PENNSYLVANIA POWER COMPANY, Petitioner v. PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION, Respondent.
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.
Argued April 11, 2007. Decided Aug. 21, 2007.
In sum, we conclude that common pleas appropriately affirmed the special exception to expand the educational facility under Section 155-11X, and appropriately reversed the denial of a special exception under Section 155-8A for the extension of the less restrictive impervious surface regulations. Accordingly, we affirm.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 14th day of August, 2007, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County in the above captioned matter is hereby AFFIRMED.
John F. Povilaitis, Harrisburg, for petitioner, Pennsylvania Power Company.
Shane Rooney, Asst. Counsel, Harrisburg, for respondent, PA Public Utility Commission.
Todd S. Stewart, Harrisburg, for intervenor, Dominion Retail, Inc.
BEFORE: LEADBETTER, President Judge, and COLINS, Judge, and MCGINLEY, Judge, and SMITH-RIBNER, Judge, and PELLEGRINI, Judge, and FRIEDMAN, Judge, and SIMPSON, Judge.
OPINION BY President Judge LEADBETTER.
The Pennsylvania Power Company (Penn Power) petitions for review from the orders of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) entered on April 28, 2006 and May 4, 2006, which denied Penn Power use of a proposed interim rate reconciliation mechanism, as well as, in the alternative, a proposed risk-shifting mechanism, through which Penn Power sought to fully recover its costs as a provider of last resort,1 and which also denied Penn Power access to alternative energy projects located within the PJM Interconnection, LLC (PJM)2 service territory but
Penn Power‘s electric generation rate caps expired on December 31, 2006. In October of 2005, Penn Power filed a petition with the PUC requesting approval of its Interim PROVIDER OF LAST RESORT Supply Plan (Interim Plan) for the interim transition period of January 1, 2007 to May 31, 2008.5 Under the terms of its Interim Plan, Penn Power would offer fixed rate provider of last resort service to all its retail customers, subject to reconciliation. Penn Power would obtain its electricity supply from wholesale suppliers through a competitive bidding process.
Under the cost reconciliation mechanism it proposed, at the end of each month Penn
The Interim Plan also dealt with Penn Power‘s obligation to obtain sources of alternate energy under the AEPS Act. Under Section 3 of the Act, a portion of the electric energy that Penn Power sells to retail electric customers in the Commonwealth must be electricity generated from alternative energy sources.7
After an evidentiary hearing, an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) recommended approval of Penn Power‘s Interim Plan with some modifications.8 Notably, the ALJ recommended approval of a reconciliation mechanism for Penn Power to recover its provider of last resort costs. The ALJ also recommended that renewable energy projects located anywhere within the service territories of PJM or MISO be eligible to meet Penn Power‘s requirements under the AEPS Act. Exceptions
The PUC issued an opinion dated April 28, 2006 adopting the ALJ‘s recommendation to approve Penn Power‘s Interim Plan with some modifications. With respect to Penn Power‘s proposed reconciliation mechanism, the PUC stated:
We believe that a competitive market will not develop if an incumbent utility has the ability to reconcile its POLR costs and the competition does not enjoy the same risk free floating rate design. While we agree that on a month-to-month basis, the cost of purchased POLR supply will not equal the billed and collected revenue for delivered POLR supply, a quarterly reconciliation will not send the proper price signal to customers who either have not chosen an alternate supplier or have elected to remain with the EDC for their electric service.... If Penn Power were permitted to earn interest on under collected administrative costs or on under collected POLR acquisition costs, it would be enjoying more than the full recovery of reasonable costs. Based upon the foregoing discussion, we shall deny Penn Power‘s proposed reconciliation mechanism.
PUC April 28, 2006 opinion at 100-101.
With respect to whether Penn Power could access renewable energy projects which are located within the PJM service territory but outside the Commonwealth, the PUC determined that the geographic eligibility test contained in Section 4 of the AEPS Act was ambiguous. Therefore, based upon its view of the General Assembly‘s intent,9 the PUC ordered that only
Penn Power filed a petition requesting clarification of the PUC‘s April 28, 2006 opinion. In its opinion dated May 4, 2006, the PUC clarified that it was its intent in its prior opinion also to deny Penn Power use of its risk-shifting mechanism.11 The PUC commented:
Wholesale suppliers do not have the necessary information to assess the risk of the mismatch in costs and revenues, i.e., customer usage per rate block.... In the event of significant under-recovery, i.e., supplier default, Penn Power may of course petition the Commission for recovery of any prudently incurred costs pursuant to 66 Pa.C.S. § 2807(e)(3).
PUC May 4, 2006 opinion at 6.
On appeal, Penn Power argues that the PUC erred 1) in denying Penn Power use of its proposed reconciliation mechanism and 2) in denying access to alternative energy projects located within the PJM service territory but outside the Commonwealth.12 With respect to the Competition Act, Penn Power argues that the PUC orders prevent Penn Power from recovering fully all reasonable costs
1. Whether the PUC erred in denying Penn Power use of its proposed reconciliation mechanism?
As noted above, the PUC denied both of the alternatives which Penn Power proposed to obtain full cost recovery. As has often been noted, “[a]s the administrative body charged with implementing the Competition Act, the PUC is entitled to substantial deference in the performance of its duties, and the PUC‘s interpretation of the Competition Act should not be overturned unless it is clear that such construction is erroneous.” George v. Pennsylvania Pub. Util. Comm‘n, 735 A.2d 1282, 1288 (Pa.Cmwlth.1999). Further, “[w]hen the statutory language is not explicit a court may defer to an administrative agency‘s interpretation in order to ascertain legislative intent.” Dominion Retail, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Pub. Util. Comm‘n, 831 A.2d 810, 814 (Pa.Cmwlth.2003). However, where statutory language is clear, such interpretive discretion ends and the agency must abide by the statute.
With respect to Penn Power‘s provider of last resort obligations, as noted above, Section 2807(e)(3) of the Competition Act provides that Penn Power “shall recover fully all reasonable costs.”
This reasoning errs for two reasons. First, it is unclear what constitutes “significant under-recovery“; however, anything less than full recovery violates the statute. Second, if the Commission allows Penn Power to later adjust its POLR prices due to under-recovery of costs, the result is the same as if the Commission had adopted Penn Power‘s reconciliation mechanism.
Dissenting Statement, May 4, 2006. We agree with Commissioner Fitzpatrick that the language used by the PUC majority is less than clear, and that the statutory language is quite explicit in mandating full recovery, not just “significant” recovery. Compounding the ambiguity of the Commission‘s position, at oral argument in April of 2007, its counsel stated that if at the end of the seventeen month transition period Penn Power can show that it has not fully recovered its costs, it is free to petition the PUC for recovery.13 Moreover, we note that the Commission‘s policy
Under these circumstances, we believe a remand is necessary. While we agree with Penn Power that it is entitled to full recovery of its reasonable costs as a provider of last resort, it is not for this court to dictate the mechanism or the timing by which that end is to be accomplished.15 We believe the Commission should have the opportunity to make this determination in the first instance, and so will remand in order that it may provide for a cost recovery mechanism which complies with the statutory directive.
2. Whether the PUC erred in denying Penn Power access to alternative energy projects which are located within the PJM service territory but outside the Commonwealth?
Pursuant to Section 7(a) of the AEPS Act, the PUC is charged with carrying out the responsibilities of the AEPS Act.16
Judge SMITH-RIBNER and Judge SIMPSON concur in the result only.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 21st day of August, 2007, the orders of the Public Utility Commission in the above captioned matter are hereby VACATED and the case is REMANDED only with respect to their denial to Penn Power of the use of a reconciliation mechanism, and REVERSED only with respect to their restriction of Penn Power‘s access to alternative energy projects located in the PJM service territory but outside the Commonwealth. Penn Power‘s motion to quash DEP‘s notice of intervention is hereby DENIED.
Jurisdiction relinquished.
Notes
If a customer contracts for electric energy and it is not delivered or if a customer does not choose an alternative electric generation supplier, the electric distribution company or commission-approved alternative supplier shall acquire electric energy at prevailing market prices to serve that customer and shall recover fully all reasonable costs.
The public utility providing facilities for the jurisdictional transmission and distribution of electricity to retail customers, except building or facility owners/operators that manage the internal distribution system serving such building or facility and that supply electric power and other related electric power services to occupants of the building or facility.
On the meaning of Section 4 as it applies to this case, one interpretation of Section 4 has been referred to as the “intra-RTO delivery requirement.” This interpretation stresses the words “only” and “in any part” in the third sentence of the section. As we stated in our AEPS Tentative Order: The General Assembly‘s use of the word “only” could be interpreted to narrowly construe the geographic eligibility limits that follow in this sentence. Specifically, “only” could be linked with the phrase “in any part” to limit energy for compliance purposes from out-of-state sources in MISO and PJM to those portions of the same RTO service territory in Pennsylvania. Thus a facility located in the MISO service territory in Ohio would “only” qualify for alternative energy system status in the Penn Power service territory, as that is the only portion of MISO that is “in any part” of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The Legislature apparently intended to ensure that the Penn Power service territory, despite its small size compared to the areas and numbers of customers served by other Pennsylvania EDCs, not be left bereft of the benefits of the AEPS Act (because PJM did not manage the transmission system in that service territory while doing so in the remainder of the Commonwealth, except for a small portion of Pike County). With no intention of expanding eligibility so broadly as effectively to deny those benefits to the vast remainder of the Commonwealth, the Legislature qualified MISO alternative energy facilities by including that RTO within the definition of “regional transmission organization” and by referring in Section 4 to a defined RTO managing “any part of” the transmission system in Pennsylvania. The Penn Power service territory was “taken care of” by qualifying for that service territory alternative energy facilities in the huge MISO, a very small part of which included Penn Power‘s service territory. The alternative interpretation—that alternative energy facilities located within the MISO region qualify in every Pennsylvania EDC service territory—cannot have been the Legislature‘s intention. The Legislature hardly would have imposed the higher costs of producing alternative energy upon Pennsylvania‘s electricity ratepayers—especially at the same time that the rate caps from electric generation restructuring settlements were expiring and opening the way to higher electric rates—when the laws of most states in MISO‘s region provided no reciprocal qualification for alternative energy facilities constructed in Pennsylvania. In other words, if the alternative interpretation is adopted, Pennsylvania ratepayers would pay for MISO alternative energy facilities with little or no commensurate economic (i.e., the financial fruits of construction projects in Pennsylvania) or environmental (i.e., cleaner Pennsylvania air) benefits to them. Moreover, it is highly unlikely that the Legislature would have diluted the anticipated benefits of the AEPS Act for 97% of Pennsylvania ratepayers for the sake of the 3% of Pennsylvania‘s electric ratepayers in Penn Power‘s service territory. In contrast, the Legislature apparently decided that expanding eligibility to alternative energy projects in states within the large PJM footprint was qualification enough. This balancing of interests is commensurate with Pennsylvania‘s seventy-year affiliation with PJM, which is based in Valley Forge, and with the physical infrastructure of that RTO, which would more likely ensure that power from that grid is delivered to Pennsylvania ratepayers. For that reason alone, the Legislature surely wished to promote system reliability in PJM by encouraging construction of alternative energy projects in that RTO, but was less concerned to do so in MISO‘s territory.PUC April 28, 2006 opinion at 139-141 (footnotes omitted).
Energy derived from alternative energy sources inside the geographical boundaries of this Commonwealth shall be eligible to meet the compliance requirements under this act. Energy derived from alternative energy sources located outside the geographical boundaries of this Common-wealth but within the service territory of a regional transmission organization that manages the transmission system in any part of this Commonwealth shall only be eligible to meet the compliance requirements of electric distribution companies [(EDCs)] or electric generation suppliers [(EGSs)] located within the service territory of the same regional transmission organization. For purposes of compliance with this act, alternative energy sources located in the PJM Interconnection, L.L.C. regional transmission organization (PJM) or its successor service territory shall be eligible to fulfill compliance obligations of all Pennsylvania electric distribution companies and electric generation suppliers. Energy derived from alternative energy sources located outside the service territory of a regional transmission organization that manages the transmission system in any part of this Commonwealth shall not be eligible to meet the compliance requirements of this act.Thus, under the AEPS Act as it has been amended, Penn Power may access alternative energy sources located in the PJM service territory but outside of the Commonwealth to satisfy its AEPS Act requirements, consistent with this opinion.
