MISSISSIPPI POWER & LIGHT CO. v. MISSISSIPPI EX REL. MOORE, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MISSISSIPPI, ET AL.
No. 86-1970
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued February 22, 1988—Decided June 24, 1988
487 U.S. 354
Rex E. Lee argued the cause for appellant. With him on the brief were George L. Saunders, Jr., David W. Carpenter, Robert R. Nordhaus, Howard E. Shapiro, and James K. Child, Jr.
Deputy Solicitor General Cohen argued the cause for the United States et al. as amici curiae urging reversal. With
John L. Maxey II argued the cause for appellees. With him on the brief for appellee State of Mississippi were Mike Moore, Attorney General, Frank Spencer, Assistant Attorney General, and W. Glenn Watts, Special Assistant Attorney General. Jesse C. Pennington and Lewis Burke filed a brief for appellee Mississippi Legal Services Coalition.*
JUSTICE STEVENS delivered the opinion of the Court.
On July 1, 1985, Grand Gulf Unit 1, a major nuclear powerplant located in Port Gibson, Mississippi, began commercial operations. An order entered by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) required Mississippi Power and Light Company (MP&L) to purchase 33% of the plant‘s output at rates determined by FERC to be just and reasonable. The Mississippi Public Service Commission (MPSC) subsequently granted MP&L an increase in its retail rates to enable it to recover the cost of its purchases of Grand Gulf power. On appeal, the Mississippi Supreme Court held that it was error to grant an increase in retail rates without first examining the prudence of the management decisions that led to the construction and completion of Grand Gulf 1. The question presented to us is whether the FERC proceedings have pre-empted such a prudence inquiry by the State Commission. For reasons similar to those set forth in Nantahala Power & Light Co. v. Thornburg, 476 U. S. 953 (1986), we conclude that the state proceedings are pre-empted and therefore reverse.
*Briefs of amici curiae urging affirmance were filed for the Consumer Federation of America et al. by Scott Hempling and Roger Colton; for the National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates by Raymon E. Lark, Jr., Elizabeth Elliot, and Steven W. Hamm; and for the National Governors’ Association et al. by Benna Ruth Solomon and Robert H. Loeffler.
Briefs of amici curiae were filed for the Council of the city of New Orleans by Clinton A. Vince; for the Arkansas Public Service Commission et al. by Steve Clark, Attorney General of Arkansas, and Mary B. Stallcup, Deputy Attorney General, Wallace L. Duncan, James D. Pembroke, and J. Cathy Fogel; and for the Edison Electric Institute by James B. Liberman, and Robert L. Baum.
I
MP&L is one of four operating companies whose voting stock is wholly owned by Middle South Utilities (MSU), a public utility holding company.1 The four companies are engaged both in the wholesale sale of electricity to each other and to companies outside the MSU system and in the retail sale of electricity in separate service areas in Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, and Mississippi. Through MSU the four companies operate as an integrated power pool, with all energy in the entire system being distributed by a single dispatch center located in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. Wholesale transactions among the four operating companies historically have been governed by a succession of three “System Agreements,” which were filed with FERC in 1951, 1973, and 1982. The System Agreements have provided the basis for planning and operating the companies’ generating units on a single-system basis and for equalizing cost imbalances among the four companies.
The retail sales of each of the operating companies are regulated by one or more local regulatory agencies. For example, Arkansas Power and Light Company (AP&L) sells in both Arkansas and Missouri and therefore is regulated by both the Arkansas Public Service Commission and the Missouri Public Service Commission. MP&L‘s retail rates are subject to the jurisdiction of the MPSC.
Through the 1950‘s and into the 1960‘s, most of the MSU system‘s generating plants were fueled with oil or gas. In the late 1960‘s, the MSU system sought to meet projected inсreases in demand and to diversify its fuel base by adding coal and nuclear generating units. It was originally contem-
In April 1974, MSE and MP&L applied to MPSC for a certificate of public convenience and necessity authorizing the construction of the plant. The State Commission granted the certificate, noting that MP&L was part of “an integrated electric system” and that “the Grand Gulf Project [would] serve as a major source of baseload capacity for the company and the entire Middle South System pooling arrangement.”4 App. to Motion to Dismiss 36–37.
By the late 1970‘s it became apparent that systemwide demand in the ensuing years would be lower than had been forecast, making Grand Gulf‘s capacity unnecessary. Moreover, regulatory delays, additional construction requirements, and severe inflation frustrated the project. Management decided to halt construction of Grand Gulf 2, but to complete Grand Gulf 1, largely on the assumption that the relatively low cost of nuclear fuel would make the overall cost of Grand Gulf power per kilowatt hour lower than that of alternative energy sources. As it turned out, however, the cost of completing Grand Gulf construction was about six times greater than had been projected.5 Consequently, the
The four operating companies considered various methods of allocating the cost of Grand Gulf‘s power. In 1982 MSU filed two agreements with FERC. The first was a new System Agreement, which set forth the terms and conditions for coordinated operations and wholesale transactions among the four companies, including a scheme of “capacity equalization payments,” which were designed to ensure that each company contribute proportionately to the total costs of generating power on the system. Transactions related to the purchase of power from Grand Gulf 1, however, were not included in the 1982 System Agreement. The second agreement filed with FERC was the Unit Power Sales Agreement (UPSA), which provided wholesale rates for MSE‘s sale of Grand Gulf 1 capacity and energy. Under the UPSA, AP&L was not obligated to purchase any of Grand Gulf‘s capacity; LP&L was obligated to purchase 38.57%, NOPSI 29.8%, and MP&L 31.63%.
The FERC Proceedings
FERC assigned the agreements to two different Administrative Law Judges, who were charged with the task of determining whether the agreements were “just and reasonable” within the meaning of the Federal Power Act.6 Ex-
The Commission affirmed and adopted the findings of the Administrative Law Judges that MSU is a highly integrated and coordinated power pool. It concluded that the result of this integration and coordination was “planning, construction, and operations which [were] conducted primarily for the system as a whole.” Id., at 61,645. Because it found that
The Commission later clarified certain aspects of its previous order in the course of considering several petitions for rehearing. It rejected contentions that its exercise of jurisdiction would destroy effective state regulation of retail rates. Specifically, FERC rejected claims that it could not exercise jurisdiction because such action would result in States bеing “precluded from judging the prudence of Grand Gulf costs and denied any say in the rate of return imposed as part of these costs” and “imping[e] on the State‘s paramount
On review, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit affirmed FERC‘s order that the four operating companies share the cost of the system‘s investment in nuclear energy in рroportion to their relative demand for energy generated by the system as a whole. The court first rejected various challenges to FERC‘s authority to restructure the parties’ agreed-upon allocations, holding that the Federal Power Act (FPA) gave FERC the necessary authority. The court then affirmed FERC‘s allocation of Grand Gulf capacity and costs as both rational and within the Commission‘s range of discretion to remedy unduly discriminatory rates. Mississippi Industries v. FERC, 257 U. S. App. D. C. 244, 285, 808 F. 2d 1525, 1566 (1987).8
The State Proceedings
On November 16, 1984, before the FERC proceedings were completed, MP&L filed an application for a substantial increase in its retail rates. The major portion of the requested increase was based on the assumption that MP&L would be required to purchase 31.63% of the high-cost Grand Gulf power when the unit began operating on July 1, 1985, in accordance with the terms of the UPSA. After public hearings, on June 14, 1985, the Mississippi Commission entered an order allowing MP&L certain additional revenues, but denying MP&L any retail rate relief associated with Grand Gulf Unit 1. App. to Juris. Statement 33a.
On June 27, 1985, MP&L applied for rehearing of the order insofar as it denied any rate relief associated with Grand Gulf. As expected, Grand Gulf went on line on July 1, 1985, and MP&L became obligated consistent with FERC‘s allocation to make net payments of about $27 million per month for Grand Gulf capacity. After public hearings on the rehearing petition, the MPSC found that MP&L would become insolvent if relief were not granted and allowed a rate increase to go into effect to recover a projected annual revenue de-
In its order the MPSC noted that petitions for rehearing were pending before FERC, in which the MPSC was continuing to challenge the allocation of 33% of Grand Gulf‘s power to MP&L. Id., at 28a. It stated that it intended “to vigorously pursue every available legal remedy challenging the validity and fairness of the FERC allocation to MP&L,” id., at 51a, and that appropriate rate adjustments would be made if that allocation was changed. The order made no reference to the prudence of the investment in Grand Gulf.
The Attorney General of Mississippi and certain other parties representing Mississippi consumers appealed to the Mississippi Supreme Court. Under Mississippi law, the MPSC has authority to establish just and reasonable rates which will lead to a fair rate of return for the utility.
The court rejected MP&L‘s argument that the decision of this Court in Nantahala Power & Light Co. v. Thornburg, 476 U. S. 953 (1986), which barred the State of North Carolina from setting retail rates that did not take into account FERC‘s allocation of power between two related utility companies, foreclosed a state prudence review. Nantahala, the state court concluded, simply did not force the “MPSC to set rates based on the construction and operation of a plant (nuclear or otherwise) that generates power that is not needed at a price that is not prudent.” 506 So. 2d, at 985. The court assumed that only the fact that Grand Gulf was owned by an out-of-state corporation as opposed to MP&L created a
The state court adopted the view that in determining whether a particular aspect of state regulation was preempted by FERC action, the state court should ““examine those matters actually determined, whether expressly or impliedly, by the FERC.” 506 So. 2d, at 986 (quoting Appeal of Sinclair Machine Products, Inc., 126 N. H. 822, 833, 498 A. 2d 696, 704 (1985)). It concluded that “[a]s to those matters not resolved by the FERC, State regulation is not preempted provided that regulation would not contradict or undermine FERC determinations and federal interests, or impose inconsistent obligations on the utility companies involved.” 506 So. 2d, at 986. The court then noted that FERC “was never presented with the question of whether the completion of Grand Gulf, or its continued operation, was prudent” ibid., and that the Court of Appeals in affirming FERC‘s allocation had “made no finding with regard to prudency because the issue was not presented.” Id., at 987 (emphasis in original). Consistent with this analysis, the Mississippi Supreme Court remanded the case to the MPSC “for a review of the prudency of the Grand Gulf investment.” The court specified that this review should “determine whether MP&L, [MSE] and MSU acted reasonably when they constructed Grand Gulf 1, in light of the change in demand for electric power in this state and the sudden escalation of costs.” Ibid. Thus the MPSC was directed to examine the prudence of the investment of both domestic and foreign corporations in Grand Gulf ”in light of local conditions.” Ibid. (emphasis in original).
Appellant MP&L contends that our decision in Nantahala, the FPA, and the Commerce Clause require the MPSC in
II
We hold that our decision in Nantahala rests on a foundation that is broad enough to support the order entered by
In Nantahala we considered the pre-emptive effect of a FERC order that reallocated the respective shares of two affiliated companies’ entitlement to low-cost power. Under an agreement between the two affiliated companies, Nantahala, a public utility selling to both retail and wholesale customers in North Carolina, had been allocated 20% of the low-cost power purchased from the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), while 80% was reserved for the affiliate whose only customer was their common parent. FERC found that the agreement was unfair to Nantahala and ordered it to file a new wholesale rate schedule based on an entitlement to 22.5% of the low-cost power purchased from TVA. Subsequently, in a retail rate proceeding, the North Carolina Regulatory Commission reexamined the issue and determined that any share less than 24.5% was unfair and therefore ordered Nantahala to calculate its costs for retail ratemaking purposes as though it had received 24.5% of the low-cost power. The effect of the State Commission‘s order was to force Nantahala to calculate its retail rates as though FERC had allocated it a greater share of the low-cost power and to deny Nantahala the right to recover a portion of the costs it had incurred in paying rates that FERC had determined to
Our decision in Nantahala relied on fundamental principles concerning the pre-emptive impact of federal jurisdiction over wholesale rates on state regulation. First, FERC has exclusive authority to determine the reasonableness of wholesale rates. It is now settled that “the right to a reasonable rate is the right to the rate which the Commission files or fixes, and, ... except for review of the Commission‘s orders, [a] court can assume no right to a different one on the ground that, in its opinion, it is the only or the more reasonable one.” Nantahala, 476 U. S., at 963–964 (quoting Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. v. Northwestern Public Service Co., 341 U. S. 246, 251–252 (1951)). This principle binds both state and federal courts and is in the former respect mandated by the Supremacy Clause. 476 U. S., at 963. Second, FERC‘s exclusive jurisdiction applies not only to rates but also to power allocations thаt affect wholesale rates. Id., at 966.
The facts of this case and Nantahala are not distinguishable in any way that has relevance to the operation of the principles stated above. Both cases concern FERC orders adjusting in the interest of fairness voluntary allocations of power among related entities. Nantahala involved a FERC order fixing the utility‘s right to acquire low-cost power; this case involves a FERC order fixing MP&L‘s obligation to acquire high-cost power. In Nantahala FERC had “deter-
In this case as in Nantahala we hold that “a state utility commission setting retail prices must allow, as reasonable operating expenses, costs incurred as a result of paying a FERC-determined wholesale price.... Once FERC sets such a rate, a State may not conclude in setting retail rates that the FERC-approved wholesale rates are unreasonable. A State must rather give effect to Congress’ desire to give FERC plenary authority over interstate wholesale rates, and to ensure that the States do not interfere with this authority.” Nantahala, 476 U. S., at 965, 966. Thus we conclude that the Supremacy Clause compels the MPSC to permit MP&L to recover as a reasonable operating expense costs incurred as the result of paying a FERC-determined wholesale rate for a FERC-mandated allocation of power.
Appellees seek to characterize this case as falling within facts distinguished in Nantahala. Without purporting to determine the issue, we stated in Nantahala: “[W]e may assume that a particular quantity of power procured by a utility from a particular source could be deemed unreasonably excessive if lower-cost power is available elsewhere, even though the higher-cost power actually purchased is obtained at a FERC-approved, and therefore reasonable, price.” Id., at 972 (emphasis in original). As we assumed, it might well be unreasonable for a utility to purchase unnecessary quanti-
The Mississippi Supreme Court erred in adopting the view that the pre-emptive effect of FERC jurisdiction turned on whether a particular matter was actually determined in the FERC proceedings. See 506 So. 2d, at 986. We have long rejected this sort of “case-by-case analysis of the impact of state regulation upon the national interest” in power regulation cases. Nantahala, 476 U. S., at 966 (quoting FPC v. Southern California Edison Co., 376 U. S. 205, 215-216 (1964)). Congress has drawn a bright line between state and federal authority in the setting of wholesale rates and in the regulation of agreements that affect wholesale rates. States may not regulate in areas where FERC has properly exercised its jurisdiction to determine just and reasonable wholesale rates or to insure that agreements affecting wholesale rates are reasonable. FERC‘s jurisdiction to adjust the allocations of Grand Gulf power in the UPSA has been established.13 Mississippi, therefore, may not consistent with the Supremacy Clause conduct any proceedings that challenge the reasonableness of FERC‘s allocation.
There “can be no divided authority over interstate commerce ... the acts of Congress on that subject are supreme and exclusive.” Missouri Pacific R. Co. v. Stroud, 267 U. S. 404, 408 (1925). Consequently, a state agency‘s “efforts to regulate commerce must fall when they conflict with or interfere with federal authority over the same activity.” Chicago & North Western Transp. Co. v. Kalo Brick & Tile Co., 450 U. S. 311, 318-319 (1981). Mississippi‘s effort to invade the province of fеderal authority must be rejected. The judgment of the Mississippi Supreme Court is reversed.
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE SCALIA, concurring in the judgment.
I concur in the judgment of the Court, but write separately to discuss more fully what is to me the critical issue in this case: whether FERC had jurisdiction to determine whether MP&L‘s agreement to participate in the construction of Grand Gulf 1 and to purchase power from that facility was prudent.
It is common ground that if FERC has jurisdiction over a subject, the States cannot have jurisdiction over the same subject. See Nantahala Power & Light Co. v. Thornburg, 476 U. S. 953, 962-967 (1986). FERC has determined that when two or more utilities form a joint venture or pool to share electrical generating capacity, including construction of
FERC has asserted that it has such jurisdiction in the context of a pool of affiliated companies. In AEP Generating Co., 36 FERC ¶61,226 (1986), FERC was asked to consider the prudence, “in light of the availability of alternative power suрplies,” of Kentucky Power Company‘s agreement to purchase 15% of the capacity of a generating facility as part of a pooling agreement with other, affiliated, utilities. Id., at 61,549. FERC agreed to do so, concluding that fair allocation of costs among the utilities was inseparable from some inquiry into the prudence of Kentucky Power‘s entering into the pooling arrangement in light of available alternative power supplies. Id., at 61,550-61,551. FERC explained that “the transaction involves affiliated, jurisdictional utilities, which are members of an integrated, interstate holding company arrangement” and that “[u]nder these circumstances, more complex, interrelated questions arise and, whether one characterizes the questions as related to prudence, interpretation [of the basic system agreements], or cost allocation, they are clearly matters most appropriately resolved by the Commission as part of its overriding authority to evaluate and implement all applicable wholesale rate schedules.” Id., at 61,550.
AEP Generating Co. makes plain that for the type of arrangement at issue in this case, see ante, at 357, and n. 1—a
What the case comes down to, then, is whether FERC‘s asserted jurisdiction to examine the prudence of a particular utility‘s joining a pooling arrangement with affiliated companies is supported by the provisions of the Federal Power Act. If so, there is no regulatory gap for the States to fill, and they are pre-empted from examining that question of prudence in calculating the rates chargeable to retail customers. In considering the Federal Power Act question we will defer, of course, to FERC‘s construction if it does not violate plain meaning and is a reasonable interpretation of silence or ambiguity. See, e. g., K mart Corp. v. Cartier, Inc., 486 U. S. 281, 291-292 (1988); Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U. S. 837, 842-844 (1984).
Contrary to the dissent, post, at 386-387, we have held that this rule of deference applies to an agency‘s interpretation of a statute designed tо confine its authority. See, e. g., Japan Whaling Assn. v. American Cetacean Society, 478 U. S. 221, 226, 233 (1986);
FERC‘s interpretation in the present case satisfies the conditions for deference. Under
Appellees rely upon the language in
After today, the battle will no longer be over who has jurisdiction, FERC or the States, to evaluate the prudence of a particular utility‘s entering pooling arrangements with affiliated companies for the sharing of electrical generating capacity or the creation and wholesaling of electrical energy. FERC has asserted that jurisdiction and has bеen vindicated. What goes along with the jurisdiction is the responsibility, where the issue is appropriately raised, to protect against allocations that have the effect of making the ratepayers of one State subsidize those of another.
JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom JUSTICE MARSHALL and JUSTICE BLACKMUN join, dissenting.
This case involves two separate prudency issues: one is governed by Nantahala Power & Light Co. v. Thornburg, 476 U. S. 953 (1986); the other is not. The first issue is whether the state utility commission has jurisdiction to determine whether, treating appellant‘s participation in the Grand Gulf project as a given, it was imprudent for appellant to purchase such a high amount of expensive Grand Gulf power. I agree with the Court that the portions of the Mississippi Supreme Court‘s opinion suggesting that the state commission does have this jurisdiction are in error. Mississippi ex rel. Pittman v. Mississippi Public Service Comm‘n, 506 So. 2d 978, 984-985 (1987). The State cannot second-guess the prudency of the amount of power purchased because FERC‘s order imposed this allocation of power on appellant. The issue is precisely analogous to that decided in
That issue is distinct, however, from the issue whether, to the extent appellant‘s decision to participate in the Grand Gulf project involved the purchase decision of a retail utility, a state utility commission has jurisdiction to review the prudency of that purchase. This issue cannot be resolved by simple reference to Nantahala, for FERC did not order appellant to participate in the Grand Gulf project, and although FERC‘s order determines the allocation of the costs incurred in the project, the question remains whether appellant imprudently incurred those costs in the first place. I am convinced that the state utility commission does have jurisdiction over this prudency issue, and thus I would affirm the Mississippi Supreme Court‘s judgment remanding for a prudency determination. The question is, however, a complicated one, which forces us to confront the issue of how the normal jurisdictional principles of the Federal Power Act apply to the rather special situation of an interstate electricity pool.
In direct response to decisions of this Court concluding that, under the Commerce Clause, States can regulate interstate sales of energy at retail but not at wholesale, Congress enacted the
If agency deference applied, I would conclude that these prudency issues are sufficiently intertwined that we should defer to FERC‘s conclusion that it has exclusive jurisdiction to determine all prudency issues concerning the participation of a retail utility in an interstate pool. I cannot, however, agree with JUSTICE SCALIA‘s conclusion that courts must defer to an agency‘s statutory construction even where, as here, the statute is designed to confine the scope of the agency‘s jurisdiction to the areas Congress intended it to occupy. Ante, at 380-382. Our agency deference cases have always been limited to statutes the agency was “entrusted to administer.” Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U. S. 837, 844 (1984); see also id., at 842; Japan Whaling Assn. v. American Cetacean Society, 478 U. S. 221, 233 (1986); Chemical Manufacturers Assn. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 470 U. S. 116, 125 (1985). Agencies do not “administer” statutes confining the scope of their jurisdiction, and such statutes are not “en-
In this case, it could not be plainer that the statutes at issue were designed to confine the scope of FERC‘s jurisdiction by prohibiting FERC from regulating matters within the sphere of authority States had to regulate retail utilities under our old Commerce Clause cases. See supra, at 384-385. The Act provides that “Federal Regulation [is] to extend only to those matters which are not subject to regula-
Furthermore, FERC‘s statutory construction in this area has not been consistent and was not contemporaneous with the enactment of the Federal Power Act. See generally INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca, 480 U. S. 421, 446-447, n. 30 (1987); Schor, supra, at 844-845. In conducting this litigation, FERC originally took the position that it had no jurisdiction over the prudence of a pool member‘s purchase decision and over whether the costs could be passed on to retail customers. App. to Motion to Dismiss 52-66.* Since then
FERC has, as JUSTICE SCALIA notes, ante, at 378-379, issued an opinion concluding that in regulating an integrated interstate pool, FERC‘s determination regarding the prudence of a wholesaler‘s costs inevitably determines the prudence of the wholesale purchase and the decision to enter into a pooling agreement. But FERC specifically noted in that opinion that its present conclusion differs from the position it took earlier in that very litigation. AEP Generating Co., 36 FERC ¶61,226, p. 61,550 (1986).
I thus examine the jurisdictional issue without any special deference to the agency‘s position. I note at the outset that FERC‘s position rests on an already shaky jurisdictional foundation. FERC does not, after all, have any jurisdiction over a utility that simply builds its own generating facility and retails the electricity. FERC nonetheless asserts jurisdiction over transactions between a pool‘s generating facility and the utilities belonging to the pool on the theory that the pool and the member utilities are sufficiently separate to deem the transaction a wholesale transaction rather than an internal transfer. In some tension with this position, it then asserts jurisdiction to allocate power in a way that forces purchases from the pool on the theory that the member utilities are sufficiently integrated in the pool so that it is merely allocating costs rather than forcing purchases on retail utilities. The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit upheld FERC‘s jurisdiction on both counts. Mississippi Industries v. FERC, 257 U. S. App. D. C. 244, 258-262, 264-266, 808 F. 2d 1525, 1539-1543, 1545-1547, cert. denied, 484 U. S. 985 (1987). Now FERC seeks to complete the jurisdictional circle by asserting that the state
The jurisdictional decisions of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit are not before us, and I do not question them. Indeed, it makes a great deal of sense to read the statute as allowing FERC to exercise jurisdiction over the allocation of costs among interstate pool members because otherwise every state commission would have a parochial incentive to claim that the costs must be imposed on the utilities located in other States. A neutral federal mediator is needed. The issue of allocation is logically distinct, however, from the issue whether the costs allocated to a particular utility should be borne by the retail customers, through increased rates, or by the utility‘s stockholders. The latter issue is the type over which States traditionally exercise jurisdiction, and there are no special reasons counseling for a neutral federal intermediary. Nor, given that FERC‘s asserted authority to force intrapool purchases by retail utilities already lies at the farthest reaches of its jurisdiction, is there any reason to read this allocative authority expansively to encompass matters within the traditional purview of the States.
To be sure, in regulating the wholesale rates of an integrated interstate pool and determining the prudence of the costs the pool incurred as the wholesaler, FERC will examine many of the same factors a state utility commission would examine in reviewing the prudence of the decision to purchase that is part of entering into and continuing a pool project. But the issues are not identical. For example, if one retail utility happens to have a low-cost source and enters into an agreement to build a medium-cost plant, the construction of the medium-cost plant may not involve any impru-
I thus conclude that regardless of FERC‘s jurisdiction to allocate incurred costs among member utilities and regardless of its jurisdiction to review the prudency of an interstate pool‘s projects in order to set wholesale rates for intrapool transactions, state utility commissions retain jurisdiction to determine whether incurring those costs involved prudent purchase decisions that can be passed on to retail customers. I thus dissent from the Court‘s decision to reverse the Mississippi Supreme Court‘s judgment remanding for a prudency determination.
Notes
“The generating facilities of the Middle South System have been strategically located with a reference to the availability of fuel, protection of local loads and other controlling economic factors. The size of these units has been determined basically by the projected load growth of the Middle South System. [MP&L‘s] present rate and capital structure obviously cannot support construction of this magnitude.
“In order to finance this construction on a basis that will be in the best interests of both its investors and the investors in its subsidiaries, and to insure adequate and dependable electric service to the customers and service areas of its subsidiaries, including Company, and without unnecessarily complicating its financial structure, Middle South [Middle South Energy, Inc.] has been organized.” App. to Motion to Dismiss 27–28, 30–31.
Because FERC determined that the UPSA allocating Grand Gulf power among the four operating companies was a contract affecting the wholesale rates of those operating companies,
Administrative Law Judge Head, who presided in the proceedings involving the 1982 System Agreement, advocated equalizing production costs on the basis of annual demand. Although he characterized Grand Gulf as an “anomaly,” he reached conclusions similar to ALJ Liebman‘s about the relationship of Grand Gulf to the system:
“[Grand Gulf] was planned, licensed, and constructed as a system plant, intended to supply power not only in Mississippi but throughout the entire
“... Grand Gulf [should be integrated] into the 1982 System Agreement by having each of the four operating companies pay for the production costs of the Grand Gulf facility bаsed on the ratio that the individual operating company‘s total annual demand bears to the total annual system demand.” Middle South Services, Inc., 30 FERC ¶ 63,030, p. 65,172 (1985) (emphasis added).
Both judges considered and rejected MP&L‘s proposition that costs should be allocated in accordance with the 1973 System Agreement. Under the 1973 Agreement, the cost to be borne by each operating company would depend on the percentage of Grand Gulf capacity that company needed to meet the demands of its customers. Thus companies owning capacity sufficient to meet their needs, “long” companies, would not bear any of the cost while “short” companies, companies that have to purchase additional capacity to meet their needs, would bear the total cost. Responsibility would shift as particular operating companies became “shorter” or “longer.” Since MP&L is predicted to be a long company until sometime in the 1990‘s, under the 1973 System Agreement, it would not have had to bear any costs associated with Grand Gulf until depreciation had substantially reduced the cost of Grand Gulf power.
Although JUSTICE SCALIA cites language from the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) hearing demonstrating that the ALJ indicated his willingness to address certain “prudency issues,” ante, at 379, n., the ALJ stressed throughout the hearing the distinction between prudency issues relevant to setting wholesale rates and issues regarding the prudency of power pur-“MR. EASTLAND [for MPSC]: ... [W]hat we say we can do is that you set a wholesale charge, ... but it is not necessarily proper or prudent for that utility, for purposes of utilizing that power in retail sales, to buy that power.
“That‘s what we‘re saying that we have the jurisdiction to make decisions with respect to.
“PRESIDING JUDGE: ... I would not get into a prudency argument unless one of the Intervenors raises a prudency question.
“I mean we have prudency questions in the gas cases now all over the place, with customers screaming that the purchasing practices of the pipelines were imprudent, and those prudency issues have been set for hearing in rate cases as an initial determination as to the justness and reasonable-
ness of the rates and rate design, and what you should do if there is imprudence. So it comеs into the justness and reasonableness. “But if you are not going to argue that—If the Intervenors themselves are not going to argue imprudence on behalf of the company, MSE or the operating companies, I‘m not going to get into that issue.
“MR. VINCE [for Council of the City of New Orleans (not a party here)]: Would your Honor be examining the issue of prudency in the subject of allocation?
“PRESIDING JUDGE: Not unless you raise it.
“MR. VINCE: Your Honor, New Orleans ... would perhaps propose to take this one step further and say that the allocation, first of all with reference to AP&L, was imprudent and secondly, with reference to the individual operating companies was imprudent, and the methodology for the allocation was imprudent.
“PRESIDING JUDGE: Okay. If you raise that question then I will have to decide the prudency issue in the context of deciding whether or not such alleged imprudency would justify a finding of unjust unreasonableness in the allocation or discrimination with respect to the allocation.
“So you are raising the prudency issue?
“MR. VINCE: With respect to allocation, yes.
“PRESIDING JUDGE: Okay. So it‘s in.” Id., at 60-62.
