Market-Based Rates for Wholesale Sales of Electric Energy, Capacity and Ancillary Services by Public Utilities; Order Requesting Supplemental Comments, 51744-51747 [E8-20546]
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51744
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 73, No. 173
Friday, September 5, 2008
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
18 CFR Part 35
[Docket No. RM04–7–005]
Market-Based Rates for Wholesale
Sales of Electric Energy, Capacity and
Ancillary Services by Public Utilities;
Order Requesting Supplemental
Comments
Issued August 29, 2008.
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Order Requesting Supplemental
Comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (Commission),
in response to requests for rehearing of
Order No. 697–A, intends to revise the
definition of the term ‘‘affiliate’’
adopted in Order No. 697–A and
codified in the Commission’s
regulations, and seeks supplemental
comments on this issue.
DATES: Comments are due October 20,
2008.
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michelle Barnaby (Technical
Information), Office of Energy Market
Regulation, Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502–
8407.
Paul Silverman (Legal Information),
Office of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426, (202) 502–8683.
Paige Bullard (Legal Information), Office
of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426, (202) 502–6462.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Before Commissioners: Joseph T. Kelliher,
Chairman; Suedeen G. Kelly, Marc Spitzer,
Philip D. Moeller, and Jon Wellinghoff.
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Order Requesting Supplemental
Comments
1. The Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (Commission) intends to
revise the definition of the term
‘‘affiliate’’ adopted in Order No. 697–A
and codified in § 35.36(a)(9) of the
Commission’s regulations,1 in response
to issues raised in requests for rehearing
of Order No. 697–A.2 To ensure a
complete record and full opportunity of
all parties to comment on a revised
definition of ‘‘affiliate’’ in this docket,
the Commission is seeking
supplemental comments on this issue.
I. Background
2. In Order No. 697–A, the
Commission clarified that it would
define the term ‘‘affiliate’’ for purposes
of Order No. 697 and the affiliate
restrictions adopted in § 35.39 of its
regulations as that term is used in the
regulations adopted in the Affiliate
Transactions Final Rule.3 The
Commission stated that it was taking
this action in light of its goal to have a
more consistent definition of affiliate for
purposes of both exempt wholesale
generators (EWGs) and non-EWGs to the
extent possible, as well as to strengthen
the Commission’s ability to ensure that
customers are protected.
3. The Commission explained that in
the Affiliate Transactions Final Rule, it
considered the use of the term affiliate
in the context of the Affiliate
Transactions Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, the Commission’s
Standards of Conduct for Transmission
Providers, and other precedent.4 In
particular, the Commission considered
its order in the 1995 Morgan Stanley
case, in which it adopted distinct
definitions of affiliate for EWGs and
non-EWGs. The Commission noted
1 18
CFR 35.36(a)(9).
Rates for Wholesale Sales of
Electric Energy, Capacity and Ancillary Services by
Public Utilities, Order No. 697, FERC Stats. & Regs.
¶ 31,252, clarified, 121 FERC ¶ 61,260 (2007), order
on reh’g, Order No. 697-A, 73 FR 25832 (May 7,
2008), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,268, clarified, 124
FERC ¶ 61,055 (2008).
3 Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on Affiliate
Transactions, Order No. 707, 73 FR 11013 (Feb. 29,
2008), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,264 (Feb. 21, 2008)
(Affiliate Transactions Final Rule), order on
rehearing, Order No. 707–A, 73 FR 43072 (July 24,
2008), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,272 (2008).
4 Order No. 697–A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,268
at P 182 (citing Morgan Stanley Capital Group, Inc.,
72 FERC ¶ 61,082, at 61,436–37 (1995) (Morgan
Stanley)).
2 Market-Based
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there that section 214 of the Federal
Power Act (FPA) required use of the
Public Utility Holding Company Act of
1935 (PUHCA 1935) definition of
affiliate to determine whether an
electric utility is an affiliate of an EWG
for purposes of evaluating EWG rates for
wholesale sales of electric energy. The
Commission thus stated in Morgan
Stanley that the PUHCA 1935 definition
of affiliate would apply to EWGs for
matters arising under Part II of the FPA.5
For all other public utilities, the
Commission adopted a definition that in
essence treats all companies under the
common control of another company, as
well as that controlling company, as
affiliates. The Commission also stated in
Morgan Stanley that a ten percent or
greater voting interest creates a
rebuttable presumption of control.6
After reviewing the precedent
established in Morgan Stanley, the
Commission in the Affiliate
Transactions Final Rule also reviewed
FPA section 214 as revised by EPAct
2005 as well as the affiliate definitions
contained in both PUHCA 1935 7 and
the Public Utility Holding Company Act
of 2005 (PUHCA 2005).8
5 Morgan
Stanley, 72 FERC ¶ 61,082 at 61,436–37.
The Commission did this by adopting the
definition of an affiliate found in its Standards of
Conduct for Interstate Pipelines.
7 15 U.S.C. 79a et seq. PUHCA 1935 defines an
affiliate as:
(a) Any person that directly or indirectly owns,
controls or holds with the power to vote, 5 per
centum or more of the outstanding voting securities
of such specified company;
(b) Any company 5 per centum or more of whose
outstanding voting securities are owned, controlled,
or held with the power to vote, directly or
indirectly, by such specified company;
(c) Any individual who is an officer or director
of such specified company, or of any company
which is an affiliate thereof under clause (a) of this
paragraph; and
(d) Any person or class of persons that the
[Securities and Exchange Commission] determines,
after appropriate notice and opportunity for
hearing, to stand in such relation to such specified
company that there is liable to be such an absence
of arm’s-length bargaining in transactions between
them as to make it necessary or appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of investors or
consumers that such person be subject to the
obligation, duties, and liabilities imposed in this
title upon affiliates of a company.
8 EPAct 2005 at 1261 et seq. Prior to its
amendment by the Energy Policy Act of 2005,
section 214 of the FPA, 16 U.S.C. 824m, read as
follows:
No rate or charge received by an exempt
wholesale generator for the sale of electric energy
shall be lawful under section 824d of this title if,
after notice and opportunity for hearing, the
Commission finds that such rate or charge results
6 Id.
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4. In Order No. 697–A, the
Commission explained that after taking
into account these differing definitions,
and recognizing the need to provide
greater clarity and consistency in its
rules, the Commission found in the
Affiliate Transactions Final Rule that it
was important to try to adopt a more
consistent definition in its various rules
and also one that is sufficiently broad to
allow the Commission to protect
customers adequately.9 The
Commission further explained that on
this basis, the definition of affiliate as
adopted in the Affiliate Transactions
Final Rule explicitly incorporated the
PUHCA 1935 definition of an affiliate
for EWGs, which uses a five percent
voting interest threshold, rather than
incorporate it by reference, as
previously had been done. The
definition in the Affiliate Transactions
Final Rule also adopted a parallel
definition of affiliate for non-EWGs, but
with adjustments to reflect the ten
percent voting interest threshold for
non-EWGs that was utilized up to that
time and to eliminate certain language
not applicable or necessary in the
context of the FPA. The Commission in
Order No. 697–A then adopted in this
rule the same definition of ‘‘affiliate’’
that it had adopted in the Affiliate
Transactions Final Rule.
II. Requests for Rehearing
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5. The Electric Power Supply
Association (EPSA), the Mirant Entities
(Mirant) 10 and Reliant Energy, Inc.
(Reliant) (together, petitioners)
submitted requests for rehearing of the
Commission’s determination in Order
No. 697–A to codify in its market-based
rate regulations a definition of affiliate
that distinguishes between EWGs and
from the receipt of any undue preference or
advantage from an electric utility which is an
associate company or an affiliate of the exempt
wholesale generator. For purposes of this section,
the terms ‘‘associate company’’ and ‘‘affiliate’’ shall
have the same meaning as provided in section 2(a)
of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935.
EPAct 2005 amended section 214 of the FPA by
substituting the reference to the PUHCA 1935
definition of affiliate with a reference to the PUHCA
2005 definition. PUHCA 2005 defines an affiliate of
a specified company as any company in which the
specified company has a five percent or greater
voting interest. Thus, as revised by EPAct 2005, the
only EWG affiliate sales that are subject to FPA
section 214 are sales by an EWG to a company in
which it owns a five percent or greater voting
interest.
9 Order No. 697–A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,268
at P 182.
10 The Mirant Entities are Mirant California, LLC,
Mirant Delta, LLC, Mirant Potrero, LLC, Mirant
Canal, LLC, Mirant Kendal, LLC, Mirant Bowline,
LLC, Mirant Lovett, LLC, Mirant Chalk Point, LLC,
Mirant Mid-Atlantic, LLC, Mirant Potomac River,
LLC, and Mirant Energy Trading, LLC.
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non-EWGs.11 They argue that the
Commission erred in adopting a
separate definition for EWGs.12
6. EPSA states that a five percent
ownership threshold for EWGs imposes
substantially greater burdens on EWGs
and achieves no useful regulatory
purpose. EPSA contends that the
Commission has provided no reasoned
explanation for using a definition
derived from PUHCA 1935 that imposes
greater burdens, including change in
status reporting obligations, on EWGs
than those imposed on other marketbased rate sellers. EPSA maintains that
if the Commission is going to
promulgate a definition of affiliate for
market-based rate purposes, it should
apply to EWGs the definition adopted in
Order No. 697–A for non-EWGs, which
uses a ten percent ownership
threshold.13 EPSA also argues that the
Commission’s promulgation of a
separate definition of affiliate for EWGs
was a violation of the notice
requirements of the Administrative
Procedure Act because the Commission
did not signal any intent to do so either
in the market-based rate notice of
proposed rulemaking or in Order No.
697 and did not afford interested parties
an opportunity to comment on the
regulatory text.14
7. Reliant similarly argues that
placing disparate burdens on companies
simply because they do or do not hold
EWG status is arbitrary and capricious
and not in the public interest.
According to Reliant, the Commission
has provided no reasonable basis to
maintain two different definitions for
determining affiliates of EWGs and nonEWGs. Reliant asserts that the only
reason that the Commission previously
had adopted a narrower affiliate
definition under the market-based rate
program for EWG utilities was its prior
belief that FPA section 214 did not
provide sufficient discretion to the
Commission to use a different
definition.15 However, Reliant states
that the Commission effectively
recognized in Order No. 697–A that it is
not required by statute to use the FPA
section 214 definition of affiliate for
purposes beyond the narrow scope of
section 214 and that, for purposes
outside of section 214, it has discretion
to adopt an affiliate definition for EWGs
11 Other issues have been raised on rehearing of
Order No. 697–A and will be addressed in a
subsequent order.
12 EPSA Rehearing Request at 5 (citing Order No.
697–A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,268 at P 182–83);
Mirant Rehearing Request at 6–7; Reliant Rehearing
Request at 2–3.
13 EPSA Rehearing Request at 19.
14 Id. at 5–6, 13–15 (citing 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)).
15 Reliant Rehearing Request at 13.
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that is different from that contained in
section 214.16 Reliant argues that the
Commission must not be arbitrary and
capricious in the exercise of that
discretion.
8. Reliant states that it supports the
Commission’s goal of using consistent
affiliate definitions for all FPA public
utilities, but it asserts that the use of
different standards for EWGs and nonEWGs for FPA purposes (other than the
narrow situations that might arise under
section 214 of the FPA) does not achieve
that consistency.17 Reliant submits that
the Commission has consistently
recognized in administering its marketbased rate program that the relevant
inquiry with respect to affiliate relations
pertains to control, i.e., whether a
market-based rate seller is controlled by
another entity or whether a marketbased rate seller and other sellers are
under common control of the same
entity. It notes that the Commission has
consistently concluded that the starting
point for assessing control is based on
a standard that begins with the
ownership of ten percent or more of a
company’s voting securities.18
According to Reliant, a lower five
percent standard for EWGs casts too
broad a net, with the result being that
EWG public utilities and their owners
may be required to impute affiliation at
thresholds significantly below the ten
percent standard applicable to non-EWG
utilities. Reliant submits that the
Commission has not explained how this
disparate treatment of EWGs is
necessary or appropriate for assessing
market power or other purposes under
its market-based rate program.
9. Reliant therefore argues that the
Commission should grant rehearing and
eliminate the PUHCA 1935 definition
for EWG affiliates and use the same
definition of affiliate for EWGs that it
has adopted in Order No. 697–A for
non-EWG utilities, which Reliant
describes as based on a control
standard.19
10. Mirant raises similar arguments. It
maintains that the Commission
provided no basis for adopting a five
percent voting interest affiliate test for
EWGs when the test for non-EWGs is
ten percent. Mirant argues that the five
percent voting interest standard that has
its origin in FPA section 214 applies
only to evaluation of EWG rates and has
no relevance to an analysis of control
over generation or the events that
should trigger a change in status filing.
Mirant contends that this rulemaking
16 Id.
at 9.
at 11.
18 Id. at 15.
19 Id. at 17.
17 Id.
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 173 / Friday, September 5, 2008 / Proposed Rules
concerns both the measure of a seller’s
ability to exercise market power and the
facts that warrant reporting of ‘‘changes
in status’’ in a seller’s market-based rate
docket.20 It states that the requirement
that market-based rate sellers report
changes in status is based not on the
Commission’s concern for the rates and
charges of the EWG, but on the
Commission’s need to be informed of
the potential exercise of market power
through the ownership or control of
generation or transmission. Mirant
therefore requests that the Commission
analyze the issue in light of the
purposes behind change in status filings
and find that there is no basis for
distinguishing between EWGs and nonEWGs in this context.21
III. Discussion
11. We have carefully considered the
legal and policy arguments petitioners
have raised on rehearing in opposition
to a separate definition of affiliate for
EWGs. Mirant and Reliant argue that,
although section 214 of the FPA
requires the Commission to apply a five
percent standard to certain transactions
involving EWGs, the Commission is not
required to use a five percent standard
in a definition of affiliate developed for
the general task of assessing market
concentration and market power.22
Petitioners argue instead that the
Commission should apply the same
standard in its market-based rate
regulations to EWGs and non-EWGs for
purposes of determining affiliation.
Having again analyzed FPA section 214,
and irrespective of any Commission
precedent to the contrary, we agree that
a reasonable interpretation of FPA
section 214 is that it does not require
the Commission to use a five percent
threshold affiliate test for EWGs for all
purposes under Part II of the FPA, and
in particular for purposes of analyzing
market concentration and market
power.23 We also find the arguments in
support of a single definition of affiliate,
applicable to both EWGs and nonEWGs, to be persuasive. Upon
reconsideration, therefore, we believe
that using the same definition for EWGs
as for non-EWGs is appropriate and that
the definition the Commission adopted
in Order No. 697–A for non-EWG
20 Mirant
Rehearing Request at 9.
21 Id.
22 Id.
at 8–9; Reliant Rehearing Request at 9, 11.
214 uses a five percent affiliate
threshold with respect to determining whether the
jurisdictional rates of an EWG are the result of a
preference or advantage of an affiliate of the EWG.
While an analysis of market power relates to an
EWG’s rates, it does not involve the specific issue
of whether an EWG has received an undue
preference or advantage with respect to a particular
wholesale sale.
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23 Section
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utilities would not affect the substance
of the Commission’s analysis of market
power issues. This definition is based
on the structure of the PUHCA 1935
definition, but modified in several ways,
including use of a ten percent threshold
instead of five percent.
12. Accordingly, the Commission
intends to revise the definition of
affiliate in § 35.36(a)(9) of its regulations
to delete the separate definition for
EWGs and to revise the non-EWG part
of the definition to delete the phrase
‘‘other than an exempt wholesale
generator.’’ Specifically, the revised
definition of affiliate in § 35.36(a)(9)
would provide that an affiliate of a
specified company means: (a) Any
person that directly or indirectly owns,
controls, or holds with power to vote, 10
percent or more of the outstanding
voting securities of the specified
company; (b) Any company 10 percent
or more of whose outstanding voting
securities are owned, controlled, or held
with power to vote, directly or
indirectly, by the specified company; (c)
Any person or class of persons that the
Commission determines, after
appropriate notice and opportunity for
hearing, to stand in such relation to the
specified company that there is liable to
be an absence of arm’s-length bargaining
in transactions between them as to make
it necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of investors
or consumers that the person be treated
as an affiliate; and (d) Any person that
is under common control with the
specified company. For purposes of
paragraph (a)(9)(i), owning, controlling
or holding with power to vote, less than
10 percent of the outstanding voting
securities of a specified company
creates a rebuttable presumption of lack
of control.
13. We believe this revision will
result in fair and consistent treatment of
jurisdictional sellers. Before taking final
action in response to the rehearing
comments, however, we seek
supplemental comments on the
proposed revised definition of affiliate
in § 35.36(a)(9) as discussed above.
IV. Information Collection Statement
14. The Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) regulations require that
OMB approve certain reporting and
recordkeeping (information collections)
imposed by an agency.24 Order No.
697’s revisions to the information
collection requirements for marketbased rate sellers were approved under
OMB Control Nos. 1902–0234. Order
No. 697–A clarified aspects of the
existing information collection
24 5
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CFR 1320.12.
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requirements for the market-based rate
program, but did not add to those
requirements. While this order requests
comments on the Commission’s
proposal to revise the definition of
affiliate in § 35.36(a)(9) of the
Commission’s regulations, it does not
add to the existing information
collection requirements for the marketbased rate program. Accordingly, a copy
of this order will be sent to OMB for
informational purposes only.
V. Regulatory Flexibility Act
15. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of
1980 25 generally requires either a
description and analysis of a rule that
will have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities
or a certification that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.26
In this order, the Commission seeks
comment on a revised definition of
affiliate in § 35.36(a)(9) of its
regulations, which would apply to
EWGs the definition based on a ten
percent voting interest adopted in Order
No. 697–A for non-EWGs, rather than
using the definition adopted in Order
No. 697–A for EWGs, which is based on
a five percent voting interest. Public
utilities seeking and currently
possessing market-based rate authority
are currently required to comply with
the Commission’s regulations with
regard to the definition of affiliate at
§ 36.36(a)(9) and the revised definition
would decrease the number of entities
considered to be affiliates of EWG
public utilities. The Commission
therefore concludes that a revised
definition of affiliate in § 35.36(a)(9)
should not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
VI. Document Availability
16. In addition to publishing the full
text of this document in the Federal
Register, the Commission provides all
interested persons an opportunity to
view and/or print the contents of this
document via the Internet through
FERC’s Home Page (https://www.ferc.gov)
and in FERC’s Public Reference Room
25 5
U.S.C. 601–612.
U.S.C. 601(3), citing to section 3 of the Small
Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 632. Section 3 of the Small
Business Act defines a ‘‘small business concern’’ as
a business that is independently owned and
operated and that is not dominant in its field of
operation. The Small Business Size Standards
component of the North American Industry
Classification System defines a small electric utility
as one that, including its affiliates, is primarily
engaged in the generation, transmission, and/or
distribution of electric energy for sale and whose
total electric output for the preceding fiscal year did
not exceed four million MWh. 13 CFR 121.201.
26 5
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 173 / Friday, September 5, 2008 / Proposed Rules
during normal business hours (8:30 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Eastern time) at 888 First
Street, NE., Room 2A, Washington DC
20426.
17. From FERC’s Home Page on the
Internet, this information is available on
eLibrary. The full text of this document
is available on eLibrary in PDF and
Microsoft Word format for viewing,
printing, and/or downloading. To access
this document in eLibrary, type the
docket number excluding the last three
digits of this document in the docket
number field.
18. User assistance is available for
eLibrary and the FERC’s Web site during
normal business hours from FERC
Online Support at 202–502–6652 (toll
free at 1–866–208–3676) or e-mail at
ferconlinesupport@ferc.gov, or the
Public Reference Room at (202) 502–
8371, TTY (202) 502–8659. E-mail the
Public Reference Room at
public.referenceroom@ferc.gov.
List of Subjects in 18 CFR Part 35
Electric power rates, Electric utilities,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
By the Commission.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E8–20546 Filed 9–4–08; 8:45 am]
Background
The notice of proposed rulemaking by
cross-reference to temporary regulations
(REG–161695–04) that is the subject of
this correction is under section 1301 of
the Internal Revenue Code.
Need for Correction
As published, REG–161695–04
contains an error that may prove to be
misleading and is in need of
clarification.
Correction of Publication
Accordingly, the publication of the
proposed rulemaking by cross-reference
to temporary regulations (REG–161695–
04), which was the subject of FR Doc.
E8–16664, is corrected as follows:
On page 42538, column 2, in the
preamble, under the caption ‘‘For
Further Information Contact’’, line 2, the
language ‘‘Amy Pfalzgraf, (202) 622–
4950 (not a‘‘ is corrected to read ‘‘Amy
Pfalzgraf (202) 622–4960 (not a‘‘.
LaNita Van Dyke,
Chief, Publications and Regulations Branch,
Legal Processing Division, Associate Chief
Counsel, (Procedure and Administration).
[FR Doc. E8–20552 Filed 9–4–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
50 CFR Part 226
Internal Revenue Service
[Docket No. 0808061060–81062–01]
26 CFR Part 1
RIN 0648–AW77
[REG–161695–04]
Endangered and Threatened Species;
Proposed Critical Habitat for the Gulf
of Maine Distinct Population Segment
of Atlantic Salmon
RIN 1545–BE23
Farmer and Fisherman Income
Averaging; Correction
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Correction to notice of proposed
rulemaking by cross-reference to
temporary regulations.
AGENCY:
This document corrects a
notice of proposed rulemaking by crossreference to temporary regulations
(REG–161695–04) that was published in
the Federal Register on Tuesday, July
22, 2008 (73 FR 42538) relating to the
averaging of farm and fishing income in
computing income tax liability.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amy Pfalzgraf, (202) 622–4960 (not a
toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
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National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: We, the National Marine
Fisheries Service (NMFS), propose to
designate critical habitat for the Gulf of
Maine Distinct Population Segment
(GOM DPS) of Atlantic salmon (Salmo
salar). We previously determined that
naturally spawned and several hatchery
populations of Atlantic salmon which
constituted the GOM DPS warrant
listing as endangered under the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (ESA). We are required to
designate critical habitat for the GOM
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51747
DPS as a result of this listing. We
propose to designate as critical habitat
45 specific areas occupied by Atlantic
salmon at the time of listing that
comprise approximately 203,781 km of
perennial river, stream, and estuary
habitat and 868 square km of lake
habitat within the range of the GOM
DPS and on which are found those
physical and biological features
essential to the conservation of the
species. The entire occupied range of
the GOM DPS in which critical habitat
is being proposed is within the State of
Maine. We propose to exclude
approximately 1,463 km of river, stream,
and estuary habitat and 115 square km
of lake habitat from critical habitat
pursuant to section 4(b)(2) of the ESA.
DATES: Comments on this proposal must
be received by November 4, 2008. Two
public hearings on the proposed rule
will be held in conjunction with the
Atlantic salmon proposed listing rule
(See the notice, Proposed Endangered
Status for the Gulf of Maine Distinct
Population Segment of Atlantic Salmon,
published in the Proposed Rules section
of the September 3, 2008, issue of the
Federal Register) and we will alert the
public of the locations and dates of
those hearings in a subsequent Federal
Register notice.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN 0648–AW77, by any of
the following methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Assistant Regional
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The proposed rule, list of references
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E:\FR\FM\05SEP1.SGM
05SEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 173 (Friday, September 5, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 51744-51747]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-20546]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 173 / Friday, September 5, 2008 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 51744]]
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
18 CFR Part 35
[Docket No. RM04-7-005]
Market-Based Rates for Wholesale Sales of Electric Energy,
Capacity and Ancillary Services by Public Utilities; Order Requesting
Supplemental Comments
Issued August 29, 2008.
AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Order Requesting Supplemental Comments.
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SUMMARY: The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Commission), in
response to requests for rehearing of Order No. 697-A, intends to
revise the definition of the term ``affiliate'' adopted in Order No.
697-A and codified in the Commission's regulations, and seeks
supplemental comments on this issue.
DATES: Comments are due October 20, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michelle Barnaby (Technical Information), Office of Energy Market
Regulation, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street,
NE., Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8407.
Paul Silverman (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel,
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8683.
Paige Bullard (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel,
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-6462.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Before Commissioners: Joseph T. Kelliher, Chairman; Suedeen G.
Kelly, Marc Spitzer, Philip D. Moeller, and Jon Wellinghoff.
Order Requesting Supplemental Comments
1. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Commission) intends to
revise the definition of the term ``affiliate'' adopted in Order No.
697-A and codified in Sec. 35.36(a)(9) of the Commission's
regulations,\1\ in response to issues raised in requests for rehearing
of Order No. 697-A.\2\ To ensure a complete record and full opportunity
of all parties to comment on a revised definition of ``affiliate'' in
this docket, the Commission is seeking supplemental comments on this
issue.
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\1\ 18 CFR 35.36(a)(9).
\2\ Market-Based Rates for Wholesale Sales of Electric Energy,
Capacity and Ancillary Services by Public Utilities, Order No. 697,
FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,252, clarified, 121 FERC ] 61,260 (2007),
order on reh'g, Order No. 697-A, 73 FR 25832 (May 7, 2008), FERC
Stats. & Regs. ] 31,268, clarified, 124 FERC ] 61,055 (2008).
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I. Background
2. In Order No. 697-A, the Commission clarified that it would
define the term ``affiliate'' for purposes of Order No. 697 and the
affiliate restrictions adopted in Sec. 35.39 of its regulations as
that term is used in the regulations adopted in the Affiliate
Transactions Final Rule.\3\ The Commission stated that it was taking
this action in light of its goal to have a more consistent definition
of affiliate for purposes of both exempt wholesale generators (EWGs)
and non-EWGs to the extent possible, as well as to strengthen the
Commission's ability to ensure that customers are protected.
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\3\ Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on Affiliate Transactions,
Order No. 707, 73 FR 11013 (Feb. 29, 2008), FERC Stats. & Regs. ]
31,264 (Feb. 21, 2008) (Affiliate Transactions Final Rule), order on
rehearing, Order No. 707-A, 73 FR 43072 (July 24, 2008), FERC Stats.
& Regs. ] 31,272 (2008).
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3. The Commission explained that in the Affiliate Transactions
Final Rule, it considered the use of the term affiliate in the context
of the Affiliate Transactions Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, the
Commission's Standards of Conduct for Transmission Providers, and other
precedent.\4\ In particular, the Commission considered its order in the
1995 Morgan Stanley case, in which it adopted distinct definitions of
affiliate for EWGs and non-EWGs. The Commission noted there that
section 214 of the Federal Power Act (FPA) required use of the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 (PUHCA 1935) definition of
affiliate to determine whether an electric utility is an affiliate of
an EWG for purposes of evaluating EWG rates for wholesale sales of
electric energy. The Commission thus stated in Morgan Stanley that the
PUHCA 1935 definition of affiliate would apply to EWGs for matters
arising under Part II of the FPA.\5\ For all other public utilities,
the Commission adopted a definition that in essence treats all
companies under the common control of another company, as well as that
controlling company, as affiliates. The Commission also stated in
Morgan Stanley that a ten percent or greater voting interest creates a
rebuttable presumption of control.\6\ After reviewing the precedent
established in Morgan Stanley, the Commission in the Affiliate
Transactions Final Rule also reviewed FPA section 214 as revised by
EPAct 2005 as well as the affiliate definitions contained in both PUHCA
1935 \7\ and the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 2005 (PUHCA
2005).\8\
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\4\ Order No. 697-A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,268 at P 182
(citing Morgan Stanley Capital Group, Inc., 72 FERC ] 61,082, at
61,436-37 (1995) (Morgan Stanley)).
\5\ Morgan Stanley, 72 FERC ] 61,082 at 61,436-37.
\6\ Id. The Commission did this by adopting the definition of an
affiliate found in its Standards of Conduct for Interstate
Pipelines.
\7\ 15 U.S.C. 79a et seq. PUHCA 1935 defines an affiliate as:
(a) Any person that directly or indirectly owns, controls or
holds with the power to vote, 5 per centum or more of the
outstanding voting securities of such specified company;
(b) Any company 5 per centum or more of whose outstanding voting
securities are owned, controlled, or held with the power to vote,
directly or indirectly, by such specified company;
(c) Any individual who is an officer or director of such
specified company, or of any company which is an affiliate thereof
under clause (a) of this paragraph; and
(d) Any person or class of persons that the [Securities and
Exchange Commission] determines, after appropriate notice and
opportunity for hearing, to stand in such relation to such specified
company that there is liable to be such an absence of arm's-length
bargaining in transactions between them as to make it necessary or
appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of
investors or consumers that such person be subject to the
obligation, duties, and liabilities imposed in this title upon
affiliates of a company.
\8\ EPAct 2005 at 1261 et seq. Prior to its amendment by the
Energy Policy Act of 2005, section 214 of the FPA, 16 U.S.C. 824m,
read as follows:
No rate or charge received by an exempt wholesale generator for
the sale of electric energy shall be lawful under section 824d of
this title if, after notice and opportunity for hearing, the
Commission finds that such rate or charge results from the receipt
of any undue preference or advantage from an electric utility which
is an associate company or an affiliate of the exempt wholesale
generator. For purposes of this section, the terms ``associate
company'' and ``affiliate'' shall have the same meaning as provided
in section 2(a) of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935.
EPAct 2005 amended section 214 of the FPA by substituting the
reference to the PUHCA 1935 definition of affiliate with a reference
to the PUHCA 2005 definition. PUHCA 2005 defines an affiliate of a
specified company as any company in which the specified company has
a five percent or greater voting interest. Thus, as revised by EPAct
2005, the only EWG affiliate sales that are subject to FPA section
214 are sales by an EWG to a company in which it owns a five percent
or greater voting interest.
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[[Page 51745]]
4. In Order No. 697-A, the Commission explained that after taking
into account these differing definitions, and recognizing the need to
provide greater clarity and consistency in its rules, the Commission
found in the Affiliate Transactions Final Rule that it was important to
try to adopt a more consistent definition in its various rules and also
one that is sufficiently broad to allow the Commission to protect
customers adequately.\9\ The Commission further explained that on this
basis, the definition of affiliate as adopted in the Affiliate
Transactions Final Rule explicitly incorporated the PUHCA 1935
definition of an affiliate for EWGs, which uses a five percent voting
interest threshold, rather than incorporate it by reference, as
previously had been done. The definition in the Affiliate Transactions
Final Rule also adopted a parallel definition of affiliate for non-
EWGs, but with adjustments to reflect the ten percent voting interest
threshold for non-EWGs that was utilized up to that time and to
eliminate certain language not applicable or necessary in the context
of the FPA. The Commission in Order No. 697-A then adopted in this rule
the same definition of ``affiliate'' that it had adopted in the
Affiliate Transactions Final Rule.
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\9\ Order No. 697-A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,268 at P 182.
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II. Requests for Rehearing
5. The Electric Power Supply Association (EPSA), the Mirant
Entities (Mirant) \10\ and Reliant Energy, Inc. (Reliant) (together,
petitioners) submitted requests for rehearing of the Commission's
determination in Order No. 697-A to codify in its market-based rate
regulations a definition of affiliate that distinguishes between EWGs
and non-EWGs.\11\ They argue that the Commission erred in adopting a
separate definition for EWGs.\12\
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\10\ The Mirant Entities are Mirant California, LLC, Mirant
Delta, LLC, Mirant Potrero, LLC, Mirant Canal, LLC, Mirant Kendal,
LLC, Mirant Bowline, LLC, Mirant Lovett, LLC, Mirant Chalk Point,
LLC, Mirant Mid-Atlantic, LLC, Mirant Potomac River, LLC, and Mirant
Energy Trading, LLC.
\11\ Other issues have been raised on rehearing of Order No.
697-A and will be addressed in a subsequent order.
\12\ EPSA Rehearing Request at 5 (citing Order No. 697-A, FERC
Stats. & Regs. ] 31,268 at P 182-83); Mirant Rehearing Request at 6-
7; Reliant Rehearing Request at 2-3.
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6. EPSA states that a five percent ownership threshold for EWGs
imposes substantially greater burdens on EWGs and achieves no useful
regulatory purpose. EPSA contends that the Commission has provided no
reasoned explanation for using a definition derived from PUHCA 1935
that imposes greater burdens, including change in status reporting
obligations, on EWGs than those imposed on other market-based rate
sellers. EPSA maintains that if the Commission is going to promulgate a
definition of affiliate for market-based rate purposes, it should apply
to EWGs the definition adopted in Order No. 697-A for non-EWGs, which
uses a ten percent ownership threshold.\13\ EPSA also argues that the
Commission's promulgation of a separate definition of affiliate for
EWGs was a violation of the notice requirements of the Administrative
Procedure Act because the Commission did not signal any intent to do so
either in the market-based rate notice of proposed rulemaking or in
Order No. 697 and did not afford interested parties an opportunity to
comment on the regulatory text.\14\
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\13\ EPSA Rehearing Request at 19.
\14\ Id. at 5-6, 13-15 (citing 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)).
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7. Reliant similarly argues that placing disparate burdens on
companies simply because they do or do not hold EWG status is arbitrary
and capricious and not in the public interest. According to Reliant,
the Commission has provided no reasonable basis to maintain two
different definitions for determining affiliates of EWGs and non-EWGs.
Reliant asserts that the only reason that the Commission previously had
adopted a narrower affiliate definition under the market-based rate
program for EWG utilities was its prior belief that FPA section 214 did
not provide sufficient discretion to the Commission to use a different
definition.\15\ However, Reliant states that the Commission effectively
recognized in Order No. 697-A that it is not required by statute to use
the FPA section 214 definition of affiliate for purposes beyond the
narrow scope of section 214 and that, for purposes outside of section
214, it has discretion to adopt an affiliate definition for EWGs that
is different from that contained in section 214.\16\ Reliant argues
that the Commission must not be arbitrary and capricious in the
exercise of that discretion.
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\15\ Reliant Rehearing Request at 13.
\16\ Id. at 9.
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8. Reliant states that it supports the Commission's goal of using
consistent affiliate definitions for all FPA public utilities, but it
asserts that the use of different standards for EWGs and non-EWGs for
FPA purposes (other than the narrow situations that might arise under
section 214 of the FPA) does not achieve that consistency.\17\ Reliant
submits that the Commission has consistently recognized in
administering its market-based rate program that the relevant inquiry
with respect to affiliate relations pertains to control, i.e., whether
a market-based rate seller is controlled by another entity or whether a
market-based rate seller and other sellers are under common control of
the same entity. It notes that the Commission has consistently
concluded that the starting point for assessing control is based on a
standard that begins with the ownership of ten percent or more of a
company's voting securities.\18\ According to Reliant, a lower five
percent standard for EWGs casts too broad a net, with the result being
that EWG public utilities and their owners may be required to impute
affiliation at thresholds significantly below the ten percent standard
applicable to non-EWG utilities. Reliant submits that the Commission
has not explained how this disparate treatment of EWGs is necessary or
appropriate for assessing market power or other purposes under its
market-based rate program.
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\17\ Id. at 11.
\18\ Id. at 15.
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9. Reliant therefore argues that the Commission should grant
rehearing and eliminate the PUHCA 1935 definition for EWG affiliates
and use the same definition of affiliate for EWGs that it has adopted
in Order No. 697-A for non-EWG utilities, which Reliant describes as
based on a control standard.\19\
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\19\ Id. at 17.
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10. Mirant raises similar arguments. It maintains that the
Commission provided no basis for adopting a five percent voting
interest affiliate test for EWGs when the test for non-EWGs is ten
percent. Mirant argues that the five percent voting interest standard
that has its origin in FPA section 214 applies only to evaluation of
EWG rates and has no relevance to an analysis of control over
generation or the events that should trigger a change in status filing.
Mirant contends that this rulemaking
[[Page 51746]]
concerns both the measure of a seller's ability to exercise market
power and the facts that warrant reporting of ``changes in status'' in
a seller's market-based rate docket.\20\ It states that the requirement
that market-based rate sellers report changes in status is based not on
the Commission's concern for the rates and charges of the EWG, but on
the Commission's need to be informed of the potential exercise of
market power through the ownership or control of generation or
transmission. Mirant therefore requests that the Commission analyze the
issue in light of the purposes behind change in status filings and find
that there is no basis for distinguishing between EWGs and non-EWGs in
this context.\21\
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\20\ Mirant Rehearing Request at 9.
\21\ Id.
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III. Discussion
11. We have carefully considered the legal and policy arguments
petitioners have raised on rehearing in opposition to a separate
definition of affiliate for EWGs. Mirant and Reliant argue that,
although section 214 of the FPA requires the Commission to apply a five
percent standard to certain transactions involving EWGs, the Commission
is not required to use a five percent standard in a definition of
affiliate developed for the general task of assessing market
concentration and market power.\22\ Petitioners argue instead that the
Commission should apply the same standard in its market-based rate
regulations to EWGs and non-EWGs for purposes of determining
affiliation. Having again analyzed FPA section 214, and irrespective of
any Commission precedent to the contrary, we agree that a reasonable
interpretation of FPA section 214 is that it does not require the
Commission to use a five percent threshold affiliate test for EWGs for
all purposes under Part II of the FPA, and in particular for purposes
of analyzing market concentration and market power.\23\ We also find
the arguments in support of a single definition of affiliate,
applicable to both EWGs and non-EWGs, to be persuasive. Upon
reconsideration, therefore, we believe that using the same definition
for EWGs as for non-EWGs is appropriate and that the definition the
Commission adopted in Order No. 697-A for non-EWG utilities would not
affect the substance of the Commission's analysis of market power
issues. This definition is based on the structure of the PUHCA 1935
definition, but modified in several ways, including use of a ten
percent threshold instead of five percent.
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\22\ Id. at 8-9; Reliant Rehearing Request at 9, 11.
\23\ Section 214 uses a five percent affiliate threshold with
respect to determining whether the jurisdictional rates of an EWG
are the result of a preference or advantage of an affiliate of the
EWG. While an analysis of market power relates to an EWG's rates, it
does not involve the specific issue of whether an EWG has received
an undue preference or advantage with respect to a particular
wholesale sale.
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12. Accordingly, the Commission intends to revise the definition of
affiliate in Sec. 35.36(a)(9) of its regulations to delete the
separate definition for EWGs and to revise the non-EWG part of the
definition to delete the phrase ``other than an exempt wholesale
generator.'' Specifically, the revised definition of affiliate in Sec.
35.36(a)(9) would provide that an affiliate of a specified company
means: (a) Any person that directly or indirectly owns, controls, or
holds with power to vote, 10 percent or more of the outstanding voting
securities of the specified company; (b) Any company 10 percent or more
of whose outstanding voting securities are owned, controlled, or held
with power to vote, directly or indirectly, by the specified company;
(c) Any person or class of persons that the Commission determines,
after appropriate notice and opportunity for hearing, to stand in such
relation to the specified company that there is liable to be an absence
of arm's-length bargaining in transactions between them as to make it
necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection
of investors or consumers that the person be treated as an affiliate;
and (d) Any person that is under common control with the specified
company. For purposes of paragraph (a)(9)(i), owning, controlling or
holding with power to vote, less than 10 percent of the outstanding
voting securities of a specified company creates a rebuttable
presumption of lack of control.
13. We believe this revision will result in fair and consistent
treatment of jurisdictional sellers. Before taking final action in
response to the rehearing comments, however, we seek supplemental
comments on the proposed revised definition of affiliate in Sec.
35.36(a)(9) as discussed above.
IV. Information Collection Statement
14. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) regulations require
that OMB approve certain reporting and recordkeeping (information
collections) imposed by an agency.\24\ Order No. 697's revisions to the
information collection requirements for market-based rate sellers were
approved under OMB Control Nos. 1902-0234. Order No. 697-A clarified
aspects of the existing information collection requirements for the
market-based rate program, but did not add to those requirements. While
this order requests comments on the Commission's proposal to revise the
definition of affiliate in Sec. 35.36(a)(9) of the Commission's
regulations, it does not add to the existing information collection
requirements for the market-based rate program. Accordingly, a copy of
this order will be sent to OMB for informational purposes only.
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\24\ 5 CFR 1320.12.
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V. Regulatory Flexibility Act
15. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 \25\ generally requires
either a description and analysis of a rule that will have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
or a certification that the rule will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities.\26\ In this order,
the Commission seeks comment on a revised definition of affiliate in
Sec. 35.36(a)(9) of its regulations, which would apply to EWGs the
definition based on a ten percent voting interest adopted in Order No.
697-A for non-EWGs, rather than using the definition adopted in Order
No. 697-A for EWGs, which is based on a five percent voting interest.
Public utilities seeking and currently possessing market-based rate
authority are currently required to comply with the Commission's
regulations with regard to the definition of affiliate at Sec.
36.36(a)(9) and the revised definition would decrease the number of
entities considered to be affiliates of EWG public utilities. The
Commission therefore concludes that a revised definition of affiliate
in Sec. 35.36(a)(9) should not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
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\25\ 5 U.S.C. 601-612.
\26\ 5 U.S.C. 601(3), citing to section 3 of the Small Business
Act, 15 U.S.C. 632. Section 3 of the Small Business Act defines a
``small business concern'' as a business that is independently owned
and operated and that is not dominant in its field of operation. The
Small Business Size Standards component of the North American
Industry Classification System defines a small electric utility as
one that, including its affiliates, is primarily engaged in the
generation, transmission, and/or distribution of electric energy for
sale and whose total electric output for the preceding fiscal year
did not exceed four million MWh. 13 CFR 121.201.
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VI. Document Availability
16. In addition to publishing the full text of this document in the
Federal Register, the Commission provides all interested persons an
opportunity to view and/or print the contents of this document via the
Internet through FERC's Home Page (https://www.ferc.gov) and in FERC's
Public Reference Room
[[Page 51747]]
during normal business hours (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern time) at 888
First Street, NE., Room 2A, Washington DC 20426.
17. From FERC's Home Page on the Internet, this information is
available on eLibrary. The full text of this document is available on
eLibrary in PDF and Microsoft Word format for viewing, printing, and/or
downloading. To access this document in eLibrary, type the docket
number excluding the last three digits of this document in the docket
number field.
18. User assistance is available for eLibrary and the FERC's Web
site during normal business hours from FERC Online Support at 202-502-
6652 (toll free at 1-866-208-3676) or e-mail at
ferconlinesupport@ferc.gov, or the Public Reference Room at (202) 502-
8371, TTY (202) 502-8659. E-mail the Public Reference Room at
public.referenceroom@ferc.gov.
List of Subjects in 18 CFR Part 35
Electric power rates, Electric utilities, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
By the Commission.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E8-20546 Filed 9-4-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717-01-P