OPINION OF THE COURT
This is an appeal from an order of the Commonwealth Court which affirmed orders of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) in certain electric utility rate-setting cases.
Pennsylvania Electric Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission,
The appellants, Metropolitan Edison Company and Pennsylvania Electric Company, own 50% and 25% interests, respectively, in the Three Mile Island station. In 1979, shortly after the nuclear accident, the PUC set reduced permanent rates for these companies, and these new rates reflected the removal from the rate base of all costs associated with Unit 2, the unit involved in the accident, on the basis that Unit 2 had been so severely damaged as to render it no longer useful in the public service. This action was in accord with well-established principles that rates charged the public for utility services are to provide a return upon only such property of the utility as is used and useful in the public service. See 66 Pa.C.S.A. § 1310(d) (utility entitled to “fair return upon the fair value of the property of such
*327
public utility, used and useful in its public service....”);
Scranton v. Scranton Steam Heat Co.,
At the time of the accident at Unit 2, another nuclear reactor at Three Mile Island, Unit 1, had been shut down for refueling. Following the accident at Unit 2, Unit 1 remained shut down by order of the Federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Shortly after ordering reduced rates based on the lack of continued usefulness of Unit 2, the PUC, in 1980, made a determination that Unit 1 was likewise no longer useful in the public service, because its return to service was not “imminent” or “certain,” and, accordingly, the PUC established temporary reduced rates, reflecting the exclusion of all costs associated with Unit 1 from the companies’ rate bases. These temporary reduced rates for Metropolitan Edison and Pennsylvania Electric were, on an annual basis, $26.9 million and $11.7 million less, respectively, than their existing rates. The companies filed complaints alleging that these new rates were unjust and unreasonable, and filed tariffs seeking substantial rate increases. In these tariffs, the companies sought to include in their rate bases costs and investments related to Unit 1, but the companies have not sought in this case to do the same with respect to the damaged reactor, Unit 2. Hearings were held before an Administrative Law Judge, and the decisions recommended by the Administrative Law Judge were adopted, with only minor modifications, by the PUC in 1981. The final PUC orders allowed Metropolitan Edison a rate increase, over and above the challenged temporary rates, of nearly $52 million (including $11 million *328 covering Unit 1 restart costs). Pennsylvania Electric was awarded an increase, over and above the temporary rates, of approximately $55.5 million (including $5.5 million covering Unit 1 restart costs). Metropolitan Edison and Pennsylvania Electric had sought larger rate increases, of $76.4 million and $67.4 million respectively. Appeals were taken to the Commonwealth Court, where the orders of the PUC were affirmed. The instant appeal ensued.
The issue presented in this appeal is a narrow one, namely whether the decision of the United States Supreme Court in
Federal Power Commission v. Hope Natural Gas Co.,
In discussing the considerations to be taken into account in applying the standard requiring “just and reasonable” rates, the Court, in
Hope,
emphasized that the focus of inquiry is properly upon the end result or “total effect” of the rate order, rather than upon the rate-setting method employed.
The rate-making process under the Act, i.e., the fixing of “just and reasonable” rates, involves a balancing of the investor and the consumer interests. Thus we stated in the Natural Gas Pipeline Co. Case that “regulation does not insure that the business shall produce net revenues.” ... [T]he investor interest has a legitimate concern with the financial integrity of the company whose rates are being regulated. From the investor or company point of view it is important that there be enough revenue not only for operating expenses but also for the capital costs of the business. These include service on the debt and dividends on the stock____ By that standard the return to the equity owner should be *330 commensurate with returns on investments in other enterprises having corresponding risks. That return, moreover, should be sufficient to assure confidence in the financial integrity of the enterprise, so as to maintain its credit and to attract capital____ The conditions under which more or less might be allowed are not important here.
Rather, the
Hope
decision requires only that the regulatory authority balance competing consumer and investor interests to determine “just and reasonable” rates.
Permian Basin Rate Cases,
The decision in
Hope
enumerated certain legitimate areas of concern for investors, these being that a company have sufficient revenue to cover operating and capital costs, that the return on equity be commensurate with returns on enterprises having similar risks, and that the company be able to maintain credit and attract capital. These investor interests are appropriate factors to be weighed in the balancing analysis under
Hope,
but they are not, in themselves, controlling, for other factors must be taken into account. As stated in
Permian Basin Area Rate Cases,
[The investor-interest criteria] remain pertinent, but they scarcely exhaust the relevant considerations.
The Commission cannot confine its inquiries either to the computation of costs of service or to conjectures about the prospective responses of the capital market; it is instead obliged at each step of its regulatory process to assess the requirements of the broad public interests entrusted to its protection by Congress. Accordingly, the “end result” of the Commission’s orders must be measured as much by the success with which they protect those interests as by the effectiveness with which they “maintain credit ... and ... attract capital.”
(emphasis added) (footnote omitted). We find no authority, in Hope or in other decisions, indicating that broad public interests are to yield to the interests of investors whenever the financial integrity of a utility company is imperiled.
In cases where the balancing of consumer interests against the interests of investors causes rates to be set at a “just and reasonable” level which is insufficient to ensure the continued financial integrity of the utility, it may simply be said that the utility has encountered one of the risks that imperil any business enterprise, namely the risk of financial failure. The express language of the
Hope
decision weighs against regarding utilities as a protected class of business enterprises which are to be relieved of such normal business
*332
risks. Specifically, it was stated in
Hope,
If the impact of diminished financial integrity were shifted from utility companies to the consumers, as would be the case if the utilities were regarded as having a constitutionally guaranteed right to rates which would preserve their financial integrity, elevating their rates above those levels that would otherwise be regarded as providing a “just and reasonable” return on assets utilized in the public service, the result would effectively circumvent the longstanding principle, discussed supra, that property included in a rate base must be “used and useful” in the public service. Specifically, rate bases which had been determined through *333 the exclusion of non-useful property would be rendered superfluous because the resulting rates would have to be adjusted upwards, whenever the financial integrity of the enterprise was in peril, and the effect upon rates would be the same as if portions of the non-useful property, such as the Three Mile Island nuclear reactors, had not been excluded from the rate base in the first instance.
The “used and useful” concept came into existence long before the
Hope
decision was rendered, and it is not generally regarded as having been overridden by that decision. The concept continues to be of application in this Commonwealth.
Barasch v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission,
Arguably tomorrow’s consumers may be better served by requiring current ratepayers to infuse interest-free capital into our utilities through the collection of excess expenses from today’s ratepayers. This may also reduce the need for additional borrowing in the capital market, improve the bond rating of utilities and lower the cost rate for common equity. However, if utility rates are to reflect such a capitalization requirement from current consumers to protect the financial integrity of the system for the future, that is a matter for the Legislature, not the courts or the Commission, to decide.
The “used and useful” principle is soundly based, for it serves to protect consumers from exploitation, and it com *334 ports with the view that, in fairness, consumers should not be required to buoy up failing utility companies by being required to, in effect, provide public subsidies for utility properties that are not useful in the public service. If the Hope decision were to be interpreted as providing constitutional guarantees for the achievement of investor interests, the “used and useful” principle would have to yield, at least in exceptional situations where the financial integrity of a utility is imperiled, but we do not perceive from Hope that investor interests are to be accorded such a guaranteed status.
In summary, therefore, we hold that the Hope decision is to be interpreted as recognizing a constitutional requirement of “just and reasonable” utility rates, providing a return on used and useful property, with rates to be determined through a balancing of consumer and investor interests. The legitimate areas of investor concern, enumerated in Hope, are not, however, of constitutional dimension, but are among the factors to be taken into account in the balancing of interests process. 1
Aside from the analysis heretofore presented, additional and independent support for this holding may be discerned from the action of the Supreme Court of the United States in regard to a decision of the Appellate Division of the Superior Court of New Jersey. In the case of
In re: Jersey Central Power & Light Co.,
No. A-162-81T2 (July 28, 1983),
cert. den.
The Supreme Court of New Jersey declined to review the decision, and an appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of the United States. That appeal was subsequently dismissed for want of a substantial federal question.
Jersey Central Power & Light Co. v. Board of Public Utilities,
Order affirmed.
JUDGMENT
ON CONSIDERATION WHEREOF, It is now hereby ordered and adjudged by this Court that the Order of the Commonwealth Court is affirmed.
Notes
. Examination of the instant PUC decisions reveals that they reflect a balancing of consumer and investor interests. Metropolitan Edison and Pennsylvania Electric seek to have this case remanded to the PUC tor further findings of fact, however, asserting that the findings of fact heretofore submitted by the PUC, pursuant 66 Pa.C.S.A. § 703(e), are insufficient to permit appellate review as to whether constitutionally guaranteed investor interests set forth in Hope have been satisfied by the PUC's rate orders. In view of our determination that Hope did not establish investor interests of constitutional dimension, any need for such a remand has been obviated.
