FortisOntario, Inc. and FortisUS Energy Corporation; Order Accepting Notice of Change in Status and Tariff Revision and Providing Guidance, 25828-25829 [E6-6557]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 84 / Tuesday, May 2, 2006 / Notices
Reference Room in Washington, DC.
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Magalie R. Salas,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E6–6572 Filed 5–1–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket Nos. ER03–775–004; ER00–136–
003]
FortisOntario, Inc. and FortisUS
Energy Corporation; Order Accepting
Notice of Change in Status and Tariff
Revision and Providing Guidance
Issued April 25, 2006.
Before Commissioners: Joseph T. Kelliher,
Chairman; Nora Mead Brownell, and
Suedeen G. Kelly.
1. On July 7, 2005, as amended on
March 7, 2006, FortisOntario, Inc.
(FortisOntario) and FortisUS Energy
Corporation (FortisUS) (collectively,
Petitioners) filed a notice of change in
status, a request for clarification of the
Commission’s reporting requirement for
changes in status for public utilities
with market-based rate authority,1 and a
tariff revision 2 incorporating the
Commission’s change in status reporting
requirement.3 In this order, the
Commission will accept Petitioners’
notice of change in status and will
accept Petitioners’ revised tariff sheets.
The Commission also provides guidance
concerning foreign sellers with marketbased rate authorization.
rmajette on PROD1PC67 with NOTICES
Background
2. Petitioners state that they are
notifying the Commission of a nonmaterial change in status regarding the
purchase by their parent, Fortis Inc.
(Fortis Parent), of Princeton Light and
1 Reporting Requirement for Changes in Status
For Public Utilities With Market-Based Rate
Authority, Order No. 652, 70 FR 8,253 (February 18,
2005), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31, 175, order on reh’g,
111 FERC ¶ 61,413 (2005) (Order No. 652).
2 FERC Electric Tariff, Second Revised Volume
No. 1, Substitute Second Revised Sheet No. 1–1A,
First Revised Sheet No. 2–5.
3 This revision is made in compliance with the
Commission’s order accepting Petitioners’ updated
market power analysis. FortisOntario, Inc. 110
FERC ¶ 61,119 (2005).
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:18 May 01, 2006
Jkt 208001
Power Company, Limited (Princeton), a
Canadian utility. Petitioners state that
this change in status does not reflect a
departure from the characteristics the
Commission relied upon in granting
market-based rate authority to either
FortisOntario or FortisUS. Petitioners
state that they believe that this notice is
not required but are submitting it ‘‘out
of an abundance of caution because
Order No. 652 does not, by its express
terms, exclude changes in status
resulting from the acquisition of electric
generation and transmission facilities
located wholly outside of the United
States.’’ 4
3. Petitioners state that, as more fully
explained in their updated market
power analysis accepted by the
Commission,5 FortisOntario has no
generating capacity in the United States
and that its only jurisdictional facility is
its market-based rate tariff on file with
the Commission. Petitioners explain
that FortisOntario is a corporation
organized under the laws of the
province of Ontario, Canada, having its
principal place of business in Ontario,
Canada. Petitioners state that
FortisOntario is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Fortis Parent, a publiclytraded holding company existing under
the laws of Newfoundland and
Labrador, Canada.6
4. FortisUS states that it directly owns
a total of approximately 22.5 MW of
qualifying small power production
facilities (QFs), located in New York.
Petitioners explain that FortisUS is
wholly-owned by a subsidiary of Fortis
Parent, and is a corporation organized
under the laws of the State of New York,
having its principal place of business in
the Canadian city of Charlottetown,
Prince Edward Island.
5. Petitioners state that other
generation owned by affiliates is located
exclusively within Canada, and that
none of these affiliates have tariffs or
rate schedules on file with the
Commission for power sales or
transmission of electric energy in the
United States. Petitioners explain that
they do not possess any transmission
facilities in the United States other than
step-up transformers and other
interconnecting transmission facilities
needed to effect sales from the QFs, and
that none of these interconnection
facilities could be used by any other
for Clarification at 1.
Inc., 110 FERC 61,119 (2005).
6 On January 31, 2003, the Commission
authorized the intracorporate transfer of the
jurisdictional assets of Canadian Niagara Power
Company to a newly formed entity, FortisOntario,
pursuant to an amalgamation under Canadian law.
Canadian Niagara Power Co., 102 FERC ¶ 62,068
(2003).
party to effectuate sales of electric
energy, capacity, or ancillary services at
wholesale.
6. Petitioners state that Fortis Parent
has acquired Princeton, a utility serving
3,200 customers in British Columbia.
Petitioners state that Princeton does not
own generation or transmission
facilities and is exclusively engaged in
the business of distributing electric
energy to its customers. Petitioners also
state that Princeton’s distribution
operations are located exclusively
within Canada and are not directly
interconnected with the United States,
and that none of Princeton’s facilities
could be used by any other party to
effectuate sales of electric energy,
capacity or ancillary services at
wholesale in the United States or the
transmission of electric energy,
capacity, or ancillary services in the
United States.
7. Petitioners further state that
Princeton is solely interconnected with
and solely obtains its power from
FortisBC Inc. (FortisBC), another
affiliate, which provides distribution
service in surrounding areas of British
Columbia, Canada. Petitioners state that
FortisBC is primarily a distribution
facility and is not directly
interconnected to the United States.
FortisBC is interconnected with British
Columbia Transmission Corporation
(BCTC), which is not affiliated with
Petitioners or Princeton. BCTC is a
corporation owned by the province of
British Columbia and is an independent
transmission system operator which is
interconnected to the United States.
Petitioners state that BCTC offers
wholesale transmission service under its
open access transmission tariff (OATT)
that is based on the Commission’s Order
No. 888 pro forma tariff and is regulated
by the British Columbia Utilities
Commission.7
8. Petitioners assert that Fortis
Parent’s acquisition of Princeton does
not and cannot raise any generation or
transmission market power concerns
with respect to Petitioners. Petitioners
request clarification from the
Commission as to whether notification
of a change in status is required where
generation and/or transmission assets
acquired by a jurisdictional facility or
its affiliates are located exclusively
within Canada and are not and cannot
be used to make sales of electric energy
4 Request
5 FortisOntario,
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
7 BCTC operates the British Columbia Hydro and
Power Authority’s transmission system (BC Hydro).
BC Hydro’s OATT was reviewed by the
Commission in 1997, in British Columbia Power
Exchange Corp., 80 FERC ¶ 61,343 (1997). The
Commission found that the tariff’s terms and
conditions were identical to the Commission’s pro
forma tariff in all material respects.
E:\FR\FM\02MYN1.SGM
02MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 84 / Tuesday, May 2, 2006 / Notices
at wholesale into the United States or
for the transmission of electric energy in
interstate commerce in the United
States.
rmajette on PROD1PC67 with NOTICES
Procedural Matters
9. Notice of Petitioners’ July 7, 2005,
filing was published in the Federal
Register, 70 FR 41,698 (2005), with
interventions and protests due on or
before July 28, 2005. None was filed.
Notice of Petitioners’ March 7, 2006,
filing was published in the Federal
Register, 71 FR 14,195 (2006), with
interventions and protests due on or
before March 28, 2006. None was filed.
Discussion
10. As discussed below, the
Commission accepts Petitioners’ notice
of change in status and provides
guidance concerning foreign sellers with
market-based rate authorization.
11. The Commission requires that
market-based rate sellers report any
changes in status that would reflect a
departure from the characteristics the
Commission relied upon in its existing
grant of market-based rate authority.8
The baseline determination of whether
a change in status filing is required is
whether the change in status in question
would have been reportable in an initial
application for market-based rate
authority under the Commission’s fourpart analysis.9
12. Petitioners in this case have
market-based rate tariffs on file with the
Commission. The change in status,
described by Petitioners as ‘‘nonmaterial,’’ involves the acquisition of a
Canadian utility characterized as distant
and small that has no generation, and
whose transmission and distribution is
limited to Canada. Petitioners state that
this change in status does not reflect a
departure from the characteristics the
Commission relied upon in granting
market-based rate authority. Petitioners
state their belief that notice of the
change in status is not required, but that
they filed the instant request for
clarification ‘‘out of an abundance of
caution’’, arguing that Order No. 652
does not expressly preclude change in
status filings arising from ‘‘the
acquisition of electric generation and
transmission facilities located wholly
outside of the United States.’’
13. The Commission has clarified that
its concerns are more limited for foreign
transmission-owning entities than for
transmission-owning entities in the
United States. The Commission has
further stated that its concern is
transmission to serve United States
8 See
9 See
Order No. 652 at P 5.
Id. at P 8, 51.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:18 May 01, 2006
Jkt 208001
load 10 as well as access for United
States competitors into Canadian
markets on a reciprocal basis.11 Thus,
the Commission seeks to assure
reciprocal service into and out of
Canada when Canadian entities seek
access to United States markets, but the
Commission is not seeking to open
intra-Canada electric markets through
the imposition of open access tariffs for
transactions wholly within Canada.12
Therefore, the Commission requires a
Canadian entity seeking market-based
rate authority to demonstrate that its
transmission-owning affiliate offers nondiscriminatory access to its transmission
system that can be used by competitors
of the Canadian seller to reach United
States markets.13
14. Fortis Parent has acquired
Princeton, whose transmission and
distribution facilities are located
exclusively within Canada and are not
directly interconnected with the United
States. Princeton is interconnected to its
affiliate, FortisBC, whose facilities are
entirely in Canada, and the transactions
between Princeton and FortisBC are
wholly within Canada. FortisBC is not
directly interconnected to the United
States but is interconnected with BCTC,
a non-affiliate that offers nondiscriminatory access under its OATT to
reach United States markets.
15. The Commission clarifies herein
that, with regard to market-based rate
authorization, the Commission does not
consider transmission and generation
facilities that are located exclusively
outside of the United States and that are
not directly interconnected to the
United States. However, the
Commission would consider
transmission facilities that are
exclusively outside the United States
but nevertheless interconnected to an
affiliate’s transmission system that is
directly interconnected to the United
States.
The Commission orders:
(A) Petitioners’ notice of change in
status and tariff sheets are accepted for
filing.
(B) The Secretary is directed to
publish a copy of this order in the
Federal Register.
10 Energy Alliance Partnership, 73 FERC ¶ 61,019
at 61,031 (1995) (Energy Alliance).
11 TransAlta Enterprises Corp., 75 FERC ¶ 61,268
at 61,875 (1996) (TransAlta).
12 See British Columbia Power Exchange Corp., 78
FERC ¶ 61,024 at 61,100 (1997).
13 See TransAlta, 75 FERC ¶ 61,268 at 61,875;
Energy Alliance, 73 FERC ¶ 61,019 at 61,030–31.
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
25829
By the Commission.
Magalie R. Salas,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E6–6557 Filed 5–1–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket Nos. CP04–400–001]
Golden Pass Pipeline LP; Notice of
Application
April 26, 2006.
Take notice that on March 31, 2006,
Golden Pass Pipeline LP (GPPL) filed in
Docket No. CP04–400–001 an
application seeking to amend the
certificate of public convenience and
necessity issued July 6, 2005, in Docket
No. CP04–400–000. That certificate
issued pursuant to section 7(c) of the
NGA and part 157, subpart A of the
Commission’s Regulations, authorized
construction and operation of facilities
to transport natural gas originating from
liquefied natural gas (LNG) receiving
terminal to be located approximately 10
miles south of Port Arthur, Texas, and
two miles northeast of the town of
Sabine Pass, Texas.
GPPL requests authorization to make
certain variations in the design and
routing of the proposed pipeline that
would reduce its overall construction
footprint. The new design component
would replace the looped segment of 43
miles of two 36-inch diameter pipelines
with a single 42-inch diameter pipeline
from Golden Pass LNG Terminal to the
AEP Texoma interconnection. The
reroute component would relocate the
route resulting in an approximately ten
mile reduction in length of the pipeline.
This application is on file with the
Commission and open to public
inspection. This filing is available for
review at the Commission in the Public
Reference Room or may be viewed on
the Commission’s Web site at https://
www.ferc.gov using the ‘‘eLibrary’’ link.
Enter the docket number excluding the
last three digits in the docket number
field to access the document. For
assistance, please contact FERC Online
Support at
FERCOnlineSupport@ferc.gov or toll
free at (866)208–3676, or for TTY,
contact (202) 502–8659. Any initial
questions regarding these applications
should be directed to Mrs. Gina M.
Dickerson, 17001 Northchase Drive,
Houston, Texas, 77060, at phone
number (281) 654–4816.
There are two ways to become
involved in the Commission’s review of
E:\FR\FM\02MYN1.SGM
02MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 84 (Tuesday, May 2, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 25828-25829]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-6557]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
[Docket Nos. ER03-775-004; ER00-136-003]
FortisOntario, Inc. and FortisUS Energy Corporation; Order
Accepting Notice of Change in Status and Tariff Revision and Providing
Guidance
Issued April 25, 2006.
Before Commissioners: Joseph T. Kelliher, Chairman; Nora Mead
Brownell, and Suedeen G. Kelly.
1. On July 7, 2005, as amended on March 7, 2006, FortisOntario,
Inc. (FortisOntario) and FortisUS Energy Corporation (FortisUS)
(collectively, Petitioners) filed a notice of change in status, a
request for clarification of the Commission's reporting requirement for
changes in status for public utilities with market-based rate
authority,\1\ and a tariff revision \2\ incorporating the Commission's
change in status reporting requirement.\3\ In this order, the
Commission will accept Petitioners' notice of change in status and will
accept Petitioners' revised tariff sheets. The Commission also provides
guidance concerning foreign sellers with market-based rate
authorization.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Reporting Requirement for Changes in Status For Public
Utilities With Market-Based Rate Authority, Order No. 652, 70 FR
8,253 (February 18, 2005), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31, 175, order on
reh'g, 111 FERC ] 61,413 (2005) (Order No. 652).
\2\ FERC Electric Tariff, Second Revised Volume No. 1,
Substitute Second Revised Sheet No. 1-1A, First Revised Sheet No. 2-
5.
\3\ This revision is made in compliance with the Commission's
order accepting Petitioners' updated market power analysis.
FortisOntario, Inc. 110 FERC ] 61,119 (2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Background
2. Petitioners state that they are notifying the Commission of a
non-material change in status regarding the purchase by their parent,
Fortis Inc. (Fortis Parent), of Princeton Light and Power Company,
Limited (Princeton), a Canadian utility. Petitioners state that this
change in status does not reflect a departure from the characteristics
the Commission relied upon in granting market-based rate authority to
either FortisOntario or FortisUS. Petitioners state that they believe
that this notice is not required but are submitting it ``out of an
abundance of caution because Order No. 652 does not, by its express
terms, exclude changes in status resulting from the acquisition of
electric generation and transmission facilities located wholly outside
of the United States.'' \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Request for Clarification at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Petitioners state that, as more fully explained in their updated
market power analysis accepted by the Commission,\5\ FortisOntario has
no generating capacity in the United States and that its only
jurisdictional facility is its market-based rate tariff on file with
the Commission. Petitioners explain that FortisOntario is a corporation
organized under the laws of the province of Ontario, Canada, having its
principal place of business in Ontario, Canada. Petitioners state that
FortisOntario is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Fortis Parent, a
publicly-traded holding company existing under the laws of Newfoundland
and Labrador, Canada.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ FortisOntario, Inc., 110 FERC 61,119 (2005).
\6\ On January 31, 2003, the Commission authorized the
intracorporate transfer of the jurisdictional assets of Canadian
Niagara Power Company to a newly formed entity, FortisOntario,
pursuant to an amalgamation under Canadian law. Canadian Niagara
Power Co., 102 FERC ] 62,068 (2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. FortisUS states that it directly owns a total of approximately
22.5 MW of qualifying small power production facilities (QFs), located
in New York. Petitioners explain that FortisUS is wholly-owned by a
subsidiary of Fortis Parent, and is a corporation organized under the
laws of the State of New York, having its principal place of business
in the Canadian city of Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.
5. Petitioners state that other generation owned by affiliates is
located exclusively within Canada, and that none of these affiliates
have tariffs or rate schedules on file with the Commission for power
sales or transmission of electric energy in the United States.
Petitioners explain that they do not possess any transmission
facilities in the United States other than step-up transformers and
other interconnecting transmission facilities needed to effect sales
from the QFs, and that none of these interconnection facilities could
be used by any other party to effectuate sales of electric energy,
capacity, or ancillary services at wholesale.
6. Petitioners state that Fortis Parent has acquired Princeton, a
utility serving 3,200 customers in British Columbia. Petitioners state
that Princeton does not own generation or transmission facilities and
is exclusively engaged in the business of distributing electric energy
to its customers. Petitioners also state that Princeton's distribution
operations are located exclusively within Canada and are not directly
interconnected with the United States, and that none of Princeton's
facilities could be used by any other party to effectuate sales of
electric energy, capacity or ancillary services at wholesale in the
United States or the transmission of electric energy, capacity, or
ancillary services in the United States.
7. Petitioners further state that Princeton is solely
interconnected with and solely obtains its power from FortisBC Inc.
(FortisBC), another affiliate, which provides distribution service in
surrounding areas of British Columbia, Canada. Petitioners state that
FortisBC is primarily a distribution facility and is not directly
interconnected to the United States. FortisBC is interconnected with
British Columbia Transmission Corporation (BCTC), which is not
affiliated with Petitioners or Princeton. BCTC is a corporation owned
by the province of British Columbia and is an independent transmission
system operator which is interconnected to the United States.
Petitioners state that BCTC offers wholesale transmission service under
its open access transmission tariff (OATT) that is based on the
Commission's Order No. 888 pro forma tariff and is regulated by the
British Columbia Utilities Commission.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ BCTC operates the British Columbia Hydro and Power
Authority's transmission system (BC Hydro). BC Hydro's OATT was
reviewed by the Commission in 1997, in British Columbia Power
Exchange Corp., 80 FERC ] 61,343 (1997). The Commission found that
the tariff's terms and conditions were identical to the Commission's
pro forma tariff in all material respects.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. Petitioners assert that Fortis Parent's acquisition of Princeton
does not and cannot raise any generation or transmission market power
concerns with respect to Petitioners. Petitioners request clarification
from the Commission as to whether notification of a change in status is
required where generation and/or transmission assets acquired by a
jurisdictional facility or its affiliates are located exclusively
within Canada and are not and cannot be used to make sales of electric
energy
[[Page 25829]]
at wholesale into the United States or for the transmission of electric
energy in interstate commerce in the United States.
Procedural Matters
9. Notice of Petitioners' July 7, 2005, filing was published in the
Federal Register, 70 FR 41,698 (2005), with interventions and protests
due on or before July 28, 2005. None was filed. Notice of Petitioners'
March 7, 2006, filing was published in the Federal Register, 71 FR
14,195 (2006), with interventions and protests due on or before March
28, 2006. None was filed.
Discussion
10. As discussed below, the Commission accepts Petitioners' notice
of change in status and provides guidance concerning foreign sellers
with market-based rate authorization.
11. The Commission requires that market-based rate sellers report
any changes in status that would reflect a departure from the
characteristics the Commission relied upon in its existing grant of
market-based rate authority.\8\ The baseline determination of whether a
change in status filing is required is whether the change in status in
question would have been reportable in an initial application for
market-based rate authority under the Commission's four-part
analysis.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See Order No. 652 at P 5.
\9\ See Id. at P 8, 51.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
12. Petitioners in this case have market-based rate tariffs on file
with the Commission. The change in status, described by Petitioners as
``non-material,'' involves the acquisition of a Canadian utility
characterized as distant and small that has no generation, and whose
transmission and distribution is limited to Canada. Petitioners state
that this change in status does not reflect a departure from the
characteristics the Commission relied upon in granting market-based
rate authority. Petitioners state their belief that notice of the
change in status is not required, but that they filed the instant
request for clarification ``out of an abundance of caution'', arguing
that Order No. 652 does not expressly preclude change in status filings
arising from ``the acquisition of electric generation and transmission
facilities located wholly outside of the United States.''
13. The Commission has clarified that its concerns are more limited
for foreign transmission-owning entities than for transmission-owning
entities in the United States. The Commission has further stated that
its concern is transmission to serve United States load \10\ as well as
access for United States competitors into Canadian markets on a
reciprocal basis.\11\ Thus, the Commission seeks to assure reciprocal
service into and out of Canada when Canadian entities seek access to
United States markets, but the Commission is not seeking to open intra-
Canada electric markets through the imposition of open access tariffs
for transactions wholly within Canada.\12\ Therefore, the Commission
requires a Canadian entity seeking market-based rate authority to
demonstrate that its transmission-owning affiliate offers non-
discriminatory access to its transmission system that can be used by
competitors of the Canadian seller to reach United States markets.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Energy Alliance Partnership, 73 FERC 61,019 at
61,031 (1995) (Energy Alliance).
\11\ TransAlta Enterprises Corp., 75 FERC ] 61,268 at 61,875
(1996) (TransAlta).
\12\ See British Columbia Power Exchange Corp., 78 FERC ] 61,024
at 61,100 (1997).
\13\ See TransAlta, 75 FERC ] 61,268 at 61,875; Energy Alliance,
73 FERC ] 61,019 at 61,030-31.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
14. Fortis Parent has acquired Princeton, whose transmission and
distribution facilities are located exclusively within Canada and are
not directly interconnected with the United States. Princeton is
interconnected to its affiliate, FortisBC, whose facilities are
entirely in Canada, and the transactions between Princeton and FortisBC
are wholly within Canada. FortisBC is not directly interconnected to
the United States but is interconnected with BCTC, a non-affiliate that
offers non-discriminatory access under its OATT to reach United States
markets.
15. The Commission clarifies herein that, with regard to market-
based rate authorization, the Commission does not consider transmission
and generation facilities that are located exclusively outside of the
United States and that are not directly interconnected to the United
States. However, the Commission would consider transmission facilities
that are exclusively outside the United States but nevertheless
interconnected to an affiliate's transmission system that is directly
interconnected to the United States.
The Commission orders:
(A) Petitioners' notice of change in status and tariff sheets are
accepted for filing.
(B) The Secretary is directed to publish a copy of this order in
the Federal Register.
By the Commission.
Magalie R. Salas,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E6-6557 Filed 5-1-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717-01-P