Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROBERTS.
I.
The Natural Gas Act (NGA), 15 U.S.C. §§ 717-717w, grants FERC jurisdiction over rates charged by any “natural-gas company for or in connection with the transportation or sale of natural gas.”
Id.
§ 717c(a). A “natural-gas company,” in
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turn, includes any firm “engaged in the transportation of natural gas in interstate commerce.”
Id.
§ 717a(6). The “gathering” of gas — “generally defined as the process of taking natural gas from the wells and moving it to a collection point for further movement through a pipeline’s principal transmission system,”
Williams Gas Processing - Gulf Coast Co., L.P. v. FERC,
In response to this regulatory environment, several jurisdictional pipelines that provided gathering services sought either to “spin off’ their gathering facilities as unrelated corporations or to “spin down” the gathering operations to corporate affiliates by transferring ownership of the gathering facilities from the pipeline to a subsidiary. While a gathering service spun
off
from a jurisdictional pipeline into a separate corporation was clearly beyond FERC’s NGA jurisdiction, the jurisdictional status of gatherers spun
down
from an interstate pipeline was less clear. FERC had claimed that it retained “in connection with” jurisdiction over the rates charged by spun-down gatherers.
See Natural Gas Gathering Services Performed by Interstate Pipelines and Interstate Pipeline Affiliate
s —
Issues Related to Rates and Terms and Conditions of Service,
The Commission sought to resolve the jurisdictional status of spun-down gathering entities in
Arkla Gathering Services Company,
The Commission went on to explain, however, that only certain “types of affiliate abuses” — those “arising specifically from the interrelationship between the pipeline and its affiliate” ■— would “trigger the Commission’s authority to disregard the corporate form” and permit it to assert jurisdiction over a spun-down gathering affiliate. Id. Such abuses included “the affiliate’s giving preferences to market affiliate gas or tying gathering service to the pipeline’s jurisdictional transmission service; the pipeline’s giving transportation discounts only to those utilizing the affiliate’s gathering service; and actions resulting in cross-subsidization between the affiliate’s gathering rates and the pipeline’s transmission rates.” Id. While the Commission acknowledged that “an affiliate could undertake other types of anti-competitive activities,” the Commission viewed its residual jurisdiction as reaching only scenarios “where the abuse is directly related to the affiliate’s unique relationship with an interstate pipeline.” Id. Only that brand of anti-competitive behavior breached “the arm’s length relationship between the pipeline and an affiliated gathering company” and thereby authorized the Commission to treat a jurisdictional pipeline and its gathering affiliate “together as a single ‘natural gas company’ ” subject to FERC jurisdiction. Id.
We affirmed FERC’s approval of the spin-down of the Arkla gathering facilities.
See Conoco,
II.
Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corporation (Transco) is a FERC-regulated natural gas transportation company that operates approximately 10,500 miles of natural gas pipeline extending from the Gulf of Mexico to New York. In November 2000, Transco sought permission from FERC to spin down its gathering facilities in the Gulf of Mexico located offshore of North Padre Island, Texas to its gathering affiliate Williams Gas Processing - Gulf Coast Company, L.P. (WGP). 1 The North Padre Island (NPI) gathering facilities consist of two small offshore legs — 3.83 miles of 10-inch pipeline and 18.79 miles of 20-inch pipeline — both of which gather and move gas before converging offshore and con *1339 necting to Transco’s separate 24-inch pipeline that provides IT-feeder service 2 to an onshore processing facility and eventually to Transco’s main pipeline in Texas.
FERC approved the spin-down of the NPI gathering facilities to WGP over the objections of numerous producers and shippers, including Shell Offshore Inc., an intervenor in this proceeding.
See Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp.,
Intervenor Shell Offshore Inc. (Shell) produced gas offshore of North Padre Island, Texas and delivered its gas into the NPI 20-inch gathering pipeline at an interconnection 3.08 miles from that pipe’s interconnection to Transco’s 24-inch IT-feeder line. Prior to the spin-down of the NPI facilities, Transco charged Shell $0.08 per dekatherm to gather and transport Shell’s gas 230 miles from Shell’s NPI interconnection to Transeo’s main line. After the spin-down, WFS informed Shell that it intended to charge Shell $0.12 per deka-therm to gather and move Shell’s gas just the 3.08 miles from Shell’s NPI interconnection to Transco’s 24-inch IT-feeder line. For its part, Transco proposed to maintain its transportation rate of $0.08 per deka-therm for the remaining 227 miles of IT-feeder service. Shell was thus being asked to pay $0.20 per dekatherm to move its gas to Transco’s main line, whereas before the spin-down it had paid $0.08 per dekatherm for the same 230-mile haul.
Unable to reach an agreement with WFS on an appropriate gathering charge, on November 30, 2001, Shell filed a complaint with the Commission against Tran-sco, WGP, and WFS, and shortly thereafter shut in its gas. See Shell Offshore Inc. v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp., Docket No. RP02-99-000, Complaint Requesting Fast Track Processing and Request for Interim Relief (Nov. 30, 2001). The complaint alleged that Transco and WFS were unlawfully leveraging their dominance in the North Padre Island gathering and transportation markets in an effort to force Shell to pay unjust and unreasonable gathering rates and to accept anticompetitive terms and conditions of gathering service, such as promising to dedicate its North Padre gas reserves to WFS gathering for the life of production. Id. at 3. The complaint urged the Commission to find that Transco and WFS were acting in concert and in an anti-competitive manner that frustrated the Commission’s ability to regulate Transco’s jurisdictional pipeline, and further request *1340 ed that FERC reassert jurisdiction over the NPI gathering facilities pursuant to its Arkla Gathering theory of residual jurisdiction. Id. at 13-21.
Shortly thereafter, Superior Natural Gas (Superior), a marketer, and Walter Oil & Gas (Walter), a producer, filed their own complaint against WGP and WFS, alleging violations of OCLSA. See Superior Natural Gas Corp. v. Williams Gas Processing - Gulf Coast Co., L.P., Docket No. RP02-144-000, Complaint of Superior Natural Gas Corporation and Walter Oil & Gas Corporation (Jan. 15, 2002). Specifically, Superior and Walter alleged that WFS was “imposing anticompetitive and discriminatory rates and terms and conditions for gathering service,” id. at 2, in violation of OCSLA’s requirement of “open and nondiscriminatory access.” 43 U.S.C. § 1334(f)(1)(A).
WFS attempted to reach a settlement with Shell, offering to provide gathering service for $0.08 per dekatherm. Shell countered with an offer of $0,019 per deka-therm, which WFS rejected. With the parties at loggerheads, the dispute was thrown to the Commission for resolution. The Commission set both the Shell and the Superior/Walter complaints for expedited hearing before an administrative law judge.
See Shell Offshore Inc. v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp.,
The hearing before the ALJ commenced in April 2002. Within three days, WFS had reached a settlement with Superior and Walter disposing of their OCSLA complaint.
See Shell Offshore Inc. v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp.,
The Commission affirmed the ALJ’s factual findings, concluding that the ALJ’s analysis was “generally well-reasoned and provide[d] a sound basis for reasserting NGA jurisdiction over the ... spundown NPI gathering facilities.”
See Shell Offshore Inc. v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp.,
Even though WFS had settled the Superior/Walter complaint and the ALJ neither accepted evidence nor reached any conclusion as to whether WFS’s actions violated OCSLA, the Commission nevertheless addressed Superior’s and Walter’s OCSLA claim. The Commission’s analysis was curt, concluding that “[i]n light of our findings that Transco and WFS, in concert, have abused their monopoly power,” Tran-sco had violated the open access and nondiscrimination requirements of OCLSA. See id. at 61,914-15. The Commission thus “also assert[ed] OCSLA jurisdiction over the rates and services provided by Transco/WFS.” Id. at 61,915.
On rehearing, Transco and WFS argued,
inter alia,
that the Commission lacked any authority under the NGA to assert jurisdiction over an affiliated gatherer, misapplied its
Arkla Gathering
test, erred in finding a violation of OCSLA, and erred in setting a cost-based rate as a remedy.
See Shell Offshore Inc. v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp.,
WGP now seeks review in this court, raising substantially the same arguments as in its petition for rehearing before the Commission. We vacate the Commission’s Order and Order on Rehearing and remand for further proceedings.
III.
We review orders of the Commission under the standards of the Administrative Procedure Act, upsetting agency action only when it is “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). Under this standard, while we will defer to an agency’s reasonable application of its own precedents,
see, e.g., Vernal Enters., Inc. v. FCC,
In this case, the Commission posited two statutory bases for reasserting jurisdiction over the NPI gathering facilities and set *1342 ting a cost-based gathering rate — the NGA and OCSLA. We address each in turn.
A. NGA Jurisdiction
As discussed above, the NGA expressly disclaims jurisdiction over gas gathering.
See
15 U.S.C. § 717(b). Where, however, the gathering entity is a corporate affiliate of a jurisdictional pipeline, the Commission, in its
Arkla Gathering
order, reserved the right to reassert jurisdiction over the gathering affiliate “in particular’ circumstances” pursuant to its “in connection with” jurisdiction under Sections 4 and 5 of the Act,
id.
§§ 717c, 717d.
But the Arkla Gathering decision did not end there. The Commission went on to elaborate that its ability to reassert jurisdiction was “limited to” abuses “directly related to the affiliate’s unique relationship with an interstate pipeline,” such as “tying gathering service to the pipeline’s jurisdictional transmission service” or “cross-subsidization between the affiliate’s gathering rates and the pipeline’s transmission rates.” Id. Only those types of activities — where the affiliate is leveraging its relationship with the pipeline to enhance its market power — would “trigger the Commission’s authority to disregard the corporate form” and treat the pipeline and its affiliate as a single entity. Id.
The allegedly anti-competitive actions undertaken by WFS against Shell fall outside this category. Shell lays two main charges: that WFS (1) charged an exorbitant gathering rate; and (2) attached anti-competitive conditions to its gathering service, including that Shell commit all its remaining reserves to be gathered by WFS. WFS could do these things for one reason only — because it was a recently deregulated monopolist in the North Padre gathering market. The fact that WFS is an affiliate of Transco is utterly irrelevant to its ability to charge high rates, or to impose onerous conditions for gathering service. This irrelevance is demonstrated by the fact that WFS, as a deregulated monopolist, could have (and likely would have) undertaken the same course of conduct had Transco been owned by someone else entirely. The fact that WFS had an affiliate relationship with Transco neither enhanced nor detracted from its ability to charge high rates or impose onerous conditions.
In this respect, WFS’s conduct is quite different from the tying or cross-subsidization examples in
Arkla Gathering.
A tying arrangement — conditioning the sale of a good or service on the purchase of another different (or tied) good or service,
see Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image Technical Servs.,
WFS, though — unlike a participant in a tying or cross-subsidization scheme — is able to engage in its allegedly anticompeti-tive conduct even in the absence of its affiliate relationship with Transco. Thus because WFS’s actions do not “aris[e] specifically from the interrelationship between [Transco] and [WFS],” they are not among the types of “affiliate abuses which would trigger the Commission’s authority to disregard the corporate form” and to reassert jurisdiction.
Arkla Gathering Servs.,
Moreover, the Commission misapplied its two-part Arkla Gathering test. The point of the Arkla Gathering test is to identify the limited scenarios when the Commission “may look through, or disregard, the separate corporate structures and treat the pipeline and gatherer as a single entity.” Id. Only when the Commission finds both concerted action between a jurisdictional pipeline and its gathering affiliate and that the concerted action frustrates the Commission’s effective regulation of the pipeline, may it then pierce the corporate veil and treat the legally distinct entities as one. Id.
Here, however, the Commission found the requisite frustration of regulation by piercing WFS’s corporate veil one step earlier in the
Arkla Gathering
analysis. After finding concerted action between WFS and Transco, but before addressing the second part of the
Arkla Gathering
test, the Commission jumped to the conclusion, reasoning that “[b]ecause their actions have been found to have been conducted on a concerted basis, the actions of WFS can be attributed to Transco, and
vice versa,
as if the facilities were still part of the Transco system.”
Order,
This line of reasoning founders as it adopts as its first premise (WFS is Tran-sco) the Arkla Gathering test’s ultimate conclusion — that the corporate form may be set aside. This is a plainly unreasonable application of the Commission’s Arkla decision. Therefore we must set aside the Commission’s orders reasserting NGA jurisdiction over the NPI gathering facilities as arbitrary and capricious. Because our conclusion is based on deficiencies in the Commission’s orders, we need not today confront WGP’s broader statutory argument that NGA does not ever permit the Commission to assert jurisdiction over gas gatherers, including those affiliated, with jurisdictional pipelines. We express no opinion on that question, leaving it for another day.
B. OCSLA Jurisdiction
The Commission also concluded that it had jurisdiction under OCSLA to regulate the NPI gathering facilities and that WFS’s violations of that statute’s open access and nondiscrimination requirements,
see
43 U.S.C. § 1334(f)(1)(A), provided an alternative justification for the
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remedies set out in the Order.
See Order,
WFS, relying on our recent decision in
The Williams Companies v. FERC,
In
The Williams Companies,
we held that FERC regulations requiring OCS operators to file certain information concerning their pricing and service structures exceeded the authority granted to the Commission under Section 5(f) of OCS-LA, 43 U.S.C. § 1334(f).
The Williams Companies
would seem to doom both the Commission’s assertion of broad authority to enforce open access and nondiscrimination principles on the OCS and its OCSLA-based reclamation of jurisdiction over the rates charged by WFS.
See Order,
First, FERC argues that our decision in
The Williams Companies
was limited to rulemakings and does not extend to “adjudicatory matters between parties.” FERC Br. 55. While it is true that
The Williams Companies
resolved a challenge to FERC regulations, its rationale was not limited to that context. Indeed, we concluded that the text of Section 5(f)(1) of OCSLA
unambiguously
constrained FERC’s authority to its role as “licensor” and did not grant the Commission “a general power to enforce OCSLA’s open access provisions.”
The Commission alternatively argues that it was enforcing the open access and nondiscrimination conditions in an
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OCSLA license —
Transco’s
tariff. WFS, the Commission contends, became subject to Transco’s conditions when it acted in concert with Transeo to frustrate the Commission’s regulation of the pipeline..
See
FERC Br. 56-57. Even if Transco’s NGA tariff sufficed as a “permit, license, ... or other grant of authority” under Section 5(f)(1) of OCSLA, and even if we had not already rejected the Commission’s application of its
Arkla Gathering
test to extend NGA jurisdiction to WFS, we could not sustain the Commission’s assertion of OCSLA jurisdiction on this basis, for it is nowhere present in either the
Order
or the
Order on Rehearing.
It is axiomatic that we may uphold agency orders based only on reasoning that is fairly stated by the agency in the order under review,
see SEC v. Chenery Corp.,
The petition for review is granted. The Order and the Order on Rehearing are vacated and the case is remanded to the Commission for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Both Transco and WGP are wholly owned by The Williams Companies, Inc., a publicly-traded corporation.
. This IT-feeder service is an interruptible gas transportation service that has higher priority than Transco’s other interruptible service.
See Exxon Mobil Corp. v. FERC,
