631 F.2d 802 | D.C. Cir. | 1980
Opinion PER CURIAM
In these consolidated appeals, we are called upon to review several orders of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“the Commission”) issued in response to the continuing shortage of natural gas.
I. BACKGROUND
El Paso is an interstate natural gas transmission company serving direct and distrib
Under the curtailment plan, El Paso’s customers report their different end use needs by priority to the pipeline each day. El Paso then fills all the P-1 needs, followed by P-2 needs, P-3 needs, and so on until all of its available gas supply for that day is exhausted. If its supplies run out before low priority customers have been fully serviced, those customers must resort to alternative fuels for that day.
While curtailment plans provide for the orderly distribution of gas during times of shortage, they are not alone a means of avoiding any shortage. Accordingly, in 1971 the Commission also ordered El Paso to develop a plan for husbanding gas in the summer, when it is in relatively low demand, for use in the winter by temperature sensitive high priority customers. In compliance with this request, El Paso successfully petitioned the Commission in 1973 for permission to reactivate the Rhodes storage field in New Mexico. The Commission’s order, which was unopposed, authorized El Paso to curtail its EOC P-5 customers so that it could inject up to 16 billion cubic feet (Bcf) of gas into the Rhodes field.
By May of 1974, El Paso became concerned that Rhodes storage would not be sufficient to assure adequate winter gas supplies for all of its EOC high priority customers. Since there were no other EOC storage facilities available, El Paso contacted its two California customers, petitioners PG&E and SoCal, and negotiated two separate agreements known as the “load equation” agreements. In the first of these contracts, El Paso agreed to increase PG&E’s summer deliveries with gas made available by curtailing EOC P-5 customers. PG&E, which had substantial unused storage capacity, would then store this extra gas throughout the winter. If the gas was needed to meet shortages in EOC high priority supplies it would be “returned” by diverting PG&E scheduled deliveries to the EOC market. PG&E would then draw from the stored gas to meet its needs.
El Paso’s agreement with SoCal called for “back-off” rights. Under this arrangement, SoCal agreed to accept reduced deliveries at any point during the winter when shortages of gas for EOC high priority customers would require curtailment. Any gas thus diverted from SoCal would later be repaid by curtailing El Paso’s lower priority EOC customers. During the interim, SoCal would draw on its substantial storage capacity for its requirements.
On May 13, 1974, El Paso applied to the Commission for temporary and permanent certificates authorizing the load equation agreements. The Commission granted a temporary certificate on June 21, 1974, authorizing load equation for the 1974-75 winter, but withholding permanent certification pending hearings.
Public hearings were then held before an administrative law judge, who, on June 7, 1976, issued an initial decision denying permanent certification.
On review, the full Commission reversed and ordered permanent certification with some modifications and conditions.
The Commission did find, however, that the El Paso plan had a discriminatory feature. It required all of the storage gas to be secured by curtailing only EOC P-5 customers, not P-5 customers in both California and the EOC states. The Commission found this feature to constitute undue discrimination between pipeline customers, and ordered El Paso, as a condition to the permanent certificate, to reallocate deliveries between the California and EOC P-5 customers so that the California customers would contribute their pro rata share to the storage arrangements. El Paso was given substantial discretion in designing an appropriate payback plan.
On August 19, 1977, El Paso’s proposed payback plan was submitted to the Commission. It was approved with modifications in Opinion 800-B, issued on December 30, 1977.
II. AEPCO’S CHALLENGE TO THE CERTIFICATION OF LOAD EQUATION
(Nos. 75-1952 and 77-1634)
Initially, AEPCO renews its challenge to the propriety of the temporary and permanent certification of the load equation agreements. They argue, inter alia, that
The doctrine of mootness requires courts to dismiss cases where “the issues presented are no longer ‘live’ or the parties lack a legally cdgnizable interest in the outcome.” Powell v. McCormack, 395 U.S. 486, 496, 89 S.Ct. 1944, 1951, 23 L.Ed.2d 491 (1969). Where “interim relief or events have completely and irrevocably eradicated the effects of [an] alleged violation” of law, a case is moot. County of Los Angeles v. Davis, 440 U.S. 625, 631, 99 S.Ct. 1379, 1383, 59 L.Ed.2d 642 (1979). In other words, when a party has already been made whole for damage it claims to have suffered, the case is ordinarily moot. See Alton & Southern Railway Co. v. International Association of Machinists & Aerospace Workers, 463 F.2d 872, 877, 879-80 (D.C.Cir. 1972).
The only damage AEPCO claims to have suffered as a result of the Commission’s orders certifying the load equation agreements is the gas it lost as an EOC P-5 customer when El Paso diverted gas for storage in California. But all of that gas has now been returned to AEPCO pursuant to the Commission’s conditions to the permanent certificate and the settlement approved in Opinion 800-B. Further, the load equation agreements have now expired, and can no longer harm AEPCO. Since AEPCO has been unable to identify any other relief which this court or the Commission could give to it by vacating the orders granting the temporary and permanent certificates,
III. AEPCO’s CHALLENGE TO THE PRICE OF THE RESTITUTION GAS
(No. 78-1198)
AEPCO’s principal grievance does not go so much to the amount of gas which was returned to it and other EOC P-5 customers, as to the price which it had to pay for the gas. In its settlement plan, El Paso proposed, and the Commission agreed, that the gas should be returned at then current 1978 prices, rather than the lower 1974 prices in effect at the time the gas was diverted from the EOC P-5 customers. AEPCO mounts three basic challenges to the Commission’s approval of the use of 1978, rather than 1974, prices: (1) the gas returned in 1978 was the same gas diverted
We note preliminarily the court’s narrow scope of review over decisions such as the Commission has had to make in this case. It is an unfortunate reality that a natural gas shortage exists and as a result, the public interest in maintaining adequate supplies occasionally requires some measure of sacrifice by the companies involved in the distribution and use of natural gas. However unpleasant that may be, it is inevitable, and as the Third Circuit has observed, “[n]ot all parties injured as a result of the . . . natural gas crisis can be made whole.” Hercules, Inc. v. FPC, 552 F.2d 74, 89 (3rd Cir. 1977). The difficult problem of balancing competing equities and interests has been given by Congress to the Commission with full knowledge that this judgment requires a great deal of discretion. Accordingly, it is not the role of the courts to second guess the Commission’s judgment because we think we could devise a better solution than that which the agency has adopted so long as the agency’s determination has a rational basis. Gulf Oil Corp. v. FPC, 563 F.2d 588, 608 (3rd Cir. 1977). We find such a rational basis in the orders presently under review.
In determining the price of the restitution volumes, the Commission, as it must, looked not only to the private interests at stake, but also to the broader public interest. It concluded that El Paso’s load equation proposals had “served a valuable public service” by assuring adequate winter gas supplies to EOC high priority customers,
The Commission also considered, and in our view properly rejected AEPCO’s contention that it will suffer undue hardship if it is required to pay 1978 prices. On the contrary, AEPCO’s surplus of natural gas during the period of restitution has allowed it to avoid resorting to expensive alternative fuels. Thus any injury it might have suffered due to the discriminatory diversions of gas in 1974 and 1975 has been offset by its more recent savings. Further, under the settlement plan approved by the Commission, AEPCO not only received California’s pro rata share of the load equation gas, the amount it claimed it was entitled to, it received all of the gas diverted from it for storage with PG&E. In this respect, AEPCO got more gas under the termination of load equation than it would have gotten had load equation been implemented without any discriminatory features. The Commission properly took these factors in to account in concluding that the restitution volumes should be priced at 1978 rates.
IV. SOCAL AND PG&E’S CLAIMS
In No. 77-1676, SoCal challenges the conditions which the Commission saw fit to impose in the permanent certificate authorizing load equation. SoCal has indicated in its brief, however, that if the Commission is affirmed as to the pricing of the restitution gas, it will withdraw its appeal in the spirit of settlement. We believe this is a proper and commendable resolution to this controversy, and therefore, in light of our affirmance of the Commission in No. 78-1198, we dismiss the petition in No. 77-1676 as moot. Similarly, we dismiss PG&E’s petition, No. 77-1830, as moot. PG&E argued that the Commission erred by refusing to consider the utility’s status as a “partial requirements” customer in conditioning the permanent certificate. In its brief and at oral argument, however, PG&E has informed the court that the Commission has now provided a forum for this argument in another ongoing proceeding. PG&E has therefore suggested that the case is moot, and we dismiss it on their suggestion.
V. CONCLUSION
In summary, we hold that AEPCO’s petitions for review of the Commission’s orders certifying load equation have been rendered moot, and therefore dismiss the petitions in Nos. 75-1952 and 77-1634. We affirm the Commission’s determination that the load equation payback should be priced at 1978 rates, No. 78-1198. Finally, we dismiss So-Cal and PG&E’s petitions, Nos. 77-1676 and 77-1830, respectively, in accordance with the wishes of the petitioners.
So ordered.
. Since the filing of notice of appeal, however, three of these appeals have not been prosecuted. In Nos. 79-1681 and 79-2087 the petitioner has expressed an intention to withdraw its appeals. See AEPCO Br. in No. 77-1634 at 1-2. In No. 77-1765 the petitioner has not filed a brief and did not appear at oral argument. The appeals in these three case numbers are accordingly dismissed.
We also decide today another set of consolidated cases involving the same parties, and based on similar facts. For convenience, we have labeled the instant group of cases “The ‘Load Equation’ Cases,” and the related set of cases “The ‘Storage Injection’ Cases.” See Arizona Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. v. FERC [The “Storage Injection” Cases], 203 U.S.App.D.C. 229, 631 F.2d 811 (D.C.Cir.1980). In both cases we refer collectively to FERC and the Federal Power Commission (FERC’s predecessor) as the “Commission.”
. El Paso’s curtailment plan was the subject of this court’s review in American Smelting and Refining Co. v. FPC, 494 F.2d 925 (D.C.Cir.), cert. denied, 419 U.S. 882, 95 S.Ct. 148, 42 L.Ed.2d 122 (1974), and City of Willcox v. FPC, 567 F.2d 394 (D.C.Cir. 1977), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 1012, 98 S.Ct. 724, 54 L.Ed.2d 755 (1978).
. Joint Appendix (“J.A.”), Vol. I at 111-112.
. J.A., Vol. II at 5202-5206.
. J.A., Vol. Ill at 5239-5263.
. Opinion and Order Issuing Conditional Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity (Opinion No. 800) (FPC May 23, 1977), J.A., Vol. Ill at 5658-5683.
. Id. at 5676-5677. See Opinion and Order on Rehearing (Opinion No. 800-A) (FPC July 20, 1977), J.A., Vol. Ill at 5770, 5777-5778.
. Opinion and Order on Remedial Compliance Filing and Granting Conditioned Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity After Statutory Hearing (Opinion No. 800-B) (FERC December 30, 1977), J.A., Vol. Ill at 5918-5939.
. In an attempt to avoid the evident mootness of its claims, AEPCO has belatedly argued that two factors keep this case alive. First, it argues that voiding the certificates “will enable the Commission to refund all of the EOC Priorities 1 and 2 surcharges” which were imposed on EOC high priority customers to pay for load equation. AEPCO Brief in No. 77-1634 at 7. Second, AEPCO claims that since only California’s pro rata share of the Rhodes field storage gas was returned to EOC P-5 customers, it still has a live claim for the gas it was required to contribute to Rhodes storage, approximately 2.5 Bcf. AEPCO reply Brief in No. 77-1634 at 2-3. Neither of these claims, however, was ever presented to the Commission. Under section 19(b) of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717r(b) (1976), this court is empowered to review only those claims which “shall have been urged before the Commission in the application for rehearing unless there is reasonable ground for failure to do so.” AEPCO never raised its surcharge claim at any time before the full Commission, much less in a petition for rehearing. Its claim regarding the Rhodes storage gas was also not raised. Indeed, AEPCO has never challenged El Paso’s activation of the Rhodes field. On the contrary, AEPCO has contended that “The Proper Action” for the Commission would have been to deny certification for the California storage plans and instead utilize the Rhodes facility to meet EOC storage needs. See AEPCO Brief in No. 75-1952 at 29-30. AEPCO’s last minute pleas cannot change the fact that these cases are moot.
. Opinion No. 800-B, supra note 8 at 13, J.A., Vol. Ill at 5931.
. Id.
. Id.
. Order on Rehearing of Opinion No. 800-B (FERC March 1, 1978), J.A., Vol. Ill at 5952, 5957.
. Id. J.A., Vol. Ill at 5955.