Adoption of Amended Navajo Power Marketing Plan, 54286-54291 [E7-18744]
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54286
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 184 / Monday, September 24, 2007 / Notices
Send comments on the scope of the
EIS to Mrs. Caryn Huntt DeCarlo,
Bureau of Reclamation, 705 N. Plaza
Street, Room 320, Carson City, NV
89701, via e-mail to
chunttdecarlo@mp.usbr.gov, or faxed to
775–884–8376.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mrs.
Huntt DeCarlo, 775–884–8352.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
project area is in the Walker River Basin
within Nevada, and includes both the
East and West Walker Rivers. The goal
of the program is to acquire water rights
sufficient to increase the long-term
average annual inflow to Walker Lake
by up to 50,000 acre-feet. To increase
Walker Lake inflows by up to 50,000
acre-feet annually may require acquiring
more than 50,000 acre-feet of water
rights due to annual hydrologic
variability.
Special Assistance for Public Scoping
Meeting
If special assistance is required at the
scoping meetings, please contact Caryn
Huntt DeCarlo at 775–884–8352, TDD
775–882–3436, or via e-mail at
chunttdecarlo@mp.usbr.gov. Please
notify Mrs. Huntt DeCarlo as far in
advance of the meetings as possible to
enable Reclamation to secure the
needed services. If a request cannot be
honored, the requestor will be notified.
A telephone device for the hearing
impaired (TDD) is available at 775–882–
3436.
Public Disclosure
Before including your name, address,
phone number, e-mail address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
Dated: August 21, 2007.
Susan M. Fry,
Regional Environmental Officer, Mid-Pacific
Region.
[FR Doc. E7–18738 Filed 9–21–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MN–P
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Reclamation
Adoption of Amended Navajo Power
Marketing Plan
AGENCY:
Bureau of Reclamation,
Interior.
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ACTION:
Notice of adoption.
SUMMARY: On September 18, 2007, the
Commissioner of Reclamation adopted
the Amended Navajo Power Marketing
Plan (Amended Plan) on behalf of the
Secretary of the Interior (Secretary),
pursuant to section 107 of the Hoover
Power Plant Act of 1984 (98 Stat. 1333).
The Amended Plan is to provide for the
future marketing of the United States’
entitlement to generation from the
Navajo Generating Station (Navajo)
which is in excess of the pumping
requirements of the Central Arizona
Project (CAP) and certain needs for
desalting and protective pumping
facilities. The Amended Plan was
developed in consultation with
representatives of the Bureau of
Reclamation (Reclamation), Western
Area Power Administration (Western),
the Governor of Arizona, and the
Central Arizona Water Conservation
District (CAWCD) as required by the
Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984 (Act).
At the request of Reclamation,
Western published a notice in the
Federal Register on August 14, 2006, to
initiate and obtain public comments on
the proposed Amended Plan. Western
held public information forums on
September 19, 2006, in Phoenix,
Arizona, and on September 22, 2006, in
Ontario, California. Western accepted
oral and written comments on the
proposed Amended Plan at public
comment forums on October 10, 2006,
in Phoenix, Arizona, and on October 11,
2006 in Ontario, California, and
thereafter until November 13, 2006, the
end of the public comment period.
Additional public information forums
will be held in advance of the time of
the actual marketing of Navajo Surplus
under the Amended Plan to address the
procedures to be used in the actual
marketing process.
Public comments were received both
with respect to the terms of the
proposed Amended Plan and with
respect to Western’s presentations at the
public forums relating to the
implementation of the plan. Written
comments were received from Aha
Macav Power Service, Arizona Power
Authority, Arizona Tribal Energy
Association, Colorado River Indian
Tribes, Ralph E. Hitchcock and
Associates, Moyes Storey Law Offices,
Santa Cruz Water & Power Districts
Association, and Salt River Project
Agricultural Improvement and Power
District. Oral comments were received
from the Central Arizona Water
Conservation District, Ralph E.
Hitchcock and Associates, and the
Colorado River Indian Tribes.
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Comments and responses, paraphrased
for brevity, are presented below.
Reclamation considered all comments
prior to the adoption of the Amended
Plan. Reclamation determined that no
modifications to the proposed Amended
Plan were necessary as a result of the
comments and in light of the proposed
Amended Plan’s flexible framework.
Nevertheless, Reclamation has made
edits to the proposed Amended Plan for
clarification purposes.
DATES: As provided in Part X of the
Amended Plan, the Amended Plan will
become effective thirty days after its
date of publication in the Federal
Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Ron Smith, Bureau of Reclamation, P.O.
Box 61470, Boulder City, Nevada 89006,
telephone (702) 293–8231, e-mail
AmendedPlan@lc.usbr.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
United States acquired an entitlement to
24.3 percent of generation available at
Navajo for use by CAP pursuant to the
Colorado River Basin Project Act (43
U.S.C. 1501, et seq.). The CAP is a
Reclamation multi-purpose water
resource development and management
project in Arizona.
Section 107(a) of the Act provides that
the capacity and energy associated with
the United States interest in Navajo
which is in excess of the pumping
requirements of the CAP and any needs
for desalting and protective pumping
facilities (Navajo Surplus) shall be
marketed and exchanged by the
Secretary of Energy. Furthermore,
Section 107(c) of the Act provides that
in the marketing and exchanging of
Navajo Surplus, the Secretary of the
Department of the Interior shall adopt
the plan deemed most acceptable, after
consultation with the Secretary of
Energy, the Governor of Arizona, and
CAWCD (or its successor in interest to
the repayment obligation for the CAP).
On December 1, 1987, Reclamation,
on behalf of the Secretary, adopted the
Original Plan which provided for longterm contracts through September 30,
2011.
This adopted Amended Plan contains
the framework for the sale and exchange
of Navajo Surplus, including an annual
process to determine the power to be
marketed, eligibility criteria, contract
provisions, rate-setting provisions, and
revenue collection and distribution
criteria. The rate-setting provisions in
the adopted Amended Plan were
developed to accomplish the
requirements of the Act to market and
exchange Navajo Surplus ‘‘for the
purposes of optimizing the availability
of Navajo surplus and providing
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financial assistance in the timely
construction and repayment of
construction costs of authorized features
of the Central Arizona project.’’ These
provisions also provide that ‘‘rates shall
not exceed levels that allow for an
appropriate saving for the contractor.’’
The adopted Amended Plan
implements provisions of the Revised
Stipulation entered in the Central
Arizona Project repayment litigation,
Central Arizona Water Conservation
District v. United States, et al., No. CIV
95–625–TUC–WDB (EHC), No. CIV 95–
1720–PHX–EHC (Consolidated Action).
The Revised Stipulation requires, as a
condition to the effectiveness of the
Revised Stipulation, that the Original
Plan be amended to provide for the
establishment of rates for the sale or
exchange of Navajo Surplus after
September 30, 2011 ‘‘which optimize
the availability and use of revenues’’ for
the Lower Colorado River Basin
Development Fund in a manner
consistent with the Act. The Arizona
Water Settlements Act of 2004, Public
Law 108–451 amends statutory
provisions relating to the use of Navajo
Surplus revenues set forth in 43 U.S.C.
1543(f).
The Original Plan also contains a
provision to collect an additional rate
component that allows CAWCD to
recover an advance of funds made to
Reclamation for the construction of
authorized features of the CAP. This
obligation will be fulfilled under the
contract provisions of the Original Plan.
The Original Plan also contains
specified quantities of capacity and
energy to be marketed under long-term
contracts. This adopted Amended Plan
provides for an annual determination of
capacity and energy resources available
for marketing as Navajo Surplus based
upon the availability of water for CAP
pumping, in conjunction with an annual
determination of rates and the various
capacity and energy products to be
marketed. Navajo Surplus under this
adopted Amended Plan will be placed
under contract for various time periods,
which may be short-term, annual, or
multi-year.
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National Environmental Policy Act
In compliance with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA), Council on Environmental
Quality regulations, and the Department
of the Interior regulations for
compliance with NEPA, Reclamation
and Western determined that the
adopted Amended Plan met the
requirements of a categorical exclusion.
Copies of the categorical exclusions
prepared by Reclamation and Western
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will be made available to interested
persons upon request.
Public Comments and Responses
Comments relating to the term of
Navajo Surplus contracts: Material
presented at the public information
forums on the proposed Amended Plan
indicates Navajo Surplus will be
marketed on an annual or shorter term
basis. This will expose the Development
Fund to market volatility and
discourage purchasers who require the
certainty of longer term contracts.
Navajo Surplus should be made
available for multi-year terms of at least
three years. A five-year contract
provides greater stability than a oneyear contract. At least a portion of the
Navajo Surplus should be sold in long
term contracts.
Response: The Amended Plan is
designed to be flexible. The Amended
Plan permits both shorter and longer
term contracts for the sale or exchange
of Navajo Surplus. Article IV.A. of the
Amended Plan states that Reclamation
will on an annual or more frequent basis
determine the quantity of Navajo
Surplus available to be marketed and
the period for which it is available. The
annual determination process will allow
Reclamation to take into account the
varying power demand of the CAP and
will reduce the need for the CAP to
purchase power to supply its demand.
Although the determination of available
Navajo Surplus will be made at least
annually, the period for which the
power is sold or exchanged may vary.
Reclamation anticipates that some
blocks of power may be marketed in
multi-year contracts and others
marketed for shorter terms.
Comments relating to the pricing of
Navajo Surplus: Navajo Surplus should
be sold at cost. Western does not have
legal authority to market Navajo Surplus
at market-based prices. Federal power
sold to preference customers should be
sold at cost-based prices. Western is
proposing to depart from established
cost-based principles governing pricing
of federal power. This poses a threat to
Western’s preference customers. The
plan to optimize revenue from the sale
of Navajo Surplus should be balanced
against the statutory requirement of an
appropriate savings for the contractor to
result in a below market price. The
power should be sold at a price based
on the market but reduced to eliminate
costs incurred by the private sector but
not by the federal government such as
taxes. After the CAP is paid off, Navajo
Surplus should be sold at cost.
Response: Navajo Surplus has never
been marketed at cost-based pricing.
The Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984
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and the Arizona Water Settlements Act
of 2004 provide that the Lower Colorado
River Basin Development Fund
(Development Fund) is to be used to
repay CAP construction costs and to
fund specified purposes including
Indian water projects and settlements.
Congress has directed that revenues
from the sale of Navajo Surplus be
deposited into the Development Fund
and be available for these purposes.
Cost-based pricing of this resource
would not result in revenue which
could be dedicated to CAP construction
costs or Indian water projects. This
would run counter to intent of these
Acts of Congress. The Hoover Power
Plant Act of 1984 states that the rates for
Navajo Surplus should not exceed levels
that allow for an appropriate saving for
the contractor but does not further
define what is intended by ‘‘appropriate
savings.’’ The marketing process for
Navajo Surplus will permit the
contractors to determine the price
which represents to them an appropriate
savings when, for example, placing a
bid or submitting a request for proposal
to Western. The provisions of the
Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984 and the
Arizona Water Settlements Act of 2004
which relate to the CAP, the sale of
Navajo Surplus, and the purposes for
which the Development Fund may be
used have no bearing upon the
marketing of power from other federal
projects.
Comments relating to the possible
auction of Navajo Surplus: Western and
Reclamation should support the use of
an auction process to sell Navajo
Surplus, using standard electricity
products and standard market contract
arrangements to promote efficiency.
Such a process could accommodate
those seeking smaller quantities of
power.
Response: The Amended Plan is
designed for flexibility. It would allow
Navajo Surplus to be auctioned as
standard electricity products using
standard contracts in a manner which
promotes efficiency and which
accommodates those seeking smaller
quantities of power.
Comments relating to the exchange of
Navajo Surplus: The proposed
Amended Plan, unlike the original
Navajo Power Marketing Plan, does not
specify the amount of power to be
exchanged.
Response: The Amended Plan is
designed for flexibility. Whether and to
what extent power is available for
exchange will be determined by
Reclamation in an annual process which
takes into account the varying power
needs of the CAP.
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Comments relating to the resale of
Navajo Surplus: Western should not
apply Western’s General Power Contract
Provisions (GPCP), Article 17, to sales of
Navajo Surplus because this would not
allow a contractor to resell Navajo
Surplus. If a contractor acquires Navajo
Surplus and is not permitted to resell
unused portions, the risk for the
contractor increases. With higher risk,
the contractor is likely to offer a lower
price for Navajo Surplus and this would
defeat the purposes of the Hoover Power
Plant Act of 1984 and the Arizona Water
Settlements Act of 2004.
Response: Article 17 of the GPCP was
included in contracts for the sale of
Navajo Surplus under the original
Navajo Power Marketing Plan. At the
time of actual contracting under the
Amended Plan, Western will determine
which GPCPs will be included in
contracts marketing Navajo Surplus.
Comments relating to the first
opportunity provisions of the original
Navajo Power Marketing Plan: The
original Navajo Power Marketing Plan
and the contracts entered into under
that plan provide a first opportunity to
existing contractors to enter into new
contracts for Navajo Surplus when the
existing contracts expire. New contracts
should be entered into under the first
opportunity provisions of the original
plan. Exercise of the first opportunity
provisions for new contracts may
impact the extent to which Navajo
Surplus is available to be marketed to
others.
Response: Reclamation is engaging in
ongoing negotiations relating to the first
opportunity provisions of the original
Navajo Power Marketing Plan. These
negotiations may result in new contracts
for the sale of Navajo Surplus. The
extent to which any such new contracts
may affect the amounts of Navajo
Surplus which is available to be
marketed to others will not be known
until the conclusion of those
negotiations.
Comments relating to marketing
Navajo Surplus to Indian tribes: Many
tribes in the Colorado River Basin are
new participants in the electric energy
business. It is unlikely that Indian tribes
have the staff capabilities to
successfully participate in an auction
process. The federal government and
Indian tribes have a long-standing trust
relationship. Western should consider
benefits to Arizona Indian tribes when
marketing Navajo Surplus. Western
should set aside the amount of Navajo
Surplus necessary to meet the needs of
Indian reservations. Tribes in Arizona
should be included in the first priority
group for eligibility to contract with
Western for the sale or exchange of
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Navajo Surplus. Navajo Surplus should
be sold to Indian tribes at cost or at the
same cost as it is sold to larger utilities
with sufficient staff to evaluate its value.
Many tribes cannot take advantage of
the sale of Navajo Surplus in large
blocks of power or for single year
periods.
Response: The Amended Plan is
designed to optimize the revenues from
the sale of Navajo Surplus to fulfill
Congressional purposes relating to the
repayment of construction costs of the
CAP and relating to funding specified
purposes including Indian water
projects and settlements. In order to
optimize revenues, Reclamation
anticipates that Western will market the
power, through an auction or by a
request for proposals. Indian tribes are
welcome to participate in these
processes. An auction is only one of
several methods that Western may use
to market Navajo Surplus under the
Amended Plan. The Amended Plan
provides that first priority will be given
to Arizona preference entities. Western
currently recognizes several Indian
Tribes as qualifying as preference
entities in Arizona. The Amended Plan
provides for flexibility in designing the
products for sale and exchange. The
Amended Plan does not require the
products be structured in any particular
manner. Reclamation anticipates that
both large and small blocks of power
may be available to be marketed as
Navajo Surplus and further anticipates
that some blocks may be available in
multi-year increments. Both
Reclamation and Western recognize the
trust relationship between the United
States and Federally-recognized Indian
Tribes.
Comments relating to the possible sale
of Navajo Surplus as a firm product: If
Navajo Surplus is sold as a firm
product, the proposed Amended Plan is
unclear as to whether Western will be
responsible for ensuring the firm
product is delivered. Western should
not firm Navajo Surplus at the expense
of other Western customers.
Response: The Amended Plan is
designed to be flexible. The Amended
Plan permits Western to market Navajo
Surplus as a firm product and as a unit
contingent product. Costs related to the
marketing of Navajo Surplus will not be
passed along to non-CAP Western
customers, nor will generation resources
from other federal projects be use to
firm Navajo Surplus.
Comments relating to the integrated
operation of the CAP water and power
systems: The CAP design assumes an
integrated operation of the CAP water
and power systems to optimize the
efficiency of both. The proposed
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Amended Plan should place more
emphasis on the integrated operation of
the CAP water and power systems.
Response: The Amended Plan
addresses the integrated operation of the
CAP water and power systems in Article
V. The integrated operation will
optimize revenues from the marketing of
Navajo Surplus. The Amended Plan
recognizes in Article VII(C) that CAWCD
may be a party to contracts for the sale
or exchange of Navajo Surplus for the
purpose of affirming any obligations of
CAWCD under the contract. Such
contracts may further address CAP
operations to enhance the availability
and value of this resource.
Comments relating to participation of
CAWCD in energy marketing: The
proposed Amended Plan does not
ensure the availability of power to run
CAP pumps in the event of an outage of
the entire Navajo power plant. It is
unclear whether the expectation is that
CAWCD will actively participate in
energy marketing or simply bear the
financial responsibility for a
replacement supply.
Response: The Amended Plan solely
addresses the marketing of Navajo
Surplus. It does not address the
availability of alternate supplies to run
CAP pumps in the event of a complete
outage of the Navajo Generating Station.
Should such an outage occur, CAWCD,
as the operating agent for the CAP, will
make the decision whether to actively
participate in energy marketing or to
utilize another entity for this purpose.
CAWCD currently participates in energy
marketing.
Comments related to transmission of
Navajo Surplus: A section should be
added requiring Western to consult with
the Arizona Power Authority prior to
entering into any contracts relating to
the transmission of Navajo Surplus in
order to avoid compromising
transmission rights and paths for the
delivery of Arizona’s federal entitlement
to power from Hoover Dam.
Response: The Amended Plan
addresses the marketing of Navajo
Surplus. To the extent Western in its
contracts for the sale or exchange of
Navajo Surplus addresses transmission,
Western will take into account
transmission rights held by others.
Western will not compromise the
transmission rights and paths for the
delivery of Arizona’s federal entitlement
to power from Hoover Dam.
Comments relating to credit
requirements for purchasers of Navajo
Surplus: The proposed Amended Plan is
silent as to the credit requirements for
purchasers of Navajo Surplus. Western
should not bear the credit risk and then
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pass it along to other Western
customers.
Response: Reclamation expects that
Western will follow its standard
procedures with respect to credit
requirements to be applied to
purchasers of Navajo Surplus. Western
will not pass along to other Western
customers any credit risk relating to
purchasers of Navajo Surplus.
Comments relating to editing the
proposed Amended Plan: The proposed
Amended Plan alternates between the
use of the phrase ‘‘sold and exchanged’’
and ‘‘sold or exchanged’’ and should be
consistent in its terminology. The
definition of ‘‘Development Fund’’
should include the phrase ‘‘as amended
or supplemented’’ because the statutory
section establishing the fund has been
amended. Article VI.D. (Eligibility)
appears to paraphrase Section 107(c) of
the 1984 Hoover Power Plant Act but
should be modified to clearly and
simply state the intent of Congress.
Response: Reclamation believes the
Amended Plan appropriately uses
‘‘and’’ and ‘‘or’’ in different contexts
when describing actions related to the
marketing of Navajo Surplus.
Reclamation has accepted this change to
the Development Fund definition. The
Amended Plan carries the Eligibility
language forward from the original
Navajo Marketing Plan. Reclamation
believes it accurately reflects the intent
of Congress.
Dated September 18, 2007.
Robert W. Johnson,
Commissioner, Bureau of Reclamation.
Amended Plan
The text of the adopted Amended
Plan is as follows:
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Amended Navajo Power Marketing
Plan
I. Purpose and Scope
Section 107 of the Hoover Power
Plant Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98–381,
requires that a power marketing plan be
developed to provide for marketing and
Exchanging of Navajo Surplus for the
purposes of optimizing the availability
of Navajo Surplus and providing
financial assistance in the timely
construction and repayment of
construction costs of authorized features
of the Central Arizona Project. The
Secretary of the Department of the
Interior adopted the original Navajo
Power Marketing Plan on December 1,
1987 (Original Plan). The Revised
Stipulation entered in the Central
Arizona Project repayment litigation,
Central Arizona Water Conservation
District v. United States, et al., No. CIV
95–625–TUC–WDB (EHC), No. CIV 95–
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1720–PHX–EHC (Consolidated Action)
requires, as a condition to the
effectiveness of the Revised Stipulation,
that the Original Plan be amended. The
Revised Stipulation requires the
amended Navajo Power Marketing Plan
provide for the establishment and
collection of rates for the sale or
Exchange of Navajo Surplus that
optimize the availability and use of
revenues for the Lower Colorado River
Basin Development Fund while
allowing for an appropriate saving for
the contractor. Satisfying the
requirements of the Revised Stipulation
is one of the elements necessary for final
judgment to be entered in the abovereferenced litigation. The entry of final
judgment in that litigation permits the
Secretary of the Department of the
Interior to make a required finding
under the terms of the Arizona Water
Settlements Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108–
451.
A. This Amended Navajo Power
Marketing Plan hereinafter called
‘‘Plan’’ shall be applicable to all new or
amended contracts for Navajo Surplus
entered into after this Plan is adopted.
The Original Plan shall remain in effect
for all Navajo Surplus contracts entered
into before the adoption of this Plan and
shall continue until such contracts
terminate or are amended in accordance
with this Plan.
B. This Plan recognizes the obligation
of the United States to use its
entitlement to electrical capacity and
energy from Navajo to provide necessary
power for the pumping requirements of
the Central Arizona Project and any
such needs for desalting and protective
pumping facilities as may be required
under section 101(b)(2)(B) of the
Colorado River Basin Salinity Control
Act of 1974, Pub. L. 93–320, as
amended.
C. This Plan provides that Western,
working closely with Reclamation and
CAWCD, will be the marketing entity
responsible for the sale and Exchange of
Navajo Surplus in accordance with
applicable Federal law, regulations and
the Revised Stipulation. Western shall
market Navajo Surplus directly to, with
or through the Arizona Power Authority
and/or other entities having the status of
preference entities under the
Reclamation Project Act of 1939.
Western may utilize Exchange, banking,
purchase or sales agreements, or
integration with other resources to
fulfill any purpose of this Plan.
D. This Plan sets parameters for the
establishment of Rates, not to exceed
levels that allow for an appropriate
saving for the contractor, that will
optimize the availability and use of
revenues from the sale and Exchange of
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Navajo Surplus to provide financial
assistance for payment of the operation
and maintenance expenses associated
with Navajo Surplus and for the
purposes set forth in 43 U.S.C. 1543(f),
as amended by the Arizona Water
Settlements Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108–
451.
E. This Plan satisfies the obligation of
the United States in accordance with the
Revised Stipulation, to amend the
Original Plan ‘‘to provide for the
establishment and collection of rates for
the sale or exchange of Navajo Surplus
Power after September 30, 2011.’’
F. This Plan specifies that for so long
as Navajo operates and there is Navajo
Surplus, Western shall continue to
market Navajo Surplus under this Plan
with such amendments or revisions as
may be adopted by the Secretary of the
Department of the Interior, after
consultation with the Secretary of
Energy, CAWCD, and the Governor of
Arizona and as provided by law,
including the authorities set forth in
section II.
II. Authorities
The authorities under which this Plan
is developed are:
A. Federal Reclamation laws (43
U.S.C. 372 et seq., and all Acts
amendatory thereof or supplementary
thereto); in particular, the Colorado
River Basin Project Act of 1968, Pub. L.
90–537, as amended, the Colorado River
Basin Salinity Control Act of 1974, Pub.
L. 93–320, as amended, the Hoover
Power Plant Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98–
381, and the Arizona Water Settlements
Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108–451.
B. Rules, regulations, and agency
agreements of Western and Reclamation
issued or made pursuant to applicable
law.
III. Definitions
The following terms wherever used
herein shall have the following
meanings:
A. ‘‘Boulder City Marketing Area’’
shall mean the marketing area defined
in the 1984 Conformed Criteria
published in the Federal Register (49
FR 50585) on December 28, 1984.
B. ‘‘Central Arizona Project’’ or
‘‘CAP’’ shall mean the Reclamation
multipurpose water resource
development and management project
in Arizona authorized by the Colorado
River Basin Project Act of 1968, Pub. L.
90–537, as amended (43 U.S.C. 1501 et.
seq.).
C. ‘‘CAWCD’’ shall mean the Central
Arizona Water Conservation District.
D. ‘‘Conformed Criteria’’ shall mean
the Conformed General Consolidated
Power Marketing Criteria or Regulations
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for Boulder City Area Projects published
in the Federal Register (49 FR 50582) on
December 28, 1984.
E. ‘‘Development Fund’’ shall mean
the Lower Colorado River Basin
Development Fund established under
section 403 of the Colorado River Basin
Project Act of 1968, Pub. L. 90–537, as
amended.
F. ‘‘Exchange’’ shall mean any
arrangements providing for delivery of
capacity and energy to Western and
return of capacity and energy by
Western from Navajo within a one year
period.
G. ‘‘Navajo’’ shall mean the Navajo
Generating Station, the thermal
generating power plant located near
Page, Arizona, and associated
transmission facilities.
H. ‘‘Navajo Entitlement’’ shall mean
the United States entitlement of 24.3
percent of the generation from Navajo.
I. ‘‘Navajo Surplus’’ shall mean
capacity and energy associated with the
Navajo Entitlement which is in excess of
the pumping requirements of the
Central Arizona Project and any such
needs for desalting and protective
pumping facilities as may be required
under section 101(b)(2)(B) of the
Colorado River Basin Salinity Control
Act of 1974, Pub. L. 93–320, as
amended.
J. ‘‘New Waddell Dam’’ or ‘‘New
Waddell Reservoir’’ shall mean the
regulatory storage facilities constructed
on the Agua Fria River as a feature of
the CAP.
K. ‘‘Original Plan’’ shall mean the
original Navajo Power Marketing Plan
adopted on December 1, 1987.
L. ‘‘Plan’’ shall mean this Amended
Navajo Power Marketing Plan.
M. ‘‘Rate(s)’’ shall mean the price(s)
established by a marketing process for
various Navajo Surplus capacity or
energy products marketed under this
Plan to optimize the availability and use
of revenues for the Development Fund.
N. ‘‘Reclamation’’ shall mean the
Bureau of Reclamation, United States
Department of the Interior.
O. ‘‘Revised Stipulation’’ shall mean
the Revised Stipulation Regarding a
Stay of Litigation, Resolution of Issues
During the Stay and for Ultimate
Judgment Upon the Satisfaction of
Conditions, filed with the United States
District Court for the District of Arizona
in Central Arizona Water Conservation
District v. United States, et al., No. CIV
95–625–TUC–WDB (EHC), No. CIV 95–
1720–PHX–EHC (Consolidated Action),
and that court’s order dated April 28,
2003, and any amendments or revisions
thereto.
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14:43 Sep 21, 2007
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P. ‘‘Western’’ shall mean the Western
Area Power Administration, United
States Department of Energy.
IV. Power To Be Marketed
A. Reclamation, in consultation with
CAWCD, shall annually or more
frequently, as appropriate, determine
the Navajo Surplus available for sale
and Exchange by Western, and the
period for which it will be available for
sale and Exchange, taking into
consideration among other factors, the
following:
1. Existing contractual commitments
to deliver Navajo Surplus, including
new contracts entered into under the
first opportunity provisions of section
IV.G. of the Original Plan.
2. CAP estimated pumping energy
requirements in excess of capacity and
energy supplied to CAWCD from
Hoover Dam or New Waddell Dam,
based on projected CAP water deliveries
for that year and successive years.
3. Estimated capacity and energy
needs of the United States for desalting
and protective pumping facilities, as
may be required under section
101(b)(2)(B) of the Colorado River Basin
Salinity Control Act of 1974, Pub. L. 93–
320, as amended.
4. Projected Navajo generation.
B. Any Navajo Surplus not sold or
Exchanged in accordance with
paragraph A of this section may, as
determined by Western, in cooperation
with CAWCD and Reclamation, be sold
under appropriate long-term or shortterm arrangements.
V. Optimization
A. To optimize the availability of
Navajo Surplus, CAWCD shall utilize,
for CAP pumping requirements, Hoover
capacity and energy scheduled from
Hoover Dam in accordance with the
terms and conditions of CAWCD’s
contract with the Arizona Power
Authority to permit additional Navajo
capacity and energy to be sold or
Exchanged by Western as Navajo
Surplus.
B. To optimize the availability and
use of revenues from the sale and
Exchange of Navajo Surplus:
1. CAWCD will use seasonal and daily
power management. Specifically,
CAWCD will divert maximum amounts
of water from the Colorado River in the
winter season for storage in the New
Waddell Reservoir, and then serve CAP
water demands in the summer season
from water previously placed in storage.
On a daily basis, CAWCD to the extent
possible will pump off-peak to optimize
the on-peak availability of Navajo
Surplus.
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2. Western, in consultation with
Reclamation and CAWCD, shall develop
capacity and energy products from the
Navajo Surplus determined to be
available under section IV.A for sale or
Exchange, taking into account market
prices for standard capacity and energy
products.
VI. Eligibility
A. Western shall offer Navajo Surplus
for sale in the following order of
priority, in accordance with part IV,
section A of the Conformed Criteria:
1. Preference entities within Arizona.
2. Preference entities within the
Boulder City Marketing Area.
3. Preference entities in adjacent
Federal marketing areas.
4. Non-preference entities in the
Boulder City Marketing Area.
B. In the event a bidding or request for
proposal process is utilized, after the
bids or proposals are received the
bidding entities will be given first
opportunity, in order of priority, to
purchase at a price which is based on
the highest offer.
C. In the event that a potential
contractor fails to place Navajo Surplus
capacity and energy under contract
within a reasonable period, as specified
by Western and in accordance with the
terms and conditions offered by
Western, the amounts of capacity and
energy not placed under contract will be
reoffered in accordance with the order
of priority specified in paragraph A of
this section.
D. Arizona entities, regardless of
preference status, shall have first
opportunity for electrical capacity and
energy Exchange rights as necessary to
implement this Plan. Western, in
consultation with CAWCD and
Reclamation, may determine that any
capacity and energy not subscribed to
by Arizona entities for Exchange may be
offered for sale in the order of priority
stated in paragraph A of this section or
may be offered to non-Arizona entities
for Exchange.
VII. Contract Provisions
A. Western, after consultation with
Reclamation and CAWCD, shall enter
into all power sales and Exchange
contracts necessary to carry out the
provisions of this Plan in selling and
exchanging Navajo Surplus. Navajo
Surplus shall be marketed, and
Exchange rights granted, by Western on
behalf of the Secretary of the
Department of the Interior, under
contracts consistent with this Plan and
the Conformed Criteria.
B. Contracts for the sale or Exchange
of Navajo Surplus shall specify a
delivery point on the Navajo or CAP
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transmission systems as may be
available. If the contractor cannot take
delivery of Navajo Surplus into its own
system at these delivery points,
transmission service arrangements to
other delivery points will be the
obligation of the contractor.
C. CAWCD may be a party to contracts
for the sale or Exchange of Navajo
Surplus for the limited purposes of (i)
concurring that the contracts optimize
the financial assistance available for the
purposes set forth in 43 U.S.C. 1543(f),
as amended by the Arizona Water
Settlements Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108–
451, and (ii) affirming any rights and
obligations of CAWCD under the
contracts.
D. Western and the contractor shall
agree upon written metering and
scheduling instructions prior to any
deliveries under this Plan. The metering
and scheduling instructions shall
provide the operating and accounting
procedures for such deliveries. Metering
and scheduling instructions are
intended to implement terms of the
contract, not to modify or amend it, and
therefore are subordinate to the contract.
Western and the contractor may modify
these instructions, as necessary, to
reflect changing power system
conditions. In the event the contractor
fails or refuses to execute the initial
metering and scheduling instructions or
any revised instructions Western
determines to be necessary, Western
shall develop and implement temporary
instructions until acceptable
instructions have been developed and
executed by Western and the contractor.
VIII. Rate-Setting
A. Rates for Navajo Surplus
developed pursuant to section IV.A
shall be established annually by
Reclamation and Western, in
consultation with CAWCD, through a
competitive process that optimizes the
availability and use of revenues for the
Development Fund with priority to
entities in accordance with section VI.A.
and that allows for an appropriate
saving for the contractor, taking into
consideration, among other factors,
prices for comparable capacity and
energy products.
B. Rates for Navajo Surplus developed
under section IV.B or marketed under
the first opportunity provision of the
Original Plan shall be established in the
contracts for sale of such Navajo
Surplus, taking into consideration,
among other factors, prices for
comparable capacity and energy
products, and allowing for an
appropriate saving for the contractor.
C. Rates developed annually pursuant
to this Plan shall not be applicable to
VerDate Aug<31>2005
14:43 Sep 21, 2007
Jkt 211001
pre-existing contracts unless provided
for in such contracts.
D. Because of the Hoover Power Plant
Act of 1984’s, Pub. L. 98–381,
requirements for noncost-based rates,
the Rates established pursuant to this
Plan are not suitable to the required
review of Western’s rates by the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission. All
Rates promulgated by the Administrator
of Western under this Plan shall be a
final act of the Secretary of Energy and
shall be subject to review pursuant to
the judicial review provided by the
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C.
553, et seq.).
IX. Revenue Collection and Distribution
Western shall deposit all revenue
collected from the marketing of Navajo
Surplus under this Plan into the
Development Fund, where it will be
used:
A. First, to pay all costs of operation
and maintenance determined to be
associated with the sale and Exchange
of Navajo Surplus, including actual
costs for services performed by
Reclamation and Western under this
Plan including appropriate
administrative expenses of Reclamation
and Western.
B. Second, for the purposes set forth
in 43 U.S.C. 1543(f), as amended by the
Arizona Water Settlements Act of 2004,
Pub. L. 108–451, including crediting
funds against the annual CAWCD
repayment obligation and funding
specific Indian water-related activities.
X. Effective Date
This Plan will become effective 30
days after publication in the Federal
Register following adoption by the
Secretary of the Department of the
Interior.
XI. Consultation
This Plan is deemed most acceptable
in accordance with section 107(c) of the
Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984, Pub. L.
98–381, after consultation with Western
(Secretary of Energy), the Governor of
Arizona, and CAWCD.
Adopted:
Dated: September 18, 2007.
Robert W. Johnson,
Commissioner, Bureau of Reclamation.
[FR Doc. E7–18744 Filed 9–21–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MN–P
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54291
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
COMMISSION
[Inv. No. 337–TA–615]
In the Matter of Certain Ground Fault
Circuit Interrupters and Products
Containing the Same; Notice of
Investigation
U.S. International Trade
Commission.
ACTION: Institution of investigation
pursuant to 19 U.S.C. 1337.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given that a
complaint was filed with the U.S.
International Trade Commission on
August 16, 2007, under section 337 of
the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, 19
U.S.C. 1337, on behalf of Pass &
Seymour, Inc. of Syracuse, New York.
Letters supplementing the complaint
were filed on September 4, 5, and 6,
2007. The complaint, as supplemented,
alleges violations of section 337 in the
importation into the United States, the
sale for importation, and the sale within
the United States after importation of
certain ground fault circuit interrupters
and products containing the same by
reason of infringement of certain claims
of U.S. Patent Nos. 5,594,398, RE38,293,
7,154,718, 7,164,564, 7,212,386, and
7,256,973. The complaint further alleges
that an industry in the United States
exists as required by subsection (a)(2) of
section 337.
The complainant requests that the
Commission institute an investigation
and, after the investigation, issue a
permanent exclusion order and
permanent cease and desist orders.
ADDRESSES: The complaint, except for
any confidential information contained
therein, is available for inspection
during official business hours (8:45 a.m.
to 5:15 p.m.) in the Office of the
Secretary, U.S. International Trade
Commission, 500 E Street, SW., Room
112, Washington, DC 20436, telephone
202–205–2000. Hearing impaired
individuals are advised that information
on this matter can be obtained by
contacting the Commission’s TDD
terminal on 202–205–1810. Persons
with mobility impairments who will
need special assistance in gaining access
to the Commission should contact the
Office of the Secretary at 202–205–2000.
General information concerning the
Commission may also be obtained by
accessing its internet server at https://
www.usitc.gov. The public record for
this investigation may be viewed on the
Commission’s electronic docket (EDIS)
at https://edis.usitc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Bryan F. Moore, Esq., Office of Unfair
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[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 184 (Monday, September 24, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 54286-54291]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-18744]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Reclamation
Adoption of Amended Navajo Power Marketing Plan
AGENCY: Bureau of Reclamation, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of adoption.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On September 18, 2007, the Commissioner of Reclamation adopted
the Amended Navajo Power Marketing Plan (Amended Plan) on behalf of the
Secretary of the Interior (Secretary), pursuant to section 107 of the
Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984 (98 Stat. 1333). The Amended Plan is to
provide for the future marketing of the United States' entitlement to
generation from the Navajo Generating Station (Navajo) which is in
excess of the pumping requirements of the Central Arizona Project (CAP)
and certain needs for desalting and protective pumping facilities. The
Amended Plan was developed in consultation with representatives of the
Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation), Western Area Power Administration
(Western), the Governor of Arizona, and the Central Arizona Water
Conservation District (CAWCD) as required by the Hoover Power Plant Act
of 1984 (Act).
At the request of Reclamation, Western published a notice in the
Federal Register on August 14, 2006, to initiate and obtain public
comments on the proposed Amended Plan. Western held public information
forums on September 19, 2006, in Phoenix, Arizona, and on September 22,
2006, in Ontario, California. Western accepted oral and written
comments on the proposed Amended Plan at public comment forums on
October 10, 2006, in Phoenix, Arizona, and on October 11, 2006 in
Ontario, California, and thereafter until November 13, 2006, the end of
the public comment period. Additional public information forums will be
held in advance of the time of the actual marketing of Navajo Surplus
under the Amended Plan to address the procedures to be used in the
actual marketing process.
Public comments were received both with respect to the terms of the
proposed Amended Plan and with respect to Western's presentations at
the public forums relating to the implementation of the plan. Written
comments were received from Aha Macav Power Service, Arizona Power
Authority, Arizona Tribal Energy Association, Colorado River Indian
Tribes, Ralph E. Hitchcock and Associates, Moyes Storey Law Offices,
Santa Cruz Water & Power Districts Association, and Salt River Project
Agricultural Improvement and Power District. Oral comments were
received from the Central Arizona Water Conservation District, Ralph E.
Hitchcock and Associates, and the Colorado River Indian Tribes.
Comments and responses, paraphrased for brevity, are presented below.
Reclamation considered all comments prior to the adoption of the
Amended Plan. Reclamation determined that no modifications to the
proposed Amended Plan were necessary as a result of the comments and in
light of the proposed Amended Plan's flexible framework. Nevertheless,
Reclamation has made edits to the proposed Amended Plan for
clarification purposes.
DATES: As provided in Part X of the Amended Plan, the Amended Plan will
become effective thirty days after its date of publication in the
Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Ron Smith, Bureau of Reclamation,
P.O. Box 61470, Boulder City, Nevada 89006, telephone (702) 293-8231,
e-mail AmendedPlan@lc.usbr.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The United States acquired an entitlement to
24.3 percent of generation available at Navajo for use by CAP pursuant
to the Colorado River Basin Project Act (43 U.S.C. 1501, et seq.). The
CAP is a Reclamation multi-purpose water resource development and
management project in Arizona.
Section 107(a) of the Act provides that the capacity and energy
associated with the United States interest in Navajo which is in excess
of the pumping requirements of the CAP and any needs for desalting and
protective pumping facilities (Navajo Surplus) shall be marketed and
exchanged by the Secretary of Energy. Furthermore, Section 107(c) of
the Act provides that in the marketing and exchanging of Navajo
Surplus, the Secretary of the Department of the Interior shall adopt
the plan deemed most acceptable, after consultation with the Secretary
of Energy, the Governor of Arizona, and CAWCD (or its successor in
interest to the repayment obligation for the CAP).
On December 1, 1987, Reclamation, on behalf of the Secretary,
adopted the Original Plan which provided for long-term contracts
through September 30, 2011.
This adopted Amended Plan contains the framework for the sale and
exchange of Navajo Surplus, including an annual process to determine
the power to be marketed, eligibility criteria, contract provisions,
rate-setting provisions, and revenue collection and distribution
criteria. The rate-setting provisions in the adopted Amended Plan were
developed to accomplish the requirements of the Act to market and
exchange Navajo Surplus ``for the purposes of optimizing the
availability of Navajo surplus and providing
[[Page 54287]]
financial assistance in the timely construction and repayment of
construction costs of authorized features of the Central Arizona
project.'' These provisions also provide that ``rates shall not exceed
levels that allow for an appropriate saving for the contractor.''
The adopted Amended Plan implements provisions of the Revised
Stipulation entered in the Central Arizona Project repayment
litigation, Central Arizona Water Conservation District v. United
States, et al., No. CIV 95-625-TUC-WDB (EHC), No. CIV 95-1720-PHX-EHC
(Consolidated Action). The Revised Stipulation requires, as a condition
to the effectiveness of the Revised Stipulation, that the Original Plan
be amended to provide for the establishment of rates for the sale or
exchange of Navajo Surplus after September 30, 2011 ``which optimize
the availability and use of revenues'' for the Lower Colorado River
Basin Development Fund in a manner consistent with the Act. The Arizona
Water Settlements Act of 2004, Public Law 108-451 amends statutory
provisions relating to the use of Navajo Surplus revenues set forth in
43 U.S.C. 1543(f).
The Original Plan also contains a provision to collect an
additional rate component that allows CAWCD to recover an advance of
funds made to Reclamation for the construction of authorized features
of the CAP. This obligation will be fulfilled under the contract
provisions of the Original Plan. The Original Plan also contains
specified quantities of capacity and energy to be marketed under long-
term contracts. This adopted Amended Plan provides for an annual
determination of capacity and energy resources available for marketing
as Navajo Surplus based upon the availability of water for CAP pumping,
in conjunction with an annual determination of rates and the various
capacity and energy products to be marketed. Navajo Surplus under this
adopted Amended Plan will be placed under contract for various time
periods, which may be short-term, annual, or multi-year.
National Environmental Policy Act
In compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA), Council on Environmental Quality regulations, and the
Department of the Interior regulations for compliance with NEPA,
Reclamation and Western determined that the adopted Amended Plan met
the requirements of a categorical exclusion. Copies of the categorical
exclusions prepared by Reclamation and Western will be made available
to interested persons upon request.
Public Comments and Responses
Comments relating to the term of Navajo Surplus contracts: Material
presented at the public information forums on the proposed Amended Plan
indicates Navajo Surplus will be marketed on an annual or shorter term
basis. This will expose the Development Fund to market volatility and
discourage purchasers who require the certainty of longer term
contracts. Navajo Surplus should be made available for multi-year terms
of at least three years. A five-year contract provides greater
stability than a one-year contract. At least a portion of the Navajo
Surplus should be sold in long term contracts.
Response: The Amended Plan is designed to be flexible. The Amended
Plan permits both shorter and longer term contracts for the sale or
exchange of Navajo Surplus. Article IV.A. of the Amended Plan states
that Reclamation will on an annual or more frequent basis determine the
quantity of Navajo Surplus available to be marketed and the period for
which it is available. The annual determination process will allow
Reclamation to take into account the varying power demand of the CAP
and will reduce the need for the CAP to purchase power to supply its
demand. Although the determination of available Navajo Surplus will be
made at least annually, the period for which the power is sold or
exchanged may vary. Reclamation anticipates that some blocks of power
may be marketed in multi-year contracts and others marketed for shorter
terms.
Comments relating to the pricing of Navajo Surplus: Navajo Surplus
should be sold at cost. Western does not have legal authority to market
Navajo Surplus at market-based prices. Federal power sold to preference
customers should be sold at cost-based prices. Western is proposing to
depart from established cost-based principles governing pricing of
federal power. This poses a threat to Western's preference customers.
The plan to optimize revenue from the sale of Navajo Surplus should be
balanced against the statutory requirement of an appropriate savings
for the contractor to result in a below market price. The power should
be sold at a price based on the market but reduced to eliminate costs
incurred by the private sector but not by the federal government such
as taxes. After the CAP is paid off, Navajo Surplus should be sold at
cost.
Response: Navajo Surplus has never been marketed at cost-based
pricing. The Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984 and the Arizona Water
Settlements Act of 2004 provide that the Lower Colorado River Basin
Development Fund (Development Fund) is to be used to repay CAP
construction costs and to fund specified purposes including Indian
water projects and settlements. Congress has directed that revenues
from the sale of Navajo Surplus be deposited into the Development Fund
and be available for these purposes. Cost-based pricing of this
resource would not result in revenue which could be dedicated to CAP
construction costs or Indian water projects. This would run counter to
intent of these Acts of Congress. The Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984
states that the rates for Navajo Surplus should not exceed levels that
allow for an appropriate saving for the contractor but does not further
define what is intended by ``appropriate savings.'' The marketing
process for Navajo Surplus will permit the contractors to determine the
price which represents to them an appropriate savings when, for
example, placing a bid or submitting a request for proposal to Western.
The provisions of the Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984 and the Arizona
Water Settlements Act of 2004 which relate to the CAP, the sale of
Navajo Surplus, and the purposes for which the Development Fund may be
used have no bearing upon the marketing of power from other federal
projects.
Comments relating to the possible auction of Navajo Surplus:
Western and Reclamation should support the use of an auction process to
sell Navajo Surplus, using standard electricity products and standard
market contract arrangements to promote efficiency. Such a process
could accommodate those seeking smaller quantities of power.
Response: The Amended Plan is designed for flexibility. It would
allow Navajo Surplus to be auctioned as standard electricity products
using standard contracts in a manner which promotes efficiency and
which accommodates those seeking smaller quantities of power.
Comments relating to the exchange of Navajo Surplus: The proposed
Amended Plan, unlike the original Navajo Power Marketing Plan, does not
specify the amount of power to be exchanged.
Response: The Amended Plan is designed for flexibility. Whether and
to what extent power is available for exchange will be determined by
Reclamation in an annual process which takes into account the varying
power needs of the CAP.
[[Page 54288]]
Comments relating to the resale of Navajo Surplus: Western should
not apply Western's General Power Contract Provisions (GPCP), Article
17, to sales of Navajo Surplus because this would not allow a
contractor to resell Navajo Surplus. If a contractor acquires Navajo
Surplus and is not permitted to resell unused portions, the risk for
the contractor increases. With higher risk, the contractor is likely to
offer a lower price for Navajo Surplus and this would defeat the
purposes of the Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984 and the Arizona Water
Settlements Act of 2004.
Response: Article 17 of the GPCP was included in contracts for the
sale of Navajo Surplus under the original Navajo Power Marketing Plan.
At the time of actual contracting under the Amended Plan, Western will
determine which GPCPs will be included in contracts marketing Navajo
Surplus.
Comments relating to the first opportunity provisions of the
original Navajo Power Marketing Plan: The original Navajo Power
Marketing Plan and the contracts entered into under that plan provide a
first opportunity to existing contractors to enter into new contracts
for Navajo Surplus when the existing contracts expire. New contracts
should be entered into under the first opportunity provisions of the
original plan. Exercise of the first opportunity provisions for new
contracts may impact the extent to which Navajo Surplus is available to
be marketed to others.
Response: Reclamation is engaging in ongoing negotiations relating
to the first opportunity provisions of the original Navajo Power
Marketing Plan. These negotiations may result in new contracts for the
sale of Navajo Surplus. The extent to which any such new contracts may
affect the amounts of Navajo Surplus which is available to be marketed
to others will not be known until the conclusion of those negotiations.
Comments relating to marketing Navajo Surplus to Indian tribes:
Many tribes in the Colorado River Basin are new participants in the
electric energy business. It is unlikely that Indian tribes have the
staff capabilities to successfully participate in an auction process.
The federal government and Indian tribes have a long-standing trust
relationship. Western should consider benefits to Arizona Indian tribes
when marketing Navajo Surplus. Western should set aside the amount of
Navajo Surplus necessary to meet the needs of Indian reservations.
Tribes in Arizona should be included in the first priority group for
eligibility to contract with Western for the sale or exchange of Navajo
Surplus. Navajo Surplus should be sold to Indian tribes at cost or at
the same cost as it is sold to larger utilities with sufficient staff
to evaluate its value. Many tribes cannot take advantage of the sale of
Navajo Surplus in large blocks of power or for single year periods.
Response: The Amended Plan is designed to optimize the revenues
from the sale of Navajo Surplus to fulfill Congressional purposes
relating to the repayment of construction costs of the CAP and relating
to funding specified purposes including Indian water projects and
settlements. In order to optimize revenues, Reclamation anticipates
that Western will market the power, through an auction or by a request
for proposals. Indian tribes are welcome to participate in these
processes. An auction is only one of several methods that Western may
use to market Navajo Surplus under the Amended Plan. The Amended Plan
provides that first priority will be given to Arizona preference
entities. Western currently recognizes several Indian Tribes as
qualifying as preference entities in Arizona. The Amended Plan provides
for flexibility in designing the products for sale and exchange. The
Amended Plan does not require the products be structured in any
particular manner. Reclamation anticipates that both large and small
blocks of power may be available to be marketed as Navajo Surplus and
further anticipates that some blocks may be available in multi-year
increments. Both Reclamation and Western recognize the trust
relationship between the United States and Federally-recognized Indian
Tribes.
Comments relating to the possible sale of Navajo Surplus as a firm
product: If Navajo Surplus is sold as a firm product, the proposed
Amended Plan is unclear as to whether Western will be responsible for
ensuring the firm product is delivered. Western should not firm Navajo
Surplus at the expense of other Western customers.
Response: The Amended Plan is designed to be flexible. The Amended
Plan permits Western to market Navajo Surplus as a firm product and as
a unit contingent product. Costs related to the marketing of Navajo
Surplus will not be passed along to non-CAP Western customers, nor will
generation resources from other federal projects be use to firm Navajo
Surplus.
Comments relating to the integrated operation of the CAP water and
power systems: The CAP design assumes an integrated operation of the
CAP water and power systems to optimize the efficiency of both. The
proposed Amended Plan should place more emphasis on the integrated
operation of the CAP water and power systems.
Response: The Amended Plan addresses the integrated operation of
the CAP water and power systems in Article V. The integrated operation
will optimize revenues from the marketing of Navajo Surplus. The
Amended Plan recognizes in Article VII(C) that CAWCD may be a party to
contracts for the sale or exchange of Navajo Surplus for the purpose of
affirming any obligations of CAWCD under the contract. Such contracts
may further address CAP operations to enhance the availability and
value of this resource.
Comments relating to participation of CAWCD in energy marketing:
The proposed Amended Plan does not ensure the availability of power to
run CAP pumps in the event of an outage of the entire Navajo power
plant. It is unclear whether the expectation is that CAWCD will
actively participate in energy marketing or simply bear the financial
responsibility for a replacement supply.
Response: The Amended Plan solely addresses the marketing of Navajo
Surplus. It does not address the availability of alternate supplies to
run CAP pumps in the event of a complete outage of the Navajo
Generating Station. Should such an outage occur, CAWCD, as the
operating agent for the CAP, will make the decision whether to actively
participate in energy marketing or to utilize another entity for this
purpose. CAWCD currently participates in energy marketing.
Comments related to transmission of Navajo Surplus: A section
should be added requiring Western to consult with the Arizona Power
Authority prior to entering into any contracts relating to the
transmission of Navajo Surplus in order to avoid compromising
transmission rights and paths for the delivery of Arizona's federal
entitlement to power from Hoover Dam.
Response: The Amended Plan addresses the marketing of Navajo
Surplus. To the extent Western in its contracts for the sale or
exchange of Navajo Surplus addresses transmission, Western will take
into account transmission rights held by others. Western will not
compromise the transmission rights and paths for the delivery of
Arizona's federal entitlement to power from Hoover Dam.
Comments relating to credit requirements for purchasers of Navajo
Surplus: The proposed Amended Plan is silent as to the credit
requirements for purchasers of Navajo Surplus. Western should not bear
the credit risk and then
[[Page 54289]]
pass it along to other Western customers.
Response: Reclamation expects that Western will follow its standard
procedures with respect to credit requirements to be applied to
purchasers of Navajo Surplus. Western will not pass along to other
Western customers any credit risk relating to purchasers of Navajo
Surplus.
Comments relating to editing the proposed Amended Plan: The
proposed Amended Plan alternates between the use of the phrase ``sold
and exchanged'' and ``sold or exchanged'' and should be consistent in
its terminology. The definition of ``Development Fund'' should include
the phrase ``as amended or supplemented'' because the statutory section
establishing the fund has been amended. Article VI.D. (Eligibility)
appears to paraphrase Section 107(c) of the 1984 Hoover Power Plant Act
but should be modified to clearly and simply state the intent of
Congress.
Response: Reclamation believes the Amended Plan appropriately uses
``and'' and ``or'' in different contexts when describing actions
related to the marketing of Navajo Surplus. Reclamation has accepted
this change to the Development Fund definition. The Amended Plan
carries the Eligibility language forward from the original Navajo
Marketing Plan. Reclamation believes it accurately reflects the intent
of Congress.
Dated September 18, 2007.
Robert W. Johnson,
Commissioner, Bureau of Reclamation.
Amended Plan
The text of the adopted Amended Plan is as follows:
Amended Navajo Power Marketing Plan
I. Purpose and Scope
Section 107 of the Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-381,
requires that a power marketing plan be developed to provide for
marketing and Exchanging of Navajo Surplus for the purposes of
optimizing the availability of Navajo Surplus and providing financial
assistance in the timely construction and repayment of construction
costs of authorized features of the Central Arizona Project. The
Secretary of the Department of the Interior adopted the original Navajo
Power Marketing Plan on December 1, 1987 (Original Plan). The Revised
Stipulation entered in the Central Arizona Project repayment
litigation, Central Arizona Water Conservation District v. United
States, et al., No. CIV 95-625-TUC-WDB (EHC), No. CIV 95-1720-PHX-EHC
(Consolidated Action) requires, as a condition to the effectiveness of
the Revised Stipulation, that the Original Plan be amended. The Revised
Stipulation requires the amended Navajo Power Marketing Plan provide
for the establishment and collection of rates for the sale or Exchange
of Navajo Surplus that optimize the availability and use of revenues
for the Lower Colorado River Basin Development Fund while allowing for
an appropriate saving for the contractor. Satisfying the requirements
of the Revised Stipulation is one of the elements necessary for final
judgment to be entered in the above-referenced litigation. The entry of
final judgment in that litigation permits the Secretary of the
Department of the Interior to make a required finding under the terms
of the Arizona Water Settlements Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108-451.
A. This Amended Navajo Power Marketing Plan hereinafter called
``Plan'' shall be applicable to all new or amended contracts for Navajo
Surplus entered into after this Plan is adopted. The Original Plan
shall remain in effect for all Navajo Surplus contracts entered into
before the adoption of this Plan and shall continue until such
contracts terminate or are amended in accordance with this Plan.
B. This Plan recognizes the obligation of the United States to use
its entitlement to electrical capacity and energy from Navajo to
provide necessary power for the pumping requirements of the Central
Arizona Project and any such needs for desalting and protective pumping
facilities as may be required under section 101(b)(2)(B) of the
Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Act of 1974, Pub. L. 93-320, as
amended.
C. This Plan provides that Western, working closely with
Reclamation and CAWCD, will be the marketing entity responsible for the
sale and Exchange of Navajo Surplus in accordance with applicable
Federal law, regulations and the Revised Stipulation. Western shall
market Navajo Surplus directly to, with or through the Arizona Power
Authority and/or other entities having the status of preference
entities under the Reclamation Project Act of 1939. Western may utilize
Exchange, banking, purchase or sales agreements, or integration with
other resources to fulfill any purpose of this Plan.
D. This Plan sets parameters for the establishment of Rates, not to
exceed levels that allow for an appropriate saving for the contractor,
that will optimize the availability and use of revenues from the sale
and Exchange of Navajo Surplus to provide financial assistance for
payment of the operation and maintenance expenses associated with
Navajo Surplus and for the purposes set forth in 43 U.S.C. 1543(f), as
amended by the Arizona Water Settlements Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108-451.
E. This Plan satisfies the obligation of the United States in
accordance with the Revised Stipulation, to amend the Original Plan
``to provide for the establishment and collection of rates for the sale
or exchange of Navajo Surplus Power after September 30, 2011.''
F. This Plan specifies that for so long as Navajo operates and
there is Navajo Surplus, Western shall continue to market Navajo
Surplus under this Plan with such amendments or revisions as may be
adopted by the Secretary of the Department of the Interior, after
consultation with the Secretary of Energy, CAWCD, and the Governor of
Arizona and as provided by law, including the authorities set forth in
section II.
II. Authorities
The authorities under which this Plan is developed are:
A. Federal Reclamation laws (43 U.S.C. 372 et seq., and all Acts
amendatory thereof or supplementary thereto); in particular, the
Colorado River Basin Project Act of 1968, Pub. L. 90-537, as amended,
the Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Act of 1974, Pub. L. 93-320,
as amended, the Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-381, and the
Arizona Water Settlements Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108-451.
B. Rules, regulations, and agency agreements of Western and
Reclamation issued or made pursuant to applicable law.
III. Definitions
The following terms wherever used herein shall have the following
meanings:
A. ``Boulder City Marketing Area'' shall mean the marketing area
defined in the 1984 Conformed Criteria published in the Federal
Register (49 FR 50585) on December 28, 1984.
B. ``Central Arizona Project'' or ``CAP'' shall mean the
Reclamation multipurpose water resource development and management
project in Arizona authorized by the Colorado River Basin Project Act
of 1968, Pub. L. 90-537, as amended (43 U.S.C. 1501 et. seq.).
C. ``CAWCD'' shall mean the Central Arizona Water Conservation
District.
D. ``Conformed Criteria'' shall mean the Conformed General
Consolidated Power Marketing Criteria or Regulations
[[Page 54290]]
for Boulder City Area Projects published in the Federal Register (49 FR
50582) on December 28, 1984.
E. ``Development Fund'' shall mean the Lower Colorado River Basin
Development Fund established under section 403 of the Colorado River
Basin Project Act of 1968, Pub. L. 90-537, as amended.
F. ``Exchange'' shall mean any arrangements providing for delivery
of capacity and energy to Western and return of capacity and energy by
Western from Navajo within a one year period.
G. ``Navajo'' shall mean the Navajo Generating Station, the thermal
generating power plant located near Page, Arizona, and associated
transmission facilities.
H. ``Navajo Entitlement'' shall mean the United States entitlement
of 24.3 percent of the generation from Navajo.
I. ``Navajo Surplus'' shall mean capacity and energy associated
with the Navajo Entitlement which is in excess of the pumping
requirements of the Central Arizona Project and any such needs for
desalting and protective pumping facilities as may be required under
section 101(b)(2)(B) of the Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Act
of 1974, Pub. L. 93-320, as amended.
J. ``New Waddell Dam'' or ``New Waddell Reservoir'' shall mean the
regulatory storage facilities constructed on the Agua Fria River as a
feature of the CAP.
K. ``Original Plan'' shall mean the original Navajo Power Marketing
Plan adopted on December 1, 1987.
L. ``Plan'' shall mean this Amended Navajo Power Marketing Plan.
M. ``Rate(s)'' shall mean the price(s) established by a marketing
process for various Navajo Surplus capacity or energy products marketed
under this Plan to optimize the availability and use of revenues for
the Development Fund.
N. ``Reclamation'' shall mean the Bureau of Reclamation, United
States Department of the Interior.
O. ``Revised Stipulation'' shall mean the Revised Stipulation
Regarding a Stay of Litigation, Resolution of Issues During the Stay
and for Ultimate Judgment Upon the Satisfaction of Conditions, filed
with the United States District Court for the District of Arizona in
Central Arizona Water Conservation District v. United States, et al.,
No. CIV 95-625-TUC-WDB (EHC), No. CIV 95-1720-PHX-EHC (Consolidated
Action), and that court's order dated April 28, 2003, and any
amendments or revisions thereto.
P. ``Western'' shall mean the Western Area Power Administration,
United States Department of Energy.
IV. Power To Be Marketed
A. Reclamation, in consultation with CAWCD, shall annually or more
frequently, as appropriate, determine the Navajo Surplus available for
sale and Exchange by Western, and the period for which it will be
available for sale and Exchange, taking into consideration among other
factors, the following:
1. Existing contractual commitments to deliver Navajo Surplus,
including new contracts entered into under the first opportunity
provisions of section IV.G. of the Original Plan.
2. CAP estimated pumping energy requirements in excess of capacity
and energy supplied to CAWCD from Hoover Dam or New Waddell Dam, based
on projected CAP water deliveries for that year and successive years.
3. Estimated capacity and energy needs of the United States for
desalting and protective pumping facilities, as may be required under
section 101(b)(2)(B) of the Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Act
of 1974, Pub. L. 93-320, as amended.
4. Projected Navajo generation.
B. Any Navajo Surplus not sold or Exchanged in accordance with
paragraph A of this section may, as determined by Western, in
cooperation with CAWCD and Reclamation, be sold under appropriate long-
term or short-term arrangements.
V. Optimization
A. To optimize the availability of Navajo Surplus, CAWCD shall
utilize, for CAP pumping requirements, Hoover capacity and energy
scheduled from Hoover Dam in accordance with the terms and conditions
of CAWCD's contract with the Arizona Power Authority to permit
additional Navajo capacity and energy to be sold or Exchanged by
Western as Navajo Surplus.
B. To optimize the availability and use of revenues from the sale
and Exchange of Navajo Surplus:
1. CAWCD will use seasonal and daily power management.
Specifically, CAWCD will divert maximum amounts of water from the
Colorado River in the winter season for storage in the New Waddell
Reservoir, and then serve CAP water demands in the summer season from
water previously placed in storage. On a daily basis, CAWCD to the
extent possible will pump off-peak to optimize the on-peak availability
of Navajo Surplus.
2. Western, in consultation with Reclamation and CAWCD, shall
develop capacity and energy products from the Navajo Surplus determined
to be available under section IV.A for sale or Exchange, taking into
account market prices for standard capacity and energy products.
VI. Eligibility
A. Western shall offer Navajo Surplus for sale in the following
order of priority, in accordance with part IV, section A of the
Conformed Criteria:
1. Preference entities within Arizona.
2. Preference entities within the Boulder City Marketing Area.
3. Preference entities in adjacent Federal marketing areas.
4. Non-preference entities in the Boulder City Marketing Area.
B. In the event a bidding or request for proposal process is
utilized, after the bids or proposals are received the bidding entities
will be given first opportunity, in order of priority, to purchase at a
price which is based on the highest offer.
C. In the event that a potential contractor fails to place Navajo
Surplus capacity and energy under contract within a reasonable period,
as specified by Western and in accordance with the terms and conditions
offered by Western, the amounts of capacity and energy not placed under
contract will be reoffered in accordance with the order of priority
specified in paragraph A of this section.
D. Arizona entities, regardless of preference status, shall have
first opportunity for electrical capacity and energy Exchange rights as
necessary to implement this Plan. Western, in consultation with CAWCD
and Reclamation, may determine that any capacity and energy not
subscribed to by Arizona entities for Exchange may be offered for sale
in the order of priority stated in paragraph A of this section or may
be offered to non-Arizona entities for Exchange.
VII. Contract Provisions
A. Western, after consultation with Reclamation and CAWCD, shall
enter into all power sales and Exchange contracts necessary to carry
out the provisions of this Plan in selling and exchanging Navajo
Surplus. Navajo Surplus shall be marketed, and Exchange rights granted,
by Western on behalf of the Secretary of the Department of the
Interior, under contracts consistent with this Plan and the Conformed
Criteria.
B. Contracts for the sale or Exchange of Navajo Surplus shall
specify a delivery point on the Navajo or CAP
[[Page 54291]]
transmission systems as may be available. If the contractor cannot take
delivery of Navajo Surplus into its own system at these delivery
points, transmission service arrangements to other delivery points will
be the obligation of the contractor.
C. CAWCD may be a party to contracts for the sale or Exchange of
Navajo Surplus for the limited purposes of (i) concurring that the
contracts optimize the financial assistance available for the purposes
set forth in 43 U.S.C. 1543(f), as amended by the Arizona Water
Settlements Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108-451, and (ii) affirming any rights
and obligations of CAWCD under the contracts.
D. Western and the contractor shall agree upon written metering and
scheduling instructions prior to any deliveries under this Plan. The
metering and scheduling instructions shall provide the operating and
accounting procedures for such deliveries. Metering and scheduling
instructions are intended to implement terms of the contract, not to
modify or amend it, and therefore are subordinate to the contract.
Western and the contractor may modify these instructions, as necessary,
to reflect changing power system conditions. In the event the
contractor fails or refuses to execute the initial metering and
scheduling instructions or any revised instructions Western determines
to be necessary, Western shall develop and implement temporary
instructions until acceptable instructions have been developed and
executed by Western and the contractor.
VIII. Rate-Setting
A. Rates for Navajo Surplus developed pursuant to section IV.A
shall be established annually by Reclamation and Western, in
consultation with CAWCD, through a competitive process that optimizes
the availability and use of revenues for the Development Fund with
priority to entities in accordance with section VI.A. and that allows
for an appropriate saving for the contractor, taking into
consideration, among other factors, prices for comparable capacity and
energy products.
B. Rates for Navajo Surplus developed under section IV.B or
marketed under the first opportunity provision of the Original Plan
shall be established in the contracts for sale of such Navajo Surplus,
taking into consideration, among other factors, prices for comparable
capacity and energy products, and allowing for an appropriate saving
for the contractor.
C. Rates developed annually pursuant to this Plan shall not be
applicable to pre-existing contracts unless provided for in such
contracts.
D. Because of the Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984's, Pub. L. 98-381,
requirements for noncost-based rates, the Rates established pursuant to
this Plan are not suitable to the required review of Western's rates by
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. All Rates promulgated by the
Administrator of Western under this Plan shall be a final act of the
Secretary of Energy and shall be subject to review pursuant to the
judicial review provided by the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C.
553, et seq.).
IX. Revenue Collection and Distribution
Western shall deposit all revenue collected from the marketing of
Navajo Surplus under this Plan into the Development Fund, where it will
be used:
A. First, to pay all costs of operation and maintenance determined
to be associated with the sale and Exchange of Navajo Surplus,
including actual costs for services performed by Reclamation and
Western under this Plan including appropriate administrative expenses
of Reclamation and Western.
B. Second, for the purposes set forth in 43 U.S.C. 1543(f), as
amended by the Arizona Water Settlements Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108-451,
including crediting funds against the annual CAWCD repayment obligation
and funding specific Indian water-related activities.
X. Effective Date
This Plan will become effective 30 days after publication in the
Federal Register following adoption by the Secretary of the Department
of the Interior.
XI. Consultation
This Plan is deemed most acceptable in accordance with section
107(c) of the Hoover Power Plant Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-381, after
consultation with Western (Secretary of Energy), the Governor of
Arizona, and CAWCD.
Adopted:
Dated: September 18, 2007.
Robert W. Johnson,
Commissioner, Bureau of Reclamation.
[FR Doc. E7-18744 Filed 9-21-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-MN-P