This is an appeal by Agrilectric Power Partners, Ltd. (“Agrilectric”) from an order of the District Court interpreting and applying a contract between Agrilectric and Entergy Gulf States, Inc. (“Entergy”), a utility company providing electric power to consumers in Louisiana and Texas. We agree that the “regulatory-out” price adjustment clause in the contract is enforceable and affirm the district court’s judgment.
. I.
Agrilectric is a qualified facility (“QF”) under the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (“PURPA”), the federal statute governing this protected category of power-generating companies. PURPA requires that utilities purchase power from QFs, but states that they cannot be forced to pay more for this power than their “avoided costs,” the utilities’ cost of self-generating the power or purchasing it from other sources. 2
Originally entered into in 1984, the electricity sales contract between Agrilectric and Entergy was amended in 1987 and 1992. The 1992 contract established a 3.54 cents/Kwh flat-rate for the entire remaining ten-year contract term, but subjected this rate to a “regulatory-out” price adjustment clause. 3 This “regulatory-out” price adjustment clause limited the contract rate to an amount not greater than that which Entergy could legally recover from its retail customers and called for a price renegotiation if Entergy was legally prevented from making such a recovery.
In 1997, the Public Utility Commission of Texas (“PUCT”) and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”) issued separate rulings regarding the retail rates Entergy had been charging and could continue to charge its retail customers. Holding that the flat-rate Entergy had been paying for Agrilectric’s power and passing on to its retail customers unreasonably exceeded its “avoided costs,” PUCT ordered Entergy to credit its retail customers for these overpayments. For similar reasons, FERC ordered that En-tergy could not make future recoveries after July of 1997 from its retail customers of amounts Entergy had been overpaying for Agrilectric’s energy.
In accordance with the contract’s “regulatory-out” price adjustment clause, Enter-gy contacted Agrilectric to recover retroactive reimbursements for past wholesale *303 electricity overpayments PUCT had ordered Entergy to credit its Texas retail customers and renegotiate the contract’s wholesale electricity rate consistent with FERC’s limitation on future retail utility rates. Agrilectric, however, refused to comply with either request. Consequently, in August of 1997, Entergy unilaterally reduced the price it was paying for Agri-lectric’s power to bring the wholesale electricity rate in line with the amount it was able to recover from its retail customers as per their “regulatory-out” price adjustment clause.
Agrilectric filed suit for declaratory relief and specific performance in the district court. Specifically, Agrilectic requested that the contract be enforced without the “regulatory-out” price adjustment clause, that its rights and obligations be declared under its interpretation of the contract, and that Entergy be ordered to abide by the contract’s 3.54 cents/Kwh flat-rate pricing provision. In response, Entergy filed a counterclaim, alleging that Agrilectic breached the contract by refusing to adjust the price in accordance with the “regulatory-out” price adjustment clause as triggered by the PUCT and FERC rulings. Entergy sought specific performance of this clause and over $2 million in damages, the amount it claims it suffered as a result of the breach.
The district court ruled that Agrilectric had breached the contract by refusing to adjust the price pursuant to the “regulatory-out” price adjustment clause. In a Supplemental Memorandum Ruling and Judgment, the court dismissed Agrilectric’s claims and awarded damages to Entergy in the amount of $1.9 million plus interest.
II.
In this appeal, Agrilectric argues that the electricity sales contract’s “regulatory-out” price adjustment clause is unenforceable and federally preempted by PURPA and its associated regulations. The gravamen of its argument is that QFs and utilities are restricted from including “regulatory-out” price adjustment clauses in their wholesale power sales contracts because such price adjustment provisions give state regulatory agencies the power to encroach on the federally preempted ambit of wholesale power rates between such parties. This argument is directly contradicted by PURPA, the regulations promulgated under its authority, and cases applying these laws to wholesale electricity contracts with similar “regulatory-out” price adjustment clauses.
While PURPA establishes that regulatory agencies may not alter wholesale price terms in contracts between QFs and utilities,
see Freehold Cogeneration Assoc., L.P. v. Board of Regulatory Commissioners of New Jersey,
While Agrilectric asserts that similar “regulatory-out” price adjustment clauses have been rejected by the courts, the cases it presents for this proposition fail to support its argument.
5
In particular, during oral argument, Agrilectric’s counsel brought the recent case
North American Natural Resources v. Michigan Public Service Commission,
III.
For the above reasons, we agree with the district court’s well reasoned opinion that the “regulatory-out” price adjustment clause in the contract between Agrilectric and Entergy is enforceable. 7 *305 Therefore, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRM.
Notes
. 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(b) (providing that FERC cannot require rates exceeding "the incremental cost to the electric utility of alternative electric energy’’); 18 C.F.R. § 292.101(6) (defining avoided costs as "the incremental costs to an electric utility of electric energy or capacity or both which, but for the purchase from the qualifying facility or qualifying facilities, such utility would generate itself or purchase from another source”).
.Contained in section 3.1 of the contract, the "regulatory-out” price adjustment clause reads as follows: “Payment to Seller. The payments by [Entergy] to [Agrilectric] under this Agreement shall not be greater than the amount [Entergy], during any recovery period, fuel adjustment or reconciliation hearing, or any other point in time or for any period in time during the term of this Agreement, shall be allowed to recover as an energy, fuel, or other cost, in all regulatory jurisdictions. In such event, the parties shall mutually agree to the adjustment of payments to [Agrilectric].”
. 18 C.F.R. § 292.301(b) ("Nothing in this subpart: (1) Limits the authority of any electric utility or any [QF] to agree to a rate for any purchase, or terms or conditions relating to any purchase, which differ from the rate or terms or conditions which would otherwise be required by this subpart; or (2) Affects the validity of any contract entered into between *304 a[QF] and an electric utility for any purchase.”) (emphasis added).
.Unlike the case at bar, Agrilectric cites cases involving state regulatory actions aimed at both utilities and QFs to directly alter the terms of agreed upon wholesale electricity contracts. Two cases Agrilectric repeatedly cites in its Brief are illustrative of its unfounded reliance on these rulings. In
Freehold Cogeneration Associates, L.P. v. New Jersey Board of Regulatory Comm’r,
. Id. at 809 (stating that the QFs "have shown that if the utilities are precluded from recovering their avoided costs, the utilities have the right to reduce their payments to plaintiffs pursuant to the ‘regulatory out' provisions” in the wholesale electricity contracts and disallow the QFs from receiving a statutorily guaranteed rate).
. Agrilectric raises a number of issues on appeal that it failed to directly raise in the district court. Chief among these are their arguments that the
filed rate doctrine
preempts Texas from disallowing the full pass-through in retail rates of the approved and implemented Agrilectric wholesale power sales rate and that the wholesale power contract was an unenforceable
contract of adhesion.
We do not consider issues raised for the first time on appeal.
See e.g., Self v. Blackburn,
