MEMORANDUM — DECISION AND ORDER
I. Introduction
The present matter arises in substantial part from the Public Utilities Regulatory Policies Act (“PURPA”), codified at 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3. PURPA was intended by Congress to promote long-term economic growth by reducing the nation’s reliance on oil and gas, to encourage the development of alternative energy sources and thereby to combat a nationwide energy crisis. Section 210(a) of PURPA required the Federal Power Commission (“FPC”), now known as the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”), to “prescribe, and from time to time thereafter revise” rules requiring electric utilities to offer both to sell and purchase electric energy from qualifying cogeneration facilities (“QFs”). 1 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(a). *111 Section 210(b) of PURPA required that the rates utilities paid for power purchased from QFs be “just and reasonable to the electric consumers” and “not discriminate” against QFs. 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(b). Finally, in Section 210(e), PURPA exempted QFs from federal and state regulatory control in connection with rates and financial organization. See 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(e). 2
Section 210(b) of PURPA declares that “[n]o such rule [promulgated by FERC] ... shall provide for a rate which exceeds the incremental cost to the electric utility of alternative electric energy.” 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(b). The “incremental cost” to the electric utility of alternative electric energy is defined as “the cost to the electric utility of the electric energy which, but for the purchase from such cogenerator or small power producer, such utility would generate or purchase from another source.” 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(d). The incremental cost described by Congress in PURPA is defined in the accompanying regulations as “avoided costs,” or those costs which the utility “avoided” incurring itself by purchasing power from a QF. See 18 C.F.R. § 292.101(b)(6). 3
In an effort to apply the tenets of PURPA to the states, Congress also directed that each state regulatory authority implement the rules prescribed by FERC pertaining to electric utilities’ obligation to purchase power from QFs.
See
16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(f).
4
Thus, in 1980, the New York State legislature enacted New York Public Service Law § 66-c, which provided that the defendant New York Public Service Commission (“PSC”) would require state regulated electrical utilities to enter into long-term contracts, a/k/a power purchase agreements (“PPAs”), for the purchase of electricity from alternative energy sources, including cogeneration facilities.
See
*112
N.Y.Pub.Serv.Law § 66-c. New York’s definitions of a QF “overlapped aspects of the federal definitions, but [were] not identical thereto.”
Consol. Edison Co. of New York, Inc. v. PSC (“Consol. Edison I”),
The New York law did not adopt PURPA’s “avoided cost” ceiling for purchases, however. In 1981, Section 66-c was amended to require PSC to establish a minimum sales price for power purchased from state qualifying QFs of at least six cents per kilowatt hour (“kwH”). See N.Y.L.1981, ch. 843, § 9. The amendment, commonly referred to as the “Six-Cent Law,” did not apply to federally qualified QFs, but as referenced above, most entities qualified as QFs under state law also qualified under PURPA.
Effective July 24, 1992, New York’s legislature once again amended § 66-c of the Public Service Law and partially repealed the Six-Cent Law. The amendment preserved the minimum rate, however, for:
any contract fully executed by the parties and filed with the [PSC] on or before [June 26, 1992] and (i) providing for the purchase of electricity at such minimum sales price; or (ii) providing for the purchase of electricity at a utility tariff rate referencing a statutory minimum sales price; or (iii) providing for the reconciliation or recalculation of such contract’s purchase price by comparison to such statutory minimum sales price or. tariff rate, for the duration of any such contract and performance thereunder, provided however, that such minimum sales price shall be implemented in accordance with the policies and conditions established by [PSC.]
N.Y.Pub.Serv.Law § 66-c(2) (McKinney 1996 Supp.). The amendment also “grandfathered” QFs which had obtained the legal right to receive the statutory minimum of six cents per kwH by way of a final, unappealable judgment of a New York State court prior to January 1, 1987. See id.
Plaintiff, Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation (“Niagara”), a traditional electrical utility, brings the present action principally to obtain relief from eleven long-term contracts 5 with various QFs, none of which are parties in this case. In each instance, Niagara’s PPA requires it to pay for energy purchased from QFs at six cents per kwH as required by the N.Y.Pub.Serv. Law. According to Niagara, its payments under the eleven PPAs in question will significantly exceed its “avoided costs” by approximately $93 million over the terms of the agreements unless the contracts, or the orders and requirements on which they are based, are “revoked or revised to comply with federal law” which limits rates for QF purchases, to a utility’s “incremental” or avoided costs. See 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(b).
II. Procedural and Regulatory History
A. PURPA Regulations
PURPA required FERC to prescribe regulations to implement the statute “[n]ot
*113
later than 1 year after November 9, 1978.” 16 U.S.C. _§ 824a-3(a). Following public rulemaking proceedings, FERC promulgated regulations governing transactions between utilities and QFs in connection with purchase and sales of electricity.
See Small Power Prod. & Cogeneration Facilities, Regs. Implementing Section 210 of [PURPA],
Order No. 69, 45 Fed.Reg. 12214 (Feb. 25, 1980). In
Am. Elec. Power Serv. Corp. v. FERC,
In
Am. Paper Inst., Inc. v. Am. Elec. Power Serv. Corp.,
B. Netu York Legal and Administrative Proceedings
PSC adopted rules to implement both PURPA and Section 66-c of the N.Y.Pub. Serv.Law in 1982.
See Consol. Edison Co. of New York, Inc.,
PSC Case No. 27574, Opinion No. 82-10,
ConEd challenged both PSC’s requirement that it make purchases from QFs which only qualified under the Public Service Law and that it pay six cents per kwH pursuant to Article 78 of N.Y.Civ.Prac.L & R.. The utility argued that PURPA preempted the Six-Cent Law to the extent that it required utilities to pay more than its avoided costs for QF purchases.
See Consol. Edison I,
PSC filed an appeal of the Appellate Division’s determination in Consol. Edison I. While awaiting decision by the Court of Appeals, PSC continued to direct utilities to sign contracts at the six-eent rate, but included provisions in said contracts to eliminate the statutory minimum if PSC lost on appeal. Niagara requested that one QF contract with Energy Oil, Inc., which was signed prior to the Appellate Division’s decision in Consol. Edison I, but not forwarded for approval by PSC until after the notice of appeal was filed, be expressly conditioned on the outcome of the appeal. PSC declined to reformulate the contract but granted Niagara’s request to obtain full recovery of the cost of the contract with Energy Oil, Inc. from its ratepayers. See Niagara Mohawk Power Corp.’s Request for Approval of a Purchase Agreement unth Energy Oil, Inc. & Full Recovery of Purchase Costs via the Fuel Adjustment Clause (memorandum filed PSC session of March 28, 1984). Niagara did not appeal this order.
Following PSC’s order that utilities file proposed purchase or “buyback” tariffs designed to implement PURPA and Public Service Law § 66-c in Opinion 82-10, Niagara proposed its buyback tariff which stated that QFs should be required to elect the statutory minimum of six cents per kwH should this rate exceed the utility’s estimated LRACs. PSC rejected this proposal, reaffirming its directive in Opinion 82-10 that QFs be paid the higher of the two rates. See On-Site Generation Proceeding — Niagara Mohawk Power Corp.’s Proposed Buyback Tariff (Order Concerning Proposed Tariff), PSC Case No. 27674, 23 N.Y.P.S.C. 5204, 5227 (September 30, 1983). Niagara did not appeal this order.
*115
PSC thereafter approved Niagara’s estimated LRACs,
see Niagara Mohawk Poiver Corp.
— Long-run
Avoided Costs (Order Endorsing Settlement & Establishing Policy on Long-Run Avoided Costs),
PSC Case No. 28793, 24 N.Y.P.S.C. 5583, 5590,
After determining that N.Y.Pub.Serv. Law § 66-c furthered, rather than hindered, PURPA’s objective by enhancing the bargaining power of QFs through a guaranteed rate of six cents per kwH, the court rejected ConEd’s argument that a second equally compelling objective of PURPA was to avoid consumer-ratepayer subsidies of QFs.
See id.
at 437,
Based on the foregoing, the Court of Appeals held that state regulation in the field was “not supplanted by PURPA but could be used to expand the federal PURPA-based incentives.”
Id.
at 436,
ConEd appealed the court’s refusal to find pre-emption to the United States Supreme Court but the ease was dismissed summarily for want of a substantial federal question.
See Consol. Edison Co. of New York, Inc. v. PSC (“Consol. Edison III”),
C. FERC Proceedings
On July 31, 1987, Orange and Rockland Utilities, Inc. (“0
&
R”), along with two other New York utilities, filed a petition with FERC for a declaratory order challenging the application of the Six-Cent Law to QF purchases. Niagara, along with Long Island Lighting Company (“LILCO”), intervened in this proceeding. In a decision which reversed its previous position as set forth in the 1980 preamble to PURPA regulations, FERC issued a prospective order on April 14, 1988, holding that in light of changes which had occurred in the industry since 1980, states thereafter could
not
impose any rate for sales by QFs to utilities in excess of avoided cost.
See Orange & Rockland Utils., Inc. (“O & R I”),
43 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,067,
reh’g denied,
43 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,546,
On January 11, 1995, FERC issued
Connecticut Light & Power Co.,
70 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,012,
As referenced above, the New York legislature amended Public Service Law § 66-c in 1992 by partially repealing the Six-Cent Law. On the same day as it issued
CL & P I,
FERC filed
Orange & Rockland Utils., Inc.(“O & R III”), 70
F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,014,
On February 10, 1995, Niagara and LILCO petitioned FERC for rehearing of both
CL & PI
and
O & R III.
13
In
CL & P II,
Niagara and LILCO objected to FERC’s decision not to apply the holding
*119
of
CL & P I
to other pre-existing contracts. On the other hand, several QFs objected to FERC’s determination that Connecticut was pre-empted from imposing a PPA rate in excess of avoided costs for QF purchases. Indeed, the QFs argued
CL & P I
could not be applied to invalidate contracts reflecting the six-cent minimum rate required by N.Y.Pub.Serv. Law § 66-c because of the Supreme Court’s dismissal in
Consol. Edison III
for lack of a federal question, which, they argued, was a bar to FERC’s determination on the merits of the Six-Cent Law.
CL & P 11
71 F.E.R.C., at 61,152,
FERC rejected this argument finding in the first instance that “[wjhile dismissal of an appeal for want of a substantial federal question is a decision on the merits of a particular case insofar as it leaves the underlying judgment undisturbed,” it did not mean that FERC and all other subsequent courts were bound “for all time and in all cases by the New York Court of Appeals’ interpretation of the meaning and reach of PURPA.”
Id.
(citing
Washington v. Confederated Bands & Tribes of the Yakima Indian Nation,
Insofar as the arguments by Niagara and LILCO regarding FERC’s refusal to apply its pre-emption determination on the merits to parties and contracts not directly before it in
CL & P I,
FERC deemed its actions necessary to “avoid the substantial injustice that our determination on the merits in this proceeding might otherwise have created if applied to invalidate other, pre-existing QF contracts that [were] not involved in the present litigation.”
Id.,
at 61,154,
This approach is especially appropriate here given the apparent confusion created by the language contained in the preamble to our regulations. The United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, which directed CL & P to put this matter before us, 14 for one, *120 noted that in light of the language contained in the 1980 preamble to our regulations the law was “unsettled and conflicting.” As a consequence, some states in reliance on this preamble language have required rates that were above avoided cost for QF sales at wholesale. We have now expressly ruled that that is impermissible, and thus have cleared up the confusion that, admittedly, the language of the Commission’s 1980 preamble had a hand in creating. In light of the confusion that the preamble language created, we believe it inappropriate to entertain requests to invalidate other, pre-existing contracts where the avoided cost issue could have been raised but was not raised.
Id.
Importantly, FERC suggested that Niagara was merely an interested participant in CL & P’s challenge of a Connecticut statute rather than a party which had presented , its own specific factual and legal challenge to application of the Six-Cent Law. Indeed, FERC noted that based on Niagara and LILCO’s intervenor — as opposed to party — status, it had no knowledge of “precisely how many contracts and how many different projects” would be affected by its pre-emption challenge.
Id.,
at n. 43,
In
O & R IV,
both utilities objected to FERC’s determination that the petition filed by 0
&
R in 1987 was moot and asked FERC to deem contracts with QFs set at rates above avoided cost void
ab initio
or at least those entered since April 14, 1988.
See
71 F.E.R.C., at 61,145,
FERC disagreed noting that it had expressly declined to extend its ruling in
CL & P I
to pre-existing contracts where the issue of pre-emption could have been raised but was not to avoid “substantial injustice.”
Id.,
at 61,147,
was and is only an intervenor in this proceeding. Niagara ... has never filed a separate petition seeking relief as to its own QF contracts. Moreover, since 1988, when [FERC] limited its order in this proceeding to future contracts, and then stayed the effectiveness of the order, Niagara ... has made no filing at [FERC] or, to our knowledge, initiated state or federal court litigation seeking to challenge the rates in its own QF contracts as violating the avoided cost *121 requirement of PURPA. This contrasts starkly with the continuing effort by [CL & P] to challenge its contract in state court, in federal court and then at this Commission.
Id. Furthermore, FERC rejected the notion that Niagara and LILCO had relied justifiably on FERC’s pre-emption determination in 0 & R I since that order was to apply only prospectively and its effectiveness was nevertheless almost immediately stayed. “For the Commission, at this late date, suddenly to act to invalidate existing contracts that expressly had not been invalidated by its earlier orders in this proceeding would not be consistent with the need to avoid substantial injustice to the parties to such contracts.” Id.
D. District of Columbia Circuit Decision
On April 12, 1995, Niagara petitioned the United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit for review of FERC’s: (1) refusal to apply its decision in
CL & P I
to all pre-existing contracts; and (2) its dismissal of 0 & R’s petition as moot in
O &R III.
In
NYSEG v. FERC,
Niagara countered that Indus. Cogener-ators was inapposite since each of the orders which it challenged in Niagara v. FERC “announced] a rule of general application and not [as in Indus. Cogenera-tors ], a decision limited to a specific set of facts.” Id. To wit, Niagara argued “nothing in Industrial Cogenerators suggests that the procedure for judicial review must differ because FERC eventually decided to resolve the issue in a declaratory ruling rather than through a rulemaking.” Id. Moreover, Niagara contended that the enforcement action urged by FERC as an adequate remedy was ill-suited for review of FERC’s actions since such actions were aimed at non-compliant state commissions and could not be brought directly against FERC. See id.
The D.C. Circuit acknowledged that it had “expressly reserved” on the question of whether it had jurisdiction to review a FERC order promulgated under PURPA which announced a “rule of general application, not tied to a particular set of facts potentially subject to the statutory enforcement scheme.”
Id.
(quoting
Indus. Cogenerators,
*122 An order that does no more than announce the Commission’s interpretation of the PURPA or one of the agency’s implementing regulations is of no legal moment Unless and until a district court adopts that interpretation when called upon to enforce the PURPA. As a result, in the framework established by the Congress it is the district court that has been given the task of deciding in the first instance whether to adopt or reject a position advocated by the Commission. The courts of appeals accordingly do not have pre-enforcement jurisdiction to review a declaratory order that merely announces the position advocated by the FERC.
Niagara v. FERC,
In applying this rationale to the two orders of which Niagara sought judicial review, the court, held:
The order issued by ... FERC in the CL & P [I] proceeding is, as we said of the order at issue in Industrial Cogener-ators, “much like a memorandum of law”; it does “nothing more than state how the FERC interprets its own regulations.” The district court in which CL & P’s suit is pending may or may not decide to defer to the Commission’s interpretation. Under the Administrative Procedure Act the district court must, of course, determine whether the Commission’s interpretation of the statute is reasonable — but that task, contrary to petitioners’ suggestion, the district court is perfectly capable of performing even if the Commission chooses not to intervene.
For the court of appeals to review the order at this juncture, could set up a quite unnecessary conflict; perhaps still worse, if in another case the district court were in the circuit where review of the declaratory order was sought, the appellate court’s judgment would bind the district court and necessarily, therefore, oust that court from its role as the court of first instance in the enforcement scheme created of § 210. As we said in Industrial Cogenerators, the Congress cannot have intended that the courts of appeals review a declaratory order interpreting the PURPA when doing so would disrupt the elaborate enforcement scheme that the Congress created.
Orange and Rockland is no different. The Commission’s declaratory order concerning the New York statute prescribing a six-cent rate had no legally binding effect; at most, it could have commanded some deference from a district court in a future enforcement action. Thus the petitioners ask us, when they petition for review of the order vacating the 1988 declaration, to review an order that “does nothing more than withdraw [an] ineffectual declaratory order.” As we held in Industrial Cogener-ators, we are without jurisdiction to do that.
Id.
at 1488-89 (citing
Indus. Cogenerators,
E. Niagara’s Complaint and the Present Motions
One month after it filed petitions for review of FERC’s orders in CL & PII and 0 & R III, but well before the D.C. Circuit issued the above-referenced decision, Niagara filed the present complaint against FERC, PSC and the individual commissioners of the PSC which it amended in July 1995. 16 Thereafter, New York State *123 Electric and Gas Corporation (“NYSEG”) moved and was granted leave to intervene as a plaintiff and several QFs 17 along with Independent Power Producers of New York, Inc. (“IPPNY”), a trade organization representing the interests of QFs statewide, later intervened as defendants. In lieu of serving answers to the amended complaint, all defendants moved to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and failure to state a claim pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and (6). After soliciting arguments from the parties as to whether she should recuse herself from determination of the case given her prior status as a PSC commissioner, and deciding that recu-sal was not required, then U.S. District Judge Rosemary S. Pooler (now a Circuit Judge for the Second Circuit Court of Appeals), to whom this matter was originally assigned, scheduled oral argument of defendants’ motions for March 4, 1996.
FERC then moved to stay action in the case pending the above-referenced decision by the D.C. Circuit in Niagara v. FERC which motion Judge Pooler accepted on submittal following oral argument of defendants’ dispositive motions. On April 15, 1997, Judge Pooler granted the motion to stay the action, pending determination of the D.C. Circuit’s decision on Niagara’s petitions for review. On July 11, 1997, the D.C. Circuit issued its decision in Niagara v. FERC as discussed above.
Niagara, IPPNY, and several QF inter-venors thereafter moved jointly to again stay proceedings in the Northern District of New York after Niagara entered a contingent settlement agreement involving New York’s governor, its legislature and PSC (“the Master Restructuring Agreement”) designed to restructure or terminate some of its PPAs with QFs. This Agreement was expected to resolve many of the issues in Niagara’s lawsuit against several of the parties. Based thereupon, Judge Pooler issued an order staying the action until April 15, 1998. In April 1998, Judge Pooler extended the stay to July 15, 1998, in view of lingering uncertainty as to the closing date of the Master Restructuring Agreement. Finally, on July 10, 1998, Judge Pooler signed a Stipulated Order executed by all of the parties whereby Niagara’s claims against all intervening defendant QFs were dismissed. However, Niagara’s claims regarding those six-cent PPAs which were not affected by the Master Restructuring Agreement were preserved. Thereafter, Niagara requested that in view of expiration of the longstanding stay, the Court decide the pending motions to dismiss.
F. Niagara’s Present Claims
In the first count of the amended complaint, Niagara alleges that PSC’s orders which implemented New York’s Six-Cent Law constitute state regulation of the wholesale sale of electric power, an area pre-empted by the FPA. Furthermore, Niagara alleges that the Six-Cent Law and PSC’s implementation of same: (1) violate PURPA and its implementing rules; and (2) violate the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution. In the second cause of action, Niagara asserts that FERC’s decision to refuse to apply the avoided cost limitation of PURPA and its own regulations to Niagara’s existing six- *124 cent PPAs was arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, not in accordance with law, in excess of statutory authority and otherwise violative of the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”). 18 Niagara further contends that FERC’s action or inaction herein violates PURPA’s incremental cost limitation.
In a letter dated August 20,1998, Niagara’s counsel advised the Court that after reviewing the remaining eleven six-eent contracts to which it is a party, which represent some 78 MWs of capacity, the utility believes it will pay approximately $93 million more than current estimates of its LRACs over the life of the agreements. While acknowledging that this figure is considerably less than the sum at stake prior to execution of the Master Restructuring Agreement, Niagara contended that the amount of money still at issue is nevertheless “substantial,” compelling it to proceed with the case. 19
III. Discussion
A. Applicable Legal Standard
In addressing defendants’ motions for dismissal pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and (6), the Court accepts as true all factual allegations in the amended complaint and draws all inferences from those allegations in the light most favorable to Niagara.
See Albright v. Oliver,
B. Motions to Dismiss the Claims against FERC
1. Claims Pursuant to PURPA
FERC asserts Niagara’s claim against it based on Section 210 of PURPA must be dismissed pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. Nowhere in the complaint does Niagara state its legal grounds for proceeding against FERC based directly on PURPA. Indeed, its pleading simply alleges that “FERC’s refusal to apply the incremental and avoided cost limitations of PURPA and its regulations under PURPA to Niagara’s existing QF contracts constitutes a violation of the incremental cost limitation of PURPA.” See First Amended Complaint ¶ 38 (citing 16 U.S.C. §§ 824a-3(b), (d)). The former section of course provides that rates for QF purchases should not exceed a utility’s “incremental” or avoided costs while the latter provision simply defines incremental costs. Neither section provides a private right of action for a party aggrieved by FERC’s alleged failure to implement these statutory guidelines.
*125
The only right of action which appears in PURPA belongs, in the first instance, to FERC. Subsection (A) of PURPA Section 210(h)(2) authorizes FERC to
enforce
state implementation of its regulations against a non-compliant state regulatory authority or non-regulated utility in district court while subsection (B) allows an electric utility or QF to
petition FERC
to commence such an action. Only if FERC declines to do so, may the utility or QF commence its own action to force a state agency or non-regulated utility to comply with FERC’s regulations.
See
16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(h)(2). Here, without citing Section 210(h) of PURPA in its complaint or alleging that it has satisfied the administrative pre-requi-site of petitioning FERC to commence an enforcement action, Niagara sues FERC itself for failure to comply with PURPA’s rate cap. As referenced above, however, the “enforcement” contemplated under the statute is of FERC regulations against non-compliant state commissions.
See
16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(f), (h).
20
Niagara “turns PURPA inside out by seeking to enforce the statute’s alleged rate cap against FERC,”
see NYSEG v. Saranac Power Partners, L.P.,
2. Claims Pursuant to the APA
a. Failure to State a Claim
The Court agrees with defendants that because no statute clearly provides a right of review of FERC decisions interpreting PURPA, no such right exists under the APA unless Niagara demonstrates it has no other adequate remedy at law. 22 Defendants argue that PURPA’s elaborate enforcement scheme and Niagara’s statutory right to sue PSC pursuant to Section 210(h) of PURPA is an adequate alternative remedy thus precluding judicial review. Niagara counters that it cannot get full satisfaction by suing PSC alone. To wit, it contends that “FERC’s presence as a defendant is necessary when judicial review of a FERC ruling is at issue.” Memorandum of Law of Niagara in Opposition to Motions to Dismiss (“Niagara Brief’), p. 5.
*126
However, as discussed above, subsequent to the filing of the present motions, the D.C. Circuit ruled in this very case, that FERC is
not
a necessary party to an enforcement action even where a district court is called upon to review the reasonableness or applicability of a regulatory interpretation by the agency.
See Niagara v. FERC,
Even if this was not true, defendants point out that the controversial orders were merely non-enforcement determinations — -that is, FERC elected not to apply its retroactive pre-emption analysis to other parties and contracts not directly before
it in CL & PI
and
0 & R III,
even in the face of clear evidence that other QF contracts in those cases called for rates in excess of the avoided cost ceiling set forth in PURPA. According to defendants, the orders are thus unreviewable as a matter of law pursuant to
Heckler v. Chaney. See
In a related argument which forecasted to some extent the D.C. Circuit’s earlier determination in this case that “the orders here at issue do announce a rule of general application,”
Niagara v. FERC,
Even if the presence of an adequate remedy against a party other than FERC and the Court’s conclusion that FERC’s orders herein are nothing more than non-enforcement decisions do not preclude APA review, Niagara has still failed to allege an adequate claim against FERC under the APA. Under the APA, a party “aggrieved” by an agency must show the agency’s action was “arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). It is true that generally, agency “rule[s]” must be subjected to a notice and comment period before taking effect. 5 U.S.C. § 553. An agency such as FERC which promulgates a new rule “without observance of procedure required by law” has violated the APA. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(D). However, in this case, unlike the plaintiff in
NYCERS,
on which Niagara relies in support of its demand for APA review, Niagara
does not
contend that FERC violated the notice and comment provisions of Section 553(b)(A) of the APA.
30
Rather, Niagara alleges that
*129
FERC’s decision not to provide it with the same relief granted to CL & P was unlawful. To wit, Niagara claims that FERC’s refusal “entertain requests as a consequence of this order asking us to invalidate on this basis [pre-emption of state statute which purported to require PURPA PPA rates in excess of avoided costs] other, preexisting contracts where the avoided cost issue could have been raised,”
CL & P,
70 F.E.R.C., at 61,029,
Connecticut Valley Elec. Co. v. FERC, infra,
is instructive on this issue. There, the plaintiff electric utility (“Connecticut Valley”) sued FERC after the Commission refused to take action on its petition to revoke the QF status of Claremont, a small power producer (“SPP”), from whom it was obligated to purchase energy pursuant to a PPA.
See Connecticut Valley Elec. Co. v. FERC,
FERC determined in a 1991 decision that under Section 3(17)(C)(ii) of the FPA, a SPP which sells more than its net output of energy cannot be a QF.
See Turners Falls, Ltd. P’ship,
55 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,487, at 62,668,
The D.C. Circuit disagreed holding that FERC “reasonably infers the parties’ settled expectations from the terms of their contract” and “either party may avoid such an inference by including a specific reservation in its contract or by challenging the validity of a contract provision at the time it executes the contract.”
Id.
FERC’s application of its “general rule inferring the settled expectations of the parties to a contract from the terms of their agreement” was not a legislative action, but merely interpretive, and thus “not arbitrary or capricious” pursuant to the APA.
Id.
at 1047.
34
Thus, FERC’s failure to apply its determination in
CL & P I
retro
*131
actively to invalidate Niagara’s QF contracts which contained rates in excess of avoided costs “may be characterized simply as refusal to do more than it was required to do by statute, that is, implement and periodically revise regulations to encourage cogeneration.”
NYSEG,
Niagara attempts to distinguish its plight from NYSEG’s by arguing that unlike the latter, it is not objecting to contract rates based on faulty avoided costs estimates which exceeded actual avoided costs over the life of the PPAs. Rather, Niagara insists the contract rates at issue herein “never complied with PURPA” because they were based upon a six-cent rate and imposed “without regard to avoided cost.” However, as the D.C. Circuit’s decision in Connecticut Valley made clear, Niagara’s argument merely highlights a distinction without a difference.
The court determined in
Connecticut Valley
that FERC’s “grandfathering” of Claremont’s PPA with Connecticut Valley in the face of a clear statutory violation was within its discretion. Indeed, as FERC acknowledged in
Turners Falls,
Claremont was not even a QF within the meaning of the FPA which disqualifies any QF selling more than its net output of power. Thus, Connecticut Valley argued as Niagara does here, that its PPAs with Claremont never complied with PURPA and should be voided
ab initio.
However, the court found that FERC did not abuse its remedial discretion pursuant to the APA by deciding not to revoke Clare-mont’s QF status or provide any alternative relief since the relevant statutory purpose of PURPA was to “encourage the development of non-traditional generating facilities.”
Niagara relies on
Harper v. Virginia Dep’t of Taxation,
To the extent that Niagara contends that FERC abused its discretion in failing
*133
to take into account “equitable considerations favoring relief for Niagara and its ratepayers,” the court in
Connecticut Valley
rejected similar arguments that PURPA required FERC to consider the harm to consumers in declining to take action against Claremont. The court found that PURPA’s requirement that “rates for purchases ... shall be just and reasonable to the electric consumers of the electric utility and in the public interest ...” was directed only to FERC’s exercise of
rulemaking
authority over the rates utilities must pay QFs for power.
Based on the foregoing, the Court finds Niagara’s claim that FERC’s refusal to invalidate existing QF contracts pursuant to PURPA violates the APA fails to state a cause of action upon which relief can be granted and must be dismissed pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
b. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Assuming any of Niagara’s claims against FERC are not fatally flawed by failure to state a claim, FERC argues, in the alternative, that this court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over Niagara’s claims. FERC contends: (1) there is no justiciable controversy because the declaratory orders at issue have no present effect on Niagara; and (2) the claims herein are not ripe for adjudication. 38 FERC argues that the issues which Niagara presents are not purely legal since it makes several factual claims in its complaint including allegations concerning “the massive continuing financial burden imposed on Niagara and its ratepayers; the non-voluntary nature of the contracts; the QFs’ deliberate reliance on law and regulations which they knew were subject to change; ... and the fact that New York’s Six-Cent Law has been under continuous challenge since at least 1987.” Amended Complaint ¶ 27. Niagara also alleges it was “at least as diligent as [CL & P] in challenging the state requirement to purchase QF power at a rate above avoided cost,” and that as to some of the contracts at issue in this case “application of federal law [PURPA] would reduce the rates charged without any amendment of the pricing provisions of the contracts.” Id. at ¶¶ 29-30. FERC argues that resolution of these factual matters must occur, if at all, in the context of PSC administrative proceedings or an enforcement action under Section 210(h) of PURPA Niagara does not respond to this argument.
*134
FERC also asserts that the declaratory orders under challenge by Niagara are not final agency action since no legal rights or obligations flow from them. Again, Niagara does not dispute this argument, nor could it in light of the D.C. Circuit’s opinion in
Niagara v. FERC
concerning the binding effect of the
CL & P I
and O
& R III
orders.
See
Consequently, the Court holds that a second, independent basis for dismissing Niagara’s claims against FERC is the absence of subject matter jurisdiction.
C. Motions to Dismiss the Claims against PSC
PSC, along with IPPNY, seek dismissal of Niagara’s claims against PSC on seven grounds; 1) The court has no subject matter jurisdiction over Niagara’s claims against PSC; 2) Niagara’s present claims against PSC are an impermissible collateral attack on agency action; 3) the Court is obligated to dismiss the complaint as a matter of equitable discretion; 4) the statute of limitations has run on Niagara’s claims against PSC; 5) Niagara’s claims are precluded based on the doctrines of
res judicata
and collateral estoppel; 6) the complaint is barred by the Eleventh Amendment;
39
and finally, 7) the Third Circuit’s decision in
Freehold Cogeneration Assoc. v. Bd. of Regulatory Comm’rs. of the State of New Jersey,
1. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
As discussed previously, PURPA grants federal district courts jurisdiction to act on a utility’s petition to force a state regulatory authority to implement a PURPA rule or regulation. 41 This is true, however, only if the utility has previously petitioned FERC to commence an enforcement proceeding against a state commission and FERC has refused or failed to do so within 60 days of the petition. It is undisputed that Niagara did not follow this procedure prior to commencement of the present action. 42 For its part, Niagara does not even cite the jurisdictional basis of Section 210(h) of PURPA in its amended complaint. Instead, it argued in response to FERC’s claims regarding the absence of subject matter jurisdiction that Section 210(h) of PURPA would not afford it complete relief since it could not sue FERC in an enforcement action against PSC. Assuming, however, Niagara intended to rely on this section in alleging that PSC violated the incremental cost limita *136 tion of PURPA and its regulations, defendants are correct. This Court has no subject matter jurisdiction over any claim against PSC based on PURPA in the absence of proof that Niagara complied with the jurisdictional pre-requisites of the statute.
However, Niagara’s remaining claim against PSC for violation of the Supremacy Clause
43
of the United States Constitution triggers federal question jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331.
See NYSEG,
2. Collateral Challenge to Agency Action
Defendants argue that Niagara’s claim against PSC, which indirectly challenges the validity of its prior orders is impermissible because the New York legislature established a manner for directly challenging agency action via Article 78 proceedings.
See PSC v. Rochester Tel. Corp.,
3. Equitable Discretion
Defendants argue that this Court should dismiss Niagara’s claims against PSC based on the doctrine of equitable discretion.
See Alabama Public Serv. Comm’n v. Southern Ry. Co.,
4. Statute of Limitations
PSC, along -with Saranac and Lockport, argue that Niagara’s complaint is barred on the ground of statute of limitations because under New York Civil Procedure Law, Article 78 proceedings to challenge agency action must be commenced within four months of final agency action.
See
N.Y.C.P.L.R. § 217. However, in addition to challenging PSC’s implementation of N.Y.Pub.Serv.Law § 66-c via requirement and approval of QF contracts with rates in excess of avoided costs, Niagara alleges that the state statute itself is unconstitutional. Niagara’s Supremacy Clause argument “widens the Court’s analysis of PSC’s action from mere implementation of PURPA to a question of federal pre-emption” and is therefore not governed by the four-month limitation period.
NYSEG,
Niagara argues, however, that the six-year limitations period did not begin to run until § 66-c was amended in 1992. To wit, the utility contends that the amendment not only extended its six-cent obligation with respect to QF contracts executed and filed prior to June 26, 1992, it also imposed the minimum six-cent payment on long-term PPAs with QFs for all power to be purchased via the contract in addition to 10% over the amount of electricity provided for therein. See N.Y.Pub. Serv.Law § 66—c(2)(b); (c). Niagara also argues that the 1992 amendment imposed the six-cent obligation on contracts which simply referenced a “tariff’ or “statutory minimum” rate in effect at time of payment. Thus, Niagara alleges that the harm it complains of herein accrued subsequent to passage of the amendment and within the applicable six-year limitations period.
The problem with this argument is that the amendment to § 66-c is not a “new enactment” according to New York statutory construction. Section 66-c as amended *138 simply carried forward the previous provisions as originally enacted for contracts entered prior to June 1992 and repealed its application to subsequent agreements. “The provisions of a law repealing a prior law, which are substantial re-enactments of provisions of the prior law, shall be construed as a continuation of such provisions of prior law, modified or amended according to the language employed, and not as new enactments.” See N.Y.Gen. Constr.Law § 95. Because the amendment did not change any of Niagara’s obligations with respect to pre-June 1992 QF contracts, but simply continued to impose the very same requirements as the original enactment, the statute of limitations began to run in 1981 when the Six-Cent Law became effective. 45
In the alternative to arguing in support of a six-year limitations' period, Niagara contends that it is being subjected to a “continuing wrong” and therefore its statute of limitations has not yet begun to run.
See Davis v. Rosenblatt,
This Court acknowledged the possibility of such an argument in NYSEG but did not address it since the plaintiff utility therein never raised it. 47 Niagara’s contention that the “continuing wrong” exception should apply to its claims against PSC *139 is premised on: (1) PSC’s continuing obligation to implement PURPA; (2) PSC’s requirement that Niagara continue to file tariffs incorporating the six-cent rate based on the 1992 amendment to N.Y.Pub. Serv.Law § 66 — c; and (3) the prospect of sanctions Niagara may face if it breaches its contracts by failing to pay the six-cent rate.
PSC relies on
PSC v. Rochester Tel. Corp.,
PSC’s alternative argument regarding the inapplicability of the “continuing harm” doctrine to this case is more compelling. Defendants contend that since Niagara alleges that the QF contracts themselves created unconstitutional obligations to pay more than avoided costs for QF power, the Supremacy Clause or preemption claim against PSC arose when the contracts were executed.
See NYPIRG,
This Court discerns a distinction between the EPA’s actions in Eli Lilly and PSC’s actions or inactions here. To wit, the EPA was alleged to have continually misappropriated the plaintiff chemical company’s proprietary research data whereas here, the actions of PSC which occurred after it ordered and approved the allegedly illegal QF contracts were largely ministerial. Thus the Court questions whether these actions or inactions of PSC in failing and/or refusing to relieve Niagara from the burdens of allegedly illegal contracts justify extending the statute of limitations on a “continuing wrong” theory. *140 The Court need not reach the merits of this issue, however, as Niagara’s claims are subject to dismissal in any event as discussed below.
5. Res Judicata and Collateral Estoppel
PSC argued in
NYSEG
as it does here that since the plaintiff utility did not appeal the orders which set its LRACs and approved the QF contracts at issue herein, those orders are entitled to preclu-sive effect and bar Niagara’s claims against PSC. Claim preclusion or
res judi-cata
dictates that “a final judgment on the merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in that action.”
Allen v. McCurry,
Defendants argue that PSC’s right to require Niagara and other New York utilities to pay six cents per kwH for QF power was established explicitly by the New York Court of Appeals in
Consol. Edison II
and implicitly each time PSC issued an order approving a six-cent contract which Niagara failed to challenge or appeal. Instead, Niagara requested and was granted a “pass through” right with respect to each contract which ensured that any added costs of QF PPAs would be borne by its ratepayers. According to PSC, these unappealed administrative orders are quasi-judicial and entitled to pre-clusive effect.
See Allied Chem.,
IPPNY’s present argument regarding the preclusive effect of the Supreme Court’s dismissal of ConEd’s appeal in
Consol. Edison III
is precisely the same argument raised before FERC by the interested QFs in
CL & P II.
There, the
*141
QFs contended that the Court of Appeals’ determination that the Six-Cent Law was not pre-empted by PURPA precluded FERC from reaching a different conclusion. It is well-settled that “[sjummary affirmances and dismissal for want of a substantial federal question without doubt reject the specific challenges presented in the statement of jurisdiction and do leave undisturbed the judgment appealed from. They do prevent lower courts from coming to opposite conclusions on the precise issues presented and necessarily decided by those actions.”
Mandel v. Bradley,
FERC held likewise in refusing to deem itself bound by the Court of Appeals’ interpretation of PURPA in
Consol. Edison II. See CL & P II,
71 F.E.R.C., at 61,152,
With respect to the alleged “change” affected by the 1992 amendment to § 66-c, the Court is not persuaded that it actually changed anything in connection with Niagara’s QF contract obligations. 52 Moreover, the Court is not persuaded that FERC’s clarification of its 1980 preamble language- or the other “changed circumstances” re *142 lied on by Niagara constitute changes in relevant facts within the meaning of Man-del as much as changed policy considerations. Nevertheless, the Court declines to second-guess FERC’s determination that it was free to change its mind about states’ rights to impose QF PPA rates in excess of avoided costs. Thus, Niagara is not precluded from challenging the legality of the Six-Cent Law based on dismissal of ConEd’s appeal by the Supreme Court in Consol. Edison III.
With respect to the second issue raised by PSC—the preclusive effect of the unap-pealed PSC orders approving contracts'— this Court assumed without deciding in
NYSEG
that these types of administrative orders which merely set or approved rates in QF contracts are legislative, rather than adjudicative in nature and would thus not bar further litigation.
See NYSEG,
However, PSC’s third argument—■ that Niagara’s failure to litigate the issue of pre-emption in
Niagara v. PSC,
In the first instance, because FERC’s decision
in CL & P I
expressly eschewed retroactive effect for utilities such as Niagara which had not been continuously challenging rates it alleged to be illegal, the Court doubts it would even constitute a “change [in] the legal atmosphere” within the meaning of the cited authority.
Sunnen,
6. Eleventh Amendment
PSC argues that the Eleventh Amendment
53
bars this Court from adjudicating Niagara’s claims against it in federal court.
See Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida,
The foregoing is not an issue of first impression. In
North Am. Natural Res., Inc. v. Michigan Pub. Serv. Comm’n (“North Am.”),
7. PSC’s Power to Alter Existing QF Contracts
Relying on
Freehold,
defendants assert that PURPA pre-empts PSC from altering previously approved contracts.
See
It is clear that Niagara can prove no set of facts in support of its causes of action against PSC or its commissioners under either PURPA or the Supremacy Clause *146 which would entitle it to relief. Thus, these claims are subject to dismissal.
IV. Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, defendants’ motions to dismiss Niagara’s complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b) are GRANTED in them entirety.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. A qualifying cogeneration facility is defined by PURPA as a small power production facility of "not more than 80 megawatt ("MW”) capacity,” 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(a), which produces electric energy primarily by use of solar or wind energy, waste or geothermal resources and is owned by a person "not primarily engaged in the generation or sale of electric power (other than electric power solely from cogeneration facilities or small power production facilities).” 16 U.S.C. § 796(17)(A)-(E).
. These requirements were based on Congress' identification of two problems which impeded the development of non-traditional generational facilities: 1) traditional electrical utilities were reluctant to purchase power from, and sell power to non-traditional facilities; and 2) regulation of non-traditional facilities by state and federal utility authorities imposed undue financial burdens on small alternative energy producers.
See FERC v. Mississippi,
. PURPA also contains an elaborate enforcement scheme and provisions for judicial review. See 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(g)-(h). Section 210(g) provides for (1) state court review of state regulatory authorities’ orders implementing PURPA; and (2) state court actions to enforce requirements of state regulatory authorities. See 16 U.S.C. § 824a — 3(g)(1)—(2). Section 210(h)(1) provides that for enforcement purposes, rules and regulations promulgated pursuant to PURPA shall be treated like rules promulgated pursuant to the Federal Power Act ("FPA”), see 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(h)(1), which are enforceable by FERC in federal district court. See 16 U.S.C. § 825m. The FPA grants FERC the authority to regulate the nationwide development of water and power resources, the transmission of electric energy in interstate commerce, the sale of such energy at wholesale in interstate commerce and the licensing and administration of public utilities. 16 U.S.C. § 791a et seq .. Section 210(h)(2)(A) of PURPA provides that FERC may bring an enforcement action against a state regulatory agency in district court, and Section 210(h)(2)(B) allows a utility or cogenerator to petition FERC to enforce Section 210(0 which governs state regulatory authorities’ responsibilities to implement PURPA rules and regulations. See 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(h)(2)(B). If FERC declines to bring such an enforcement action, the utility or cogenerator can commence its own enforcement action against the state regulatory authority in district court. See id.
. Section 210(0(1) of PURPA obligates slate regulatory agencies to implement FERC's rules through their own rulemaking. Prior to the enactment of PURPA, FERC had exclusive authority to regulate wholesale power rates charged by utilities under the FPA.
See Arkansas Elec. Co-op. v. Arkansas Pub. Serv. Comm'n,
. Niagara's First Amended Complaint demands relief in connection with eighteen long-term QF contracts but seven of these were settled via a Stipulation and Order negotiated in connection with a Master Restructuring Agreement between Niagara and several Qfs, many of whom were at one time defendant-intervenors in this matter.
. The proceedings before the Appellate Division were held in abeyance for a time pending the outcome of
AEP, supra,
which as discussed above, ultimately upheld the validity of FERC’s PURPA rules.
See Consol. Edison I,
. See supra note 4.
. Indeed, in the Preamble to its PURPA regulations, FERC left the states free to utilize their own means of encouraging alternate energy production, stating:
The Commission has become aware that several States have enacted legislation requiring electric utilities in that State to purchase the electrical output of facilities ... at rates which may differ from the rates required under the Commission’s rules implementing section 210 of PURPA.... This Commission has set the rate for purchases at a level which it believes appropriate to encourage cogeneration and small power production, as required by section 210 of PURPA. While the rules prescribed under section 210 of PURPA are subject to the statutory parameters, the States are free, under their own authority, to enact laws or regulations providing for rates which would result in even greater encouragement of these technologies. However, State laws or regulations which would provide rates lower than the federal standards would fail to provide the requisite encouragement to these technologies, and must yield to federal law. If a State program were to provide that electric utilities must purchase power from certain types of facilities, among which are included "qualifying facilities,” at a rate higher than that provided by these rules, a qualifying facility might seek to obtain the benefits of that State program. In such a case, however, the higher rates would be based on State authority to establish such rates, and not on the Commission rules.
The Commission finds no inconsistency in a facility’s taking advantage of section 210 in order to obtain one of its benefits, while relying on other authority under which to buy from or sell to a utility.
Small Power Prod. & Cogeneration Facilities; Regs. Implementing Section 210 of [PURPA],
Order No. 69, 45 Fed.Reg. 12214, 12224,
Rates for Purchases-Relation to State Programs, [FERC Statutes & Regs., Regs. Preambles] 1977-1981
¶ 30,128, at 30,880 (1980),
order on reh’g, FERC Statutes & Regs., Regs. Preambles 1977-1981
¶ 30,160 (1980),
aff'd in part and vacated in part, AEP,
. Indeed, the court found that the FPA would also pre-empt New York's regulation of federal qualifying QFs in New York except that they are already exempt from the FPA pursuant to section 210(e) of PURPA. See 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(e); 18 C.F.R. § 292.602. The purely state qualified QFs, however, are not eligible for this federally authorized exemption because they are not covered by PURPA. Part II of the FPA applies "to the sale of electric energy at wholesale in interstate commerce.” 16 U.S.C. § 824(b).
. In two subsequent proceedings, Niagara challenged unsuccessfully the rates it was re
*117
quired to pay QFs which were constructed or had begun facility construction prior to enactment of PURPA,
see Allied Chem. v. Niagara,
. Niagara appealed only one of these orders. In
Niagara v. PSC,
. Indeed, on June 16, 1988, the same day that FERC stayed its April 14, 1988, order in O & R I, FERC issued a notice requesting supplemental comments on whether it should codify, in a final rule, the position FERC adopted in said order. See Admin. Determination of Full Avoided Costs, 53 Fed.Reg. 24099 (June 27, 1988), FERC Statutes and Regulations ¶ 32,462 (1988). The underlying rulemaking proceeding had been pending since March 1988, prior to issuance of O & R I. See Admin. Determination of Full Avoided Costs, Sales of Power to Qualifying Facilities & Interconnection Facilities, 53 Fed.Reg. 9331 (March 22, 1988).
. Although the parties in both cases styled their petitions as requesting a rehearing, FERC deemed them to request reconsideration. Citing
Indus. Cogenerators v. FERC,
. As referenced by FERC in CL & P I, CL & P had been litigating the lawfulness of the rates in its state-imposed PPAs since 1987. After obtaining partial relief from the Connecticut Supreme Court regarding one aspect of its challenge — the rate that the municipal QF in question could charge for power — CL & P brought an action for declaratory and in-junctive relief in United States district court alleging that Connecticut’s regulatory scheme for municipal resources recovery facilities was pre-empted by Section 210 of PURPA. *120 See CL & P v. South Eastern Connecticut Reg'l Res. Recovery Auth., 822 F.Supp. 888, 891 (D.Conn.1993). There, the court deferred determination of the case on the merits holding that the issue of whether the statute was so pre-empted should be referred to FERC under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction. See id.
. Under PURPA, FERC may bring an enforcement action in federal district court against any state electrical regulatory authority which fails to implement FERC regulations designed to encourage cogeneration. See 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(h)(2)(A). Alternatively, a utility or cogenerator may petition FERC to bring such an action and, if the agency declines, may itself sue the state regulatory authority in district court. See 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(h)(2)(B).
. PSC moved to intervene as a party plaintiff and Independent Power Producers of New York also moved to intervene as a defendant. By order dated February 25, 1998, then U.S. Magistrate Judge David N. Hurd denied these motions without prejudice subject to renewal *123 upon this Court’s determination of the parties’ dispositive motions.
. The intervening QFs were as follows: Power City Partners, L.P., Ag-Energy, L.P., Seneca Power Partners, L.P., Sterling Power Partners, L.P., P & N Partners, L.P., Onondaga Cogeneration Limited Partnership, Project Orange Associates, L.P., United Development Group-Niagara, L.P., American Ref-Fuel Company, and Cogen Energy Technology, L.P.
. The APA, codified at 5 U.S.C. § 551 et seq., prescribes procedures by which federal agencies may promulgate rules and make adjudicative determinations. The APA also establishes a right to judicial review of such rulemaking and agency decisions:
A person suffering a legal wrong because of agency action, or adversely aggrieved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant statute, is entitled to judicial review thereof.
5 U.S.C. § 702. The APA serves as a default mechanism for review in instances where review procedures are not specified in a governing statute.
See Bowen v. Massachusetts,
. Niagara has not, to the Court's knowledge, served or filed a second amended complaint.
. To the extent that Niagara contends its PURPA claim against FERC is something other than an enforcement action, there is no legal authority which provides a basis for enforcing Section 210 of PURPA “in general” against FERC.
. This Court dealt extensively with many of the legal issues presented in this case or issues closely related thereto in NYSEG, as cited herein. There, NYSEG, another traditional New York utility sued FERC and PSC along with two QFs with which it had been required to enter long-term PPAs pursuant to N.Y.Pub.Serv.Law § 66-c alleging that the failure and/or refusal of FERC and PSC to offer it relief from these contracts was viola-live of PURPA and the APA since the rates in said contracts were expected to exceed NY-SEG's estimated LRACs by over $3 billion. Because NYSEG involved many of the same parties, indeed, many of the same attorneys, as the present litigation, the Court assumes familiarity with the facts and legal analysis set forth therein and need not repeat them at length for purposes of the present opinion.
.The APA contemplates judicial review of "agency action made reviewable by statute and final agency action for which there is no other adequate remedy in a court.” 5 U.S.C. § 704;
see also Bowen,
. In
Marlow,
a disabled school teacher filed an administrative complaint with the federal Education Department alleging discriminatory failure to hire by the New York City Board of Education Examiners in violation of the federal Rehabilitation Act.
. This presumption can be rebutted if the substantive statute contains guidelines for the agency to follow in exercising its enforcement powers.
Heckler v. Chaney,
. Indeed, this Court has previously held that the opposite is true. “PURPA is not self-implementing, it is a 'regulatory statute,'
see NYSEG,
. The Court is unable to discern a meaningful distinction between FERC’s alleged failure to apply the avoided cost rate cap to Niagara's QF contracts, wherein the rates were unquestionably higher, and a decision by FERC "not to prosecute” or take action with respect to flagrant PURPA violations.
. Although the D.C. Circuit suggested in dicta that "[u]nder the [APA] the district court must, of course, determine whether [FERC's] interpretation of [PURPA] is reasonable,” id., this Court disagrees. Such a suggestion flies directly in the face of the balance of the court’s opinion which expressly rejected Niagara’s contention that a PURPA Section 210 enforcement action against PSC was not an adequate remedy for challenging the legally binding effect of FERC’s orders in CL & P I and O & R IV. As discussed above, if Niagara has an adequate remedy in PURPA against PSC, it cannot also sue FERC pursuant to the APA. However, even if the Circuit court "assumed” that APA review would properly lie in district court under these-circumstances, the assumption of a jurisdictional basis where none lies is legally insignificant.
. In this context, the D.C. Circuit’s agreement that the orders challenged by Niagara in Niagara v. FERC announced rules of "general application” is inconsequential since Niagara doesn't challenge the rules themselves, only the failure to apply them to its existing contracts.
. There, the court rejected EPA's claim that its interpretation of the storage provision of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act ("RCRA”) was an immune exercise of enforcement discretion.
. In any event, the notice and comment requirement does not apply "to interpretive rules [or to] general statements of policy.”
See Zhang v. Slattery,
In distinguishing between the two types of rules, the central question is essentially whether an agency is exercising its rule-making power to clarify an existing statute or regulation, or to create new law, rights, or duties in what amounts to a legislative act. Since legislative rule-making involves [an] agency's delegated power to make law through rules, it is subject to the public participation and debate that notice and comment procedures provide. Legislative rules have the force of law.... Interpretive rules, on the other hand, do not create rights.... A rule is interpretive ... if it attempts to clarify an existing rule but does not change existing law, policy, or practice.
Id. (internal quotations and citations omitted). As noted by the D.C. Circuit in Niagara v. FERC, FERC neither created nor denied new rights, law or policy with its rule of "general application.” Indeed, it is clear that the alleged "continuous challenge rule” is no more than FERC’s reiteration of its "general policy 'against invalidating contracts for which a PURPA-based challenge was not timely raised — that is, before the contracts were executed,' so as not 'to upset the settled expectations of parties to, and to invalidate any of their obligations and responsibilities under, such PURPA sales contracts.’ ” Connecticut Valley Elec. Co. v. FERC, 208 F.3d 1037, 1046 (D.C.Cir.2000).
. Of course Niagara could not actually obtain any relief from PSC pursuant to Section 210(0 of PURPA since, as discussed above, that section of the statute merely requires states to implement FERC’s PURPA regulations. Rather, Niagara would first have to ask FERC to commence an enforcement action against PSC pursuant to Section 210(h) and then bring the action itself if FERC refused.
. Niagara’s argument presupposes that FERC orders such as those
in CL & PI
and
O & R III
have binding effect, like FERC regulations, on parties other than those involved directly in the underlying administrative proceedings. However, in
Niagara v. FERC,
in spite of the D.C. Circuit’s view that the FERC orders challenged by Niagara “ announced] a rule of general application” the orders were of "no legal moment” since the court nonetheless declined jurisdiction to review the orders.
. Section 3 of the FPA prohibits an SPP from obtaining QF status if it is "engaged in the generation or sale of electric power (other than electric power solely from cogeneration facilities or SPP facilities).” 16 U.S.C. § 796(17)(c)(ii). Since SPPs in Claremont’s position were selling electric power which they purchased directly from utilities, they were no longer "not primarily engaged” in the sale of non-alternatively produced electricity.
. In
Connecticut Valley,
the plaintiff utility made the same arguments that Niagara makes here, that is, Section 210 of PURPA expressly requires FERC to “balance the interests of consumers against those of producers” and ensure PPA rates do not exceed a utility’s avoided costs.
This conclusion was based largely on the D.C. Circuit's disagreement with Connecticut Valley that the overriding purpose of PURPA was to ensure reasonable rates for electric consumers and rates not in excess of avoided costs for utilities. Indeed, the Supreme Court has disagreed with this characterization, stating that the focus of Title II or Section 210 of PURPA is "to encourage the development of cogeneration and small power production facilities” by addressing "problems imped[ing]
*131
the development of non-traditional generating facilities.”
FERC v. Mississippi,
. Indeed, this Court rejected a nearly identical claim against FERC in NYSEG. There, the plaintiff utility argued that since PURPA itself states that "no rule prescribed [by FERC] ... shall provide for a rate which exceeds the incremental cost of the electric utility of alternative electric energy,” 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(b), FERC’s attendant regulation, 18 C.F.R. § 292.304(b)(5) — which provides that a purchase rate which "differs from avoided costs” at the time energy is delivered pursuant to a long-term PPA does not violate PURPA — was unlawful. This Court:
disagree[d] with NYSEG's contention that PURPA requires FERC to take an active role in monitoring its regulations and QF contracts pursuant to PURPA to ascertain no utility pays more than avoided costs for purchases. FERC fulfilled its obligations under PURPA when it promulgated rules to "encourage cogeneration ... which rules require electric utilities” to offer to buy electric energy from and sell electric energy to QFs. 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(a).... Consequently, FERC’s refusal to modify or waive its rules retrospectively to ascertain that NYSEG, an electric utility, is not disadvantaged by a PURPA contract is not a refusal to "enforce” PURPA.
NYSEG,
. "In other words, the Commission ordinarily has remedial discretion, even in the face of an undoubted statutory violation, unless the statute itself mandates a particular remedy.”
Id.
(citing
Towns of Concord, Norwood & Wellesley v. FERC,
. In
NYSEG,
this Court rejected the plaintiff utility’s argument that retroactive rulemaking was authorized there based on the "patent illegality” of: 1) 18 C.F.R. § 292.304(b)(5) which allowed the defendants QFs to collect a rate in excess of avoided costs because it was based on estimated LRACs in a long-term PPA; and 2) the PPA rates themselves because the QFs had no "vested interest” in rates which violate PURPA. To wit, this Court held "FERC’s regulations, which account for and forgive a rate in excess of avoided costs in NYSEG’s very circumstances, are not illegal and QFs are entitled to rely on purchase rates in long-term PPAs even if they violate PURPA’s rate cap.”
. In the context of administrative law, the "ripeness” doctrine "prevents] the courts, through avoidance of premature adjudication, from entangling themselves in abstract disagreements over administrative policies,” and also "protects] the agencies from judicial interference until an administrative decision has been formalized and its effects felt in a concrete way by the challenging parties.”
Abbott Labs. v. Gardner,
(1) whether the issues presented are purely legal; (2) whether the challenged agency action constitutes 'final agency action’ within the meaning of the Administrative Procedure Act; (3) whether the challenged agency action has or will have a direct and immediate impact on the petitioner; and (4) whether the resolution of the issues will foster, rather than impede, effective enforcement and administration by that agency-
Occidental Chem. Corp. v. FERC,
. PSC did not, in its original moving papers, assert it was entitled to relief based on immunity afforded the states pursuant to the Eleventh Amendment. Rather, the immunity claim appeared for the first time in a letter brief submitted by PSC in response to the Court’s invitation in June 1999, to all counsel to submit briefs outlining "new developments in the applicable law which they believe are outcome determinative.” PSC asserts that the Supreme Court's decisions in
Seminole Tribe of Florida
v.
Florida,
. There, the court held that state agencies such as PSC are pre-empted from altering PURPA contracts once ordered and approved.
. Section 210(h)(2)(B) provides that
Any electric utility ... may petition the Commission to enforce the requirements of subsection (f) of this section as provided in subparagraph (A) of this paragraph. If the Commission does not initiate an enforcement action under subparagraph (A) against a State regulatory authority ... within 60 days following the date on which a petition is filed under this subparagraph ... the petitioner may bring an action in the appropriate United States district court to require such state regulatory authority ... to comply with such requirements, and such court may issue such injunctive or other relief as may be appropriate....
16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(h)(2)(B). Section 210(f), which is referenced in Section 210(h)(2), requires the state regulatory authority to make rules implementing the FERC’s rules for regulated utilities in that state. See 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(f).
. Niagara’s response to defendants’ citation of its failure to petition FERC in the first instance for the relief it seeks herein against PSC is two-fold. First, Niagara vaguely suggests that the fact that it intervened in the FERC proceeding commenced by O
&
R satisfied its administrative exhaustion requirement. However, the Court doubts that Niagara can exhaust administrative remedies by proxy.
See e.g., Platte River Whooping Crane Critical Habitat Maint. Trust v. FERC,
Niagara also contends that it was not required to exhaust administrative remedies after FERC dismissed O & R’s petition, making clear that "any further request that it enforce the avoided-cost limit against the continuing requirement to make payments under the Six-Cent Law would be futile.”
See Ahrens v. Bowen,
. According to the Supremacy Clause, the U.S. Constitution and the laws passed pursuant to it are the "supreme laws of the land, binding alike upon the states, courts and the people, anything in the Constitution or Laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding.”
Testa v. Katt,
. In NYSEG, this Court noted:
PURPA and its implementing regulations establish "an extensive federal system to encourage and regulate the sale of electrical energy by QFs.” Freehold,44 F.3d at 1191 . However, as referenced above, *137 PURPA is not a self-sufficient body of federal law. PURPA amended the FPA and its Section 210(f) grants state regulatory authorities “power to implement the requirements of Section 210(a) and the relevant regulations.” Freehold,44 F.3d at 1191-92 . A state regulatory authority complies with PURPA “by issuing regulations, resolving disputes on a case-by-case basis, or by taking any other action reasonably designed to give effect to FERC's rules." FERC v. Mississippi,456 U.S. at 751 ,102 S.Ct. 2126 . “The most that can be said is that ... [PURPA] establishes a program of cooperative federalism that allows the States, within limits established by federal minimum standards, to enact and administer their own regulatory programs, structured to meet their own particular needs.” Id. at 767,102 S.Ct. 2126 .
By providing that states would implement PURPA by enactment of regulatory programs within prescribed guidelines, Congress “expressed its intention that state law provides the content of and operates as federal law.” Corcoran v. New York Power Auth.,202 F.3d 530 , 538 (2d Cir.1999) (concluding that Congress intended substantive rules for decisions under federal Price-Anderson Act would derive from laws of states where nuclear accidents occurred, unless such laws were inconsistent with Price-Anderson).
. Niagara avers that the 1992 amendment imposed new obligations by way of requiring the six-cent rate for purchases pursuant to all contracts referencing a "utility tariff" 'or "statutory minimum sales price.” N.Y.Pub. Serv.Law § 66-c(2)(a)(ii). Although Niagara argues these PPAs were not previously subject to the six-cent rate, its claim is belied by the fact that the "statutory minimum sales price" would obviously have referred to the six-cent rate prior to 1992. To the extent that a filed utility tariff rate reflecting avoided costs would have been less than six cents, PSC’s unappealed 1993 decision in On-Site Generation Proceeding — Niagara Mohawk Power Corp.'s Proposed Buyback Tariff, established that QFs were entitled to the higher of the two rates. See p. 114, supra. Thus, the Court rejects Niagara’s contention that the 1992 amendment imposed higher rates or altered its legal obligations with respect to any of these contracts.
. "Federal courts do recognize a continuing wrong theory .... The doctrine applies when the defendant’s conduct causes plaintiff to sustain damages after the time when the statute of limitations would have expired if it commenced at the time of defendant’s first act. Instead, the claim accrues each time the plaintiff sustains damages. The rule is based primarily upon the impracticality and unfairness of requiring a plaintiff to institute his action before he can predict his damages."
See Kahn v. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co.,
. See NYSEG,
. Under the full faith and credit doctrine, federal courts must accord final judgments of state courts the same preclusive effect such judgments would have in the state courts.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1738. In New York, issue preclusion may arise from the quasi-judicial determinations of administrative agencies.
See Allied Chem.,
. See supra note 11.
. To wit, Niagara contends that subsequent to Consol. Edison III, (1) Congress and FERC adopted a policy favoring competition amongst all bulk power suppliers; (2) the 1992 amendment to § 66-c of the N.Y.Pub. Serv.Law increased disparity in avoided costs versus QF contract rates because it extended the six-cent rate to include QF capacity up to 10% over contract terms; and (3) PSC's adopted procedures to allow QFs to "lock in” long term PPA rates based on estimated LRACs, thus removing the concern outlined by the Court of Appeals that rate fluctuation would be detrimental to QF development.
. In connection with this latter argument, Niagara alleges that the Court of Appeals considered two issues in Consol. Edison II: (1) whether the state had independent authority to establish QF rates and (2) if so, whether PURPA pre-empted the exercise of that authority. Niagara argues that because ConEd raised only the pre-emption issue in its appeal and this was presumably, the only issue considered by the Supreme Court, it is still free to argue that states lack independent authority to set rates in excess of the avoided cost. This argument is specious however, because if states are pre-empted from establishing QF contract rates above avoided costs, they clearly have no independent authority to do so. Thus, resolution of one issue was necessarily determinative of the other.
.See supra note 44.
. The Eleventh Amendment provides:
The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.
U.S. Const., amend. XI.
. Indeed, this Court noted:
Constructive consent is not a doctrine commonly associated with the surrender of constitutional rights.” College Sav.Bank,527 U.S. at 681 ,119 S.Ct. 2219 (quoting Edelman v. Jordan,415 U.S. 651 , 673,94 S.Ct. 1347 ,39 L.Ed.2d 662 (1974)). "True waiver of a constitutional right is demonstrably an 'intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege.’ ” Id. (quoting Johnson v. Zerbst,304 U.S. 458 , 464,58 S.Ct. 1019 ,82 L.Ed. 1461 (1938)). "[CJourts indulge every reasonable presumption against waiver” of fundamental constitutional rights. Id. (quoting Aetna Ins. Co. v. Kennedy ex rel. Bogash,301 U.S. 389 , 393,57 S.Ct. 809 ,81 L.Ed. 1177 (1937)).
The Supreme Court has expressly held that a state’s participation in or agreement to administer a federal program does not constitute waiver of Eleventh Amendment immunity. See Florida Dep’t of Health & Rehab. Servs. v. Florida Nursing Home Assoc.,450 U.S. 147 , 150,101 S.Ct. 1032 ,67 L.Ed.2d 132 (1981) (state’s participation in federal Medicaid program through which federal government provides assistance for operation by state of system of public aid and agreement to abide by federal law in doing so is not sufficient to establish consent on part of state to be sued in federal courts). Thus, the Court rejects NYSEG's contention that New York waived its sovereign immunity against being sued in federal court by agreeing to implement PURPA.
NYSEG,
. There, the Supreme Court held that the Eleventh Amendment was not a bar to enjoining individual state officials from continuing to commit unconstitutional acts.
See 209
U.S. 123, 159,
. There, this Court stated:
Section 210(c) of PURPA required FERC to prescribe rules exempting QF's from the FPA and state utility-type regulation, see § 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(e)(l), which directive FERC fulfilled by promulgating 18 C.F.R. §§ 292.601-292.602, which exempt certain QFs, ... from traditional utility-type regulation. The Third Circuit held that these provisions together with FERC’s avoided cost regulations, pre-empt a state regulatory commission from modifying previously approved rates in a PPA to reconcile a significant decline in the utility’s avoided costs, the very situation in which NYSEG now finds itself. See Freehold,44 F.3d at 1192 ("[T]here is specific federal statutory legislation, PURPA, that bars reconsideration of the prior approval of the PPA ...”).
And NYSEG’s plight is not unique. Since enactment of PURPA, NYSEG is not the only utility which has found itself bound to PPA contracts which obligate it to pay more than avoided costs for purchases. Yet courts which have examined such predicaments have uniformly refrained from trenching upon Congress’ explicit intent to advance the development of alternative energy producers, even if at the expense of traditional utilities and even if at the ex *145 pense of ratepayers. See Connecticut Valley,208 F.3d at 1045 . In Smith Cogeneration, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma held that any attempt to revisit a cogeneration contract as a result of changed circumstances deprives QFs of the benefits of their bargain and imposes “utility-type” regulations on them in violation of Congressional intent.863 P.2d at 1240 . Likewise in IEP, the Ninth Circuit held that the fact that "prices for fuel, and therefore the Utilities' avoided costs are lower than estimated does not give the State and Utilities the right unilaterally to modify terms of the [PPA.]”36 F.3d at 858 . Indeed, "[flederal regulations provide that QFs are entitled to deliver energy to utilities at an avoided cost rate calculated at the time the contract is signed” even if the avoided cost rate in the contract is greater than the utility's avoided cost rate at the time of delivery. Id. at 858-59. Once a state regulatory authority approves a PPA on the ground that the rate therein is "consistent with avoided cost,” any action by such agency to "reconsider its approval or deny passage of such rates” to a QF is “pre-empted by federal law.” Freehold,44 F.3d at 1194 .
NYSEG,
. Niagara contends it is entitled to modification of both (1) contracts which require it to continue to pay the six-cent rate; and (2) contracts which simply reference an existing "tariff” or filed rate. Niagara insists PSC could accomplish the latter by prospectively changing the tariff rate referred to in the agreements. This, according to Niagara, would not constitute alteration of existing contract terms and thus not implicate Freehold. The Court notes Niagara already attempted to persuade PSC that it was entitled to substitute a lower avoided cost filed tariff rate for the statutory six-cent rate in such QF contracts and PSC rejected the suggestion. See On-Site Generation Proceeding — Niagara Mohawk Power Corp.'s Proposed Buyback Tariff, PSC Case No. 27574, discussed at p. 114, supra. Rather, PSC determined that QFs were entitled to receive the higher of either the filed or six-cent rate. Thus, the Court discerns no meaningful distinction between modifying contract rates from six-cents per kwH and modifying the rates contemplated in pre- 1992 amendment contracts to be at least six cents based on the unappealed order of PSC in Case No. 27574.
. Indeed, this Court found “no legal basis to conclude that PSC has a continuing obligation to monitor PURPA contracts” or PPA rates after contract approval any more than FERC has a continuing obligation to do so after prescribing regulations designed to “encourage cogeneration.”
NYSEG,
