Section 4(e) of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717(c)(e) (1976), gives the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Commission) discretionary power over the suspension of rates and the ordering of refunds:
Whenever [a new rate] is filed the Commission shall have authority . to enter upon a hearing concerning the lawfulness of such rate, . . . and, pending such hearing and the decision thereon, the Commission . . . may suspend the operation of such schedule and defer the use of such rate, . but not for a longer period than five months beyond the time when it would otherwise go into effect . . .. If the proceeding has not been concluded and an order made at the expiration of the suspension period, on motion of the natural-gas company making the filing, the proposed change of rate . . . shall go into effect. Where increased rates . are thus made effective, the Commission may . . . require the natural-gas company ... to refund, with interest, the portion of such increased rates or charges by its decision found not justified.
It is well established that a natural gas company cannot recoup income denied to it when the Commission exercises the five-month suspension power under section 4(e).
FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co.,
I
Petitioner Belco Petroleum Corporation (Belco) makes interstate sales of natural gas obtained from its leasehold interests in the Big Piney Area of Wyoming. These sales are made to Northwest Pipeline Corporation (Northwest) pursuant to five separate contracts negotiated in the late 1950’s and on file with the Commission as Belco’s Gas Rate Schedule Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6. On August 6, 1974, Belco and Northwest agreed to amend these contracts to increase the applicable prices to forty cents (40$) per Mcf. 1 The next day, Belco tendered the proposed rate increases for filing with the Commission. On September 6, 1974, the Commission accepted Belco’s filings and, invoking its power under section 4(e), suspended the effectiveness of the proposed rates for five months until February 7, ■ 1975. Under the provisions of section 4(e), if the Commission has not passed on the lawfulness of the rates, the higher rate goes into effect at the end of the suspension period.
*683 Approximately fifteen months before the negotiation and filing of the Belco-North-west rate increase, the Commission had issued notice of a proposed rulemaking to establish nationwide rates for natural gas obtained from wells commenced prior to January 1, 1973. 2 This rulemaking would affect most of the gas sold under the Belco-Northwest contracts. The rulemaking proceedings did not culminate in a final determination until December 31, 1975, over ten months after Belco’s increases went into effect. On that date, the Commission issued Opinion No. 749, setting the just and reasonable rate for natural gas from the subject wells. 3 Opinion No. 749 also provided that for sales (such as Belco’s) being made subject to refund, the newly established rate “shall be the applicable just and reasonable rate as of the date of suspension” and that “all amounts collected in excess of that rate shall be refunded.” The Commission later revised the refund procedure, however, in Opinion No. 749-C, issued July 19,1976. This second opinion provided that the newly established rates would apply from the date such rates were collected subject to refund.
Belco duly filed its refund reports on November 16, 1976, but in so doing, it reduced the amounts it had collected in excess of the applicable just and reasonable rate by the difference between the amounts it had been able to collect during the suspension period and the amounts it could have collected under the newly established rates had there been no suspension. By letter order dated January 11, 1977, the Commission rejected Belco’s proposed offset procedure, declaring it to be “improper and inconsistent with Commission precedent.” On March 10, 1977, the Commission issued an order denying Belco’s application for rehearing and reaffirming its rejection of the offset procedure, but it subsequently granted Belco’s request for a stay pending appeal. Belco’s petition before this court seeks review of the orders of January 11 and March 10, 1977.
II
As a preliminary issue, the Commission contests Belco’s standing in this court. Section 19(b) of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717r(b) (1976), requires a reviewing court to consider only objections that have been urged before the Commission in an application for rehearing. The Commission asserts that the application for rehearing did not contain an objection to the Commission’s order based on Belco’s interpretation of Opinion No. 749, and that consequently this court should not address that issue.
Belco’s application for rehearing set forth arguments in support of its contention that the Commission abused its discretion in rejecting Belco’s requested offset procedure, which had been based on Opinion No. 749. Section 19 does not preclude appellate consideration of an argument in support of a properly preserved ground of error. Read in the entirety, Belco’s application gave notice to the Commission with sufficient clarity regarding the grounds on which it urged reconsideration. This fulfills the statutory requirement.
See Rhode Island Consumers’ Council v. FPC,
III
The language of Opinion No. 749 relevant to refund obligations provided:
For those sales which are presently being made subject to refund, we find that the rate established in this Opinion or the higher applicable rate, shall be the applicable just and reasonable rate as of the date of suspension and all amounts collected in excess of that rate, as adjusted pursuant to the regulations adopted herein, or the higher applicable area rate shall be refunded .
(Emphasis added).
Belco argues that this language authorized it to offset its refund obligations by the income denied during the period of suspension when it could not collect a just ánd *684 reasonable rate. Belco emphasizes that it was contractually entitled to collect the just and reasonable rate from the date of suspension but could not do solely because the Commission exercised its valid authority under section 4(e). 4
Although Belco’s argument has some facial validity, the language of Opinion No. 749, read in its entirety, is not unequivocal in support of Belco’s position. Instead, the language is quite ambiguous with respect to the manner of computing the refund. For example, another explanation for the above-quoted language — and in our view the more plausible one — is that the Commission, in stating that the “applicable just and reasonable rate” shall exist “as of the date of suspension,” was simply acknowledging that the filed rate had been investigated and found to be just and reasonable as of the time the investigation began or as of the date the rate would have become effective absent suspension. The separate and distinct character of the two considerations involved in Opinion No. 749 — what is the just and reasonable rate, and the manner in which the refund is to be computed— is apparent from the text of the preceding paragraph of the Opinion:
At the present time, there are a number of jurisdictional sales, which will be subject to the rate prescribed herein, that are being made subject to refund. By this decision, we [(1)] determine a just and reasonable rate for those sales and [(2)] require refunds of amounts collected which are in excess of the applicable rate.
Thus, the just and reasonable rate was first determined as of the date of suspension (which is the usual reference point from which such a determination is made), and then a statement was made concerning the refunds. The reference to the “date of suspension,” a phrase modifying the “applicable just and reasonable rate,” has, in logic, nothing to do with the Commission’s statement about the computation of refunds.
In stating that “all amounts collected in excess of that rate . . . shall be refunded,” therefore, the Commission was embarking on the discussion of a new subject. In so stating, the Commission could well have meant that all monies collected as a result of the higher, excessive rate — that is, the rate charged during the period between the end of the suspension period and the final determination of the just and reasonable rate — should be returned to the company’s customers. On this reading, in other words, the Commission intended the refund computation to be made by looking only to the period during which the higher rate was actually collected, a period which does not include the period of suspension.
It must be conceded, however, that Bel-co’s interpretation of the language of Opinion No. 749 is not wholly unreasonable if one looks solely to the language. Although the Commission may well have intended to refer only to the period during which a higher rate was actually collected, the language of the Opinion itself does not foreclose computing the “excess” by incorporating the period of suspension.
Fortunately, the Commission clarified this ambiguity in its subsequent order of July 19, 1976, Opinion No. 749-C. This order provided:
[Rjefunds shall be computed on the basis of the adjusted national rate or the otherwise applicable area rate, whichever is greater. Such rates shall apply from the date rates were collected subject to refund . .
(Emphasis added). The order also provided:
For those proceedings in which rates are presently being collected subject to refund or were collected subject to refund prior to the issuance of Opinion No. 749, refunds will be determined on the basis of the adjusted national rate prescribed in Opinion No. 749 or the otherwise applicable higher area rate.
(Emphasis added). This language clarified the ambiguity created by the imprecise language in Opinion No. 749. Opinion No. 749-C makes clear that the refunds were to be computed without reference to what *685 could have been collected during the period of suspension. Indeed, the second of the above-quoted passages strongly suggests that all Opinion No. 749 sought to accomplish by referring to the “date of suspension” was to demonstrate that the approved rate was “just and reasonable” on the factual showing as of that date, but not that refunds were to be computed by including a backward adjustment for the period of suspension. The clarification in Opinion No. 749-C indicates, moreover, that the reference to “amounts collected” in Opinion No. 749 was intended to limit the refund computation to the period after the lapse of the suspension, that is, to the period when “amounts” were actually “collected.”
Indeed, a detailed examination of Opinion No. 749-C strongly suggests that Opinion No. 749 was never intended to permit Bel-co’s proposed offset procedure. The reference to “the applicable just and reasonable rate as of the date of suspension” was contained in the text of Opinion No. 749 in a section entitled “Refunds and Rate Increases.” The procedure for computing the refund was set forth in more specific terms in Ordering Paragraph (D), which provided:
(D) Producer Refunds and Purchaser’s Flow-Through
Within 120 days of the date of this order, refund reports shall be filed with this Commission in triplicate, and one copy served on the purchaser, by each producer (other than small producers) collecting rates subject to refund in Section 4(e) or Section 7(c) proceedings in excess of the adjusted national rate prescribed herein or the otherwise higher applicable area rate, and as to which refunds are required under the terms of this decision.
(Emphasis added). This paragraph, which articulates the procedure for paying refunds, makes no reference to the period of suspension. This paragraph, like the passage from the same order analyzed above, is ambiguous: the period for computing the “excess of the adjusted national rate” could be confined solely to the period after the suspension period when rates were actually collected, or it could be that period as well as the period of suspension. The language from Opinion No. 749-C quoted above was specifically designated as amending Ordering Paragraph (D) of Opinion No. 749. As we noted, that language from Opinion No. 749-C makes no reference to the period of suspension. This omission suggests to us that the Commission never meant to refer to the period of suspension in computing the refund and that Opinion No. 749-C was meant to clarify an ambiguity in the earlier order to prevent an interpretation permitting an offset procedure.
There is an additional reason strongly suggesting that Opinion No. 749 was never intended to allow the offset procedure urged by Belco. In
FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra,
the Court stated that a company “can
never
recoup the income lost when the five-month suspension power of the Commission is exercised under § 4(e).”
In any event, Opinion No. 749-C clearly and unambiguously clarified the language of Opinion No. 749. When construction of an agency regulation is in issue, courts owe great deference to the interpretation adopted by the agency and will uphold that interpretation if it is reasonable and consistent with the regulation. The court need not find that the agency’s construction is the only possible one, or even the one that the court would have adopted in the first instance.
United States v. Larionoff,
IV
Our inquiry does not end with the conclusion that the Commission did not act arbitrarily or capriciously in clarifying the ambiguity of Opinion No. 749. The question remains whether Belco has a right to offset its refund obligation by the amount of income denied it during the suspension period. Stated differently, the issue is whether depriving Belco of the offset deprives it of income to which it is entitled on statutory or constitutional grounds. We hold that it does not.
A
Nothing in section 4(e) requires the Commission to order refunds. The Commission
may
order refunds, but the decision is left to the Commission’s discretion.
Cities Service Gas Co. v. FPC,
It is not insignificant that the Commission acted consistently with the statutory bias favoring retroactive rate reductions but not retroactive rate increases, a bias Congress wrote directly into the statute:
[T]he Commission shall have no power to order any increase in any rate contained in the currently effective schedule of such natural gas company on file with the Commission, unless such increase is in accordance with a new schedule filed by such natural gas company; but the Commission may order a decrease where existing rates are unjust, unduly discriminatory, preferential, otherwise unlawful, or are not the lowest reasonable rates.
15 U.S.C. § 717d(a) (1976). While the offset Belco proposes is not technically a retroactive rate increase, it is a retroactive assessment against the consumer and would have the same effect as a retroactive rate increase. Regardless of how the offset is characterized, rates the consumer did not pay during the suspension period would be charged against them, albeit camouflaged as reductions in the payments Belco must make for having charged above a just and reasonable rate after the suspension period lapsed. The conclusion is inevitable, then, that in denying Belco’s request for an offset, the Commission neither violated the statute nor deprived Belco of any right to which it was entitled under the statute. See Gillring Oil Co. v. FERC, supra at 1325.
B
The constitutional implications of natural gas regulation were addressed in
Permian Basin Area Rate Cases,
It is plain that the Constitution does not forbid the imposition, in appropriate circumstances, of maximum prices upon commercial and other activities . Its exercise has regularly been approved by this Court . .. It is, however, plain that the “power to regulate is not a power to destroy,” . . . and that maximum rates must be calculated for a regulated class in conformity with the pertinent constitutional limitations. Price control is
“unconstitutional . if arbitrary, discriminatory, or demonstrably irrelevant to the policy the legislature is free to adopt . .
..”
Neb-bia v. New York,
*688
Insofar as it affects the producer, a decision by the Commission to approve a producer’s filed rate at a just and reasonable level somewhere below the proposed rate is analytically the same as a decision by the Commission that a refund should be made. Both decisions impose a maximum price upon the producer; the difference is that one operates prospectively while the other operates retroactively. Consequently, like a rate decision, a refund order would be unconstitutional if “arbitrary, discriminatory, or demonstrably irrelevant to the policy the legislature is free to adopt.” And a refund decision that falls within “the broad zone of reasonableness permitted by the Act” could not “properly be attacked as confiscatory.” In sum, no constitutional objection will lie if the Commission fully accounts for “the various interests which Congress has required it to reconcile.”
Similarly, a decision by the Commission to suspend the effectiveness of proposed rates — a decision which may operate permanently to deprive a natural gas producer of a just and reasonable rate
10
— is properly within the sound discretion of the Commission. Section 4(e) reflects the careful balancing of several interests. Obviously, an important purpose of the suspension power is to maintain the status quo for up to five months during which the Commission can investigate the reasonableness of the proposed rate.
Phillips Petroleum Co. v. FPC,
It is manifest that an area rate case requires more than five months to be completed by the Commission. However, it cannot be denied that the five-month period is being utilized by the Commission in its investigation and determination of the area rate. . . . The five month’s suspension period is a congressional authorization provided by the Natural Gas Act and we are without authority to nullify it. Petitioners assert no constitutional invalidity in the practice but contend that the circumstances warrant a holding by us that the Commission’s exercise of the five months’ suspension period in the majority of independent producer filings, when an applicable area rate case is pending, is an abuse of discretion. We are unable to agree, for it is apparent that Congress intended to protect consumers from increased rates until the Commission would fix just and reasonable rates, but it considered that a *689 period of five months would be the maximum time permitted.
As Hunt Oil illustrates, section 4(e) reflects a congressional balance of the consumer’s interest in being protected from excessive rates and of the producer’s interest in receiving some increase pending final Commission action in what can often be lengthy investigations. When the Commission suspends a rate, its action is expected to reflect an appropriate balance of these competing interests, thereby furthering the legislative intent. Presumably, if a suspension is not within the zone of reasonableness reflecting the appropriate balance of competing interests, it may be confiscatory and unconstitutional within the meaning of Permian Basin. 11 The permissible zone, however, is obviously extremely broad when suspension orders are being tested, for in that context Congress has seen fit by statute to afford the Commission considerable discretion. 12
In testing the Commission’s decision disallowing Belco to offset the income denied during the period of suspension against the refunds of the excessive rates charged in the post-suspension period, we hold that the Commission did not transgress the broad zone of reasonableness that marks the constitutional limits on Commission activity. The Commission has determined that such an offset is inconsistent with policies served by section 4(e)’s suspension power. These policies reflect, in our view, the careful balancing of competing interests, which Congress has directed the Commission to reconcile. 13
*690
The Commission’s responsibility is to “afford consumers a complete, permanent, and effective bond of protection from excessive rates and charges.”
Atlantic Refining Co. v. Public Service Commission,
C
Our research and that of counsel have not uncovered any decisions directly addressing the issue of this case. The case law does, *691 however, provide some guidance in resolving the issue.
In Permian Basin Area Rate Cases, supra, the Supreme Court considered whether the Commission’s power to order refunds was limited to periods in which aggregate revenues for all producers in a given area exceeded aggregate revenue requirements for such producers. In holding that the Commission’s power was not so limited, the Court stated:
A rate found to be unjust and unreasonable is declared by § 4(a) to be unlawful; if the rate has been the subject of a rate schedule modification under § 4(d), the Commission is empowered by § 4(e) to order its refund. We can see no warrant, either in the Act or in the terms of the Commission’s orders, now to impose any additional limitations upon the Commission's authority .
reasonably concluded that the adoption of a system of refunds conditioned on findings as to aggregate area revenues . would require consumers to accede to unjust and unreasonable prices merely because other prices . . . had proved improvident.
Similarly, the reasoning in FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra, tends to support the Commission’s decision in this case. Tennessee Gas operated an extensive pipeline system, which it divided into six rate zones with rate differentials. It did not have a system-wide rate applicable to all services. In 1959, Tennessee Gas filed with the Commission proposed rate increases for its six rate zones. The proposed rates were based on a 7% overall return on its net investment. At the outset of the hearings on the reasonableness of the proposed rates, the Commission imposed a five month suspension period. After a full hearing, the Commission concluded that 6%% rather than 7% was a just and reasonable return. Accordingly, it ordered Tennessee Gas to file lower rates retroactive to the end of the five-month suspension period and to refund the differences collected since that time. Tennessee Gas did not object to the 6Vs% figure for return on net investment, but it did contend that requiring refunds prior to a determination on cost allocation among its zones of operation might result in its being unable to realize the just and reasonable return during the refund period. Tennessee Gas reasoned that in some of the zones the approved rates might exceed the collected rates less the refunds ordered, with the result that it would be unable to achieve a &Vs% return because it could not retroactively collect the higher rate in those zones while it was obligated to make full refunds in the remaining lower rate zones. On review, the court of appeals held that the Commission erred in ordering an immediate refund before it had determined other issues in the proceeding, particularly the proper allocation costs among the six zones, an issue that could well determine the reasonableness of the overall filed rate with respect to each zone. The Supreme Court reversed the court of appeals:
[A]n analysis of the policy of the [Natural Gas] Act clearly indicates that a natural gas company initiating an increase in rates under § 4(d) assumes the hazards *692 involved in that procedure. . . . [T]he company can never recoup the income lost when the five-month suspension power of the Commission is exercised under § 4(e). The company is also required to refund any sums thereafter collected should it not sustain its burden of proving the reasonableness of an increased rate, and it may suffer further loss when the Commission upon a finding of excessiveness makes adjustments in the rate detail of the company’s filing. In this latter respect a rate for one class or zone of customers may be found by the Commission to be too low, but the company cannot recoup its losses by making retroactive the higher rate subsequently allowed; on the other hand, when another class or zone of customers is found to be subjected to excessive rates and a lowered rate is ordered, the company must make refunds to them. The company’s losses in the first instance do not justify its illegal gain in the latter. The company having initially filed the rates and either collected an illegal return or failed to collect a sufficient one must, under the theory of the Act, shoulder the hazards incident to its action including not only the refund of any illegal gain but also its losses where its filed rate is found to be inadequate.
Thus, that a higher rate might be declared just and reasonable in one of the zones did not entitle Tennessee Gas, in effect, to offset the income denied in that zone against the refunds ordered in another zone. Here again, Tennessee Gas can be factually distinguished from this case: the petitioner in the former did not seek to offset income denied during the suspension period against the ordered refunds. Yet the principle underlying the case — that a company cannot recoup its losses by imposing a retroactive assessment on its customers — is equally applicable here. The Court’s statement that a company “can never recoup the income lost when the five-month suspension power of the Commission is exercised” reflects, as we have said, a regulatory philosophy that has served both to further, within constitutional limits, the interests which the Act is intended to protect, and to reconcile other competing interests. It was proper for the Commission to insist that Belco both “refund [its] illegal gain” and shoulder “its losses,” which were “incident to its actions.”
Perhaps the most important implication of
Tennessee Gas
and
Permian Basin
is that no precedent
forbids
the Commission from following the course it has taken. In the reported cases, the Commission has resisted off-setting refunds with prior losses, for such procedures have often closely resembled retroactive ratemaking. But the interests to be furthered by the Act also justify prohibitions on other kinds of retroactive assessments like the one Belco would impose here. It is not the province of this court to substitute its judgment for that of the Commission.
See Humbolt Express v. ICC,
V
Accordingly, because the Commission did not act in an arbitrary and capricious manner in denying Belco’s request, and because a contrary result is not mandated by the Constitution, the statute, and the philosophy underlying the relevant judicial precedent, we affirm.
Judgment accordingly.
Notes
. The price for gas sold under Belco’s Gas Rate Schedule Nos. 1, 2, and 3 was 21.16$ per Mcf., subject to upward adjustment depending on the pressure at which the gas was delivered. The price for' gas sold under Belco’s Gas Rate Schedule Nos. 5 and 6 was 28.63$ per Mcf. Adjusted for pressure base differential, tax reimbursement, and Btu content, the 1974 amendment price was 41.72$ per Mcf. In consideration for the 1974 increase, Belco undertook an extensive drilling and workover program on acreage covered by the subject contracts.
. 38 Fed.Reg. 22848 (1973).
. The Commission set a base ceiling price of 23.5$ per Mcf. on and after July 1, 1976. These rates were subject to adjustment for, inter alia, Btu content, taxes, and gathering.
. See note 10 infra.
. As then Circuit Judge (later Justice) Minton wrote in
Barron Coop. Creamery v. Wickard,
Administrative orders, like statutes, are not to be given strained and unnatural constructions. As was said in
Lynch v. Alworth-Stephens Co.,
. Belco argues that it is impossible to determine the basis for the Commission’s action in this case. While the Commission’s letter order, Joint App. at 1, and the order denying rehearing, id.- at 12-15, are quite succinct, the discussion therein and the citation of cases do communicate the manner in which the Commission reasoned and consequently do demonstrate the basis for the Commission’s action.
. In
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. ICC,
.
Cf. Tenneco Oil Co. v. FERC,
. As the court of appeals said in
Hope Natural Gas Co. v. FPC,
Some states provide for putting a suspended rate into effect immediately by filing a bond for the repayment of any excess found. [Statutory citations omitted.] No such provision was inserted in the statute here under consideration. It is argued that it is as reasonable to make the rates retroactive to the beginning of the suspension period as to the end thereof. The answer is that Congress made express provision for the refund of the excess portion of rates collected after the expiration of the suspension period but made no provision whatever for collecting any additional amount for the period of suspension.
. That it does so does not render § 4(e) constitutionally defective.
Hope Natural Gas Co. v. FPC,
. This point is well made by the court of appeals in
Hope Natural Gas Co.
v.
FPC,
Any loss sustained by a maintenance of the status quo [i. e., by suspension] while such determination [of the reasonableness of a proposed rate increase] is being made is properly considered, not as a violation of a constitutional right, but as a necessary incident of rate regulation so long as the period of suspension does not “overpass the bounds of reason.” See
American Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. United States,
229 (299) U.S. 232, 247,
. Here again the reasoning of
Hope Natural Gas Co. v. FPC,
It is argued that since the rates allowed by the Commission were found to be reasonable with reference to a test year which ended just before the beginning of the suspension period, there is as much reason in making the rates applicable during the following period when the rates which had been suspended were in effect. This however, was a matter for Congress and not for the Commission or the courts.
Id. at 808 (emphasis added).
. [The-following discussion is not concurred in by the other two members of this panel.]
An example of the application of policies underlying the Commission’s exercise of discretion under § 4(e) is illustrated by the considerations suggested by the facts of this case.
A producer who files a proposed rate that is subsequently adjudged by the Commission to be a just and reasonable rate is nonetheless deprived of that rate during the suspension period that the Commission invokes in the exercise of its § 4(e) power. Owing to the likelihood that the Commission will order a refund if a proposed rate is in excess of the just and reasonable rate, a producer now stands to gain very little from filing a rate he believes to be outside the zone of reasonableness. A producer may, of course, file a rate he knows to be somewhat higher than the Commission is likely to approve, but such a decision at the present time is probably prompted by the not inconceivable chance that within the very broad range of reasonableness the Commission will approve a rate on the higher end of the zone. A just and reasonable rate is not a product of any single formula, but is instead a rate within a broad ambit of various rates which may be just and reasonable
See, e. g., Permian Basin Area Rate Cases,
Allowing an offset, as Belco requests, would tend to encourage unreasonably high filings with an eye toward generating a fund with which suspension period rates could, in effect, be increased, thereby diminishing or eliminating altogether the refund due consumers. The Commission could reduce or avoid this tendency by exercising its option to suspend for one day only. But while this might reduce the incentive to file excessive rates, it would place a burden on the Commission’s exercise of its discretion and sacrifice the additional consumer interest, evident in the Hunt- Oil analysis above, in being free from increased rates for the maximum allowable period while the Commission is considéring the validity of the increase. Congress has determined that the risk of harm to the public of paying excessive rates — absent the additional incentives to file such rates inherent in an offset procedure — justifies the use of a five month suspension period. This delicate balance would be disrupted if producers were encouraged to file excessive rates, or alternatively, if consumers are denied the protection of an up-to-five-month suspension period.
Of course, the offset procedure proposed by Belco would not impact consumers in the same manner as a pure retroactive increase. See
Indiana & Michigan Elec. Co. v. FPC,
.
Gillring’s
offset procedure can be factually distinguished from that proposed by Belco. In the years that Gillring’s prices were below the ceiling prices, the Commission was not restricting the upward movement of the prices in any way. Rather, the price was that voluntarily devised by the regulated companies, disturbance of which is not countenanced unless demanded by public necessity.
An offset procedure similar to the one proposed in Gillring was also rejected in Phillips Petroleum Co., 41 F.P.C. 415, 417 (1969).
