OKLAHOMA NATURAL GAS COMPANY, A DIVISION OF ONEOK, INC., Petitioner,
v.
FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION, Respondent,
Amax Gas Marketing, Inc., Natural Gas Pipeline Company of
America, PowerSmith Cogeneration Project, Limited
Partnership, Williams Natural Gas
Company, Intervenors.
No. 92-1576.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Feb. 4, 1994.
Decided July 22, 1994.
Petition for Review of Orders of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
William I. Harkaway, Washington, DC, argued the cause for petitioner. With him on the briefs were Kathleen Mazure, Washington, DC, Brad D. Fuller and C. Burnett Dunn, Tulsa, OK.
Jerome M. Feit, Solicitor, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Susan Tomasky, Gen. Counsel, and Joel M. Cockrell, Attorney, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC.
On the joint brief for intervenors were John N. Estes, Philip R. Ehrenkranz, Michael T. Mishkin, Harold L. Talisman, Ronald N. Carroll, Washington, DC, and John H. Cary, Tulsa, OK. Priscilla A. Mims, Paul E. Goldstein and Philip R. Telleen, Lombard, IL, entered an appearance for intervenor Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America. Douglas E. Nordlinger, Washington, DC, entered an appearance for PowerSmith Cogeneration Project, Limited Partnership.
Before: BUCKLEY, WILLIAMS and GINSBURG, Circuit Judges.
STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge:
For the third time, we review an order of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission granting a certificate of public convenience and necessity to Williams Natural Gas Company for a 12.4-mile lateral pipeline. Oklahoma Natural Gas Company, a local distribution company that is a rival seller to the customer that the lateral will supply, contests FERC's jurisdiction over the pipeline, claiming that it does not transport gas in interstate commerce. Our earlier doubts answered, we affirm the Commission's exercise of jurisdiction.
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Williams in 1989 sought a certificate under Sec. 7 of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 717f, to construct, own and operate a lateral pipeline to connect its 16-inch diameter interstate "Cement Pipeline" with the PowerSmith Cogeneration Project Limited Partnership plant. The lateral serves only PowerSmith, pursuant to a transportation agreement among PowerSmith, Amax Gas Marketing, Inc.1 and Williams. The agreement provides that Williams will transport, on an interruptible basis, gas sold by Amax to PowerSmith under a longterm supply contract. The arrangement is for a "back-haul". Amax injects gas into the Williams pipeline at numerous points in Oklahoma, Kansas and Wyoming, all downstream of the point where the lateral cuts off from the Cement Pipeline. Williams delivers equal amounts of gas to PowerSmith in Oklahoma via the lateral. We assume, as the Commission did, that because the Cement Pipeline originates in Oklahoma, every molecule received by PowerSmith will have originated in Oklahoma.
Oklahoma Natural Gas has consistently contended that the lateral would not transport gas in interstate commerce, defeating Commission jurisdiction. In its first pass at the matter, the Commission rejected the claim in a mere footnote, only to have its decision remanded by this Court for a more adequate explanation. Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. v. FERC,
* * *
In neither of the previous proceedings before this court did FERC invoke Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. NRDC,
The exchange between the majority and the dissent in Railway Labor Executives' Ass'n v. National Mediation Board,
Petitioner argues more narrowly that wherever a federal agency's exercise of authority will preempt state power, Chevron deference is inappropriate. But with the exception of negative exercises of federal authority, all agency legal interpretations have some preemptive effect; no state law in direct contradiction will survive. Petitioner's special non-deference principle would therefore have to be applied almost universally, overturning Chevron. Alternatively, the issue of deference would turn on a survey of state rules to see if any extant ones happened to succumb under preemption principles. This approach, though less of an onslaught on Chevron, would be completely unprincipled, for deference would depend on what rules states happened to have adopted at the moment of review.
Hence, we review FERC's interpretation of its authority to exercise jurisdiction over transportation with the familiar Chevron framework in mind.
* * *
Section 1(b) of the Natural Gas Act states that the Act shall apply
to the transportation of natural gas in interstate commerce, to the sale in interstate commerce of natural gas for resale ..., and to natural-gas companies engaged in such transportation or sale, but shall not apply to any other transportation or sale of natural gas....
15 U.S.C. Sec. 717(b) (brackets added). The Act defines "interstate commerce" as
commerce between any point in a State and any point outside thereof, or between points within the same State but through any place outside thereof, but only insofar as such commerce takes place within the United States.
15 U.S.C. Sec. 717a(7). We must determine whether FERC reasonably determined that the gas delivered by Williams from Oklahoma wells to PowerSmith, also located in Oklahoma, is transported in interstate commerce.
FERC rests in part on a rather complex argument attributing interstate character to the lateral because of the out-of-state character of the gas supplied by Amax to Williams under the three-way agreement. We pass that, however, because we are persuaded that the Commission's determination is permissible under longstanding precedent embodying a narrower principle--namely that gas commingled with other gas indisputably flowing in interstate commerce becomes itself interstate gas, even though the gas in question leaves the interstate stream before it crosses any state border.
In the first two proceedings, FERC defended its jurisdiction largely on the basis of California v. Lo-Vaca Gathering Co.,
In the first appearance of this case, we distinguished Lo-Vaca on the ground that it rested on the Act's "sale for resale" jurisdiction, not the "transportation" jurisdiction. Oklahoma Natural Gas I,
Reviewing that assertion, we said that FERC had missed the point, which was that the consequences of commingling were different in Lo-Vaca from the consequences here. Specifically, we said that jurisdiction over commingled gas had rested on the concept that gas was "dedicated to interstate commerce" whenever it was mixed with jurisdictional gas, and that the dedication concept had been undermined by the intervening "massive deregulation of gas transportation pursuant to the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978 and the Commission's promulgation of Orders Nos. 436 & 500." Oklahoma Natural Gas II,
1. In its Second Remand Order, the Commission has made clear that the precedent on which it rests is by no means limited to its sales jurisdiction. In Louisiana Power & Light Co. v. FPC,
The Commission also cited Public Service Commission of Kentucky v. FERC,
2. The Commission explained on remand why developments since such cases as Lo-Vaca and Louisiana Power have not mooted their analysis. Second Remand Order,
In any event, insofar as Oklahoma Natural Gas II questioned whether the Commission's view of its jurisdiction could be reconciled with evolving circumstances in the natural gas industry, we believe the Commission has answered the concern in its discussion of the question of laterals delivering gas to end-users, and specifically of the Gulf Fuels case, to which we now turn.
3. In Oklahoma Natural Gas II we laid considerable stress on Mississippi Valley Gas Co. v. Gulf Fuels, Inc., 48 FERC p 61,178 (1989), citing it (and Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America, 40 FERC p 61,119 (1987)) for the proposition that the Commission regularly determined that "branch pipelines extending off interstate trunk lines are engaged in intrastate transportation."
The Commission's response took two forms. First, it argued that the Act made ownership per se important, as was shown by the fact that ownership was critical to application of the so-called "Hinshaw" exception, Sec. 1(c) of the NGA, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 717(c). See Second Remand Order,
That Congress recognized the importance of ownership in creating a specific exception to the Commission's jurisdiction seems to us of limited importance. Of course one might suppose that a difference in ownership is presumptively important, as ownership normally entails the power, subject to qualifications, to control the use of the property in question. Indeed, one might expect that all except those completely enmeshed in the administrative state would normally presume ownership to be important. But the congressional limitation of the Hinshaw exception to pipelines owned by persons other than an interstate pipeline only becomes seriously convincing if one can perceive that the reasons for its importance there apply here as well. That turns on the Commission's discussion of the practical importance of a single firm's owning and operating a lateral in conjunction with its indisputably jurisdictional pipeline.
On that subject, the Commission wrote:
As a result of this integration, Williams is able to maintain system balancing maintenance and curtailment practices on the lateral pipeline, and to operate the pressure and flow characteristics of the pipeline in a manner consistent with its overall interstate requirements.
The integration of the lateral pipeline into Williams' system also enables Williams to ensure a continuity of service through the pipeline and to achieve economies of scale in a manner which would not be possible were the pipeline owned by someone else. For instance, Williams states that PowerSmith is able to receive service on days when flowing upstream supplies are inadequate because of its integration with Williams' system, including the South of Blackwell line. The coordinated operation of the lateral pipeline with Williams' mainline system, as evidenced by flow reversals and improved capacity of the mainline, fully demonstrates the integration of the lateral into Williams' system. In addition to the ownership distinction, these circumstances distinguish the instant case from Gulf Fuels.
As operator of an integrated interstate pipeline, then, Williams can use the PowerSmith lateral to meet the needs of its interstate customers (at least it can so long as it is not subject to state regulatory control and attendant conflicts with FERC's jurisdiction over the trunk, such as might arise if Oklahoma Natural Gas's position were upheld). A pipeline is not just an artery of gas transportation; it has inherent storage capacity, to be exploited by adjusting the pressure in the line. See, e.g., Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co., 65 FERC p 61,224 at 62,057 (1993) ("Managing instantaneous no-notice service demands requires system-wide operational responses (through the use of line pack or production area storage)") (emphasis added). FERC's allusion to "flow reversals" suggests more--that the very notions of "downstream" and "upstream" may be arbitrary and unrealistic. Even without the flow reversals, however, we think that protection of Williams's ability to use the PowerSmith lateral to make optimal decisions for provision of service to its interstate customers amply explains, under the specific circumstances, why Commission jurisdiction should attach. The capacity of Williams as single owner of an integrated system, moreover, distinguishes not only Gulf Fuels but most other cases denying jurisdiction over delivery laterals owned and controlled by persons other than an interstate pipeline.2 See Public Service Electric & Gas Co. v. FPC,
Finally, it is true that in Gulf Fuels the Commission broadly observed that "[i]n recent years, with the deregulation of producer sales, the concept of 'dedication to interstate commerce' has largely lost its significance."
* * *
Petitioners also argue that the Commission erred by failing to reopen the proceeding to consider their claim that the Oklahoma franchise law is an unconstitutional burden on interstate commerce and preempted by the Natural Gas Act. This repeats a contention made and rejected in Oklahoma Natural Gas II,
Accordingly, the petition for review is
Denied.
Notes
Amax is in fact a party to the contract by virtue of having acquired Ladd Gas Marketing, Inc., one of the original parties. For simplicity's sake, we refer throughout to Amax
A pipeline might by contract attain integrated control over a lateral owned by another. In that event, the above reasoning would appear to render the lateral jurisdictional, but we need not address that issue now
The latter Commission decision, issued after Lo-Vaca and the Fifth Circuit's opinion in Louisiana Power, appears inconsistent with those cases and with the Commission's view here. It offers no analysis justifying departure from the previously established interpretation. Cf. Maislin Industries v. Primary Steel,
