Friends of the Earth (Appellant) appeals from the order of approval issued by the Public Service Commission (Commission) of the combined application of South Carolina Electric & Gas Company (SCE & G) to construct and operate an additional two-unit nuclear facility, as well as to revise its rates to reflect the cost of capital applied to the project. We affirm.
FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In May of 2008, SCE & G filed a combined application for certificate of environmental compatibility, public convenience and necessity (Application) pursuant to the Utility Facility Siting and Environmental Protection Act (Siting Act),
1
and the Base Load Review Act,
2
with the Commission. The purpose of the Application was to seek the approval of the Commission to construct and operate a new two-unit nuclear generating facility (Facility) in Jenkinsville, South Carolina. The project is to be jointly owned by SCE & G and the South Carolina Public Service Authority (Santee Cooper). The application was put together following an evaluation of the growing demand for electricity and a comparison of the available electricity generation technologies, which arrived at the conclusion that nuclear generation was the least costly alternative available. As a part of the Application under the Base Load Review Act, SCE
&
G also applied for: (1) a pre-construction review of the prudency of its decision to construct the Facility; (2) approval of cost and milestone targets for completing the Facility; and (3) an initial rate adjustment of one-half of one
Appellant is a not-for-profit membership organization that advocates clean energy usage initiatives, based on efficiency improvements, along with renewable energy sources such as wind, geothermal, and solar power. Appellant claims membership consisting of ratepayers of SCE & G and residents of South Carolina, including neighbors of the site of the proposed Facility, who allege they have direct and material interests in access to economical, clean, and sustainable electric service, as well as an interest in protecting the use and enjoyment of the natural resources of the State. Appellant opposed the Application of SCE & G, and timely filed a petition to intervene in the proceeding before the Commission, which was allowed. 3 Additionally, The Office of Regulatory Staff (ORS) was a party to the Application 4 pursuant to section 58-4-10(B) of the South Carolina Code (Supp.2009), and is a respondent in this matter on appeal.
The Commission held a hearing on the Application, and by Order No. 2009-104(A) approved the Application of SCE & G, authorizing the construction and operation of the Facility. Petitions for Rehearing or Reconsideration were filed on behalf of Appellant, the South Carolina Energy User Committee, and Joseph Wojcicki, which were denied by the Commission by Order No. 2009-218. Thereafter, Appellant appealed the denial to this Court.
I. Standard of Review applied under the Base Load Review Act
Initially, Appellant contends this Court should apply a new standard of review to the analysis of the Commission below, because this is the first combined application the Commission has decided under the Base Load Review Act. 5 Appellant maintains a new standard of “heightened scrutiny” is the appropriate standard this Court should apply to decisions of the Commission under the Base Load Review Act. We disagree.
Ordinarily, the Court’s application of varying degrees of scrutiny is limited to those cases where a statute’s constitutionality is being challenged under the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution.
See
U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1; S.C. Const, art. I, § 8. The application of heightened, or strict scrutiny is warranted in cases where “a classification trammels fundamental personal rights or is drawn upon inherently suspect distinctions such as race, religion, or alien-age. ...”
Fraternal Order of Police v. S.C. Dep’t of Revenue,
Consequently, “[t]his Court employs a deferential standard of review when reviewing a decision of the Public Service Commission and will affirm that decision when substantial evidence supports it.”
Duke Power Co. v. Public Service Comm’n of South Carolina,
Furthermore, the Court may not substitute its judgment for the Commission’s on questions about which there is room for a difference of intelligent opinion.
Duke Power Co.,
II. Alleged Failings of the SCE & G Application
Appellant next contends SCE & G failed to update its integrated resource plan (IRP) or complete a review of potential energy efficiency and demand side management (DSM) load reductions, thus SCE & G has failed to adequately demonstrate the need for the proposed capacity expansion of the Facility. We disagree.
DSM programs are designed to reduce the overall energy consumption of customers. There are two general types of DSM programs: first, demand reduction programs that involve motivating customers to shift their use of power away from peak energy usage periods, thus limiting or reducing the growth of energy consumption during a utility’s peak demand; and second, energy efficient programs which seek to reduce customers’ overall energy consumption through customer information and energy conservation programs designed to educate the energy-consuming public. With respect to SCE & G’s DSM reports, the Commission noted that SCE & G, at the time of the order, was exploring the revitalization of its programs in light of the current energy prices, general economic conditions, and the increased environmental concerns of its customers. In addition, the Commission acknowledged that SCE & G could have made a better effort at establishing its energy efficiency programs in the past, and stated its anticipation at reviewing the company’s new DSM programs in June of 2009. Nonetheless, viewing the entirety of the evidence before it, the Commission determined that DSM programs were not a viable substitute for the base load capacity for which SCE & G had established a need, and sought to fulfill in the construction of the Facility.
Appellant also contends SCE & G’s most recent IRP update, which was completed in May of 2008, was not done close enough in time to the Application, and failed to give an accurate portrayal of the need SCE & G was facing. According to the Commission:
The objective of the IRP process is the development of a plan that results in the minimization of the long run total costs of the utility’s overall system and produces the leastcost to the consumer consistent with the availability of an adequate and rehable supply of electricity while maintaining system flexibility and considering environmental impacts. In conjunction with the overall objective, the IRP should contribute toward the outcomes of improved customer service, additional customer options, and improved efficiencies of energy utilization.
Order No. 1991-885, August 28, 1991. Under section 58-37-40(A) of the South Carolina Code (Supp.2009), electrical utilities are required to file a detailed, fifteen year IRP with the State Energy Office, every three years, with updates made annually.
Appellant maintains that, because SCE & G did not conduct a separate IRP specifically for this combined application — and based on its typical IRP schedule, SCE & G’s last IRP filing was in May of 2008 — the data and forecasts that were a part of their most recent IRP were unreliable. As part and parcel to this argument, Appellant contends SCE & G failed to consider alternatives to nuclear power, such as solar, wind, landfill gas, biomass, natural gas, and coal. However, this argument is contradicted by the direct testimony of SCE & G’s experts and employees, wherein they stated SCE & G considered each of the seven types of energy generation facilities listed above.
Finally, Appellant argues the Commission should have deferred its decision on SCE
&
G’s combined application, or in the alternative, should have prospectively limited the company’s ability to make adjustments in the approved schedule or budget for completion of the Facility. This argument is made, in principal part, due to the Application’s alleged inadequacies regarding SCE & G’s IRP and DSM plans. However, under the plain reading of the Base Load Review Act, neither of these requests are contemplated or authorized; therefore, Appellant’s contentions are without merit. The General Assembly specifically provided that the Commission must rule and issue an order, either approving or disapproving, a request made by a utility, including requests made in an application under the Base Load Review Act, within nine months of the filing of the combined application.
See
S.C.Code Ann. § 58-33-240(E) (Supp.2009) (modifying, for the purposes of
As explained above, based on the overwhelming amount of evidence in the record, the Commission’s determination that SCE & G considered all forms of viable energy generation, and concluded that nuclear energy was the least costly alternative source, is supported by substantial evidence.
III. Failure of SCE & G to prove a need for the Facility
Appellant finally contends the Commission erred in finding SCE & G had established the proper need and prudency of building the Facility, given: SCE & G’s size relative to other utility companies; the steep economic downturn the country and South Carolina is facing; and the fact that SCE & G will be the first utility to build this type of facility. Because the record demonstrates the Commission adequately considered each of the requirements under the Base Load Review Act, and its determinations are supported by substantial evidence in the record, we disagree.
Section 58-33-240(D) of the South Carolina Code (Supp. 2009) provides that in proceedings before the Commission, upon the filing of a combined application, “the utility shall have the burden of proving that the decision to build the plant was prudent, and shall have the burden of proof as to all matters on which the commission is required to enter findings under Section 58-33-270(A), (B), (C), (D), and (E).” Furthermore, under the new requirements of the Base Load Review Act, the Commission is obligated to go beyond the findings
(1) that the utility’s decision to proceed with construction of the plant is prudent and reasonable considering the information available to the utility at the time;
(2) for plants located in this State, that the utility has satisfied the requirements of Section 58-33-160 of the Utility Facility Siting and Environmental Protection Act, either in a past proceeding or in the current proceeding if the current proceeding is a combined proceeding; and
(3) for plants located outside South Carolina, that the utility has satisfied the requirements of Section 58-33-160(l)(a), 58 — 33—160(l)(d), and 58-33-160(1)© of the Utility Facility Siting and Environmental Protection Act.
(B) The base load review order shall establish:
(1) the anticipated construction schedule for the plant including contingencies;
(2) the anticipated components of capital costs and the anticipated schedule for incurring them, including specified contingencies;
(3) the return on equity established in conformity with Section 58-33-220(16);
(4) the choice of the specific type of unit or units and major components of the plant;
(5) the qualification and selection of principal contractors and suppliers for construction of the plant; and
(6) the inflation indices used by the utility for costs of plant construction, covering major cost components or groups of related cost components. Each utility shall provide its own indices, including: the source of the data for each index, if the source is external to the company, or the methodology for each index which is compiled from internal utility data, the method of computation of inflation from each index, acalculated overall weighted index for capital costs, and a five-year history of each index on an annual basis.
(C) If revised rates are requested, the base load review order shall specify initial revised rates reflecting the utility’s current investment in the plant which must be determined using the standards set forth in Section 58-33-280(B) and implemented according to Section 58-33-280(D).
(D) The base load review order shall establish the rate design and class allocation factors to be used in calculating revised rates related to the plant. In establishing revised rates, all factors, allocations, and rate designs shall be as determined in the utility’s last rate order or as otherwise previously established by the commission, except that the additional revenue requirement to be collected through revised rates shall be allocated among customer classes based on the utility’s South Carolina firm peak demand data from the prior year.
In reviewing the decision of the Commission under a statute for which it is charged with the administration, the Commission is “the ‘expert’ designated by the legislature to make policy determinations regarding utility rates; thus, the role of a court reviewing such decisions is very limited.”
Hamm v. South Carolina Public Service Comm’n,
Without addressing all of the considerations SCE & G advanced to establish its need for the Facility in the Application, the record is replete with evidence from which the Commission could come to the conclusion that SCE & G’s need was satisfactorily established. The crux of Appellant’s argument is that SCE
&
G is too small of a utility to be the guinea pig for these types of nuclear facilities, and that given the cost of capital estimates associated with projects of this
CONCLUSION
On balance, Appellant essentially asks this Court to substitute its judgment for that of the Commission, in an area in which the Commission is recognized as the expert. Although Appellant’s concerns are deserving of evaluation, SCE & G’s Application, as well as the Commission’s thorough and well-reasoned order, reveal these considerations were adequately considered in the determination to approve the Application. Accordingly, the decision of the Commission is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. S.C.Code Ann. § 58-33-10 et seq. (1977 & Supp.2009).
. S.C.Code Ann. § 58-33-210 et seq. (Supp.2009).
. In addition to Appellant, the Commission also received timely petitions to intervene from CMC Steel South Carolina, Pamela Greenlaw, Mildred A. McKinley, Lawrence P. Newton, the South Carolina Energy User Committee, Ruth Thomas, Maxine Warshauer, Samuel Baker, and Joseph Wojcicki. Although petitions for rehearing from the order on appeal were filed by the South Carolina Energy User Committee and Wojcicki, in addition to that filed by Appellant, none of the above-listed intervenors are a part of the appeal before us.
. South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control, South Carolina Department of Natural Resources, South Carolina Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism, and the Town of Jenkins-ville were all listed as parties based on the provisions of section 58-33-140 of the South Carolina Code (Supp.2009), but did not appear or take part in the proceedings.
. The General Assembly enacted the Base Load Review Act in 2007, by Act No. 16, effective upon signature of the Governor on May 3, 2007.
