OPINION
We withdraw our opinion and judgment issued on April 21, 2006, and substitute this one in its place. We overrule the second motion for rehearing filed by Cen-terPoint Energy Entex.
This appeal presents a question of first impression: whether the Texas Railroad Commission (the Commission) may conduct a retroactive prudence review of charges flowed through a purchased gas adjustment clause (PGA clause) and order refunds of charges that the Commission finds the utility imprudently incurred. We must also consider whether such a review is a “ratemaking proceeding” in which a participating municipality is entitled to expense reimbursement. See Tex. Util.Code Ann. § 103.022 (West 1998). The Commission and the district court answered both questions in the affirmative. Because we find that the Commission has authority to conduct the review and order refunds but that such a review is not a “ratemaking proceeding,” we affirm the order of the district court in part but reverse and render in part.
BACKGROUND
Appellant CenterPoint Energy Entex
2
is a gas utility subject to the Gas Utility Regulatory Act.
See
Tex. UtiLCode Ann. § 101.003(7) (West Supp.2005);
see generally id.
§§ 101.001-105.051 (West 1998 & Supp.2005) (GURA). For more than twenty-five years, Entex purchased gas on behalf of customers served by the Tyler Integrated Distribution System (TIDS) and charged customers under tariffs approved by the City of Tyler (the City), termed “rate schedules.”
3
Since 1985, each of Entex’s approved rate schedules included a “Purchased Gas Adjustment Provision” (PGA clause), an automatic escalator mechanism devised by utility regulators to deal with rapid fluctuations in the cost of natural gas.
See Railroad Comm’n of Tex. v. High Plains Natural Gas Co.,
Since at least November 1992, Entex notified the City on a monthly basis regarding any gas cost changes that it would flow to its customers through the PGA clause. In some months, Entex reported no changes. In others, it informed the City of a change, either an increase or a decrease, and generally provided supporting information in the form of two Entex-generated documents stating the cost of gas purchased from several gas distributors and the effect those costs would have on the amounts charged to customers.
In 2002, the City began reviewing En-tex’s past customer gas charges, after which it informed Entex of “concerns” it had about the manner by which Entex purchased gas for resale to its customers. In particular, Entex had been acquiring its gas through two gas contracts, one with Texas GasMark, Inc. (TGM contract) and one with TXO Gas Marketing Corporation (TXO contract). Both of the gas supplies purchased under each contract were “firm” (as opposed to interruptible), but the TGM contract price was significantly lower than the TXO contract price. It was alleged that Entex acted wrongfully by charging the higher priced gas to residential and small commercial customers while reserving the lower-priced gas for large commercial customers. The City believed that this procedure resulted in “overcharges” of about $39,000,000 to residential and small commercial customers because Entex had passed the higher-priced gas charges to those customers through the PGA clauses in Entex’s filed rates. The City made further charges alleging that Entex had filed misleading tariffs, failed to request annual price redeterminations, and failed to charge non-Tyler customers for their proportionate share of Entex’s capital costs. The City set the matter for consideration at a city council meeting.
Entex filed suit in Travis County district court seeking a declaration that the City lacked authority to order refunds and an injunction to prevent consideration of the issue at the city council meeting. Entex asserted that ordering refunds for gas distribution was within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Commission. See Tex. Util. Code Ann. § 104.005(c) (West 1998). En-tex and the City agreed that Entex would dismiss its district court proceedings and that the parties would instead submit the issues directly to the Commission. In their “Joint Petition for Review of Charges for Gas Sales,” 5 the parties requested that
the Commission initiate a proceeding to determine whether Entex has properly and lawfully charged and collected for gas sales to residential and commercial customers served from the TIDS during the period from November 1, 1992 to October 31, 2002, to consider any appro *614 priate remedies, including but not limited to, refunds, with interest, and to enter such orders as may be appropriate.
But the parties disputed what the Commission’s review should entail. Entex urged that the Commission had power only to determine whether Entex “properly and lawfully charged and collected for gas sales to residential and commercial customers in Tyler as authorized under its tariffs and rate schedules” but that the Commission could not consider the prudence of Entex’s gas purchases because that would constitute retroactive ratemak-ing. See id. § 104.151. Entex also maintained that the Commission should first consider the scope of its review authority before reaching the merits of the City’s allegations. The City argued that the Commission could conduct a retroactive prudence review of Entex’s gas purchases 6 and that the Commission should address in a single proceeding both the scope of its authority to review Entex’s charges and to order refunds and the merits of the City’s allegations. The City also requested that the Commission order En-tex to reimburse the City for its expenses because it considered the proceeding to be a “rate case” as defined in the utilities code. See id. § 103.022 (West 1998). En-tex responded that the case was not a “ratemaking proceeding” and, thus, the City was not entitled to recover its expenses. See id. § 103.022.
The Commission set the matter before two hearing examiners, who decided that “issues related to a consideration of the reasonableness and necessity of Entex’s gas costs and gas purchase practices will be considered in this proceeding.” The Commission denied Entex’s appeal of this decision. After a hearing on the merits, the hearing examiners rejected the City’s argument that any proceeding that affects the compensation of a utility is a ratemak-ing proceeding. Instead, they decided that “ratemaking proceedings” are only those that are exclusively devoted to rates such that they may result in changed rates. Thus, the examiners found that the City could not be entitled to reimbursement for its expenses. On appeal, the Commission reversed that holding and awarded the City 90 percent of its expenses. 7
Entex then filed suit in Travis County district court seeking a declaration that the Commission lacks authority to conduct a retroactive prudence review of gas purchases and, alternatively, that such an action by the Commission is not a “ratemak-ing proceeding” in which the City could obtain expense reimbursement. It also asked the district court to enjoin enforcement of the Commission’s order requiring Entex to reimburse the City 90 percent of its expenses. The district court rendered judgment declaring that the Commission has authority to conduct a retroactive prudence review of gas purchases and that such a proceeding is a ratemaking proceeding in which the City could recover expenses. This appeal followed. 8
*615 DISCUSSION
Entex brings two issues on appeal that mirror its issues before the district court— whether the Commission has authority to conduct a retroactive prudence review of gas purchases that Entex flowed through the PGA clauses and whether such a proceeding is a ratemaking proceeding for which the City can seek expense reimbursement.
Standard of review
Our consideration of Entex’s appellate issues ultimately turns upon statutory construction. Statutory construction is a matter of law, which we review
de novo. City of San Antonio v. City of Boerne,
The legislature has instructed us that GURA is to “be construed liberally to
promote the effectiveness and efficiency of regulation of gas utilities.” Tex. Util.Code Ann. § 101.007 (West 1998). However, as an administrative agency, the Commission may exercise only those powers that the legislature confers upon it in clear and express language and cannot create and exercise what really amounts to a new or additional power for the purpose of administrative expediency.
Texas Natural Res. Conservation Comm’n v. Lakeshore Util. Co.,
Retroactive prudence review of gas purchases
In its first issue, Entex argues that the Commission lacks authority to conduct retroactive prudence reviews of gas purchase charges flowed through a PGA clause or to order refunds. It also asserts that such a review that might result in a refund order violates the filed rate doctrine and is a form of prohibited retroactive ratemaking.
Regulatory and policy context
We begin by recognizing that the legislature to date has continued to impose a comprehensive regime of traditional rate regulation on gas utilities. Gas utilities are monopolies in the areas they serve. Tex. Util.Code Ann. § 101.002(b) (West 1998). As a result, “the normal forces of competition that regulate prices in a free enterprise society do not operate.” Id. Instead, the legislature sought through GURA “to establish a comprehensive and adequate regulatory system for gas utilities to assure rates, operations, and services that are just and reasonable to the consumers and to the utilities,” with the overarching goal of protecting “the public interest inherent in the rates and services of gas utilities.” Id. § 101.002(a). To this end, the legislature charged the Commission with the task of ensuring “compliance with the obligations of gas utilities” in GURA and granted the Commission broad powers to regulate “utility rates, operations, and services as a substitute for competition.” Id. § 104.001 (emphasis added).
The legislature emphasized that the Commission “shall ensure that each rate a gas utility or two or more gas utilities jointly make, demand, or receive is just and reasonable” in a manner that will “permit the utility a reasonable opportunity to earn a reasonable return on the utility’s invested capital used and useful in providing service to the public in excess of its reasonable and necessary operating expenses.”
Id.
§ 104.003. These policy goals inform our analysis of the Commission’s powers here.
See id.
§ 101.007;
compare with TXU Generation Co., L.P. v. Public Util. Comm’n of Tex.,
PGA clauses
We next note the nature and function of PGA clauses.
9
Fuel adjustment clauses for utilities, such as the PGA clauses at issue in this case, originated as part of utility rate schedules in response to the rapid changes in coal prices during World War I. Richard J. Pierce,
Reconsidering the Roles of Regulation and Competition in the Natural Gas Industry,
97 Harv. L.Rev. 345, 373 (1983). They allow a utility to adjust charges automatically, either up or down, on an ongoing basis in response to fluctuating fuel costs. Dennis Schiffel,
Electric Utility Regulation: An Overvieiv of Fuel Adjustment Clauses,
95:13 Pub. Util. Fort. 23, 23-24 (1975); R.S. Trigg,
Escalator Clauses in Public
*617
Utility Rate Schedules,
106 U. Pa. L.Rev. 964, 964 (1958). In other words, an automatic fuel adjustment clause is “a fixed rule under which future rates to be charged the public are determined. It is simply an addition of a mathematical formula to the filed schedules of the Company under which the rates and charges fluctuate as the wholesale cost of gas to the Company fluctuates.”
City of Norfolk,
Other cost components of rate schedules are generated from historically based projections of future costs and so are reflected in fixed components of the rate schedule. 10 See Pierce, 97 Harv. L.Rev. at 373. Al-
though sometimes criticized, this bifurcated regulatory treatment is generally deemed satisfactory because most costs tend to increase gradually and predictably while fuel costs are particularly subject to dramatic and unforeseeable changes.
11
Id.
at 373 n. 152. In addition, fuel costs constitute such a large proportion of a utility’s total costs that any substantial regulatory lag
12
in approving rate increases to reflect fuel cost increases can cause the rapid financial ruin of an otherwise healthy utility.
13
Id.
PGA clauses permit fluctuations in the utility’s costs to be passed through directly to its customers as cost adjustments in subsequent utility bills. Elizabeth Warren,
Regulated Industries’ Automatic Cost of Service Adjustment Clauses: Do They Increase or Decrease Cost to the
*618
Consumer?,
55 Notre Dame L.Rev. 333, 336 (1980). Through a PGA clause, then, a utility can track its customer charges more closely to its current cost of fuel without continually having to file for rate increases (or decreases) and ameliorate the regulatory lag problem.
See Public Serv. Co. of N.H. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Comm’n,
Generally, implementation of PGA clauses is an exercise by a regulatory commission of its ratemaking, as opposed to rulemaking, power, and PGA clauses are generally adopted in a ratemaking proceeding as an integral part of a utility’s overall rate structure.
See Public Serv. Co. of N.H.,
Entex’s approved rate and its PGA clause
We next consider the relationship between the PGA clause here and Entex’s approved rate. GURA defines a “rate” as
(A) any compensation, tariff, charge, fare, toll, rental, or classification that is directly or indirectly demanded, observed, charged, or collected by a gas utility for a service, product, or commodity described in the definition of gas utility in this section; and
(B) a rule, regulation, practice, or contract affecting the compensation, tariff, charge, fare, toll, rental, or classification.
Tex. UtihCode Ann. § 101.003(12) (West Supp.2005). Through this language, the legislature has recognized that a rate may consist not merely of a fixed dollar amount but may instead be a rule “affecting” the charge, a term contemplating the use of variables. See id. § 101.003(12)(B).
The approved rate schedules in this case amount to a rule providing a three-step process for computing a customer’s monthly gas charge. 14 See id.; see also Appendix A. First, the rate schedule sets each customer a minimum monthly bill, $9.19. Second, the rate schedule defines the price of gas per 100 cubic feet of gas. 15 Collectively, these prices may be termed the “base rate” because they set the base from which the actual customer charge will vary according to the terms of the third part of the rate schedule, the PGA clause. The third component, the PGA clause, states *619 that the “net monthly rate per unit sold is predicated upon a price of natural gas purchased for resale” at $4.5705 per Mcf. 16 As a result, the actual customer charge for gas would be the amount set by the base rate, adjusted for the deviation of the cost of gas to Entex from the assumed purchase price of $4.5705 per Mcf.
This “rule” fits squarely within the statutory definition of “rate.”
See
Tex. Util.Code Ann. § 101.003(12)(B). We thus conclude that an Entex gas rate consists of its entire rate schedule, which may result in differing customer charges month-to-month.
See
16 Tex. Admin. Code § 7.315(a), (c)(8) (2005) (formula may constitute rate; rate adjustment provision must be part of rate filing);
cf. Chevron-Texaco Exploration & Prod. Co. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Comm’n,
387
F.3d 892,
895 (D.C.Cir.2004) (quoting
Transwestem Pipeline Co. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Comm’n,
The Commission’s authority over the rate
The regulatory authority, whether the Commission or a municipality, “shall ensure that each rate a gas utility or two or more gas utilities jointly make, demand, or receive is just and reasonable.” Tex. Util. Code Ann. § 104.003 (West 1998). Rates must be established so as to permit the utility “a reasonable opportunity to earn a reasonable return on the utility’s invested capital used and useful in providing service to the public in excess of its reasonable and necessary operating expenses.” Id. §§ 104.051, .053. “A gas utility may not directly or indirectly charge, demand, collect, or receive from a person a greater or lesser compensation for a service provided or to be provided by the utility than the compensation prescribed by the applicable schedule of rates filed.” Id. § 104.005. Finally, the Commission “may require the examination and audit of the accounts of a gas or municipally owned utility” and may inspect “the papers, books, accounts, documents, and other business records of a gas utility within its jurisdiction.” Id. §§ 102.202, .203.
The utilities code does not define “examination” or “audit,” so we may rely on definitions listed in commonly used dictionaries to discern the plain meaning of terms in the statute.
See Powell v. Stover,
The legislature has charged the Commission to ensure “compliance with the obligations of gas utilities” in GURA and to regulate “utility rates, operations, and services as a substitute for competition,” Tex. Util.Code Ann. § 104.001, and has specifically enumerated its power to
*620
conduct examinations and audit the utilities.
Id.
§§ 102.202, .203. The PGA clause, as part of the rate, is an important and varying factor in the charge to the utilities’ customers, and the amount charged to customers ultimately depends, under the terms of the PGA clause, on the price of gas purchased. PGA clauses are merely recoupment devices designed to permit utilities a dollar-for-dollar recovery of fluctuations in fuel costs. The customer is harmed by the implementation of such clauses only if such clauses are manipulated or abused, thus encouraging the promulgation of rate charges that are neither just nor reasonable to the ratepayer.
See
Fowler, 6 St. Mary’s L.J. at 578-81;
see also In re Niagara Mohawk Power Corp.,
In response, Entex points out that although GURA and PURA share a common legislative history, the legislature gave the Commission express authority in PURA to review and reconcile the prudence of the fuel costs of
electric
utilities,
see
Tex. Util. Code Ann. § 36.203 (West 1998), yet included no such provision in GURA regarding gas utilities. Entex would have us infer that the legislature did not intend to empower the Commission to review and reconcile gas utilities’ fuel costs. However, the legislature enacted the provision granting the Commission authority to review and reconcile the prudence of fuel costs at a time when it had prohibited the PUC from allowing electric utilities to use automatic fuel cost adjustment clauses like PGAs.
Id.
§ 36.201 (West 1998);
see also Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Public Util. Comm’n of Tex.,
As we have discussed, when a PGA clause is approved, the power to review past purchases and order refunds is necessary to ensure compliance with the approved rate. We find it reasonably necessary for the Commission to have the power to review past gas purchases and order refunds as part of its express audit power to ensure compliance with the approved rate and its implied power to approve PGA clauses.
See id.
§§ 104.005(a), (c) (Commission may order refund with interest if it finds that utility violated terms of its filed rate);
see also City Pub. Serv. Bd.,
Filed rate doctrine
Entex next argues that the power to conduct a retroactive prudence review violates the filed rate doctrine. We disagree.
The “filed rate doctrine” applies when state law creates a state agency and a statutory scheme under which the agency determines reasonable rates for the service provided.
Arkansas La. Gas Co. v. Hall,
The considerations underlying the doctrine are the preservation of the regulatory agency’s primary jurisdiction over reasonableness of rates and the need
*622
to insure that regulated companies charge only those rates of which the regulatory agency has been made cognizant.
See Concord v. Federal Energy Regulatory Comm’n,
As we have explained above, the Commission’s authority to conduct a retroactive review of gas purchases does not involve retroactively changing the terms of En-tex’s approved rate schedule. Instead, the Commission is attempting to review gas purchases that resulted in changes to the amounts charged to Entex’s customers under the terms of its PGA clause. The City’s underlying claim, the basis for the Commission’s action, amounts to one of abuse of the PGA clause, a variable in Entex’s approved rate; the proceedings concern the alleged misapplication of En-tex’s rates rather than an attempt to change the terms of the rates. In other words, the Commission’s review is not an attempt to order Entex to calculate its charges differently; rather, it would be ordering Entex only to calculate its charges correctly. Thus, we conclude that the filed rate doctrine does not prevent regulatory review of allegedly imprudent expenditures automatically passed through to the ratepayers through a PGA clause.
Rule against retroactive ratemaking
Finally, Entex argues that the authority to conduct a retroactive review of gas purchases would violate the rule against retroactive ratemaking. We disagree.
Fundamental in the utility rate-making process is the principle, termed the rule against retroactive ratemaking, that utility rates are set for the future and not the past.
Railroad Comm’n of Tex. v. Lone Star Gas Co.,
The rule against retroactive ratemaking is often misunderstood and misapplied.
See State v. Public Util. Comm’n of Tex.,
The Commission’s attempt to review En-tex’s gas purchases, which directly affected the amounts charged to Entex’s customers, and to order refunds to compensate for allegedly imprudent purchases may well be retroactive in effect, but it is not retroactive ratemaking. As we have already discussed, the Commission is not attempting to disturb the determination that Entex’s rate schedules are just and reasonable. Rather, the Commission’s review will only concern its application of the approved rates — having been given the benefit of including PGA clauses in its rates, Entex will be subject to review of gas purchases to ensure that it did not misapply its filed rate schedule. The Commission is not modifying the rate.
The rule against retroactive ratemaking does not prohibit the Commission from ordering a utility to honor its rate schedule when the rate schedule itself includes a variable term.
17
A customer charge determined by the application of a PGA clause cannot be declared reasonable or just until after it has been implemented. Thus, a regulatory agency can identify overcharges only through retrospective analysis. As the D.C. Circuit explained when considering a similar problem under the Federal Natural Gas Act, “The allegedly retroactive changes here are not retroactive at all; they simply implement an existing rate system that requires periodic adjustments.”
East Tenn. Natural Gas Co.,
Entex offers two cases from other states to support its argument that the power to order refunds after conducting retroactive review of gas purchases violates the rule against retroactive ratemaking.
See Matanuska Elec. Ass’n v. Chugach Elec. Ass’n,
In
dicta,
the
Matanuska
court relied on
Wisconsin Power & Light,
a case that considered fuel adjustment clauses contained in wholesale electricity rates.
Id.
at 586 (reviewing
Wisconsin Power & Light,
Wisconsin Power & Light differs significantly from this case. Entex’s PGA clause was approved as part of its rate. As fuel costs changed, sometimes as frequently as every month, there was no requirement to receive approval from a regulatory authority to alter the amount charged to customers. Instead, the charges changed according to the terms of the filed rate.
To the extent that Wisconsin Power & Light could be interpreted broadly as prohibiting as retroactive ratemaking in Wisconsin any refund based on a review of fuel purchase costs passed through to customers through fuel adjustment clauses, we decline to adopt that reasoning here. Instead, we find persuasive the dissenting opinion to that case, arguing that, because “rates calculated under the fuel adjustment clause go into effect without advance approval by the [regulatory agency], the utility cannot validly expect that charges thus collected are insulated from retroactive modification.” 18 Id. at 299 (Abrahamson, J., dissenting). Many other courts have reached similar conclusions. 19 We have concluded that the proper characterization of the Commission’s review recognizes that increased consumer charges resulting from gas purchases were not products of ratemaking. We therefore hold that they cannot be rendered inviola *625 ble by the rule against retroactive rate-making. 20
Conclusion concerning retroactive reviews of gas purchases
After careful review of Entex’s arguments, we have concluded that the Commission’s claimed authority to conduct retroactive reviews of gas purchases and to order refunds has statutory support and does not violate either the filed rate doctrine or the rule against retroactive rate-making. We overrule Entex’s first issue. Expense reimbursement
In its second issue, Entex argues that retroactive review of its gas purchases is not a “ratemaking proceeding” in which the Commission could require it to reimburse the City for its costs for participating in the review. See Tex. UtihCode Ann. § 103.022. We agree.
“The gas utility in a ratemaking proceeding shall reimburse the governing body of the municipality for the reasonable cost of the services of a person engaged under [the statute] to the extent the applicable regulatory authority determines reasonable.” Id. § 103.022(b). As noted above, the utilities code defines “rate” broadly:
(A) any compensation, tariff, charge, fare, toll, rental, or classification that is directly or indirectly demanded, observed, charged, or collected by a gas utility for a service, product, or commodity described in the definition of gas utility in this section; and
(B) a rule, regulation, practice, or contract affecting the compensation, tariff, charge, fare, toll, rental, or classification.
Id. § 101.003(12). A “proceeding” is a hearing, investigation, inquiry, or other procedure for finding facts or making a decision under GURA. Id. § 101.003(11). The term includes a denial of relief or dismissal of a complaint. Id.
Under GURA, a utility’s rates may be changed in only two ways- — by petition of the utility or by a rate-setting authority, such as the Commission or the City.
See id.
§§ 104.102, .151. A proceeding that changes the amount charged customers may be a ratemaking proceeding in circumstances where the proceeding is functionally equivalent of the procedures for notice and hearing described in sub-chapters C and D of the utilities code.
See Southwestern Pub. Serv. Co. v. Public Util. Comm’n of Tex.,
The City argues that the proceedings at issue in
Southwestern Public Service Co.,
We have already concluded that the issue presented here is one concerning alleged misapplication of Entex’s approved rates, not the setting of Entex’s rates. 21 The City is not seeking to adjust the formula contained in the PGA clause or to change Entex’s rates. It is merely requesting a review of gas purchases to ensure that the customer charge complies with Entex’s approved rate. As a result, these proceedings are not “ratemaking proceedings,” and the City is not entitled to reimbursement for its costs for its participation in the review. We sustain En-tex’s second issue.
CONCLUSION
We have concluded that the Commission has the authority to review Entex’s past gas purchases when the costs associated with those purchases were passed through to Entex’s customers through the application of the PGA clauses in Entex’s filed rates and that the Commission has the power to order refunds if it determines that Entex’s gas purchases were imprudent. We have also determined that the Commission’s exercise of those powers do not violate the filed rate doctrine or the rule against retroactive ratemaking, and we thus affirm the judgment of the district court concerning those issues. We emphasize that Entex has only presented for our review facial challenges to the Commission’s authority to conduct the prudence reviews. We express no opinion regarding other issues, if any, that might be raised by the Commission’s application of this authority in any particular circumstance.
We have also found that a prudence review is not a ratemaking proceeding for purposes of utilities code section 103.022(b), and therefore the City is not *627 entitled to recover its expenses incurred while participating in those proceedings. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court in part and render judgment that the City is not entitled to its expenses under utilities code section 103.022(b).
APPENDIX A
ENTEX
RATE SHEET
RESIDENTIAL SERVICE
RATE SCHEDULE NO. R-1446-2
APPLICATION OF SCHEDULE
This schedule is applicable to customers receiving gas for uses usual in a home through a single meter serving a single family dwelling and its related structures. Natural gas supplied hereunder is for the individual use of the customer at one point of delivery and shall not be resold or shared with others.
NET MONTHLY RATE
First 400 cubic feet or less $9.19 Next 2,600 cubic feet .6536 per 100 cubic feet
Next 7,000 cubic feet .5412 per 100 cubic feet
Over 10,000 cubic feet .5208 per 100 cubic feet
MINIMUM MONTHLY BILL $9.19
PAYMENT
Bills shall be rendered on a monthly basis and are due and payable within ten (10) days from the date of bill.
PURCHASED GAS ADJUSTMENT PROVISION
The above net monthly rate per unit sold is predicated upon a price of natural gas purchased for resale hereunder of $4.5705 per Mcf. To the extent that EN-TEX’s price of natural gas to be purchased (adjusted to correct any prior variations from actual costs) for resale hereunder increases or decreases, said net monthly rate shall be adjusted up or down to reflect
(i) changes in such cost of gas per unit sold and (ii) changes in gross receipts taxes resulting from such increases or decreases in the net monthly rate. For purposes of calculating said adjustment, it shall be proper for ENTEX to determine its cost of gas from its several suppliers and the gross receipts taxes to be paid on the basis of a logical geographical area.
If ENTEX receives any refunds of any increased cost of purchased gas that have been passed on under this provision, a refund shall be made to customers served by this rate schedule.
Notes
. We refer to this entity as Entex, as it was known during the relevant events from which this appeal arose.
. Cities have exclusive original jurisdiction over natural gas rates in areas within the municipality while the Commission has the same over rates in areas outside of municipalities. See Tex. Util.Code Ann. §§ 102.001(a)(1)(A) & 103.001 (West Supp. 2005). A municipality can surrender its authority to the Commission. Id. §§ 102.001(a)(1)(B), 103.001, 103.003.
We have reproduced an example of one of the City-approved rate schedules at Appendix A.
. We will discuss the nature of PGA clauses in more detail when we consider Entex's appellate issues.
. On January 8, 2003, the City, by ordinance, surrendered to the Commission its claimed jurisdiction over the matter. See Tex. Util. Code Ann. § 103.003 (West Supp.2005).
.The Commission's hearing examiners characterized the parties’ positions thus: “Generally, the City of Tyler, on the one hand, argues that the proceeding includes a 'prudence review' of past purchases. On the other hand, Entex argues that the Commission lacks the authority to conduct a retroactive prudence review and that this case is limited to an audit of its gas costs flow through.” (Footnotes omitted.).
. Commissioner Michael Williams dissented.
. After filing its petition in district court, En-tex filed a petition for writ of mandamus requesting that this Court stay the Commission from engaging in its prudence review of Entex's gas purchases during the pendency of this appeal. We denied the petition. The parties report that the Commission has conducted its review, found that no refund was due, and severed from that proceeding the *615 issue of the City’s claim for rate case expense reimbursement. The Commission later denied the City reimbursement in the severed cause. Because this appeal continues to present live issues affecting matters still pending before the Commission, we proceed to consider them.
. We do so while mindful of the admonition that a “lawyer who attempts to chop his way around in the jungle of legal opinion on the subject of these [PGA] clauses is apt to find himself wandering in circles with his intellectual machete so dulled he is soon brought to a standstill.” Philip P. Ardery, Should There Be Rules about Escalator Clauses?, 53:1 Pub. Util. Fort. 35, 39 (1954).
.In the sample rate schedule reproduced as Appendix A, fixed-cost and variable-cost portions of the schedule are reported together under the heading "Net Monthly Rate.” Some courts have termed these numbers as the “base rate,” which fluctuates based on changes in the gas-cost variable as described in the PGA clause.
See, e.g., Southern Cal. Edison Co. v. Public Util. Comm’n,
. Pierce has asserted that escalator clauses, such as the PGA clauses in this case, "are essential to the financial viability of many pipelines and other utilities.” Richard J. Pierce, Reconsidering the Roles of Regulation and Competition in the Natural Gas Industry, 97 Harv. L.Rev. 345, 373 (1983). Nonetheless, criticism has been voiced against the use of such clauses because of their automatic nature. See G. William Fowler, Purchased Gas Adjustment Clauses: An Adjuster’s Viewpoint, 6 St. Mary’s L.J. 567, 578-81 (1974) (reviewing major areas of criticism of fuel adjustment clauses, including incentive issues and parent-subsidiary self-dealing considerations).
. "Regulatory lag” is the loss of earnings between the time a utility files a petition for a rate increase and when the rate relief actually becomes effective. Pierce, 97 Harv. L.Rev. at 360; see R.S. Trigg, Escalator Clauses in Public Utility Rate Schedules, 106 U. Pa. L.Rev. 964, 964 (1958); see also Elizabeth Warren, Regulated Industries’ Automatic Cost of Service Adjustment Clauses: Do They Increase or Decrease Cost to the Consumer?, 55 Notre Dame L.Rev. 333, 348 (1980) ("Regulatory lag simply operates as a squeeze on the utility.”).
.Four pragmatic justifications have generally been identified for using such clauses:
(1) to reduce the number of rate proceedings and the expenses attended thereon, (2) a series of smaller increases to the consumer, (3) improved financial stability for the utility by reducing the variations in earnings caused by such increase in expenses, and as a result (4) a somewhat reduced cost of capital which ultimately would accrue to the benefit of the consumer.
Patricia Gabel, et al., Utility Rates, Consumers, and the New York State Public Service Commission, 39 Alb. L.Rev. 707, 754 (1975); see Daily Advertiser v. Trans-La, Div. of Atmos Energy Corp.,612 So.2d 7 , 22 n. 23 (La.1993); see also Railroad Comm’n of Tex. v. City of Fort Worth,576 S.W.2d 899 , 902 (Tex.Civ.App.-Austin 1979, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (citing Montana Consumer Counsel v. Public Serv. Comm’n,168 Mont. 180 ,541 P.2d 770 (1975)); Fowler, 6 St. Mary’s L.J. at 578.
. For the sake of simplicity, we refer only to the terms and numbers used in the sample rate schedule reproduced at Appendix A.
. The price of gas is divided into four brackets: for the first 400 cubic feet of gas, the customer is charged a set price of $9.19 (the minimum monthly bill); the next 2,600 cubic feet cost $.6536 per 100 cubic feet; the next 7,000 cubic feet cost $.5412 per 100 cubic feet; and, finally, any amount of gas more than the initial 10,000 cubic feet will cost the customer $.5208 per 100 cubic feet.
. The PGA clause also includes a provision for the amount charged to vary according to changes in gross receipts taxes, a practice that has been common in jurisdictions that permit the use of PGA clauses. See Trigg, 106 U. Pa. L.Rev. at 982-87.
. The rule against retroactive ratemaking generally protects the utility from being subject to later decisions by a regulatory agency that the agency’s earlier decision in approving a rate was “unsound.”
See Public Util. Comm’n of Cal. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Comm’n,
. As the Rhode Island Supreme Court has observed, the "specter of retroactive ratemak-ing must not be viewed as a talismanic inhibition against the application of principles based upon equity and common sense.”
Roberts v. Narragansett Elec. Co.,
.
See Fitchburg Gas & Elec. Light Co. v. Department of Telecomms. & Energy,
. Entex appears to make an additional argument — that the period to be subject to review is not limited in a way that will pass constitutional muster concerning its vested rights in the approved rates.
See
Tex. Const, art. I, § 16;
Southwestern Bell Tel. Co. v. Public Util. Comm'n of Tex.,
. The City’s petition to the Commission to engage in retroactive review of Entex’s gas purchases reflects this distinction. The City did not cede its jurisdiction to set rates. Instead, it alleged only that (1) Entex’s gas purchases were unreasonable; (2) Entex’s allocation of purchased gas discriminated against residential and small commercial customers; (3) its tariffs were false and misleading (but did not request that new rates be set); and (4) the PGA clause included improper charges.
