Opinion for the Court by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
Shippers with long-term (twenty-year) firm contracts on the Portland Natural Gas Transmission System (“PNGTS”) petition for review of two orders of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”) certifying PNGTS’s capacity. The Shippers’ Group contends FERC’s determination was arbitrary and capricious because FERC failed to take into account the potential economic impact of a reduction in capacity. Noting the pipeline’s historical capacity and an “at-risk” condition imposed by FERC on PNGTS, the shippers fear that their rates will increase as a result of the reduction. In the challenged orders, however, FERC concluded that any potential impact on rates would be better addressed in PNGTS’s subsequent rate case.
Portland Natural Gas Transmission Sys.,
123 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,275,
I.
The Natural Gas Act provides that pipelines must obtain a certificate of public convenience and necessity before they can construct, acquire, or operate interstate natural gas pipeline facilities. 15 U.S.C. § 717f(c). Facilities subject to FERC’s jurisdiction or services rendered by such facilities may not be abandoned without FERC’s prior approval, based on a finding that the available supply of natural gas is depleted or that the present or future public convenience and necessity permit abandonment. § 717f(b); see 18 C.F.R. §§ 157.1-.22 (Part 157, Subpart A). A pipeline, however, may file a petition for a declaratory order “to terminate a controversy or remove uncertainty.” 18 C.F.R. § 385.207(a)(2). PNGTS filed such a petition in 2008 in view of several orders by FERC addressing the construction of two pipelines.
In the Declaratory Order now challenged by the Shippers’ Group, FERC summarized the background to its decision. In July 1996 FERC issued preliminary determinations in two proceedings in which PNGTS and Maritimes & Northeastern Pipeline, LLC (“Maritimes”) sought authorization to construct pipeline facilities in the Northeastern United States. Declaratory Order ¶ 3. Because the southern portion of each proposed pipeline “would run along essentially the same route, [FERC] urged the pipelines to consider jointly owning pipeline where their proposed routes converged.” Id. They did and subsequently they filed an additional application to construct jointly a 101-mile long, thirty-inch diameter pipeline extending from Westbrook, Maine, to Dracut, Massachusetts, as well as various laterals (“joint facilities”).
In July 1997 FERC made a preliminary determination, pending favorable environmental review, authorizing PNGTS to con
In the first year of service, PNGTS will have a capacity of 178,000 Mcf [one thousand cubic feet] per day on its 24-inch mainline and ... 169,400 Mcf per day on the joint facilities. In subsequent years, the upstream mainline and PNGTS’ share of the joint facilities’ capacity will increase to 210,000 Mcf per day. Therefore, PNGTS must revise its initial rates to reflect billing determinants based on [these capacities].
Id.
¶ 5 (quoting
Portland Natural Gas Transmission Sys.,
80 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,134 at 61,448,
In September 1997 FERC issued final certificates to PNGTS authorizing construction and operation of the individually-owned pipeline facilities between Pitts-burg, New Hampshire and Westbrook, Maine, as well as construction and operation of the joint facilities between West-brook and Wells, and the operation of the joint facilities between Wells and Dracut. The 1997 final certificate order also addressed PNGTS’s petition for rehearing on the issue of the increase in capacity and the at-risk condition after the first year. Because it was uncertain exactly when the Maritimes upstream facilities would go on line and when TQM would install its new planned compression, FERC concluded it was “premature to require PNGTS to revise its rates or to be placed at risk for higher capacity after its first year of operation,”
Declaratory Order
¶ 8 (quoting
Portland Natural Gas Transmission Sys.,
80 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,345 at 62,146,
On January 31, 2008, PNGTS filed a petition for a declaratory order requesting a determination that physical capacity across its system would be 168,000 Mcf per day on a firm year-round basis once Mari-times Phase IV Expansion facilities were placed in service on November 1, 2008. It also requested a determination that it could lawfully deny future requests for firm service that together with its existing contracts would cause it to exceed 168,000 Mcf per day. According to FERC, the 1997 final certificate orders did not establish a certificated firm level of service and PNGTS’s most recent section 4 rate case had resulted in a settlement without resolving that issue. PNGTS explained that its previously available capacity would diminish when Maritimes’s Phase IV Expansion facilities were placed in service. Be
In the Declaratory Order granting PNGTS’s petition, FERC made four determinations. First, FERC concluded that PNGTS was not required to file an abandonment application because (A) the 1997 final certificate order authorizing PNGTS’s facilities did not establish a system-wide certificated capacity level after the first year of service, due to the uncertainty involving the timing and impact of additional compression and use of joint facilities, and (B) PNGTS’s subsequent rate case was resolved by uncontested settlement, which also did not establish a certificated capacity for PNGTS. Second, FERC concluded that it was appropriate to determine PNGTS’s certificated level of service going forward because that would “remove uncertainty and provide transparency to the market,” including PNGTS and its shippers. Id. ¶ 27. Third, upon reviewing the engineering information submitted by PNGTS, FERC found that adopting 168,000 Mcf per day as PNGTS’s annual certificated systemwide capacity was in the public convenience and necessity. Although “PNGTS historically has been able to provide service in excess of this level,” FERC stated its “primary focus is whether natural gas service will be jeopardized.” Id. ¶ 29. It found “no basis to conclude that requiring PNGTS to operate its system at a capacity level greater than 168,000 is needed to continue to serve current or anticipated customers.” Id. 1
No party, FERC noted, took issue with PNGTS’s assertions that it will have more than sufficient capacity to meet all of its “contractual obligations for service after October 31, 2008, that are now in effect, and that it is not aware of any interest for additional firm service that would exceed the 168,000 Mcf/d capacity level.” Id. Fourth, FERC stated that the “action here does not prejudge the impact of our decision on PNGTS’s rates and ... any rate issues associated with our decision here, including the appropriate determinants to use to design PNGTS’s rates, are more appropriately determined in PNGTS’s next rate proceeding.” Id. ¶ 30.
On rehearing, FERC rejected the objections presented by the Shippers’ Group, including that PNGTS was required to file for abandonment. FERC explained that an abandonment proceeding was not required because it had deferred the determination of future capacity to PNGTS’s subsequent rate case and the issue of capacity had never been resolved in view of the settlement of that rate case. Rehearing Order ¶ 16. Further, FERC explained that the record did not support requiring PNGTS to maintain its system design at a higher level, id. ¶ 19, and that there was no reason to inquire whether PNGTS could contract for additional existing compression from its affiliates, or whether cheap compression could be built, because there were no pending requests for additional firm service, id. ¶ 18. Rejecting the Shippers’ Group’s assertion that FERC had ignored the rate impact on the shippers, FERC stated the Declaratory Order
specifically limited our ruling to the certificated capacity of the PNGTS system... [and] did not prejudge the impact of PNGTS’ rates and any rate issues, including the appropriate determinants to use to design PNGTS’ rates---- Similarly, the [Declaratory Order ] did not address or change the at-risk condition imposed on PNGTS by the Commission’s certificate orders. The at-risk condition relates to the design of PNGTS’ rates and is more appropriately addressed in PNGTS’ next rate case.
Id. ¶ 20. The Shippers’ Group petitions for review of the Declaratory Order and the Rehearing Order.
II.
Ordinarily when a pipeline seeks to reduce its certificated level of capacity it must seek prior approval of the abandonment of capacity pursuant to the Natural Gas Act. 15 U.S.C. § 717f(b);
see
18 C.F.R. § 157.5;
see also Tenn. Gas Pipeline Co. v. FERC,
As a threshold matter, however, FERC maintains that the Shippers’ Group lacks standing because it cannot show concrete and particularized harm as a result of the Declaratory Order and the Rehearing Order. Because those orders were limited to establishing PNGTS’s certificated capacity, and did not prejudge the impact of FERC’s decision on any rate issues, including the appropriate billing determinants and the at-risk condition previously imposed on PNGTS, FERC concludes that the Shippers’ Group is not aggrieved and the court lacks jurisdiction over its claims.
Section 19(b) of the Natural Gas Act allows only “aggrieved” persons to seek judicial review of a FERC order. 15 U.S.C. § 717r(b);
see Interstate Natural Gas Ass’n of Am. v. FERC,
Each member of the Shippers’ Group has a long-term firm transportation agreement with PNGTS that obligates the shipper to pay PNGTS’s firm transportation rates. Before FERC the Shipper’s Group argued that its members would be “directly affected by any ruling which could impact PNGTS’ cost responsibilities imposed by the orders issued during its system certification.” Motion to Intervene and Protest of the PNGTS Shippers’ Group (“Shippers’ Protest”) at 4. It notes that PNGTS’s rates are calculated under an at-risk condition by apportioning system costs according to billing determinants, factors based on the total system costs and the total capacity of the pipeline. Id. at 10-11; see also Declaratory Order ¶¶ 5, 26; Rehearing Order ¶¶ 11, 16.' The shippers’ concern is that by setting PNGTS’s certificated capacity at a level at least 20% below that recognized in the 1997 preliminary certificate order, without a corresponding reduction in system costs or facilities, the shippers’ costs may increase if the billing determinants are based on the certificated capacity. Reducing capacity under an at-risk condition reduces PNGTS’s incentive to pay for system costs by seeking contracts for interruptible service rather than by shifting costs to shippers with long-term firm service contracts; it also will relieve PNGTS of the burden of having to obtain extra compression facilities. The Shippers’ Group therefore maintains that “FERC has set the stage for capacity-based billing determinants that could increase rates by over 22%, an increase that is not merely speculative but readily quantifiable.” Pet’r’s Br. 29. In its view, the challenged orders “undermine any likelihood that PNGTS’ original at-risk condition will govern its rates and provide the same shipper protections in the future, and accordingly inhibit negotiation of long-term contract and rate issues, forcing further administrative litigation.” Id.
The potential for “future economic injury,” even assuming it is “readily quantifiable” into a possible rate increase in the future, id., is not enough to show the requisite injury for Article III standing. The Shippers’ Group does not contend that this rate increase is inevitable once FERC established PNGTS’s certificated capacity below the capacity stated in the 1997 final certificate order. FERC has not yet determined PNGTS’s rates at its certificated capacity level and FERC has stated that it will determine the rates in PNGTS’s section 4 rate proceeding. See Declaratory Order ¶ 30; Rehearing Order ¶ 20. Neither did FERC “address or change the at-risk condition.” Rehearing Order ¶ 20.
In
Alabama Municipal Distributors Group v. FERC,
In the challenged orders FERC stated it was deferring any decisions on PNGTS’s
An abandonment proceeding is a forum in which FERC should consider the potential economic impact of a capacity reduction,
see Transcon. Gas Pipe Line Corp. v. FPC,
Reliance on
ANR Pipeline Co. v. FERC,
Accordingly, because the Shippers’ Group fails to demonstrate that shippers are aggrieved by the challenged orders,
Notes
. In footnote 30 of the Declaratory Order, FERC stated that its finding PNGTS will be incapable of transporting volumes in excess of 168,000 Mcf on a firm year-round basis from Pittsburg to Dracut after the in-service date of Maritimes' Phase IV Expansion “does not ... affect PNGTS’s capacity rights of 210,000 Mcpd in the joint facilities between West-brook and Dracut as defined by the Definitive Agreements between PNGTS and Maritimes.” Id. ¶ 28 n. 30.
