Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
Williston Basin Interstate Pipeline Company challenges orders of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that modified its contract with a shipper, the Northern States Power Company (“NSP”), so that NSP would be able to resell transportation capacity for which it had no use. While we find that the Commission was correct to decide the case under the “just and reasonable” standard of § 5(a) of the Natural Gas Act (“NGA”), 15 U.S.C. § 717d(a), we grant Williston’s petition; flaws in the Commission’s reasoning render its orders arbitrary and capricious.
Williston stores and transports natural gas throughout Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. NSP, a natural gas distributor, is one of Williston’s customers and operates in North Dakota and Minnesota. Williston and NSP entered into two contracts under which NSP would receive transportation services from Williston along a pipeline called the Maple-ton Extension, which Williston had built under arrangement with NSP to carry gas to an NSP distribution system in eastern North Dakota. One contract, the “Rate Schedule X-13 contract,” was filed as an individually certificated transportation service under Part 157 of the Commission’s regulations, 18 C.F.R. Pt. 157. The second contract was for open access service under Williston’s Rate Schedule FT-1 under Part 284, 18 C.F.R. Pt. 284. Under Part 284, firm shippers that do not use all of their capacity can “release” the unused portion and enjoy the revenue paid by the replacement shipper, either directly or as a credit to the pipeline’s charges. See id. § 284.8(a)-(g).
At about the time that Williston and NSP finalized the Rate Schedule X-13 contract, the Commission initiated a rulemaking that would eventually yield Order No. 636. See
Pipeline Service Obligations and Revisions to Regulations Governing Self-Implementing Transportation; and Regulation of Natural Gas Pipelines After
*499
Partial Wellhead Decontrol,
57 Fed.Reg. 13267 (Apr. 16,1992). The order, so far as is relevant here, encouraged pipelines and their customers to convert transportation service under Part 157 to open access service under Part 284. While the order offered pipelines inducements to convert, it imposed no mandate to do so. See
United Distribution Cos. v. FERC,
In the course of a rate proceeding filed by Williston under NGA § 4, 15 U.S.C. § 717c, the Commission found that Part 157 service under Rate Schedule X-13, without capacity release rights, was no longer just and reasonable, and accordingly granted NSP’s request that the service be converted to Part 284.
Williston Basin Interstate Pipeline Co.,
We review the Commission’s orders under the arbitrary and capricious standard. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A); see also
Midwest ISO Transmission Owners v. FERC,
The “public interest” standard.
Under the
Mobile-Sierra
doctrine, “where parties have negotiated a natural gas shipment contract that ... denies either party the right to change [] prices or charges unilaterally, [the Commission] may abrogate or modify the contract only if the public interest so requires.”
Texaco Inc. v. FERC,
The label
“Memphis
clause” derives from the Supreme Court’s decision in
United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division,
Here the contract, after providing that Williston could apply to the Commission to make changes under § 4 of the NGA, made a parallel provision for NSP, saying that the agreement should not be construed as “in any way” affecting NSP’s rights “to intervene, protest or otherwise participate in such proceedings or to seek to initiate proceedings under Section 5 of the Natural Gas Act, other provisions thereof, or the FERC’s rules and regulations thereunder, or any other applicable statute(s).” Williston Basin Interstate Pipeline Company FERC Gas Tariff, Rate Schedule X-13, art. IX, Ex. NSP-3 at 16, Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 253.
Williston argues that while the provision here empowers NSP to initiate proceedings under § 5 of the Natural Gas Act, it fails to specify a controlling standard (and thus leaves Mobile-Sierra’s “public interest” standard in place). But
Mobile-Sierra
always leaves parties free to seek change under its stringent standard. Thus, as we said in the case of a contract similar to the one at issue here, which permitted filings with the Commission but failed to specify a standard, “specific acknowledgment of the possibility of future rate change is virtually meaningless unless it envisions a just-and-reasonable standard.”
Papago Tribal Utility Auth. v. FERC,
Williston next contends that the Commission was required to apply the “public interest” test because the Commission “did not merely adjust the rate or a term of the service, it invalidated the contract and ordered [Williston] to enter into a new and entirely different kind of contract and service with NSP.” Petitioner’s Br. 18. In support, Williston relies on our decision in
Exxon Mobil Corp. v. FERC,
Application of the just and reasonable standard.
Under § 5’s “just and
*501
reasonable” standard the Commission bears the burden of demonstrating that the current rate is unjust and unreasonable and that the replacement rate is just and reasonable. See
Municipal Def. Group v. FERC,
Second, the Commission seems confused about the relationship between its authority and its obligation to explain its policy. It declared in the Rehearing Order that “it is illogical [for Williston to argue] that the Commission has the authority to order the conversion, but that it must justify its exercise of that authority as a ‘new policy.’ ”
Id.
at 61,276 ¶26; see also Respondent’s. Br. at 28-29. Regardless of whether the Commission’s policy is new (a matter we take up below), a party is perfectly consistent in its reasoning when it recognizes the Commission’s authority, yet demands that the Commission articulate the policy well enough so that parties (and courts) can understand how it arrived at its result. That proposition is almost universally true, but is especially true here, where (1) the Commission’s leading statement of relevant policy, Order No. 636, deliberately refrained from imposing the mandate that it has imposed here, and (2) it is undisputed that this is the first instance in which the Commission has imposed such a mandate. See Rehearing Order,
In its request for rehearing, Williston challenged the Commission to state what it regarded as the “appropriate conditions” for moving from simply “favoring” shippers’ entitlement to capacity release rights to mandating such rights. The Commission picked up the gauntlet:
Quite simply, [the appropriate] conditions were: [1] the history of Williston’s aggressive interpretation of Rate Schedule X-13, reflected in its mispricing of the rates thereunder, [2] the unique fact of its affiliation with its largest customer and the protection from transmission competition [that] the vestigial X-13 arrangement offered these entities, [3] the impairment of market health resulting from this diminution of competition, and [4] the rejection by the transporter of alternatives offered at hearing for transitioning to open-access service from X-13, which was the culmination of many years of rebuffing the shipper’s request to negotiate such a transition. [5] Since these elements in the aggregate evidenced obstruction of the Commission’s policy favoring open-access use of capacity by those who pay for it, the appropriate conditions were presented for the Commission to act in furtherance of that pro-competitive goal. Accordingly, rehearing on the issue of conversion of the X-13 service is denied.
Id. at 61,280 ¶ 45.
Points 1, 4 and 5
appear
irrelevant. Point 1 seems to suggest that Williston’s choice to litigate an adverse Commission rate ruling somehow disentitles it to have its position here examined on the merits.
*502
(We note that Williston picked up a dissent in the litigation,
Williston Basin Interstate Pipeline Co. v. FERC,
This leaves Point 2, the fact that Williston’s largest customer is its affiliate, and Point 3, the enhancement to competition that would flow from shippers’ enjoying capacity release. We take the affiliation to be relevant because, even in a world of general open access, the affiliate would not compete with Williston in the resale of unused pipeline capacity. At the margin, that presumably enhances the argument for shifting NSP to open access, as it means that the competitive capacity resale market is smaller than one would otherwise expect. But while we clearly see that a capacity resale market with an abundance of independent resellers would be more competitive than one dominated by the pipeline, this was surely just as true when the Commission adopted its general policy of not forcing conversion. Similarly, while the Commission consistently viewed enhanced competition as a generic reason for a preference for capacity release (since the policy’s adoption), it has never hitherto found a case that justified ordering a pipeline to convert at the request of a shipper. Because the general policy preference has been a constant, the Commission’s failure to identify the special characteristics applicable to Williston, or to explicitly revise its policy, leaves a serious gap in its reasoning.
The Commission decisions offered by Williston fall somewhat short of showing a clear change in policy. We find it hard to discern much of a policy at all. Williston calls our attention to passages in
Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp.,
Williston cites
Marathon Oil Co. v. Trailblazer Pipeline Co.,
*503 Absent a compelling reason, the Commission does not believe it should second-guess the business and economic decisions between knowledgeable business entities when they enter into negotiated rate contracts. Pipelines rely on their contracts and the integrity of the Commission’s process in deciding whether to construct new facilities. As such, the Commission is reluctant to upset the expectations of pipelines when they make investment decisions in reliance on the commitments by their customers and the Commission’s approval.
Id.
at 62,064 ¶ 64. In the Rehearing Order, the Commission responded to the citation by saying that here the facts presented a “compelling reason,”
In short, however one characterizes pri- or policy, we do not think the Commission has yet articulated a “rational connection between the facts found and the choice made,” as required by
State Farm,
Williston also argued that the order would be quite costly for Williston and its customers. As to the customers, the Commission said that until Williston filed a new rate case there would be no effect on customers, see Order,
As to the immediate impact on Williston, the Commission said that conversion to open-access service would yield a gain of approximately $402,000 to $695,000 per year for NSP and a loss of only about $50,000 for Williston (which it viewed as trivial). See Rehearing Order,
Williston offered an explanation — in effect that the Commission was comparing apples to oranges: a comparison of NSP’s gains from resale rights throughout Williston’s pipeline system with Williston’s losses from NSP’s flexibility on the Mapleton Extension only. In fact, as the administrative law judge noted, a witness for Williston testified that the $50,000 estimate depends only on the Mapleton Extension. See
Williston Basin Interstate Pipeline Co.,
The Commission has responded to this confusion (both on rehearing and at oral argument) by reverting to its mantra that the entitlement was in any event NSP’s: “[E]ven in the unlikely event Williston’s estimates prove true, it is the shipper and its customer who should receive the revenues, since they are paying for the capacity.” Rehearing Order,
To the extent that a mandated change would adversely affect shippers, another Williston argument may be relevant. Williston points to documents that it says indicate that it and NSP shared the understanding that Williston’s existing shippers would not bear the costs of building the extension, Ex. WBIP-1 at 4, J.A. 299; Ex. WBIP-10, J.A. 301, and Ex. WBIP-11, J.A. 309, and indeed that Williston would benefit from any capacity that NSP was *504 not fully using, as of course Part 157 allowed. In the present confusion on the cost shift data, we take no position on these claims.
Finally, the Commission in one passage seems to invoke the notion that “other cost reductions” may offset the “reallocation of the Rate Schedule X-13 costs.” Rehearing Order,
The last issue is Williston’s argument that the Commission erroneously decided to continue NSP’s right to exercise a right to biennial rate adjustments established by the Rate Schedule X-13 contract; Williston says this denial gave NSP an undue preference, as its other Part 284 customers (to whom the Commission’s orders would assimilate NSP) have no such right. The Commission, rejecting Williston’s claim, explained that “[its] intent was to preserve as much of the parties’ original agreement as possible, while according NSP the ability to release capacity and other features of Part 284 service that are accorded FT shippers.” Id. at 61,280 ¶43. The Commission also said that “it is reasonable ... to maintain the biennial restatement process, because the X-13 rate always was intended to converge with the FT-1 rate.” Id. at 61,278 ¶ 35.
Of course, the Commission, if it had wished, could have preserved the entire agreement between Williston and NSP, so its sudden effort to wrap itself in the sacred character of contracts sounds a bit lame. In reality the Commission seems to be saying that it wants to preserve as much of the parties’ original agreement as possible,
subject to its greater desire to shift the capacity release revenues to NSP.
It may be that the Commission’s decision can rest exclusively on the “convergence” argument alluded to just above, but the Commission never developed the point, and in any event, when an agency relies on two theories, one of them unsound, we usually remand unless we are quite sure that the agency regards the remaining reason as sufficient. See
National Fuel Gas Supply Corp. v. FERC,
Because there seems to be a significant possibility that the Commission may find an adequate explanation for its actions, and, in any event, it appears that the consequences of its current ruling can be unraveled if it fails to, see
Allied-Signal v. United States Nuclear Regulatory Comm’n.,
So ordered.
