Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge CLIFTON; Dissent by Judge McKEOWN.
This stоry begins over a decade ago during the California energy crisis of 2000 and 2001. This court
We do not agree with FERC’s assertion that it has broad authority under § 206 of the FPA to retroactively reset rates that were charged in the California electricity markets during the time in question, October 2, 2000 through June 20, 2001. As we held in Bonneville, the FPA grants FERC the authority to investigate rates and to order refunds only from public utilities. Bonneville,
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Only a brief summary of the long and detailed history of the California energy crisis and subsequent litigation is necessary here. In the mid~1990’s, California
Together CalPX and ISO operated single-price auction spot markets for the wholesale sale of electricity. California’s investor-owned (“public”) utilities were required to purchase the electricity their customers needed in this market. In re California Power Exch. Corp.,
Power-producing municipal and federal government entities also sold electricity into the market. These entities are “nonpublic” utilities not subject to FERC’s jurisdiction.
Sellers of electricity, both public and non-public, would bid into the market until sufficient power was secured to meet demand, at which point all sellers were paid the price bid by the seller whose electricity was needed to “clear the mаrket.” See generally Bonneville,
Although intended to reduce prices for electricity, the CalPX and ISO electric energy markets produced prices far above those in prior years, at comparable load levels. In August of 2000, San Diego Gas & Electric Company (“SDG & E”) filed a complaint with FERC alleging that the rates charged on the CalPX and ISO markets, the market clearing prices, “d[id] not reflect legitimate forces of supply and demand.” In response, FERC initiated hearing proceedings to investigate the justness and reasonableness of the CalPX/ ISO rates.
Following an investigation, on March 9, 2001, FERC issued another order in which it concluded that the CalPX/ISO rates were in fact unjust and unreasonable. In this order, FERC established a mitigation plan and set a mitigated market clearing price — the price that would have been in effect “had there been competitive forces at work” — above which refunds may be required.
In a July 25, 2001 order (“July 2001 Order”), FERC announced that the transactions subject to refund would “include sales by public and nonpublic utilities into these markets.” Bonneville,
*833 A number of parties confuse the just and reasonable standard with the authority to order retroactive refunds of unjust and unreasonable rates. Whether rates are unjust and unreasonable is a separate issue from whether the Commission is authorized under the statute to order refunds retroactively. Under FPA section 206, if the Commission finds that rates no longer meet the just and reasonable standard, the Commission has a statutory obligation to fix a new rate or to fix practices “to be thereafter observed.” In amending FPA section 206, Congress did not give the Commission authority to modify unjust and unreasonable rates retroactively.
Following the July 2001 Order, non-public utilities brought a petition for review to this court. In our 2005 opinion in Bonneville, we held that in keeping with Congress’s clearly expressed intent, FERC lacked jurisdiction over non-public utilities and could not order them to pay refunds. 422 F.8d at 911, 920. As we observed in passing, for those who purchased electricity from non-public sellers “the remedy, if any, may rest in a contract claim, not a refund action,” id. at 925, but we followed this statement with the proviso that “we take no position on remedies available outside of the FPA,” id. at 926.
In proceedings following the remand from Bonneville, FERC issued a new order on October 19, 2007 (“October 2007 Order”).
California Parties assert that the Commission revised the pricing formulations contained in the [CalPX/ISO] tariffs for the period to which the MMCP [mitigated market clearing price] applies. We disagree. The Bonneville court found that the Commission had ordered refunds rather than amending the [CalPX/ISO] tariffs to reset the market clearing price during the refund period. The court further found that the Commission had acted outside its jurisdiction when ordering non-public utility entities to pay these refunds. Therefore, we vacate each of the Commission’s orders in the California refund proceeding to the extent that they order non-public utility entities to pay refunds.
The California Parties sought clarification of Paragraph 36, arguing that FERC had misleadingly implied it did not reset the market clearing prices and that Bonneville held as much. See
California Parties assert that the Commission revised the pricing formulations*834 contained in the [CalPX/ISO]'’tariffs for the period to which the MMCP applies. We do not disagree. The Bonneville court found that the Commission had ordered refunds by non-jurisdictional entities rather than merely amending the [CalPX/ISO] tariffs to reset the market clearing price during the refund period.
Id. at 61,926.
The controversy was not quelled.' The various Petitionérs in this case, all nonpublic utilities for the purposes of the FPA, sought rehearing bеfore FERC of its November 2007 Order.
FERC denied this petition in an order issued on May 29, 2009 (“May 2009 Order”).
The May 2009 Order also further sought to explain the consistency of FERC’s orders with our decision in Bonneville, notably in Paragraph 43:
We disagree with the Requesting Parties’ assertion that the Clarification Order is inconsistent with the Ninth Circuit’s ruling in Bonneville. In Bonneville, the Ninth Circuit found that the Commission lacked authority to order governmental entities or other non-public utilities to pay refunds. On remand, we are not ordering those entities to pay refunds, rather we are establishing just and reasonable prices in markets operated by jurisdictional public entities (the [CalPX/ISO]), so that we may properly order refunds from public utilities.
Id. at 61,874.
Claiming to take up this panel’s invitation in Bonneville, the California Parties
II. Petitioners’ Standing
Before we reach the scope of FERC’s authority to retroactively “revise” the rates charged in the California energy
The first is an argument that Petitioners lack standing to seek the requested relief. We conclude that Petitioners do have standing.
FERC characterizes Petitioners as having “succeeded” in the FERC proceeding, in that FERC did not order that Petitioners must pay refunds. Thus, FERC argues, Petitioners were not injured by the Orders on review. However, FERC’s assertion on appeal that it reset the CalPX/ ISO rates for all market participants, not only the entities over which it has jurisdiction, results in a sufficiently concrete injury to Petitioners to afford them standing. FERC’s action to reset rates in a way that could support a contract action against Petitioners would have an obvious and real impact on them. Petitioners are, therefore, “aggrieved” parties under the FPA and they have standing to seek review of the Orders.
Section 313 of the FPA “limits judicial review to those parties who have been ‘aggrieved by an order of the Commission.’ ” Port of Seattle,
FERC argues that Petitioners fail to demonstrate the requisite injury because they prevailed in the challenged Orders on remand from Bonneville, “which absolved them from any liability for a refund under FPA § 206(b).” It is true that “[t]he general rule is that a party may not appeal from a decree in its favor.” Port of Seattle,
Petitioners’ personal stake is obvious. They have been forced to defend themselves in lawsuits seeking substantial contract damages. Those actions are premised оn the FERC Orders challenged here. Counsel for the California Parties, the plaintiffs in the contract actions and Respondents-Intervenors here, conceded that FERC’s resetting of the rates charged by the non-jurisdictional entities is the predicate for these pending contract actions. Thus, Petitioners’ suit is no “mere disagreement with an agency’s rationale for a substantively favorable decision.” See Port of Seattle,
FERC challenges Petitioners’ standing as resting on speculation regarding the contract action. Several observations dispel that characterization, most notably FERC’s vigorous argument in response to this court’s supplеmental briefing order asking the parties about the practical effect of the ruling in this case. At length, FERC argues that “all market participants agree by contract to abide by the terms and conditions of the FERC jurisdictional tariffs and any related FERC rulings.” FERC goes on to underscore that all players, including non-jurisdictional utilities like Petitioners, are “integrated co-participants” in the market, and argues that an unfavorable ruling about the scope of § 206(b) could “preclude contract actions against governmental market participants.” FERC’s concern about the outcome of this case underscores the Petitioners’ very real stake in the proceeding.
FERC’s reliance on Federal Power Commission v. Hope Natural Gas Co.,
III. Collateral Attack on a Prior FERC Order
The California Parties argue that Petitioners’ appeal is an untimely and impermissible collateral attack on FERC’s July 2001 Order. They note that although Petitioners sought rehearing and appealed
Our jurisdiction undеr the FPA “is limited to review of new orders. We may not entertain a petition for review that collaterally attacks a prior FERC order.” Pac. Gas & Elec. Co. v. FERC,
It is fаr from clear that a reasonable party in Petitioners’ position would have understood that FERC’s July 2001 Order meant what the California Parties now say it meant — that FERC was retroactively revising the rates charged by non-jurisdictional sellers during the refund period. It is true that FERC declared in its July 2001 Order that in ordering refunds of all sales on the CalPX/ISO markets its “action ... revise[d] the market clearing prices that all market participants previously agreed to accept for their sales.”
In addition to the lack of clarity in the July 2001 Order itself, FERC’s later orders did not tell an entirely consistent story. In its October 2007 Order FERC “disagree[d]” with the assertion that “the Commission revised the pricing formulations contained in the [CalPX/ISO] tariffs,” and stated that this panel in Bonneville found that “the Commission had ordered refunds rather than amending the [CalPX/ISO] tariff to reset the market clearing price during the refund period.”
In sum, FERC’s shifting position with regard to its authority to order refunds
IV. Authority to Retroactively Adjust Ratеs for Non-Public Entities
Having concluded that Petitioners’ claims survive the threshold- challenges, we now address the core questions on the merits. We begin with FERC’s assertion of broad power under FPA § 206 to retroactively reset rates for all market participants. In reviewing an agency’s interpretation of the statute it is charged with administering, we must apply the familiar test established in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council,
Congress has infused FERC with expansive authority over energy markets through the FPA. Section 201 of the FPA grants FERC exclusive jurisdiction over the transmission and sale of electric energy in interstate commerce. 16 U.S.C. § 824(b)(1). Under § 205, Congress gave FERC jurisdiction over the “rates and charges” of “every public utility.” 16 U.S.C. § '824d.
Congress expanded FERC’s authority to address “unjust and unreasonable” rates by adding § 206(b) to the FPA in 1988, over fifty years after the enactment of the original law.
In its briefing, FERC has asserted that it has the authority to retroactively reset the market rates for all market participants through the exercise of its § 206(b) refund authority over public utilities. We hold that it does not. Although we are sympathetic to FERC’s desire to create a market-wide fix for past rates charged that it later found were unjust and unreasonable, § 206(b) simply does not endow FERC with this power. As we previously held in Bonneville, FERC’s refund authority does not extend to non-jurisdictional governmental entities, such as Petitioners.
FERC cites to a number of cases that have characterized its refund authority under § 206(b) involving “retroactive rate change,” at least in the colloquial meaning of that phrase. See, e.g., Exxon Mobil,
Nor was the question of FERC’s statutory authority to retroactively revise tariff rates squarely presented to the Eighth Circuit in Alliant Energy v. Nebraska
FERC asserts that its authority to retroactively reset rates for all market participants flows from its § 206(b) authority to order refunds and set a refund effective date. Our rejection of this conclusion derives from the language and structure of the statute. We begin with the overall structure. Section 206 separates the power to set rates in § 206(a) from the power to order refunds in § 206(b). This bifurcation points to the unambiguous congressional decision that these provinces remain distinct. See Exxon Mobil,
If FERC’s greater power to order refunds included the lesser power to reset market rates, the jurisdictional reach of the two powers should logically be coextensive. However, FERC’s refund authority applies only to jurisdictional entities as we held in Bonneville,
FERC maintains that our interpretation reads § 206(b) out of the statute
In short, we conclude that FPA § 206(b) is not ambiguous: While FERC has the authority to state retroactively what a “just and reasonable” rate would have been pursuant to its refund authority, Congress did not provide FERC with retroactive ratesetting authority over non-jurisdictional sellers. FPA § 206 attests to congressional intent to maintain a separation between FERC’s authority to set a just and reasonable rate under § 206(a) and its ability to order refunds under § 206(b). Because Congress spoke with clarity in § 206, we need not progress to the second step of the Chevron inquiry to determine whether, in the face of statutory ambiguity, FERC’s interpretation of the statute on appeal is a reasonable one. See Chevron,
Y. The Specific Orders at Issue
Although we are not persuaded by the argument on appeal that FERC’s power is more expansive (an argument that we think was presented more forcefully by the California Parties than by FERC itself), the Orders under review do not directly contravene our more limited understanding of § 206. The July 2001 Order “reset” the market clearing prices in the CalPX and ISO spot markets during the refund period to just and reasonable levels for the purpose of calculating the amount of refund due from entities over which FERC had authority. See PUC of California,
Our action here establishes a revised method for calculating the just and reasonable clearing prices to be applied in those markets for the period beginning October 2, 2000. This is pursuant to the Commission’s authority under FPA Section 206 to fix the just and reasonable rate. Our action thus revised the market clearing prices that all market participants previously agreed to accept for their sales.
The post-Bonneville Orders now under review are read by the dissenting opinion to invoke only a more expansive authority to retroactively reset the rates “observed and in force” from all market participants. We think the language of the Orders can and should be read more modestly. The primary focus of the Orders was on the fair and reasonable clearing prices, not on which parties would be affected by the Orders. On the latter subject, it may have taken FERC a few tries to clarify what it meant, as outlined above at 833-34, but in the May 2009 Order FERC clearly acknowledged that it did not have authority to order refunds from the non-public utilities and explained that it was establishing just and reasonable rates in order to determine the appropriate refund amount for public entities:
*842 We disagree with the Requesting Parties’ assertion that the Clarification Order is inconsistent with the Ninth Circuit’s ruling in Bonneville. In Bonneville, the Ninth Circuit found that the Commission lacked authority to order governmental entities or other non-public utilities to pay refunds. On remand, we are not ordering those entities to pay refunds, rather we are establishing just and reasonable prices in markets by jurisdictional entities (the [CalPX/ISO]), so that we may properly order refunds from public utilities.
Like our dissenting colleague, we reject the argument that FERC has an expansive statutory authority to retroactively reset rates. But that does not mean that we have to disregard the Order that FERC actually entered. It is simply not the case that we have put words into FERC’s mouth — or as expressed by the dissenting opinion, at 843, that “we just don’t think [FERC] said what [it] said.” To the contrary, we have attributed to FERC exactly the position that it expressed in its May 2009 Order, as quoted above.
That an argument has been presented on aрpeal for broader FERC power does not mean that FERC had no power whatsoever. The core of our disagreement with the dissenting opinion may be reflected in its own summary: “a review of the orders, followed by FERC’s litigation position, shows that FERC did more than passively determine just prices en route to ordering refunds for jurisdictional entities. It also sought to retroactively reset market rates for all entities through those orders, without the necessary legal authority.” Dissenting opinion, at 843-44 (emphasis in original). But the fact that FERC did not have the authority to do what it “also” might have tried to do does not mean that it did not have the power to do what it did in “passively” determining just prices en route to ordering refunds only from jurisdictional entities.
We are not blind to the potential impact of FERC’s determination of the just and reasonable prices. In the contract actions brought in other forums, it is claimed that the Petitioners before us are liable for charges collected by them in excess of the just and reasonable prices subsequently calculated by FERC. Petitioners seek to protect themselves against those claims by preventing FERC from recalculating the market rates. But FERC’s recalculation was not an empty exercise, because it had to determine just and reasonable market clearing prices in order to calculate the refunds to be ordered from sellers from which it could order refunds. What impact this calculation might have on the contract actions pending in other courts is not for us to say. FERC has not treated those claims as an infringement upon FERC’s regulatory authority, so we do not see need to treat them as such.
VI. Conclusion
As we hold that FERC did not exceed its authority in issuing the Orders under review, the petitions for review are DENIED.
PETITIONS FOR REVIEW DENIED.
Notes
. See, e.g., California ex rel. Lockyer v. Dynegy, Inc.,
. See, e.g., Port of Seattle v. FERC,
. The terms "revised” and "reset” are used interchangeably, as are "non-public" and "non-jurisdictional.”
. The term "Petitioners” inclusively refers to Bonneville Power Administration (“BPA”), Western Area Power Administration ("Western”), and the other original Indicated Public Entity Petitioners — Northern California Power Agency, Modesto Irrigation District, City of Redding, Turlock Irrigation District, Arizona Electric Power Cooperative, Inc., Sacramento Municipal Utility District, City of Santa Clara, City of Glendale, and City of Burbank.
.It is a source of regular confusion among those who do not customarily reside in the world of regulated utilities that the definition of "public” utilities excludes governmental entities such as the Petitioners in this case (cities, counties, local irrigation districts, and state and federal agencies), even though in other context those entities are understood to be "public” agencies. See Bonneville,
. California’s investor-owned utilities were sellers as well as buyers because California’s restructuring law required them to offer into the market all of the electricity they generated themselves. In re California Power Exch. Corp.,
. The "California Parties”, in the context of this Order, include the State of California, the California Electricity Oversight Board, the Public Utilities Commission of California, Pacific Gas and Electric, Southern California Edison, and SDG & E.
. The "California Parties” in the context of this appeal include the State of California, the Public Utilities Commission of California, Pacific Gas and Electric, Southern California Edison, and SDG & E.
. The Court of Federal Claims recently ruled that BPA and Western breached contractual duties to pay refunds owed to the California parties resulting from electricity overcharges during the 2000-2001 energy crisis in California. Pac. Gas & Elec. Co. v. United States,
. Nor is this a case like Wisconsin Public Power Inc. v. FERC,
. In explaining the "public utility" limitation on FERC’s jurisdiction in § 205, § 201(f) provides that "[n]o provision in this subchapter shall apply to ... the United States, a State or any political subdivision of a State ... or any agency, authority, or instrumentality of any one or more оf the foregoing, or any corporation which is wholly owned, directly or indirectly, by any one or more of the foregoing." 16 U.S.C. § 824(f).
. Congress added this subsection with the Regulatory Fairness Act of 1988, Pub.L. No. 100-473, 102 Stat. 2299. Until this time, FERC could "only order the rates of public utilities to be reduced prospectively from the date of its decision that existing rates [were] unlawful.” S.Rep. No. 100-491, at 3 (1988), reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2584,
. FERC references similar statements in a line of cases involving § 4 of the Natural Gas Act ("NGA”). 15 U.S.C. § 717. See E. Tenn. Natural Gas Co. v. FERC,
. FERC's initial claim that it has the authority to retroactively revise the market clearing prices in its July 2001 Order is best understood as a justification for FERC’s imposition of refund liability on non-jurisdictional, nonpublic entities. See
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The Federal Power Act’s (“FPA”) delineation of FERC’s authority under § 206(b) is unambiguous: FERC lacks the “broad power under FPA § 206 to retroactively reset rates for all market participants.” Maj. Op. 837-38. From this rejection of FERC’s position, the end of the line seems clear — FERC’s orders exceeded its authority by resetting market rates retroactively, and the petition should be granted. Apparently not so. In a surprise twist ending, notwithstanding the plain language of the orders at issue and FERC’s litiga
To understand why the majority’s conclusion takes a wrong turn, it is helpful to step back and track FERC’s bidding in this multi-year saga. FERC has stated throughout these proceedings that it has reset rates retroactively, and claims authority to do so under § 206(b) of the FPA. It argues that a contrary interpretation reads § 206(b) out of the statute entirely, because FERC must be able to retroactively reset rates to enable it to order refunds under § 206(b). A careful reading of FERC’s orders also shows that it sought to reset market rates. See, e.g., 127 FERC at ¶ 61,869 (“[T]he ordering of refunds by its very nature involves the resetting of rates in a past period.”). The majority’s effort to candy coat and recategorize what FERC said is inconsistent with the scope of our review of these administrative agency orders. In effect, the majority is saying “We know what your position is, we know what you argued on appeal, and we read what you wrote, but never mind, we just don’t think you said what you said.” That can’t be right. Although I join parts I-IV of the opinion, I cannot endorse the majority’s ultimate conclusion. I respectfully dissent.
A. Federal Power Act, § 206
Before turning to what FERC actually did do, it is important to recognize what FERC may do under the statute. Under FPA § 206, from which FERC’s (legal) power flows, FERC may “determine the just and reasonable rate ... to be thereafter observed and in force.” 16 U.S.C. § 824e(a). Subsection 206(b) outlines FERC’s retroactive authority. FERC must first “show that [a] rate” charged during a particular period “is unjust, unreasonable, unduly discriminatory, or preferential.” Upon making this showing, it “may order refunds of any amounts paid” over a particular period. § 206(b).
Under both sections, FERC’s first step is to “determine” the appropriate rate, and relatedly, that an alternative rate is unjust. At that point, FERC takes steps to implement the appropriate rate. Under § 206(a), FERC has the prospective authority to set the rate as the market rate “thereafter observed and in force.” Under § 206(b), FERC has the retroactive authority to order refunds based on its determination. As the majority correctly determines, the ratesetting authority is distinct from the refund authority and has prospective application only. Thus, under the statute, FERC may engage in three types of actions: the prospective and retroactive determination of a fair market price, prospective setting of market rates “in force” based on that price, and the retroactive ordering of refunds. Maj. Op. at 840-41. Nowhere in § 206 did Congress grant FERC the ability to retroactively reset market rates. FERC’s approach, which is to cherry pick a little from both subsections of the statute, creates an unprecedented and unauthorized option — retroactive resetting of rates.
B. FERC’s Orders
Having correctly read the statute, the majority holds that FERC was merely “calculating]” the just and reasonable market prices, rather than attempting to reset rates in the orders on appeal. Maj. Op. at 841. As the discussion of the collateral order doctrine suggests, FERC’s orders were hardly a model of clarity. Maj. Op. 836-38. However, a review of the
It is useful to trace the orders with care. From the outset, FERC has suggested that it sought to reset market rates. In its 2001 order, which we reviewed in Bonneville Power Administration v. FERC,
Our action here establishes a revised method for calculating the just and reasonable clearing prices to be applied in those markets for the period beginning October 2, 2000. This is pursuant to the Commission’s authority under FPA Section 206 to fix the just and reasonable rate. Our action thus revised the market clearing prices that all market participants previously agreed to accept for their sales.
Although the quoted passage concerned a 2001 decision and petitioners here challenge only orders issued post-Bonneville, bygones cannot be bygones. The first of FERC’s post -Bonneville’s orders does not pose a problem. In October 2007, FERC “vacate[d] each of the Commission’s orders,” including the 2001 order at issue in Bonneville, “to the extent that they order non-public utility entities to pay refunds” in compliance with Bonneville. San Diego Gas & Elec. Co. v. Sellers of Energy & Ancillary Svcs., 121 FERCT 61,067, at 61,-352 (2007). Had matters ended there, the order may have passed muster.
However, at the instigation'of the California parties who had brought contract claims against the petitioners, FERC clarified its order the following month. Without mincing words, in its November 2007 Order, FERC explained:
We agree with the California Parties that the Commission inadvertently mischaracterized both its prior orders and the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Bonneville. [Establishing a just and reasonable rate is a prerequisite for ordering refunds. Accordingly, the Commission made clear that it was resetting the market clearing prices in the [2001] Refund Order:
Our action here establishes a revised method for calсulating the just and reasonable clearing prices to be applied in those markets [the CAISO and PX wholesale electricity markets] for the period beginning October 2, 2000. This is pursuant to the Commission’s authority under FPA section 206 to fix the just and reasonable rate. Our action thus revises the market*845 clearing prices that all market participants previously agreed to accept for their sales.
San Diego Gas & Elec. Co. v. Sellers of Energy & Ancillary Svcs.,
Faced with what they perceived as a turnabout by FERC, petitioners asked FERC to reconsider. Not only did FERC deny the request, but reemphasized that it had the power to reset market clearing prices, claiming more than once that the retroactive “application during that period of the new rate determined by the Commission to be just” was essential to its refund authority.
FERC does not explain why, after it “determine[s]” a rate to be just, it cannot simply order a refund, without retroactively applying the rate.
Modesty aside, the majority’s approach sidesteps a plain reading of the orders. The majority quotes from a passage in the 2009 Order, in which FERC claimed that it was merely “establishing just and reasonable prices in markets by jurisdictional entities.” Maj. Op. at 834 (quoting
Our ruling must begin and end with the language of the orders — unlike in a typical summary judgment appeal from a district court, we cannot affirm on any ground, nor may we substitute our view for that of the agency. The majority opinion “implies that if the administrative [agency] opinion consisted of two words — ‘[petition] denied’ — a persuasive [judicial opinion] could substitute for the missing agency reasoning. That is incorrect.” Spiva v. Astrue,
Chenery requires us to hold FERC to its own words. Resolution of this appeal requires no nuanced interpretation of the orders, just allegiance to plain English. Because the FERC orders clearly seek to go beyond its statutory authority — retroactively resetting rates for all market sales — I would grant the petition.
C. FERC’s Argument on Appeal
Whatever other criticism is leveled at FERC’s approach, it cannot be faulted for a lack of consistency. On appeal, keeping faith with Chenery, FERC echoes its orders and maintains again and again in its brief that those orders “revise[d] the market clearing prices that all market participants previously agreed to accept for their sales,” and then seeks to defend this position. The majority itself recognizes the “argument on appeal that FERC’s power is more expansive,” allowing FERC to retroactively reset rates. Maj. Op. at 841. FERC also accepts the government utilities’ characterization of the dispute as involving retroactive rate resetting, arguing, in fact, that it engaged in this resetting and has the power to do so. In its brief, FERC actually disagreed with petitioners’ claim that FERC did not “reset the rates previously charged.” See
In the face of FERC’s position, it seems odd indeed for the majority to craft a position that feven FERC does not endorse. In resolving this case in favor of FERC, the majority gives short shrift to basic tenets of administrative law and principles of appellate practice.
D. Standing
The majority’s position renders precariоus its ruling as to the petitioners’ standing. The FPA “limits judicial review to those parties who have been ‘aggrieved by an order of the Commission.’ ” Port of Seattle v. FERC,
Petitioners’ status as aggrieved parties under the Act, and the concreteness of their injury, all come down to whether FERC’s orders had a retroactive effect on the petitioners. If, however, FERC simply calculated just prices, without taking any action with respect to the petitioners,
Without this concrete injury, the majority’s ruling on standing is on shaky ground. In Federal Power Commission v. Hope Natural Gas Co.,
Finally, the majority suggests that it is possible to ignore the fact that FERC engaged in impermissible rate resetting because FERC also engaged in permissible rate calculation. Maj. Op. 842. This “see no evil” approach is at odds with both Chenery as well as common sense. As our standing analysis shows, the petitioners challenge and are injured by the rate resetting; it is this action they challenge on appeal. We cannot ignore the point of the litigation simply because there is a silver lining to the otherwise dark cloud of ultra vires FERC action. Because the orders also violate FERC’s authority under § 206 of the FPAI respectfully dissent.
. It is true that “FERC sent contradictory signals in the same Order,’’ by noting that •"[i]n amending FPA Section 206, Congress did not give the Commission authority to modify unjust and unreasonable rates retroactively.”
. As the majority notes, FERC explained that it may “establish! 1 just and reasonable prices in markets by jurisdictional entities ... so that we may properly order refunds from public utilities.” 127 FERC at ¶ 61,874.
