This case is one of a group arising from 1;he adoption by the Federal Power Commission of “curtailment plans” filed by United Gas Pipe Line Company. These curtailment plans were the outgrowth of an order promulgated by the FPC and were aimed at serving the public interest by establishing a rational scheme of allocation of available natural gas in light of the current, somewhat critical, shortage of this much-used fuel. Due to this shortage, pipeline companies found that they would not be able to meet all of their current contractual obligations for delivery of gas. At present, the FPC has not finally ap *134 proved any of the curtailment plans in question. It has, however, issued two orders, Opinions 606 and 606A, which are reviewable and are now challenged by numerous parties on several grounds before this court. Each of the contentions raised by these petitioners will be considered separately below.
FPC Jurisdiction to Enter Curtailment Orders Affecting Direct Sale Customers
At the time this action was initially filed with this court, we had previously held in Louisiana Power & Light Company v. United Gas Pipe Line Company, 5 Cir. 1972,
Opinions 606 and 606A and Damage Suits for Contract Breach Growing Out of Curtailment
Petitioners here, as have the petitioners in several other of the cases arising from this curtailment situation, object to language in Opinions 606 and 606A issued by the Federal Power Commission on October 5, 1971, and December 3, 1971, which indicated that the adoption of a curtailment plan by the Commission pursuant to its procedures would serve as an “absolute defense” to any private contract actions against the pipeline for damages growing out of the curtailment. This court has today issued a full opinion on this point in International Paper Company v. Federal Power Commission 1 and no purpose would be served by fully restating the result reached in that case here. Therefore we adopt as part of this opinion the holding of International Paper Company v. Federal Power Commission with regard to the effect of Opinions 606 and 606A on possible suits for breach of contract growing out of any curtailment plan which is ultimately adopted.
Curtailment on the “Green System East”
Petitioners in this case strongly urge that United has improperly, with the aid of the Commission, been curtailing gas deliveries on its “Green System East.” In Louisiana Power & Light Company v. United Gas Pipe Line Company, 5 Cir. 1972,
The precise objection made by petitioners in a supplementary brief filed five days prior to oral argument was that United, with the knowing acquiescence of the FPC, was curtailing deliveries on the “Green System East” for several months before the FPC ever made its initial finding of jurisdiction over that pipeline. The claim is that curtailment is not retroactive and that curtailment while the Commission was making its initial jurisdictional decision was improper. The issue was not orally argued.
This panel of the court has recently been assigned to review the FPC’s ultimate decision on jurisdiction over the “Green System East.” Louisiana Power *135 & Light, et al. v. Federal Power Commission, No. 72-1714 (consolidated with several other cases on the same issue). We notice in the briefs for those cases that this issue is raised and answered. Since argument in those cases will be forthcoming in the near future, we feel that a better resolution of this issue can be made in those cases. We therefore decline to pass on this issue at this time.
As to the issues raised by these petitioners, the orders of the FPC are affirmed in part and remanded in part.
Notes
. 5 Cir. 1973,
