Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203, 1348-1376 [06-77]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 4 / Friday, January 6, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
18 CFR Parts 2 and 33
[Docket No. RM05–34–000; Order No. 669]
Transactions Subject to FPA Section
203
Issued December 23, 2005.
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Under Subtitle G (Market
Transparency, Enforcement, and
Consumer Protection), section 1289
(Merger Review Reform), of Title XII
(Electricity Modernization Act of 2005),
of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct
2005), Public Law 109–58, 119 Stat. 594
(2005), the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (Commission) amends 18
CFR 2.26 and 18 CFR part 33 to
implement amended section 203 of the
Federal Power Act (FPA).1
DATES: Effective Date: This Final Rule
will become effective on February 8,
2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sarah McWane (Legal Information),
Office of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426. (202) 502–8372.
Phillip Nicholson (Technical
Information), Office of Markets,
Tariffs and Rates—West, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC,
20426. (202) 502–8240.
Jan Macpherson (Legal Information),
Office of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426. (202) 502–8921.
James Akers (Technical Information),
Office of Markets, Tariffs and Rates—
West, Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502–
8101.
SUPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Paragraph Nos.
I. Introduction ...................................................................................................................................................................................
II. Background ..................................................................................................................................................................................
A. Commission Merger Policy Before Effective Date of Amended FPA Section 203 .............................................................
B. Section 203 As Amended By EPAct 2005 ..........................................................................................................................
C. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203 .................................................................
III. Discussion ..................................................................................................................................................................................
A. Amendments to 18 CFR Part 33 .........................................................................................................................................
1. Section 33.1(a)—Applicability ..............................................................................................................................................
2. Section 33.1(b)—Definitions of ‘‘Associate Company,’’ ‘‘Holding Company,’’ ‘‘Holding Company System,’’ ‘‘Transmitting
Utility,’’ and ‘‘Electric Utility Company’’ .................................................................................................................................
3. Section 33.1(b)—Definition of ‘‘Existing Generation Facility’’ ..............................................................................................
4. Section 33.1(b)—Definition of ‘‘Non-Utility Associate Company’’ ........................................................................................
5. Section 33.1(b)—Definition of ‘‘Value’’ .................................................................................................................................
6. Compliance with Section 203 ...............................................................................................................................................
7. Cash Management Arrangements, Intra-Holding Company System Financing, Securities Under Amended Section 203,
and Blanket Authorizations ...................................................................................................................................................
8. Section 33.2(j)—General Information Requirements Regarding Cross-Subsidization ........................................................
9. Section 33.11—Commission Procedures for Consideration of Applications under Section 203 of the FPA .....................
B. Amendments to 18 CFR 2.26—The Merger Policy Statement ...........................................................................................
1. Comments ............................................................................................................................................................................
2. Commission Determination ..................................................................................................................................................
IV. Information Collection Statement ...............................................................................................................................................
V. Environmental Analysis ...............................................................................................................................................................
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification .......................................................................................................................................
VII. Document Availability ................................................................................................................................................................
VIII. Effective Date and Congressional Notification ........................................................................................................................
Before Commissioners: Joseph T. Kelliher,
Chairman; Nora Mead Brownell, and
Suedeen G. Kelly.
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I. Introduction
1. On August 8, 2005, the Energy
Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct 2005) 2 was
signed into law. Section 1289 (Merger
Review Reform) of Title XII, Subtitle G
(Market Transparency, Enforcement,
and Consumer Protection),3 of EPAct
2005 amends section 203 of the Federal
Power Act (FPA).4 Amended section
203: (1) Increases (from $50,000 to
greater than $10 million) the value
threshold for certain transactions being
subject to section 203; (2) extends the
U.S.C. 824b (2000).
Policy Act of 2005, Pub. L. No. 109–58,
119 Stat. 594 (2005).
scope of section 203 to include
transactions involving certain transfers
of generation facilities and certain
holding companies’ transactions with a
value in excess of $10 million; (3) limits
the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission’s (Commission) review of a
public utility’s acquisition of securities
of another public utility to transactions
greater than $10 million; (4) requires
that the Commission, when reviewing
proposed section 203 transactions,
examine cross-subsidization and
pledges or encumbrances of utility
assets; and (5) directs the Commission
to adopt, by rule, procedures for the
1 16
3 EPAct
2 Energy
4 16
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2005 §§ 1281 et seq.
U.S.C. 824b (2000).
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27.
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74.
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202.
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213.
expeditious consideration of
applications for the approval of
dispositions, consolidations, or
acquisitions under section 203.
2. As discussed below, on October 3,
2005, the Commission issued a notice of
proposed rulemaking (NOPR) in which
it proposed certain modifications to 18
CFR 2.26 and 18 CFR part 33 to
implement amended section 203.5
Numerous comments were filed by a
variety of entities.
3. In this Final Rule, the Commission
adopts some of the proposals in the
5 Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203, 70 FR
58,636 (October 7, 2005), FERC Stats. & Regs.
¶ 32,589 (2005).
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NOPR as well as many of the
commenters’ recommendations.
Specifically, this Final Rule:
(1) Implements the new applicability
of amended section 203 of the FPA;
(2) Grants blanket authorizations for
certain types of transactions, including
foreign utility acquisitions by holding
companies, intra-holding company
system financing and cash management
arrangements, certain internal corporate
reorganizations, and certain investments
in transmitting utilities and electric
utility companies;
(3) Adopts many of the NOPR’s
proposed defined terms, including
‘‘electric utility company,’’ ‘‘holding
company,’’ and ‘‘non-utility associate
company,’’ but clarifies the application
of these terms to certain entities;
(4) Amends the proposed definition of
‘‘existing generation facility;’
(5) Adopts a simpler rule than was
proposed in the NOPR with respect to
the determination of ‘‘value’’ as it
applies to various section 203
transactions;
(6) Clarifies and refines the NOPR’s
proposal with respect to a section 203
applicant’s obligation to file evidentiary
support to demonstrate that a proposed
transaction will not result in crosssubsidization of a non-utility associate
company or pledge or encumbrance of
utility assets for the benefit of an
associate company; and
(7) Adopts the NOPR’s proposal that
the Commission provide expeditious
consideration of completed applications
for the approval of transactions that are
not contested, do not involve mergers,
and are consistent with Commission
precedent.
4. Our goal is to carry out the
expanded authorities and requirements
contained in the new section 203
amendments to ensure that all
jurisdictional transactions subject to
section 203 are consistent with the
public interest and at the same time
ensure that our rules do not impede
day-to-day business transactions or
stifle timely investment in transmission
and generation infrastructure. We
believe we have accomplished this
result with the rules herein. However, at
the technical conference we announced
in our final rule implementing the
Public Utility Holding Company Act of
2005 (PUHCA 2005),6 to be held within
the next year,7 we will also address
6 EPAct 2005 sections 1261 et seq. Repeal of the
Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 and
Enactment of the Public Utility Holding Company
Act of 2005, Order No. 667, FERC Stats. & Regs.
¶ 31,197 (2005) (PUHCA 2005 Final Rule).
7 PUHCA 2005 Final Rule at P 17. Specifically, in
the PUHCA Final Rule, the Commission stated that
we intend to hold a technical conference no later
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issues raised in this proceeding,
including the appropriateness of the
blanket authorizations granted herein
and whether additional steps are needed
to protect against cross-subsidization
and pledges or encumbrance of utility
assets.
II. Background
A. Commission Merger Policy Before
Effective Date of Amended FPA Section
203
5. Section 203 of the FPA 8 currently
provides that: No public utility shall
sell, lease or otherwise dispose of the
whole of its facilities subject to the
jurisdiction of the Commission, or any
part thereof of a value in excess of
$50,000, or by any means whatsoever,
directly or indirectly, merge or
consolidate such facilities or any part
thereof with those of any other person,
or purchase, acquire, or take any
security of any other public utility,
without first having secured an order of
the Commission authorizing it to do so.
The Commission shall approve such
transactions if they are ‘‘consistent with
the public interest.’’
6. In 1996, the Commission issued the
Merger Policy Statement 9 updating and
clarifying the Commission’s procedures,
criteria, and policies concerning public
utility mergers. The purpose of the
Merger Policy Statement was to ensure
that mergers are consistent with the
public interest and to provide greater
certainty and expedition in the
Commission’s analysis of merger
applications.
7. The Merger Policy Statement sets
out three factors the Commission
generally considers when analyzing
whether a proposed section 203
transaction 10 is consistent with the
public interest: Effect on competition;
effect on rates; and effect on regulation.
8. With respect to the first factor, the
effect on competition, the Merger Policy
than one year after PUHCA 2005 becomes effective
to evaluate whether additional exemptions,
different reporting requirements, or other regulatory
actions need to be considered. The Commission’s
regulations implementing PUHCA 2005 take effect
on February 8, 2006.
8 EPAct 2005’s amendments to FPA section 203
take effect on February 8, 2006. We will generally
refer to EPAct 2005’s amended section 203 of the
FPA as ‘‘amended’’ or ‘‘new’’ section 203. All other
references to FPA section 203 are as it exists now.
9 Inquiry Concerning the Commission’s Merger
Policy Under the Federal Power Act: Policy
Statement, Order No. 592, 61 FR 68,595 (Dec. 30,
1996), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,044 (1996),
reconsideration denied, Order No. 592–A, 62 FR
33,340 (June 19, 1997), 79 FERC ¶ 61,321 (1997)
(Merger Policy Statement).
10 Although the Commission applies these factors
to all section 203 transactions, not just mergers, the
filing requirements and the level of detail required
may differ. Id. at 30,113 n.7. See also 18 CFR 2.26
(2005) (codifying the Merger Policy Statement).
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Statement adopts the Department of
Justice (DOJ)/Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) 1992 Horizontal Merger
Guidelines (Guidelines) 11 as the
analytical framework for examining
horizontal market power concerns. The
Merger Policy Statement also uses an
analytical screen (Appendix A analysis)
to allow early identification of
transactions that clearly do not raise
competitive concerns.12 As part of the
screen analysis, applicants must define
the relevant products sold by the
merging entities, identify the customers
and potential suppliers in the
geographic markets that are likely to be
affected by the proposed transaction,
and measure the concentration in those
markets. Using the Delivered Price Test
to identify alternative competing
suppliers, the concentration of potential
suppliers included in the defined
market is then measured by the
Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) and
used as a screen to determine which
transactions clearly do not raise market
power concerns.
9. The Commission stated in the
Merger Policy Statement that it will
examine the second factor, the effect on
rates, by focusing on customer
protections designed to insulate
consumers from any harm resulting
from the transaction.13
10. The Merger Policy Statement set
forth a third factor for examination, the
effect on regulation. This includes both
state regulation and the Commission’s
regulation, including any potential shift
in regulation from the Commission to
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) due to a transaction
creating a registered public utility
holding company under the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 1935
(PUHCA 1935).14 The Merger Policy
Statement explained that, unless
applicants commit themselves to abide
by this Commission’s policies with
regard to affiliate transactions involving
non-power goods and services, we will
set the issue of the effect on regulation
for hearing.15
11 U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade
Commission, Horizontal Merger Guidelines, 57 FR
41,552 (1992), revised, 4 Trade Reg. Rep. (CCH)
¶ 13,104 (Apr. 8, 1997).
12 Merger Policy Statement at 30,119–20.
13 See id. at 30,121–24.
14 15 U.S.C. 79a et seq. (2000).
15 Merger Policy Statement at 30,125; see also
Atlantic City Electric Co. and Delmarva Power &
Light Co., 80 FERC ¶ 61,126 at 61,412, order
denying reh’g, 81 FERC ¶ 61,173 (1997). With
respect to a transaction’s effect on state regulation,
where the state commissions have authority to act
on the transaction, the Commission stated that it
intends to rely on them to exercise their authority
to protect state interests.
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11. The Commission later issued the
Filing Requirements Rule,16 a final rule
updating the filing requirements under
18 CFR part 33 of the Commission’s
regulations for section 203 applications.
The Filing Requirements Rule
implements the Merger Policy
Statement and provides detailed
guidance to applicants for preparing
applications. The revised filing
requirements also assist the Commission
in determining whether section 203
transactions are consistent with the
public interest, provide more certainty,
and expedite the Commission’s
handling of such applications.
12. Further, the Filing Requirements
Rule codified the Commission’s
screening approach, provided specific
filing requirements consistent with
Appendix A of the Commission’s
Merger Policy Statement, established
guidelines for vertical competitive
analysis, and set forth filing
requirements for mergers that may raise
vertical market power concerns.
13. The Filing Requirements Rule also
reduced the information burden for
transactions that clearly raise no
competitive concerns. The Commission
explained that for certain transactions,
abbreviated filing requirements are
appropriate because it is relatively easy
to determine that they will not harm
competition and, thus, a full-fledged
horizontal screen analysis or vertical
competitive analysis is not required.17
14. The Commission stated in the
Filing Requirements Rule that it
intended to continue processing section
203 applications expeditiously, with a
goal of issuing an initial order for most
mergers within 150 days of a completed
application.18 Further, the Commission
stated that it intended to continue
processing uncontested non-merger
applications within 60 days of filing and
protested non-merger applications
within 90 days of filing.19
B. Section 203 as Amended by EPAct
2005
15. EPAct 2005 revises section 203(a)
of the FPA as follows:
16. Amended section 203(a)(1) states
that no public utility shall, without first
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16 Revised
Filing Requirements Under Part 33 of
the Commission’s Regulations, Order No. 642, 65
FR 70,983 (Nov. 28, 2000), FERC Stats. & Regs., July
1996–Dec. 2000 ¶ 31,111 (2000), order on reh’g,
Order No. 642–A, 66 FR 16,121 (Mar. 23, 2001), 94
FERC ¶ 61,289 (2001) (codified at 18 CFR Part 33
(2005)) (Filing Requirements Rule).
17 Filing Requirements Rule at 31,902 & 31,907.
The Commission clarified that, if it later determined
that a filing raised competitive issues, the
Commission would evaluate those issues and direct
the applicant to submit any data needed to satisfy
the Commission’s concerns. Id. at n.79.
18 Id. at 31,873.
19 Id. at 31,876.
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having secured an order of the
Commission authorizing it to do so: (A)
Sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of the
whole of its facilities subject to the
jurisdiction of the Commission, or any
part thereof of a value in excess of $10
million; (B) merge or consolidate,
directly or indirectly, such facilities or
any part thereof with those of any other
person, by any means whatsoever; (C)
purchase, acquire, or take any security
with a value in excess of $10 million of
any other public utility; or (D) purchase,
lease, or otherwise acquire an existing
generation facility: (i) That has a value
in excess of $10 million; and (ii) that is
used for interstate wholesale sales and
over which the Commission has
jurisdiction for ratemaking purposes.
17. Section 203(a)(2) adds the entirely
new requirement that no holding
company in a holding company system
that includes a transmitting utility or an
electric utility shall purchase, acquire,
or take any security with a value in
excess of $10 million of, or, by any
means whatsoever, directly or
indirectly, merge or consolidate with, a
transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a
holding company system that includes a
transmitting utility, or an electric utility
company, with a value in excess of $10
million without prior Commission
authorization.
18. Like the existing section 203(a),
amended section 203(a)(3) provides that
upon receipt of an application for such
approval, the Commission shall give
reasonable notice in writing to the
Governor and state commission of each
of the states in which the physical
property affected is situated, and to
such other persons as it may deem
advisable.
19. Amended section 203(a)(4) states
that after notice and opportunity for
hearing, the Commission shall approve
the proposed disposition, consolidation,
acquisition, or change in control if it
finds that the transaction will be
consistent with the public interest. It
also specifically provides that the
Commission must find that the
transaction will not result in crosssubsidization of a non-utility associate
company or pledge or encumbrance of
utility assets for the benefit of an
associate company, unless that crosssubsidization, pledge, or encumbrance
will be consistent with the public
interest.
20. Section 203(a)(5) adds the entirely
new requirement that the Commission
shall: By rule, adopt procedures for the
expeditious consideration of
applications for the approval of
dispositions, consolidations, or
acquisitions, under this section. Such
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rules shall identify classes of
transactions, or specify criteria for
transactions, that normally meet the
standards established in paragraph (4).
The Commission shall provide
expedited review for such transactions.
The Commission shall grant or deny any
other application for approval of a
transaction not later than 180 days after
the application is filed. If the
Commission does not act within 180
days, such application shall be deemed
granted unless the Commission finds,
based on good cause, that further
consideration is required to determine
whether the proposed transaction meets
the standards of paragraph (4) and
issues an order tolling the time for
acting on the application for not more
than 180 days, at the end of which
additional period the Commission shall
grant or deny the application.
21. Section 203(a)(6), which is also
new, provides that for purposes of this
subsection, the terms ‘‘associate
company,’’ ‘‘holding company,’’ and
‘‘holding company system’’ have the
meaning given those terms in PUHCA
2005.
22. Section 1289(b) provides that the
amendments made by this section shall
take effect six months after the date of
enactment of EPAct 2005, or February 8,
2006. This is the same date on which
the repeal of PUHCA 1935 and
enactment of the PUHCA 2005, are to
take effect.20
23. Section 1289(c) provides that the
amendments made by subsection (a)
shall not apply to any section 203
application that was filed on or before
the date of enactment of EPAct 2005.
24. Section 203(b) of the FPA remains
unchanged.21
C. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on
Transactions Subject to FPA Section
203
25. On October 7, 2005, the
Commission’s NOPR on Transactions
Subject to FPA Section 203 was
published in the Federal Register.22 As
discussed in more detail below, in the
20 Id.
§§ 1261, 1274. PUHCA 2005 Final Rule at
P 1.
21 Section 203(b) states:
The Commission may grant any application for an
order under this section in whole or in part and
upon such terms and conditions as it finds
necessary or appropriate to secure the maintenance
of adequate service and the coordination in the
public interest of facilities subject to the
jurisdiction of the Commission. The Commission
may from time to time for good cause shown make
such orders supplemental to any order made under
this section as it may find necessary or appropriate.
22 70 FR 58,636 (October 7, 2005). On October 19,
2005, an errata notice was published in the Federal
Register (70 FR 60,748), correcting Paragraph 1,
footnote 4 of the NOPR to refer to February 8, 2006,
as opposed to February 3, 2006.
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NOPR the Commission proposed to
revise 18 CFR part 33 and 18 CFR 2.26
of its rules to implement amended
section 203 of the FPA. Comments were
due on or before November 7, 2005.23
26. This Final Rule will be effective
on the date on which amended section
203 of the FPA takes effect, February 8,
2006.
III. Discussion
A. Amendments to 18 CFR Part 33
27. In the NOPR, the Commission
proposed to amend 18 CFR part 33 by:
Revising the title to read ‘‘Applications
Under Federal Power Act Section 203;’’
amending section 33.1(a) to clarify what
transactions are subject to amended
section 203 and part 33 as a result of
amended sections 203(a)(1)(A)–(D) and
(a)(2) of the FPA; adding a new
subsection 33.1(b) that defines certain
new terms used in amended section 203
that are not defined in EPAct 2005;
adding a new subsection 33.2(j) to
implement amended section 203(a)(4)
regarding cross-subsidization and
pledge or encumbrance issues; and
adding new sections 33.11(a) and (b) to
implement amended section 203(a)(5)
regarding the Commission’s procedures
for the consideration of applications
under section 203 of the FPA.
1. Section 33.1(a)—Applicability
28. Proposed section 33.1(a) clarifies
what transactions are subject to
amended section 203 and part 33 as a
result of amended sections 203(a)(1)(A)–
(D) and (a)(2) of the FPA.24
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a. Comments
29. Several commenters raise
concerns, described in more detail
below, regarding the applicability of
amended section 203 to transactions
involving foreign utility companies
(FUCOs), qualifying facilities (QFs),
exempt wholesale generators (EWGs),25
rural electric cooperatives, local
distribution companies, stand-alone
generation and retail sales, as well as
intrastate transactions, i.e., transactions
wholly within the Electric Reliability
Council of Texas (ERCOT), Alaska, or
Hawaii. They generally argue that
Congress did not intend to expand
significantly the Commission’s
jurisdiction under amended section 203
and, therefore, did not convey to the
Commission jurisdiction over these
23 The commenters are listed in an appendix to
this order.
24 Because proposed section 33.1(a) is almost
identical, with minor exceptions, to amended
sections 203(a)(1)(A)–(D) and (a)(2), which are
summarized in section II.B. above and set forth in
the regulatory text, we will not recite that text here.
25 PUHCA 2005 § 1266(a).
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types of transactions. Commenters also
express concern over any potential
overlap between the Commission’s
scope of review under amended section
203 and the scope of review by state
commissions. They state that the
Commission should not use its new
section 203 authority to preempt state
regulatory authority over rates and
approvals of utility mergers and
acquisitions.
30. Electric Power Supply Association
(EPSA) requests that the Commission
modify the text of proposed section
33.1(a)(1)(ii) to clarify that any merger
or consolidation must exceed the $10
million threshold before section 203
filing approval is required. It states that
the Commission should not alter its past
practice of applying the statutory dollar
threshold to all types of transactions
requiring section 203 approval,
including mergers and acquisitions.
EPSA explains that the mergers and
acquisitions clause of the currently
effective section 203 and section 203 as
amended by EPAct 2005 are
substantially the same and do not
specify a value amount. EPSA points
out, however, that although the
currently effective statutory language,
like the newly enacted EPAct 2005
language, did not codify the monetary
threshold with respect to mergers and
consolidations, for decades the
Commission’s regulations (section
33.1(a)(2)) have required section 203
applications for mergers, consolidations
and acquisitions only if they meet the
$50,000 threshold (which on February
8, 2006 will become $10 million). EPSA
states that the NOPR provides no reason
for the Commission to change its
interpretation of section 203.
b. Commission Determination
31. Most of the concerns regarding the
applicability of amended section 203
involve new section 203(a)(2) and the
Commission’s proposed definitions of
‘‘electric utility company’’ and ‘‘holding
company.’’ Accordingly, these
comments are discussed in greater detail
in those sections below. Similarly,
concerns regarding any potential
overlap between the scope of review of
the Commission under amended section
203 and that of state commissions are
also discussed with the proposed
definition of ‘‘electric utility company,’’
below.
32. We reject EPSA’s request that we
revise proposed section 33.1(a)(1)(ii) to
clarify that any merger or consolidation
must also exceed a monetary threshold
before section 203 filing approval is
required. The plain language of
amended section 203(a)(1)(B) does not
permit such an interpretation. Under
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amended section 203(a)(1)(B): ‘‘No
public utility shall * * * merge or
consolidate, directly or indirectly, such
facilities [facilities subject to the
jurisdiction of the Commission] or any
part thereof with those of any other
person, by any means whatsoever.’’ This
provision, on its face, does not impose
a dollar threshold on mergers or
consolidations and proposed section
33.1(a)(1)(ii) is consistent with the
statutory provision. While Congress
included a $10 million threshold for
amended subsections 203(a)(1)(A), (C),
(D), and 203(a)(2) (dispositions of
jurisdictional facilities; acquisitions of
securities of public utilities; purchases
of existing generation facilities; holding
company acquisitions), Congress clearly
did not adopt a monetary threshold for
mergers and consolidations in amended
subsection 203(a)(1)(B). We note that
‘‘[w]here Congress includes particular
language in one section of a statute but
omits it in another section of the same
Act, it is generally presumed that
Congress acts intentionally and
purposely in the disparate inclusion or
exclusion.’’ 26 In light of the
unambiguous statutory language, we are
not convinced by EPSA’s unsupported
assertion that the failure to include a
monetary threshold as to mergers and
consolidations was an ‘‘oversight’’ and
that ‘‘Congress did not intend to change
[the currently effective] statutory and
regulatory structure.’’ 27 While our
regulations previously applied a dollar
threshold to mergers and
consolidations, such an approach is no
longer tenable, since it is inconsistent
with the plain language of amended
section 203. Thus, we will not revise
section 33.1(a)(1)(ii) to include a $10
million threshold.
2. Section 33.1(b)—Definitions of
‘‘Associate Company,’’ ‘‘Holding
Company,’’ ‘‘Holding Company
System,’’ ‘‘Transmitting Utility,’’ and
‘‘Electric Utility Company’’
33. As noted above, section 203(a)(2)
adds an entirely new requirement to the
FPA:
No holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting utility or
an electric utility shall purchase, acquire, or
take any security with a value in excess of
$10 million of, or, by any means whatsoever,
directly or indirectly, merge or consolidate
with, a transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a holding
company system that includes a transmitting
utility, or an electric utility company, with a
value in excess of $10 million without first
26 Russello v. United States, 464 U.S. 16, 23
(1983) (internal citations omitted).
27 EPSA Comments at 5.
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having secured an order of the Commission
authorizing it to do so.
a. Definition of ‘‘Electric Utility
Company’’
34. The scope of amended section
203(a)(2) turns in large part on the
Commission’s interpretation of the term
‘‘electric utility company’’ which, in
turn, affects whether an entity is a
holding company subject to section
203(a)(2). The FPA does not include a
definition of ‘‘electric utility company’’
and the Commission proposed that the
term, as used in amended section
203(a)(2), have the same meaning as in
PUHCA 2005, which is ‘‘any company
that owns or operates facilities used for
the generation, transmission, or
distribution of electric energy for
sale.’’ 28
i. Comments
35. The proposed definition of
‘‘electric utility company’’ was one of
the most commented-on issues in the
NOPR. While certain commenters,
including the American Public Power
Association and the National Rural
Electric Cooperative Association
(APPA/NRECA), Indiana Utility
Regulatory Commission (Indiana
Commission), and Southern Company
Services, Inc. (Southern Companies),
support the Commission’s adoption of
the PUHCA 2005 definition of ‘‘electric
utility company,’’ several commenters
expressed concerns about the scope of
the Commission’s jurisdiction under the
proposed definition. Specifically, they
object to the proposed definition of the
term ‘‘electric utility company’’ or seek
clarification as to what types of entities
are considered ‘‘electric utility
companies,’’ for purposes of amended
section 203(a)(2), to determine whether
or not they must seek section 203
approval.
36. Many commenters argue that
Congress did not intend to give the
Commission jurisdiction over
acquisitions of foreign companies.29
Certain commenters assert that if
Congress had intended the PUHCA 2005
definition to apply to ‘‘electric utility
company’’ as used in amended section
203(a)(2), it would have said so as it did
for the other terms listed in amended
section 203(a)(6). They explain that,
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28 EPAct
2005 § 1262(5).
29 E.g., Congressman Joe Barton (Chairman
Barton), The AES Corporation (AES), Edison
Electric Institute (EEI), Entergy Services, Inc.
(Entergy), E.ON AG (E.ON), EPSA, GE Energy
Financial Services (GE EFS), Cogentrix Energy, Inc.
and The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (Independent
Sellers), National Grid USA (National Grid), PNM
Resources, Inc. (PNM), Progress Energy, Inc.
(Progress Energy), Scottish Power plc (Scottish
Power), and SUEZ Energy North America (Suez).
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while the term ‘‘electric utility’’ is used
once in amended section 203(a)(2) and
‘‘electric utility company’’ is used twice,
the terms should be read similarly and
should not affect the interpretation of
the section. Accordingly, commenters
assert that it is reasonable to read the
term ‘‘electric utility company,’’ not as
used in PUHCA 2005, where the term
includes foreign utility companies, but
rather to have the same meaning as
‘‘electric utility,’’ which is defined in
the FPA as ‘‘a person or Federal or State
agency * * * that sells electric
energy.’’ 30 They argue that the use of
the term ‘‘electric utility’’ in the FPA
and in the Public Utility Regulatory
Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA) 31 makes
clear that ‘‘electric utilities’’ are
domestic entities (i.e., ones selling
electricity in the U.S.), not foreign.32
37. Similarly, EEI, Entergy, E.ON,
PNM, and Progress Energy maintain
that, in order to be consistent with the
Commission’s FPA jurisdiction, the
Commission should define an ‘‘electric
utility company’’ as ‘‘a person that sells
electric energy in interstate commerce.’’
Suez states that, based on an analysis of
and the legislative purpose behind
EPAct 2005, the Commission should
exempt the acquisition of foreign utility
assets by jurisdictional holding
companies without captive customers
by adding the word ‘‘jurisdictional’’
before ‘‘transmitting utility’’ and
‘‘electric utility company’’ at the end of
proposed section 33.1(a)(2).
38. Other commenters add that the
Commission did not have jurisdiction
over foreign acquisitions before EPAct
2005 and that nothing in EPAct 2005
explicitly gives the Commission
jurisdiction over foreign acquisitions.
Commenters assert that Commission
jurisdiction over foreign acquisitions is
contrary to Congressional intent and
poor public policy, because Commission
review will become an impediment to
U.S. investment in foreign entities and
may discourage international
investment in the U.S. utility industry.33
They assert that the Commission should
not review the numerous and/or routine
foreign transactions that are not
connected to the Commission’s role of
overseeing U.S. wholesale electric
markets and the public interest. Certain
commenters maintain that, at minimum,
30 EPAct
2005 1291(b)(22).
U.S.C. 824a–3 (2000).
32 See, e.g., AES Comments at 5. For example,
AES states that, unless ‘‘electric utility’’ is
implicitly defined only to include domestic entities,
the provisions of sections 111–117 of PURPA,
which relate in part to the actions of state
commissions as they affect ‘‘electric utilities,’’
become a complete non sequitur.
33 E.g., E.ON, Chairman Barton, and Suez.
31 16
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the Commission should exempt from
review a holding company’s acquisition
of a FUCO where the holding company
has no captive U.S. ratepayers.
39. Several commenters argue that if
the PUHCA 2005 definition of ‘‘electric
utility company’’ is adopted in the Final
Rule, the definition should incorporate
the exemptions to that definition set
forth in the PUHCA 2005, including the
exemption for FUCOs.34
40. As indicated above, commenters
argue that part II of the FPA applies to
interstate commerce; therefore, section
203 should not be read to extend to
transactions that are not in interstate
commerce.35 Several commenters object
to the proposed definition of ‘‘electric
utility company’’ if it includes
transactions typically reserved for state
commission consideration (including
transactions involving local distribution
companies, stand-alone generation,
retail sales and exclusively intrastate
transactions), which the commenters
maintain are beyond the Commission’s
jurisdiction.36
41. Specifically, Chairman Barton
maintains that Congress did not intend
to give the Commission jurisdiction over
mergers in ERCOT. EEI, as supported by
E.ON, PNM, and Progress Energy,
maintains that its alternative definition
for ‘‘electric utility company,’’ which is
‘‘a person that sells electric energy in
interstate commerce,’’ would properly
exclude local distribution companies
from the Commission’s authority under
amended section 203.
42. Further, many commenters are
concerned that the proposed definition
of ‘‘electric utility company’’ applies to
QFs.37 ACC, EPSA, GE EFS, and
Independent Sellers ask that the
Commission clarify that QFs continue to
be exempt from the Commission’s
section 203 authority. ACC asks the
Commission to exclude QFs that are not
affiliated with traditional utilities,
transmission providers, or other non-QF
power producers in order to ensure that
the parent companies of such QFs are
not subject to amended section 203.
43. Similarly, EPSA, GE EFS, and
Independent Sellers request that we
exclude a QF’s upstream owners from
Commission oversight under amended
203. They state that section 210(e) of
34 E.g., EEI, Entergy, E.ON, Independent Sellers,
National Grid, Progress Energy, and Scottish Power
(citing, e.g., PUHCA 2005 §§ 1264 & 1266).
35 See, e.g., Chairman Barton Comments at 3.
36 E.g., Chairman Barton, EEI, Hawaiian Electric
Company, Inc. (HECO), National Association of
Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC),
National Grid, PNM, and Progress Energy.
37 E.g., American Chemistry Counsel (ACC),
APPA/NRECA, EPSA, GE EFS, Independent Sellers,
and Transmission Access Policy Study Group
(TAPSG).
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PURPA 38 supports this finding.
Independent Sellers also maintain that
Congressional testimony suggests that
amended 203(a)(2) should regulate only
transactions of holding companies with
public utilities in their holding
company systems.39
44. Several commenters, including GE
EFS and Morgan Stanley Capital Group
Inc. (Morgan Stanley), express concern
about whether the proposed definition
of ‘‘electric utility company’’ includes
EWGs. Morgan Stanley agrees with the
use of the PUHCA 2005 definition of
‘‘electric utility company,’’ stating that
applying the same definition in both
statutes accords with traditional
principles of statutory construction.
However, it asks the Commission to
construe that definition consistent with
the exemptions set forth in PUHCA
2005; this would exempt EWGs.
45. APPA/NRECA seek clarification
that ‘‘a State, any political subdivision
of a State, or any agency, authority or
instrumentality of a State or political
subdivision of a State’’ is not an
‘‘electric utility company’’ under
amended section 203(a)(2).
46. Finally, the Energy Program of
Public Citizen, Inc. (Public Citizen) asks
the Commission to interpret its
jurisdiction under amended FPA section
203 more extensively. It argues that
certain ‘‘suspect’’ categories of utility
owners are not addressed in the NOPR
or in current merger policy. These
include investment banks, electric
equipment suppliers, natural gas system
owners, oil companies, and construction
and other ‘‘service’’ companies. Public
Citizen also states that the Commission
must formulate a policy as to how it will
protect American ratepayers if foreign
holding companies are allowed to
acquire, or continue to own, U.S. public
utilities. Public Citizen criticizes the
SEC’s practice of allowing foreign
holding companies to declare their own
domestic utilities to be FUCOs under
section 33 of PUHCA 1935, even though
Congress did not intend to provide for
this.40 Public Citizen asks for greater
protections for domestic ratepayers
given the absence of a requirement for
‘‘registration for foreign holding
companies and comprehensive PUHCA
1935 regulation of their financial
transaction with their U.S. public
utilities.’’ 41 It also states that the
Commission should require a strong
showing that acquisition by a foreign
company without any experience in
38 16
U.S.C. 824a–3 (2000). Section 210(e)
provides certain exemptions for cogeneration and
small power producers.
39 Independent Sellers Comments at 9.
40 Public Citizen Comments at 10.
41 Id. at 10–11.
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owning utilities is consistent with the
public interest.
ii. Commission Determination
47. A number of commenters make
various arguments to support the
contention that the term ‘‘electric utility
company,’’ as used in amended section
203(a)(2), should not have the same
meaning contained in PUHCA 2005. As
discussed in greater detail below, we
have carefully considered this issue and
will retain the NOPR’s proposed
definition of the term. Additionally, we
continue to believe that the most
reasonable interpretation of section
203(a)(2) is that it applies to purchases
or acquisitions of foreign utility
companies. However, consistent with
Congressional intent, we do not want to
impede foreign investments and we will
grant blanket authorizations of foreign
utility company acquisitions subject to
certain conditions to protect U.S.
captive customers. We also offer further
clarifications below regarding the
application of the definition of ‘‘electric
utility company’’ in specific
circumstances and provide blanket
authorizations for certain transactions.
48. As noted above, new section
203(a)(2) provides:
No holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting utility or
an electric utility shall purchase, acquire, or
take any security with a value in excess of
$10,000,000 of, or, by any means whatsoever,
directly or indirectly, merger or consolidate
with, a transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a holding
company system that includes a transmitting
utility, or an electric utility company, with a
value in excess of $10,000,000 * * *.42
Canons of statutory construction require
that effect be given to every term used
in a statute.43 In new section 203(a)(2),
Congress uses the term ‘‘electric utility’’
(already defined in the FPA) one time,
and the term ‘‘electric utility company’’
(undefined in the FPA, but defined in
both PUHCA 1935 and PUHCA 2005)
two times in the same sentence. We
cannot ignore the fact that Congress
used two different terms within the
same sentence. Had Congress intended
‘‘electric utility’’ to be used in three
places instead of one, it would have
done so.
49. However, the precise meaning of
the term ‘‘electric utility company’’ is
not clear. It is not a defined term in the
FPA. Amended section 203(a)(6)
provides that certain other terms used in
42 EPAct
2005 1289(a).
Reiter v. Sonotone Corp., 442 U.S. 330, 339
(1979) (finding that settled principles of statutory
construction require giving ‘‘effect, if possible, to
every word Congress used’’); see also 2A Statutes
and Statutory Construction § 46.06 (N. Singer 6th
Ed. 2000 Revision) (a statute must be construed so
that no part will be void or insignificant).
43 See
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1353
amended section 203 (‘‘associate
company,’’ ‘‘holding company,’’ and
‘‘holding company system’’) are to have
the same meanings given those terms in
PUHCA 2005, but does not address
‘‘electric utility company.’’ Thus there is
Congressional silence as to the meaning
of the term. We are therefore left to
apply a reasonable meaning to the term
in light of the simultaneous
amendments to FPA section 203 and
enactment of PUHCA 2005.
50. One of the arguments commenters
raise in seeking an alternative definition
of ‘‘electric utility company,’’ is that
‘‘nothing compels’’ the Commission to
use the PUHCA 2005 definition of the
term.44 We agree that such a result is not
‘‘compelled,’’ because the term is
ambiguous. However, in determining
what Congress might have meant by
‘‘electric utility company,’’ the only
reference points the Commission has in
the context of federal electric utility
regulatory terminology is the meaning of
the term as used in PUHCA 1935 and in
PUHCA 2005.45 Further, while certain
commenters maintain that Congress
intended to use the term ‘‘electric
utility’’ instead of ‘‘electric utility
company’’ in section 203(a)(2), there is
no reliable legislative history to support
this conclusion and, moreover, we do
not believe that proper statutory
construction permits us to simply
substitute a term that Congress did not
use.46 Additionally, as discussed below,
substitution of the FPA term ‘‘electric
utility’’ would not by itself resolve the
issue as sought by commenters.
51. We conclude that the most
reasonable interpretation of ‘‘electric
utility company,’’ as used in section
203(a)(2) of the FPA, particularly in
light of the fact that section 203(a)(2)
will become effective simultaneous with
the repeal of PUHCA 1935 and
enactment of PUHCA 2005, is the
meaning in PUHCA 2005: ‘‘any
company that owns or operates facilities
used for the generation, transmission, or
distribution of electric energy for sale.’’
We also find that it is reasonable to
44 Commenters’ alternative proposed definitions
are also discussed below in the specific context of
the requested exemptions of foreign transactions.
45 While both the FPA and PURPA contain
definitions of ‘‘electric utility,’’ neither contains a
definition of ‘‘electric utility company.’’
46 See, e.g., Indiana Michigan Power Co. v. Dept.
of Energy, 88 F.3d 1272, 1276 (DC Cir. 1996)
(vacating an agency’s decision where the agency’s
‘‘treatment of [a] statute is not an interpretation but
a rewrite’’); United States v. Plaza Health
Laboratories, Inc., 3 F.3d 643, 655 (2nd Cir. 1993),
cert. denied sub nom. United States v. Villegas, 512
U.S. 1245 (1994) (‘‘neither agencies nor courts
should rewrite the statute to be more ‘reasonable’
* * * than Congress intended’’).
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interpret section 203(a)(2) as applying to
foreign utility acquisitions, in light of
the legitimate concern that there be
federal oversight to ensure that U.S.
captive customers do not crosssubsidize foreign transactions and that
U.S. utility assets used to serve captive
customers are not encumbered in order
to support foreign acquisitions. The
legislative history relevant to new
section 203(a)(2) evidences this
concern.47 However, the legislative
history also makes clear that the
provision was not intended to impede
foreign investments, particularly where
there are no U.S. captive customers that
could be affected. Accordingly, we will
interpret ‘‘electric utility company’’ to
include foreign utility companies, but,
as discussed infra, we will grant blanket
authorizations for certain foreign
acquisitions, with conditions to protect
U.S. customers.
52. We reject commenters’ specific
alternatives to the proposed definition
of ‘‘electric utility company.’’ We do not
believe that those proposed alternative
definitions properly resolve the issue as
to whether amended section 203(a)(2)
applies to acquisitions of foreign utility
companies. As noted above, the term
‘‘electric utility company’’ is defined in
PUHCA 2005 as ‘‘any company that
owns or operates facilities used for the
generation, transmission, or distribution
of electric energy for sale.’’ 48 In
contrast, ‘‘electric utility’’ (which some
commenters would have us substitute)
is defined in the FPA, as modified by
EPAct 2005, as ‘‘a person or Federal or
State agency * * * that sells electric
energy.’’ 49 Neither of these terms, on its
face, is limited to domestic transactions
or even to interstate transactions.
‘‘Electric utility,’’ as defined in the FPA,
both pre- and post-EPAct 2005, means
persons that sell electric energy. Thus,
we reject the argument that the
Commission should insert the term
‘‘electric utility’’ into section 203(a)(2)
and then re-define it to mean persons
that sell electric energy ‘‘in interstate
commerce.’’ Not only has the modifier
in ‘‘interstate commerce’’ not been
included in the FPA definition of
‘‘electric utility’’ either pre- or postEPAct 2005, but these commenters
47 The only legislative history on this issue is a
colloquy between Senators Bingaman and
Domenici, Ranking Member and Chairman,
respectively, of the Senate Committee on Energy
and Natural Resources. See Senate Floor Statements
by Senators Bingaman (D–NM) and Domenici (R–
NM), H.R. 6, Energy Policy Act of 2005, 151 Cong.
Rec. S9359 (July 29, 2005) (discussing concerns
regarding Commission approval of certain foreign
transactions outside of the United States).
48 EPAct 2005 § 1262(5).
49 Id. § 1291(b)(22).
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would require us to write into the
statute words that are not there.50
53. We also reject the alternative,
proposed by Suez, by which the
Commission would exclude foreign
acquisitions by jurisdictional holding
companies without captive customers
by adding the word ‘‘jurisdictional’’
before ‘‘transmitting utility’’ and
‘‘electric utility company’’ at the end of
proposed section 33.1(a)(2) (which
reflects new section 203(a)(2)). Congress
in other provisions of the FPA,
including section 203, has specifically
limited certain authorizations to
jurisdictional facilities, but chose not to
do so in section 203(a)(2). We do not
believe it is appropriate to insert into
the statute modifiers that Congress did
not include.
54. A number of commenters raised
concerns about the definition of
‘‘electric utility company’’ and the
applicability of the Commission’s
authority under amended section 203 to
transactions wholly within ERCOT,
Alaska, or Hawaii, transactions
involving QFs, local distribution
companies, stand-alone generation,
retail sales and other intrastate
transactions. Several of these
commenters rely on the argument, as
stated above, that Congress did not
intend to expand significantly the
Commission’s jurisdiction and,
therefore, did not convey to the
Commission jurisdiction over
transactions typically reserved for state
commission consideration. Others argue
for exemptions from the definition of
‘‘electric utility company.’’
55. While we do not believe it is
reasonable to interpret section 203(a)(2)
as being limited solely to holding
company acquisitions and mergers
involving wholesale sales or
50 In fact, the key FPA provisions in which the
term ‘‘electric utility’’ is used are sections 210 and
211. Section 210, both pre- and post-EPAct 2005,
permits the Commission to order an
interconnection with the facilities of persons that
sell energy in interstate or intrastate commerce. The
current interconnection between ERCOT and the
interstate grid was pursuant to a Commission order
under sections 210 and 211 of the FPA. See Central
Power & Light Co., 17 FERC ¶ 61,078 (1981), order
on reh’g, 18 FERC ¶ 61,100 (1982). Although
commenters are correct that most of part II of the
FPA is limited to interstate commerce, Congress has
made specific exceptions in certain FPA provisions,
and that includes the definition of ‘‘electric utility.’’
Cf. Indiana Michigan Power Co. v. Dept. of Energy,
88 F.3d 1272, 1276 (DC Cir. 1996) (‘‘The [agency’s]
treatment of this statute is not an interpretation but
a rewrite.’’); United States v. Plaza Health
Laboratories, Inc., 3 F.3d 643, 655 (2nd Cir. 1993)
(stating ‘‘neither agencies nor courts should rewrite
the statute to be more ‘reasonable’ * * * than
Congress intended’’); Newman v. Love, 962 F.2d
1008, 1013 (Fed. Cir. 1992) (rejecting an agency’s
‘‘attempt to rewrite’’ a statute to contain costs or to
avoid what it views as an inappropriate allocation
of benefits).
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transmission in interstate commerce, we
nevertheless conclude that commenters
have raised valid concerns and that
there would be no benefit from the
Commission’s case-by-case evaluation of
certain transactions under section
203(a)(2).51
56. Our core jurisdiction under part II
of the FPA continues to be transmission
and sales for resale of electric energy in
interstate commerce and we believe that
a major impetus behind section
203(a)(2) was to clarify the
Commission’s jurisdiction over mergers
of holding companies that own public
utilities as defined in the FPA.52
However, the fact is that the language in
section 203(a)(2) does more than
address this issue, and we must
implement the provision in a way that
recognizes the expansion of authority,
yet retains our primary focus on
interstate wholesale energy markets and
does not interfere unduly with historical
state jurisdiction. Accordingly, we
conclude that it is consistent with the
public interest to grant blanket
authorizations in the Final Rule for the
following:
(1) Section 203(a)(2) purchases or
acquisitions by holding companies of
companies that own, operate, or control
facilities used solely for transmission or
sales of electric energy in intrastate
commerce; and
(2) Section 203(a)(2) purchases or
acquisitions by holding companies of
facilities used solely for local
distribution and/or sales at retail
regulated by a state commission.
57. We conclude that these blanket
authorizations are consistent with the
public interest for several reasons. First,
the identified categories do not raise
concerns with respect to competitive
wholesale markets for sales in interstate
commerce or protection of wholesale
captive customers served by
Commission-regulated public utilities—
matters within this Commission’s core
responsibility and expertise. Second, to
the extent these categories raise
competitive issues in intrastate
commerce, i.e., in ERCOT, Hawaii, and
Alaska,53 those issues are within the
51 An acquisition or merger involving ‘‘any
company that owns or operates facilities used for
the generation, transmission, or distribution of
electric energy for sale’’ is not on its face limited
to interstate facilities.
52 Illinois Power Co., 67 FERC ¶ 61,136 (1994)
(noting that the Commission does not have
jurisdiction over public holding company mergers
or consolidations, but concluding that, ordinarily,
when public utility holding companies merge, an
indirect merger involving their public utility
subsidiaries also takes place, and that Commission
approval under section 203 would be required).
53 Similarly, although not raised by commenters,
the blanket authorization would apply to any
organized Territory of the United States.
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expertise of, and more appropriately
addressed by, state commissions. Third,
to the extent retail competition and
retail ratepayer protection issues are
raised by a holding company acquisition
of local distribution or other retail
facilities, these issues also are within
the expertise of, and more appropriately
addressed by, state commissions. We
will thus grant the identified blanket
authorizations and not impose any type
of filing requirement with respect to
such transactions.
58. In response to the request of
APPA/NRECA that we clarify that ‘‘a
State, any political subdivision of a
State, or any agency, authority or
instrumentality of a State or political
subdivision of a State’’ is not an
‘‘electric utility company’’ under
amended section 203(a)(2), and
therefore, not subject to amended
section 203, we clarify that even if a
governmental entity were to meet the
definitions of ‘‘electric utility company’’
or ‘‘holding company,’’ section 203(a)(2)
would not impose on the governmental
entity any filing requirements under
section 203. This is discussed in further
detail infra. However, if a nongovernmental public utility holding
company were to seek to acquire a
governmental utility (e.g., a municipal
utility) that owns interstate transmission
facilities or facilities used for wholesale
sales in interstate commerce (and thus
meets the definitions of ‘‘electric utility
company’’), and turn it into a private
company subsidiary, then section
203(a)(2) should apply to the public
utility holding company’s acquisition.
While no section 203 filing requirement
would be imposed on the governmental
entity, it would be imposed on the
private entity.
59. We reject commenters’ request
that we explicitly exclude QFs and
EWGs from the definition of ‘‘electric
utility company.’’ Regardless of their
status under PUHCA 2005, the
exemptions set forth under PUHCA
2005 are not dispositive as to the scope
of the Commission’s amended FPA
section 203 authority. These PUHCA
2005 exemptions are set forth in the
context of federal access to books and
records and, more importantly, unlike
PUHCA 2005, FPA section 203 does not
give us any express authority to exempt
persons or classes of transactions.54
60. Additionally, were the
Commission to interpret ‘‘electric utility
company’’ for purposes of FPA section
203(a)(2) not to include EWGs or QFs,
54 While QFs themselves currently are exempt
from section 203’s filing requirements by virtue of
the Commission’s PURPA regulations, PURPA does
not give us authority to exempt holding companies
that own QFs.
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this could preclude review of certain
acquisitions of securities of EWGs or
QFs even by holding companies whose
systems contain traditional public
utilities with transmission facilities
and/or captive customers. We do not
believe that such transactions should be
excluded from review under section 203
and conclude that it is reasonable to
interpret the statute not to exclude
them.55 We recognize the arguments of
some commenters that we should not
apply section 203(a)(2) to holding
company acquisitions of securities of
EWGs and QFs, or at a minimum should
not apply it to such acquisitions by
holding companies that are holding
companies solely by virtue of owning or
controlling one or more EWGs, FUCOs,
or QFs, because it would impede
investments in QFs and EWGs or result
in unnecessary regulation of upstream
owners of QFs and EWGs.56 In response,
we believe the blanket authorizations
granted herein for certain holding
company acquisitions of non-voting
securities and up to 9.9 percent of
voting securities in electric utility
companies will adequately address the
concerns raised. To the extent
additional blanket authorizations are
needed or appropriate, we will consider
those on a case-by-case basis.
61. Public Citizen makes broad
comments on the scope of the
Commission’s jurisdiction and the
standards articulated in the
Commission’s existing merger policy.
We reject the request that we treat
various types of utility owners or
transactions as ‘‘suspect.’’ As discussed
below, the Commission is adopting the
definition of ‘‘holding company’’ as
required by amended section 203(a)(6),
and is adopting a definition of ‘‘electric
utility company’’ that is reasonable, in
light of the statutory construction of
amended section 203 and Congressional
silence. We note that several of the
scenarios discussed by Public Citizen in
its comments fall under the
Commission’s amended section 203
authority, as clarified herein. As with all
such transactions under its review, the
Commission will carefully examine the
55 We note that a holding company acquisition of
securities of an EWG would in some circumstances
trigger section 203 review in any event by virtue of
section 203(a)(1). This is because the EWG could
well be a public utility and, to the extent the
holding company acquired ‘‘control’’ of the EWG,
we would construe the EWG to be ‘‘disposing’’ of
its jurisdictional facilities and thus required to file
for approval under section 203(a). A similar
situation involving acquisition of securities of a QF
would not trigger section 203 review, since QFs
currently are exempted from FPA section 203 filing
requirements by the Commission’s PURPA
regulations.
56 See, e.g., GE EFS and Independent Sellers.
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proposed transaction to ensure it is
consistent with the public interest.
Moreover, Public Citizen will have an
opportunity to present its concerns in
these specific cases.
b. Definitions of ‘‘Associate Company,’’
‘‘Holding Company,’’ ‘‘Holding
Company System,’’ and ‘‘Transmitting
Utility’’
62. In the NOPR, the Commission
explained that the term ‘‘transmitting
utility’’ is already defined in amended
section 3 of the FPA 57 as ‘‘an entity
(including an entity described in section
201(f)) that owns, operates, or controls
facilities used for the transmission of
electric energy—(A) in interstate
commerce; (B) for the sale of electric
energy at wholesale.’’ 58
63. The Commission also proposed
that, consistent with amended section
203(a)(6), the terms ‘‘associate
company,’’ ‘‘holding company,’’ and
‘‘holding company system’’ shall have
the meaning given those terms in
PUHCA 2005.59
i. Comments
64. No comments were filed
specifically in response to these
proposed definitions of ‘‘transmitting
utility,’’ ‘‘associate company,’’ or
‘‘holding company system.’’ However,
several commenters object to the
proposed definition of ‘‘holding
company’’ or seek exemption from that
definition for purposes of amended
section 203(a)(2). They seek to limit the
scope of the Commission’s definition of
‘‘holding company.’’ 60 Amended
section 203(a)(2) provides explicitly, for
the first time, that ‘‘holding companies’’
must seek Commission approval prior to
certain mergers and acquisitions.
Commenters seek clarification as to the
types of entities that meet the definition
of ‘‘holding company’’ to confirm
whether or not they will be subject to
this new filing requirement.
65. GE EFS asks the Commission to
construe the term ‘‘holding company’’ to
include only companies that own
traditional utilities and that would have
been deemed to be holding companies
under PUHCA 1935. This would
exclude companies that are holding
companies only by virtue of owning
QFs, EWGs, or FUCOs. Industrial
57 16
U.S.C. 796 (2000).
at P 38 (citing EPAct 2005
1291(b)(1)(B)(23)).
59 Id. at P 39 (citing EPAct 2005 1262(2), (8), &
(9)).
60 E.g., GE EFS, HECO, Independent Sellers, and
the Electricity Consumers Resource Council, the
American Iron and Steel Institute, the American
Chemistry Council, and the PJM Industrial
Customer Coalition (collectively, Industrial
Consumers).
58 NOPR
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Consumers also seek to limit the
definition of ‘‘holding company,’’ asking
the Commission to clarify that
‘‘industrials and other entities whose
on-site generation investment meets the
statutory definition of EWGs’ are not
included in the definition.61
Independent Sellers asks the
Commission to confirm that a ‘‘holding
company,’’ for purposes of amended
section 203(a), does not include entities
owning new electric generation facilities
that have not yet begun commercial
operation.
66. APPA/NRECA seek clarification
that ‘‘a State, any political subdivision
of a State, or any agency, authority or
instrumentality of a State or political
subdivision of a State,’’ does not meet
the definition of ‘‘holding company.’’ 62
It also seeks clarification that rural
electric cooperatives are not ‘‘holding
companies’’ under amended section
203(a)(2).
67. HECO seeks clarification that an
entity that meets the definition of
holding company for purposes of
section 203(a)(2) solely because it is the
upstream owner of an electric utility
company that is not a public utility
under FPA, and that is not otherwise
subject to Commission jurisdiction
under any other provision of part II of
the FPA, will not be subject to the
Commission’s merger authority. HECO
explains that this would exclude from
the Commission’s jurisdiction under
section 203(a)(2) acquisitions of holding
companies with subsidiaries located
only in Hawaii, Alaska, ERCOT, and
foreign countries. HECO contends that
Commission oversight of holding
company acquisitions in this context is
not necessary to protect the public
interest.
ii. Commission Determination
68. Because the term ‘‘transmitting
utility’’ is already defined in amended
section 3 of the FPA and amended
section 203(a)(6) provides that the terms
‘‘associated company’’ and ‘‘holding
company system’’ shall have the
meaning provided in PUHCA 2005, the
Final Rule adopts them, as set forth in
the NOPR.63 We also note that no
commenters oppose these proposed
definitions.
69. The Final Rule also adopts the
NOPR’s proposed definition of the term
61 Industrial
Consumers Comments at 6.
Comments at 18.
63 We note that, prior to EPAct 2005, the FPA
term ‘‘transmitting utility’’ was not limited to
entities that own or operate transmission facilities
used ‘‘in interstate commerce.’’ EPAct 2005,
however, modified the definition to, among other
things, limit it to facilities used in interstate
commerce.
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62 APPA/NRECA
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‘‘holding company.’’ Amended section
203(a)(6) mandates that the term
‘‘holding company’’ shall have the
meaning provided in PUHCA 2005. This
statutory directive is unambiguous.
70. The Commission therefore rejects
requests for clarification that only
companies that own traditional utilities,
and not those that own solely FUCOs,
EWGs and/or QFs, should be deemed
‘‘holding companies’’ under amended
section 203. ‘‘Holding Company’’ in
PUHCA 2005, as reflected in the rules
adopted herein, means ‘‘any company
that directly or indirectly owns,
controls, or holds, with the power to
vote, 10 percent or more of the
outstanding voting securities of a public
utility company or of a holding
company of any public utility company;
* * *’’ 64 There is no limitation within
the plain words of this definition that
can be read to exclude holding
companies that own or control EWGs,
FUCOs, or QFs. Additionally, even
under PUHCA 2005, persons that own
or control only EWGs, FUCOs, or QFs
are considered holding companies but
are explicitly exempted from PUHCA
2005 by section 1266. There is no
similar exemption in amended section
203 and we conclude that it is
reasonable to interpret section 203(a)(2)
review to include acquisitions of
generation or transmission facilities or
companies by holding companies
owning only FUCOs, QFs, and/or EWGs.
71. In response to the clarification
sought by HECO, as indicated above,
amended section 203(a)(6) mandates the
adoption of the PUHCA 2005 definition
of ‘‘holding company.’’ That definition
includes the upstream owners of an
electric utility company that is not a
public utility under the FPA and that is
not otherwise subject to Commission
ratemaking jurisdiction under part II of
the FPA. As discussed above regarding
the definition of ‘‘electric utility
company,’’ we have concluded that this
definition is not limited to interstate
commerce. Therefore, holding
companies that own ‘‘electric utility
companies’’ whose businesses are solely
intrastate technically fall under
amended section 203(a)(2). However, we
agree that reviewing transactions
involving Hawaii, Alaska, and ERCOT
would involve matters outside our
expertise and the core focus of part II of
the FPA, and therefore we have granted
blanket authorizations, as discussed
above.
72. As requested by Independent
Sellers, we clarify that a ‘‘holding
company,’’ for purposes of amended
section 203(a), does not include entities
owning new electric generation that
have not yet begun commercial
operation.
73. We grant APPA/NRECA’s request
that the Commission clarify that a state
or any political subdivision of a state or
agency thereof is not a ‘‘holding
company’’ under amended section
203(a)(2). While the definition of
holding company possibly could be
construed to include governmental
entities or electric power cooperatives,
we believe a more reasonable
interpretation is that Congress did not
intend to give the Commission authority
over acquisitions by such entities.
Section 201(f) of the FPA 65 excludes
from most FPA part II provisions
governmental entities and electric
power cooperatives financed by the
Rural Electrification Act of 1936,66 and
there is no indication that Congress
intended to impose any section 203
filing requirements on such entities.
Accordingly, we will not interpret
section 203(a)(2) to apply to
governmental entities and electric
power cooperatives.
3. Section 33.1(b)—Definition of
‘‘Existing Generation Facility’’
74. The Commission proposed that
subsection 33.1(b) would define
‘‘existing generation facility’’ for section
203 purposes as a generation facility
that is operational at the time the
transaction is consummated.67 The
Commission stated that, as reflected in
proposed section 33.1(a)(1)(iv)(b), if
such a generation facility is intended to
be used in whole or in part for
wholesale sales in interstate commerce
by a public utility, it is subject to our
jurisdiction for ratemaking purposes
and thus is covered under amended
section 203(a)(1)(D). The Commission
explained that, although the statute
refers to a facility that ‘‘is’’ used for
wholesale sales (and over which the
Commission has jurisdiction for
ratemaking purposes), we believed that
a reasonable interpretation is that the
provision would apply to newly
constructed facilities that have already
been energized at the time the
transaction is consummated and are
intended to be used in whole or in part
for wholesale sales in interstate
commerce by public utilities. The
Commission also noted that if it can be
demonstrated that a facility is used
exclusively for retail sales, then
amended section 203(a)(1)(D) does not
apply.
65 16
U.S.C. 824(f) (2000).
U.S.C. 901 et seq.
67 NOPR at P 37.
66 7
64 EPAct
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a. Comments
75. The definition of ‘‘existing
generation facility’’ drew extensive
comment from state regulatory
commissions, traditional public
utilities, public/cooperative entities and
retail customer and other groups.
76. One comment raised by EEI and
Progress Energy is that the Commission
should construe the term ‘‘existing’’ to
mean only facilities that existed as of
the date of enactment of EPAct 2005
(August 8, 2005). They claim that had
Congress meant to apply amended
section 203 to facilities that become
operational after August 8, 2005, it
would have used different language.
APPA/NRECA takes the decidedly
opposite view that applying amended
section 203 only to facilities that existed
when EPAct 2005 was enacted would
eventually mean the demise of section
203 review, without any indication that
Congress intended such a result.
77. Most commenters focused on the
term ‘‘existing’’ in its operational and
temporal context, as reflected in the
NOPR’s proposal to assert jurisdiction
over transfers of facilities that ‘‘are
operational at the time the transaction is
consummated.’’ Commenters generally
focused on whether the facilities are in
the construction or development stage,
at or near ‘‘operation,’’ or in retired or
mothballed status. Contrary to most
commenters, Kentucky Public Service
Commission (Kentucky Commission)
and National Association of State Utility
Consumer Advocates (NASUCA) would
have the Commission assert jurisdiction
over transfers of facilities that are under
construction or development. NASUCA
argues that section 203 should apply if
the facilities have received any kind of
federal or state permit or have applied
for market-based rate authority or
generator interconnection status with an
independent system operator (ISO) or
regional transmission organization
(RTO). It contends that such facilities
are already influencing the market,
particularly if they are being sold to
provide future capacity or ancillary
services. By the same token, NASUCA
and TAPSG want us to assert
jurisdiction over transfers of units that
are mothballed or retired, especially if
the units can be brought back on line
and retain the permits or authorities.
FirstEnergy Service Company
(FirstEnergy) recommends that the
Commission clarify its rules to deal with
a mothballed facility that is slated to be
refurbished and with a facility that is
shut down where the site and
equipment has been sold. Neither
FirstEnergy nor Progress Energy believe
that section 203 should apply to
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transfers of facilities removed from
service and from the Commission’s
accounting and thus are not physically
or otherwise capable of making
wholesale sales.
78. Although all commenters agree
that section 203 review should
encompass facilities that are
‘‘operational,’’ they disagree as to how
to define ‘‘operational’’ and ‘‘ability to
make sales.’’ They also disagree as to the
point in time at which a jurisdictional
determination is to be made,
particularly for substantially completed
plants that are at or near the
‘‘operational stage.’’ APPA/NRECA
finds the Commission’s proposed
approach reasonable, but is concerned
that defining a facility on the basis of
whether the facility is energized may
allow companies to evade section 203
by delaying the interconnection process.
NASUCA shares this concern, asserting
that whether the plant is producing
electricity at the time of the transaction
is irrelevant to whether section 203
jurisdiction should apply. NARUC,
Progress Energy, and Southern
Companies take the view that for a
generation facility to be deemed
‘‘operational,’’ it must be interconnected
and synchronized with the system so
that it is capable of making wholesale
sales. Other commenters suggest that a
facility actually be in service and
making jurisdictional sales. Most
commenters agree with the
Commission’s proposal that the
jurisdictional determination should be
made on the basis of whether the facility
is operational, or is projected to be
operational when the transaction is (or
is expected) to be consummated.
NARUC, however, suggests that the
jurisdictional determination should be
made on the basis of whether the facility
is operational at the time the underlying
transaction agreement has been entered
into and submitted for Commission
approval.
79. Wisconsin Electric Power
Company (Wisconsin Electric) expresses
concern regarding the application of the
term ‘‘operational.’’ It requests that the
Commission clarify either that
‘‘consummated’’ refers to when the
transaction, as defined by the lease and
associated commitments, is executed or
that ‘‘operational’’ is restricted to
operations in the ordinary course of the
business of the non-acquiring party.
80. EEI and Ameren Services
Company (Ameren) argue that the
‘‘intent’’ language in proposed section
33.1(a)(1)(iv)(b) exceeds the statutory
authority of amended section
203(a)(1)(D)(ii). They also insist that an
‘‘intent’’ standard is unworkable
because ‘‘intent’’ would be difficult to
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ascertain. Southern is also concerned
that the ‘‘intent’’ language would
introduce confusion as to the
jurisdictional status of transfers of
facilities that are merely under
construction. Chairman Barton
questions whether requiring only an
intent to use facilities in interstate
commerce will unduly burden potential
transactions and results in unnecessary
review, particularly when, after the
facilities are placed in service, the
Commission has authority under FPA
sections 205 68 and 206 69 over the
facility and its rates. Although not
specifically referring to either the
‘‘intent’’ language or the ‘‘exclusive use
for retail sales’’ language, the North
Carolina Utilities Commission (North
Carolina Commission) emphasizes that
nothing in amended section 203(a)(1)(D)
expands the Commission’s jurisdiction
to include generation resource adequacy
for retail service; EPAct 2005 expressly
reserves authority over generation
resource adequacy to the states. It urges
that the final rule recognize this
limitation.
81. Other commenters, such as Utility
Workers Union of America, AFL–CIO
(UWUA) and APPA/NRECA, generally
support the ‘‘intent’’ language. APPA/
NRECA and TAPSG, however, believe
that a very high standard should be set
for demonstrating that a facility is
exclusively used for retail sales. TAPSG
points out that utilities do not ordinarily
dispatch their units separately for
wholesale sales and retail sales. Both
commenters also contend that amended
section 203 should apply to facilities
that received an exemption initially
from section 203 on the basis of retail
use only but that later are used for
wholesale sales. Owners of such
facilities should be subject to the
Commission’s expanded penalty
authority. APPA/NRECA and TAPSG
argue that the Commission should
explicitly state that section 203 approval
is required for the acquisition of a QF;
they ask us to clarify that QFs may be
‘‘existing generation facilities’’ under
amended section 203(a)(1)(D).
b. Commission Determination
82. The Commission will clarify and
modify a number of aspects of its
proposal for determining whether a
generation facility is an existing
generation facility for purposes of
amended section 203(a)(1)(D). We will
also address other questions raised by
commenters with regard to the NOPR.
83. Initially, the Commission will
reject EEI’s and Progress Energy’s
68 16
69 16
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argument that ‘‘existing generation
facility’’ should be construed to
encompass only those generation
facilities in existence as of the date of
enactment of EPAct 2005 (i.e., August 8,
2005). They submit that any other
interpretation would effectively write
‘‘existing’’ out of the statute and that if
Congress had intended amended section
203 to apply to generation facilities that
come into existence after August 8,
2005, it would have used plainly
different language. We do not agree.
First, such an interpretation is not, as
Progress Energy suggests, required as a
textual matter. Congress could have, but
chose not to, use the term ‘‘existing on
the effective date of this Act.’’ Rather, it
simply used the term ‘‘existing.’’
Second, such an interpretation would
make little sense. It would eventually
write amended section 203(a)(1)(D) out
of existence as pre-EPAct 2005
generation facilities are retired and only
post-EPAct 2005 generation facilities
remain. There is only a brief mention of
the term ‘‘existing,’’ without any
explanation, in the legislative history of
amended section 203. However, the
legislative history suggests that Congress
intended for the Commission to not only
continue, but to expand our review of
activities that would affect wholesale
competition and ratepayers.70
Therefore, we reject EEI’s and Progress
Energy’s argument.
84. The Commission adopts the
NOPR’s proposal that an ‘‘existing
generation facility’’ is a generation
facility that is operational at or before
the time the transaction is
consummated. However, we are deleting
language in proposed section
33.1(a)(iv)(b) stating that section 203
applies if the generation facility ‘‘is
intended to be used’’ in whole or in part
for wholesale sales in interstate
commerce by a public utility. Below we
explain various aspects of this
definition.
85. We note first that ‘‘the time the
transaction is consummated’’ refers to
the point in time when the transaction
actually closes and control of the facility
changes hands. The Commission will
construe ‘‘operational’’ to mean a
generation facility for which
construction is complete (i.e., it is
capable of producing power). An
‘‘existing generation facility’’ would not
include generation plants that are only
70 See, e.g., Senate Floor Statement by Senator
Bingaman (D–NM), H.R. 6, Energy Policy Act of
2005, Congressional Record at S9258 (July 28, 2005)
(stating that ‘‘in the area of electric utility mergers,
we have expanded the jurisdiction of [the
Commission] over mergers involving existing
generation plants; that is, plants that are in
existence at the time the merger takes place.’’).
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in the development or construction
stage. However, an ‘‘existing generation
facility’’ would include a mothballed
facility, so long as the facility was
operational at any time before the
transaction is consummated.
86. With regard to the issue of
wholesale versus retail sales, the
Commission will eliminate the language
‘‘intended to be’’ from proposed section
33.1(a)(1)(iv)(b). We agree with some
commenters that ‘‘intent’’ is difficult to
discern and could introduce
unnecessary confusion about plants that
are under construction and clearly not
being used for wholesale sales. Rather,
the Commission will adopt a rebuttable
presumption that amended section
203(a) applies to the transfer of any
existing generation facility unless the
utility can demonstrate with substantial
evidence that the generator is used
exclusively for retail sales. In our
experience, utilities do not ordinarily
separate the dispatch of their plants for
retail sales and wholesale sales; rather,
they dispatch all their units on an
integrated basis to serve all load (retail
and wholesale). Therefore a utility
proposing an unusual procedure by
which it dispatches certain plants
‘‘only’’ for retail load will have the
burden to demonstrate that any
particular generating facility will never
be used to make wholesale sales.
87. Finally, in response to
commenters’ requests that section 203
approval be required for the acquisition
of a QF, we clarify that if a public utility
acquires an existing generation facility
used for Commission-jurisdictional
sales, whether a QF or any other type of
generation facility, the transaction is
subject to section 203. Although certain
QFs themselves are exempted from any
filing requirements under section 203 by
virtue of our PURPA regulations, this
does not mean that public utilities that
acquire QFs are exempt. Additionally,
there is no limitation in amended
section 203(a)(1)(D) on the type of
generation facilities that trigger section
203 review, if they are used for
interstate wholesale sales and the
Commission has jurisdiction over them
for ratemaking purposes. Further, even
if the Commission had the discretion to
exempt QF acquisitions from section
203 review, we do not think it would be
necessarily consistent with the public
interest to do so in light of EPAct 2005’s
elimination of QF ownership
restrictions.
4. Section 33.1(b)—Definition of ‘‘NonUtility Associate Company’’
88. The Commission proposed to
interpret the term ‘‘non-utility associate
company’’ to mean any associate
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company in a holding company system
other than a public utility or electric
utility company that has wholesale or
retail customers served under cost-based
regulation.71 Therefore, we proposed
that a non-utility associate company
would include, for example, a power
marketer, a generator that does not have
captive customers, a gas marketer, a fuel
supply company or other company that
provides inputs to power production, or
a company that is involved in business
activities not related to the generation,
transmission, distribution, or sale of
electricity.72 This definition is relevant
because of the new section 203(a)(4)
requirement that we find that a
proposed transaction does not result in
inappropriate cross-subsidization or
pledge or encumbrance of utility assets.
The Commission sought comment on
whether it should use a narrower
definition, for example, whether we
should define a ‘‘non-utility associate
company’’ as a company that is in a
business not related to the generation,
transmission, distribution, or sale of
electricity.
a. Comments
89. Many state commissions and other
commenters from the industry agree that
the Commission’s proposed broad
definition of ‘‘non-utility associate
company’’ should be adopted in order to
afford the greatest protection against
cross-subsidization, as Congress
intended in EPAct 2005.73 Indiana
Commission and NARUC explain that
the cross-subsidization of an entity
involved in a business unrelated to the
electric industry and the crosssubsidization of an entity involved in
‘‘unregulated,’’ electricity-related
activities are equally inappropriate. On
the other hand, FirstEnergy and
Southern Companies urge the
Commission to adopt the narrower
definition.
90. American Electric Power Service
Corporation (AEP) asserts that both the
Commission’s broader definition
proposed in the NOPR and the narrower
definition (proposed as an alternative)
are unnecessarily broad, ensnaring
companies that are providing essentially
ancillary services to the regulated utility
and that thus present no risk of crosssubsidization. AEP maintains that
amended section 203(a)(4) is simply
designed to ensure that a transaction
does not result in cross-subsidization,
71 NOPR
at P 44.
are examples only. This list is not
intended to be exhaustive.
73 E.g., APPA/NRECA, Indiana Commission,
Kentucky Commission, NARUC, NASUCA, and
New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (New Jersey
Board).
72 These
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which, by definition, only occurs when
a competitive affiliate of the utility is
unduly enriched by use of regulated
assets. AEP states that the Commission
has already defined these energy
affiliate companies in the Standards of
Conduct,74 and states that we should
define a ‘‘non-utility associate
company’’ by adopting the same
definition used to describe an ‘‘energy
affiliate’’ in 18 CFR 358.3(d).
b. Commission Determination
91. We agree with the majority of the
commenters that the NOPR’s proposed
broader definition of the term ‘‘nonutility associate company’’ is
reasonable. Our goal in defining this
term is to ensure that public utilities
with captive customers do not crosssubsidize ‘‘non-regulated’’ associate
companies, i.e., companies that are not
subject to traditional cost-based
regulation.75 As it relates to this
objective, there is no difference between
the propriety of cross-subsidizing
associate energy companies that are not
subject to traditional cost-based
regulation versus an entity that is
involved in a business completely
unrelated to the energy industry. Since
the purpose is to protect customers,
whether the company inappropriately
subsidized is an associate company in
the energy industry or not is irrelevant.
92. We disagree with AEP’s
contention that cross-subsidization
occurs only when using traditionally
regulated assets to subsidize a
competitive affiliate of the utility
company. Congress was concerned with
the potential for abuse when a
traditionally regulated public utility
(i.e., one that is subject to the
Commission’s traditional cost-based
regulation) subsidizes an ‘‘unregulated’’
affiliate company within the same
holding company system. Defining a
non-utility associate company based on
whether or not that ‘‘unregulated’’
affiliate company is a competitor of the
utility company is too narrow to prevent
abuses; consequently, the Standards of
Conduct definition of an ‘‘energy
affiliate’’ is not appropriate here.76
93. Accordingly, we will adopt the
broader definition of a ‘‘non-utility
associate company,’’ which is any
associate company in a holding
company system other than a public
utility or electric utility company that
has wholesale or retail customers served
under cost-based regulation. A nonutility associate company would
include, among others, a power
CFR part 358 (2005).
at P 42.
76 18 CFR 358.3(d).
marketer, a generator that does not have
captive customers, a gas marketer, a fuel
supply company or company that
provides inputs to power production, or
a company that is involved in business
activities not related to the generation,
transmission, distribution or sale of
electricity.
5. Section 33.1(b)—Definition of
‘‘Value’’
94. In the NOPR, the Commission
proposed to generally rely on a ‘‘market
value’’ approach for determining
whether asset transfers, with the
exception of wholesale contracts, meet
the value threshold necessary to require
approval under amended section 203.
This would base value on expected
future earnings or profits over the life of
the asset. This is in contrast to our
current regulations, which define value
as original cost undepreciated as
defined in the Commission’s Uniform
System of Accounts; in other words the
amount paid for installing an original
plant and equipment and additions
thereto.77 As described below, the
Commission proposed certain measures
of value for each of four types of asset
transactions, inviting comment and
suggestions for alternative approaches.
95. Specifically, the Commission
proposed that section 33.1(b) would
define ‘‘value,’’ as applied to
jurisdictional facilities and existing
generation facilities (addressed by
amended subsections 203(a)(1)(A) and
(D)), as the market value of such
facilities.78 The Commission recognized
that determining the market value of
transmission facilities could be difficult
in some instances. We proposed that, in
the absence of a readily ascertainable
market value, original cost
undepreciated would be used. For
transactions involving transfers of
facilities between non-affiliates, the
Commission stated that market value
will, in most circumstances, be reflected
in the transaction price. For transactions
between affiliates, the Commission
recognized that we cannot assume that
market value will be reflected in
transaction price. We suggested
undepreciated original cost as a possible
alternative measure of value.
96. The Commission also proposed
that section 33.1(b) would define
‘‘value,’’ with respect to a merger or
consolidation with a transmitting
utility, an electric utility company, or a
holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting
utility, or an electric utility company,
with a value in excess of $10 million,
74 18
75 NOPR
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77 18
CFR 33.1(b) (2005).
at P 30.
78 NOPR
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1359
as used in amended section 203(a)(2)) as
‘‘market value.’’ We stated that in most
instances market value would be
reflected in the transaction price for
transactions between non-affiliates.
97. Turning to how to value paper
jurisdictional facilities, the Commission
proposed that the value of any
wholesale contract included in the
transaction would be based on total
expected contract revenues over the
remaining life of the contract.79 We
noted that market value was an
alternative approach and that it could be
based on the price or consideration paid
for the contract.
98. The Commission proposed to
define the ‘‘value’’ of a security, as
discussed in amended sections
203(a)(1)(C) and (a)(2), as the market
price at the time the security is
acquired.80 For transactions between
non-affiliated companies, the
Commission proposed to rebuttably
presume that the market value is the
agreed-upon transaction price. We
sought comments on how to determine
value for security transactions involving
affiliates if the securities are not widely
traded. Further, the Commission sought
comments as to whether it should give
particular weight to evidence of nonaffiliate transactions involving either
non-affiliated buyers or sellers of
securities of similarly situated utilities
or assets.
a. Comments on Definition of ‘‘Value’’
as Applied to Transmission and
Generation Facilities
99. Nearly all commenters support the
use of market value. Most commenters
support using transaction price to
measure market value in most
situations.81
100. APPA/NRECA and TAPSG
contend that market value should be
replaced by ‘‘fair’’ market value. They
recommend that the Commission
measure ‘‘fair’’ market value based on
standards to be adopted by the Financial
Accounting Standards Board that use
both a market approach and an income
approach. Because the market value
standard could introduce some
79 Id.
at P 32.
at P 33.
81 Chairman Barton does not take a position on
the appropriate measure of value, but believes that
the Commission should consider whether the use
of market value, by bringing more transactions
under section 203, will unnecessarily increase
regulatory burden because of the potential for
disputes concerning the market value of
transactions. He also suggests that some utilities
will make section 203 filings needlessly to show the
Commission that section 203 does not apply. He
notes that undepreciated original cost value is a
simple way to value transactions. Chairman Barton
Comments at 6.
80 Id.
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uncertainty into the process, FirstEnergy
urges the Commission to provide clear
guidance to the industry and the
investment community explaining how
a market value standard would be used
in certain situations. It suggests that we
create a ‘‘safe harbor’’ that clearly
defines methods and components used
to assess market value. EEI argues that
when a state commission has reviewed
or made a determination of value for a
particular transaction, a company
should be able to rely on that value for
purposes of determining value under
section 203; the company should not
have to pay penalties if the Commission
later determines that the value of the
transaction exceeds $10 million.
101. Virtually all commenters
recognize that a market value standard,
particularly one based on transaction
price, may need to be modified or even
replaced in some circumstances. As
explained below, these circumstances
involve transactions that include nonjurisdictional facilities in addition to
jurisdictional facilities or generation
facilities; transactions where market
value may not be ascertainable; and
transactions not conducted at arms’length (such as affiliate transactions).
Alternative suggested measures of
market value or value are the following:
(1) Market value as determined by
market-based results of an Edgar-type
analysis 82 or independent valuation
process; (2) original cost undepreciated;
(3) the higher of market value or original
cost undepreciated; and (4) net book
value (original cost depreciated).
102. Focusing first on transactions
between non-affiliates, many
commenters agree that, in most
circumstances, transaction price is the
appropriate measure of market value.83
EEI, Duke Energy Corporation and
Cinergy Corp. (Duke/Cinergy), and
Progress Energy urge the Commission to
rebuttably presume that market value is
the agreed-on transaction price. EEI,
Duke/Cinergy, Entergy, and FirstEnergy,
argue that the market value
determination should be based only on
the value of jurisdictional transmission
assets or generation assets. They state
that a single transaction price will not
measure the market value for a
transaction that also includes assets
other than jurisdictional transmission
82 Boston Edison Co. Re: Edgar Electric Energy
Co., 55 FERC ¶ 61,382 (1991) (Edgar). The Edgar
standard of review is designed to prevent affiliate
abuse and to ensure prices that are consistent with
competitive outcomes.
83 E.g., Indiana Commission, Kentucky
Commission, New Jersey Board, International
Transmission Company (International
Transmission), EPSA, Scottish Power, TAPSG, and
UWUA.
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assets or generation assets. EEI proposes
determining the transaction price for the
jurisdictional transmission facilities or
generation facilities based on their
relative net book value (original cost
depreciated).
103. Commenters differ significantly
as to the appropriate measure of value
where the transaction is between
affiliates. As a first backstop in
scenarios involving affiliated
transactions, several commenters
contend that transaction price is still a
reasonable measure of market value,
provided that the transaction price is
shown to be consistent with the results
of an Edgar-type analysis or
independent valuation process.84
However, other commenters, including
the New Jersey Board, NASUCA, and
APPA/NRECA, would compare a market
value or ‘‘fair’’ market value with
original cost undepreciated and select
the higher of the two. They argue that
the Commission must evaluate the
widest possible range of transactions to
determine the public interest
implications of transactions; utilities
will attempt to understate value and
thereby avoid section 203 review.
104. When a market-based
determination of value is not possible or
practical, commenters are divided,
mainly between original cost
undepreciated and net book value.
Commenters who advocate the use of
net book value urge the Commission to
reject any use of original cost
undepreciated, particularly for nonaffiliate transactions, since it does not
reflect the deterioration (wear) of the
facility.85 Rather, they would encourage
the use of net book value, since it is the
basis of transmission rates.
105. Other commenters suggest a
modification of the original cost
undepreciated and net book value
concepts. Missouri Public Utilities
Commission (Missouri Commission)
would rely on reproduction cost (the
costs of replicating the same plant today
with the same assets and same
technology). As a proxy for this
measure, Missouri Commission suggests
that the original cost could be escalated
by appropriate wholesale price indices.
Scottish Power would adjust net book
value by converting it to current dollars.
84 E.g., EEI, Duke/Cinergy, TAPSO, Indiana
Commission, Kentucky Commission, Progress
Energy, and Scottish Power.
85 E.g., EEI, Ameren, Progress Energy, Southern
Companies, and Duke/Cinergy.
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
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b. Comments on Definition of ‘‘Value’’
as Applied to Transmitting Utilities,
Electric Utility Companies, or Holding
Companies
106. Nearly all commenters support
the market value approach as measured
by the transaction price to determine the
value of a transaction involving
transmitting utilities, electric utility
companies, or holding companies.
NASUCA proposes the higher of market
value or original cost undepreciated to
limit the possibility that a merger of two
independent transmission companies
would escape review. It also asserts that
market value is not necessarily the same
as market price. FirstEnergy believes
that the transaction price should reflect
only the value of the underlying
jurisdictional or generation facilities.
The Commission should also establish
other parameters for determining the
market price, such as the point in time
at which the determination is to be
made, such as the date of the agreement,
the date of filing of the application, or
the date of consummation of the
transaction. To the extent the
Commission does not adopt transaction
price, FirstEnergy urges the Commission
to otherwise specifically define market
value and specify safe harbor standards.
c. Comments on Definition of ‘‘Value’’
as Applied to Paper Jurisdictional
Facilities
107. Many commenters, including
state commissions and consumer groups
generally favor total expected revenues
over the contract’s remaining life as the
appropriate measure of value for
transfers of wholesale contracts.86 This
is regardless of whether affiliates or
non-affiliates are involved. Revenues
will be a function of quantities of
supply and thus are an indirect measure
of the contract’s contribution to market
supply, in much the same way that the
value of generation assets will be related
to generator size. These commenters
also point out that a revenues approach
would be much easier to apply than an
expected net profits standard, which
can be unpredictable on the basis of
varying assumptions and is likely to be
measured inaccurately.
108. Constellation adds that the use of
nominal revenues avoids confidentiality
issues raised by how buyers and sellers
value contracts on the basis of
transaction price. This is particularly
true where it is necessary to determine
value for individual contracts that are
part of a portfolio of contracts and non86 NARUC, Missouri Commission, the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio (Ohio Commission),
APPA/NRECA, NASUCA, and Constellation Energy
Group Inc. (Constellation).
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jurisdictional assets. Some commenters
point out that in some instances, for
individual contracts, the seller may
actually pay the buyer and the buyer
may have the option to buy the power
at a market price, which may be lower
than contract price. Thus, the
transaction price would either be
negative or much smaller than under a
revenues approach. This would increase
the likelihood that the transaction
would not fall under section 203.
109. On the other hand, many
commenters urge the Commission to
adopt transaction price as the measure
of value.87 They contend that value is
closely tied to expected profits, which
considers supply costs, unlike the
revenue approach, and thus will be
more accurately reflected in transaction
price than in revenues. FirstEnergy
comments that a revenues approach
would be difficult to apply if the
contract rates are not fixed. If the
Commission decides not to use
transaction price, commenters suggest a
variety of other measures, including
discounted value of future cash flows
reduced by obligations, net present
value of non-fuel revenues, and
expected profits.
110. For affiliate transactions, many of
these same commenters generally agree
that transaction price is appropriate if it
is supported by Edgar-type evidence.
However, another measure favored by
EEI, Entergy, and Duke/Cinergy would
apply ‘‘mark to market’’ pricing 88 to
determine the value of a contract
between affiliates. Entergy, citing Order
No. 627,89 asserts that the Commission
has taken the same approach in
requiring utilities to report in Form 1
changes to the fair market value of
certain derivative instruments and
activities.
d. Comments on Definition of ‘‘Value’’
as Applied to Securities in Excess of $10
Million
111. Generally all of the commenters
from the various segments of the
industry, including regulatory
commissions, public power, and
customer groups, support the
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87 E.g.,
EEI, First Energy, Ameren, Duke/Cinergy,
Entergy, International Transmission, EPSA,
Independent Sellers, Scottish Power, Morgan
Stanley, Indiana Commission, and Missouri
Commission.
88 In this context, ‘‘mark to market’’ refers to the
process whereby the book value or collateral value
of an asset such as a multiyear contract or power
purchase agreement is adjusted to reflect current
market value for the applicable period.
89 Accounting and Reporting of Financial
Instruments, Comprehensive Income, Derivatives
and Hedging Activities, Order No. 627, 67 FR
67,691 (Oct. 10, 2002), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,558
(2002).
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Commission’s proposal to value security
transactions between non-affiliates at
market value. Nearly all appear to
accept our proposal to rebuttably
presume that price is the appropriate
measure of market value. FirstEnergy
requests, however, that the Commission
provide more specificity as to which
price is relevant, i.e., the agreed-to-price
or a publicly traded price, and as to
what is meant by time of the
transaction—the time of agreement or
the time of consummation. FirstEnergy
also asks whether the transaction value
used should take into consideration the
fact that non-regulated assets may be
included in the transaction as well. EEI
and International Transmission argue
that to give regulatory certainty to the
transacting parties, the relevant price
should be the agreed-to price.
112. EEI suggests that for securities
transactions between affiliated parties,
market price is reasonable when the
securities are widely traded. However,
several parties support assessing market
value based on an application of Edgar
standards, particularly when the
securities are not widely traded. On the
other hand, FirstEnergy and NASUCA
contend that an Edgar approach will not
work well because any group of nonaffiliate transactions will be vastly
different in terms and other factors that
affect value or price. When Edgar-type
evidence is not available, EEI and
Ameren propose certain formulaic
measures involving company-specific
variables; 90 NARUC suggests that the
Commission simply use paid-in capital
equity. Indiana Commission suggests
that an affiliate transaction be
constructed to evade section 203
jurisdiction could be used to subsidize
a non-jurisdictional affiliate, but
Southern Companies asserts that
transaction thresholds are so low there
will no meaningful opportunities to
evade jurisdiction by such means.
e. Commission Determination
113. The Commission notes the
widespread support for using a market
value approach (where feasible). After
90 For example, EEI proposes that, for securities
that are not widely traded, the Commission should
allow companies to utilize the Edgar guidelines. If
the Edgar guidelines are not applicable to a
particular case, EEI suggests the following: For
equity securities, a three part determination should
be utilized to determine value: (i) Determining the
value of the company that is the issuer of the equity
securities based on the depreciated net book value
of the company’s assets; (ii) determining the
fraction of the securities at issue by dividing the
number of equity securities involved in the
transaction by the total number of outstanding
equity securities for the company; and (iii)
multiplying (i) by (ii) (i.e., the value of the company
multiplied by the fraction of the equity securities
at issue). EEI Comments at 11.
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1361
considering the comments of numerous
parties, we remain convinced that
market value is, in most instances, the
most effective and reasonable approach
(both for potential section 203
applicants and for the Commission) to
determine which asset transfers,
particularly those that involve
acquisitions of physical facilities or
securities, require section 203 approval.
114. As one commenter suggests,
however, using market value as the
measurement standard is not
straightforward in all circumstances. For
example, where the transaction involves
a single asset subject to section 203
being purchased and sold between nonaffiliates, the agreed-upon price for the
transaction is a straightforward measure
of market value. However, there may be
non-affiliate transactions that include a
bundle of assets, both assets subject to
section 203 and assets not subject to
section 203, so that the transaction price
does not reflect the market value of only
the assets subject to section 203.
Another example involves transactions
between affiliates where the agreedupon price for the exchange will not
necessarily reflect market value. In both
instances, other measures of market
value would be required.
115. It is important that the
Commission provide as much guidance
as possible to those contemplating
business transactions regarding how the
determination of value should be made
and thus deciding whether section 203
review is required. Such guidance will
enhance parties’ certainty and will also
contribute stability to investment
decision-making by utilities and nonutilities alike.
116. For transfers of physical facilities
(transmission and generation facilities)
the Commission will adopt market value
as the appropriate measure of value.
When a transaction occurs between nonaffiliates, the Commission will
rebuttably presume that market value is
the transaction price. The most obvious
complicating factor in applying this test
is the need to consider only the value
of the facilities subject to section 203;
many transactions will include other
assets not subject to section 203 as well.
However, in such situations, the
acquiring entity will probably have
made a valuation analysis of the
constituent parts of the transaction in
order to guide its negotiations and/or
properly record the value of those
facilities on its balance sheet. Almost
certainly included in that analysis will
be a valuation of the physical facilities.
In transactions involving both facilities
subject to section 203 and facilities not
subject to section 203, companies
should rely on such valuations in
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deciding whether to file for section 203
approval.
117. If separate valuations of the
physical assets were not performed,
companies should rely on original cost
undepreciated. Several commenters
urge the Commission to reject the use of
original cost undepreciated and adopt,
instead, net book value. Our current
regulations use original cost
undepreciated as the appropriate
measurement standard and we will
continue to use that standard in
applying amended section 203.
Although net book value is a valuation
method commonly used to establish
cost-based rates, most generating
facilities today sell power at market
rates, and their market value is driven
primarily by factors unrelated to the
book depreciation of the facility. For
example, many highly depreciated coalfired assets have commanded significant
premiums in generation divestitures.
Hence, we believe that the continued
use of original cost undepreciated is
preferable to net book value.
118. We also cannot rely on
transaction price as a measure of market
value when a transaction involving
physical facilities occurs between
affiliates. Instead, here too we will
adopt original cost undepreciated. The
alternatives to transaction price most
frequently supported by commenters
include: (1) Value based on an Edgartype analysis (market value), (2) original
cost undepreciated, (3) the higher of
market value or original cost
depreciated, and (4) net book value. As
discussed above, as between the choices
of original cost undepreciated and net
book value, the Commission believes
that original cost undepreciated is
preferable and should continue to be
used.
119. The Edgar analysis is applied in
section 205 proceedings to determine
whether purchases from an affiliate are
reasonable in light of other alternatives.
The analysis is not intended to provide
a bright-line easy-to-apply test of
whether jurisdiction to approve a
particular transaction exists in the first
place. Rather, the analysis is often
highly contentious and is used to
determine the justness and
reasonableness of a particular
transaction, not for determining whether
jurisdiction exists to review it in the
first place. The Commission believes
that, for purposes of section 203
applicability, a valuation based on
original cost depreciated will be simpler
and less ambiguous than one based on
Edgar, particularly when most
transactions will clearly exceed $10
million by any reasonable measure.
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120. With respect to determining
value to be applied to transfers of
wholesale contracts between nonaffiliates, the Commission will
rebuttably presume that market value is
the transaction price. This is consistent
with our use of market value and
transaction price for other types of asset
transfers. As with transfers of physical
facilities, when assets not subject to
section 203 are included in the
transaction, the acquiring entity should
rely on its valuation of the contracts
component included in transaction
price. The market valuation should be
consistent with the value the applicant
places on the contract for purposes of its
audited financial statements and in
keeping with generally accepted
accounting principle (GAAP)
requirements. One commenter has
expressed confidentiality concerns
about valuations for individual
contracts as part of a portfolio of
contracts that could likely arise if a
utility’s decision not to file for section
203 approval was challenged. We
believe that any such concerns can be
addressed through our procedures that
provide confidential treatment to certain
proprietary materials.91 Furthermore,
we note that any measurement standard
(such as projected revenue stream)
could also raise concerns over
confidentiality in certain circumstances.
121. The issue of how to value
contract transfers between affiliates is
more difficult to resolve, since a
transaction price, if it exists at all, will
not necessarily reflect market value. For
affiliate transfers of contracts, we agree
with one commenter that total expected
contract revenues are a simple, objective
way to assess value and to provide
increased certainty as to the need for a
section 203 filing. We therefore adopt
this standard for valuing jurisdictional
contracts between affiliates.
122. Amended sections 203(a)(1)(C)
and (a)(2) define the Commission’s
jurisdiction over certain acquisitions of
securities by public utilities and holding
companies. With respect to securities
transactions between non-affiliates, the
Commission will adopt transaction
price, as explained more fully herein,
for the acquisition of securities by either
a public utility or a holding company.
The Commission recognizes that the
NOPR was not entirely clear as to how
to determine the ‘‘transaction price.’’
Although we stated that the value of a
security would be defined as the market
price at the time the security is
acquired, we also stated that the market
value would be rebuttably presumed to
be the agreed-on transaction price.
91 18
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Thus, FirstEnergy asks how market
price should be defined—a publicly
traded price or the price ultimately
agreed on. It also asked the Commission
to clarify the meaning of ‘‘at the time the
security is acquired.’’ Specifically, does
this language refer to the point in time
an agreement is entered into or the
actual time of consummation of the
transaction?
123. The Commission is mindful of
the need to provide parties as much
regulatory certainty as possible with
respect to decisions as to whether
section 203 approval is required for a
particular transaction. In this case, the
Commission finds that greater
regulatory certainty is provided by
relying on the agreed-to transaction
price at the time the transacting parties
enter into an agreement. However, the
Commission will reject the argument
that the value of securities transactions
should be adjusted to reflect the fact
that not all of the assets underlying the
value of the securities are jurisdictional
facilities or generation facilities.
Amended section 203 does not permit
any such interpretation, as it applies to
the purchase of the ‘‘security * * * of
a * * * public utility,’’ not to the
‘‘securities applicable to the
jurisdictional facilities of a public
utility.’’
124. For securities transactions
between affiliates, however, an agreedon transaction price will not necessarily
be consistent with market price. For that
reason, if the securities are widely
traded, the Commission will require that
affiliates value the transaction based on
the market price at the time the
securities are acquired. If the securities
are not widely traded, we will adopt, in
a slightly modified manner, EEI’s
suggestion. For equity securities, we
will utilize a three-part determination to
determine value: (i) Determining the
value of the company that is the issuer
of the equity securities based on the
total undepreciated book value of the
company’s assets; (ii) determining the
fraction of the securities at issue by
dividing the number of equity securities
involved in the transaction by the total
number of outstanding equity securities
for the company; and (iii) multiplying
(i) by (ii) (i.e., the value of the company
multiplied by the fraction of the equity
securities at issue). This method for
securities transactions that are not
widely traded is consistent with our use
of original cost undepreciated to
measure value for transactions between
affiliates involving physical assets.
125. Amended section 203(a)(2)
addresses holding company mergers or
consolidations with a transmitting
utility, an electric utility company, or a
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holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting
utility, or an electric utility company,
with a value in excess of $10 million.
Regarding transactions between nonaffiliates, market value will be the
transaction price or consideration paid,
as provided for in the agreement
between the transacting entities. As
with securities, we note there is no
statutory provision or legislative history
to suggest that the transaction price
should be adjusted to reflect the fact
that non-jurisdictional assets are also
involved, and so we will not allow for
such an adjustment.
126. For mergers or consolidations
involving affiliates, transaction price
will not be an acceptable basis for
establishing value. Several commenters
recommend the use of an Edgar-type
analysis to arrive at a market value.
However, the Edgar approach is not a
practical approach to applying the $10
million jurisdictional threshold for the
reasons discussed above. Therefore, the
Commission will, instead, use the book
cost of all of a company’s assets to
measure the value of mergers or
consolidations of affiliated companies.92
6. Compliance With Section 203
127. Given the increased significance
of valuation of a transaction under
amended section 203, the Commission
solicited comments on whether our
existing recordkeeping and reporting
requirements, outside the section 203
context, will allow us and the public to
effectively monitor jurisdictional
entities’ determinations of when a
section 203 application is required. For
example, the Commission asked ‘‘do
FERC Form 1s or Order No. 652 93
market-based rate change in status
reports provide sufficient information to
monitor compliance with section
203?’’ 94
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a. Comments
128. Many commenters believe that
the Commission’s existing recordkeeping and reporting requirements will
be enough.95 Some note that parties
often seek section 203 authorization out
92 Book cost, as used here, refers to original book
cost.
93 Reporting Requirement for Changes in Status
for Public Utilities with Market-Based Rate
Authority, Order No. 652, 70 FR 8,253 (Feb. 18,
2005), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,175, order on reh’g,
111 FERC ¶ 61,413 (2005).
94 NOPR at P 35.
95 E.g., Kentucky Commission, NARUC,
Oklahoma Commission, Ameren, Constellation, EEI,
FirstEnergy, Progress Energy, and Southern
Companies. Some commenters argue that the
Commission’s existing record-keeping and reporting
requirements, including the information supplied
under the FERC Form 1, Order No. 652, and Change
in Status reports, are more than adequate.
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of an abundance of caution, whenever
there is a reasonable possibility that
section 203 approval is legally required,
in order to remove regulatory
uncertainty from a transaction, as an
entire transaction can be placed at risk
if required regulatory approvals are not
obtained.
129. However, some commenters
suggest that the Commission’s current
record-keeping and reporting
requirements are the minimum
necessary for section 203 purposes and
should not be reduced. NARUC states
that our existing record-keeping and
reporting requirements are adequate as
they pertain to mergers. However,
NARUC suggests that Commission
review of merger applications could be
enhanced by requiring the applicant to
file pro forma consolidated financial
reports showing the projected financial
position of the merged entity after the
proposed transaction.96
130. APPA/NRECA assert that the
Commission’s existing record-keeping
and reporting requirements do not
provide sufficient information on fair
market value for the Commission to
ensure that companies are not
improperly transacting without filing for
approval. They state that the
Commission should update our
reporting requirements, including
requiring applicants to adhere to GAAP
principles for valuation determinations
and to justify exemption from section
203 under both a cost and market value
method of valuation. As for reporting
requirements that might enable the
Commission and the public to police
compliance with section 203, APPA/
NRECA suggest that the Commission
should consider requiring public
utilities to file annual reports of all
transactions with a value exceeding, for
example, $5 million, to enable the
Commission to enforce the $10 million
standard.
b. Commission Determination
131. Most commenters state that the
Commission’s existing record-keeping
and reporting requirements are
adequate. We agree and we will not
adopt any additional compliance
requirements at this time. We intend to
keep our regulations as straightforward
as possible so as not to increase
regulatory burden on the industry while
at the same time adequately monitoring
jurisdictional entities’ determinations of
when section 203 applies to their
transaction. The Commission agrees that
parties have often sought section 203
authorization out of an abundance of
caution because of a reasonable
96 NARUC
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1363
possibility that section 203 approval
was legally required. In this way, parties
have sought to remove regulatory
uncertainty from a transaction, as an
entire transaction can be placed at risk
if required regulatory approvals are not
obtained. This incentive is even greater
now that EPAct 2005 has authorized
civil penalties for violating statutory
requirements.97
132. Although the majority of
commenters assert that the current
requirements are adequate, a few
suggest that these requirements should
be considered the minimum necessary
for section 203 purposes and should not
be reduced. We agree, and note that the
NOPR did not propose to reduce our
current requirements. We merely asked
whether our existing record keeping and
reporting requirements, outside the
section 203 context, provide an
adequate basis for monitoring
jurisdictional entities’ determinations of
when a section 203 application is
required. We believe that those
requirements, as well as other publicly
available information (e.g., financial
statements filed with the SEC), will give
interested entities enough information
to allow them to monitor compliance
with section 203. For example, under
SEC disclosure requirements, publicly
traded entities must disclose material
transactions such as mergers or asset
acquisitions. Most of these transactions
will easily exceed the $10 million
threshold, so the public will be on
notice of transactions that likely should
be submitted to the Commission for
approval under section 203. We will
therefore not adopt the suggestions of
NARUC and APPA/NRECA that we
impose new and burdensome disclosure
requirements for purposes of monitoring
compliance with section 203.
7. Cash Management Arrangements,
Intra-Holding Company System
Financing, Securities Under Amended
Section 203, and Blanket Authorizations
133. The NOPR did not specifically
address these issues, but we received
comments on them. We note that
section 203(a)(2) adds the entirely new
requirement that no holding company in
a holding company system that includes
a transmitting utility or an electric
utility shall purchase, acquire, or take
any security with a value in excess of
$10 million of, or, by any means
whatsoever, directly or indirectly, merge
or consolidate with, a transmitting
utility, an electric utility company, or a
holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting
97 See 16 U.S.C. 825o–1 (2000), as amended by
EPAct 2005 1284(e).
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utility, or an electric utility company,
with a value in excess of $10 million
without Commission authorization.
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a. Comments
134. Many commenters, including
EEI, Duke/Cinergy, and Entergy, request
that the Commission clarify that it will
continue to interpret section 203 to not
apply to cash management 98 and other
financing arrangements routinely used
in utility holding company systems.
Thus, they request that the Commission
continue to distinguish between the
acquisition of voting securities and
other instruments that confer control,
which is subject to review under section
203, and the acquisition of loans and
other financial instruments that do not
confer control. They state that the
issuance of these should remain subject
to section 204 of the FPA 99 and relevant
state law, but should not require section
203 approval. EEI, Duke/Cinergy, and
Entergy also explain that cash
management rules are already in place
to monitor any potential crosssubsidization concerns for these types of
financial arrangements. Furthermore,
they assert that requiring prior approval
under section 203 for cash management
arrangements would impair the ability
of holding companies and their public
utility subsidiaries to manage their
short-term financing needs efficiently.
Applying section 203 to all intra-system
financings would be contrary to
Congress’ intent and would create
significant burdens for the Commission
and utilities alike. Alternatively, should
the Commission determine that section
203 applies to cash management
programs, they request that the
Commission allow companies to seek
pre-approval (similar to the preapproval process and reporting
requirements adopted for cash
management agreements) or blanket
authorization.
135. MidAmerican Energy Holdings
Company (MidAmerican) also urges the
Commission to grant a blanket
authorization for intra-holding company
system financings, contributions, or
98 While there are several different types of cash
management programs, a cash management program
generally involves pooling the cash resources of
several affiliated companies into a ‘‘money pool.’’
Affiliates can then borrow against the funds in the
pool, often at below market rates. Additionally, the
parent company is often able to achieve a higher
rate of return on its money pool investments than
any single affiliate could on its own. For a more
detailed discussion of cash management programs.
See Regulation of Cash Management Practices,
Order No. 634, 68 FR 40,500 (July 8, 2003), III FERC
Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,145 (June 26, 2003), Order No.
634–A, 68 FR 61,993 (Oct. 31, 2003), FERC Stats.
& Regs. ¶ 31,152 (Oct. 23, 2003) (Cash Management
Rule).
99 16 U.S.C. 824c (2000).
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equity infusions in excess of $10 million
undertaken by an upper tier company to
fund a lower tier holding company,
intermediate holding company, or
public utility company within the same
holding company system. It states that
the purpose of these financial
transactions is to fund the capital and
operating requirements of the lower tier
entities and, thus, that these
transactions do not raise any crosssubsidization issues. MidAmerican
explains that the utility company would
still need to obtain Commission
authorization under section 204 for the
issuance of its own securities.
136. Further, MidAmerican urges the
Commission to grant another blanket
authorization for the infusion of capital
by a passive investor through the
acquisition of holding company or
public utility company securities,
including debt and equity securities,
subject to an aggregate limitation that
the passive investor acquire less than
ten percent of voting equity securities.
It explains that one of the main
objectives of repealing PUHCA 1935
was to encourage additional investment
in the energy infrastructure by nontraditional, or passive investors (who
make significant capital infusions in the
utility industry either as lenders or
equity investors), because existing
investors are not providing sufficient
money. There is no need for passive
investors to follow the traditional
section 203 approval process. It states
that passive investments will not have
any adverse effects on competition,
rates, or regulation, and will not result
in cross-subsidization. MidAmerican
proposes that, to ensure that a passive
investor will not be able to exercise
control through ownership of a voting
equity security, the passive investor be
limited to an ownership interest of less
than ten percent of voting securities.
Further, MidAmerican states that when
an investor acquires the debt or equity
securities of an entity that has a de
minimis interest in an electric utility
company, we should grant the blanket
authorization.
137. MidAmerican suggests that the
Commission require those who receive
these types of blanket authorizations to
report their transactions within 45 days
of the closing of the transactions.
138. Many commenters, including
EPSA and Independent Sellers, request
that the Commission clarify that the
term ‘‘securities,’’ as used in amended
section 203(a), means only ‘‘voting
securities,’’ as that term is defined in
section 1262(17) of PUHCA 2005, and
does not apply, for example, to debt or
other nonvoting securities.
Alternatively, if the Commission is
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unable or unwilling to so clarify, the
Commission should request a
conforming amendment from Congress.
139. Transmission Agency of
Northern California (TANC) urges the
Commission to modify its Cash
Management Rule to apply to public
utility holding companies, which would
add an additional layer of protection to
utilities and their customers.
b. Commission Determination
140. As noted above, amended section
203(a)(2) expands the Commission’s
authority to include mergers,
acquisitions, and purchases of
securities 100 of over $10 million
involving holding companies within
certain holding company systems. A
major part of the Commission’s past
practice in reviewing section 203
transactions has been to determine
whether a particular merger or
acquisition results in a single entity
having control over transmission or
generation resources that would allow it
exercise market power. This would also
be a concern under the new section
203(a)(2) provision.
141. However, as several commenters
suggest, there are several classes of
transactions covered by amended
section 203(a)(2) that will not harm
competition or captive customers. These
include: (1) Routine cash management
transactions and intra-holding company
system financing transactions; (2)
acquisition of non-voting securities (in
any amount); 101 and (3) acquisition of
voting securities that would give the
acquiring entity not more than 9.9
percent ownership of the outstanding
voting securities. For these transactions,
the Commission finds that it is
consistent with the public interest to
issue a blanket authorization in this
Final Rule, for the reasons discussed
below.
100 The term ‘‘security’’ is defined in FPA section
3(16) as ‘‘any note, stock, treasury stock, bond,
debenture, or other evidence of indebtedness of a
corporation * * *.’’
101 We note, however, that it is possible, in some
circumstances, for non-voting securities to convey
sufficient ‘‘veto’’ rights over management actions as
to convey ‘‘control’’ that triggers section 203. The
Commission has addressed similar issues for
purposes of evaluating independence of entities
that ask for RTO status, and the SEC considered
similar issues through its ‘‘no action’’ letter process
in applying PUHCA 1935. We anticipate that our
treatment of such issues under amended section
203 will generally be consistent with these
precedents. If uncertainty exists as to whether
significant veto rights could convey control, entities
should seek a ruling from the Commission to
determine whether section 203 approval is
required.
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i. Cash Management Programs and IntraHolding Company Financing
Arrangements
142. As several commenters note,
cash management programs, money
pools, and other intra-holding company
financing arrangements are a routine
and important tool used by many large
companies to lower the cost of capital
for their regulated subsidiaries and to
improve the rate of return the holding
company and its subsidiaries can get on
their money.102 The Commission does
not intend to make it more difficult for
companies to take advantage of these
types of transactions. Since the
companies participating in a cash
management-type agreement are already
affiliated, allowing the transfer of funds
between such companies does not
generally present competitive problems.
Thus, we find that it is consistent with
the public interest to grant a blanket
authorization to allow holding
companies and their subsidiaries to take
part in intra-system cash managementtype programs, subject to the discussion
below.
143. TANC suggests that the
Commission modify its Cash
Management Rule to cover holding
companies themselves. Currently, the
Cash Management Rule only covers the
cash management practices of a holding
company’s public utility subsidiaries.103
We disagree with TANC that additional
generic cash management rules
governing holding companies are
necessary at this time to safeguard
consumers. The focus of amended
section 203 is partly to prevent
inappropriate cross-subsidization, or
encumbrances or pledges of utility
assets by public utility subsidiaries.
Applicants must adopt sufficient
safeguards, including any necessary
cash management controls (such as
restrictions on upstream transfers of
funds, ring fencing, etc.), to prevent any
cross-subsidization between holding
companies and their new subsidiaries
prior to receiving section 203 approval.
Such safeguards ensure that consumers
are protected, while permitting
companies the flexibility to
competitively manage their cost of
capital via a cash management program.
On balance, the Commission believes
that the flexibility provided by this
approach, combined with our existing
cash management policies,104 is
102 See,
e.g., EEI Comments at 27–31.
Cash Management Rule at P 29.
104 We also note that under our existing Cash
Management Rule, changes to existing or new cash
management agreements (including money pool
arrangements and other internal corporate financing
arrangements) must be filed with the Commission.
103 See
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superior to the one-size-fits-all approach
advocated by TANC.
ii. Purchases of Non-Voting Securities
by a Qualifying Holding Company
144. We agree with the majority of
commenters that there is no need for
case-by-case examination of the
purchase by a holding company of nonvoting securities of a public utility or of
another holding company under
amended section 203. The purchase of
such securities generally does not
convey control and hence does not grant
the purchasing holding company
additional market power, harm
competitive markets, or otherwise
disadvantage captive customers.105 This
is consistent with the intent of Congress
that EPAct 2005 increase outside
investment in the utility sector while
protecting customers.106 As
MidAmerican notes, the issuance of
securities by a jurisdictional company is
also governed by section 204 of the FPA.
Thus, for the purposes of amended
section 203, we find that it is consistent
with the public interest to grant a
blanket authorization for the purchase
by a holding company of any amount of
non-voting securities of a public utility
or of another holding company. We will
grant this blanket authorization and will
not impose any type of filing
requirement with respect to such
transactions.
iii. Purchases of Voting Securities
Amounting to 9.9 Percent or Less of
Outstanding Voting Securities
145. As commenters note, a number of
investors would like to invest in the
utility sector, but have been prevented
from doing so by the fear that they
would become subject to regulation by
the SEC as well as this Commission. To
remedy this problem, a number of
commenters suggest giving a blanket
section 203 approval to institutional
investors within holding company
systems purchasing less than 10 percent
of the outstanding voting securities.
Commenters note that the SEC has
traditionally given blanket approval to a
holding company in a holding company
system purchasing up to 9.9 percent of
outstanding voting securities of a public
utility or a holding company covered by
the statute. We agree that this approach
makes sense and that it is consistent
105 See Cash Management Rule at P 29 (discussing
exception for non-voting interests that convey
significant veto rights).
106 See, e.g., Senate Floor Statement by Senators
Domenici (R–NM), H.R. 6, Energy Policy Act of
2005, 151 Cong. Rec. S9256 (July 28, 2005) (stating
that ‘‘this should bring much more capital
investment into the utility companies that make up
this powerful institution, this entity called the grid
of the United States.’’).
PO 00000
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1365
with the public interest and
Congressional intent in repealing the
restrictions of PUHCA 1935 and
encouraging incentives for additional
investment. We will, however,
condition the blanket authorization by
requiring the purchaser of such
securities to provide the Commission,
not more than 45 days after the
purchase, with the same information on
the same basis that the holding
company now provides to the SEC.107
We will issue notices of these filings for
informational purposes only.
8. Section 33.2(j)—General Information
Requirements Regarding CrossSubsidization
146. In the NOPR, the Commission
proposed that new section 33.2(j) would
implement section 203(a)(4) by
requiring applicants to explain how
they are providing assurance that the
proposed transaction will not result in
a cross-subsidization of a non-utility
associate company or a pledge or
encumbrance of utility assets for the
benefit of an associate company. We
proposed to require appropriate
evidentiary support for that explanation.
We proposed that if no such assurance
can be provided, applicants must
explain how such cross-subsidization,
pledge, or encumbrance will be
consistent with the public interest.108
This explanation would be Exhibit M to
the applicant’s section 203 application.
The Commission sought comment on
what evidence parties should be
required to submit to support any
explanation offered under this
subsection.
147. The Commission noted that it
has sought to guard against potential
107 Accordingly, the Commission directs that the
purchaser of such securities file with the
Commission copies of SEC schedules 13D, 13G, and
13F. SEC schedule 13D is required to be filed by
any entity acquiring beneficial ownership of more
than 5 percent of a class of a company’s securities.
The schedule 13D filing requires, among other
things, a statement of the purpose(s) of the
acquisition of the securities of the issuer and a
description of any plans or proposals the reporting
person may have that relate to or would result in
the acquisition of additional securities of the issuer;
any extraordinary corporate transactions, such as a
merger, reorganization or liquidation of the issuer
or its affiliates; and any changes in the board of
directors or management of the issuer. Schedule
13G is the same form, but is used when the person
or entity is making the purchase for investment
only. Institutional investment managers who
exercise investment discretion over $100 million or
more must report their holdings on SEC schedule
13F. We note that these schedules required for a
grant of blanket authorization under section
203(a)(2) should impose only a de minimis burden
on the holding company, since we are requiring
merely the same information that is filed with the
SEC. Should the SEC change its reporting
requirements, this information must continue to be
filed with the Commission.
108 NOPR at P 45.
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cross-subsidization and affiliate abuse
when it reviews applications for costbased or market-based rate authority
under section 205 of the FPA 109 or
dispositions of jurisdictional facilities
under section 203 involving public
utilities (or their affiliates) with captive
customers.110 We also noted that the
Commission has cash management rules
to monitor proprietary capital ratios and
money lending or other financial
arrangements that can harm regulated
companies.111 We stated that our
primary focus has been on preventing a
transfer of benefits from a traditional
public utility’s captive customers to
shareholders of the public utility’s
holding company due to an intra-system
transaction that involves power or
energy, generation facilities, or nonpower goods and services. Thus, in light
of the Congress’ clear directive in EPAct
2005 that the Commission make
findings regarding cross-subsidization
and the pledge or encumbrance of
utility assets in a section 203 order, we
sought comments on what additional
safeguards or conditions may need to be
placed on section 203 transactions.
Specifically, the Commission solicited
comments on the adequacy of its
present policies preventing affiliate
abuse and cross-subsidization, and
whether conditions such as those
imposed by state commissions may
need to be imposed on section 203
transactions. The Commission also
sought comment on whether additional
conditions should be placed on section
203 approvals to ensure that there is no
pledge or encumbrance that harms
utility customers.
a. Comments
148. Many commenters generally
support the Commission’s proposal but
recommend additional conditions or
safeguards. They agree that the
Commission should impose specific
conditions or safeguards to protect
against unfair competitive practices,
cross-subsidization, and affiliate
abuse.112 Some recommend that the
Commission consider such protections
on a case-by-case basis in consultation
with affected state commissions.
Proposed conditions include, for
example: Utility company subsidiaries
shall not loan any funds (or advance any
credit or indemnity) to the holding
company without appropriate regulatory
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109 16
U.S.C. 824d (2000).
e.g., Sierra Pacific, 95 FERC ¶ 61,193;
Boston Edison Co., 80 FERC ¶ 61,274 (1997).
111 NOPR at P 46.
112 E.g., NARUC, New Jersey Board, Ohio
Commission, Oklahoma Commission, Indiana
Commission, APPA/NRECA, TANC, TAPSG,
NASUCA, and UWUA.
110 See,
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approvals; a utility shall not incur any
additional indebtedness, issue any
additional securities, or pledge any
assets to finance any part of a merger of
holding companies without prior
regulatory approvals; all debt at the
holding company level shall be nonrecourse to the utility; and the
Commission should develop a process
for periodic audits of inter-company
transactions to be conducted in
appropriate instances, as well as
procedures for compliance monitoring,
investigation, and complaints of crosssubsidization and affiliate abuse.
149. The Oklahoma Corporation
Commission (Oklahoma Commission)
proposes that applicants provide: A
report of the nature of affiliates’
operations; description of the business
intended to be done by subsidiaries; and
an explanation and detailed rationale of
any plans to make any material change
in investment policy, business,
corporate structure, or management.
150. New Jersey Board states that it is
not clear that proposed section 33.2(j)
requires applicants to provide
evidentiary support when claiming that
a cross-subsidization, pledge, or
encumbrance is consistent with the
public interest. Therefore, it proposes
that the text be revised to state ‘‘An
explanation, with appropriate
evidentiary support for such
explanation (to be identified as Exhibit
M to this application):’’.113
151. To mitigate cross-subsidization
risks to ratepayers, other commenters
propose structural conditions on
mergers of entities that include both
public utility and non-utility
businesses, as the facts require. This
could include the separation of public
utility business within companies that
also engage in non-utility business and
the separation of a public utility’s books
and records from those of non-utility
affiliates.
152. Finally, Southern Companies
request that when a public utility
predominately serves customers at retail
but has some jurisdictional facilities, the
Commission accept as sufficient a
showing that the public utility applicant
is subject to general supervision by a
state commission that has authority to
review the transaction, and that such
state commission approval is predicated
upon a finding that the transaction will
not impair the performance of public
service obligations or result in crosssubsidy burdening utility assets or
service.
153. Other commenters generally state
that there is no need to impose
113 New Jersey Board Comments at 6 (emphasis in
original).
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additional conditions or a new
evidentiary requirement to ensure that
transactions are consistent with the
public interest.114 They assert that the
Commission already has in ways to
guard against cross-subsidization or
pledging or encumbering of utility
assets, including: (1) Cash management
rules; (2) code of conduct restrictions;
(3) prior approval for certain power
transactions; (4) access to, and auditing
of, books and records; (5) expanded
jurisdiction under EPAct 2005 with
regard to books, accounts, and records;
(6) standards of conduct; and (7) the
application of Edgar standards to ensure
that the sale price is not higher than
would have been paid to a non-affiliate.
154. Duke/Cinergy, EEI, PNM, and
Entergy assert that the Commission
should allow applicants to avoid a
detailed examination of crosssubsidization and encumbrance
concerns by making four verifications
on a case-by-case basis that address
those issues. These verifications would
enable the Commission to quickly
determine whether a transaction is
consistent with the public interest. The
verifications would be that the
transaction results in: (1) No transfers of
facilities between a traditional utility
associate company with wholesale or
retail customers served under cost-based
rates and an associate company; (2) no
new issuance of securities by traditional
utility associate companies with
wholesale or retail customers served
under cost-based rates for the benefit of
an associate company; (3) no new
pledge or encumbrance of assets of a
traditional utility associate company
with wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation for
the benefit of an associate company; (4)
no new affiliate contracts between nonutility associate companies and
traditional utility associate companies
with wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based rates, other
than system allocation agreements
subject to review under EPAct 2005
section 1275(b).115 In cases where an
applicant is unable to make one or more
of the accepted verifications, these
commenters state that the applicant
should bear the burden of submitting
sufficient information in Exhibit M to
demonstrate that there is no crosssubsidization issue or, if there is, that
the transaction is consistent with the
public interest.
114 E.g., Duke/Cinergy, Entergy, EEI, AEP,
Ameren, FirstEnergy, Progress Energy, International
Transmission, National Grid, and Scottish Power.
115 See, e.g., EEI Comments at 20–21; Entergy
Comments at 8; Duke/Cinergy Comments at 7.
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155. Some commenters generally
oppose imposing additional conditions
or safeguards beyond or that would
conflict with those imposed by state
commissions. Many commenters believe
that the Commission’s current policies
are more than adequate to address state
commission conditions and that the
Commission already imposes most of
these conditions directly.116
156. Oklahoma Commission suggests
that the Commission allow state
commissions to continue to exercise
their autonomous authority in
addressing possible affiliate abuse and
cross-subsidization. Kentucky
Commission states that any additional
conditions imposed by the Commission
should complement, not nullify or
preempt, those imposed by state
commissions.
157. International Transmission states
that because independent transmission
companies, by definition, are not
affiliated with market participants,
concerns regarding transmissionspecific cross-subsidization that distort
energy markets are minimized. National
Grid states that the Commission should
impose a merger condition only when it
finds a proposed transaction, taken as a
whole, is inconsistent with the public
interest. Scottish Power states that the
Commission should allow applicants to
provide their own ways to demonstrate
that there is no potential for crosssubsidization, on a case-by-case basis.
158. FirstEnergy contends that a
requirement that applications
demonstrate that each company within
a holding company system is unaffected
by cross-subsidization would inundate
the Commission with information that
has no real import. If the Commission
requires such an evidentiary showing, it
must clearly define the types of
evidentiary support that would be
necessary and provide guidance on the
types of activities that typically would
result in a pledge or encumbrance and
those that will be consistent with the
public interest. FirstEnergy states that
conditions should be placed on section
203 approvals only when the
Commission finds that a pledge or
encumbrance is not consistent with the
public interest.
159. Finally, Independent Sellers
request that the Commission adopt a
rebuttable presumption that no
opportunity for cross-subsidization
exists when a transaction involves only
entities that are not affiliated with
116 E.g., Duke/Cinergy, EEI, Entergy, AEP,
Ameren, Progress Energy, PNM, FirstEnergy,
International Transmission, National Grid, and
Scottish Power (citing NOPR at P 52.).
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traditional public utilities with captive
ratepayers.
160. In addition, Kentucky
Commission, APPA/NRECA, and
TAPSG comment that the Commission
should require as part of a section 203
application the disclosure of all existing
and/or future pledges and future
encumbrances of utility assets. They
state that applicants should have to
explain how these existing pledges or
encumbrances do not harm utility
customers. However, International
Transmission and FirstEnergy do not
believe that all existing pledges and
encumbrances should be disclosed in
section 203 applications because this
would be inconsistent with section
33.11(b)(3) of the regulations, which
assumes that corporate reorganizations
can occur that do not present crosssubsidization issues.
161. Missouri Commission states that
the Commission should require, as a
condition of approving mergers, the
application of a ‘‘lower of’’ or ‘‘higher
of’’ ‘‘cost or market value’’ standard.
TANC states that requiring associate and
affiliated companies to file cost
allocation agreements with the
Commission will help prevent excessive
costs for non-power goods and services
from being charged to utility companies
and their customers. With regard to cost
allocations for non-power goods and
services, TANC asserts that the dual
approach of a ‘‘lower of cost or market’’
standard has the advantage of ensuring
that utilities and customers will not be
harmed by an affiliate company
relationship, regardless of whether
market price exceeds costs for the nonpower goods or services, or vice versa.
162. AEP encourages the Commission
to retain the ‘‘at cost’’ standard for intrasystem non-power goods and services
transactions due to the added cost,
burden, and inconsistencies that would
be created otherwise. It explains that the
expense and effort of implementing a
‘‘lower of cost or market’’ standard to
the wide range of routine service
company administrative and
professional services would be
immense, would result in lost
efficiencies and, ultimately, would
produce higher rates for regulated
ratepayers. AEP states that the at-cost
standard is a fair, verifiable, and
workable.117
163. National Grid states that the
Commission should continue to allow
the use of the SEC’s ‘‘at no more than
cost’’ standard for pricing of intracompany transactions involving service
companies. It explains that such
companies were created to allow
117 AEP
PO 00000
efficiently centralized support services
for utility and non-utility associate
companies within a holding company;
therefore, a pricing system based on
market prices would not be appropriate.
b. Commission Determination
164. The Commission will adopt, with
the modification explained below, our
proposal to require section 203
applicants to include an explanation of
either: (1) How they are providing
assurances that the proposed transaction
will not result in cross-subsidization or
improper pledges or encumbrances of
utility assets; or (2) if such results
would occur, how those results are
consistent with the public interest. We
believe that this approach meets
Congress’ concern regarding crosssubsidization in section 203
transactions. As we explained in the
NOPR, the Commission has previously
adopted a number of policies to address
affiliate abuse and cross-subsidization
activities as it carries out its section 203
and 205 responsibilities. Amended
section 203, however, clearly shows that
Congress intended that crosssubsidization and related concerns
should be a focal point of the
Commission’s section 203 analysis.
165. We also agree with commenters
that certain protections may be
necessary, on a case-by-case basis, in
order to protect against crosssubsidization, pledge or encumbrance of
utility assets, and affiliate abuse. We
note that commenters who generally
support the Commission’s proposal, as
well as some who generally do not
support the proposal, advocate a caseby-case approach. Commenters suggest
many valid conditions that applicants
might propose or that the Commission
might impose under revised FPA
section 203(a)(4). However, many of
these conditions may not be appropriate
to every section 203 transaction.
166. In our Merger Policy Statement,
the Commission explained that, in
determining whether a merger is
consistent with the public interest, one
of the factors we consider is the effect
the proposed merger will have on rates.
The Commission’s main objective in
applying this factor is to protect captive
customers who are served under costbased rates that could be adversely
affected by a section 203 transaction.118
118 Customers charged under market-based rates
escape the potentially deleterious effects of crosssubsidization, or pledge or encumbrance of utility
assets, because the prices are constrained by
competition, regardless of the seller’s costs. In
contrast, captive customers (who pay cost-based
rates) require protection. See, e.g., Alpena Power
Generation, L.L.C., 110 FERC ¶ 61,199, at P 17
Comments at 6–7.
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Continued
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The new provision in amended section
203(a)(4) concerning cross-subsidization
is rooted in similar concerns. In our
Merger Policy Statement, we held that
an applicant that wishes to avoid a
hearing on rate issues should submit a
commitment that adequately protects
captive customers, such as a hold
harmless commitment or an open
season. Also, as part of our policy
authorizing market-based rates for
traditional public utilities or their
affiliates, we have required that these
utilities adopt a code of conduct that
addresses both power and non-power
transactions between them.119 We
believe that these types of commitments
also can, in appropriate circumstances,
address concerns regarding the potential
that a merger may permit crosssubsidization. We will therefore require
applicants to offer protections to their
captive customers that address the
potential for cross-subsidization. We
also note that, in addition to any such
commitments, we have continuing
jurisdiction over the rates of public
utilities under section 205 by which to
further protect captive customers.
167. In sum, the concern about crosssubsidization is principally a concern
over the effect of a transaction on rates.
Accordingly, applicants proposing
transactions under section 203 should
proffer ratepayer protection mechanisms
to assure that captive customers are
protected from the effects of crosssubsidization. The applicant bears the
burden of proof to demonstrate that
customers will be protected.120
Applicants should attempt to resolve
the matter with customers before filing.
Among the types of protection
mechanisms that could be proposed by
applicants are: A general hold harmless
provision, which must be enforceable
and administratively manageable, where
(2005) (finding affiliate abuse concerns were
addressed with respect to market-based rate
authority because, among other factors, there were
no captive customers); Pinnacle West Capital Corp.,
95 FERC ¶ 61,300, at 62,024 (2001) (‘‘The focus of
the Commission’s affiliate abuse concerns in cases
involving sales between affiliates at market-based
rates thus is protection of captive customers.’’);
Connectiv Energy Supply, Inc., 91 FERC ¶ 61,076,
at 61,268 (2000) (‘‘As the Commission has
explained in previous cases, there is a concern
whenever a public utility can transact with an
affiliated power marketer in such a way as to
transfer benefits from a power sale from captive
ratepayers to its shareholders.’’); The Detroit Edison
Co., 84 FERC ¶ 61,197 (1998) (the Commission
places no restrictions on power marketer
transactions with affiliates that do not have captive
customers).
119 NOPR at P 48 and 49.
120 See Central Vermont Pub. Serv. Corp., 39
FERC ¶ 61,295, at 61,960 (1987) (stating that in
cases where the Commission finds sufficient
potential for abuse, the Commission may
disapprove the transaction or place appropriate
conditions on it).
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the applicant commits that it will
protect wholesale customers from any
adverse rate effects resulting from the
transaction for a significant period of
time following the transaction; or a
moratorium on increases in base rates
(rate freeze), where the applicant
commits to freezing its rates for
wholesale customers under a certain
tariff for a significant period of time.121
The Commission will address the
adequacy of the proposed mechanisms
on a case-by-case basis. Furthermore, we
agree that any additional conditions
imposed by the Commission would
complement, not nullify, those imposed
by state commissions.
168. What constitutes adequate
ratepayer protection will depend on the
particular circumstances of the
transaction. Should parties be unable to
reach an agreement on ratepayer
protection, the Commission may still be
able to approve the transaction on the
basis of the parties’ filings if we
determine that the proposal protects
ratepayers from harm, or after imposing
conditions specific to the particular
circumstances.
169. We also agree with commenters
that certain verifications in an
application under amended section 203
could streamline the approval process
by avoiding a detailed examination of
cross-subsidization and encumbrance
concerns. Such verifications, considered
on a case-by-case basis in light of the
given transaction, and explanations
relating to those verifications, as well as
other explanations of how the
transaction will not result in crosssubsidization, pledge, or encumbrance
of utility assets for the benefit of an
associate company ‘‘ or if it does result
in such, an explanation of how such
cross-subsidization, pledge, or
encumbrance will be consistent with the
public interest ‘‘ is to be included as
Exhibit M to the application.
Accordingly, along with any protection
mechanisms as discussed above, we
may accept on a case-by-case basis, in
lieu of or in addition to any other
explanation, the following four
verifications. The application may
verify that the proposed transaction
does not result in, at the time of the
transaction or in the future: (1) Transfers
of facilities between a traditional utility
associate company with wholesale or
retail customers served under cost-based
regulation and an associate company;
(2) new issuances of securities by
121 These protection mechanisms are offered only
as examples. Whether these types of protection
mechanisms are appropriate in a particular case
will depend on the circumstances and the details
of the transaction in question. See, e.g., Merger
Policy Statement at 30,121–24.
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
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traditional utility associate companies
with wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation for
the benefit of an associate company; (3)
new pledges or encumbrances of assets
of a traditional utility associate
company with wholesale or retail
customers served under cost-based
regulation for the benefit of an associate
company; (4) new affiliate contracts
between non-utility associate companies
and traditional utility associate
companies with wholesale or retail
customers served under cost-based
regulation, other than non-power goods
and services agreements subject to
review under sections 205 and 206 of
the FPA.
170. We also agree with New Jersey
Board that proposed section 33.2(j) does
not clearly require appropriate
evidentiary support for the explanation
in Exhibit M. We will therefore revise
the text to read: ‘‘An explanation, with
appropriate evidentiary support for such
explanation (to be identified as Exhibit
M to this application): * * *’’ Further,
the Commission will monitor and
periodically audit, where appropriate, to
ensure that applicants abide by their
commitments in Exhibit M and any
requirements contained in Commission
orders.
171. With regard to comments on the
‘‘at cost’’ standard versus the ‘‘market’’
standard for transactions involving nonpower goods and services, we note that
the Commission addressed this issue in
the PUHCA 2005 rulemaking.122
9. Section 33.11—Commission
Procedures for Consideration of
Applications Under Section 203 of the
FPA
172. In the NOPR, the Commission
proposed new subsections 33.11(a) and
(b) to implement amended section
203(a)(5). Specifically, subsection
33.11(a) provides that the Commission
will act on a completed application for
approval of a transaction (i.e., an
application that meets the requirements
of Part 33), not later than 180 days after
the completed application is filed.123 If
the Commission does not act within 180
days, such application shall be deemed
granted unless the Commission finds,
based on good cause, that further
consideration is required and issues an
122 PUHCA
2005 Final Rule at P 166–73.
explained in the Merger Policy Statement,
a complete application is one that describes the
merger being proposed and that contains all the
information necessary to explain how the merger is
consistent with the public interest, including an
evaluation of the merger’s effect on competition,
rates, and regulation. Merger Policy Statement at
30,127. The Commission’s review process will
begin when the application is deemed to be
complete.
123 As
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order tolling the time for acting on the
application for not more than 180 days,
at the end of which additional period
the Commission shall grant or deny the
application, as required by amended
section 203 of the FPA.124
173. Proposed subsection 33.11(b)
would provide for the expeditious
consideration of completed section 203
applications that are not contested, are
not mergers, and are consistent with
Commission precedent, because they
should typically meet the standards
established in section 203(a)(4).125
174. The Commission also stated that
it could not provide a comprehensive
description of all the classes or types of
transactions that will receive the
expedited review. However, the
Commission proposed that transactions
that would generally warrant expedited
review include: (1) A disposition of only
transmission facilities, particularly
those that both before and after the
transaction remain under the functional
control of a Commission-approved RTO
or independent system operator; (2)
transfers involving generation facilities
of a size that do not require an
Appendix A analysis; (3) internal
corporate reorganizations that do not
present cross-subsidization issues; and
(4) the acquisition of a foreign utility
company by a holding company with no
captive customers in the United
States.126
175. With respect to the latter
category, the Commission recognized
that amended section 203’s requirement
for regulatory approval could have a
chilling effect on investment—
particularly if the transaction were
subjected to a lengthy regulatory review.
The Commission noted that such a
transaction would not cause competitive
concerns in the United States and,
further, that there would be no concerns
about cross-subsidization that harms
captive customers in the United States.
In addition, the Commission stated that
even with respect to the acquisition of
a foreign utility company by a holding
company with captive customers in the
United States, there may be safeguards
that allow expedited approval of such
transactions. Thus, the Commission
sought comment on procedures the
Commission might adopt, or safeguards
it might require, to pre-approve or
expedite such transactions while at the
124 NOPR
at P 56.
at P 57.
126 NOPR at P 59. The Commission noted that
PUHCA 1935 exempted from its requirements
certain acquisitions of foreign utility companies by
a holding company with operations in the United
States. 15 U.S.C. 33 (2000); 17 CFR 250.57 (2005).
However, amended section 203 appears to provide
no such exemption.
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125 Id.
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same time protecting U.S. captive
customers.
176. Further, the Commission stated
that it expects to have a 60-day notice
period for section 203 applications that
involve, contain, or require a
competitive analysis per the part 33 and
a 21-day notice period for all other
section 203 applications, except for
certain applications that may raise
cross-subsidization concerns. The
Commission stated that it expects to
have a 60-day notice period for
applications that seek authorization to
transfer ownership of a generation plant
from one affiliate or associate company
to another company within the same
corporate structure and for other
applications that may raise crosssubsidization or pledge or encumbrance
issues.127
a. Comments
177. Many commenters, including
TAPSG and UWUA, support the
Commission’s proposal regarding the
criteria for expedited consideration
(applications that are not contested, are
not mergers, and are consistent with
Commission precedent). APPA/NRECA
and TANC, however, caution that
uncontested section 203 applications
should still be reviewed to ensure they
are consistent with Commission
precedent. International Transmission
notes that limiting expedited review to
non-merger transactions is inconsistent
with the Commission’s recognition in
the NOPR that not all merger
transactions require the same level of
analysis. Oklahoma Commission
suggests that state commissions take
over initial transaction review and that
the Commission adopt a role of
appellate review where there are
disagreements between state
commissions and the applicant.
178. TAPSG and UWUA agree with
the Commission’s proposal not to
provide a comprehensive description of
the classes or types of transactions that
generally fall into the expedited review
category. However, TANC suggests that
the Commission adopt an exhaustive list
of section 203 transactions that are
eligible for expedited review to provide
customers with the utmost protection
and certainty. International
Transmission recommends that, in order
to encourage investment in independent
transmission, dispositions,
consolidations, or acquisitions by
independent transmission companies
127 NOPR at P 64–64. The Commission explained
that not included in this category are transactions
that merely change upstream ownership interests
held by parent companies of public utilities or
transactions that do not alter the terms of power
supply or power supply costs for captive customers.
PO 00000
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1369
should receive expedited review, even if
all of the criteria in section 33.11(b) of
the proposed regulations are not met.
Many commenters recommend that, for
all four of the categories, the
Commission automatically approve the
application upon filing an informational
report where the applicants make
certain verifications.128
179. With respect to proposed section
33.11(b)(4), commenters had a variety of
responses on the procedures that the
Commission might adopt, or safeguards
it might require, to expedite or preapprove transactions involving the
acquisition of a FUCO by a holding
company with no captive customers in
the U.S. Many commenters request that
the Commission not adopt any rules or
policies that would impose undue
regulatory burdens on holding
companies that seek to invest in foreign
utility companies.
180. Many traditional public utility
commenters and others generally
support a 30-day expedited review or
pre-approval for transactions involving
acquisitions of FUCOs.129 Commenters
suggest that the Commission
automatically approve the application
when the applicant provides certain
cross-subsidization verifications (similar
to those listed in EEI’s comments), as
well as assurances that the transaction
will have no adverse effect on
competition, rates, and regulation, if the
filing is verified by a duly authorized
corporate official of the holding
company.130 The transaction should be
deemed approved upon making such
informational filing.
181. State commission commenters,
including NARUC, Ohio Commission,
and New Jersey Board, generally suggest
that, in order to protect domestic
customers while expediting or preapproving foreign utility transactions,
the Commission should consider
reviewing the financial condition and
credit ratings of the acquiring utility
holding company and its operating
utility companies, or require applicants
to submit service agreements, codes of
128 See EEI Comments at 22–23. For example, one
verification that EEI proposes is that the proposed
transaction results in no transfers of facilities
between a traditional utility associate company
with wholesale or retail customers served under
cost-based regulation and an associate company.
Thus, a transaction that results in a transfer of
facilities into or out of a traditional utility with
captive customers could not qualify for automatic
approval.
129 E.g., EEI, Duke/Cinergy, Entergy, AEP,
Progress Energy, Ameren, AES, EPSA, Scottish
Power, and E.ON.
130 E.g., EEI Comments at 22–23, 25–26; National
Grid Comments at 20–22; AES Comments at 15–19;
EPSA Comments at 8–9.
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conduct, and affiliate rules.131 They
recommend that the Commission also
conduct a cursory ‘‘due diligence’’
review of historical information from
annual FERC Form 1 filings by the
holding company’s operating utility
companies to examine trends in the
holding company’s investment in its
domestic operating utilities and in their
quality of service. The Commission
could get this information from state
regulatory commissions.
182. Some commenters are cautious of
the Commission’s proposed expedited
procedures for approving the
acquisition of FUCOs. TAPSG states that
the Commission should not decide in
the abstract how reviews of such
transactions can be expedited. Public
Citizen urges the Commission to protect
domestic ratepayers by requiring that a
strong showing be made that such a
transaction is consistent with the public
interest and by evaluating whether
attempts by off-shore companies to
acquire or hold controlling shares in
U.S. public utilities can be found to be
consistent with the public interest.
183. With respect to proposed section
33.11(b)(1) and expedited procedures
for a disposition of transmission
facilities only (particularly those that
both before and after the transaction
remain under the functional control of
a Commission-approved RTO or ISO),
TANC comments that expedited review
should be used only where the facilities
will remain under the functional control
of the same Commission-approved RTO
or ISO after the transaction is
completed. TANC also states that
transmission-only dispositions should
receive expedited review only when
they involve entities that are nondominant market participants. APPA/
NRECA argues that dispositions of
transmission-only facilities should not
generally receive expedited review.
184. With respect to proposed section
33.11(b)(2) and expedited procedures
for transfers involving generation
facilities of a size that do not require an
Appendix A analysis, many traditional
public utility commenters suggest that
such expedited review be extended to
include all transactions that do not
require an Appendix A analysis. They
recommend revising the proposed
regulations to state: ‘‘transactions that
do not require an Appendix A
analysis.’’ 132 They also state that, even
in cases where an Appendix A analysis
is required for a generation facility
131 See, e.g., NARUC Comments at 15–16; Ohio
Commission Comments at 8–9; New Jersey Board
Comments at 9–10.
132 See, e.g., EEI Comments at 24–26; Duke/
Cinergy Comments at 10–11; Entergy Comments at
9–11.
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acquisition, the Commission should act
expeditiously in certain circumstances,
setting a 30-day comment period and
issuing an order no later than 30 days
thereafter. Southern Companies requests
that the Commission provide guidance
regarding when an Appendix A analysis
is required.
185. With regard to proposed section
33.11(b)(3), EEI, Entergy, and Duke/
Cinergy support expedited procedures
or pre-approval for internal corporate
reorganizations that do not present
cross-subsidization issues. National
Grid, however, requests expedited
procedures or pre-approval for internal
reorganizations that do involve
mergers.133 It requests that the
Commission facilitate all internal
corporate reorganizations that do not
either introduce new third-party
interests or cross-subsidization issues,
which are routine aspects of a
company’s financial operations, and do
not need to be disrupted by formal
proceedings, however expedited, under
section 203.
186. EEI, Entergy, and Duke/Cinergy,
state that the Commission could
streamline the process further by
granting blanket authorizations, for
FUCO acquisitions involving holding
companies that do not have captive
customers in the U.S. and for internal
corporate reorganizations involving
public utility and holding company
systems that do not involve traditional
utility companies with captive
customers.134
187. Several commenters also made
suggestions regarding notice periods
and complete applications. Many
commenters support the Commission’s
expected notice periods. However, some
commenters recommend that, except in
simple cases, the Commission provide
for a 60-day notice period. They suggest
that the applicant bear the burden of
demonstrating that a shorter notice
period is appropriate. TAPSG and
UWUA recommend that, where
applications are not complete, the
Commission should issue deficiency
letters. TAPSG also suggests that the
Commission not deem an application
complete until after it has reviewed any
interventions or protests, since they may
identify deficiencies in the application.
UWUA recommends that the 180-day
clock on section 203 applications
should not begin to run until a complete
application has been submitted. It states
that merger applicants should have an
increased responsibility to submit
complete applications that are
supported with full explanations of the
133 National
134 See,
PO 00000
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e.g., EEI Comments at 26–27.
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
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details of the proposed transaction,
including testimony.
b. Commission Determination
188. The Commission adopts the
proposed criteria for expedited
consideration in section 33.11(b).
Expedited consideration will be
available for applications that are not
contested, are not mergers, and are
consistent with Commission precedent.
With respect to APPA/NRECA and
TANC’s concerns that the Commission
should review even uncontested section
203 applications to ensure that they are
consistent with Commission precedent,
we note that the Commission has always
reviewed section 203 applications,
regardless of whether they are
contested.
189. Further, while some commenters
recommend that the regulations contain
an exhaustive list of the types of
transactions that would generally
warrant expedited review, we continue
to believe that doing so could exclude
transactions that may warrant expedited
review, but that are not listed. Thus, as
discussed below, we will not adopt an
exhaustive list of such transactions. The
Commission will not expressly provide
expedited review for mergers or
acquisitions involving independent
transmission companies, as suggested
by International Transmission, as
review of such cases would be more
appropriately addressed on an
individual basis.135
190. Commenters have raised many
valid arguments regarding the
Commission’s four proposed categories
of transactions generally warranting
expedited review. We will adopt the
NOPR’s proposal in section 33.11(b)(1)
and will generally provide expedited
review for a disposition of only
transmission facilities, particularly
those that both before and after the
transaction remain under the functional
control of a Commission-approved RTO
or ISO. We note APPA/NRECA’s
concern that the consolidation of
control of jurisdictional facilities should
be carefully evaluated under section 203
and TANC’s argument that expedited
review should be limited to those
facilities that will remain under the
functional control of the same
Commission-approved RTO or ISO after
the transaction is completed. However,
135 We note that although the Filing Requirements
Rule provided that applicants for a transaction
involving only transmission facilities need not
provide a competitive analysis under §§ 33.3 or 33.4
of the Commission’s regulations, it also states that
if the Commission determines that a filing
nonetheless raises competitive issues, the
Commission will evaluate those issues. Filing
Requirements Rule at 31,902.
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we believe that ISOs and RTOs are procompetitive and are effective at
preventing market power abuse because
they have Commission-approved
market-monitoring and mitigation
measures in place. Further, we continue
to believe that, as stated in the Filing
Requirements Rule, ‘‘the standards set
forth in Order No. 2000 136 require
extensive information from RTO
applicants that we believe will
demonstrate whether the proposal is in
the public interest. It also has been our
experience that anticompetitive effects
are unlikely to arise with regard to
internal corporate reorganizations or
transactions that only involve the
disposition of transmission
facilities.’’ 137 For these reasons, we
adopt section 33.11(b)(1) as proposed in
the NOPR.
191. With respect to proposed section
33.11(b)(2), the Commission will adopt
commenters’ proposal and expand that
section to generally provide expedited
review for ‘‘transactions that do not
require an Appendix A analysis.’’ On
further consideration, the Commission
finds that it is not necessary to limit the
transactions that will receive expedited
review based on the amount of
generation that is being transferred in
the transaction. First, we note that the
amount as well as the type of generation
involved can have different market
power consequences, depending on the
situation, in different markets. Second,
our current regulations, which allow
applicants to file an abbreviated
competitive analysis (e.g., an analysis
that does not include an Appendix A
analysis) in certain circumstances,
permit us to seek additional information
if it is needed to allow us to evaluate the
effects of the transaction. Therefore,
although in the first instance the
applicant must decide whether to
perform a full-fledged analysis, it is the
Commission that ultimately decides
whether such analysis is necessary and
thus whether the filing qualifies for
expedited review.
192. With respect to proposed section
33.11(b)(3), we agree with commenters
that internal corporate reorganizations
that do not present cross-subsidization
issues are unlikely to cause
anticompetitive effects. Thus, instead of
providing expedited review for this
category, the Commission is granting a
blanket authorization for internal
136 Regional Transmission Organizations, Order
No. 2000, 65 FR 809 (Jan. 6, 2000), FERC Stats. &
Regs. ¶ 31,089, at 31,108 (1999), order on reh’g,
Order No. 2000–A, 65 FR 12,088 (Mar. 8, 2000),
FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,092 (2000), aff’d sub nom.
Public Utility District No. 1 of Snohomish County,
Washington v. FERC, 272 F.3d 607 (DC Cir. 2001).
137 Filing Requirements Rule at 31,902.
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corporate reorganizations that do not
present cross-subsidization issues and
that do not involve a traditional public
utility with captive customers.
193. With respect to the last category,
proposed section 33.11(b)(4), we will
not adopt the NOPR’s proposal to
expedite review for transactions
involving the acquisition of a FUCO by
a holding company with no captive
customers in the U.S. Instead, we will
grant a blanket authorization for any
holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting
utility or an electric utility company to
acquire a foreign utility company.
However, if such holding company or
any of its affiliates, its subsidiaries, or
associate companies within the holding
company system have captive customers
in the United States, the authorization is
conditioned on the holding company
verifying by a duly authorized corporate
official of the holding company that the
proposed transaction will not have any
adverse effect on competition, rates, or
regulation, and will not result in, at the
time of the transaction or in the future:
(1) Any transfer of facilities between a
traditional utility associate company
with wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation and
an associate company; (2) any new
issuance of securities by traditional
utility associate companies with
wholesale or retail customers served
under cost-based regulation for the
benefit of an associate company; (3) any
new pledge or encumbrance of assets of
a traditional utility associate company
with wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation for
the benefit of an associate company; or
(4) any new affiliate contracts between
non-utility associate companies and
traditional utility associate companies
with wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation,
other than non-power goods and
services agreements subject to review
under sections 205 and 206 of the FPA.
Such transactions will be deemed
approved only upon making a filing of
these verifications.
194. Regarding notice periods, the
Final Rule adopts the NOPR approach.
Some commenters recommend that the
Commission’s default rule for all section
203 applications should be to provide
the public 60 days to submit comments,
and that the applicants should bear the
burden or demonstrating that a shorter
notice is appropriate. However, the
Commission finds that the NOPR notice
periods will allow us to continue
processing section 203 applications
quickly to allow reasonable business
goals to be met. Accordingly, we expect
to have a 60-day notice period for
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1371
section 203 applications that involve,
contain, or require a competitive
analysis per the revised filing
requirements, and a 21-day notice
period for all other section 203
applications, except those that may raise
cross-subsidization concerns. We will
not formalize this policy by rule, so that
we can be flexible to deal with varying
circumstances. This will allow us to
protect against some commenters’
concerns that the public notice period
would be ‘‘unnecessarily shortcircuited,’’ and ensure that it will only
be streamlined as appropriate.
B. Amendments to 18 CFR 2.26—The
Merger Policy Statement
195. When the Commission considers
a proposed transaction’s effect on
federal regulation, section 2.26(e)(1)
states that ‘‘[w]here the merged entity
would be part of a registered public
utility holding company, if applicants
do not commit in their application to
abide by this Commission’s policies
with regard to affiliate transactions, the
Commission will set the issue for a trialtype hearing.’’
196. However, in the NOPR, the
Commission explained that because
EPAct 2005 repeals PUHCA 1935,138
activities of registered holding
companies that were previously subject
to SEC regulation, including intercompany transactions, will no longer be
exempt from this Commission’s
regulation once PUHCA 1935 repeal
takes effect on February 8, 2006.139
Thus, the Commission stated that there
is no longer a concern about any
potential shift in regulation from this
Commission to the SEC under the effect
of regulation factor, and proposed to
delete section 2.26(e)(1).140
197. Proposed new subsection 2.26(f)
would state that the Commission will
not approve a transaction that will
result in cross-subsidization of a nonutility associate company or pledge or
encumbrance of utility assets for the
benefit of an associate company unless
that cross-subsidization, pledge, or
encumbrance will be consistent with the
public interest.
1. Comments
198. Commenters did not specifically
address the Commission’s proposed
section 2.26(e) and (f) amendments.
However, some recommend that the
Commission rethink its current merger
policy and make important decisions as
138 EPAct
2005 § 1263.
17 CFR part 250 (2005).
140 NOPR at P 67. However, the Commission
reiterated that applicants are still required to
address whether the transaction will have any other
effect on the Commission’s regulation.
139 See
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to what ‘‘consistent with the public
interest’’ means in light of amended
section 203 and the repeal of PUHCA
1935. Some comment that the
Commission should broaden its public
interest inquiry to consider ratepayer
benefits on an application-specific basis;
namely, applicants could propose an
open season guarantee under which
their existing wholesale requirements
customers could terminate their
contracts if the applicants request a rate
increase affecting those customers for
the first five years after the merger is
consummated.
199. Ohio Commission comments that
the Commission should consider factors
in addition to those listed in section
2.26(b). It recommends that the
Commission require that a holding
company secure a letter of endorsement,
or order, from any affected state
regulatory commission in which the
holding company has utility operations.
It states that a similar endorsement
requirement is used by the SEC to
implement Rule 53 141 regarding
authority for registered holding
company financings in connection with
the acquisition of exempt wholesale
generators.
200. Commenters also explain that, in
light of amended section 203, the
Commission should expect numerous
section 203 applications seeking
approval of ‘‘cross-country’’ (or
interstate) mergers. They state that the
Commission’s current method for
evaluating the effect of a proposed
electric utility merger on competition,
the Appendix A analysis, was
developed when cross-country electric
utility mergers were not common,
because of PUHCA 1935. The ‘‘impact
on competition’’ horizontal screen
analysis looks primarily at whether
competition will be lessened in the
‘‘common’’ markets where the merger
applicants operate. They state that
continued use of the Appendix A
analysis alone may result in substantial
industry consolidation.
201. TAPSG asserts that the
Commission almost exclusively relies
on the HHI aspect of the Appendix A
analysis and fails to examine the other
competitive effects of a transaction. It
comments that the Commission should
require applicants to submit documents
and data, beyond those needed to
perform the Appendix A analysis,
including the kinds of information
submitted to the antitrust agencies as
part of the initial Hart-Scott-Rodino 142
141 17
CFR 250.53 (2005).
142 TAPSG explains that the Hart-Scott-Rodino
notification is a far more limited submission
required of all utilities subject to the Hart-Scott-
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notification, and should require
applicants to submit supply curve
analyses for each relevant market.
2. Commission Determination
202. With respect to commenters’
specific concerns regarding the
Commission’s merger policy, we are not
persuaded at this time to change our
current policies. Our standard of review
is flexible enough to consider any
changes in market structure that
ultimately result from the EPAct 2005
and the repeal of PUHCA 1935.
However, once the Commission has
gained more experience in evaluating
section 203 applications under the new
statute, we may consider reevaluating
our merger policy in general.
Accordingly, we adopt the proposal set
forth in the NOPR with respect to
amended sections 2.26(e) and (f).
IV. Information Collection Statement
203. Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) regulations require that
OMB approve certain reporting and
recordkeeping requirements (collections
of information) imposed by an
agency.143 The information collection
requirements in this Final Rule are
identified under the Commission’s data
collection, FERC–519, ‘‘Applications
Under Federal Power Act Section 203.’’
Under section 3507(d) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995,144 the reporting
requirements in this rulemaking will be
submitted to OMB for review.
204. Respondents subject to the filing
requirements of this Final Rule will not
be penalized for failing to respond to
this collection of information unless the
collection of information displays a
valid OMB control number. ‘‘Display’’ is
defined as publishing the OMB control
number in regulations, guidelines, forms
or other issuances in the Federal
Register (for example, in the preamble
or regulatory text for the Final Rule
containing the information
collection).145
Public Reporting Burden: In the
NOPR, the Commission stated that the
regulations that it proposed should have
a minimal impact on the current
reporting burden associated with an
individual application, as they would
not substantially change the filing
requirements with which section 203
applicants must currently comply.
Further, the Commission stated that it
did not expect the total number of
section 203 applications to increase
Rodino filing requirements and described in 16 CFR
part 803 (2005).
143 5 CFR 1320.11 (2005).
144 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) (2000).
145 See 1 CFR 21.35; 5 CFR 1320.3(f)(3).
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substantially under amended section
203. The Commission received 42
comments on its NOPR and only GE
EFS specifically addressed its estimates.
GE EFS notes that the ‘‘Information
Collection Statement’’ in the NOPR
states that ‘‘the Commission does not
expect the total number of section 203
applications under amended section 203
to increase substantially.’’ 146 GE EFS
comments that, unless the Commission
limits the overly broad scope of its
proposed rules, the Commission will be
burdened with applications for
acquisitions of securities of QFs, which
heretofore were exempted from section
203.147 As noted above, we believe that
the blanket authorizations granted
herein for certain holding company
acquisitions of non-voting securities and
up to 9.9 percent of voting securities in
electric utility companies will
adequately address GE EFS’ concerns.
To the extent additional blanket
authorizations are needed or
appropriate, we will consider those on
a case-by-case basis. Thus, we believe
that we have lessened the burden on
applicants subject to the requirements of
amended section 203, including for
applicants seeking to acquire securities
of QFs. Therefore, the Commission will
retain its initial estimates.
The Commission is submitting a copy
of this Final Rule to OMB for review
and approval. In their notice of
December 9, 2005, OMB took no action
on the NOPR, instead deferring their
approval until review of the Final Rule.
Title: FERC–519, Applications Under
Federal Power Act Section 203.
Action: Proposed Information
Collection.
OMB Control No: 1902–0082.
Respondents: Businesses or other for
profit.
Necessity of the Information: The
information collected under the
requirements of FERC–519 is used by
the Commission to implement section
203 of the Federal Power Act and the
Code of Federal Regulations under 18
CFR part 33 and 18 CFR 2.26. This Final
Rule is limited to implementing
amended section 203 of the FPA, which
directs the Commission to adopt a rule
to do so. Further, this Final Rule does
not substantially change the current
filing requirements or regulations that
applicants must comply with for
transactions subject to FPA section 203.
205. Interested persons may obtain
information on this information
collection by contacting the following:
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
888 First Street, NE., Washington, DC
146 NOPR
147 GE
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at P 70.
EFS Comments at 2.
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20426, Attention: Michael Miller,
Officer of the Executive Director, phone:
(202) 502–8415, fax: (202) 273–0873, email: michael.miller@ferc.gov.
206. Comments concerning this
information collection can be sent to the
Office of Management and Budget,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Washington, DC 20503
[Attention: Desk Officer for the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, phone:
(202) 395–4650, fax: (202) 395–7285].
V. Environmental Analysis
207. The Commission is required to
prepare an Environmental Assessment
or an Environmental Impact Statement
for any action that may have a
significant adverse effect on the human
environment.148 The Commission
concludes that neither an
Environmental Assessment or an
Environmental Impact Statement is
required for this Final Rule under
section 380.4(a)(2)(ii) of the Commission
regulations, which provides a
‘‘categorical exclusion for rules that do
not substantively change the effect of
legislation.’’149
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VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Certification
208. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of
1980 (RFA)150 generally requires a
description and analysis of final rules
that will have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.151 The Commission is not
required to make such analyses if a rule
would not have such an effect.
209. The Commission adheres to its
certification in the NOPR that this
rulemaking will not have a significant
economic impact upon a substantial
number of small entities. As stated in
the NOPR, EPAct 2005 directs the
Commission to issue a rule adopting
procedures for the expeditious
consideration of applications for the
approval of dispositions, consolidations,
or acquisition, under this section. In
accordance with this directive, this rule
148 Order No. 486, Regulations Implementing the
National Environmental Policy Act, 52 FR 47,897
(Dec. 17, 1987), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,783 (1987).
149 18 CFR 380.4(a)(2)(ii) (2005).
150 5 U.S.C. 601–12.
151 The RFA definition of ‘‘small entity’’ refers to
the definition provided in the Small Business Act,
which defines a ‘‘small business concern’’ as a
business that is independently owned and operated
and that is not dominant in its field of operation.
15 U.S.C. 632. The Small Business Size Standards
component of the North American Industry
Classification System defines a small electric utility
as one that, including its affiliates, is primarily
engaged in the generation, transmission, and/or
distribution of electric energy for sale and whose
total electric output for the preceding fiscal years
did not exceed 4 million MWh. 13 CFR 121.201
(2005).
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implements section 203 of the FPA. In
particular, the rule increases the value
threshold for filing a section 203
application with the Commission from
transactions in excess of $50,000 to
transactions in excess of $10 million
(under amended section 203 of the
FPA). Further, the RFA directs agencies
to consider four regulatory alternatives
to be considered in a rulemaking to
lessen the impact on small entities:
Tiering or establishment of different
compliance or reporting requirements
for small entities, classification,
consolidation, clarification or
simplification of compliance and
reporting requirements, performance
rather than design standards, and
exemptions. In this Final Rule, the
Commission has adopted tiering, and
classification and simplification by
classifying the types of holding
acquisitions that qualify for a grant of
blanket approval under section
203(a)(2). Further, the rule does not
substantially change the current
requirements and regulations that
applicants must comply with for
transactions subject to FPA section 203.
Therefore, the Commission certifies that
this rule will not have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
VII. Document Availability
210. In addition to publishing the full
text of this document in the Federal
Register, the Commission provides all
interested persons an opportunity to
view and/or print the contents of this
document via the Internet through
FERC’s Home Page (https://www.ferc.gov)
and in FERC’s Public Reference Room
during normal business hours (8:30 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Eastern time) at 888 First
Street, NE., Room 2A, Washington, DC
20426.
211. From the Commission’s Home
Page on the Internet, this information is
available in the Commission’s document
management system, eLibrary. The full
text of this document is available on
eLibrary in PDF and Microsoft Word
format for viewing, printing, and/or
downloading. To access this document
in eLibrary, type ‘‘RM05–34’’ in the
docket number field.
212. User assistance is available for
eLibrary and the FERC’s Web site during
normal business hours. For assistance,
please contact FERC Online Support at
1–866–208–3676 (toll free) or 202–502–
6652 (e-mail at
FERCOnlineSupport@FERC.gov), or the
Public Reference Room at 202–502–
8371, TTY 202–502–8659 (e-mail at
public.referenceroom@ferc.gov).
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1373
VIII. Effective Date and Congressional
Notification
213. This Final Rule will take effect
on February 8, 2006. The Commission
has determined, with the concurrence of
the Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of
OMB, that this rule is not a major rule
within the meaning of section 251 of the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996.152 The
Commission will submit this Final Rule
to both houses of Congress and the
General Accountability Office.153
List of Subjects
18 CFR Part 2
Administrative practice and
procedure; Electric power; Natural gas;
Pipelines; Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements
18 CFR Part 33
Electric utilities; Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements; Securities
By Order of the Commission.
Magalie R. Salas,
Secretary.
In consideration of the foregoing, the
Commission amends Chapter I, Title 18,
Code of Federal Regulations, as follows:
I
PART 2—GENERAL POLICY AND
INTERPRETATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 2 is
revised to read as follows:
I
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 601; 15 U.S.C. 717–
717w, 3301–3432; 16 U.S.C. 792–825y, 2601–
2645; 42 U.S.C. 4321–4361, 7101–7352; Pub.
L. No. 109–58, 119 Stat. 594.2.
2. Section 2.26 is amended by revising
paragraph (e) and by adding paragraph
(f) to read as follows:
I
§ 2.26. Policies concerning review of
applications under section 203.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Effect on regulation. (1) Where the
affected state commissions have
authority to act on the transaction, the
Commission will not set for hearing
whether the transaction would impair
effective regulation by the state
commissions. The application should
state whether the state commissions
have this authority.
(2) Where the affected state
commissions do not have authority to
act on the transaction, the Commission
may set for hearing the issue of whether
the transaction would impair effective
state regulation.
(f) Under section 203(a)(4) of the
Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. 824b), in
152 See
153 See
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5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
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reviewing a proposed transaction
subject to section 203, the Commission
will also consider whether the proposed
transaction will result in crosssubsidization of a non-utility associate
company or pledge or encumbrance of
utility assets for the benefit of an
associate company, unless that crosssubsidization, pledge, or encumbrance
will be consistent with the public
interest.
PART 33—APPLICATIONS UNDER
FEDERAL POWER ACT SECTION 203
3. The authority citation for part 33 is
revised to read as follows:
I
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 791a–825r, 2601–
2645; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 42 U.S.C. 7101–7352;
Pub. L. No. 109–58, 119 Stat. 594.
4. The heading of part 33 is revised to
read as set forth above.
I 5. Section 33.1 is revised to read as
follows:
I
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§ 33.1. Applicability, definitions, and
blanket authorizations.
(a) Applicability. (1) The requirements
of this part will apply to any public
utility seeking authorization under
section 203 of the Federal Power Act to:
(i) Sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of
the whole of its facilities subject to the
jurisdiction of the Commission, or any
part thereof of a value in excess of $10
million;
(ii) Merge or consolidate, directly or
indirectly, such facilities or any part
thereof with those of any other person,
by any means whatsoever;
(iii) Purchase, acquire, or take any
security with a value in excess of $10
million of any other public utility; or
(iv) Purchase, lease, or otherwise
acquire an existing generation facility:
(A) That has a value in excess of $10
million; and
(B) That is used in whole or in part
for wholesale sales in interstate
commerce by a public utility.
(2) The requirements of this part shall
also apply to any holding company in
a holding company system that includes
a transmitting utility or an electric
utility if such holding company seeks to
purchase, acquire, or take any security
with a value in excess of $10 million of,
or, by any means whatsoever, directly or
indirectly, merge or consolidate with, a
transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a
holding company system that includes a
transmitting utility, or an electric utility
company, with a value in excess of $10
million.
(b) Definitions. For the purposes of
this part, as used in section 203 of the
Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. 824b)
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(1) Existing generation facility means
a generation facility that is operational
at or before the time the section 203
transaction is consummated. ‘‘The time
the transaction is consummated’’ means
the point in time when the transaction
actually closes and control of the facility
changes hands. ‘‘Operational’’ means a
generation facility for which
construction is complete (i.e., it is
capable of producing power). The
Commission will rebuttably presume
that section 203(a) applies to the
transfer of any existing generation
facility unless the utility can
demonstrate with substantial evidence
that the generator is used exclusively for
retail sales.
(2) Non-utility associate company
means any associate company in a
holding company system other than a
public utility or electric utility company
that has wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation.
(3) Value when applied to:
(i) Transmission facilities, generation
facilities, transmitting utilities, electric
utility companies, and holding
companies, means the market value of
the facilities or companies for
transactions between non-affiliated
companies; the Commission will
rebuttably presume that the market
value is the transaction price. For
transactions between affiliated
companies, value means original cost
undepreciated, as defined in the
Commission’s Uniform System of
Accounts prescribed for public utilities
and licensees in part 101 of this chapter,
or original book cost, as applicable;
(ii) Wholesale contracts, means the
market value for transactions between
non-affiliated companies; the
Commission will rebuttably presume
that the market value is the transaction
price. For transactions between
affiliated companies, value means total
expected nominal contract revenues
over the remaining life of the contract;
and
(iii) Securities, means market value
for transactions between non-affiliated
companies; the Commission will
rebuttably presume that the market
value is the agreed-upon transaction
price. For transactions between
affiliated companies, value means
market value if the securities are widely
traded, in which case the Commission
will rebuttably presume that market
value is the market price at which the
securities are being traded at the time
the transaction occurs; if the securities
are not widely traded, market value is
determined by:
(A) Determining the value of the
company that is the issuer of the equity
securities based on the total
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undepreciated book value of the
company’s assets;
(B) Determining the fraction of the
securities at issue by dividing the
number of equity securities involved in
the transaction by the total number of
outstanding equity securities for the
company; and
(C) Multiplying the value determined
in paragraph (b)(3)(iii)(A) of this section
by the value determined in paragraph
(b)(3)(iii)(B) of this section (i.e., the
value of the company multiplied by the
fraction of the equity securities at issue).
(4) The terms associate company,
electric utility company, foreign utility
company, holding company, and
holding company system have the
meaning given those terms in the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 2005.
The term holding company does not
include: A State, any political
subdivision of a State, or any agency,
authority or instrumentality of a State or
political subdivision of a State; or an
electric power cooperative.
(c) Blanket Authorizations. (1) Any
holding company in a holding company
system that includes a transmitting
utility or an electric utility is granted a
blanket authorization under section
203(a)(2) of the Federal Power Act to
purchase, acquire, or take any security
of:
(i) A transmitting utility or company
that owns, operates, or controls only
facilities used solely for transmission in
intrastate commerce and/or sales of
electric energy in intrastate commerce;
(ii) A transmitting utility or company
that owns, operates, or controls only
facilities used solely for local
distribution and/or sales of electric
energy at retail regulated by a state
commission; or
(iii) A transmitting utility or company
if the transaction involves an internal
corporate reorganization that does not
present cross-subsidization issues and
does not involve a traditional public
utility with captive customers.
(2) Any holding company in a holding
company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility
is granted a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) of the Federal Power
Act to purchase, acquire, or take:
(i) Any non-voting security (that does
not convey sufficient veto rights over
management actions so as to convey
control) in a transmitting utility, an
electric utility company, or a holding
company in a holding company system
that includes a transmitting utility or an
electric utility company; or
(ii) Any voting security in a
transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a
holding company system that includes a
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transmitting utility or an electric utility
company if, after the acquisition, the
holding company will own less than 10
percent of the outstanding voting
securities; or
(iii) Any security of a subsidiary
company within the holding company
system.
(3) The blanket authorizations granted
under paragraph (c)(2) of this section are
subject to the conditions that the
holding company shall not:
(i) Borrow from any electric utility
company subsidiary in connection with
such acquisition; or
(ii) Pledge or encumber the assets of
any electric utility company subsidiary
in connection with such acquisition;
(4) A holding company granted
blanket authorizations in section (c)(2)
shall provide the Commission with the
same information, on the same basis,
that the holding company provides to
the Securities and Exchange
Commission in connection with any
securities purchased, acquired or taken
pursuant to this section.
(5) Any holding company in a holding
company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility
is granted a blanket authorization under
section 203(a)(2) of the Federal Power
Act to acquire a foreign utility company.
However, if such holding company or
any of its affiliates, its subsidiaries, or
associate companies within the holding
company system have captive customers
in the United States, the authorization is
conditioned on the holding company
verifying by a duly authorized corporate
official of the holding company that the
proposed transaction:
(i) Will not have any adverse effect on
competition, rates, or regulation; and
(ii) Will not result in, at the time of
the transaction or in the future:
(A) Any transfer of facilities between
a traditional utility associate company
with wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation and
an associate company;
(B) Any new issuance of securities by
traditional utility associate companies
with wholesale or retail customers
served under cost-based regulation for
the benefit of an associate company;
(C) Any new pledge or encumbrance
of assets of a traditional utility associate
company with wholesale or retail
customers served under cost-based
regulation for the benefit of an associate
company; or
(D) Any new affiliate contracts
between non-utility associate companies
and traditional utility associate
companies with wholesale or retail
customers served under cost-based
regulation, other than non-power goods
and services agreements subject to
review under sections 205 and 206 of
the Federal Power Act.
(iii) A transaction by a holding
company subject to the conditions in
paragraphs (c)(5)(i) and (ii) of this
section will be deemed approved only
upon filing the information required in
paragraphs (c)(5)(i) and (ii) of this
section.
6. Section 33.2 is amended to add
paragraph (j) to read as follows:
I
§ 33.2. Contents of application—general
information requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(j) An explanation, with appropriate
evidentiary support for such
explanation (to be identified as Exhibit
M to the application):
(1) Of how applicants are providing
assurance that the proposed transaction
will not result in cross-subsidization of
a non-utility associate company or
pledge or encumbrance of utility assets
for the benefit of an associate company;
or
(2) If no such assurance can be
provided, an explanation of how such
cross-subsidization, pledge, or
encumbrance will be consistent with the
public interest.
7. Section 33.11 is added to read as
follows:
I
1375
§ 33.11. Commission procedures for the
consideration of applications under section
203 of the FPA.
(a) The Commission will act on a
completed application for approval of a
transaction (i.e., one that is consistent
with the requirements of this part) not
later than 180 days after the completed
application is filed. If the Commission
does not act within 180 days, such
application shall be deemed granted
unless the Commission finds, based on
good cause, that further consideration is
required to determine whether the
proposed transaction meets the
standards of section 203(a)(4) of the FPA
and issues, by the 180th day, an order
tolling the time for acting on the
application for not more than 180 days,
at the end of which additional period
the Commission shall grant or deny the
application.
(b) The Commission will provide for
the expeditious consideration of
completed applications for the approval
of transactions that are not contested, do
not involve mergers, and are consistent
with Commission precedent. The
transactions that would generally
warrant expedited review include:
(1) A disposition of only transmission
facilities, particularly those that both
before and after the transaction remain
under the functional control of a
Commission-approved regional
transmission organization or
independent system operator; and
(2) Transactions that do not require an
Appendix A analysis.1
Note: The following appendix will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
Appendix List of Intervenors and
Commenters
Intervenors
California Public Utilities Commission.
Edison Mission Energy, Edison Mission
Marketing & Trading, Inc., and Midwest
Generation EME, LLC.
Public Service Commission of Wisconsin.
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
Southern California Edison Company.
COMMENTERS
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Acronym
Name
ACC .................................................
AEP .................................................
AES .................................................
Ameren ............................................
APPA/NRECA .................................
Chairman Barton .............................
Constellation ...................................
Duke/Cinergy ..................................
EEI ..................................................
American Chemistry Counsel.
American Electric Power Service Corporation.
The AES Corporation.
Ameren Services Company.
American Public Power Association and the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.
Congressman Joe Barton.
Constellation Energy Group Inc.
Duke Energy Corporation and Cinergy Corporation.
Edison Electric Institute.
1 Inquiry Concerning the Commission’s Merger
Policy Under the Federal Power Act: Policy
Statement, Order No. 592, 61 FR 68,595 (Dec. 30,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
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reconsideration denied, Order No. 592–A, 62 FR
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COMMENTERS—Continued
Acronym
Name
Entergy ............................................
E.ON ...............................................
EPSA ...............................................
FirstEnergy ......................................
GE EFS ...........................................
HECO ..............................................
Independent Sellers ........................
Indiana Commission .......................
Industrial Consumers ......................
Entergy Services, Inc.
E.ON AG.
Electric Power Supply Association.
FirstEnergy Service Company.
GE Energy Financial Services.
Hawaiian Electric Company, Inc.
Cogentrix Energy, Inc. and The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission.
Electricity Consumers Resource Council, the American Iron and Steel Institute, the American Chemistry
Council, and the PJM Industrial Customer Coalition.
International Transmission Company.
Kentucky Public Service Commission.
MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company.
Missouri Public Utilities Commission.
Morgan Stanley Capital Group Inc.
National Alliance for Fair Competition.
National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners.
National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates.
National Grid USA.
New Jersey Board of Public Utilities.
North Carolina Utilities Commission.
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
Oklahoma Corporation Commission.
PNM Resources, Inc.
Progress Energy, Inc.
Energy Program of Public Citizen, Inc.
Scottish Power plc.
Southern Company Services, Inc.
SUEZ Energy North America.
Transmission Agency of Northern California.
Transmission Access Policy Study Group.
Utility Workers Union of America, AFL–CIO.
Wisconsin Electric Power Company.
Xcel Energy Services, Inc.
International Transmission ..............
Kentucky Commission ....................
MidAmerican ...................................
Missouri Commission ......................
Morgan Stanley ...............................
NAFC ..............................................
NARUC ...........................................
NASUCA .........................................
National Grid ...................................
New Jersey Board ..........................
North Carolina Commission ............
Ohio Commission ............................
Oklahoma Commission ...................
PNM ................................................
Progress Energy .............................
Public Citizen ..................................
Scottish Power ................................
Southern Companies ......................
Suez ................................................
TANC ..............................................
TAPSG ............................................
UWUA .............................................
Wisconsin Electric ...........................
Xcel .................................................
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 4 (Friday, January 6, 2006)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1348-1376]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-77]
[[Page 1347]]
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Part III
Department of Energy
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Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
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18 CFR Parts 2 and 33
Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 4 / Friday, January 6, 2006 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 1348]]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
18 CFR Parts 2 and 33
[Docket No. RM05-34-000; Order No. 669]
Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203
Issued December 23, 2005.
AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: Under Subtitle G (Market Transparency, Enforcement, and
Consumer Protection), section 1289 (Merger Review Reform), of Title XII
(Electricity Modernization Act of 2005), of the Energy Policy Act of
2005 (EPAct 2005), Public Law 109-58, 119 Stat. 594 (2005), the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission (Commission) amends 18 CFR 2.26 and 18 CFR
part 33 to implement amended section 203 of the Federal Power Act
(FPA).\1\
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\1\ 16 U.S.C. 824b (2000).
DATES: Effective Date: This Final Rule will become effective on
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February 8, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sarah McWane (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel,
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502-8372.
Phillip Nicholson (Technical Information), Office of Markets, Tariffs
and Rates--West, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC, 20426. (202) 502-8240.
Jan Macpherson (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel,
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502-8921.
James Akers (Technical Information), Office of Markets, Tariffs and
Rates--West, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street,
NE., Washington, DC 20426. (202) 502-8101.
SUPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paragraph Nos.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Introduction....................................... 1.
II. Background........................................ 5.
A. Commission Merger Policy Before Effective Date 5.
of Amended FPA Section 203.......................
B. Section 203 As Amended By EPAct 2005........... 15.
C. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Transactions 25.
Subject to FPA Section 203.......................
III. Discussion....................................... 27.
A. Amendments to 18 CFR Part 33................... 27.
1. Section 33.1(a)--Applicability................. 28.
2. Section 33.1(b)--Definitions of ``Associate 33.
Company,'' ``Holding Company,'' ``Holding Company
System,'' ``Transmitting Utility,'' and
``Electric Utility Company''.....................
3. Section 33.1(b)--Definition of ``Existing 74.
Generation Facility''............................
4. Section 33.1(b)--Definition of ``Non-Utility 88.
Associate Company''..............................
5. Section 33.1(b)--Definition of ``Value''....... 94.
6. Compliance with Section 203.................... 127.
7. Cash Management Arrangements, Intra-Holding 133.
Company System Financing, Securities Under
Amended Section 203, and Blanket Authorizations..
8. Section 33.2(j)--General Information 146.
Requirements Regarding Cross-Subsidization.......
9. Section 33.11--Commission Procedures for 172.
Consideration of Applications under Section 203
of the FPA.......................................
B. Amendments to 18 CFR 2.26--The Merger Policy 195.
Statement........................................
1. Comments....................................... 198.
2. Commission Determination....................... 202.
IV. Information Collection Statement.................. 203.
V. Environmental Analysis............................. 207.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification.......... 208.
VII. Document Availability............................ 210.
VIII. Effective Date and Congressional Notification... 213.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before Commissioners: Joseph T. Kelliher, Chairman; Nora Mead
Brownell, and Suedeen G. Kelly.
I. Introduction
1. On August 8, 2005, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct 2005)
\2\ was signed into law. Section 1289 (Merger Review Reform) of Title
XII, Subtitle G (Market Transparency, Enforcement, and Consumer
Protection),\3\ of EPAct 2005 amends section 203 of the Federal Power
Act (FPA).\4\ Amended section 203: (1) Increases (from $50,000 to
greater than $10 million) the value threshold for certain transactions
being subject to section 203; (2) extends the scope of section 203 to
include transactions involving certain transfers of generation
facilities and certain holding companies' transactions with a value in
excess of $10 million; (3) limits the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission's (Commission) review of a public utility's acquisition of
securities of another public utility to transactions greater than $10
million; (4) requires that the Commission, when reviewing proposed
section 203 transactions, examine cross-subsidization and pledges or
encumbrances of utility assets; and (5) directs the Commission to
adopt, by rule, procedures for the expeditious consideration of
applications for the approval of dispositions, consolidations, or
acquisitions under section 203.
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\2\ Energy Policy Act of 2005, Pub. L. No. 109-58, 119 Stat. 594
(2005).
\3\ EPAct 2005 Sec. Sec. 1281 et seq.
\4\ 16 U.S.C. 824b (2000).
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2. As discussed below, on October 3, 2005, the Commission issued a
notice of proposed rulemaking (NOPR) in which it proposed certain
modifications to 18 CFR 2.26 and 18 CFR part 33 to implement amended
section 203.\5\ Numerous comments were filed by a variety of entities.
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\5\ Transactions Subject to FPA Section 203, 70 FR 58,636
(October 7, 2005), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,589 (2005).
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3. In this Final Rule, the Commission adopts some of the proposals
in the
[[Page 1349]]
NOPR as well as many of the commenters' recommendations. Specifically,
this Final Rule:
(1) Implements the new applicability of amended section 203 of the
FPA;
(2) Grants blanket authorizations for certain types of
transactions, including foreign utility acquisitions by holding
companies, intra-holding company system financing and cash management
arrangements, certain internal corporate reorganizations, and certain
investments in transmitting utilities and electric utility companies;
(3) Adopts many of the NOPR's proposed defined terms, including
``electric utility company,'' ``holding company,'' and ``non-utility
associate company,'' but clarifies the application of these terms to
certain entities;
(4) Amends the proposed definition of ``existing generation
facility;'
(5) Adopts a simpler rule than was proposed in the NOPR with
respect to the determination of ``value'' as it applies to various
section 203 transactions;
(6) Clarifies and refines the NOPR's proposal with respect to a
section 203 applicant's obligation to file evidentiary support to
demonstrate that a proposed transaction will not result in cross-
subsidization of a non-utility associate company or pledge or
encumbrance of utility assets for the benefit of an associate company;
and
(7) Adopts the NOPR's proposal that the Commission provide
expeditious consideration of completed applications for the approval of
transactions that are not contested, do not involve mergers, and are
consistent with Commission precedent.
4. Our goal is to carry out the expanded authorities and
requirements contained in the new section 203 amendments to ensure that
all jurisdictional transactions subject to section 203 are consistent
with the public interest and at the same time ensure that our rules do
not impede day-to-day business transactions or stifle timely investment
in transmission and generation infrastructure. We believe we have
accomplished this result with the rules herein. However, at the
technical conference we announced in our final rule implementing the
Public Utility Holding Company Act of 2005 (PUHCA 2005),\6\ to be held
within the next year,\7\ we will also address issues raised in this
proceeding, including the appropriateness of the blanket authorizations
granted herein and whether additional steps are needed to protect
against cross-subsidization and pledges or encumbrance of utility
assets.
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\6\ EPAct 2005 sections 1261 et seq. Repeal of the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 and Enactment of the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 2005, Order No. 667, FERC Stats. &
Regs. ] 31,197 (2005) (PUHCA 2005 Final Rule).
\7\ PUHCA 2005 Final Rule at P 17. Specifically, in the PUHCA
Final Rule, the Commission stated that we intend to hold a technical
conference no later than one year after PUHCA 2005 becomes effective
to evaluate whether additional exemptions, different reporting
requirements, or other regulatory actions need to be considered. The
Commission's regulations implementing PUHCA 2005 take effect on
February 8, 2006.
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II. Background
A. Commission Merger Policy Before Effective Date of Amended FPA
Section 203
5. Section 203 of the FPA \8\ currently provides that: No public
utility shall sell, lease or otherwise dispose of the whole of its
facilities subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, or any part
thereof of a value in excess of $50,000, or by any means whatsoever,
directly or indirectly, merge or consolidate such facilities or any
part thereof with those of any other person, or purchase, acquire, or
take any security of any other public utility, without first having
secured an order of the Commission authorizing it to do so.
\8\ EPAct 2005's amendments to FPA section 203 take effect on
February 8, 2006. We will generally refer to EPAct 2005's amended
section 203 of the FPA as ``amended'' or ``new'' section 203. All
other references to FPA section 203 are as it exists now.
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The Commission shall approve such transactions if they are ``consistent
with the public interest.''
6. In 1996, the Commission issued the Merger Policy Statement \9\
updating and clarifying the Commission's procedures, criteria, and
policies concerning public utility mergers. The purpose of the Merger
Policy Statement was to ensure that mergers are consistent with the
public interest and to provide greater certainty and expedition in the
Commission's analysis of merger applications.
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\9\ Inquiry Concerning the Commission's Merger Policy Under the
Federal Power Act: Policy Statement, Order No. 592, 61 FR 68,595
(Dec. 30, 1996), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,044 (1996),
reconsideration denied, Order No. 592-A, 62 FR 33,340 (June 19,
1997), 79 FERC ] 61,321 (1997) (Merger Policy Statement).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. The Merger Policy Statement sets out three factors the
Commission generally considers when analyzing whether a proposed
section 203 transaction \10\ is consistent with the public interest:
Effect on competition; effect on rates; and effect on regulation.
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\10\ Although the Commission applies these factors to all
section 203 transactions, not just mergers, the filing requirements
and the level of detail required may differ. Id. at 30,113 n.7. See
also 18 CFR 2.26 (2005) (codifying the Merger Policy Statement).
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8. With respect to the first factor, the effect on competition, the
Merger Policy Statement adopts the Department of Justice (DOJ)/Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) 1992 Horizontal Merger Guidelines (Guidelines)
\11\ as the analytical framework for examining horizontal market power
concerns. The Merger Policy Statement also uses an analytical screen
(Appendix A analysis) to allow early identification of transactions
that clearly do not raise competitive concerns.\12\ As part of the
screen analysis, applicants must define the relevant products sold by
the merging entities, identify the customers and potential suppliers in
the geographic markets that are likely to be affected by the proposed
transaction, and measure the concentration in those markets. Using the
Delivered Price Test to identify alternative competing suppliers, the
concentration of potential suppliers included in the defined market is
then measured by the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) and used as a
screen to determine which transactions clearly do not raise market
power concerns.
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\11\ U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission,
Horizontal Merger Guidelines, 57 FR 41,552 (1992), revised, 4 Trade
Reg. Rep. (CCH) ] 13,104 (Apr. 8, 1997).
\12\ Merger Policy Statement at 30,119-20.
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9. The Commission stated in the Merger Policy Statement that it
will examine the second factor, the effect on rates, by focusing on
customer protections designed to insulate consumers from any harm
resulting from the transaction.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See id. at 30,121-24.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
10. The Merger Policy Statement set forth a third factor for
examination, the effect on regulation. This includes both state
regulation and the Commission's regulation, including any potential
shift in regulation from the Commission to the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) due to a transaction creating a registered public
utility holding company under the Public Utility Holding Company Act of
1935 (PUHCA 1935).\14\ The Merger Policy Statement explained that,
unless applicants commit themselves to abide by this Commission's
policies with regard to affiliate transactions involving non-power
goods and services, we will set the issue of the effect on regulation
for hearing.\15\
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\14\ 15 U.S.C. 79a et seq. (2000).
\15\ Merger Policy Statement at 30,125; see also Atlantic City
Electric Co. and Delmarva Power & Light Co., 80 FERC ] 61,126 at
61,412, order denying reh'g, 81 FERC ] 61,173 (1997). With respect
to a transaction's effect on state regulation, where the state
commissions have authority to act on the transaction, the Commission
stated that it intends to rely on them to exercise their authority
to protect state interests.
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[[Page 1350]]
11. The Commission later issued the Filing Requirements Rule,\16\ a
final rule updating the filing requirements under 18 CFR part 33 of the
Commission's regulations for section 203 applications. The Filing
Requirements Rule implements the Merger Policy Statement and provides
detailed guidance to applicants for preparing applications. The revised
filing requirements also assist the Commission in determining whether
section 203 transactions are consistent with the public interest,
provide more certainty, and expedite the Commission's handling of such
applications.
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\16\ Revised Filing Requirements Under Part 33 of the
Commission's Regulations, Order No. 642, 65 FR 70,983 (Nov. 28,
2000), FERC Stats. & Regs., July 1996-Dec. 2000 ] 31,111 (2000),
order on reh'g, Order No. 642-A, 66 FR 16,121 (Mar. 23, 2001), 94
FERC ] 61,289 (2001) (codified at 18 CFR Part 33 (2005)) (Filing
Requirements Rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
12. Further, the Filing Requirements Rule codified the Commission's
screening approach, provided specific filing requirements consistent
with Appendix A of the Commission's Merger Policy Statement,
established guidelines for vertical competitive analysis, and set forth
filing requirements for mergers that may raise vertical market power
concerns.
13. The Filing Requirements Rule also reduced the information
burden for transactions that clearly raise no competitive concerns. The
Commission explained that for certain transactions, abbreviated filing
requirements are appropriate because it is relatively easy to determine
that they will not harm competition and, thus, a full-fledged
horizontal screen analysis or vertical competitive analysis is not
required.\17\
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\17\ Filing Requirements Rule at 31,902 & 31,907. The Commission
clarified that, if it later determined that a filing raised
competitive issues, the Commission would evaluate those issues and
direct the applicant to submit any data needed to satisfy the
Commission's concerns. Id. at n.79.
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14. The Commission stated in the Filing Requirements Rule that it
intended to continue processing section 203 applications expeditiously,
with a goal of issuing an initial order for most mergers within 150
days of a completed application.\18\ Further, the Commission stated
that it intended to continue processing uncontested non-merger
applications within 60 days of filing and protested non-merger
applications within 90 days of filing.\19\
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\18\ Id. at 31,873.
\19\ Id. at 31,876.
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B. Section 203 as Amended by EPAct 2005
15. EPAct 2005 revises section 203(a) of the FPA as follows:
16. Amended section 203(a)(1) states that no public utility shall,
without first having secured an order of the Commission authorizing it
to do so: (A) Sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of the whole of its
facilities subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, or any part
thereof of a value in excess of $10 million; (B) merge or consolidate,
directly or indirectly, such facilities or any part thereof with those
of any other person, by any means whatsoever; (C) purchase, acquire, or
take any security with a value in excess of $10 million of any other
public utility; or (D) purchase, lease, or otherwise acquire an
existing generation facility: (i) That has a value in excess of $10
million; and (ii) that is used for interstate wholesale sales and over
which the Commission has jurisdiction for ratemaking purposes.
17. Section 203(a)(2) adds the entirely new requirement that no
holding company in a holding company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility shall purchase, acquire, or
take any security with a value in excess of $10 million of, or, by any
means whatsoever, directly or indirectly, merge or consolidate with, a
transmitting utility, an electric utility company, or a holding company
in a holding company system that includes a transmitting utility, or an
electric utility company, with a value in excess of $10 million without
prior Commission authorization.
18. Like the existing section 203(a), amended section 203(a)(3)
provides that upon receipt of an application for such approval, the
Commission shall give reasonable notice in writing to the Governor and
state commission of each of the states in which the physical property
affected is situated, and to such other persons as it may deem
advisable.
19. Amended section 203(a)(4) states that after notice and
opportunity for hearing, the Commission shall approve the proposed
disposition, consolidation, acquisition, or change in control if it
finds that the transaction will be consistent with the public interest.
It also specifically provides that the Commission must find that the
transaction will not result in cross-subsidization of a non-utility
associate company or pledge or encumbrance of utility assets for the
benefit of an associate company, unless that cross-subsidization,
pledge, or encumbrance will be consistent with the public interest.
20. Section 203(a)(5) adds the entirely new requirement that the
Commission shall: By rule, adopt procedures for the expeditious
consideration of applications for the approval of dispositions,
consolidations, or acquisitions, under this section. Such rules shall
identify classes of transactions, or specify criteria for transactions,
that normally meet the standards established in paragraph (4). The
Commission shall provide expedited review for such transactions. The
Commission shall grant or deny any other application for approval of a
transaction not later than 180 days after the application is filed. If
the Commission does not act within 180 days, such application shall be
deemed granted unless the Commission finds, based on good cause, that
further consideration is required to determine whether the proposed
transaction meets the standards of paragraph (4) and issues an order
tolling the time for acting on the application for not more than 180
days, at the end of which additional period the Commission shall grant
or deny the application.
21. Section 203(a)(6), which is also new, provides that for
purposes of this subsection, the terms ``associate company,'' ``holding
company,'' and ``holding company system'' have the meaning given those
terms in PUHCA 2005.
22. Section 1289(b) provides that the amendments made by this
section shall take effect six months after the date of enactment of
EPAct 2005, or February 8, 2006. This is the same date on which the
repeal of PUHCA 1935 and enactment of the PUHCA 2005, are to take
effect.\20\
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\20\ Id. Sec. Sec. 1261, 1274. PUHCA 2005 Final Rule at P 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
23. Section 1289(c) provides that the amendments made by subsection
(a) shall not apply to any section 203 application that was filed on or
before the date of enactment of EPAct 2005.
24. Section 203(b) of the FPA remains unchanged.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Section 203(b) states:
The Commission may grant any application for an order under this
section in whole or in part and upon such terms and conditions as it
finds necessary or appropriate to secure the maintenance of adequate
service and the coordination in the public interest of facilities
subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission. The Commission may
from time to time for good cause shown make such orders supplemental
to any order made under this section as it may find necessary or
appropriate.
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C. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Transactions Subject to FPA Section
203
25. On October 7, 2005, the Commission's NOPR on Transactions
Subject to FPA Section 203 was published in the Federal Register.\22\
As discussed in more detail below, in the
[[Page 1351]]
NOPR the Commission proposed to revise 18 CFR part 33 and 18 CFR 2.26
of its rules to implement amended section 203 of the FPA. Comments were
due on or before November 7, 2005.\23\
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\22\ 70 FR 58,636 (October 7, 2005). On October 19, 2005, an
errata notice was published in the Federal Register (70 FR 60,748),
correcting Paragraph 1, footnote 4 of the NOPR to refer to February
8, 2006, as opposed to February 3, 2006.
\23\ The commenters are listed in an appendix to this order.
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26. This Final Rule will be effective on the date on which amended
section 203 of the FPA takes effect, February 8, 2006.
III. Discussion
A. Amendments to 18 CFR Part 33
27. In the NOPR, the Commission proposed to amend 18 CFR part 33
by: Revising the title to read ``Applications Under Federal Power Act
Section 203;'' amending section 33.1(a) to clarify what transactions
are subject to amended section 203 and part 33 as a result of amended
sections 203(a)(1)(A)-(D) and (a)(2) of the FPA; adding a new
subsection 33.1(b) that defines certain new terms used in amended
section 203 that are not defined in EPAct 2005; adding a new subsection
33.2(j) to implement amended section 203(a)(4) regarding cross-
subsidization and pledge or encumbrance issues; and adding new sections
33.11(a) and (b) to implement amended section 203(a)(5) regarding the
Commission's procedures for the consideration of applications under
section 203 of the FPA.
1. Section 33.1(a)--Applicability
28. Proposed section 33.1(a) clarifies what transactions are
subject to amended section 203 and part 33 as a result of amended
sections 203(a)(1)(A)-(D) and (a)(2) of the FPA.\24\
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\24\ Because proposed section 33.1(a) is almost identical, with
minor exceptions, to amended sections 203(a)(1)(A)-(D) and (a)(2),
which are summarized in section II.B. above and set forth in the
regulatory text, we will not recite that text here.
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a. Comments
29. Several commenters raise concerns, described in more detail
below, regarding the applicability of amended section 203 to
transactions involving foreign utility companies (FUCOs), qualifying
facilities (QFs), exempt wholesale generators (EWGs),\25\ rural
electric cooperatives, local distribution companies, stand-alone
generation and retail sales, as well as intrastate transactions, i.e.,
transactions wholly within the Electric Reliability Council of Texas
(ERCOT), Alaska, or Hawaii. They generally argue that Congress did not
intend to expand significantly the Commission's jurisdiction under
amended section 203 and, therefore, did not convey to the Commission
jurisdiction over these types of transactions. Commenters also express
concern over any potential overlap between the Commission's scope of
review under amended section 203 and the scope of review by state
commissions. They state that the Commission should not use its new
section 203 authority to preempt state regulatory authority over rates
and approvals of utility mergers and acquisitions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ PUHCA 2005 Sec. 1266(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
30. Electric Power Supply Association (EPSA) requests that the
Commission modify the text of proposed section 33.1(a)(1)(ii) to
clarify that any merger or consolidation must exceed the $10 million
threshold before section 203 filing approval is required. It states
that the Commission should not alter its past practice of applying the
statutory dollar threshold to all types of transactions requiring
section 203 approval, including mergers and acquisitions. EPSA explains
that the mergers and acquisitions clause of the currently effective
section 203 and section 203 as amended by EPAct 2005 are substantially
the same and do not specify a value amount. EPSA points out, however,
that although the currently effective statutory language, like the
newly enacted EPAct 2005 language, did not codify the monetary
threshold with respect to mergers and consolidations, for decades the
Commission's regulations (section 33.1(a)(2)) have required section 203
applications for mergers, consolidations and acquisitions only if they
meet the $50,000 threshold (which on February 8, 2006 will become $10
million). EPSA states that the NOPR provides no reason for the
Commission to change its interpretation of section 203.
b. Commission Determination
31. Most of the concerns regarding the applicability of amended
section 203 involve new section 203(a)(2) and the Commission's proposed
definitions of ``electric utility company'' and ``holding company.''
Accordingly, these comments are discussed in greater detail in those
sections below. Similarly, concerns regarding any potential overlap
between the scope of review of the Commission under amended section 203
and that of state commissions are also discussed with the proposed
definition of ``electric utility company,'' below.
32. We reject EPSA's request that we revise proposed section
33.1(a)(1)(ii) to clarify that any merger or consolidation must also
exceed a monetary threshold before section 203 filing approval is
required. The plain language of amended section 203(a)(1)(B) does not
permit such an interpretation. Under amended section 203(a)(1)(B): ``No
public utility shall * * * merge or consolidate, directly or
indirectly, such facilities [facilities subject to the jurisdiction of
the Commission] or any part thereof with those of any other person, by
any means whatsoever.'' This provision, on its face, does not impose a
dollar threshold on mergers or consolidations and proposed section
33.1(a)(1)(ii) is consistent with the statutory provision. While
Congress included a $10 million threshold for amended subsections
203(a)(1)(A), (C), (D), and 203(a)(2) (dispositions of jurisdictional
facilities; acquisitions of securities of public utilities; purchases
of existing generation facilities; holding company acquisitions),
Congress clearly did not adopt a monetary threshold for mergers and
consolidations in amended subsection 203(a)(1)(B). We note that
``[w]here Congress includes particular language in one section of a
statute but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is
generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in
the disparate inclusion or exclusion.'' \26\ In light of the
unambiguous statutory language, we are not convinced by EPSA's
unsupported assertion that the failure to include a monetary threshold
as to mergers and consolidations was an ``oversight'' and that
``Congress did not intend to change [the currently effective] statutory
and regulatory structure.'' \27\ While our regulations previously
applied a dollar threshold to mergers and consolidations, such an
approach is no longer tenable, since it is inconsistent with the plain
language of amended section 203. Thus, we will not revise section
33.1(a)(1)(ii) to include a $10 million threshold.
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\26\ Russello v. United States, 464 U.S. 16, 23 (1983) (internal
citations omitted).
\27\ EPSA Comments at 5.
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2. Section 33.1(b)--Definitions of ``Associate Company,'' ``Holding
Company,'' ``Holding Company System,'' ``Transmitting Utility,'' and
``Electric Utility Company''
33. As noted above, section 203(a)(2) adds an entirely new
requirement to the FPA:
No holding company in a holding company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility shall purchase, acquire,
or take any security with a value in excess of $10 million of, or,
by any means whatsoever, directly or indirectly, merge or
consolidate with, a transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a holding company system that
includes a transmitting utility, or an electric utility company,
with a value in excess of $10 million without first
[[Page 1352]]
having secured an order of the Commission authorizing it to do so.
a. Definition of ``Electric Utility Company''
34. The scope of amended section 203(a)(2) turns in large part on
the Commission's interpretation of the term ``electric utility
company'' which, in turn, affects whether an entity is a holding
company subject to section 203(a)(2). The FPA does not include a
definition of ``electric utility company'' and the Commission proposed
that the term, as used in amended section 203(a)(2), have the same
meaning as in PUHCA 2005, which is ``any company that owns or operates
facilities used for the generation, transmission, or distribution of
electric energy for sale.'' \28\
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\28\ EPAct 2005 Sec. 1262(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
i. Comments
35. The proposed definition of ``electric utility company'' was one
of the most commented-on issues in the NOPR. While certain commenters,
including the American Public Power Association and the National Rural
Electric Cooperative Association (APPA/NRECA), Indiana Utility
Regulatory Commission (Indiana Commission), and Southern Company
Services, Inc. (Southern Companies), support the Commission's adoption
of the PUHCA 2005 definition of ``electric utility company,'' several
commenters expressed concerns about the scope of the Commission's
jurisdiction under the proposed definition. Specifically, they object
to the proposed definition of the term ``electric utility company'' or
seek clarification as to what types of entities are considered
``electric utility companies,'' for purposes of amended section
203(a)(2), to determine whether or not they must seek section 203
approval.
36. Many commenters argue that Congress did not intend to give the
Commission jurisdiction over acquisitions of foreign companies.\29\
Certain commenters assert that if Congress had intended the PUHCA 2005
definition to apply to ``electric utility company'' as used in amended
section 203(a)(2), it would have said so as it did for the other terms
listed in amended section 203(a)(6). They explain that, while the term
``electric utility'' is used once in amended section 203(a)(2) and
``electric utility company'' is used twice, the terms should be read
similarly and should not affect the interpretation of the section.
Accordingly, commenters assert that it is reasonable to read the term
``electric utility company,'' not as used in PUHCA 2005, where the term
includes foreign utility companies, but rather to have the same meaning
as ``electric utility,'' which is defined in the FPA as ``a person or
Federal or State agency * * * that sells electric energy.'' \30\ They
argue that the use of the term ``electric utility'' in the FPA and in
the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA) \31\ makes
clear that ``electric utilities'' are domestic entities (i.e., ones
selling electricity in the U.S.), not foreign.\32\
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\29\ E.g., Congressman Joe Barton (Chairman Barton), The AES
Corporation (AES), Edison Electric Institute (EEI), Entergy
Services, Inc. (Entergy), E.ON AG (E.ON), EPSA, GE Energy Financial
Services (GE EFS), Cogentrix Energy, Inc. and The Goldman Sachs
Group, Inc. (Independent Sellers), National Grid USA (National
Grid), PNM Resources, Inc. (PNM), Progress Energy, Inc. (Progress
Energy), Scottish Power plc (Scottish Power), and SUEZ Energy North
America (Suez).
\30\ EPAct 2005 1291(b)(22).
\31\ 16 U.S.C. 824a-3 (2000).
\32\ See, e.g., AES Comments at 5. For example, AES states that,
unless ``electric utility'' is implicitly defined only to include
domestic entities, the provisions of sections 111-117 of PURPA,
which relate in part to the actions of state commissions as they
affect ``electric utilities,'' become a complete non sequitur.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
37. Similarly, EEI, Entergy, E.ON, PNM, and Progress Energy
maintain that, in order to be consistent with the Commission's FPA
jurisdiction, the Commission should define an ``electric utility
company'' as ``a person that sells electric energy in interstate
commerce.'' Suez states that, based on an analysis of and the
legislative purpose behind EPAct 2005, the Commission should exempt the
acquisition of foreign utility assets by jurisdictional holding
companies without captive customers by adding the word
``jurisdictional'' before ``transmitting utility'' and ``electric
utility company'' at the end of proposed section 33.1(a)(2).
38. Other commenters add that the Commission did not have
jurisdiction over foreign acquisitions before EPAct 2005 and that
nothing in EPAct 2005 explicitly gives the Commission jurisdiction over
foreign acquisitions. Commenters assert that Commission jurisdiction
over foreign acquisitions is contrary to Congressional intent and poor
public policy, because Commission review will become an impediment to
U.S. investment in foreign entities and may discourage international
investment in the U.S. utility industry.\33\ They assert that the
Commission should not review the numerous and/or routine foreign
transactions that are not connected to the Commission's role of
overseeing U.S. wholesale electric markets and the public interest.
Certain commenters maintain that, at minimum, the Commission should
exempt from review a holding company's acquisition of a FUCO where the
holding company has no captive U.S. ratepayers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ E.g., E.ON, Chairman Barton, and Suez.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
39. Several commenters argue that if the PUHCA 2005 definition of
``electric utility company'' is adopted in the Final Rule, the
definition should incorporate the exemptions to that definition set
forth in the PUHCA 2005, including the exemption for FUCOs.\34\
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\34\ E.g., EEI, Entergy, E.ON, Independent Sellers, National
Grid, Progress Energy, and Scottish Power (citing, e.g., PUHCA 2005
Sec. Sec. 1264 & 1266).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
40. As indicated above, commenters argue that part II of the FPA
applies to interstate commerce; therefore, section 203 should not be
read to extend to transactions that are not in interstate commerce.\35\
Several commenters object to the proposed definition of ``electric
utility company'' if it includes transactions typically reserved for
state commission consideration (including transactions involving local
distribution companies, stand-alone generation, retail sales and
exclusively intrastate transactions), which the commenters maintain are
beyond the Commission's jurisdiction.\36\
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\35\ See, e.g., Chairman Barton Comments at 3.
\36\ E.g., Chairman Barton, EEI, Hawaiian Electric Company, Inc.
(HECO), National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners
(NARUC), National Grid, PNM, and Progress Energy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
41. Specifically, Chairman Barton maintains that Congress did not
intend to give the Commission jurisdiction over mergers in ERCOT. EEI,
as supported by E.ON, PNM, and Progress Energy, maintains that its
alternative definition for ``electric utility company,'' which is ``a
person that sells electric energy in interstate commerce,'' would
properly exclude local distribution companies from the Commission's
authority under amended section 203.
42. Further, many commenters are concerned that the proposed
definition of ``electric utility company'' applies to QFs.\37\ ACC,
EPSA, GE EFS, and Independent Sellers ask that the Commission clarify
that QFs continue to be exempt from the Commission's section 203
authority. ACC asks the Commission to exclude QFs that are not
affiliated with traditional utilities, transmission providers, or other
non-QF power producers in order to ensure that the parent companies of
such QFs are not subject to amended section 203.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ E.g., American Chemistry Counsel (ACC), APPA/NRECA, EPSA,
GE EFS, Independent Sellers, and Transmission Access Policy Study
Group (TAPSG).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
43. Similarly, EPSA, GE EFS, and Independent Sellers request that
we exclude a QF's upstream owners from Commission oversight under
amended 203. They state that section 210(e) of
[[Page 1353]]
PURPA \38\ supports this finding. Independent Sellers also maintain
that Congressional testimony suggests that amended 203(a)(2) should
regulate only transactions of holding companies with public utilities
in their holding company systems.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ 16 U.S.C. 824a-3 (2000). Section 210(e) provides certain
exemptions for cogeneration and small power producers.
\39\ Independent Sellers Comments at 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
44. Several commenters, including GE EFS and Morgan Stanley Capital
Group Inc. (Morgan Stanley), express concern about whether the proposed
definition of ``electric utility company'' includes EWGs. Morgan
Stanley agrees with the use of the PUHCA 2005 definition of ``electric
utility company,'' stating that applying the same definition in both
statutes accords with traditional principles of statutory construction.
However, it asks the Commission to construe that definition consistent
with the exemptions set forth in PUHCA 2005; this would exempt EWGs.
45. APPA/NRECA seek clarification that ``a State, any political
subdivision of a State, or any agency, authority or instrumentality of
a State or political subdivision of a State'' is not an ``electric
utility company'' under amended section 203(a)(2).
46. Finally, the Energy Program of Public Citizen, Inc. (Public
Citizen) asks the Commission to interpret its jurisdiction under
amended FPA section 203 more extensively. It argues that certain
``suspect'' categories of utility owners are not addressed in the NOPR
or in current merger policy. These include investment banks, electric
equipment suppliers, natural gas system owners, oil companies, and
construction and other ``service'' companies. Public Citizen also
states that the Commission must formulate a policy as to how it will
protect American ratepayers if foreign holding companies are allowed to
acquire, or continue to own, U.S. public utilities. Public Citizen
criticizes the SEC's practice of allowing foreign holding companies to
declare their own domestic utilities to be FUCOs under section 33 of
PUHCA 1935, even though Congress did not intend to provide for
this.\40\ Public Citizen asks for greater protections for domestic
ratepayers given the absence of a requirement for ``registration for
foreign holding companies and comprehensive PUHCA 1935 regulation of
their financial transaction with their U.S. public utilities.'' \41\ It
also states that the Commission should require a strong showing that
acquisition by a foreign company without any experience in owning
utilities is consistent with the public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Public Citizen Comments at 10.
\41\ Id. at 10-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Commission Determination
47. A number of commenters make various arguments to support the
contention that the term ``electric utility company,'' as used in
amended section 203(a)(2), should not have the same meaning contained
in PUHCA 2005. As discussed in greater detail below, we have carefully
considered this issue and will retain the NOPR's proposed definition of
the term. Additionally, we continue to believe that the most reasonable
interpretation of section 203(a)(2) is that it applies to purchases or
acquisitions of foreign utility companies. However, consistent with
Congressional intent, we do not want to impede foreign investments and
we will grant blanket authorizations of foreign utility company
acquisitions subject to certain conditions to protect U.S. captive
customers. We also offer further clarifications below regarding the
application of the definition of ``electric utility company'' in
specific circumstances and provide blanket authorizations for certain
transactions.
48. As noted above, new section 203(a)(2) provides:
No holding company in a holding company system that includes a
transmitting utility or an electric utility shall purchase, acquire,
or take any security with a value in excess of $10,000,000 of, or,
by any means whatsoever, directly or indirectly, merger or
consolidate with, a transmitting utility, an electric utility
company, or a holding company in a holding company system that
includes a transmitting utility, or an electric utility company,
with a value in excess of $10,000,000 * * *.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ EPAct 2005 1289(a).
Canons of statutory construction require that effect be given to every
term used in a statute.\43\ In new section 203(a)(2), Congress uses the
term ``electric utility'' (already defined in the FPA) one time, and
the term ``electric utility company'' (undefined in the FPA, but
defined in both PUHCA 1935 and PUHCA 2005) two times in the same
sentence. We cannot ignore the fact that Congress used two different
terms within the same sentence. Had Congress intended ``electric
utility'' to be used in three places instead of one, it would have done
so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ See Reiter v. Sonotone Corp., 442 U.S. 330, 339 (1979)
(finding that settled principles of statutory construction require
giving ``effect, if possible, to every word Congress used''); see
also 2A Statutes and Statutory Construction Sec. 46.06 (N. Singer
6th Ed. 2000 Revision) (a statute must be construed so that no part
will be void or insignificant).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
49. However, the precise meaning of the term ``electric utility
company'' is not clear. It is not a defined term in the FPA. Amended
section 203(a)(6) provides that certain other terms used in amended
section 203 (``associate company,'' ``holding company,'' and ``holding
company system'') are to have the same meanings given those terms in
PUHCA 2005, but does not address ``electric utility company.'' Thus
there is Congressional silence as to the meaning of the term. We are
therefore left to apply a reasonable meaning to the term in light of
the simultaneous amendments to FPA section 203 and enactment of PUHCA
2005.
50. One of the arguments commenters raise in seeking an alternative
definition of ``electric utility company,'' is that ``nothing compels''
the Commission to use the PUHCA 2005 definition of the term.\44\ We
agree that such a result is not ``compelled,'' because the term is
ambiguous. However, in determining what Congress might have meant by
``electric utility company,'' the only reference points the Commission
has in the context of federal electric utility regulatory terminology
is the meaning of the term as used in PUHCA 1935 and in PUHCA 2005.\45\
Further, while certain commenters maintain that Congress intended to
use the term ``electric utility'' instead of ``electric utility
company'' in section 203(a)(2), there is no reliable legislative
history to support this conclusion and, moreover, we do not believe
that proper statutory construction permits us to simply substitute a
term that Congress did not use.\46\ Additionally, as discussed below,
substitution of the FPA term ``electric utility'' would not by itself
resolve the issue as sought by commenters.
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\44\ Commenters' alternative proposed definitions are also
discussed below in the specific context of the requested exemptions
of foreign transactions.
\45\ While both the FPA and PURPA contain definitions of
``electric utility,'' neither contains a definition of ``electric
utility company.''
\46\ See, e.g., Indiana Michigan Power Co. v. Dept. of Energy,
88 F.3d 1272, 1276 (DC Cir. 1996) (vacating an agency's decision
where the agency's ``treatment of [a] statute is not an
interpretation but a rewrite''); United States v. Plaza Health
Laboratories, Inc., 3 F.3d 643, 655 (2nd Cir. 1993), cert. denied
sub nom. United States v. Villegas, 512 U.S. 1245 (1994) (``neither
agencies nor courts should rewrite the statute to be more
`reasonable' * * * than Congress intended'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
51. We conclude that the most reasonable interpretation of
``electric utility company,'' as used in section 203(a)(2) of the FPA,
particularly in light of the fact that section 203(a)(2) will become
effective simultaneous with the repeal of PUHCA 1935 and enactment of
PUHCA 2005, is the meaning in PUHCA 2005: ``any company that owns or
operates facilities used for the generation, transmission, or
distribution of electric energy for sale.'' We also find that it is
reasonable to
[[Page 1354]]
interpret section 203(a)(2) as applying to foreign utility
acquisitions, in light of the legitimate concern that there be federal
oversight to ensure that U.S. captive customers do not cross-subsidize
foreign transactions and that U.S. utility assets used to serve captive
customers are not encumbered in order to support foreign acquisitions.
The legislative history relevant to new section 203(a)(2) evidences
this concern.\47\ However, the legislative history also makes clear
that the provision was not intended to impede foreign investments,
particularly where there are no U.S. captive customers that could be
affected. Accordingly, we will interpret ``electric utility company''
to include foreign utility companies, but, as discussed infra, we will
grant blanket authorizations for certain foreign acquisitions, with
conditions to protect U.S. customers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ The only legislative history on this issue is a colloquy
between Senators Bingaman and Domenici, Ranking Member and Chairman,
respectively, of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural
Resources. See Senate Floor Statements by Senators Bingaman (D-NM)
and Domenici (R-NM), H.R. 6, Energy Policy Act of 2005, 151 Cong.
Rec. S9359 (July 29, 2005) (discussing concerns regarding Commission
approval of certain foreign transactions outside of the United
States).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
52. We reject commenters' specific alternatives to the proposed
definition of ``electric utility company.'' We do not believe that
those proposed alternative definitions properly resolve the issue as to
whether amended section 203(a)(2) applies to acquisitions of foreign
utility companies. As noted above, the term ``electric utility
company'' is defined in PUHCA 2005 as ``any company that owns or
operates facilities used for the generation, transmission, or
distribution of electric energy for sale.'' \48\ In contrast,
``electric utility'' (which some commenters would have us substitute)
is defined in the FPA, as modified by EPAct 2005, as ``a person or
Federal or State agency * * * that sells electric energy.'' \49\
Neither of these terms, on its face, is limited to domestic
transactions or even to interstate transactions. ``Electric utility,''
as defined in the FPA, both pre- and post-EPAct 2005, means persons
that sell electric energy. Thus, we reject the argument that the
Commission should insert the term ``electric utility'' into section
203(a)(2) and then re-define it to mean persons that sell electric
energy ``in interstate commerce.'' Not only has the modifier in
``interstate commerce'' not been included in the FPA definition of
``electric utility'' either pre- or post-EPAct 2005, but these
commenters would require us to write into the statute words that are
not there.\50\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ EPAct 2005 Sec. 1262(5).
\49\ Id. Sec. 1291(b)(22).
\50\ In fact, the key FPA provisions in which the term
``electric utility'' is used are sections 210 and 211. Section 210,
both pre- and post-EPAct 2005, permits the Commission to order an
interconnection with the facilities of persons that sell energy in
interstate or intrastate commerce. The current interconnection
between ERCOT and the interstate grid was pursuant to a Commission
order under sections 210 and 211 of the FPA. See Central Power &
Light Co., 17 FERC ] 61,078 (1981), order on reh'g, 18 FERC ] 61,100
(1982). Although commenters are correct that most of part II of the
FPA is limited to interstate commerce, Congress has made specific
exceptions in certain FPA provisions, and that includes the
definition of ``electric utility.'' Cf. Indiana Michigan Power Co.
v. Dept. of Energy, 88 F.3d 1272, 1276 (DC Cir. 1996) (``The
[agency's] treatment of this statute is not an interpretation but a
rewrite.''); United States v. Plaza Health Laboratories, Inc., 3
F.3d 643, 655 (2nd Cir. 1993) (stating ``neither agencies nor courts
should rewrite the statute to be more `reasonable' * * * than
Congress intended''); Newman v. Love, 962 F.2d 1008, 1013 (Fed. Cir.
1992) (rejecting an agency's ``attempt to rewrite'' a statute to
contain costs or to avoid what it views as an inappropriate
allocation of benefits).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
53. We also reject the alternative, proposed by Suez, by which the
Commission would exclude foreign acquisitions by jurisdictional holding
companies without captive customers by adding the word
``jurisdictional'' before ``transmitting utility'' and ``electric
utility company'' at the end of proposed section 33.1(a)(2) (which
reflects new section 203(a)(2)). Congress in other provisions of the
FPA, including section 203, has specifically limited certain
authorizations to jurisdictional facilities, but chose not to do so in
section 203(a)(2). We do not believe it is appropriate to insert into
the statute modifiers that Congress did not include.
54. A number of commenters raised concerns about the definition of
``electric utility company'' and the applicability of the Commission's
authority under amended section 203 to transactions wholly within
ERCOT, Alaska, or Hawaii, transactions involving QFs, local
distribution companies, stand-alone generation, retail sales and other
intrastate transactions. Several of these commenters rely on the
argument, as stated above, that Congress did not intend to expand
significantly the Commission's jurisdiction and, therefore, did not
convey to the Commission jurisdiction over transactions typically
reserved for state commission consideration. Others argue for
exemptions from the definition of ``electric utility company.''
55. While we do not believe it is reasonable to interpret section
203(a)(2) as being limited solely to holding company acquisitions and
mergers involving wholesale sales or transmission in interstate
commerce, we nevertheless conclude that commenters have raised valid
concerns and that there would be no benefit from the Commission's case-
by-case evaluation of certain transactions under section 203(a)(2).\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ An acquisition or merger involving ``any company that owns
or operates facilities used for the generation, transmission, or
distribution of electric energy for sale'' is not on its face
limited to interstate facilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
56. Our core jurisdiction under part II of the FPA continues to be
transmission and sales for resale of electric energy in interstate
commerce and we believe that a major impetus behind section 203(a)(2)
was to clarify the Commission's jurisdiction over mergers of holding
companies that own public utilities as defined in the FPA.\52\ However,
the fact is that the language in section 203(a)(2) does more than
address this issue, and we must implement the provision in a way that
recognizes the expansion of authority, yet retains our primary focus on
interstate wholesale energy markets and does not interfere unduly with
historical state jurisdiction. Accordingly, we conclude that it is
consistent with the public interest to grant blanket authorizations in
the Final Rule for the following:
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\52\ Illinois Power Co., 67 FERC ] 61,136 (1994) (noting that
the Commission does not have jurisdiction over public holding
company mergers or consolidations, but concluding that, ordinarily,
when public utility holding companies merge, an indirect merger
involving their public utility subsidiaries also takes place, and
that Commission approval under section 203 would be required).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Section 203(a)(2) purchases or acquisitions by holding
companies of companies that own, operate, or control facilities used
solely for transmission or sales of electric energy in intrastate
commerce; and
(2) Section 203(a)(2) purchases or acquisitions by holding
companies of facilities used solely for local distribution and/or sales
at retail regulated by a state commission.
57. We conclude that these blanket authorizations are consistent
with the public interest for several reasons. First, the identified
categories do not raise concerns with respect to competitive wholesale
markets for sales in interstate commerce or protection of wholesale
captive customers served by Commission-regulated public utilities--
matters within this Commission's core responsibility and expertise.
Second, to the extent these categories raise competitive issues in
intrastate commerce, i.e., in ERCOT, Hawaii, and Alaska,\53\ those
issues are within the
[[Page 1355]]
expertise of, and more appropriately addressed by, state commissions.
Third, to the extent retail competition and retail ratepayer protection
issues are raised by a holding company acquisition of local
distribution or other retail facilities, these issues also are within
the expertise of, and more appropriately addressed by, state
commissions. We will thus grant the identified blanket authorizations
and not impose any type of filing requirement with respect to such
transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ Similarly, although not raised by commenters, the blanket
authorization would apply to any organized Territory of the United
States.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
58. In response to the request of APPA/NRECA that we clarify that
``a State, any political subdivision of a State, or any agency,
authority or instrumentality of a State or political subdivision of a
State'' is not an ``electric utility company'' under amended section
203(a)(2), and therefore, not subject to amended section 203, we
clarify that even if a governmental entity were to meet the definitions
of ``electric utility company'' or ``holding company,'' section
203(a)(2) would not impose on the governmental entity any filing
requirements under section 203. This is discussed in further detail
infra. However, if a non-governmental public utility holding company
were to seek to acquire a governmental utility (e.g., a municipal
utility) that owns interstate transmission facilities or facilities
used for wholesale sales in interstate commerce (and thus meets the
definitions of ``electric utility company''), and turn it into a
private company subsidiary, then section 203(a)(2) should apply to the
public utility holding company's acquisition. While no section 203
filing requirement would be imposed on the governmental entity, it
would be imposed on the private entity.
59. We reject commenters' request that we explicitly exclude QFs
and EWGs from the definition of ``electric utility company.''
Regardless of their status under PUHCA 2005, the exemptions set forth
under PUHCA 2005 are not dispositive as to the scope of the
Commission's amended FPA section 203 authority. These PUHCA 2005
exemptions are set forth in the context of federal access to books and
records and, more importantly, unlike PUHCA 2005, FPA section 203 does
not give us any express authority to exempt persons or classes of
transactions.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ While QFs themselves currently are exempt from section
203's filing requirements by virtue of the Commission's PURPA
regulations, PURPA does not give us authority to exempt holding
companies that own QFs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
60. Additionally, were the Commission to interpret ``electric
utility company'' for purposes of FPA section 203(a)(2) not to include
EWGs or QFs, this could preclude review of certain acquisitions of
securities of EWGs or QFs even by holding companies whose systems
contain traditional public utilities with transmission facilities and/
or captive customers. We do not believe that such transactions should
be excluded from review under section 203 and conclude that it is
reasonable to interpret the statute not to exclude them.\55\ We
recognize the arguments of some commenters that we should not apply
section 203(a)(2) to holding company acquisitions of securities of EWGs
and QFs, or at a minimum should not apply it to such acquisitions by
holding companies that are holding companies solely by virtue of owning
or controlling one or more EWGs, FUCOs, or QFs, because it would impede
investments in QFs and EWGs or result in unnecessary regulation of
upstream owners of QFs and EWGs.\56\ In response, we believe the
blanket authorizations granted herein for certain holding company
acquisitions of non-voting securities and up to 9.9 percent of voting
securities in electric utility companies will adequately address the
concerns raised. To the extent additional blanket authorizations are
needed or appropriate, we will consider those on a case-by-case basis.
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\55\ We note that a holding company acquisition of securities of
an EWG would in some circumstances trigger section 203 review in any
event by virtue of section 203(a)(1). This is because the EWG could
well be a public utility and, to the extent the holding company
acquired ``control'' of the EWG, we would construe the EWG to be
``disposin