. Otter Tail requested that FERC order MISO to bring all transmission owners into alignment by modifying its tariff to allow the choice of transmission owner funding for indirect interconnections.
The Commission agreed with Otter Tail that this disparity was unsupportable. In its June 2015 Order,
The Commission determined that providing directly connected transmission owners with the ability to select transmission owner funding “may be unjust, unreasonable, unduly discriminatory or preferential because it ... may result in discriminatory treatment by the transmission owner of different interconnection customers.”
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Those cost differences, according to the Commission, had two main causes. FERC thought that generators missed the opportunity to seek favorable construction funding in competitive capital markets; in other words, the use of transmission owner funding could prevent the generator from finding a better deal from a third party. June 2015 Order at P 48. Second, FERC contended that transmission owner funding imposed a more onerous “security” requirement on generators. June 2015 Order at P 49 & n.110. Transmission owners required generators to provide some form of financial assurance—such as a guarantee, surety bond, or letter of credit—that was sufficient to cover the cost commitments undertaken by the transmission owner in constructing the network upgrades. Under generator funding, this requirement lasted only for the duration of construction. But under transmission owner funding, security was required for the duration of the funding agreement. As an example, one proposed transmission owner funding agreement specified tfyat an incoming generator would maintain a letter of credit over a term of 20 years. December 2015 Order at P 38 & n.60.
Given these tentative findings, FERC instituted a formal adjudicatory proceeding under Section 206 of the Federal Power Act, requiring MISO to either modify its tariff to require generator consent for transmission owner funding, or to explain why the Commission’s views were not correct. This proceeding attracted a large cohort of intervenors; various transmission owners (including Petitioners), independent generators, and associations that represent those groups each contributed comments before the Commission. In the second of the orders under review in this case (“December 2015 Order”), FERC affirmed its earlier finding that “it is potentially unjust, unreasonable and unduly discriminatory to deprive the interconnection customer of the ability to provide its own
II.
The Commission’s position before us largely tracks its final decision below. It relied, as we noted, on two grounds to determine that transmission owners may not insist on transmission owner funding, but that generators must'instead have the option to self-fund. The first is that giving transmission -owners the option to fund the upgrades provides them with the power to discriminate amongst generators who wish to connect to the grid. (Discrimination is, of course, prohibited by the Federal Power Act. See 16 U.S.C. §§ 824d(b); 824e(a).) Petitioners argue vigorously, however, that there is neither evidence of discrimination
■ Our dissenting colleague suggests that we actually lack jurisdiction to consider Petitioners’ : anti-discrimination argument—at least insofar as Petitioners point out that only a transmission owner which also owns a generator would have an incentive to discriminate—because Petitioners did not explicitly make that specific point to the Commission. But when Petitioners vigorously contended there was no evidence to support a finding of discrimination and no reason to “predict[J” it would occur as “a foregone conclusion,” Request for Rehearing of the Indicated
The second theory upon which FERC based its orders was that allowing transmission owners to insist on transmission owner funding would be “unjust and unreasonable” under the Federal Power Act because it imposed increased costs without any corresponding increase in service. We should note at the outset that the Commission does not assert that transmission owner funding is inherently unjust and unreasonable; it is only if the transmission owner chooses that method of funding that FERC believes it crosses the unjust and unreasonable line. (That suggests that FERC is really seeking to enhance the generator’s bargaining position vis-a-vis the transmission owners—which, of course, is why generators have intervened in support of the Commission.) As we explained, FERC wants generators to have the .option to seek the funding for .the new construction from parties other than the transmission owners because it asserts that cheaper funding may be available elsewhere. FERC observes that the transmission owners have an incentive to increase costs because such costs will either be included in the rate base—upon which revenue can be predicated—or in charges back to the generator owner, which also include a measure of profit. FERC also states that the transmission owners have no right to the generator’s financing business.
. The Commission . contends moreover that generator funding avoids the larger security costs under transmission owner funding. We are puzzled by FERC’s reasoning on this point, because if the generator had found another source of capital to c.over. the costs of the upgrade, we can’t imagine that the generator wouldn’t have to provide the same kind of security to that third party—covering the risk of default—that it does for transmission owners.
But this proposition applies equally to all cost components of Network Upgrade construction, which Petitioners perform on the generators’ behalf—not' merely its funding. By the same logic, since they bear a greater share of cost responsibility, the generators also have a sharper incentive than Petitioners to reduce the costs of raw materials," or construction labor/ or design fees. This is why the generators can challenge inclusion of any such costs that deviate unreasonably from a fair market price before the Commission. "
In any event, it does not necessarily follow from any incentive differences that FERC may compel transmission owners to operate the upgrades without an opportunity to earn a return. Such a determination would require reasoned justification by the
First, they claim that under compelled generator funding, transmission owners will be forced to assume certain costs that are never compensated. Keeping in mind that the transmission owners will own and operate the grid, including the upgrades, they will bear liability for insurance deductibles and all sorts of litigation, including environmental and reliability claims (such as blackout risks). The Commission’s response dismisses these risks; it asserts ■that upgrades might actually reduce congestion risks, see August 2016 Order Denying Rehearing at P 17, but it makes no real attempt to holistically assess all of the various risks and benefits to the transmission owner caused by the addition of the upgrade facilities.
Instead, FERC asserts that because “this case concerns only the capital costs of facility construction,” Resp.Br. 35, and since “[tjransmission owners will recover their cost of service (beyond capital costs) through their, transmission rates,”
Contrary to the dissent’s characterization, FERC’s musing that network upgrades might actually reduce reliability risk is hardly a “finding” of fact to which we are obliged to defer. It is, at most, a possibility to be explored—and one that sounds a bit far fetched to us. In any event, FERC makes no assertion that any such reduction of reliability risk’would be of sufficient magnitude that the added facilities would actually reduce the net overall risk borne by the owner-operator. Further, the dissent’s suggestion that the environmental risks are identical regardless of who provides capital for the upgrades is something of a diversion. Of course that is true. The problem is that the risk is always borne by the transmission owner, and under Option 2, Petitioners contend they are not compensated for bearing it. And whether the transmission owner chooses, at its own expense, to insure that risk is obviously irrelevant. Cf. Dissent at 592.
We therefore think that FERC inadequately considered Petitioners’ argument
Petitioners’ second—and more fundamental—argument is that FERC’s orders require them to act, at least in part, as a nonprofit business. Put another way, by modifying the transmission owners’ entire enterprise, FERC’s orders attack their very business model and thereby create a risk that new capital investment will be deterred. In its orders, FERC distorted and dismissed this argument, stating derisively that because generators bear responsibility for most of the capital costs under generator funding, the entire enterprise argument “implies that the affected system operator is owed the interconnection customer’s financing business.” June 2015 Order at P 50. FERC seems to believe that transmission owners are simply not entitled to participate in funding the network upgrades, and importantly to earn a return on capital.
But a careful reading of Supreme Court precedent reveals that a regulated industry is entitled to a return that is sufficient to ensure that new capital can be attracted. See Hope, 320 U.S. at 603,
Our dissenting colleague responds to Petitioners’ primary argument—that FERC’s order inquires them to operate partly as a non-profit business—by asserting that Hope does not guarantee that each portion of a regulated business will be profitable. Dissent at 592. That is, of course, true, but it seems undisputable that when portions of a business are unprofitable, it detracts from the attractiveness to investors of the business as a whole—and that is a concern that the Commission must at least address under Hope’s, capital-attraction standard.
Notwithstanding these concerns, the non-profit innovation might remain bearable so long as the generator-funded upgrades growing inside the grid remain tiny relative to their host. But if more and more of a transmission owner’s business is to be owned and operated on a non-profit basis, these additions would likely deter investors and diminish the ability of the transmission grid to attract capital for future maintenance and expansion. That FERC’s orders cross a rather significant conceptual line was revealed when FERC’s counsel was asked whether, if a group of generators got together to fund a billion-dollar upgrade that totally refurbished a portion of the grid, the transmission owner would be obliged to operate and assume liability for the upgrade—with operations and maintenance costs reimbursed, but no return. The .answer, alarmingly, was yes. Oral Arg. at 39:36; see also id, at 51:39-52:15. Transmission owners’ desire to retain the' choice tp fund the upgrades is therefore much more than a, claim of entitlement to the generator’s “financing business.” It is, at root, a desire to retain, control over their own business.
In its discussion of the balance of investor and consumer interests. mandated by Hope, the Commission stresses that capital costs are ultimately borne by the generator under either option.' But this- backward-looking perspective elides Hope’s forward-looking capital attraction standard. 320 U.S. at 605,
In sum, petitioning transmission owners raise serious statutory and constitutional concerns with respect to the effect of compulsory generator-funded upgrades on their business model. They ask why their current invéstors should be forced to accept risk-bearing additions to their network with zero return. We think ah even greater concern is whether any future providers of capital would choose to enter into that questionable bargain. See Hope, 320 U.S. at 603,
Setting aside the merits of the case, FERC contends in the alternative that our review is premature because the transmission owners can seek to adjust their rates in a future hearing under Section 205 of the Federal Power Act. We are thus urged not to intervene on the transmission owners’ behalf, because they can, and should, simply seek relief from FERC directly in a later hearing.
But for two reasons, a Section 205 hearing cannot provide the relief that the petitioning transmission .owners seek. First, FERC’s precedents do not provide compensation for several of the classes of risks that Petitioners allege will accompany construction and operation of the network upgrade facilities. For example, fines and penalties for violations of mandatory reliability standards and environmental regulations are generally charged directly to the utility, not passed through to customers via rate increases. See, e.g,, In re SCANA Corp.,
The second reason why a Section 205 hearing would be of little use to the petitioning transmission owners is that FERC has spoken with utter and consistent clarity as to the question of whether a rate of return is justified under the generator funding option. See Resp.Br. 33; August 2016 Rehearing Order PP 12-20; December 2015 Rehearing Order PP 56-59. If, in a future Section 205 hearing, the transmission owners were to seek to include generator-funded assets in their rate base,, a negative result is a foregone conclusion. The relevant question, then, is not whether the rate can be adjusted later in a Section 205 hearing—-but instead whether a transmission owner can be forced to accept generator-funded upgrades in the first instance. That .question is. squarely before us; we return it to FERC for a more thorough answer.
On a related point, the dissent suggests that since the Commission plans to take up the issue of generic interconnection costs in a pending rulemaking, it is unnecessary for us to consider Petitioners’ concern in this case. The dissent implies that FERC has consciously chosen a specific “manner of proceeding, addressing capital costs here' and generic interconnection cost issues in a separate docket,” Dissent at 589.
The Commission did not make this argument before us, and for good reason: the' purported plan to separate capital costs from other cost issues is fiction. (In fact, FERC’s sole mention of its separate rule-making in the proceedings below was to acknowledge and reject the Petitioners’ request to avoid adjudication while the rulemaking was in progress. See December 2015 Order PP 40, 60.) In the referenced rulemaking—Docket No. RM15-21— FERC requested comments on Intervenor AWEA’s proposals for changes to the’ standard interconnection agreements. See Notice of Petition for Rulemaking, Docket No. RM15-21 (FERC July. 7,. 2015). And those proposals explicitly include, in multiple locations, the precise issue of capital cost allocation.
Further, even assuming that FERC had intended such a “manner of proceeding” (and that such a dichotomy would be conceptually tenable), the dissent’s wait-and-see suggestion confuses adjudication— which is retroactive, determining whether a party violated legal policy—with rule-making, which is of only future effect. We once described an agency’s effort to offer future rulemaking as a response to a claim of agency illegality as an “administrative law shell game,” Am. Tel. & Tel. Co. v. FCC,
IV.
When we remand orders to FERC, two factors inform our decision whether to vacate: the gravity of the orders’ flaws, and the “disruptive consequences” that may result. Black Oak Energy, LLC v. FERC,
As noted above, we have no need to finally decide the transmission owners’ central complaint in this case: that under the Federal Power Act and the Constitution, FERC cannot force them to construct and operate generator-funded network upgrades.
The transmission owners complain that generator-funded upgrades draft them into service to manage non-profit appendages to their network; we today remand in part because FERC failed to respond to that argument. By approving changes to the MISO tariff, however, the August 2016 Order on Compliance opens the floodgates to involuntary generator-funded interconnection projects.
We think it at least uncertain that FERC can reach the same result after addressing the deficiencies identified in this opinion; indeed, the potential-discrimination justification for FERC’s orders seems especially weak. But we think the prospect of disruptive consequences cuts decisively against the premature approval, and precipitate commencement, of construction projects under a tariff of questionable legality. Moreover, that FERC plans a rulemaking to consider interconnection problems and costs also suggests that it should approach those issues on a clean slate. We therefore vacate the orders—with the recognition that the Commission may, as always, file a petition for rehearing in the event it objects to such vacatur on ground we do not perceive— and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
. MISO operates in fifteen states located largely within the midwestem United States, along with the Canadian province of Manitoba.
. For a detailed description of the series of FERC orders that, led to the development of competitive power generation markets and the Creation of MISO, see Wisconsin Public Power, Inc. v. FERC,
. Standardization of Generator Interconnection Agreements and Procedures, Order No. 2003, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,146 (2003), order on reh'g, Order No. 2003-A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,160, order on reh'g, Order No. 2003-B, FERC Stats. & Regs. 31,171 (2004), order on reh'g, Order No. 2003-C, FERC Stats. & Regs, ¶ 31,190 (2005), aff'd sub nom. Nat'l Ass’n of Regulatory Util. Comm’rs v. FERC,
. E.ON Climate & Renewables North America, LLC v. Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Op., Inc.,
. Under generator funding, the transmission owner does provide a refund of the reimbursable portion of construction costs—which amount to ten percent of capital costs for projects rated at 345 kilovolts or higher—in the form of a credit toward transmission services charged to the interconnecting generator. The' generator receives no reimbursement for the remaining ninety percent of these larger projects.
. This unexecuted FCA was submitted pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal Power Act, 16U.S.C. § 824d (2012).
. Midwest Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc.,
. This language suggests that FERC thought transmission owner funding was unjust and unreasonable only because it was discriminatory. However, in the final orders the Commission seems to rest on two separate grounds: potential discrimination by transmission owners among generators, and excessive costs charged to generators with no increase in service, which FERC found to be unjust and unreasonable. See Otter Tail Power Co. v. Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc.,
.In the third and fourth of the orders under review, FERC rejected another petition from six transmission owners (“August 2016 Order Denying Rehearing”) and accepted MISO’s compliance filing to remove a transmission owner’s ability to choose between funding options from the MISO Tariff ("August 2016 Order on Compliance”). In the fifth and final order on review in this case ("October 2016 Order”), the Commission denied a procedurally-oriented request for rehearing, with reference to its December 2015 Order and August 2016 Orders.
. The only- study alleging evidence of disparate costs charged generators was conceded by FERC to be flawed. See December-2015 Order at P 33.
. See, e.g., Calpine Corp. v. FERC,
. As such, of the two alleged sources of increased costs under transmission owner funding—a missed opportunity to seek alternative, cheaper funding and a more onerous security requirement—the second seems to collapse into the first: any alternative financing package must account for the risk of loss, whether through an explicit security requirement (such as a letter of credit) or an implicit willingness to bear that risk expressed through a higher financing rate.
. This recovery is alleged to occur through a process by which transmission owners recoup their recognized expenses for such line items as operations and maintenance. See December 2015 Order at P 57 & n. 118.
. The dissent contends that Petitioners offered "only bare generalities about its uncompensated costs, but no specifics.” Dissent at 591. But risks—which are contingent possibilities of future adverse events—must be described in hypothetical terms. And Petitioners did offer specific examples to support the general argument that when they are denied the opportunity to fund construction that occurs within their grid, “the return earned is disproportionate to the size, complexity, and risks of the system the transmission owner owns and operates.” Request for Rehearing of the Indicated Transmission Owners, Docket Nos. EL15-68, EL15-36 (FERC January 28, 2016) at 14. Indeed, they cited FERC’s own summary of these risks, noting that FERC had addressed only one small subset (construction risks covered by financial security). Id. at 20-22. They offered compliance with Reliability Standards as just "one example of such risk” that had not been addressed. Id. at
. See, e.g., December 2015 Order at P 59 ("Our decision does not preclude the transmission owner from earning a return on these network upgrades from the interconnection customer where the transmission owner and the interconnection customer mutually agree ... any return that was available to a transmission owner when the initial funding election was made on a unilateral basis by the transmission owner is still available when the transmission owner’s initial funding option is made on a mutually agreed upon basis.”).
. See Petition for Rulemaking of the American Wind Energy Association to Revise Generator Interconnection Rules and Procedures, Docket No. RM15-21 (FERC June 19, 2015)
. Nor is it necessary to reach the petitioning transmission owners' argument that FERC departed from its precedent without justification, or that its orders here are illegal because they constitute a "novel” form of ratemaking under Hope. These issues may become appropriate for our consideration in the event that FERC adequately supports its decision.
. We think it noteworthy here that FERC, the petitioning transmission owners, and the intervening independent generators have all recognized that many interconnecting generators would prefer to use generator funding if permitted by FERC. And as one engineer noted before FERC, the backlog of new projects is high, causing a situation in which "Otter Tail and its neighboring transmission systems are rapidly confronting the need to fund and construct both direct and indirect Network Upgrades for new generation.” Affidavit of Dean Pawloski, Principal Engineer, Otter Tail Power Company at P 6 (January 12, 2015). The prospect, then, that today’s network upgrades will cumulatively constitute a significant fraction of tomorrow’s grid renders the petitioning transmission owners’ concern more credible.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
After the Federal Regulatory Commission rejected a transmission owner’s request for unilateral authority to select the funding method for “network upgrades,” certain transmission owners (hereinafter “Ameren”) did not prevail on rehearing and now petition for review of five orders of the Commission.
On' appeal, Ameren principally contends that the Commission’s action is confiscatory insofar as it denies Ameren the ability to earn a return on network upgrades and fails.to compensate Ameren for business risk, Petrs Br. 30-35. Ameren maintains that the challenged orders fail to address its most important concern, namely, that absent gaining generator consent, the orders “force [Ameren],to construct, own, and operate transmission facilities without any return, ie.,. on a non-profit basis.” Id. at 37-38. The court vacates the challenged orders, concluding that “there is neither evidence nor economic logic supporting [the Commission’s] discrimination] theory as applied to transmission owners without affiliated generation assets,” and ‘that the Commission failed to respond adequately to Ameren’s ‘ non-profit objection. Op. at 573, 582-83. For the following reasons, I respectfully dissent.
I.
As a preliminary matter, it is worth acknowledging the limited scope of the court’s review of Commission orders. “[I]n a technical area like electricity rate design,” courts must “afford great deference to the Commission in its rate decisions.” FERC v. Elec. Power Supply Ass’n, — U.S. -—,
By way of background to understanding the Commission’s ongoing consideration of cost allocation in the Midwest region, the critical undisputed fact is that under the Midcontinent System Operator (“MISO”) Tariff, generators bear 90 to 100 percent of the costs of construction of network upgrades. The Commission determined in 2003 that when the generator funds the network-- upgrade, the generator is to receive credits against transmission service for the amounts, funded. Standardization of Generator Interconnection Agreements and Procedures, Order No. 2003,
II.
In the first of the challenged orders, the Commission, in again addressing the contentious issue of cost allocation in this section 206 proceeding, rejected the request of a transmission owner (“Otter Tail”) for unilateral discretion to choose the funding method for network upgrades. The Commission determined that such discretion could allow transmission owners to discriminate against generators through the imposition of increased costs, thereby “frustrat[ing] the development of new, competitive generation.” June 2015 Order PP 48-49. Examining Article 11.3 of MISO’s Generator Interconnection Agreement, the Commission reasoned that the provision appeared unjust and unreasonable and unduly discriminatory or preferential because “it allows the transmission owner the discretion to elect to initially fund the upgrades and subsequently assess the [generator] a network upgrade charge that is not later reimbursed ,.. through ... credits,” and it “may deprive the [generator] of other options to finance the cost of network upgrades that provide more favorable terms and rates.”
As Joint Intervenors point out, MISO’s post-2009 credit policy is “[a] primary reason” the Commission determined that such unilateral discretion was unjust and unreasonable .and unduly discriminatory, Jt. In-tervenors’ Br. 11 (citing June 2015 Order P 3). Intervenors elaborate that by asking for a revised MISO-specifie credit policy in 2009 and abandoning responsibility for financing network upgrades, MISO transmission ■ owners “gave up the opportunity to earn a rate of return on the network upgrades.”
On rehearing, the Commission rejected Ameren’s arguments that there was insufficient evidence of discrimination and that
The Commission reasonably responded to Ameren’s argument that removal of transmission owners’ unilateral discretion over initial funding improperly deprived it of the ability to recover prudently-incurred transmission costs of service from generators beyond the capital costs of the network upgrades. For instance, the Commission rejected the argument that the initial funding option under Article 11.3 of MISO’s pro forma tariff allows transmission owners to recover non-capital costs as contrary to its precedent in Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc.,
Balancing risks in allocating costs, the Commission determined that Option 2 was a just and reasonable rate and available under MISO’s Tariff, noting that Ameren “ignores the continued existence of the transmission owner’s initial funding option” by mutual agreement with the generator. December 2015 Order P 59. It emphasized that “the obligation to fund these network upgrades rests with the [generator] under MISO’s Tariff and as credits are not provided in return for this funding, we find that it is potentially unjust, unreasonable and unduly discriminatory to deprive the [generator] of the ability to provide its own capital funding.”
The Commission observed further that Ameren “does not allege that funding for network upgrades under Option 2 is confiscatory inasmuch as it provides an insufficient rate of return to a transmission owners; rather, [Ameren] take[s] issue only with the fact that [it] will no longer unilaterally elect that financing option.”
III.
The court nevertheless concludes that the challenged orders must be vacated. Op. at 585. The reasons offered by the court for vacatur are unpersuasive because the so-called “deficiencies,” id. at 584, simply ignore the Commission’s analysis and Am-eren’s failure to produce evidence of uncompensated risks as well as the Commission’s manner of proceeding, addressing capital costs here and generic interconnection cost issues in a separate docket. The challenged orders reflect the Commission’s determination upon assessing a complex and difficult balancing of risks in regard to recovery of costs, and the court owes deference to the Commission’s expertise and technical understanding. See Elec. Power Supply Ass’n,
A.
The court faults the Commission for failing to show why a transmission owner without affiliates would discriminate among generators. Op. at 578-79. But
That procedural default aside, the court could 'hardly dispute that Ameren has “a competitive motive” to favor affiliated generators over other generators. The Commission addressed this circumstance in Order No. 888 and the Supreme Court thereafter observed that “utilities’ control of transmission facilities gives them the power either to refuse to. deliver energy produced by competitors or to deliver competitors’ power on terms and conditions less favorable than those they apply to their own transmissions.” New York v. FERC,
This court has recognized that the Commission may properly take action “premised not on individualized findings of discrimination by transmission providers, but on a fundamental systemic problem.” Transmission Access Policy Study Grp.,
In addition to relying on “reasonable economic propositions,” see S.C. Pub. Serv. Auth. v. FERC,
Indeed, the court acknowledges that “it is certainly possible, if not probable” that generators could be deprived of less -costly financing options. Op. at 579;' see June 2015 Order P 49; Jt. Intervenors’ Br 13-14 (citing comments of Intervenor American Wind Energy Association). Yet the court dismisses without serious engagement, - see Op. at 579-80, the Commission’s extended consideration of the difficulties -presented by cost allocation in the Midwest region, see Midwest ITO 2009, P 2, aggravated by MISO’s post-2009 credit policy, as well as the Commission’s determination to adhere to the principles underlying Order No. 2003, so as to prevent undue discrimination, preserve reliability, increase energy supply, and lower wholesale prices for 'customers by increasing competition, and its interconnection precedent in Hoopeston and E.ON to ensure transmission owners could not unilaterally increase costs to generators.
B.
The court also raises the specter of additional uncompensated risks and concludes the Commission “inadequately considered” Ameren’s argument. Op, at 580. Were this so, then1 a remand for further explanation, not vacatur, would be appropriate. See Allied-Signal v. Nuclear Reg. Comm’n,
First, the Commission’s response is understandable because Ameren offered only bare generalities about its uncompensated costs, but no specifics. December 2015 Order P 59. In seeking rehearing, Ameren referred broadly and baldly to concern about “lawsuits, reliability compliance obligations, environmental risk, and construction risk, among others.” Request for Reh’g of the Indicated Transmission Owners (Sept. 8, 2016), at 13. In a footnote, the
Second, the court ignores that Ameren never points to any explanation it offered to the Commission of how it faced any additional insurance, construction, or environmental risk as a result of a particular funding method over another. It is undisputed that under MISO’s Tariff, as the Commission found, Ameren as a transmission owner is compensated for operational and management costs. December 2015 Order P 47 n.118 (citing MISO, FERC Electric Tariff, att. O). Transmission owners are 'also required to purchase Employers’ Liability and Workers’ Compensation Iiisurance, Commercial General ■ Liability Insurance, Comprehensive Automobile Liability Insurance, and Excess Public Liability Insurance regardless of how network upgrades are funded. MISO, FERC Electric Tariff, att. X, app. 6 (GIA) § 18.4 (minimum insurance requirements). Generators, in turn must post security, under MISO’s Tariff, “in order to address risk during construction.” December 2015 Order P 59. Ameren does not suggest the risk of an environmental violation is anything other than equal under either initial funding method. In the Commission’s words:
Indicated MISO Transmission Owners have not explained how allowing [a generator] to fund network upgrades under Option 2 fails to protect against unspecified ‘other risks associated with construction (not otherwise addressed by insurance)’ or operating risks due to requirements “to operate customer-financed assets in compliance with applicable Reliability Standards,” violations of which could “result in penalties that would not be recoverable from customers.”
August 2016 Order P 17 (quoting Request for Reh’g at 22).
Furthermore, the Commission determined that network upgrades could mitigate transmission owners’ reliability risk by reducing congestion. August 2016 Order P 17. In the post-Order No. 888 context, this court has recognized that network upgrades “provide system-wide benefits.” NARUC,
Having failed to identify any unrecoverable additional costs traceable to the challenged orders, Ameren attempts to shift its “heavy” burden on rehearing, see Hope,
Under the circumstances, there is no basis for the court to state that the Commission made “no real attempt to holistically assess” risks and benefits, Op. at 580, given Ameren’s evidentiary failure, the Commission’s determination regarding reliability risk, and its broader analysis of the allocation issue based on the record before it. Instead, the court has ignored inconvenient record facts and the Commission’s fulsome response to Ameren’s arguments, including its explicit statement on the limits of its ruling on MISO’s Tariff in the challenged orders. December 2015 Order P 60. The Commission’s assessments of how the risks should be balanced in allocating capital costs is a quintessential task involving Commission expertise and technical understanding that is entitled to deference by the court. See Elec. Power Supply Ass’n,
C.
The court also mistakenly accepts Amer-en’s bald assertion that the challenged orders will force transmission owners to operate on a nonprofit basis in violation of Hope. Op. at 581-83. In Hope, the Supreme Court addressed whether natural gas rates threatened a company’s overall financial integrity; it nowhere suggested that the Federal Power Act entitled a company to the ability to earn a favorable return on every portion of its business. See Hope,
D.
The court’s discounting of the'Commission’s reference to Ameren’s opportunity to present evidence of uncompensated risks in a future proceeding, Op. at 582-83; December 2015 Order P 57, fares no better. The court states that “fines and penalties for violations-of mandatory reliability standards ■ and environmental regulations are generally charged directly to the utility, not passed through to customers via rate increases.” Op. at 582; see Pet’rs. Br. 33 n.l. The stipulated agreement in In re SCAN A- Corp.,
III.
' The Federal Power Act mandates the Commission ensure that rates are “just and reasonable” and not unduly discriminatory, 16 U.S.O. § 824d(a)-(b). A purpose of Order No. 2003 is to “increasefe] the number and variety of new generation thát will compete in the wholesale electricity market.” Order No. 2003 at P 1. Given the established economic motivations and the post-2009 MISO credit policy’s treatment of capital costs, the Commission reasonably and adequately explained its assessment of how risks should be balanced between investor and customer interests. See
In doubting the adequacy of the Commission’s determination of the appropriate allocation of capital costs in MISO, the court asserts that the Commission failed to address the concern that “when portions of a business are unprofitable, it detracts from the attractiveness to investors of the business as a whole.” Op. at 581. But the Commission directly addressed that concern when it found that Ameren had failed to present evidence showing a threat to its overall financial integrity as would warrant finding the challenged orders were confiscatory. August Order
. Four orders denied rehearing; a fifth order addressed compliance. Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., Order Denying Rehearing, Granting in Part and Denying in Part Complaint, and Instituting Section 206 Proceeding,
. Request for Reh’g of the Certain MISO Transmission Owners (Jul. 20, 2015); Request for Reh’g of the Indicated Transmission Owners (Jan. 28, 2016); Request for Reh’g of the Indicated Transmission Owners (Sept. 8, 2016).
. The court’s chastisement of the Commission, based on its counsel's puiported re
Reference
- Full Case Name
- AMEREN SERVICES COMPANY, Et Al., Petitioners v. FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION, Respondent. American Wind Energy Association, Et Al., Intervenors
- Cited By
- 13 cases
- Status
- Published