420 Mass. 168 | Mass. | 1995
The plaintiff, Plymouth Rock Energy Associates (PREA), has appealed (G. L. c. 25, § 5 [1992 ed.])
The regulatory and factual background of this case is summarized as follows.
PURPA’s implementing regulations, 18 C.F.R. Part 292 (1994), require that utilities purchase power from QF’s at the utility’s full “avoided cost” rate. 18 C.F.R. § 292.304 (d). “Avoided costs” are defined as a utility’s incremental costs of purchasing alternative electric energy.
The department’s IRM regulations (220 Code Mass. Regs. § 10.00) were promulgated in 1990 to govern the planning, solicitation, and procurement of new and additional resources by investor-owned electric utilities such as Commonwealth from small power producers and cogenerators which qualify as QFs. The IRM regulations replaced the department’s QF
PREA, a limited partnership, is the developer of a five MW cogeneration power production facility adjacent to a regional shopping mall in Kingston. PREA’s project will produce steam for heating and cooling the mall and electricity for sale to the utility grid. PREA made contact with Commonwealth in early 1992 to sell electricity to Commonwealth under a long-run standard contract B. When Commonwealth disputed any obligation to enter such a contract with PREA, these proceedings were commenced at the department. The department found that PREA’s project fell within the exceptian for projects of five MW or less and would be governed by the provisions of § 10.07 (1). Because the IRM regula
The parties do not dispute that the department’s IRM regulations govern PREA’s sale of electricity to Commonwealth. Nowhere do those regulations provide that the RFP 2 bidding process determines avoided costs in the absence of a “final award group.” Indeed, as the department noted in its decision, the promulgation of the new IRM regulations marked a distinct departure from the superseded QF regulations. Nevertheless, in support of its position, PREA emphasizes that its project was already in the development “pipeline” during the transition from the QF regulatory framework to the IRM process in 1991 and 1992. The department’s regulations explicitly state, however, that the QF solicitation reg
Similarly, the department was also warranted in concluding that its decision in Alfresco Lynn, Inc., D.P.U. 91-142, did not require it to award PREA the RFP 2 prices. In Altresco Lynn, Inc., Commonwealth asserted that it was relieved from its obligation to enter into a contract with the RFP 2 bid winners, referring to decreased projections for additional capacity and, therefore, decreased avoided costs. The department disagreed, determining that the interests of ratepayers would be best served by requiring Commonwealth to execute the contracts. PREA argues that it is entitled to the identical RFP 2 prices upheld by the department in the Altresco Lynn, Inc., proceeding because the contracts at issue in that case were executed at the same time that PREA sought to enter into a contract with Commonwealth. The Altresco Lynn, Inc., proceeding however, did not involve an interpretation of “final award group” in § 10.07 (1) of the IRM regulations. Rather, it involved the different issue whether changed circumstances justified granting Commonwealth a waiver from its obligation under the QF regulations to enter into a contract to purchase power at a price determined by the bid solicitation process. There was never any question that, if the department concluded that Commonwealth was obligated to purchase power from the bid winners, the RFP 2 award prices continued to be appropriate under the QF regulations. We are not persuaded that this decision somehow compelled the department to assign a simi
2. The case thus comes down to whether the price set by the department was warranted. Arguing that the price conflicts with PURPA and cannot stand, PREA contends that, at a minimum, it is entitled to a purchase price equal to the avoided costs established by Commonwealth in its submissions to the department.
We do not accept the department’s waiver argument. PURPA is intrinsic to any analysis of the adequacy of the contract price. The statute and its implementing regulations clearly mandate that the rate to be paid by utilities for electrie energy be determined by the avoided cost to the utility of generating that energy or purchasing it elsewhere. See Southern Cal. Edison Co., 70 F.E.R.C. par. 61,215, at 61,677 (1995). To be sure, the States are afforded flexibility in calculating avoided costs. However, by no means can the department wholly ignore the avoided cost requirement and arbitrarily assign a purchase price. See Independent Energy Producers Ass’n v. California Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 36 F.3d 848, 854-855 (9th Cir. 1994).
As stated above, avoided costs include both energy costs and capacity costs. It is unclear when the PREA facility will
We accordingly vacate the decision of the department in D.P.U. 92-122, and remand the case for further proceedings in light of this opinion.
So ordered.
Other cases having relevance to the problem before us are Boston Edison Co. v. Department of Pub. Utils., 419 Mass. 738 (1995); Point of Pines Beach Ass’n v. Energy Facilities Siting Bd., 419 Mass. 281 (1995); and Boston Edison Co. v. Department of Pub. Utils., 417 Mass. 458 (1994).
Avoided costs include both energy costs and capacity costs. See 18 C.F.R. § 292.101 (b)(6) (1994). The energy component refers to the fuel and variable operating and maintenance costs incurred by the utility to produce electricity. The capacity component refers to capital costs, fixed operating and maintenance costs, and other costs the utility would incur if it were required to construct a new generating facility. See Administrative Determination of Full Avoided Costs, Sales of Power to Qualifying Facilities, and Interconnection Facilities, Fed. Energy Reg. Comm’n Rep. (CCH) par. 32,457, at 32,157 (1988).
The department found that the IRM regulations, by their terms, became effective as to Commonwealth as of the date of its first filing under the regulations, which occurred on November 15, 1991. 220 Code Mass. Regs. § 10.01 (c) (1990). PREA’s first contact with Commonwealth came after that date. At the time of initial contact, Commonwealth had not yet had a competitive solicitation under the IRM regulations and, therefore, did not have a “final award group” with which to set a contract price pursuant to 220 Code Mass. Regs. § 10.07 (1) (1990).
“The Department’s IRM regulations state that a ‘company shall offer a purchase price . . . equivalent in value, on a present-worth basis, to the weighted average stream of contractually-set prices paid to all of the project developers from the most recent final award group.’ . . . Since Commonwealth has had no ‘final award group’ in IRM, PREA asserts that the RFP 2 award group price should apply,' because it was the Company’s most recent award group and IRM evolved from the QF solicitation process.
“While PREA’s argument has some merit, Commonwealth presents a more persuasive analysis. As noted . . . above, the IRM regulations cancel and replace the long-term contracting provision of the QF regulations. In addition, the IRM regulations do not state that the most recent QF award group should apply until the Company’s first IRM final award group is identified. Unlike the IRM regulations, the QF regulations do not refer to a ‘final award group.’ Furthermore, it would be inappropriate to apply the
“Therefore, it is appropriate to examine the purposes of IRM and PURPA to determine whether PREA is entitled to the RFP 2 prices. IRM is explicitly intended to establish a process that identifies and acquires least-cost energy resources available to a company. . . . Unlike the QF solicitation process, IRM solicitations include proposals for utility generation and [demand side management] programs and thus should yield more competitive prices than bids from QFs alone. Commonwealth also emphasizes that PURPA does not require a utility to sign a contract in excess of its avoided cost. . . .
“There is no dispute that Commonwealth has had no final IRM award group or that the Company has no current need for capacity. Therefore, the Department finds that PREA is not entitled to the RFP 2 prices which include capacity payments. Consequently, based on the foregoing undisputed facts and as a matter of law, the Department finds that PREA is entitled only to Commonwealth’s short-run energy purchase rate. Furthermore, the Department determines that the appropriate price for the PREA contract is the Company QF rate available at the time PREA first approached the Company, i.e., the rate for the first quarter of 1992, which was established in D.P.U. 91-3D.” (Footnotes and citations omitted.)
In October, 1992, Commonwealth, as requested by the department, submitted statistical documentation for its claim that the payment of a power purchase price to PREA equal to the average price paid to the most recent RFP bid winners would exceed Commonwealth’s avoided costs by $1.8 million over the life of the contract. The evidence, which was undisputed, established that Commonwealth’s avoided costs for the twenty-year term of the contract ranged from 5.6 cents a kilowatt hour in 1997 to twenty-nine cents a kilowatt hour in 2016.
In its decision in Cambridge Elec. Light Co. & Commonwealth Elec. Co., D.P.U. 91-234 (1993), the department confirmed that Commonwealth would need additional capacity beginning in 2001.
It would appear to be implicit in the department’s decision requiring Commonwealth to purchase energy from PREA that PREA is a qualifying facility under PURPA. See 16 U.S.C. § 796 (18) (B). The briefs of the