Opinion for the Court filed PER CURIAM.
The Midwest Independent System Operator, known as MISO, is a nonprofit corporation that controls the transmission of electricity over a grid spanning 15 Mid-western states. Its original tariff was approved by-the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and went into effect in 2002. Under that tariffs terms, MISO approved transmission requests, scheduled service, monitored the grid to manage congestion, and provided various ancillary services to support the regional electricity market.
On March 24, 2004, MISO filed a revised tariff with FERC. Under the new tariff, MISO administers two competitive wholesale power markets: a “day-ahead” market that allows transmission to be scheduled in advance, and a real-time or “spot” market. Among other improvements over MISO’s original operations, these markets incorporate more sophisticated pricing and congestion-management mechanisms that *246 increase the efficiency and reliability of the transmission grid. In a series of orders issued between May 2004 and September 2005, the Commission accepted the proposed tariff with modifications, and MISO’s new market began operating on April 1, 2005. Three groups of petitioners now seek review of various aspects of the Commission’s orders: the Transmission Dependent Utilities, who rely on MISO’s transmission system and markets to buy and sell electric power to retail customers; the Transmission Owners, who are electricity sellers in MISO’s markets subject to the new tariffs rules and liabilities; and the Cooperatives, who are electricity buyers under contracts predating the establishment of MISO. For the reasons that follow, we deny the petitions of the Transmission Dependents and the Transmission Owners, and we dismiss those of the Cooperatives for lack of standing.
I
Section 201(b) of the Federal Power Act (FPA) grants the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission exclusive jurisdiction over the transmission and wholesale salé of electricity in interstate commerce. See 16 U.S.C. § 824(b). Section 205 of the FPA provides that “[a]ll rates and charges made, demanded, or received by any public utility for or in connection with the transmission or sale of electric energy subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission ... shall be just and reasonable, and any such rate or charge that is not just and reasonable is hereby declared to be unlawful.” Id. § 824d(a). Section 205 also prohibits undue discrimination in rates, charges, or terms of service. See id. § 824d(b). To enforce these requirements, Section 205 requires that utilities file tariffs reflecting their rates and service terms with the Commission, which must in turn ensure that those rates and terms are just and reasonable and not unduly discriminatory. Id. § 824d(c).
A
In the mid-1990s, FERC determined that longstanding structural barriers to competition in the wholesale power market constituted undue discrimination. Since then, it has been the Commission’s policy to eliminate those barriers and promote competition. This policy required a significant shift in the Commission’s regulatory approach, which has in turn produced dramatic changes in the electricity • industry. Because the tariff at issue in these petitions is part of that transformation, we begin with some background on the development of FERC’s policy. Rather than reinventing the wheel, we borrow the following account from our opinion in Midwest ISO Transmission Owners v. FERC:
In the bad old days, utilities were vertically integrated monopolies; electricity generation, transmission, and distribution for a particular geographic area were generally provided by and under the control of a single regulated utility. Sales of those services were “bundled,” meaning consumers paid a single price for generation, transmission, and distribution. As the Supreme Court observed, with blithe understatement, “[c]ompetition among utilities was not prevalent.” New York v. FERC,535 U.S. 1 , 5,122 S.Ct. 1012 ,152 L.Ed.2d 47 (2002).
In its pathmarking Order No. 888, FERC required utilities that owned transmission facilities to guarantee all market participants non-discriminatory access to those facilities. See Promoting Wholesale Competition Through Open Access Non-Discriminatory Transmission Services by Public Utilities, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,036, 31,-635-36 (1996) (Order No. 888). That is, FERC required all transmission-owning utilities to provide transmission service for electricity generated by others on *247 the same basis that they provided transmission service for the electricity they themselves generated. To effectuate this introduction of competition, FERC required public utilities to “functionally unbundle” their wholesale generation and transmission services by stating separate rates for each service in a single tariff and offering transmission service under that tariff on an open-access, non-discriminatory basis. See New York,535 U.S. at 11 ,122 S.Ct. 1012 ; see generally California Indep. Sys. Operator Corp. v. FERC,372 F.3d 395 , 397 (D.C.Cir.2004).
As the next step toward the goal of a more competitive electricity marketplace, Order No. 888 encouraged — but did not require — the development of multi-utility regional transmission organizations (RTOs). The concern was that the segmentation of the transmission grid among different utilities, even if each had functionally unbundled transmission, contributed to inefficiencies that impeded free competition in the market for electric power. Combining the different segments and placing control of the grid in one entity — an RTO — was expected to overcome these inefficiencies and promote competition. Order No. 888 at 31,730-32; see also Public Util. Dist. No. 1 of Snohomish County v. FERC,272 F.3d 607 , 610-11 (D.C.Cir. 2001). Better still if the RTO were run by an independent system operator — an ISO. As envisioned by FERC, an ISO would assume operational control — but not ownership — of the transmission facilities owned by its member utilities, thereby “separating] operation of the transmission grid and access to it from economic interests in generation.” Order No. 888 at 31,654; see also id. at 31,730-32. The ISO would then provide open access to the regional transmission system to all electricity generators at rates established in “a single, unbundled, grid-wide tariff that applies to all eligible users in a non-discriminatory manner.” Id. at 31,731; see also California Indep. Sys. Operator Corp.,372 F.3d at 397 . FERC called this type of separation of generation and transmission “operational unbundling,” a step beyond “functional unbundling.” Order No. 888 at 31,654. Although several parties to the 1996 rulemaking had requested that FERC require “operational unbundling” or even divestiture of transmission assets, it was FERC’s considered judgment that “the less intrusive functional unbundling approach ... is all that we must require at this time.” Id. at 31,655.
By 1999, FERC had come to a less sanguine view of the curative powers of functional unbundling. In FERC’s view, inefficiencies in the transmission grid and lingering opportunities for transmission owners to discriminate in their own favor remained obstacles to robust competition in the wholesale electricity market. FERC concluded that these problems could be remedied through the establishment of RTOs, explaining that “better regional coordination in areas such as maintenance of transmission and generation systems and transmission planning and operation” was necessary to address regional reliability concerns and to foster regional competition. See Regional Transmission Organizations, Order No. 2000, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,089, 30,999 (1999) (Order No. 2000) (codified at 18 C.F.R. § 35.34) (citing Staff Report to FERC on the Causes of Wholesale Electric Pricing Abnormalities in the Midwest During June 1998, at 5-8 (Sept. 22, 1998)). FERC concluded that RTOs would: “(1) improve efficiencies in transmission grid management; (2) impose grid reliability; (3) remove remaining opportunities for discriminatory *248 transmission practices; (4) improve market performance; and (5) facilitate lighter handed regulation.” Order No. 2000 at 30,993; Public Util. Dist. No. 1,272 F.3d at 611 . To further encourage RTO development, FERC directed transmission-owning utilities either to participate in an RTO or to explain their refusal to do so. Public Util. Dist. No. 1,272 F.3d at 612 . Importantly, though, Order No. 2000 still did not require utilities to join RTOs; participation remained voluntary. See id. at 616.
For those utilities opting to join an RTO, Order No. 2000 retained a flexible approach, allowing the RTOs to employ a variety of ownership and operational structures, so long as the RTO established that it had certain required characteristics and functional capabilities. Id. at 611. FERC required, inter alia, that an RTO be regional in scope, 18 C.F.R. § 35.34(j)(2); “have operational authority for all transmission facilities under its control,” id. § 35.34(j)(3); “be the only provider of transmission service over the facilities under its control,” id. § 35.34(k)(l)(i); and “have the sole authority to receive, evaluate, and approve or deny all requests for transmission service,” id. Thus, whatever its structure, once a utility made the decision to surrender operational control of its transmission facilities to an RTO, any transmissions across those facilities were subject to the control of that RTO.
B
MISO developed in response to Order No. 888 and Order No. 2000. On January 15, 1998, pursuant to Order No. 888, a group of Midwestern transmission owners sought FERC’s approval of their agreement establishing an Independent System Operator.
See Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc.,
84 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,231, at 62,139 (1998) (“MISO Formation Order”). Under the MISO Agreement, “[t]he participating transmission owners ... transferred] to the Midwest ISO functional control over all network transmission facilities” above a specified voltage.
Id.
The transmission owners retained ownership and physical control over the facilities, but operated them according to MISO’s instructions. MISO, in turn, was “authorized to provide non-discriminatory open access transmission service,” “to receive and distribute transmission revenues” to the transmission owners, and “to be responsible for regional system security.”
Id.; see also E. Ky. Power Coop., Inc. v. FERC,
FERC conditionally approved the MISO Agreement and the OATT on September 16, 1998, but suspended the tariff pending a hearing to determine whether its terms were just and reasonable. See MISO Formation Order, 84 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,231, at 62,-181-82. While these proceedings were still ongoing, FERC issued Order No. 2000, which directed all FERC-approved ISOs to show that they had met the requirements for RTO status. See 18 C.F.R. § 35.34(h). When MISO made the re *249 quired filing, the Commission found that it had satisfied Order No. 2000’s requirements and granted it RTO status. See Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc., 97 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,326, at 62,500 (2001) (“RTO Formation Order”). The Commission also approved the OATT, and MISO began providing transmission service on February 1, 2002. See Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc., 97 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,033, at 61,177 (2001) (“Opinion No. 453”), order on reh’g, 98 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,141 (2002) (“Opinion No. 453-A”).
MISO’s development was complicated by the existence of several hundred pre-exist-ing bilateral contracts between its transmission owners and other utilities.
Midwest ISO Transmission Owners,
FERC accepted this proposed treatment of the GFAs when it initially approved the formation of the Midwest ISO, but had to revisit the issue in light of Order No. 2000. As the Commission explained, “Order No. 2000 and Section 35.34(k) of the Commission regulations require that an RTO be the only provider of transmission services over the facilities under its control.” Opinion No. 453, 97 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,033, at 61,170 (citing 18 C.F.R. § 35.34(k)). The proposed MISO Agreement and OATT did not satisfy this requirement because they allowed transmission owners to provide independent transmission service to fulfill their obligations under the GFAs. FERC therefore directed that, “to the extent that certain transmission-owning members of the Midwest ISO serve ... grandfathered load, those transmission-owning members will have to take transmission service under the Midwest ISO Tariff for their use of the Midwest ISO transmission system to serve ... grandfathered agreement customers.” Opinion No. 453-A, 98 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,141, at 61,413. MISO complied. Under the revised MISO Agreement, a transmission owner providing service under a GFA took service from MISO under the terms of the OATT and then re-sold the same service to the GFA customer (this is known as providing “back-to-back” transmission service).
Order No. 2000 demanded this formal integration of the GFAs into MISO, but in financial terms the transmission owners— with FERC’s approval — preserved the separate status of the GFAs. The final version of-the OATT provided that MISO transmission owners “will be exempt, during the [six-year] transition period, from rates under the Midwest ISO Tariff for services provided pursuant to the existing [GFA] agreements.” Id. Thus, although the transmission owners took service under the OATT when serving GFAs, they did not pay MISO for that service — finan- *250 dally, grandfathered load was effectively kept outside of the OATT. 2
C
Under MISO’s original OATT, MISO managed transmission congestion primarily through the Transmission Line Loading Relief procedure (TLR). The TLR procedure required MISO to monitor real-time power flows and to order the physical curtailment of any transactions that threatened to exceed the system’s transmission capacity.
See Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc.,
108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,279 PP 27-30 (2004) (“GFA Order”). This system of congestion management was highly inefficient. “[R]eliance on TLRs for congestion management inherently leaves transmission capacity under-utilized because the TLR approach relies on imprecise flow estimates” and because “each TLR curtailment ... may curtail too many or too few transactions.”
Id.
at 62,
FERC recognized these shortcomings in the OATT, and it granted MISO’s request for RTO status on the condition that MISO begin planning a transition to more “dynamic” operations, including more efficient market-based congestion management. RTO Formation Order, 97 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,326, at 62,512, 62,522. On March 31, 2004, MISO filed a revised Open Access Transmission and Energy Markets Tariff (Tariff) that is the subject of these petitions for review. The Tariff provides for a “security-eonstrained, centralized bid-based scheduling and dispatch system” similar to those currently operating in three other RTOs.
See Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc.,
108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163, at 61,916-17 PP 2-6 (2004) (“TEMT II Order”). In these systems, the ISO “administers two sets of bid-based energy markets. First is the ‘Day-Ahead Market,’ in which the [ISO] derives a market-clearing price from the sellers’ and buyers’ price and quantity indications for the next day; sales are then made at the market-clearing price. Second is the ‘Real-Time Market,’ designed to ensure system reliability by calculating hourly clearing prices and allowing sellers to offer supplies to meet additional demand and even to revise day-ahead bids.”
Edison Mission Energy, Inc. v. FERC,
As directed by FERC, the Tariff includes a market-based approach to congestion management. The Tariff establishes markets based on a mechanism known as locational marginal pricing (LMP), which incorporates the cost of congestion into the price of energy. Under the LMP system, MISO takes into account the limits on available transmission capacity when determining the price of energy at each node in its transmission grid. This results in higher energy prices at nodes that require the use of congested transmission lines and lower prices in less congested areas. See Prepared Direct Testimony of Dr. Ronald R. McNamara 33. LMP reduces the need for inefficient TLRs by giving market participants incentives to avoid congestion-causing transactions. See id. *251 It is also more economically efficient: scarce transmission capacity is allocated to those who value it most instead of being physically rationed by TLRs. See id. at 35.
In order to protect market participants from variations in congestion costs, the Tariff provides for a system of Financial Transmission Rights (FTRs), which are financial instruments that entitle their holders to be paid the congestion costs associated with transmitting a given quantity of electricity between two specified points.
See
TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163, at 61,935-
Two additional features of the Tariff are relevant to the petitions before us: market power mitigation measures and marginal loss refunds. First, MISO recognized that, during periods of transmission congestion and high demand, sellers might be able to exercise, market power and drive prices in MISO’s markets to unreasonable levels. The Tariff therefore provides for two types of market power mitigation: one for Narrow Constrained Areas (NCAs) and one for Broad Constrained Areas (BCAs). NCAs are determined annually and are defined as areas where transmission constraints are expected to be binding for at least 500 hours during a given year and where at least one seller is “pivotal.”
See id.
at 61,
The consequence of being within an NCA or BCA is that a generator’s bids are subject to mitigation if they exceed “conduct” and “impact” thresholds. These thresholds are defined in relation to the seller’s “reference level,” which is based on an estimate of its marginal cost. In BCAs, the “conduct” threshold is equal to either $100 per megawatt hour above the seller’s reference level or 300 percent above the reference level, whichever is less.
See id.
at 61,959 PP 307-12. If a seller’s bid fails the conduct test, then it is subject to the impact test. A bid fails the BCA impact test if it causes the market-clearing price to increase by either $100 per megawatt-hour or 200 percent above the price that would have resulted if the seller had bid its reference level.
See id.
If a seller’s bid fails both the conduct and impact tests, then it is “mitigated” — that is, it is reduced to the reference level. FERC approved MISO’s BCA mitigation measures, but imposed a “sunset” provision requiring that they terminate after one year unless MISO filed for an extension.
See id.
at 61,954-
Because of the greater risk of market power in NCAs, the conduct and impact thresholds are lower than in BCAs. In NCAs, both thresholds are the same: the seller’s reference price plus a “fixed cost adder” equal to the “net annual fixed cost divided by the constrained hours” expected that year. Id. at 61,959 PP 307-12. Net annual fixed cost is defined as “the fixed *252 cost of a new peaking generator minus revenue from applicable resource reserve adequacy payments.” Id. at 61,959 n. 209. The purpose of the fixed-cost adder is to preserve incentives for suppliers to enter the market (and to discourage existing suppliers from exiting) by ensuring that market revenues cover a generator’s fixed costs. See id. at 61,960 PP 316-17. FERC approved MISO’s NCA mitigation measures without imposing a sunset provision.
The second relevant feature of the Tariff is its marginal loss refund mechanism. In addition to accounting for congestion costs, the Tariffs LMP mechanism includes a component for transmission losses. When electricity is transmitted across power lines, some portion of the energy is lost as heat. The loss is a function of (among other things) the length of the transmission and the square of the amount of current being transmitted.
See Sithe/Independence Power Partners, L.P. v. FERC,
In order to provide transitional protection for market participants who faced higher costs as a result of the new marginal loss system, FERC required MISO to use this surplus to “refund the difference between the marginal loss charge and either an average loss or a historical loss charge to all existing transmission customers” for the first five years of the Tariff.
Id.
at 61,926 PP 73-74. MISO proposed, and FERC approved, a refund mechanism that distributes marginal loss surpluses through groups of market participants known as “Balancing Authority Areas.”
See Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc.,
109 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,285, at 62,
D
The Commission approved the Tariff in two parallel proceedings. In the first set of orders, FERC considered the justness and reasonableness of the terms of the Tariff, including the features described above. These orders accepted the Tariff with some modifications and subject to ongoing compliance filings. See TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163, order on reh’g, 109 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,157 (2004) (“TEMT II Reh’g Order”), order on reh’g, 111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,043 (2005) (“Compliance Order III”), reh’g denied, 112 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,086 (2005) (“Compliance Order V”). 3
*253
In the second set of orders, the Commission considered the relationship between MISO’s new markets and the GFAs, which — as during the formation of MISO — posed special difficulties. In the original MISO Agreement, the transmission owners agreed to. preserve the rates and terms of the GFA contracts for at least a six-year transition period. But under the Tariff, with its system of markets and centralized dispatch, the GFA parties could only “exercise the scheduling and energy management provisions of their GFAs in the same manner they did before” if MISO reserved or “carved out” transmission capacity from its day-ahead market to allow for the possibility that it would be used by the GFA transactions. GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,-
All three options proposed by MISO required the GFA parties to designate a GFA Responsible Entity (GFA-RE), which would be financially responsible for charges under the Tariff, and a GFA Scheduling Entity (GFA-SE), which would submit schedules for GFA transactions to MISO.
See id.
at 61,
The Commission responded to MISO’s proposal by instituting a three-step process to gather additional information about the GFAs and their impact on the new markets. Step one, the “paper hearing,” required utilities to provide information about their GFA contracts and sought additional information from MISO on the impact of a “carve out” of GFA load on the efficiency and reliability of the new markets.
See id.
at 61,785-
The Commission issued its order on the merits on September 16, 2004.
See
GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236,
order on reh’g,
111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,042 (2005) (“GFA Reh’g Order”),
order on reh’g,
112 F.E.R.C. ¶61,311 (2005). Based on the paper hearing and the ALJ findings, FERC determined that MISO’s initial estimate of the scope of the problem had been somewhat exaggerated. A total of 229 GFAs would be in existence when the Tariff went into effect, representing 23 percent of MISO’s total load rather than 40 percent.
See id.
at 62,
The Commission concluded that carving out the relatively small number of remaining GFAs would not threaten the reliability of MISO’s grid or seriously compromise the efficiency of its markets.
See id.
at 62,288-91 PP 89-102. FERC also explained that, if the GFAs were not carved out, the result would “impose changes to the manner in which transmission service is provided for transactions under the GFAs” and could alter the original bargain between the GFA parties by shifting costs between them.
Id.
at 62,296-
In order to balance these competing considerations, the Commission determined that the treatment of non-settling GFAs should depend on the standard of review in each GFA contract. FPA section 205 allows utilities to file changes to their rates at any time and requires FERC to approve them as long as the new rates are “just and reasonable.” 16 U.S.C. § 824d(d), (e). “Under the Supreme Court’s
Mobile-Sierra
doctrine,” however, “parties may negotiate a fixed-rate contract with a provision relinquishing their right to file for a unilateral change in rates.”
Atl. City Elec. Co. v. FERC,
FERC concluded that all non-settling GFA contracts that were subject to unilateral modification under the “just and reasonable” standard should be required to “choose between the scheduling and settlement provisions of Option A or Option C.” GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,-
By contrast, the Commission directed MISO to “carve [the Mobile-Sierra] GFAs out of the Energy Markets for the remainder of the six-year transition period.”
Id.
at 62,
The Commission also addressed the designation of GFA-REs and GFA-SEs. Unless the parties agreed otherwise, the Commission determined that the transmission owner responsible for providing service under the GFA should be both the GFA-RE and the GFA-SE. See id. at 62,300-01 PP 161, 165.
Finally, the Commission addressed the assessment of MISO charges on GFA agreements. It concluded that the administrative costs associated with the new markets — known as Schedule 17 charges— should be assessed on all load using the MISO grid, including carved-out GFAs.
See id.
at 62,321-22 PP 297-98. Applying the “cost-causation” principle, the Commission found that the new markets would “produce more reliable service and more efficient Energy Markets that will benefit all [parties] transacting over the Midwest ISO grid,” and concluded that “GFAs should pay for the benefits they receive.”
Id.
at 62,
E
Three groups of petitioners now seek review of the 11 orders approving the Tariff and addressing the treatment of the GFAs. The first group, led by the Midwest Transmission Dependent Utilities, is made up of buyers of power in the new markets. They argue that FERC should have required more stringent market power mitigation measures and that the Commission’s approval of MISO’s marginal loss refund mechanism was arbitrary and capricious. The second group, led by the National Rural Electric Cooperative Asso *256 ciation and the Dairyland Power Cooperative (the Cooperatives), is composed of buyers of power under GFA agreements. They argue that the imposition of Schedule 17 charges on carved-out GFAs was arbitrary and capricious and that the Commission’s denial of their request for an eviden-tiary hearing violated the Administrative Procedure Act and the Due Process Clause of the Constitution. The third group consists of Duke Energy Shared Services, Inc., and Xcel Energy Services Inc.— transmission owners who sell power in the new markets. They argue that all GFAs should have been required to choose between conversion to the Tariff, Option A, or Option C, and that FERC acted arbitrarily by carving out some GFAs entirely and granting others favorable treatment under Option B. In addition, Xcel challenges FERC’s designation of the GFA-RE and GFA-SE. 6
The remainder of this opinion addresses the issues raised by each group of petitioners in turn. At the outset, however, we set forth the standard of review that is common to the objections asserted by all three. We review FERC’s orders by applying the Administrative Procedure Act’s “arbitrary and capricious” standard.
See 5
U.S.C. § 706(2)(A);
Midwest ISO Transmission Owners,
II
The Transmission Dependent Utilities buy power for resale to retail customers in the new markets overseen by the Midwest Independent System Operator (MISO). These petitioners challenge two aspects of MISO’s operations under the Tariff. See Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc., 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163 (2004) (“TEMT II Order”), order on reh’g, 109 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,157 (2004) (“TEMT II Reh’g Order”). First, the Transmission Dependents challenge MISO’s market power mitigation measures, which seek to prevent electricity suppliers from unduly raising prices above competitive levels in certain areas of MISO’s grids where transmission constraints sometimes give suppliers the power to influence prices. Second, the Transmission Dependents challenge MISO’s allocation of refunds for marginal loss charges, which account for the extra energy that generators must inject into a grid to supply electricity to faraway buyers (because electricity dissipates the further it travels from its source). We hold that FERC’s conclusions on these points were reasonable, and we therefore deny *257 the Transmission Dependents’ petitions for review.
A
When electricity demand is high and the grids become congested, the possibility arises that sellers in some transmission constrained areas will be able to exercise their market power and charge higher-than-competitive prices. The Tariff separated these areas into Narrow Constrained Areas (NCAs), which pose more persistent competitive concerns, and Broad Constrained Areas (BCAs), which pose only intermittent competitive concerns. Under the Tariff, the independent market monitor compares bids in constrained areas to reference levels calculated from suppliers’ historical costs. If those bids exceed the reference level by a certain increment and fail a market impact test, the independent market monitor mitigates the bids — replacing them with lower amounts designed to give sellers an appropriate but not higher-than-competitive investment return.
See
TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,-163, at 61,949-50 PP 242, 245, 247. “The conduct screen sifts out prices that by some amount or percentage exceed a reference price.... The impact screen tests whether that price increment actually would cause market-clearing prices to rise a certain amount or percentage over the price that would prevail in the event of mitigation.”
Edison Mission Energy, Inc. v. FERC,
FERC concluded that the Tariffs approach to the mitigation of sellers’ market power in the NCAs and BCAs adequately responded to the market power problem by avoiding under-mitigation, and at the same time, not over-mitigating and squelching suppliers’ incentives to invest in additional capacity in those areas. Challenging that conclusion, the Transmission Dependents focus on features of FERC’s choices concerning the NCAs (Parts 1 and 2 below) and BCAs (Parts 3 and 4 below).
1
NCAs are areas where transmission constraints are expected to be binding for at least 500 hours during a given year, and where at least one seller is “pivotal” in that the constraint can only be resolved if the seller increases its generation output.
See
TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,-163, at 61,
The Transmission Dependents challenge the omission of market concentration analysis from the NCA definition. They proposed that MISO focus on multi
*258
lateral conduct and use a market concentration metric — such as the Herfindahl-Hirschmann Index (HHI), which “is calculated by totaling the squares of the market shares of every firm in the relevant market.”
H.J. Heinz Co.,
We conclude that FERC reasonably refused to direct MISO to define NCAs using the HHI or another market concentration measure. Petitioners’ argument that FERC precedent required a different determination errs in two respects: first, in misreading a prior FERC order in one case concerning market-based rates, and second, in mistaking the binding force of a subsequent FERC order in another case concerning the Pennsylvania-New Jersey-Maryland (PJM) Regional Transmission Organization (RTO).
First, in
AEP Power Marketing, Inc.,
FERC addressed aspects of its market-based rate evaluation framework, which applies to electricity suppliers that have received FERC’s permission to charge market-based rates (rather than rates subject to “traditional cost-based rate ceilings”).
See
107 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,018, at 61,054-70 PP 30-127 (2004);
Grand Council of the Crees v. FERC,
Because the
AEP
order did not embrace use of the HHI, it cannot be taken as precedent requiring its use here. Looking at a single firm’s individual market share, as FERC did in
AEP,
is obviously not the same thing as looking at all of the market shares of all of the firms in the market, which is what a concentration metric such as the HHI does — and which is what petitioners demanded MISO
had
to do in defining NCAs. Moreover, the market-based rate framework used in
AEP
is concerned with
shifting
the burden of proof on market power to generators with seasonal market shares of 20 percent or more; in contrast,
all
supplier bids in NCAs are reviewed under the conduct and impact tests, and suppliers have no opportunity to forestall application of those tests by offering evidence that they do.not possess market power. Thus, as FERC properly noted, the market-based rates framework and the NCA concept are sufficiently distinct that “pieces of one should not automatically be used as precedent for the other.”
*259
TEMT II Reh’g Order, 109 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,157, at 61,
Second, petitioners are mistaken in relying on a subsequent proceeding in which FERC asked the PJM RTO to explain why it did not use the market power tests described in FERC’s
AEP
order.
See PJM Interconnection, LLC,
110 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,053, at 61,249 PP 80, 84 (2005). FERC issued the
PJM
order
after
FERC issued the rehearing order approving the MISO Tariff (dated November 8, 2004); it is that rehearing order that is challenged in this case.
See
TEMT II Reh’g Order, 109 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,157, at 61,663. Agencies are ordinarily not required to “explain alleged inconsistencies in the resolution of subsequent cases,” when the subsequent case is not “part of a pattern of arguably inconsistent decision-making that began before the challenged action.”
AT & T Inc. v. FCC,
In any event, the
PJM
order simply reflected a line of inquiry by FERC concerning the reasonableness of the RTO’s proposed concentration metric, but it in no way required
all
RTOs to use concentration metrics in
all
market power mitigation frameworks. In fact, the PJM proceedings ended in a settlement that decided nothing. As FERC noted: “The Commission’s approval of the settlement agreement does not constitute approval of, or precedent regarding,
any
principle or issue in this proceeding.”
PJM Interconnection, LLC,
114 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,076, at 61,
FERC’s orders in the
AEP
and
PJM
proceedings, then, did not compel it to direct MISO to perform market concentration analysis in defining NCAs. And FERC reasonably explained that market concentration analysis carried too great a risk of over-mitigation in the context of this market power mitigation scheme.
See Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm, Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
2
Within an NCA, the conduct test compares (i) a supplier’s bid to (ii) the supplier’s reference price — calculated from historical cost data — plus a “fixed cost adder” set at the supplier’s “net annual fixed cost divided by the constrained hours” for the given year.
See
TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163, at 61,
The Transmission Dependents seek to invalidate the fixed cost adder. They contend that the adder was vaguely defined and overly generous to suppliers at the expense of buyers such as the Transmission Dependents. According to petitioners, in those few NCAs where recovery of fixed costs poses' a genuine problem, MISO should simply have set the adder at the supplier’s marginal cost plus a 10-percent booster. FERC rejected that approach, concluding that the fixed cost adder as defined in the Tariff “provides a careful balance between the need to mitigate market power and to provide an efficient incentive to invest.”
Id.
at 61,
Petitioners fail to convince us that FERC’s approval of the fixed cost adder was unsupported by the evidence or inadequately explained. FERC’s overall task, of course, was to ensure, based on record evidence, that the rates and practices set forth in the MISO Tariff were just, reasonable, and not unduly discriminatory.
See
16 U.S.C. § 824d(a), (b). “The burden,” however, “is on the petitioners to show that the Commission’s choices are unreasonable and its chosen line of demarcation is not within a zone of reasonableness as distinct from the question of whether the line drawn by the Commission is precisely right.”
ExxonMobil Gas Mktg. Co. v. FERC,
Petitioners’ argument that the appropriate investment incentive should have been limited to marginal-cosNplus-10-percent certainly casts no doubt upon the reasonableness of the adder that FERC approved. “[T]he just and reasonable standard,” the Supreme Court has explained, “does not compel the Commission to use any single pricing formula.”
Mobil Oil Exploration & Producing Se., Inc. v. United Distribution Cos.,
Moreover, FERC’s conclusion that the fixed cost adder was necessary “to provide an efficient incentive to invest” was a judgment about the future behavior of entities FERC regulates. TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163, at 61,
Petitioners contend that FERC’s predictive judgment failed to account for the testimony of two experts, who essentially opined that not every supply-constrained area of a power grid — a load pocket— needs an investment incentive like the fixed cost adder.
The expert testimony that petitioners rely on, however, did not refute FERC’s conclusion that a fixed cost adder was appropriate for NCAs. The analysis by the Transmission Dependents’ witness, Laurence Kirsch, was not anchored in the particular terms used in the Tariff (such as the NCA definition or the fixed cost adder definition); rather, Kirsch made claims at a high level of generality. He stated, for example, that FERC “should be aware that there may be some times and places” where the “efficiency justification for high electricity prices is lacking.” Kirsch Aff. at 7 (emphasis added). That testimony fell short of establishing that the fixed cost adder was inappropriate for the NCAs as defined in the Tariff. The testimony from the market monitor’s witness, David Patton, likewise did not contradict FERC’s conclusion. He stated that “new investment is not always necessary in the load pocket.” Protest of Midwest [Transmission Dependent Utilities], FERC Docket No. ER04-691-000, at 134 (May 7, 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted and emphasis altered). That statement made the undisputed point that an effective market power mitigation scheme is one that seeks to distinguish between price increases attributable to resource scarcity (which signal a need for investment to reduce the scarcity) and price increases attributable to exercise of market power (which do not signal investment need and instead reflect lack of competition). If anything, the portion of Patton’s testimony that petitioners quote suggests that interference with market prices should be avoided: “Markets,” he testified, “should establish transparent price signals that accurately reveal the marginal value of resources in the load pockets.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). That statement did not cast doubt upon the logic of the fixed cost adder — which, by affording suppliers latitude in setting prices, embraces rather than undermines the notion that transparent price signals are good for the market. In short, petitioners have not identified relevant record evidence that compelled FERC to invalidate the fixed cost adder.
Petitioners’ final argument concerning the fixed cost adder is that FERC unreasonably declined to require MISO to revise the Tariff to clarify that the fixed cost adder calculation takes into account (“nets”) all sources of fixed cost recovery — such as retail rates approved by state authorities. But petitioners informed FERC that they understood how the calculations would be performed, noting their understanding that the independent market monitor would “net any retail rate recovery against the numerator of the fixed cost adder.” Id. at 129. So even assuming that the Tariff was imprecise in explaining how the adder would be calculated, petitioners’ argument on this point does not warrant relief; they have admitted that they understand the very Tariff term they deem confusing.
3
Supplier bids in constrained areas may exceed reference levels by a certain amount under the conduct test before they are subject to the impact test for mitigation. In NCAs that certain amount is the fixed cost adder. BCAs are structured differently to account for their more robust competitive conditions. A supplier’s bid in a BCA fails the conduct test if it exceeds the reference level by the lesser of *262 $100 per megawatt hour or 300 percent. The bid goes on to fail the impact test if it would cause the market-clearing price to rise — by- the lesser of $100 per megawatt-hour or 200 percent — above the price that would have prevailed had the supplier .bid at the reference level. See TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163, at 61,959 PP 307-12.
The Transmission Dependents urged FERC to revise those numbers, arguing that they afford suppliers in BCAs too much leeway to charge high prices before mitigation kicks in. FERC rejected those arguments. See TEMT II Reh’g Order, 109 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,157, at 61,700-01 PP 215-21.
Petitioners fear that suppliers in BCAs will hike their prices to just below the specified limits — to rake in as much money as they can without triggering mitigation. But FERC reasonably concluded that petitioners’ scenario is not likely to become reality. In BCAs, concerns about market power are “minimal” or “not expected to be significant on an on-going basis.” TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163, at 61,
Equally unavailing are the other arguments advanced against FERC’s approval of the BCA mitigation framework. In deciding that the BCA ceilings are just and reasonable, FERC emphasized that approving the MISO market power mitigation- scheme required striking a balance between, on the one hand, detecting and dampening exercises of market power and, on the other hand, allowing generators to charge prices that are high enough for them to recover their fixed costs.
See
TEMT II Reh’g Order, 109 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,-157, at 61,
Those ceilings, FERC concluded, reflect an appropriate trade-off between the interests of buyers and sellers — and, of course, setting a just and reasonable rate necessarily “involves a balancing of the investor and the consumer interests.”
FPC v. Hope Natural Gas Co.,
4
The Transmission Dependents next challenge FERC’s decision to authorize mitigation within BCAs one year at a time, rather than to make such mitigation a permanent feature of the BCA landscape.
To begin with, we reject the suggestion that the claim is nonjusticiable because it is either moot or not ripe. A federal court must satisfy itself that the party invoking federal jurisdiction has presented a justiciable case or controversy.
See
U.S. Const. art. Ill, § 2, cl. 1. The mootness doctrine ensures that judicial relief can still redress the asserted injury.
See Spencer v. Kemna,
FERC authorized BCA mitigation for only one year.
See
TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163, at 61,954-
That theory overlooks, however, the continuing economic injury that the one-year sunset provision causes petitioners in planning
future
transactions — in an industry where long-term transactions are a matter of course.
Cf.
Protest of Midwest [Transmission Dependent Utilities] 115 (“MISO retail utilities typically obtain their power supply either from their owned generation facilities or from generation purchased under
longterm
contracts.”) (emphasis added). Although FERC may repeatedly renew the mitigation authority after August 1, 2007, such renewal is not guaranteed, and the lack of such a guarantee has an effect now.
Cf. S. Co. Servs., Inc. v. FERC,
Petitioners’ inability to rely on mitigation after the expiration of mitigation authority thereby reduces their bargaining power in the here-and-now; that reduction of bargaining power is an economic injury that vacatur of the one-year limitation would certainly help redress. We are satisfied that this aspect of the Transmission Dependents’ claim cannot be considered moot or unripe.
See Ohio Forestry Ass’n,
On the merits, the Transmission Dependents challenge FERC’s decision to impose the one-year sunset because there *264 was no evidence in the administrative record that market power abuse would be a problem within BCAs for only one year. On the contrary, the Transmission Dependents emphasize, BCAs are by definition those in which a transmission constraint raises market power concerns at least some of the time (although less often than in NCAs).
Petitioners’ argument has a surface appeal. It is logical to believe that a time limit on the solution to a problem should be adopted only if the problem itself is time-limited. But this does not render FERC’s determination either irrational or unsubstantiated. FERC adopted the sunset provision as a response to concerns that the Tariff vested the independent market monitor with excessive discretion in mitigating conduct within BCAs— which, again, are not listed as such in advance, but rather designated dynamically by the monitor when transmission constraints become active. “Should we find problems” with the monitor’s discretion, FERC noted, “we will take appropriate action including consideration of terminating the BCA provision before the end of the one-year period.” TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163, at 61,
Again, BCAs are competitive most of the time. And as this Court recognized in evaluating FERC’s decisions concerning the market power mitigation framework of a different RTO, “the presence of workable competition would suggest that many, perhaps most, possibly all, of the bids triggering mitigation will be due not to market power but to temporary scarcity.”
Edison Mission Energy,
Although the order approving the Tariff may have been less than crystal clear on the point, it is evident that FERC concluded that limiting the monitor’s discretion would help attain the proper balance between under-and over-mitigation — by making it less likely that the monitor would be too aggressive in mitigating high bids attributable not to market power but to legitimate supply costs. It is also evident from context that FERC concluded that adopting a one-year time limitation on the mitigation authority was one means to cabin the discretion. The sunset provision made MISO responsible for seeking and adequately justifying renewal of BCA mitigation authority if necessary. FERC indicated as much on rehearing. “We are concerned that the application of mitigation” in BCAs “could result in excessive mitigation. This is especially true,” FERC noted, to the extent that the independent market monitor “may have some discretion in appljdng that mitigation.” Therefore, FERC concluded that “the need for mitigation within BCAs should be re-evaluated after there is some
operational market experience,”
while noting that MISO could “file to continue such mitigation” in the future. TEMT II Reh’g Order, 109 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,157, at 61,
We find reasonable FERC’s concern about over-mitigation and the contribution of unfettered discretion on the part of the independent market monitor to that over-mitigation. Thus, we conclude that placing a one-year limitation on the BCA 'mitigation authority was a permissible response to the excessive discretion problem FERC sought to solve — a choice that satisfies the requirement of “reasoned decisionmaking” that the arbitrary or capricious standard embodies.
Allentown Mack Sales & Serv., Inc. v. NLRB,
B
The amount of electricity a supplier injects into the grid always exceeds the
*265
amount the customer receives; some electricity dissipates as heat during transmission (and is referred to as transmission loss).
See Sithe/Independence Power Partners, L.P. v. FERC,
In particular, FERC ordered MISO to “refund the difference between the marginal loss charge and either an average loss or a historical loss charge to all existing transmission customers.”
Id.
at 61,
The Transmission Dependents interpret those sentences to mean that FERC required MISO to issue refunds based on the average losses incurred by each individual transmission customer. Petitioners insist that directive cannot be reconciled with FERC’s subsequent approval of MISO’s “Balancing Authority” approach to the refunds — which groups transmission customers by geographic territory and computes average losses on a grouped rather than an individual basis. See, e.g., Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc., 109 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,285, at 62,364 n. 76, 62,365 PP 171-72 (2004) (“Compliance I”). That inconsistency, petitioners contend, makes FERC’s decisions arbitrary and capricious.
At the outset, FERC urges us not to reach the merits of this contention, on the theory that FERC has not made a final decision on the matter. In FERC’s view, a compliance order issued
after
the last of the orders challenged in this case directed MISO to continue entertaining petitioners’ suggested method for computing average losses, therefore deferring for another day a final FERC endorsement of MISO’s method for those computations.
See Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc.,
117 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,142, at 61,
But the very compliance order on which FERC relies squarely refutes the jurisdictional argument. As that order explains, in an
earlier
compliance order — one challenged in this case — FERC concluded that MISO’s “method for allocating the refund of marginal loss surplus revenue is just and reasonable.”
Id.
at 61,
On the merits, we reject the Transmission Dependents’ arguments concerning MISO’s average-loss computation method. In approving that method, FERC reasonably interpreted its initial instructions that refunds be distributed “based either on historical loss charges associated with existing transmission service, or otherwise on average loss charges calculated by the Midwest ISO.” TEMT II Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,163, at 61,
We review FERC’s interpretation of its own orders for reasonableness.
See Natural Gas Clearinghouse v. FERC,
Even apart from the asserted conflict with the initial order, petitioners also argue that approval of the “Balancing Authority” approach was arbitrary. To that end, petitioners have identified various ways in which they believe average loss computations tailored to individual transmission customers would be more equitable than those tailored by geographic sorting. Some of these assertions may have merit, as FERC itself appears to have recognized. In requiring MISO to make ongoing compliance filings on the subject, FERC has noted, for example, that under the group approach large entities within a group might receive more of a refund than deserved, while small entities might receive less than deserved. See Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc., 111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,053, at 61,252 PP 49-50 (2005).
FERC’s acknowledgment that the computation method can and should be refined does not, however, undercut FERC’s conclusion that the overall method affords a just and reasonable rate for the transmission customers. Merely because petitioners can conceive of a refund allocation method that they believe would be superi- or to the one FERC approved does not mean that FERC erred in concluding the latter was just and reasonable. Again, reasonableness is a zone, not a pinpoint.
See ExxonMobil Gas Mktg.,
Ill
The Cooperatives’ petitions challenge FERC’s treatment of Schedule 17 of the TEMT, which recovers the administrative costs of MISO’s energy market services.
Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc.,
111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,042, at 61,
The Cooperatives dispute FERC’s finding that the parties to GFA transactions benefit from the TEMT markets. They argue that the Commission’s ultimate conclusion was unsupported by substantial evidence, that its acceptance of some of the supporting material filed by MISO constituted an unexplained reversal, and that its refusal to hold an evidentiary hearing violated the Administrative Procedure Act and the Due Process Clause.
Before reaching the merits of these arguments, we consider Intervenor Duke’s assertion that the Cooperatives lack standing to raise them. We must address this threshold question of the jurisdiction of the court, notwithstanding that FERC does not raise it.
See Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
“[A] party seeking judicial review of a FERC order must be aggrieved by that order.”
N.M. Att’y Gen. v. FERC,
Intervenor Duke argues that the Cooperatives cannot satisfy the injury-in-fact requirement because the orders under review did not approve the imposition of any additional charges on them. As ex *268 plained above, the orders approve the imposition of Schedule 17 charges .on the GFA providers — the transmission owners that provide service under GFA contracts. None of the Cooperatives, however, is a GFA provider. Instead, they are GFA customers — utilities that purchase power from the GFA providers under those contracts. The orders before us therefore do not inflict any injury on the Cooperatives. Any injury to them would arise only out of a subsequent proceeding in which the GFA providers submitted — and FERC approved — a modified tariff providing for a “pass-through” of Schedule 17 charges to GFA customers.
The Cooperatives freely concede that the injury they seek to avoid is the pass-through of Schedule 17 charges from GFA providers to customers like themselves.
See
Cooperatives’ Reply Br. 17-19. They nonetheless argue that they have been aggrieved by the orders under review because those orders conclusively determined that the TEMT markets provide benefits to both GFA providers
and
GFA customers.
See id.
at 17-18 (citing GFA Reh’g Order, 111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,042, at 61,-
As a threshold matter, the Cooperatives’ arguments rest on an untenable reading of the Commission’s orders. Far from predetermining the outcome of a pass-through proceeding, the orders under review explicitly rejected requests that FERC approve a pass-through of Schedule 17 charges from providers to customers. The Commission instead reserved the issue for future proceedings, explaining that it lacked a “concrete proposal” for a pass-through and that the issue therefore was “not ripe for consideration.”
Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc.,
108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at at 62,
But even if the Cooperatives were correct, and FERC’s reasoning in the orders under review would govern subsequent proceedings on a pass-through, we have repeatedly held that this sort of “injury” is insufficient to establish standing. A petitioner’s “interest in the Commission’s legal reasoning and its potential precedential effect does not by itself confer standing where, as here, it is ‘uncoupled’ from any injury in fact caused by the substance of [FERC’s] adjudicatory action.”
Telecomms. Research & Action Ctr. v. FCC,
As it turns out, MISO’s transmission owners did file a “concrete proposal” for a pass-through of Schedule 17 charges to certain carved-out GFA customers, and FERC approved it in orders that are not before us in these petitions.
See Transmission Owners of the Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc.,
110 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,339, at 62,
The fact that the Commission approved a pass-through of Schedule 17 charges to GFA customers in orders not currently before us does not alter our standing analysis. The Cooperatives may be aggrieved by
those
orders, but a petitioner must show that it has been aggrieved by the final order under review.
See
16 U.S.C. § 825i (b) (“Any party to a proceeding under this chapter aggrieved by an order issued by the Commission in such proceeding may obtain a review of such order in the ... [D.C. Circuit].”). The fact that a petitioner may be aggrieved by other, related orders does not cure a failure to show an injury in fact caused by the order actually under review.
See N.M. Att’y Gen.,
Finally, the Cooperatives argue that, even if they are barred from raising their substantive claims in this proceeding, they have standing to raise their procedural challenges here. Cooperatives’ Reply Br. 21-22. It is true that we apply a modified standing analysis to procedural claims: “[a] person who has been accorded a procedural right to protect his concrete interests can assert that right without meeting all the normal standards for re-dressability and immediacy.”
Defenders of Wildlife,
As explained above, the Cooperatives have not shown that they have suffered a concrete and particularized injury caused by the orders under review. Consequently, they cannot satisfy either Article Ill’s standing requirements, or 16 U.S.C. § 825Z’s requirement that a party seeking review of a FERC order be “aggrieved” by that order. We are therefore barred from considering their claims, including their procedural arguments.
IV
The Transmission Owners are two utilities (Duke Energy Shared Services, Inc., *270 and Xcel Energy Services Inc.) that provide transmission service under the Midwest Independent System Operator (MISO) Tariff. They maintain that FERC’s solution to the problem of contracts pre-dating MISO’s formation (the grandfathered agreements, or GFAs) has impermissibly shifted to ordinary market participants — including the Transmission Owners — the congestion costs that GFA transactions canse. The Transmission Owners accordingly seek to vacate FERC’s decision approving as just and reasonable MISO’s solution to the GFA problem. See Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc., 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236 (2004) (“GFA Order”), order on reh’g, 111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,042 (2005) (“GFA Reh’g Order”), order on reh’g, 112 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,311 (2005).
The tension between GFA terms and practices on the one hand and the MISO Tariff on the other hand was from the very beginning a “fundamental problem in the proposed design and operation” of MISO. Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc., 97 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,033, at 61,169 (2001) (“Opinion No. 453”), order on reh’g, 98 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,141 (2002). FERC’s solution to the problem hinged on sorting the GFAs into different classes and reaching appropriate accommodations for each.
Specifically, 229 GFAs remained in effect in March 2005. GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,
For the GFAs that did not settle, FERC’s response varied according to the applicable standard for contract modification. One set, consisting of 50 GFAs, was subject to the “just and reasonable” standard of review.
See id.
at 62,
In this Court, the Transmission Owners first claim that FERC erred in approving the carve out of the 127 GFAs subject to the public interest standard. Second, they claim that FERC erred in approving the Option B settlement terms for 30 GFAs. Third, they assert that even if the carve out and Option B settlements were adequately supported as individual decisions, FERC erred in approving the carve out and Option B settlements together as just *271 and reasonable. (Xcel presses a fourth claim concerning FERC’s designation of entities responsible in the first instance for paying GFA charges.) We hold that these claims are unsound, and we therefore deny the Transmission Owners’ petitions for review.
A
In the companion cases for which the
Mobile-Siem
doctrine is named, the Supreme Court interpreted the Federal Power Act to substantially preserve the rights of federally regulated utilities to make private contracts among themselves, subject to only limited FERC intervention.
See United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile Gas Serv. Corp.,
Thus, under the
Mobile-Sierra
doctrine, if and only if the public interest requires, FERC may “abrogate or modify freely negotiated private contracts that set firm rates or establish a specific methodology for setting the rates for service, and deny either party the right to unilaterally change those rates.”
Atl. City Elec. Co. v. FERC,
The public interest standard is “much more restrictive than the. just and reasonable standard” that FERC applies to rates not contractually shielded.
Atl. City Elec.,
*272 1
The first step in the Mobile-Sierra analysis is to determine whether the challenged regulatory action constitutes an abrogation or modification of the contracts protected by the doctrine. The Transmission Owners insist that requiring the GFA parties to obey MISO Tariff terms would not abrogate or modify the GFAs. We reject that view. The central flaw in petitioners’ argument is its radical oversimplification of the GFA problem. Giving short shrift to the tensions between the GFAs and the MISO Tariff, petitioners essentially claim that instead of carving out GFA transactions (thereby shifting the congestion costs they create onto all other market participants), FERC should have required MISO to simply impose a congestion charge on each GFA transaction— which, petitioners contend, would have placed the GFA and non-GFA transactions on equal footing. As FERC recognized in the orders at issue here, however, subjecting GFA transactions to Tariff terms would be far more disruptive for the GFA parties than that account of the problem suggests.
A critical concern that petitioners’ account omits is the direct collision between GFA scheduling practices and the MISO Tariffs scheduling requirements. “ ‘Carving out’ GFAs,” FERC explained, “means that parties to GFAs are allowed to exercise the
scheduling
and energy management provisions of their GFAs in the same manner they did” before MISO’s new markets started up. GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,
But centralized scheduling in the Day-Ahead market is utterly foreign to the GFAs,. some of which date back to the 1950s and 1960s and certainly are out of sync with FERC’s post-1990 efforts to spur the development of competitive bulk power markets. In particular, a number of the GFAs do not spell out the quantity of electricity to be purchased or the precise time when the buyer will take delivery; those details have often been worked out in the course of dealing on a real-time (not a day-ahead) basis between the GFA parties. “[S]pecific details of the contracts, such as usage,
scheduling requirements
and megawatt quantity or capacity, are not readily apparent on the face of some of the contracts.”
Id.
at 61,
FERC’s investigation led it to conclude that “while the [MISO Tariff] does not rewrite the GFAs, it would impose significant changes in the manner in which transmission service is provided for [in] transac
*273
tions under the GFAs that could result in cost shifts between the parties to the individual GFAs and thus affect the bargain between the parties to the individual GFAs.” GFA Reh’g Order, 111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,042, at 61,
Although FERC’s wording may have been less than precise on this point, “the agency’s path may reasonably be discerned,” as FERC’s “significant changes” conclusion was tantamount to a finding that
not
carving out this narrow class of GFAs would modify them, thereby triggering application of
Mobile-Sierra’s,
public interest standard.
See Alaska Dep’t of Envtl. Conservation v. EPA,
2
The second step in the
Mobile-Sierra
analysis is to determine whether the challenged modification or abrogation of the contracts protected by the doctrine is necessary in the public interest. If not, then FERC had no choice but to carve out these 127 GFAs. FERC decided that it could not meet the public interest standard: Because “the Energy Markets .'.. can be operated reliably, with net benefits to the public” even with the
Mobile-Sierra
GFAs carved out, FERC determined that “unequivocal public necessity” did not support subjecting the relevant GFAs to the MISO Tariff.
See
GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,
In
Sierra,
although the Supreme Court did not purport to enumerate all the circumstances in which the public interest standard may be satisfied, the Court did provide three concrete examples of such circumstances: where the contract rate FERC aims to modify “might impair the financial ability of the public utility to continue its service, cast upon other consum
*274
ers an excessive burden, or be unduly discriminatory.”
But petitioners have demonstrated nothing like that. Although petitioners complain that the carve out will impermissibly shift congestion costs to everyone else in the market (except for those GFA parties that took the Option B settlement), petitioners do not claim — let alone prove — that the cost shift was so severe as to threaten the “financial ability” of any utility “to continue its service,” or that the cost shift amounted to an “excessive” burden on any other market participants.
Moreover, although petitioners’ argument about the cost shift might be construed as presenting a claim that the cost shift was “unduly discriminatory” within
Sierra’s
meaning, that claim fails. Even when conduct amounts to undue discrimination in violation of Section 205 of the Federal Power Act,
see
16 U.S.C § 824d(b), such conduct is not automatically “unduly discriminatory” within the meaning of the
Mobile-Sierra
doctrine, thereby justifying a rate modification: “[I]t is possible to have discrimination that violates § 205(b) but does not dismantle the protection generally afforded to fixed-rate contracts under
Mobile-Sierra.” Town of Norwood v. FERC,
To be sure, exempting the GFA parties from Tariff requirements was in some loose sense discriminatory, in part because it allows GFA parties to “schedule on short notice, with greater flexibility than non-GFA transmission users.” Procedural Order, 107 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,191, at 61,
Forcing the public-interest GFA parties to conform to the MISO Tariff would thus have had comparatively small advantages, compared to the distinct
disadvantages
that would result from not exempting them. On this point, again, petitioners’ analysis gives virtually no weight to the settled expectations of the parties to GFAs protected by
Mobile-Sierra;
FERC, of course, could not afford to be so dismissive. Thus, the discrimination alleged by petitioners was not undue discrimination forbidden by Section 205 — and necessarily
*275
fell short of establishing that the public interest required modifying or abrogating the narrow class of GFAs at issue.
See Town of Norwood,
Finally, there was yet another reason FERC reasonably determined that “unequivocal public necessity” did not mandate overriding the narrow class of GFAs at issue.
Permian Basin Area Rate Cases,
To sum up: Petitioners have underestimated the disruption to the narrow class of GFAs protected by the Mobile-Sierra doctrine that would have resulted had FERC not approved the carve out. We therefore reject petitioners’ contention that FERC’s reasoning in this case threatened to expand that doctrine beyond its proper bounds; rather, FERC’s analysis was fully consistent with the doctrine. FERC reasonably concluded that the public interest standard was not satisfied here, and FERC therefore was not arbitrary or capricious when it determined that the GFAs protected by the Mobile-Sierra doctrine should not be forced to comply with the MISO Tariff and instead should be carved out.
B
FERC approved Option B only for those 30 GFA parties that settled before July 28, 2004, the end of a period FERC afforded for trial-type hearings to resolve factual disputes about the terms of the GFAs.
See
GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,316-
Petitioners contend that FERC erred in allowing the Option B settlements. We disagree. Contrary to petitioners’ claim, this is not a case in which FERC “failed to provide an adequate explanation for its decision to approve the settlement” under Option B’s terms.
Laclede Gas Co. v. FERC,
To be sure, petitioners and other ordinary market participants bore the cost of that incentive. For example, GFA parties that settled under Option B transmit electricity over MISO grids, but those parties receive compensation for congestion costs on transmissions scheduled through the Day-Ahead market — forcing ordinary market participants to bear those congestion costs pro rata. But all market participants also reaped the benefit of having MISO’s new markets start up faster than would have been possible had FERC been forced into litigation with all of the settling GFA parties. Difficult issues might have arisen in that litigation (such as whether the Mobile-Sierra doctrine would have applied to each GFA, and if so, whether the public interest standard could be satisfied), and resolution of those issues would have delayed the commencement of market operations.
This Court previously has stated that FERC “must indicate why the interest in avoiding lengthy and difficult proceedings warrants acceptance” of a challenged settlement.
Laclede Gas,
C
Petitioners next claim that
even if
FERC’s reasoning correctly supported its decision to carve out the GFAs protected by the
Mobile-Sierra
doctrine, and
even if
FERC reasonably offered the Option B settlement terms, FERC erred in approving the carve out and the Option B settlements in combination as just and reasonable. Although one might question whether the whole can be
less
than the sum of its parts as this argument seems to suggest, FERC explicitly tied its approval of the carve out and its approval of the Option B settlements together: “[W]hile we discussed the impact of the carve-out and Option B treatments separately ... our assessment of the overall
*277
benefits of the Energy Markets considered both the carve-out and Option B treatments together.” GFA Reh’g Order, 111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,042, at 61,
That claim is unsound. FERC’s balancing of the interests' was reasonable given the relatively small magnitude of the impact on the markets that the carve out and the Option B settlements were expected to create. FERC acknowledged “that a carve-out of GFAs has the potential to result in additional costs for non-GFA transactions. However, we expect those impacts to be minor, in light of the small percentage of capacity to be carved-out.” GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,
Moreover, FERC’s conclusion respected the principle of cost causation, “requiring that all approved rates reflect to some degree the costs actually caused by the customer who must pay them.”
Midwest ISO Transmission Owners v. FERC,
Nor was FERC’s decision to approve the carve out (again, for a narrow class of GFAs) and the Option B settlements inconsistent with its conclusion that
all
GFA parties should pay the Schedule 17 charges covering MISO’s market operation and administrative costs. Schedule Í7 charges pay for the market functions as a whole, and not for the costs created by a specific transaction.
See, e.g.,
GFA Reh’g Order, 111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,042, at 61,
In short, FERC’s approval of the carve out and Option B in combination was not “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).
D
Finally, Xcel Energy Services challenges the designation of several of its subsidiaries, rather than their customers, as GFA Responsible Entities (that is, the GFA parties liable in the first instance for MISO Tariff charges).
To review: FERC initially asked the GFA parties to agree among themselves which of them should be the Responsible Entity for each GFA.
See
GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,291 PP 103-04. Numerous GFA parties, including Xcel’s subsidiaries, failed to amicably resolve the issue. For those recalcitrant GFA parties, FERC sought to streamline matters by adopting a default rule designating the GFA provider — namely, the utility that takes transmission service from MISO grids and supplies it to the GFA customer — as the Responsible Entity for each GFA.
See id.
at 62,300-01 PP 160-62. Although the provider takes the MISO Tariff-constrained service for the ultimate benefit of the customer, FERC concluded that the provider should be responsible because it is the provider that interacts with MISO’s grids, and it is the provider that is certified as a market participant “financially responsible” to MISO “for all of its Market Activities and obligations,” whereas some GFA customers are not so certified.
Id.
at. 62,
Xcel falls short of demonstrating that FERC’s determination was arbitrary or capricious. A GFA transaction may be described in two analytical steps. In the first of these analytical steps, the GFA provider receives electricity transmitted over the MISO grids. MISO is not involved in the second analytical step — the transmission of electricity on a “back-to-back basis” from the GFA provider to the GFA customer.
See
Transmission Owners’ Br. 12 (“MISO provides TEMT service to. the transmission owner that is a party to the GFA, and the transmission owner in turn, on a back-to-back basis, provides the GFA service to its GFA counterparty.”);
see also id.
at 4. Because the Responsible Entity must pay charges to MISO, FERC reasonably concluded that the GFA provider — which
does
interact directly with MISO — should be responsible in the first instance. This is particularly so given FERC’s refusal in the orders at issue here to in any way prevent GFA providers from passing their Tariff-related liability through to GFA customers where appropriate. FERC simply “did not predetermine the outcome of future proceedings involving proposals to pass [Tariff] related costs through to customers under particular GFAs.” GFA Reh’g Order, 111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,042, at 61,
Moreover, it made sound business sense to require that the Responsible Entity be a utility that was
already
required by the Tariff definition to be financially responsible to MISO.
See
GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,
V
We dismiss the Cooperatives’ petitions for review for lack of standing, and we deny the Transmission Dependents and Transmission Owners’ petitions for review.
So ordered.
Notes
. "Load” simply refers to demand for service on a transmission grid.
See Transmission Access Policy Study Group v. FERC,
. FERC did, however, require that
all
load using the grid contribute to MISO’s administrative costs, which are recovered by Schedule 10 of the OATT.
See
Opinion No. 453-A, 98 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,141, at 61,413. As we explained in the course of affirming FERC’s determination, the imposition of Schedule 10 charges on grandfathered load was consistent with the Commission's "cost-causation principle” because even transmission owners serving grandfathered load "draw benefits from being a part of the MISO regional transmission system.”
Midwest ISO Transmission Owners,
. Petitioners also seek review of three related compliance orders. See Compliance Order I, *253 109 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,285, order on reh’g, 111 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,053 (2005) (“Compliance Order IV”); Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator, Inc., 110 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,049 (2005) (“Compliance Order II”).
. FERC determined that both of these options were just and reasonable, and that Option B was just and reasonable for those parties that had already settled.
See
GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,
. These figures include contracts that did not specify a standard of review, which the Commission decided to treat as if they had incorporated the
Mobile-Sierra
standard.
See
GFA Order, 108 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,236, at 62,298 PP 147-49. They also include a small number of non-jurisdictional GFAs. FERC explained that these GFAs had to be carved out because it "has no authority to make any modifications to these contracts.”
Id.
at 62,
. The Transmission Dependents intervened in support of FERC on the issues raised by Duke and Xcel, while Duke (but not Xcel) intervened to support FERC on the issues raised by the other two groups of petitioners. Finally, MISO intervened to support FERC on the issues raised by the Transmission Dependents and the Cooperatives.
