779 F.2d 697 | D.C. Cir. | 1985
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge STARR.
Not so long ago, this Nation was in the throes of an acute shortage of natural gas. The shortages of the past decade, spawning such litigation-generating measures as curtailment plans, have since given way to the surpluses of the present decade. It is in this rapid transformation of the energy landscape that this case had its genesis.
With the onset of natural gas shortages, Trunkline Gas Company and Trunkline LNG Company (together referred .to as “Trunkline”), sought federal regulatory approval in 1973 of an ambitious project to import liquified natural gas (LNG) from Algeria. Calling for a twenty-year period of importation of Algerian LNG purchased from a state-owned corporation, Sonatrach, the applications were eventually approved without condition in 1977 by the Federal Power Commission pursuant to section 3 of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717b (1982). Due to various delays, almost a decade passed before Trunkline announced in August 1982 that LNG loadings would begin. As fate would have it, this long-an
FERC and ERA set the complaints for hearing, presided over by FERC’s Chief Administrative Law Judge. After taking evidence in the closing months of 1982, the AU rendered his decision in January 1983.
In the first of two decisions now under challenge, the ERA Administrator concluded in Opinion and Order No. 50, J.A. at 971, (1) that the agency did in fact enjoy authority under section 3 to revoke or suspend an import authorization (even where the licensee was in compliance with the terms of the authorization) but that the requisite showing of “compelling and extraordinary circumstances” had not been made in this case, id. at 986; and (2) that any decision as to the reasonableness of the price and related pricing provisions would be deferred for at least six months, when market conditions and unfolding developments on Capitol Hill could be better assessed.
Following this decision, with numerous petitions for rehearing pending before the Administrator, Trunkline filed a proposed amendment to its import contract with Sonatrach. Styled Amendment No. 1, the modification, if approved by both U.S. and Algerian authorities, would reduce both the amount of LNG that Trunkline is required to take at present and the price of the LNG for several years of the 20-year agreement. As market conditions changed, however, Trunkline unilaterally suspended purchases from Sonatrach in December 1983, contending that the high cost of Algerian LNG had rendered the gas unmarketable. In setting forth its reasons for this suspension before the agency, Trunkline stated that it “could no longer purchase LNG ... [because] further purchases would threaten [its] economic viability.”
At best, a determination made on the pending issues utilizing the record of this proceeding would constitute a hypothetical and advisory opinion. This would not serve the public interest.
Id. Accordingly, the complaints were dismissed “without prejudice to resubmission in the event that changes to the present circumstances make such action appropriate.” Id. at 1434. Aware of Trunkline's on-going discussions with Sonatrach, the Administrator observed that any revised import arrangement would require Trunk-line to seek to amend its section 3 authorization, thus requiring ERA approval. Moreover, in the event that shipments were contemplated under Trunkline’s existing authorization, the Administrator directed that 90 days’ advance notice 'of any such action be given, which in turn would lead to public notice designed “to provide interested persons the opportunity to raise relevant issues.” Id.
Confronting another round of applications for rehearing, the Administrator entered an order on May 7, 1984, denying relief to all parties. As to Trunkline’s desire for approval of Amendment No. 1, the Administrator concluded:
[S]o long as the import is suspended and there is no proposal for its resumption, no practical purpose would be served by continuing the proceeding on [Trunkline’s] application to amend its authorization. Granting the amendment would neither resolve the factors that led to the suspension nor clearly affect [Trunkline’s] potential liabilities to Sonatrach. * * * * In this context, the application for amendment is not a live proposal for importing gas, and it is within the agency’s discretion to dismiss it without prejudice to resubmission.
Id. at 1461.
In their petitions for review before us, Trunkline’s customers and Trunkline itself join forces in attacking the Administrator’s dismissal of the various proceedings. Drawing upon constitutionally based decisions as to the existence vel non of judicial power under Article III of the Constitution, the Joint Petitioners strenuously argue that this case is not moot as long as Trunk-line’s 1977 authorization under section 3 remains intact. Joint Petitioners’ Brief at 24. So too, Trunkline contends that its application to secure ERA’s approval of Amendment No. 1 is not moot, inasmuch as regulatory approval of that modification would reduce Trunkline’s liability (now at issue before arbitrators) for past obligations (both in the quantity and price of gas taken from Sonatrach) and, correspondingly, Trunkline’s future take-or-pay obligations to Sonatrach.
We agree that the proceedings before the Administrator were not moot in the constitutional sense of vitiating a live “case or controversy,” which is of course the bedrock requirement of Article III for the exercise of judicial power.
It is too well-established to be seriously questioned that agencies are empowered to order their own proceedings and control their own dockets.
Joint Petitioners nonetheless argue vehemently that the Administrator must go forward with their revocation proceedings. As they see it, the Administrator is duty bound to protect the public interest which, in their view, can only be vindicated by revoking or suspending a billion-dollar project which some of their number once supported. But this argument proves too much. The ERA manifestly does not have an ironclad obligation to opine on any public-interest issue that parties may invite it to address. We are at a loss to divine any statutory or regulatory requirement im
We reach the same conclusion as to Trunkline’s push for approval of its Amendment No. 1. As Trunkline sees it, ERA’s approval of that amendment would have a salubrious effect in the arbitration proceedings now going on in Europe. But the hard fact remains that although Amendment No. 1 was crafted to govern the importation of Algerian LNG, at this juncture Trunkline is not seeking to import a single cubic foot of LNG from Sonatrach. The Administrator was thus correct in concluding that Trunkline’s application is “[i]n this context ... not a live proposal for importing gas.” J.A. at 1461 (emphasis added). We know of nothing that would require an Administrator to act upon an application merely because- it might have happy consequences for a regulated entity’s arbitration position with a foreign supplier.
For the reasons stated, we conclude that the Administrator acted within his discretion in dismissing these proceedings without prejudice to resubmission of the various petitions and applications. We thus have no occasion to address any of the substantive conclusions set forth in Opinion and Order No. 50;
Denied.
. The decision was of no legal consequence for purposes of this proceeding, inasmuch as the ALJ’s mission was simply to compile a record for the Administrator of ERA. The ALJ’s determination did serve as an initial decision of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
. In the course of his decision, the Administrator reached the following conclusions: (1) Although a gas surplus exists nationally on the Trunkline system, Trunkline will need additional supplies of gas within 3 to 4 years, depending upon the success of Trunkline’s domestic supply acquisitions, J.A. at 990; (2) that "the record does not support a conclusion that Algeria is an unreliable supplier under [the Trunkline] contract," although Algeria’s record with respect to other contracts and trading partners "has been mixed,” id. at 999; and {¡¡y'that Trunkline’s project will have a slight adverse impact on the U.S. balance of payments, id. at 1001.
.In the specific corporate setting before us, Trunkline Gas Company notified its supplier of LNG, Trunkline LNG Company, that it could no longer take Algerian LNG. Trunkline LNG Company thereupon notified Sonatrach and a U.S. shipping company (Lachmar) that owned three large, cryogenic LNG vessels of an indefinite suspension of LNG purchases and transportation effective December 12, 1983. In the words of the ERA Administrator, Trunkline LNG Company "cited certain events and the effect of Trunkline [Gas Company’s] action as constituting a force majeure, as Trunkline [Gas Company] was [Trunkline LNG Co.’s] sole customer and source of revenue." J.A. at 1432 (citation omitted).
. Without plumbing the depths of the law of mootness, we simply note by way of example that Trunkline continues to enjoy its section 3 authorization (albeit subject to the 90-day advanee notice requirement imposed by Opinion and Order No. 50-A) in the face of the Joint Petitioners’ assault on that authorization as incompatible with the public interest.
. In so holding, we in no wise uphold the agency's action on a ground other than that articulated by the agency itself. Compare SEC v. Chenery Corp., 332 U.S. 194, 67 S.Ct. 1575, 91 L.Ed. 1995 (1947). To be sure, the Administrator employed the term ."moot" in dismissing these petitions and applications. But it is manifest that the Administrator was not invoking “mootness" in the sense of the Article III judicial power; that is to say, the Administrator emphatically did not hold that he was without power to go forward in these proceedings. Not only did he not invoke the various decisional authorities on mootness now relied on by all parties in this court, but he reasserted his authority over these various proceedings by, among other things, requiring Trunkline to provide 90 days' notice before resuming importation of LNG. Rather, the Administrator was using the term "moot" in its ordinary sense of "hypothetical.” We read the Administrator's decision, then, as a simple exercise of administrative discretion, in which the Administrator held that it would not be in the public interest to address a set of hypothetical, abstract issues when it was uncertain whether this project would ever be revived.
. See, e.g., Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. NRDC, 435 U.S. 519, 543-44, 98 S.Ct. 1197, 1211, 55 L.Ed.2d 460 (1978) ("administrative agencies ‘should be free to fashion their own rules of procedure and to pursue methods of inquiry capable of permitting them to discharge their multitudinous duties.’”) (quoting FCC v. Schreiber, 381 U.S. 279, 290, 85 S.Ct. 1459, 1467, 14 L.Ed.2d 383 (1965) and FCC v. Pottsville Broadcasting Co., 309 U.S. 134, 143, 60 S.Ct. 437, 441, 84 L.Ed. 656 (1940)); FCC v. WJR, The Goodwill Station, Inc., 337 U.S. 265, 272, 69 S.Ct. 1097, 1101, 93 L.Ed. 1353 (1949) (docket management a matter for agency discretion); Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. SEC, 606 F.2d 1031, 1056 (D.C.Cir.1979) ("An agency is allowed to be master of its own house, lest effective agency decisionmaking hot occur in any proceeding ...") (emphasis in original).
. In particular, we do not address the nettlesome issue whether the ERA does indeed have authority to revoke a section 3 authorization, pursuant to which approximately SI billion was invested in U.S. facilities alone, in the absence of a violation of the terms of the authorization.