Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC; Order on Rehearing and Accepting Tariff Filing, Subject to Modification, Establishing Hearing Procedures and Directing Further Compliance Filing, 28973-28983 [2011-12278]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 97 / Thursday, May 19, 2011 / Notices
CFR 385.2001(a)(1)(iii) and the
instructions on the Commission’s Web
site under the ‘‘e-Filing’’ link. The
Commission strongly encourages
intervenors to file electronically.
Any person or the Commission’s staff
may, within 60 days after issuance of
the instant notice by the Commission,
file pursuant to Rule 214 of the
Commission’s Procedural Rules (18 CFR
385.214) a motion to intervene or notice
of intervention and pursuant to section
157.205 of the regulations under the
NGA (18 CFR 157.205), a protest to the
request. If no protest is filed within the
time allowed therefore, the proposed
activity shall be deemed to be
authorized effective the day after the
time allowed for filing a protest. If a
protest is filed and not withdrawn
within 30 days after the allowed time
for filing a protest, the instant request
shall be treated as an application for
authorization pursuant to section 7 of
the NGA.
Dated: May 12, 2011.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2011–12297 Filed 5–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket Nos. ER11–2127–001, ER11–2127–
002, EL11–37–000]
jlentini on DSK4TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC; Order on
Rehearing and Accepting Tariff Filing,
Subject to Modification, Establishing
Hearing Procedures and Directing
Further Compliance Filing
Before Commissioners: Marc Spitzer,
Philip D. Moeller, John R. Norris, and
Cheryl A. LaFleur.
1. In this order, the Commission
addresses an open access transmission
tariff (OATT) submitted by Terra-Gen
Dixie Valley, LLC (Terra-Gen), in
response to a Commission order issued
in this proceeding on January 14, 2011.1
The Commission will accept TerraGen’s OATT, to be effective May 14,
2011, and order modifications to TerraGen’s OATT and require a further
compliance filing. We will also establish
hearing and settlement procedures.
Finally, as discussed below, we will
grant in part and deny in part TerraGen’s request for rehearing of the
January 14 Order.
1 See Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC, 134 FERC ¶
61,027 (2011) (January 14 Order).
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I. Background
2. Terra-Gen is the owner of a 60 MW
geothermal plant (Plant), located in
northern Nevada, and an associated 214mile, 230 kV radial generator tie-line
(Dixie Valley Line) (collectively, Dixie
Valley QF). Both the Plant and the Dixie
Valley Line were certified as a single QF
under the Commission’s regulations.
Terra-Gen currently utilizes the Dixie
Valley Line by selling the 60 MW output
of the Plant to Southern California
Edison (SoCal Edison) under a preexisting power purchase agreement.
3. On September 16, 2010, the
Commission acted on a petition by
Terra-Gen, whereby Terra-Gen and two
of its affiliates, TGP Dixie Development
Company, LLC, and New York Canyon,
LLC, sought a determination awarding
priority to existing and future planned
expansion transmission capacity on the
Dixie Valley Line. In that Order, the
Commission also addressed a complaint
filed against Terra-Gen by Green
Borders Geothermal, LLC (Green
Borders). In relevant part, the
Commission found that: (1) Terra-Gen
must file an OATT as a result of Green
Borders’ valid transmission service
request made on May 8, 2007; (2) TerraGen is entitled to continue its present
use of its 60 MW of capacity; (3) TerraGen had not supported its request for
100 MW of priority transmission
capacity for expansion of its generation
resource; and (4) Terra-Gen had not
supported the claim for priority of 200
MW of expansion capacity for the two
Terra-Gen affiliates.2 However, the
Commission allowed Terra-Gen ‘‘to
submit further evidence of pre-existing
development plans that satisfy the
criteria in Aero Energy and Milford.’’
The Commission explained that TerraGen ‘‘must demonstrate the existence of
specific pre-existing generation
development plans, consistent material
progress towards achieving such plans,
and that such plans and initial progress
pre-date Green Border’s valid request for
service.’’ 3
4. In compliance with the September
16 Order, Terra-Gen submitted its OATT
to the Commission on November 15,
2010, in Docket No. ER11–2127–000.
Terra-Gen also submitted additional
materials to support its request for 300
MW of priority transmission capacity.4
On January 14, 2010, the Commission
rejected Terra-Gen’s OATT because
Terra-Gen had not demonstrated that its
OATT was consistent with or superior
2 Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC, 132 FERC ¶ 61,215
(2010) (September 16 Order).
3 Id. P 53.
4 The additional materials were submitted in
Docket No. EL10–29–002.
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28973
to the pro forma OATT. The
Commission directed Terra Gen to
resubmit an OATT that is consistent
with the direction of the January 14
Order. On March 16, 2011, Terra-Gen
submitted the instant filing in
compliance with the January 14 Order.
Subsequently, Terra-Gen requested
rehearing of the January 14 Order.
A. Request for Rehearing of January 14
Order
5. On February 14, 2011, Terra-Gen
filed a Request for Rehearing of the
January 14 Order (Request for
Rehearing). Terra-Gen alleges that the
Commission departed from precedent,
failed to engage in reasoned decisionmaking, and acted arbitrarily and
capriciously ‘‘by finding that [Terra-Gen]
had not justified an OATT exemption
for its existing or future priority
transmission services when the
Commission had grandfathered [TerraGen’s] priority transmission services in
the September 16 Order.’’ 5 Specifically,
Terra-Gen argues that the Commission
improperly departed from precedent
established in Sagebrush by rejecting
Terra-Gen’s proposed OATT provisions
that would provide ‘‘an OATT
exemption for its existing and any
future service rights confirmed by the
Commission.’’ 6 According to Terra-Gen,
its proposed treatment of the 60 MW of
existing capacity on the Dixie Valley
Line is no different than Sagebrush’s
‘‘treatment of capacity to which it had
pre-OATT grandfathered rights.’’ 7
B. Terra-Gen OATT
6. Terra-Gen asserts that its OATT
complies with the directives in the
January 14 Order. Specifically, TerraGen explains that its compliance OATT
contains several deviations from the pro
forma OATT due to the design of the
Dixie Valley Line as a generator tie-line.
Terra-Gen explains that its OATT has
non-conforming provisions that include
limiting the applicability of the OATT
with regard to any priority transmission
capacity granted to Terra-Gen and its
affiliates, providing alternative
creditworthiness requirements for
transmission customers, clarifying how
Terra-Gen will cluster transmission
system impact studies, and modifying
the large generator interconnection
procedures.
7. In addition, as it did in its initial
filing, Terra-Gen reaffirms its requests
for waiver of the pro forma OATT
provisions related to the provision of
5 Request
for Rehearing at 5.
for Rehearing at 6 (citing Sagebrush, a
California Partnership, 130 FERC ¶ 61,093 (2010)
(Sagebrush)).
7 Id. at 7.
6 Request
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network transmission service, ancillary
services, Open Access Same-Time
Information System (OASIS), and
Standards of Conduct. Terra-Gen also
requests waiver of various other pro
forma provisions that Terra-Gen asserts
are not necessary given the nature and
use of the Dixie Valley Line. Finally,
Terra-Gen proposes to modify or
eliminate certain schedules and
attachments of the pro forma OATT,
consistent with the changes in the body
of the Terra-Gen OATT.
II. Notice and Responsive Pleadings
8. Notice of Terra-Gen’s OATT filing
was published in the Federal Register,
76 FR 16,621 (2011), with interventions
and protests due on or before April 6,
2011. On March 25, 2011, Green Borders
filed a motion for an extension of time
to file comments. Subsequently, the
Commission issued a notice on March
30, 2011, extending the comment date to
April 11, 2011. On April 11, 2011,
Green Borders filed a protest requesting
that the Commission reject Terra-Gen’s
OATT for failure to comply with the
directives of the January 14 Order or, in
the alternative, reject certain elements of
the proposed OATT that are outside the
scope of the January 14 Order and set
certain issues for hearing.8 On April 26,
2011, Terra-Gen filed an answer to
Green Borders’ protest.
III. Discussion
A. Procedural Matters
9. Rule 213(a)(2) of the Commission’s
Rules of Practice and Procedure, 18 CFR
385.213(a)(2) (2010), prohibits an
answer to a protest unless otherwise
ordered by the decisional authority.
Accordingly, we will reject Terra-Gen’s
answer.
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B. Substantive Matters
1. Terra-Gen Rehearing
10. The Commission will grant in part
and deny in part the Request for
Rehearing. As discussed in greater detail
below, the Commission clarifies that it
is appropriate for Terra-Gen to utilize
transmission service outside the terms
of the OATT for the 60 MW of preexisting service it has been providing for
itself. Terra-Gen was utilizing the
capacity prior to Green Borders’ May 8,
2007 request for transmission service;
that is, prior to the time when Terra-Gen
was first required to submit an OATT
with the Commission. Therefore, the
Commission will grant Terra-Gen’s
Request for Rehearing with respect to
the 60 MW of existing transmission
capacity.
8 Green
Borders April 11, 2011 Protest (Protest).
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11. The Commission will deny the
Request for Rehearing with respect to
Terra-Gen’s future use of the Dixie
Valley Line. Contrary to the situation
presented by Terra-Gen’s existing use of
the Dixie Valley Line, Terra-Gen is not
currently providing any transmission
service beyond the existing 60 MW.
Therefore, there is no ‘‘existing use’’ of
transmission capacity beyond the
existing 60 MW of service that could be
considered for ‘‘grandfathering’’ outside
of the OATT.
deletion of the provisions for network
service is consistent with the January 14
Order and will therefore grant waiver in
the instant submittal. Similarly, we find
that removal of the provisions for local
furnishing bonds, redispatch, and
stranded cost recovery is consistent
with the January 14 Order.15 We note,
however, that, while Terra-Gen has
proposed to remove the references to
stranded cost recovery,16 Terra-Gen has
retained the stranded cost recovery
provision in its proposed OATT.
Accordingly, Terra-Gen will be required
2. Terra-Gen OATT
to submit a compliance filing that
12. In Order No. 890,9 the
removes the stranded cost provisions
Commission allowed transmission
from its OATT.17
providers to propose non-rate terms and
13. In addition to granting waiver of
conditions that differ from those in
the network transmission service and
related provisions, we also find that
Order No. 890 if those provisions are
Terra-Gen’s removal of references to
consistent with or superior to the pro
forma OATT.10 To the extent deviations OASIS and Standards of Conduct is
from the pro forma OATT are necessary, appropriate because we have already
granted waiver to Terra-Gen of these
we have found that applicant
requirements.18 This waiver will remain
transmission owners must explain and
in effect unless and until the
support the deviations sufficiently,11
Commission takes action in response to
and we will evaluate proposed OATT
deviations on a case-by-case basis.12 The a complaint to the Commission that an
entity evaluating its transmission needs
Commission will only find that
deviations from the pro forma OATT are could not get the information necessary
to complete its evaluation (for an OASIS
just and reasonable if the filing party
waiver) or an entity complains that the
explains how the deviations in the
public utility has unfairly used its
proposed OATT are consistent with or
superior to the pro forma OATT, or fully access to information about
transmission to benefit the utility or its
explains how the pro forma provisions
affiliate (for a Standards of Conduct
are not applicable given the filing
waiver).19 If there is a material change
party’s business model.13 In this order,
in facts that affects this waiver, Terrawe summarily affirm the waivers
Gen must notify the Commission within
granted in the January 14 Order. In
30 days of such change.20
addition, we will reject in part and
14. In addition to the waivers granted
accept in part Terra-Gen’s OATT,
above, Terra-Gen proposes several
effective May 14, 2011, as requested,
additional deviations from the pro
and require Terra-Gen to submit a
forma OATT. Many of these proposed
compliance filing. In the January 14
deviations are a direct result of the
Order, we granted waiver of the
determinations in the January 14 Order.
provisions to provide network
Other proposed deviations are new
transmission service under Terra-Gen’s
OATT. Additionally, we found that
15 Id.
Terra-Gen may remove references to
16 See Appendix C to Terra-Gen March 16, 2011
local furnishing bonds, redispatch, and
Filing at 7.
stranded cost recovery, as those
17 See Section 26 of Terra-Gen OATT. We note
provisions do not apply to service that
that removal of this provision is not imperative. To
the extent that Terra-Gen seeks recovery of stranded
Terra-Gen will provide on the Dixie
costs, it must submit a future section 205 filing with
Valley Line.14 We find that Terra-Gen’s
9 Preventing Undue Discrimination and
Preference in Transmission Service, Order No. 890,
FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,241, order on reh’g, Order
No. 890–A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,261 (2007),
order on reh’g, Order No. 890–B, 123 FERC ¶ 61,299
(2008), order on reh’g, Order No. 890–C, 126 FERC
¶ 61,228 (2009).
10 Order No. 890, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,241 at
P 135.
11 Chinook Power Transmission, LLC, 126 FERC ¶
61,134, at P 47 (2009).
12 Montana Alberta Tie Ltd., 116 FERC ¶ 61,071,
at P 55–60 (2006) (MATL).
13 Id. at 60.
14 See January 14 Order, 134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P
12.
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the Commission. 16 U.S.C. 824d (2006). Retaining
this provision does not obligate Terra-Gen to seek
recovery of stranded costs.
18 See September 16 Order, 132 FERC ¶ 61,215 at
P 55; January 14 Order, 134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P 109.
19 See Entergy Mississippi, Inc., 112 FERC ¶
61,228, at P 23 (2005) (citing Central Minnesota
Municipal Power Agency, 79 FERC ¶ 61,260, at
62,127 (1997) and Easton Utilities Commission, 83
FERC ¶ 61,334, at 62,343 (1998)). Therefore,
because Terra-Gen has demonstrated that it is a
small public utility, the waiver we granted in the
September 16 Order will not be revoked when an
interconnection becomes operable.
20 See Material Changes in Facts Underlying
Waiver of Order No. 889 and Part 358 of the
Commission’s Regulations, 127 FERC ¶ 61,141, at
P 5 (2009).
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requests for waivers. We address these
matters in the following sections.
a. Clustering and Effective Date
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
15. Terra-Gen proposes provisions to
address clustering of transmission
system impact studies, consistent with
the guidance provided in the January 14
Order.21 In its submittal, Terra-Gen
proposes to include a new section 19.10
that provides procedures on how TerraGen may cluster studies.22 Terra-Gen’s
proposed clustering provisions provide,
among other things, that ‘‘[T]he costs of
the Cluster Study will be shared pro rata
among the Eligible Customers whose
request for service are included in the
Cluster Study based on the amount of
MW of service that the Transmission
Customer has requested compared to the
total MW of service required in the
cluster.’’23
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ii. Protest
16. Green Borders asserts that TerraGen has modified provisions of the
OATT that the Commission found to be
consistent with Commission precedent
in the January 14 Order. Green Borders
states that Terra-Gen proposes to change
the cost sharing for cluster studies from
being equal among all customers to a
method whereby costs will be allocated
based on the amount of MW of service
requested by a transmission customer as
compared to the total MW of
transmission service requests included
in the cluster study.24 Green Borders
argues that the change was not directed
by the Commission and therefore should
be rejected.
17. Green Borders also argues that the
effective date of Terra-Gen’s tariff,
including the clustering provisions,
should have been made effective
retroactive to 60 days after Green
Borders’ valid transmission request
made in May 2007.25 Green Borders,
citing the Commission’s guidance that
the Terra-Gen OATT will dictate how
the assignment of available transmission
capacity will be initially allocated,
asserts that it is unfair and
discriminatory to now allow Terra-Gen
to extend the ‘‘window’’ for initial
capacity until Terra-Gen’s affiliated
projects are completed, thereby allowing
Terra-Gen to ‘‘dump Green Borders’
request from 2007 into the same
lottery.’’ 26
21 Transmittal Letter at 11 (citing January 14
Order, 134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P 17).
22 Id.
23 Terra-Gen OATT at Section 19.10.
24 Protest at 30.
25 Id.
26 Id.
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iii. Commission Determination
18. We will accept Terra-Gen’s
proposed clustering provisions as
consistent with Commission
precedent.27 Like the proposal accepted
in Midwest ISO, Terra-Gen’s clustering
proposal would allocate the cluster
study costs to customers participating in
the cluster based on the MW of capacity
they are requesting. Furthermore, we
find this pro rata allocation of the cost
of the cluster study among eligible
customers is consistent with cost
causation principles as customer
requests that require more study
expenditures should pay the
commensurate costs related to their
request. Nothing in the January 14 Order
precludes Terra-Gen from proposing
additional deviations from the pro
forma tariff, so long as these proposals
are consistent with or superior to the
pro forma tariff, and we find the
clustering provisions to be consistent
with or superior to the pro forma tariff.
19. We also find that Green Borders’
argument regarding the effective date of
the OATT is an impermissible collateral
attack on the January 14 Order. In the
January 14 Order, we denied Green
Borders’ request for a priority position
in the transmission service queue. In
addition, we directed that all
transmission service requests made
within the first 60 days of the effective
date of the Terra-Gen OATT be treated
as being submitted simultaneously and
subject to a lottery system, if necessary,
for assigning available transfer
capability (ATC), consistent with
section 2.1 of the pro forma tariff.28
Green Borders now seeks to inject a
request for an effective date back to
2007 on the presumption that it may
obtain a more favorable position in the
transmission queue for service on the
Dixie Valley Line. We find this is a
collateral attack on the January 14 Order
and will therefore reject it. No party has
provided cause for the Commission to
consider a retroactive effective date for
Terra-Gen’s proposed OATT. As
discussed above, Terra-Gen’s OATT
shall become effective, as modified as
discussed in this order, on May 14,
2011.
b. Service Exempted From the OATT
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
20. Terra-Gen’s proposed OATT
modifies section 2.1 of the pro forma
27 See, e.g., Midwest Independent Transmission
System Operator, Inc., 126 FERC ¶ 61,108, at P 23–
25 (2009); accepting compliance filing detailing that
costs of cluster studies are shared ‘‘pro rata among
customers * * * based on MWs of service
requested.’’
28 January 14 Order, 134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P 17.
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28975
OATT to grandfather Terra-Gen’s
existing use of 60 MW of capacity on the
Dixie Valley Line outside of the rates,
terms, and conditions of the OATT,
based on the Commission’s prior
confirmation of priority. The provisions
in section 2.1 also propose that, if the
Commission awards any additional
priority rights to Terra-Gen or its
affiliates to the planned expansion
capacity on the Dixie Valley Line, such
service would also be taken outside of
the rates, terms, and conditions of the
OATT.
21. In support of its proposal, TerraGen argues that the grandfathering
provision mirrors what was previously
approved by the Commission in
Sagebrush. Specifically, Terra-Gen
points out that, in Sagebrush, the
Commission excluded from the OATT
existing transmission service as well as
planned expansion for which the
Sagebrush partners had been granted
priority in Aero Energy. 29 Terra-Gen
also argues that all provisions proposing
modifications to accommodate
grandfathered service30 are consistent
with or superior to the pro forma OATT
because they implement the September
16 Order and preserve Terra-Gen’s
expectations with respect to its historic
use of the Dixie Valley Line.
Additionally, in order to comply with
the January 14 Order, which found that
Terra-Gen had failed to explain the rules
or agreements it would use to
implement the proposed grandfathered
service, Terra-Gen asserts that the
proposed grandfathering provision
includes language that Terra-Gen and
any affiliates’ use of the Dixie Valley
Line capacity shall be subject to a future
assignment, co-tenancy, and shared
facilities agreement governing their
rights with respect to each other.
Finally, Terra-Gen explains that the
proposed provisions provide that any
future requests for additional firm
transmission capacity, whether made by
Terra-Gen, a Terra-Gen affiliate, or an
unaffiliated third party, will be
governed by the terms of the OATT.
ii. Protest
22. Green Borders asserts that, in
contrast to the circumstances present in
Sagebrush, where the Commission had
the opportunity to review agreements
related to prioritized service for an
affiliate and did so prior to the
triggering of the OATT filing obligation
in that proceeding, Terra-Gen has failed
29 See Terra-Gen March 15 Filing at 10 (citing
Sagebrush, 130 FERC ¶ 61,093 at P 27).
30 In addition to the proposed section 2.1a, TerraGen indicates that it made additional modifications
to the proposed OATT to reflect that it does not
apply to service grandfathered by the Commission.
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to provide any such agreements despite
a Commission directive to do so. Green
Borders also argues that Terra-Gen has
failed to comply with the requirement
in Order No. 888, which requires that
public utilities must take service under
the same tariff used by others or
demonstrate why they should be
allowed to do otherwise. Accordingly,
Green Borders urges the Commission to
reject Terra-Gen’s proposed
grandfathering provision (Section 2.1a).
iii. Commission Determination
23. We will allow Terra-Gen to utilize
transmission service outside of the
OATT for the 60 MW of existing service.
However, the Commission will require
that all other service must be taken
under the rates, terms, and conditions of
the OATT. In Order No. 888,31 the
Commission determined that functional
unbundling of wholesale services is
necessary to implement nondiscriminatory open access transmission
service. As a result, the Commission
required that a public utility take
transmission services (including
ancillary services) for all of its new
wholesale sales and purchases of
energy, with the exception of
transmission service used by native
load, under the same tariff of general
applicability as do others, and a public
utility must state separate rates for
wholesale generation, transmission, and
ancillary services.32 The principles
underlying that policy also require a
transmission provider such as Terra-Gen
to provide all new service pursuant to
the provisions of an OATT, while
existing service may continue under
prior arrangements.
24. Contrary to Terra-Gen’s assertions,
its OATT proposal with respect to
priority and grandfathering of future
planned service is inconsistent with
Commission policy, as well as Order
No. 888, which requires that all new
transmission be provided pursuant to an
OATT.33 Terra-Gen is correct that, in
Sagebrush, we excluded from the OATT
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31 See
Promoting Wholesale Competition Through
Open Access Non-discriminatory Transmission
Services by Public Utilities and Recovery of
Stranded Costs by Public Utilities and Transmitting
Utilities, Order No. 888, 61 FR 21,540 (May 10,
1996), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,036, at 31,654
(1996).
32 Id. The Commission has consistently indicated
that native (retail) load customers of the
transmission provider do not take transmission
service under the OATT, but are required to
designate network load and network resources in a
manner consistent with the OATT. In this instance,
the only service under the Terra-Gen OATT is
point-to-point transmission service, and Terra-Gen
does not have any retail load, as it has proposed to
remove network service and native load service
requirement from the proposed OATT.
33 Id. at 31,654.
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planned expansion for which the
Sagebrush partners had previously been
granted priority.34 However, our
determination in Sagebrush to exempt
the 33 MW which had been granted
priority was made almost three years
after priority had been granted in Aero
Energy, LLC,35 and the parties had
expected, during that intervening time,
that the 33 MW would be exempt from
the OATT, as we did not impose an
obligation to file an OATT. In contrast,
here, the obligation to file an OATT was
triggered by Green Border’s valid
transmission service request made on
May 8, 2007, prior to Terra-Gen’s
attempt to establish priority for future
service let alone a Commission order
granting such priority. In addition, here
there was never any question that there
would be an obligation to file an OATT,
as was the case in Aero Energy; there
was thus no assumption that service
could be taken pursuant to an existing
agreement as in Sagebrush. Thus, in
considering any future use of the Dixie
Valley Line, whether it be priority
service to Terra-Gen itself, or to a thirdparty such as Green Borders, the
Commission will apply its usual open
access principals, which require that
future service be taken subject to the
OATT.
25. In the instant case, Terra-Gen
proposes tariff language that would
allow Terra-Gen to continue its existing
service and initiate new transmission
service to itself, for any Commission
approved priority rights associated with
its generation, outside of the rates,
terms, and conditions of the OATT.
Such a provision is not consistent with
or superior to the pro forma OATT.
Accordingly, Terra-Gen must revise its
proposed grandfathering provision
(Section 2.1a) in order to reflect that all
future users of planned transmission
capacity, for which priority may be
granted, must take service subject to the
terms of the OATT.
c. Ancillary Services
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
26. Terra-Gen requests waiver of the
requirement to provide any ancillary
services to customers of the Dixie Valley
Line. Terra-Gen states that it does not
operate a balancing area or have the
generation resources necessary to
provide ancillary services to thirdparties seeking to take transmission
service on the Dixie Valley Line. TerraGen notes that in the January 14 Order,
the Commission granted waiver to
Terra-Gen for the requirement to
34 Sagebrush,
35 118
130 FERC ¶ 61,093 at P 27 & n.49.
FERC ¶ 61,204, at P 19 (2007) (Aero
Energy).
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provide the ancillary services stated in
Schedules 3 through 6 and Schedule 9
of the pro forma OATT.36 In addition to
the waivers granted in the January 14
Order, Terra-Gen now also requests
waiver of the requirement to provide
Scheduling, System Control and Load
Dispatch Services (Service Schedule 1)
and Reactive Power and Voltage
Support Service (Service Schedule 2).37
Finally, Terra-Gen seeks waiver of the
requirement to act as an agent to assist
third parties in obtaining ancillary
services.
27. Terra-Gen explains that that
scheduling of transmission service on
the Dixie Valley Line is dependent of
the ability to schedule on the SoCal
Edison downstream transmission
system. It continues that SoCal Edison
currently provides the scheduling
service for Terra-Gen’s existing service
and that any transmission customer may
make similar arrangements with SoCal
Edison. Terra-Gen also states that
transmission customers may
alternatively contract with a scheduling
coordinator operating in the California
Independent System Operator
Corporation (CAISO) market in order to
obtain all necessary ancillary services,
including Scheduling and Reactive
Power services.
28. As a result of its request for
waiver, Terra-Gen proposes to include a
new Schedule 12 provision stating that
Terra-Gen will not provide ancillary
services or contract to supply ancillary
services and thus requires that
transmission customers either selfsupply ancillary services or contract
with a CAISO certified Scheduling
Coordinator in order to obtain any
necessary ancillary services, including
scheduling service and reactive power.
Terra-Gen also proposes to modify
section 13.8 (Scheduling of Firm PointTo-Point Transmission Service) and
section 14.6 (Scheduling of Non-Firm
Point-to-Point Transmission Service) 38
of its proposed tariff in order to state
that transmission service must be
scheduled by a CAISO certified
Scheduling Coordinator.39
36 Transmittal Letter at 6, citing January 14 Order,
134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P 48. These schedules are
Regulation and Frequency Response (Schedule 3),
Energy Imbalance Service (Schedule 4), Operating
Reserve-Spinning Reserve Service (Schedule 5),
Operating Reserve-Supplemental Reserve Service
(Schedule 6), and Generator Imbalance Service
(Schedule 9), and Section 1.2 and Section 3 of the
pro forma OATT.
37 Id. at 7.
38 Transmittal Letter at 13–14. Terra-Gen’s
transmittal stated that sections 13.6 and 14.8 were
modified, but apparently this is a typographical
error as sections 13.8 and 14.6 are instead modified
in the clean tariff included in the submittal.
39 Terra-Gen has included as section 1.42a, a new
definition to the pro forma OATT denoting that
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ii. Protest
29. Green Borders asserts that TerraGen’s request for waiver of all ancillary
service obligations does not meet the
Commission’s ‘‘consistent with or
superior to’’ test.40 Green Borders argues
that Terra-Gen has not provided
sufficient information to justify a
deviation from the pro forma OATT.
Green Borders, citing the January 14
Order, asserts that Terra-Gen was
required to explain how scheduling and
reactive services may be obtained and
who the balancing area authority is for
the Dixie Valley Line, which are
required for the Commission to evaluate
Terra-Gen’s requested waiver. Green
Borders also argues that Terra-Gen’s
reliance on Sagebrush is misplaced.41
Green Borders states that, unlike the
situation presented in Sagebrush, TerraGen demonstrates in its OATT that it
will make no effort to either provide the
services or to act as an agent to procure
the services.
30. Green Borders argues that TerraGen has failed to comply with the
January 14 Order by failing to fully
explain how scheduling services are to
be provided. Green Borders asserts that
the Commission should reject the
proposed scheduling provisions
provided in sections 13.8 and 14.6, as
these provisions provide no specificity
regarding the scheduling requirements
that will be imposed by the Scheduling
Coordinator. Green Borders states, for
example, that the proposed revisions do
not provide any indication of what time
of day schedules will be required for
service over the Dixie Valley Line, how
many times a day scheduling changes
will be permitted, and under what
circumstances or what the charge for
such service will be, if any.
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iii. Commission Determination
31. In the January 14 Order, the
Commission found that Terra-Gen had
demonstrated that a deletion of the
provisions for ancillary services may be
justified.42 The Commission stated that
waiver of these services was appropriate
because transmission customers may
either obtain these ancillary services
from a third-party participating in the
CAISO market or enter into appropriate
agreements for similar service, as TerraGen currently does.43 We continue to
find that waiver of ancillary service
schedules 3 through 6 and 9 is justified
Scheduling Coordinator means ‘‘an entity that the
California Independent System Operator has
certified as a Scheduling Coordinator.’’
40 Protest at 16.
41 Id.
42 January 14 Order, 134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P 48.
43 Id.
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based on the fact that the Dixie Valley
Line is a limited and discrete
transmission line. Therefore, consistent
with the January 14 Order, we will grant
waiver of these provisions.44
32. We also will grant Terra-Gen’s
request for waiver of the obligation to
provide scheduling services. Terra-Gen
currently does not provide scheduling
for its own use. Terra-Gen’s line
interconnects only to the CAISO
controlled grid, and the CAISO is the
balancing area authority in which the
Dixie Valley Line is located.45 Because
any output from a third-party generator
using the Terra-Gen facilities will sink
to the CAISO controlled grid, we agree
that scheduling service may be obtained
from any scheduling coordinator
operating in the CAISO market.
Alternatively, any transmission
customer can seek certification as a
scheduling coordinator and schedule for
itself. Terra-Gen does not need to
supply scheduling service since
certified scheduling coordinators will
provide the necessary schedules for
users of the Dixie Valley Line to the
CAISO to perform scheduling and
dispatch functions.
33. Consistent with Commission
precedent, the Commission also will
grant Terra-Gen’s request for waiver of
the obligation to provide reactive
service.46 The Dixie Valley Line is not
a network grid supported by multiple
resources from which ancillary services
can be provided. We also agree with
Terra-Gen that requiring it to provide
reactive services from its existing Dixie
Valley plant would impair a pre-existing
contractual obligation that it has with
SoCal Edison. Furthermore, reactive
services are generally necessary as close
to the load as practicable. There is no
load served on the Dixie Valley Line;
rather, all energy transmitted will sink
to the CAISO system, thereby allowing
reactive services to be obtained from the
CAISO-controlled grid through the
CAISO market. Accordingly, based on
the design of the facilities, Terra-Gen
need not be the provider of reactive
services.
34. Finally, we will grant Terra-Gen’s
request for waiver of the obligation to
act as agent to assist third-parties in
obtaining any ancillary services,
including scheduling and reactive
44 Id. See also Sagebrush, 130 FERC ¶ 61,093 at
P 29; MATL, 116 FERC ¶ 61,071 at P 58.
45 Pursuant to the North American Electric
Reliability Corporation (NERC) Registry, Terra-Gen
Dixie Valley is listed as only a Generator Owner
and Generator Operator. Because the Dixie Valley
Line is only connected to SoCal Edison, the CAISO
must be the Balancing Area Authority.
46 Sagebrush, 130 FERC ¶ 61,093 at P 29 and
n.52.
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28977
power services. In this instance, because
the Dixie Valley Line interconnects only
to the CAISO market, third-party users
may freely obtain the requisite services
by entering into bilateral agreements or
otherwise obtaining them from the
competitive market. Based upon the
current design and use of the Dixie
Valley Line, for example only delivering
energy to a Commission-approved
organized market, with no load being
served off of the line prior to delivery
to the CAISO-controlled system, we find
that the agent provisions are not
necessary at this time. Accordingly, we
find that the revised sections 13.8 and
14.6 are just and reasonable.
d. Transmission Losses
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
35. In response to concerns raised by
the Commission in the January 14
Order,47 Terra-Gen proposes a formula
in Schedule 10 of its proposed OATT to
address the allocation of line losses to
transmission customers on the Dixie
Valley Line. Specifically, Terra-Gen
proposes a formula to calculate the
incremental line losses that are directly
attributable to a specific customer at the
time the customer interconnects with
the Dixie Valley Line. According to
Terra-Gen, the proposed formula makes
the determination of the line losses
associated with each new customer
transparent and ensures that line losses
are being determined in a uniform and
fair manner.48 Terra-Gen states that
application of the proposed formula will
guarantee that each transmission
customer is responsible for the line
losses attributable to the customer’s
specific transmission request.49 TerraGen further states that the proposed
OATT provision is consistent with
Commission policy that customers
should bear the costs they cause.50
ii. Protest
36. Green Borders opposes TerraGen’s proposed assignment of line
losses. First, Green Borders argues that
Terra-Gen’s shift from average line
losses in the November 15 OATT filing
to incremental line losses in the March
15 compliance filing goes beyond what
the Commission directed Terra-Gen to
do in the compliance filing.51 Second,
Green Borders states that Terra-Gen has
failed to provide support for the
47 See
January 14 Order, 134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P
49.
48 Transmittal
Letter at 8.
49 Id.
50 Id. (citing Quachita Power, LLC v. Entergy La.,
Inc., 120 FERC ¶ 61,059, at P 10 (2007);
Commonwealth Edison & Commonwealth Edison of
Ind., Inc., 123 FERC ¶ 61,122, at P 22 (2008)).
51 Protest at 27.
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proposed treatment of losses.52 Third,
Green Borders argues that Terra-Gen’s
proposed treatment of line losses is
contrary to Commission precedent.
Specifically, Green Borders argues that
Terra-Gen’s proposal is inconsistent
with the policy that a transmission
provider cannot use incremental losses
while charging average rates.53
iii. Commission Determination
37. We find that Terra-Gen’s proposed
treatment of line losses is not consistent
with Commission policy.54 Specifically,
under current Commission policy, it is
unreasonable for Terra-Gen to assign
incremental line losses while charging
an average embedded cost rate for
existing transmission service on the
Dixie Valley Line.55 We note that the
two cases cited by Terra-Gen in support
of the proposed assignment of line
losses are not on point. Specifically,
Quachita Power, LLC v. Entergy La.,
Inc.,56 addresses the treatment of
transmission credits resulting from a
customer-financed system upgrade, and
Commonwealth Edison &
Commonwealth Edison of Ind., Inc., 57
addresses the treatment of losses
associated with service over nonjurisdictional distribution facilities. The
facts at issue in both cases cited by
Terra-Gen are not analogous to the
situation here, where the Commission’s
policy clearly requires like treatment for
both the development of transmission
rates and the assignment of line losses.58
To the extent that Terra-Gen charges an
average embedded cost rate to existing
transmission service customers, it must
assign losses on an average basis.
Should Terra-Gen prefer to assign losses
52 Id.
at 27–28.
at 28–29 (citing Mw. Indep. Transmission
Sys. Operator, Inc., 129 FERC ¶ 61,172, at P 22
(2009)).
54 See Sithe/Independence Power Partners LP v.
FERC, 165 F.3d 944, 334 U.S. App. DC 157 (DC Cir.
1999); Northern States Power Co., 59 FERC
¶ 61,100, at 61,369, reh’g denied, 60 FERC ¶ 61,076,
at 61,252–53 & n.25 (1992), clarification denied, 64
FERC ¶ 61,111, at 61,920 (1993), aff’d sub nom.
Northern States Power Co. v. FERC, 30 F.3d 177,
308 U.S. App. DC 115 (DC Cir. 1994).
55 We note that Terra-Gen’s proposed form of
service agreement notes that it may seek to charge
a new transmission customer either the average
embedded cost rate stated in the OATT, or propose
an incremental transmission charge based on the
cost of expansion of the Dixie Valley Line caused
by the transmission request.
56 120 FERC ¶ 61,059 (2007).
57 123 FERC ¶61,122 (2008).
58 See Midwest ISO, Inc., 129 FERC ¶ 61,172, at
P 34 (2009); Sithe/Independence Power Partners LP
v. FERC, 165 F.3d 944, 334 U.S. App. DC 157 (DC
Cir. 1999); Northern States Power Co., 59 FERC
¶ 61,100, at 61,369, reh’g denied, 60 FERC ¶ 61,076,
at 61,252–53 & n.25 (1992), clarification denied, 64
FERC ¶ 61,111, at 61,920 (1993), aff’d sub nom.
Northern States Power Co. v. FERC, 30 F.3d 177,
308 U.S. App. DC 115 (DC Cir. 1994).
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53 Id.
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on an incremental basis, it is free to
propose a rate methodology that is
consistent with Commission policy.
Accordingly, we do not find Terra-Gen’s
incremental loss proposal just and
reasonable and we will require a further
compliance filing proposing a loss
compensation methodology that is
consistent with Commission policy and
precedent.
e. Creditworthiness
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
38. Terra-Gen proposes to modify the
pro forma creditworthiness procedures
in Attachment L. Specifically, Terra-Gen
proposes several alternatives for
transmission customers to demonstrate
creditworthiness. First, Terra-Gen
would allow a customer to establish
creditworthiness by demonstrating that
it has a credit rating of BBB+/Baa1 or
better, and posting a letter of credit
equal to three months of its reservation
charges at the time it executes its service
agreement.59 Alternatively, if a
customer does not have a credit rating
of BBB+/Baa1, a transmission customer
must post a letter of credit equivalent to
twelve months of reservation charges.60
For customers seeking transmission
service for less than one year, the
customer must be investment grade or
provide a letter of credit equal to two
times the estimated monthly charges for
service. Terra-Gen’s Attachment L also
provides that the transmission customer
and Terra-Gen may agree on an
alternative credit support arrangement.
ii. Protest
39. Green Borders argues that TerraGen’s proposed creditworthiness
procedures are not reasonable and are
inconsistent with industry commercial
practices. Green Borders states that,
while the proposed creditworthiness
provisions are a step forward from those
the Commission rejected in the January
14 Order, the provisions raise questions
about discrimination against
unaffiliated generators.61 Green Borders
argues that the precedent to which
Terra-Gen refers in support of it rating
level to determine creditworthy parties
is inconsistent with other parties in the
market and is not commercially
reasonable.62
iii. Commission Determination
40. In Order No. 890, the Commission
explained that an Attachment L filing
59 Terra-Gen OATT at Attachment L, Section
1.2(i).
60 Both the three months of reservations or twelve
months of reservations apply to customers seeking
long-term point-to-point transmission service.
61 Green Borders Protest at 21.
62 Id.
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must specify both the qualitative and
quantitative criteria that the
transmission provider will use to
determine the level of secured and
unsecured credit required of customers.
In addition, the Commission required
transmission providers to address six
specific elements regarding the
transmission provider’s credit
requirements.63 We find that TerraGen’s proposed Attachment L
provisions include both quantitative
and qualitative creditworthiness
criteria, consistent with Commission
policy.64 We agree with Terra-Gen that
the nature of its business as only a
generator developer and operator that is
not a publicly held entity from which it
can obtain additional financial
resources, supports higher
creditworthiness standards in order to
ensure that it is not financially harmed.
41. We also find that the provisions
for non-creditworthy parties, whereby
those customers must provide a letter of
credit of up to twelve months of
reservation charges, to be just and
reasonable. Terra-Gen is not a
transmission owner and operator in the
traditional sense. For example, it does
not plan for native load growth and
other uses for which transmission
expansion is required. Accordingly,
there are limitations on its ability to
expand the Dixie Valley Line without
these additional credit supports.
42. Additionally, we find acceptable
the proposed credit requirements of a
letter of credit equal to two times the
expected monthly charge for service
requests of less than one year. We
disagree with Green Borders at this time
that the threshold credit rating of BBB+/
Baa1 is unreasonable. We also note that
section 1.9 of Attachment L provides
that other forms of security may be
agreed to between Terra-Gen and its
customers. In that regard, we remind
Terra-Gen that any additional
creditworthiness provision that is
agreed to that deviates from the terms
and conditions of Attachment L must be
filed with the Commission.
43. However, we still have some
concerns regarding the proposal. TerraGen has not explained why it is
necessary to require a letter of credit, or
to otherwise require a cash deposit, for
creditworthy parties. Consistent with
the provisions of section 17.2 of the
OATT, among other things, customers
must submit a deposit when requesting
63 Order No. 890, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,241 at
P 1656–61. See also NorthWestern Corp., 128 FERC
¶ 61,202, at P 8–9 (2009).
64 Id. See also Policy on Electric Creditworthiness,
109 FERC ¶ 61,186 (2004).
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transmission service.65 If these parties
are creditworthy, we agree with Green
Borders that the additional deposit
requirements proposed by Terra-Gen
might be unnecessary. Accordingly,
Terra-Gen is required to explain why
additional deposits for creditworthy
customers are necessary, or delete the
letter of credit provision for
creditworthy parties.
44. While we accept the
creditworthiness provisions, subject to
further explanation or revision from
Terra-Gen, to the extent a transmission
customer believes that the transmission
provider has discriminated in the
application of its creditworthiness
standards, that customer may contact
the Commission’s enforcement hotline
or file a complaint pursuant to section
206 of the Federal Power Act (FPA).66
f. Attachment C—Methodology for
Calculating ATC
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
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45. Terra-Gen requests waivers of
certain Attachment C (calculation of
available transfer capability)
requirements, to the extent necessary to
accept its proposed Attachment C
provisions. Terra-Gen asserts that its
Attachment C methodology is consistent
with or superior to the pro forma OATT
because it provides necessary
information for assessing the transfer
capability of the Dixie Valley Line while
avoiding the imposition of unnecessary
costs, such as those associated with
various modeling requirements. In
addition, Terra-Gen commits to reassess
its proposed Available Transfer
Capability (ATC) methodology in the
event there is a modification to or
addition of a transmission component
on the Dixie Valley Line. Finally, until
such time as Terra-Gen has an available
Web site, Terra-Gen requests a limited
waiver from the requirement to include
a link to its ATC methodology.67
46. Pursuant to the Commission’s
January 14 Order, Terra-Gen identifies
the Rated System Path Methodology,
described in North American Electric
Reliability Corporation (NERC)
Reliability Standard MOD–29–1a, as the
methodology it employs to calculate
ATC. Terra-Gen further states that it has
65 Deposits for system impact studies and
interconnection studies and the requirement to
fund system expansions required by the
transmission service request are required elsewhere
in the OATT.
66 16 U.S.C. 824e (2006).
67 Terra-Gen suggests that it anticipates having an
operational Web site within ninety days from the
date upon which its filing was made and commits
to amending its ATC provision to include a link to
its ATC methodology once the Web site becomes
available.
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included a process flow diagram
illustrating the steps taken in
calculating ATC, as well as definitions
of the ATC components. Terra-Gen also
includes an algorithm that it states
would apply to its scheduling, operating
and planning horizons, but suggests that
ATC calculations for SoCal Edison
would provide more useful information
because application of Terra-Gen’s
methodology results in an ATC of zero.
47. In support of its ATC calculation,
Terra-Gen states that service on the
Dixie Valley Line is contingent on the
line being in service and on SoCal
Edison having sufficient ATC to
schedule deliveries from the line onto
its system. Terra-Gen asserts that the
methodologies approved by NERC for
the calculation of ATC demonstrate that
ATC is meaningless when applied to a
single radial transmission line with one
point of interconnection. Specifically,
Terra-Gen asserts that Total Transfer
Capability (TTC) is zero because a single
radial transmission line with one point
of interconnection cannot sustain an N–
1 contingency and, thus, ATC is also
zero.
28979
Terra-Gen show that ETC reduces only
ATC.72
iii. Commission Determination
50. In the January 14 Order, we
directed Terra-Gen to address certain
deficiencies with its proposed
Attachment C. Specifically, we directed
Terra-Gen to include certain algorithms
for calculating ATC for the scheduling,
operating, and planning horizons,
explain the application of all algorithms
it includes, provide an ATC process
flow diagram and an Internet link to its
ATC data and algorithms, and revise its
proposed definitions of ATC
components to comply with the
requirements of Order No. 890.73
51. With respect to the
aforementioned directives, we find that
Terra-Gen has substantially complied
inasmuch as it has attempted to provide
the Commission with the missing
information that was identified in the
January 14 Order. However, we find that
Terra-Gen’s treatment of ATC in
Attachment C is contradictory, when
considering a TTC value of zero, and we
will therefore reject Terra-Gen’s
proposed Attachment C. Moreover, it is
illogical for Terra-Gen to state that TTC
ii. Protest
on the Dixie Valley Line is zero, while
simultaneously arguing that there is
48. Green Borders states that Terracapacity available to accommodate any
Gen’s calculations of TTC and ATC as
grandfathered service but not service for
zero are in error, and that these
other potential users. Insofar as Terracalculations are an attempt to reserve
Gen’s Attachment C will always yield a
capacity on the Dixie Valley Line for
TTC value of zero regardless of the
Terra-Gen’s affiliates while denying
service to others.68 Green Borders argues line’s actual capacity, we find that such
methodology is not consistent with or
that Terra-Gen has incorrectly applied
superior to the pro forma tariff, and is
NERC standards to arrive at a value of
zero for TTC. Green Borders asserts that thus not just and reasonable.
52. In prior orders, we have found
the NERC Reliability Standard MOD–
that different transmission provider
29–1a is intended to ensure that
business models and unique layouts and
contingencies will not result in
the resulting different services offered
reliability problems elsewhere on the
may justify differences in the OATT
system when the contingency occurs.69
applicable to such facilities as compared
49. Green Borders argues that if TTC
to an OATT governing more traditional
and ATC are always zero for a radial
integrated network transmission
line, then there is no need for an OATT
facilities.74 For example, as discussed
because no capacity would ever be
previously in this order, we will not
available until a second circuit is
require Terra-Gen to provide network
70 Green Borders states that Terrabuilt.
service on the Dixie Valley Line as it
Gen is inconsistent in arguing that TTC
makes little sense to provide such
is zero and also arguing that existing
service.75 Similarly, we find here that
users should have priority service on
Terra-Gen’s assertion that application of
the line, as a TTC value of zero should
the N–1 analysis in computing transfer
preclude any transfers on the line.71
capability makes little sense because the
Finally, Green Borders argues Terra-Gen Dixie Valley Line is a radial tie line, and
is wrong that ETC (capacity held by
do not find it to be reasonable. This
existing users) reduces both TTC and
standard, as applied to the Dixie Valley
ATC, as the equations proposed by
Line, will always result in zero for ATC
68 Protest
at 25.
Exhibit GBG–4; Testimony of David
Becher at 5:8–11.
70 Testimony of David Becher at 5:15–16.
71 Protest at 24, Testimony of David Becher at
6:16–17.
69 Protest,
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72 Testimony
of David Becher at 7:4–13.
14 Order, 134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P 58.
74 See, e.g., MATL, 116 FERC ¶ 61,071, at P 57–
58.
75 Id. See also Sagebrush, 130 FERC ¶ 61,093 at
P 29.
73 January
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and TTC, regardless of whether there
may actually be capacity available.
Accordingly, we will direct Terra-Gen to
re-file Attachment C establishing the
TTC value for the line based on the most
limiting component of the line,
electrical characteristics, or other factors
(such as ground clearance) that impact
reliable operation, and which is
consistent with the fact that that an
allocation of capacity to existing users
implies that TTC on the Dixie Valley
Line must exceed zero.76
g. Transmission Planning Process—
Attachment K
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
53. In the January 14 Order, the
Commission addressed Terra-Gen’s
proposed planning process. The
Commission found that Terra-Gen’s
planning process satisfied the
coordination, transparency, and regional
participation principles. The
Commission also found that Terra-Gen’s
proposed planning process satisfactorily
addressed how it would recover the cost
of planning activities. However, the
Commission found that Terra-Gen
partially complied with the openness,
information exchange, comparability,
and dispute resolution principles. In
addition, the Commission found that
Terra-Gen did not satisfy the economic
planning or cost allocation principles.
54. As a result of the January 14
Order, Terra-Gen proposes an
Attachment K that is directed at
addressing the guidance provided in the
January 14 Order. Specifically, TerraGen addresses further the openness,
information exchange, comparability,
dispute resolution, economic planning,
and cost allocation principles.
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ii. Protest
55. Green Borders comments that,
while Terra-Gen’s proposed planning
process addresses the guidance in the
January 14 Order, the Commission
should require Terra-Gen to make
further revisions to the comparability,
economic planning, and cost allocation
principles.
56. With regard to comparability,
Green Borders points out that TerraGen’s proposal provides Terra-Gen with
sole discretion for selecting which
projects to undertake, based on factors
76 While we recognize that the downstream ATC
at the SoCal Edison system interface may limit the
realizable ATC on the Dixie Valley Line, service
from the point where Terra-Gen’s line interconnect
with SoCal Edison’s line is a separate matter not
covered under Terra-Gen’s OATT and, as such, is
beyond the scope of this proceeding. Additionally,
because we reject the proposed Attachment C, we
find it unnecessary to address the limited request
for waiver of the requirement to provide an Internet
link to the ATC calculation data and methodology.
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over which Terra-Gen has sole
discretion to consider. Green Borders
asserts that, under such a process,
stakeholders would not be able to
ensure that Terra-Gen is not
discriminating against unaffiliated
generators and using the transmission
planning process to allocate the cost of
self-serving projects to multiple
parties.77
57. Green Borders also asserts that
Terra-Gen’s economic planning
proposal could lead to discriminatory
planning and ignores the interests of
stakeholders in the planning process.78
For example, Green Borders points out
that, while a transmission customer
must assist in gathering the information
for conducting the economic study, the
provisions do not provide an
opportunity for the requesting customer
to participate in, oversee, or observe the
study. Additionally, Green Borders
asserts that Terra-Gen’s proposal to
reserve sole discretion of which
economic studies are highest priority is
unreasonable.
58. Finally, Green Borders asserts that
Terra-Gen’s cost allocation proposal
doesn’t satisfy the guidance provided in
the January 14 Order. Green Borders
states that, while the Commission
required that Terra-Gen include a
method by which Terra-Gen would
allocate the costs of new transmission
facilities that do not fit under existing
rate structures, Terra-Gen’s OATT only
provides that the cost allocation of
facilities will be pursuant to the tariff.79
Green Borders asks that the Commission
require Terra-Gen to provide greater
specificity regarding the allocation of
costs that are not already contemplated
by the existing rate schedules.80
iii. Commission Determination
59. Consistent with our findings in
the January 14 Order, we continue to
find that Terra-Gen complies with the
coordination, transparency, and regional
participation principles.81 For the same
reasons, Terra-Gen also satisfactorily
addresses the recovery of planning
costs.82 In addition, Terra-Gen has
addressed the openness, information
exchange, and dispute resolution
principles, based upon the guidance in
the January 14 Order. For example,
Terra-Gen has addressed the openness
principle by modifying its provisions to
allow any stakeholder to participate in
the planning process. Terra-Gen also
77 Protest
at 18.
78 Id.
79 Id.
at 19.
addressed the information exchange by
explaining how interested parties may
submit data to the planning process and
provided the milestones and timeframes
for data submission and stakeholder
review of the plan. Terra-Gen has also
specified the process by which disputes
arising during the planning process will
be handled. Accordingly, in addition to
meeting the coordination principle,
transparency principle, regional
participation principle, and the recovery
of planning costs, we find that TerraGen satisfactorily complies with the
openness, information exchange and
dispute resolution principles.
60. While we find that Terra-Gen
complies with the principles addressed
above, we address below the
comparability, economic planning, and
cost allocation principles, as addressed
by Terra-Gen in the instant filing.
Comparability
61. In the January 14 Order, the
Commission found that Terra-Gen’s
Attachment K partially complied with
the comparability principle. However,
the Commission noted that Terra-Gen
had not addressed how its proposed
planning provisions comply with Order
No. 890–A.83
62. Terra-Gen addresses the
requirement of the January 14 Order by
modifying its Attachment K to clarify
that all interested stakeholders in the
transmission planning process may
participate in the Planning Advisory
Group, including providers of
transmission and non-transmission
alternatives. Additionally, Terra-Gen
has clarified how and when
stakeholders in the transmission
planning process may provide data to
the plan and offer alternatives to the
transmission plan.
63. Based upon our preliminary
review of Terra-Gen’s transmission
planning process, we agree with Green
Borders that Terra-Gen’s proposal to
retain sole discretion to select projects
based on ‘‘cost, economic impact,
reliability and other considerations’’
does not satisfactorily explain how
Terra-Gen will select projects for
inclusion in the transmission plan.84 To
select one of the bases for evaluation ‘‘at
its sole discretion’’ without input from
stakeholders fails to provide
transparency in the selection process.
Accordingly, we will require Terra-Gen
to submit a further compliance filing
that addresses the basis on which
competing projects will be selected.
80 Id.
81 See January 14 Order, 134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P
68, P 76, and P 89, respectively.
82 Id. P 98.
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83 January
84 See
14 Order, 134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P 83.
Terra-Gen OATT, Attachment K at Section
1.4.
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Economic Planning
64. In the January 14 Order, the
Commission found that Terra-Gen did
not satisfy the economic planning
requirement.85 Specifically, the
Commission noted that Terra-Gen’s
proposed Attachment K did not include
any provisions for the study of
economic considerations in the
transmission planning process.86
65. Terra-Gen has now included
provisions that establish procedures for
conducting economic studies as part of
the overall planning cycle. Terra-Gen
proposes a new section 4.6 to its
Attachment K that provides that, during
its five year planning cycle, it will take
into account economic and reliability
considerations proposed by interested
stakeholders. Terra-Gen’s proposed
provisions detail the time frames in
which interested stakeholders may
submit information for conducting
economic studies and the obligations of
a stakeholder to participate in the
economic study process. Terra-Gen
proposes that it will conduct up to two
high-priority economic planning studies
during each planning cycle.
66. We find that Terra-Gen’s
Attachment K satisfies the economic
planning requirement. Terra-Gen has
adequately described when and how
interested parties may request economic
studies, and how Terra-Gen will address
which high priority economic study
request will be undertaken within the
planning period. Additionally, we
disagree with Green Borders that the
economic planning process is not
transparent and open. Terra-Gen
explains that economic planning studies
will be submitted to the Planning
Advisory Group as part of the planning
process and will consider the input of
interested stakeholders.
Cost Allocation
67. In the January 14 Order, the
Commission found that Terra-Gen did
not satisfy the cost allocation
principle.87 Similar to the economic
planning requirement, the Commission
noted that Terra-Gen’s proposed
Attachment K did not include any
provisions that address how Terra-Gen
proposed to allocate the cost of new
facilities that do not fit under existing
rate structures.88
68. To address the cost allocation
principle, Terra-Gen now proposes a
new section 10 to its Attachment K that
states ‘‘the costs of new facilities
required because of individual requests
85 January
14 Order, 134 FERC ¶ 61,027 at P 93.
86 Id.
87 Id.
P 96.
88 Id.
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for transmission and interconnection
service shall be allocated to customers
pursuant to the Tariff.’’ 89
69. The Commission finds that TerraGen’s proposal does not satisfy the cost
allocation principle. We agree with
Green Borders that Terra-Gen’s proposal
is vague as to how the costs of new
facilities that do not otherwise fit under
the existing rate structures of TerraGen’s OATT will be allocated.
Accordingly, we will require Terra-Gen
to submit a further compliance filing
that explains how such costs would be
allocated; whether, for example,
allocated to the requesting customer or
allocated to transmission or
interconnection customers that benefit
from the facilities.
h. Transmission Service Rates
i. Tariff Proposal
70. Terra-Gen proposes a cost-based,
monthly rate of $3,600/MW for both
firm and non-firm point-to-point
transmission service on the Dixie Valley
Line.90 Terra-Gen’s proposed
transmission service rate is based upon
an average annual revenue requirement
of approximately $2.8 million.91
71. Terra-Gen’s proposed revenue
requirement includes a proxy capital
structure adopted from SoCal Edison,
the transmission provider to which the
Dixie Valley Line is interconnected.92
Terra-Gen states that it does not issue
publicly traded stocks, thus requiring a
proxy capital structure, and further
asserts that Commission policy permits
an independent power producer to
adopt the capital structure of its
interconnected transmission owner due
to the fact that it has not been subject
to either traditional rate regulation or
the FERC Uniform System of
Accounts.93
72. In addition to the stated average
embedded rates for transmission
service, Terra-Gen has also included a
provision, as part of the form of
transmission service agreement, that it
may charge a transmission customer the
higher of the rate established for firm
point-to-point transmission service or
the rate developed from amortizing the
costs of any new facilities required by
the transmission customer’s request for
service, over the period of the
89 Terra-Gen
OATT, Attachment K at Section 10.
Letter at 16.
91 Terra-Gen has only included monthly rates for
Point-to-Point Transmission Service. Because it
does not provide Network Transmission Service,
the OATT does not include the $2.8 million
transmission revenue requirement in Attachment H.
92 Id. at 17–18.
93 Id.
90 Transmittal
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28981
transmission customer’s service
agreement.94
73. Terra-Gen also seeks permission to
establish a regulatory asset that will
include expenses incurred in
connection with the requirement that
Terra-Gen convert the Dixie Valley Line
into a Commission-regulated
transmission line. Terra-Gen asserts that
it has spent approximately $1 million to
address the regulatory ramifications of
Green Borders’ decision to explore
siting a generator on the Dixie Valley
Line.95 Terra-Gen asserts that the costs
to be included in the regulatory asset
include, but are not limited to,
consulting, accounting and legal
expenses, engineering studies,
personnel, and computer and
communication expenses. Terra-Gen
proposes to accrue carrying charges on
the regulatory asset from the effective
date of the Commission approval until
such time as the regulatory asset is
included in rate base. Terra-Gen
proposes to record the regulatory asset
and related carrying charges to FERC
Account 182.3.
ii. Protest
74. Green Borders states that TerraGen has failed to comply with the
January 14 Order in that it failed to
submit all cost computations used to
develop the proposed rate, including,
but not limited to, detailed work
papers.96 Therefore, Green Borders
requests that the Commission either
reject the proposed rate or schedule a
full evidentiary hearing to review TerraGen’s proposed rate.97 In particular,
Green Borders argues that Terra-Gen
should not be permitted to adopt SoCal
Edison’s capital structure because TerraGen is acting as a transmission provider
in the instant situation as opposed to a
merchant generator.98
75. Green Borders also raises concerns
with other aspects of the proposed rate.
First, Green Borders states that the
plant-in-service amount and
depreciation methods used in the rate
calculation appear to be selected to
artificially maximize Terra-Gen’s rate
base.99 Second, Green Borders states
that Terra-Gen’s calculation of net tax
balance is unsupported by evidence.
Green Borders also states that the
amounts used to calculate costs for
other taxes appear abnormally high and
94 Terra-Gen
OATT, Attachment A, Section 5.1.
Letter at 19.
96 Protest at 9 (citing January 14 Order, 134 FERC
¶ 61,027 at P 104).
97 Id. at 10.
98 Id.
99 Id. at 11.
95 Transmittal
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are not supported by evidence.100 In
addition, Green Borders questions the
billing determinants used to calculate
the proposed rate. Specifically, Green
Borders argues that Terra-Gen erred in
using only the 64 MW of current firm
service rather than the actual current
capacity of 400 MW. Green Borders
argues that, at a minimum, Terra-Gen
should include 60 MW of firm service
for Green Borders in the calculation.101
Finally, Green Borders states that TerraGen should not use a non-levelized
carrying charge in calculating the
rate.102
76. Green Borders also asserts that
Terra-Gen has provided no explanation
to justify the addition of the incremental
cost provisions in the form of service
agreement. Green Borders requests that
the Commission reject this provision,
recognizing that Terra-Gen must submit
any proposed rate with the Commission
for approval.103
iii. Commission Determination
77. Our preliminary review of TerraGen’s filing indicates that the proposed
rates have not been shown to be just and
reasonable and may be unjust,
unreasonable, unduly discriminatory or
preferential, or otherwise unlawful.
Several aspects of Terra-Gen’s proposed
rates raise issues of material fact,
including the reasonableness of TerraGen’s proposed return on equity of
10.30 percent, the verification of TerraGen’s plant-in-service, depreciation,
operations and maintenance, and other
cost-of-service related data.104 We
further note that Terra-Gen has not
provided any rates other than for
monthly service, either for firm point-topoint transmission service or non-firm
point-to-point service. Therefore, we
will accept Terra-Gen’s proposed rates,
to be effective May 14, 2011, as
requested, and set the proposed rates for
hearing pursuant to section 206 of the
FPA 105 and settlement judge
procedures.
78. In cases where, as here, the
Commission institutes a section 206
investigation on its own motion, section
206(b) of the FPA requires that the
Commission establish a refund effective
date that is no earlier than publication
100 Id.
101 Id.
at 10–12.
at 12.
103 Protest at 20.
104 Terra-Gen was formerly exempt from the
Commission’s reporting requirements as a
Qualifying Facility. Accordingly, no publicly
reported data, consistent with the Commission’s
Uniform System of Accounts, is available for
examination in this proceeding without discovery
and cross-examination.
105 The section 206 proceeding has been
designated Docket No. EL11–37–000.
of notice of the Commission’s initiation
of its investigation in the Federal
Register, and no later than five months
subsequent to that date. In order to give
maximum protection to customers, and
consistent with our precedent,106 we
will establish a refund date at the
earliest possible date. This date will be
the date on which the notice of our
investigation in this proceeding is
published in the Federal Register. The
Commission is also required by section
206 to indicate when it expects to issue
a final order. In this case, the
Commission expects that it will be able
to issue a final order, should the case go
to an initial decision, within one year of
the date of an initial decision.
79. While we are setting these matters
for trial-type evidentiary hearing, we
encourage the parties to make every
effort to settle their dispute before
hearing procedures are commenced. To
aid the parties in their settlement
efforts, we will hold the hearing in
abeyance and direct that a settlement
judge be appointed, pursuant to Rule
603 of the Commission’s Rules of
Practice and Procedure. If the parties
desire, they may, by mutual agreement,
request a specific judge as the
settlement judge in the proceeding;
otherwise the Chief Judge will select a
judge for this purpose. The settlement
judge shall report to the Chief Judge and
the Commission within 30 days of the
date of the appointment of the
settlement judge, concerning the status
of settlement discussions. Based on this
report, the Chief Judge shall provide the
parties with additional time to continue
their settlement discussions or provide
for commencement of a hearing by
assigning the case to a presiding judge.
80. We will not reject section 5.1 of
Terra-Gen’s form of service agreement
allowing it to propose incremental
transmission rates, capped at the cost of
expansion, in lieu of the stated average
cost transmission rates proposed in
Services Schedules 7 and 8 of its OATT.
Pursuant to Commission policy, a
transmission provider may seek to
charge a transmission customer the
greater of the average embedded cost of
service or the incremental cost of
providing service (capped at the cost of
expansion), but not both.107 We remind
Terra-Gen that any service agreement in
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106 See, e.g., PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 90 FERC
¶ 61,137 (2000); Cambridge Elec. Light Co., 75 FERC
¶ 61,177, clarified, 76 FERC ¶ 61,020 (1996); Canal
Elec. Co., 46 FERC ¶ 61,153, reh’g denied, 47 FERC
¶ 61,275 (1989).
107 See Inquiry Concerning the Commission’s
Pricing Policy for Transmission Services Provided
by Public Utilities Under the Federal Power Act;
Policy Statement, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,005
(1994).
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which it seeks to charge an incremental
rate to a transmission customer, in lieu
of the stated average cost rates provided
in its OATT, is a non-conforming
service agreement that will be required
to be filed with the Commission. The
transmission customer must have
opportunity to ensure that any proposed
transmission rate based on the
incremental cost of expansion on the
Dixie Valley Line is just and reasonable.
81. Finally, we will allow Terra-Gen
to establish a regulatory asset, as
requested. Costs deferred as a regulatory
asset must be recorded in Account
182.3, Other Regulatory Assets, and may
only include amounts that would
otherwise be chargeable to expense in
the period incurred, are not recoverable
in current rates, and are probable for
recovery in rates in a different period.108
Furthermore, the instructions to
Account 182.3 require that amounts
deferred in this account are to be
charged to expense concurrent with the
recovery of the amounts in rates. If rate
recovery of all or part of the costs
deferred in Account 182.3 is later
disallowed, the disallowed amount shall
be charged to Account 426.5, Other
Deductions, in the year of disallowance.
82. While this order provides TerraGen with the ability to record certain
costs as a regulatory asset, Terra-Gen
must make a filing under section 205 of
the FPA when it proposes to include
such costs in transmission rates, in
order to ensure that the incurred
expenses are just and reasonable. TerraGen also will have to establish that the
costs included in the regulatory asset
are costs that would have otherwise
been chargeable to expense in the
period incurred. Parties will be able to
challenge these costs at that time.
3. Waiver of Reporting Requirements
83. Terra-Gen requests that the
Commission grant waiver to Terra-Gen
so that it will have to comply with the
FERC Uniform System of Accounts only
with respect to the Dixie Valley Line.109
Terra-Gen explains that, because the
generator is a qualifying facility (QF),
imposing the FERC reporting
requirements on its merchant function
will impose a burden of complying with
new accounting rules. Terra-Gen further
108 The term ‘‘probable’’ as used in the definition
of regulatory assets, refers to that which can
reasonably be expected or believed on the basis of
available evidence or logic but is neither certain nor
proved. Revisions to Uniform Systems of Accounts
to Account for Allowances under the Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1990 and Regulatory-Created
Assets and Liabilities and to Form Nos. 1, 1–F, 2,
and 2–A, FERC Statutes and Regulations,
Regulations Preambles January 1991–June 1996 ¶
30,967 (1993).
109 Transmittal Letter at 18.
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requests the Commission grant a
deferral of the obligation to comply with
the Uniform System of Accounts with
respect to the Dixie Valley Line until
such time as a third-party commences
service under the OATT.
84. We will grant the waiver TerraGen requests with regard to requiring
the Dixie Valley QF to be subject to
FERC Uniform System of Accounts. As
we explained in the September 16
Order, our determination does not affect
the QF status of the Dixie Valley
Generator.110 As a result, Terra-Gen
must only be required to report under
the uniform system of accounts, as a
transmission service provider, for the
Dixie Valley Line. However, we will not
grant deferral of the reporting
requirement. Terra-Gen will be required
to submit the appropriate reporting
information consistent with the
Commission regulations.
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4. Additional Matters
85. In review of Terra-Gen’s proposed
deviations from the pro forma OATT,111
Terra-Gen lists the proposed changes it
seeks approval of in its OATT. We agree
with Green Borders that certain uses of
the term ‘‘Transmitting Utility’’ may
remain in the OATT, notably in the
Large Generator Interconnection
Procedures and Large Generator
Interconnection Agreement, despite
Terra-Gen’s removal of the term from
the master definitions. We will require
Terra-Gen to correct these instances and
utilize the pro forma term Transmission
Provider, as it has committed to do.112
86. Additionally, Terra-Gen has
revised the language it filed as Schedule
11, FERC Annual Charges, to clarify that
all users of the Dixie Valley Line,
including grandfathered users, will be
responsible for FERC annual charges
that are attributable to transmission
service. Additionally, Terra-Gen has
incorporated pro forma sections 17.7
(Extensions for Commencement of
Service), 19.8 (Expedited Procedures for
New Facilities), and 19.9 (Penalties for
Failure to Meet Study Deadlines), as
well as pro forma sections 4.1.1 and
4.1.2 of the LGIP into its proposed
OATT. We find that Terra-Gen’s
proposals in this regard satisfactorily
comply with the January 14 Order.
The Commission orders:
(A) Terra-Gen’s February 14, 2011
Request for Rehearing is hereby granted
in part and denied in part, as discussed
in the body of this order.
110 September
16 Order, 132 FERC ¶ 61,215 at n.
80.
111 See
March 16 Filing, Attachment C.
Letter at 15.
112 Transmittal
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(B) Terra-Gen is hereby directed to
file, within 30 days of the date of this
order, revisions to its proposed OATT,
as discussed in the body of this order.
(C) Terra-Gen’s proposed OATT is
hereby accepted in part and rejected in
part, effective May 14, 2011, as modified
in accordance with Ordering Paragraph
(B) above, as discussed in the body of
this order.
(D) Terra-Gen’s requested waivers are
granted in part and denied in part, as
discussed in the body of this order.
(E) Terra-Gen’s proposed transmission
rates are hereby accepted, effective May
14, 2011, subject to refund.
(F) Pursuant to the authority
contained in and subject to the
jurisdiction conferred upon the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission by
section 402(a) of the Department of
Energy Organization Act and the
Federal Power Act, particularly sections
205 and 206 thereof, and pursuant to the
Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure and the regulations under the
Federal Power Act (18 CFR chapter I),
a public hearing shall be held
concerning Terra-Gen’s proposed
revenue requirement. However, the
hearing shall be held in abeyance to
provide time for settlement judge
procedures, as discussed in Ordering
Paragraphs (G) and (H) below.
(G) Pursuant to Rule 603 of the
Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure, 18 CFR 385.603 (2010), the
Chief Administrative Law Judge is
hereby directed to appoint a settlement
judge in this proceeding within fifteen
(15) days of the date of this order. Such
settlement judge shall have all powers
and duties enumerated in Rule 603 and
shall convene a settlement conference as
soon as practicable after the Chief Judge
designates the settlement judge. If the
parties decide to request a specific
judge, they must make their request to
the Chief Judge within five (5) days of
the date of this order.
(H) Within thirty (30) days of the
appointment of the settlement judge, the
settlement judge shall file a report with
the Commission and the Chief Judge on
the status of the settlement discussions.
Based on this report, the Chief Judge
shall provide the parties with additional
time to continue their settlement
discussions, if appropriate, or assign
this case to a presiding judge for a trialtype evidentiary hearing, if appropriate.
If settlement discussions continue, the
settlement judge shall file a report at
least every sixty (60) days thereafter,
informing the Commission and the
Chief Judge of the parties’ progress
toward settlement.
(I) If settlement judge procedures fail
and a trial-type evidentiary hearing is to
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28983
be held, a presiding judge, to be
designated by the Chief Judge, shall,
within fifteen (15) days of the date of
the presiding judge’s designation,
convene a prehearing conference in
these proceedings in a hearing room of
the Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. Such a
conference shall be held for the purpose
of establishing a procedural schedule.
The presiding judge is authorized to
establish procedural dates and to rule
on all motions (except motions to
dismiss) as provided in the
Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure.
(J) The Secretary shall promptly
publish in the Federal Register a notice
of the Commission’s initiation of the
investigation ordered in Ordering
Paragraph (F) above, under section 206
of the Federal Power Act.
By the Commission. Chairman Wellinghoff
is not participating.
Dated: May 13, 2011.
Nathaniel J. Davis, Sr.,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2011–12278 Filed 5–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
[MB Docket No. 11–83; DA 11–756]
Media Bureau Seeks Comment on the
Economic Impact of Low-Power FM
Stations on Full-Service Commercial
FM Stations
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Notice; solicitation of
comments.
AGENCY:
This document solicits public
comments on the economic impact of
low-power FM stations on full-service
commercial FM stations in connection
with the Commission’s preparation of
an economic study and report due to
Congress, as required by section 8 of the
Local Community Radio Act of 2010.
DATES: Interested parties may file
comments on or before June 24, 2011,
and reply comments on or before July
25, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Martha Heller, Media Bureau (202) 418–
0426, or e-mail at
Martha.Heller@fcc.gov, and Julie
Salovaara, Media Bureau (202) 418–
2330 or e-mail at
Julie.Salovaara@fcc.gov. Press inquiries
should be directed to Janice Wise, (202)
418–8165, of the Media Bureau.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
synopsis of the Commission’s document
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 97 (Thursday, May 19, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 28973-28983]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-12278]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
[Docket Nos. ER11-2127-001, ER11-2127-002, EL11-37-000]
Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC; Order on Rehearing and Accepting
Tariff Filing, Subject to Modification, Establishing Hearing Procedures
and Directing Further Compliance Filing
Before Commissioners: Marc Spitzer, Philip D. Moeller, John R.
Norris, and Cheryl A. LaFleur.
1. In this order, the Commission addresses an open access
transmission tariff (OATT) submitted by Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC
(Terra-Gen), in response to a Commission order issued in this
proceeding on January 14, 2011.\1\ The Commission will accept Terra-
Gen's OATT, to be effective May 14, 2011, and order modifications to
Terra-Gen's OATT and require a further compliance filing. We will also
establish hearing and settlement procedures. Finally, as discussed
below, we will grant in part and deny in part Terra-Gen's request for
rehearing of the January 14 Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC, 134 FERC ] 61,027 (2011)
(January 14 Order).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Background
2. Terra-Gen is the owner of a 60 MW geothermal plant (Plant),
located in northern Nevada, and an associated 214-mile, 230 kV radial
generator tie-line (Dixie Valley Line) (collectively, Dixie Valley QF).
Both the Plant and the Dixie Valley Line were certified as a single QF
under the Commission's regulations. Terra-Gen currently utilizes the
Dixie Valley Line by selling the 60 MW output of the Plant to Southern
California Edison (SoCal Edison) under a pre-existing power purchase
agreement.
3. On September 16, 2010, the Commission acted on a petition by
Terra-Gen, whereby Terra-Gen and two of its affiliates, TGP Dixie
Development Company, LLC, and New York Canyon, LLC, sought a
determination awarding priority to existing and future planned
expansion transmission capacity on the Dixie Valley Line. In that
Order, the Commission also addressed a complaint filed against Terra-
Gen by Green Borders Geothermal, LLC (Green Borders). In relevant part,
the Commission found that: (1) Terra-Gen must file an OATT as a result
of Green Borders' valid transmission service request made on May 8,
2007; (2) Terra-Gen is entitled to continue its present use of its 60
MW of capacity; (3) Terra-Gen had not supported its request for 100 MW
of priority transmission capacity for expansion of its generation
resource; and (4) Terra-Gen had not supported the claim for priority of
200 MW of expansion capacity for the two Terra-Gen affiliates.\2\
However, the Commission allowed Terra-Gen ``to submit further evidence
of pre-existing development plans that satisfy the criteria in Aero
Energy and Milford.'' The Commission explained that Terra-Gen ``must
demonstrate the existence of specific pre-existing generation
development plans, consistent material progress towards achieving such
plans, and that such plans and initial progress pre-date Green Border's
valid request for service.'' \3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC, 132 FERC ] 61,215 (2010)
(September 16 Order).
\3\ Id. P 53.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. In compliance with the September 16 Order, Terra-Gen submitted
its OATT to the Commission on November 15, 2010, in Docket No. ER11-
2127-000. Terra-Gen also submitted additional materials to support its
request for 300 MW of priority transmission capacity.\4\ On January 14,
2010, the Commission rejected Terra-Gen's OATT because Terra-Gen had
not demonstrated that its OATT was consistent with or superior to the
pro forma OATT. The Commission directed Terra Gen to resubmit an OATT
that is consistent with the direction of the January 14 Order. On March
16, 2011, Terra-Gen submitted the instant filing in compliance with the
January 14 Order. Subsequently, Terra-Gen requested rehearing of the
January 14 Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ The additional materials were submitted in Docket No. EL10-
29-002.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Request for Rehearing of January 14 Order
5. On February 14, 2011, Terra-Gen filed a Request for Rehearing of
the January 14 Order (Request for Rehearing). Terra-Gen alleges that
the Commission departed from precedent, failed to engage in reasoned
decision-making, and acted arbitrarily and capriciously ``by finding
that [Terra-Gen] had not justified an OATT exemption for its existing
or future priority transmission services when the Commission had
grandfathered [Terra-Gen's] priority transmission services in the
September 16 Order.'' \5\ Specifically, Terra-Gen argues that the
Commission improperly departed from precedent established in Sagebrush
by rejecting Terra-Gen's proposed OATT provisions that would provide
``an OATT exemption for its existing and any future service rights
confirmed by the Commission.'' \6\ According to Terra-Gen, its proposed
treatment of the 60 MW of existing capacity on the Dixie Valley Line is
no different than Sagebrush's ``treatment of capacity to which it had
pre-OATT grandfathered rights.'' \7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Request for Rehearing at 5.
\6\ Request for Rehearing at 6 (citing Sagebrush, a California
Partnership, 130 FERC ] 61,093 (2010) (Sagebrush)).
\7\ Id. at 7.
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B. Terra-Gen OATT
6. Terra-Gen asserts that its OATT complies with the directives in
the January 14 Order. Specifically, Terra-Gen explains that its
compliance OATT contains several deviations from the pro forma OATT due
to the design of the Dixie Valley Line as a generator tie-line. Terra-
Gen explains that its OATT has non-conforming provisions that include
limiting the applicability of the OATT with regard to any priority
transmission capacity granted to Terra-Gen and its affiliates,
providing alternative creditworthiness requirements for transmission
customers, clarifying how Terra-Gen will cluster transmission system
impact studies, and modifying the large generator interconnection
procedures.
7. In addition, as it did in its initial filing, Terra-Gen
reaffirms its requests for waiver of the pro forma OATT provisions
related to the provision of
[[Page 28974]]
network transmission service, ancillary services, Open Access Same-Time
Information System (OASIS), and Standards of Conduct. Terra-Gen also
requests waiver of various other pro forma provisions that Terra-Gen
asserts are not necessary given the nature and use of the Dixie Valley
Line. Finally, Terra-Gen proposes to modify or eliminate certain
schedules and attachments of the pro forma OATT, consistent with the
changes in the body of the Terra-Gen OATT.
II. Notice and Responsive Pleadings
8. Notice of Terra-Gen's OATT filing was published in the Federal
Register, 76 FR 16,621 (2011), with interventions and protests due on
or before April 6, 2011. On March 25, 2011, Green Borders filed a
motion for an extension of time to file comments. Subsequently, the
Commission issued a notice on March 30, 2011, extending the comment
date to April 11, 2011. On April 11, 2011, Green Borders filed a
protest requesting that the Commission reject Terra-Gen's OATT for
failure to comply with the directives of the January 14 Order or, in
the alternative, reject certain elements of the proposed OATT that are
outside the scope of the January 14 Order and set certain issues for
hearing.\8\ On April 26, 2011, Terra-Gen filed an answer to Green
Borders' protest.
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\8\ Green Borders April 11, 2011 Protest (Protest).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Discussion
A. Procedural Matters
9. Rule 213(a)(2) of the Commission's Rules of Practice and
Procedure, 18 CFR 385.213(a)(2) (2010), prohibits an answer to a
protest unless otherwise ordered by the decisional authority.
Accordingly, we will reject Terra-Gen's answer.
B. Substantive Matters
1. Terra-Gen Rehearing
10. The Commission will grant in part and deny in part the Request
for Rehearing. As discussed in greater detail below, the Commission
clarifies that it is appropriate for Terra-Gen to utilize transmission
service outside the terms of the OATT for the 60 MW of pre-existing
service it has been providing for itself. Terra-Gen was utilizing the
capacity prior to Green Borders' May 8, 2007 request for transmission
service; that is, prior to the time when Terra-Gen was first required
to submit an OATT with the Commission. Therefore, the Commission will
grant Terra-Gen's Request for Rehearing with respect to the 60 MW of
existing transmission capacity.
11. The Commission will deny the Request for Rehearing with respect
to Terra-Gen's future use of the Dixie Valley Line. Contrary to the
situation presented by Terra-Gen's existing use of the Dixie Valley
Line, Terra-Gen is not currently providing any transmission service
beyond the existing 60 MW. Therefore, there is no ``existing use'' of
transmission capacity beyond the existing 60 MW of service that could
be considered for ``grandfathering'' outside of the OATT.
2. Terra-Gen OATT
12. In Order No. 890,\9\ the Commission allowed transmission
providers to propose non-rate terms and conditions that differ from
those in Order No. 890 if those provisions are consistent with or
superior to the pro forma OATT.\10\ To the extent deviations from the
pro forma OATT are necessary, we have found that applicant transmission
owners must explain and support the deviations sufficiently,\11\ and we
will evaluate proposed OATT deviations on a case-by-case basis.\12\ The
Commission will only find that deviations from the pro forma OATT are
just and reasonable if the filing party explains how the deviations in
the proposed OATT are consistent with or superior to the pro forma
OATT, or fully explains how the pro forma provisions are not applicable
given the filing party's business model.\13\ In this order, we
summarily affirm the waivers granted in the January 14 Order. In
addition, we will reject in part and accept in part Terra-Gen's OATT,
effective May 14, 2011, as requested, and require Terra-Gen to submit a
compliance filing. In the January 14 Order, we granted waiver of the
provisions to provide network transmission service under Terra-Gen's
OATT. Additionally, we found that Terra-Gen may remove references to
local furnishing bonds, redispatch, and stranded cost recovery, as
those provisions do not apply to service that Terra-Gen will provide on
the Dixie Valley Line.\14\ We find that Terra-Gen's deletion of the
provisions for network service is consistent with the January 14 Order
and will therefore grant waiver in the instant submittal. Similarly, we
find that removal of the provisions for local furnishing bonds,
redispatch, and stranded cost recovery is consistent with the January
14 Order.\15\ We note, however, that, while Terra-Gen has proposed to
remove the references to stranded cost recovery,\16\ Terra-Gen has
retained the stranded cost recovery provision in its proposed OATT.
Accordingly, Terra-Gen will be required to submit a compliance filing
that removes the stranded cost provisions from its OATT.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Preventing Undue Discrimination and Preference in
Transmission Service, Order No. 890, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,241,
order on reh'g, Order No. 890-A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,261
(2007), order on reh'g, Order No. 890-B, 123 FERC ] 61,299 (2008),
order on reh'g, Order No. 890-C, 126 FERC ] 61,228 (2009).
\10\ Order No. 890, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,241 at P 135.
\11\ Chinook Power Transmission, LLC, 126 FERC ] 61,134, at P 47
(2009).
\12\ Montana Alberta Tie Ltd., 116 FERC ] 61,071, at P 55-60
(2006) (MATL).
\13\ Id. at 60.
\14\ See January 14 Order, 134 FERC ] 61,027 at P 12.
\15\ Id.
\16\ See Appendix C to Terra-Gen March 16, 2011 Filing at 7.
\17\ See Section 26 of Terra-Gen OATT. We note that removal of
this provision is not imperative. To the extent that Terra-Gen seeks
recovery of stranded costs, it must submit a future section 205
filing with the Commission. 16 U.S.C. 824d (2006). Retaining this
provision does not obligate Terra-Gen to seek recovery of stranded
costs.
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13. In addition to granting waiver of the network transmission
service and related provisions, we also find that Terra-Gen's removal
of references to OASIS and Standards of Conduct is appropriate because
we have already granted waiver to Terra-Gen of these requirements.\18\
This waiver will remain in effect unless and until the Commission takes
action in response to a complaint to the Commission that an entity
evaluating its transmission needs could not get the information
necessary to complete its evaluation (for an OASIS waiver) or an entity
complains that the public utility has unfairly used its access to
information about transmission to benefit the utility or its affiliate
(for a Standards of Conduct waiver).\19\ If there is a material change
in facts that affects this waiver, Terra-Gen must notify the Commission
within 30 days of such change.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ See September 16 Order, 132 FERC ] 61,215 at P 55; January
14 Order, 134 FERC ] 61,027 at P 109.
\19\ See Entergy Mississippi, Inc., 112 FERC ] 61,228, at P 23
(2005) (citing Central Minnesota Municipal Power Agency, 79 FERC ]
61,260, at 62,127 (1997) and Easton Utilities Commission, 83 FERC ]
61,334, at 62,343 (1998)). Therefore, because Terra-Gen has
demonstrated that it is a small public utility, the waiver we
granted in the September 16 Order will not be revoked when an
interconnection becomes operable.
\20\ See Material Changes in Facts Underlying Waiver of Order
No. 889 and Part 358 of the Commission's Regulations, 127 FERC ]
61,141, at P 5 (2009).
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14. In addition to the waivers granted above, Terra-Gen proposes
several additional deviations from the pro forma OATT. Many of these
proposed deviations are a direct result of the determinations in the
January 14 Order. Other proposed deviations are new
[[Page 28975]]
requests for waivers. We address these matters in the following
sections.
a. Clustering and Effective Date
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
15. Terra-Gen proposes provisions to address clustering of
transmission system impact studies, consistent with the guidance
provided in the January 14 Order.\21\ In its submittal, Terra-Gen
proposes to include a new section 19.10 that provides procedures on how
Terra-Gen may cluster studies.\22\ Terra-Gen's proposed clustering
provisions provide, among other things, that ``[T]he costs of the
Cluster Study will be shared pro rata among the Eligible Customers
whose request for service are included in the Cluster Study based on
the amount of MW of service that the Transmission Customer has
requested compared to the total MW of service required in the
cluster.''\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Transmittal Letter at 11 (citing January 14 Order, 134 FERC
] 61,027 at P 17).
\22\ Id.
\23\ Terra-Gen OATT at Section 19.10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Protest
16. Green Borders asserts that Terra-Gen has modified provisions of
the OATT that the Commission found to be consistent with Commission
precedent in the January 14 Order. Green Borders states that Terra-Gen
proposes to change the cost sharing for cluster studies from being
equal among all customers to a method whereby costs will be allocated
based on the amount of MW of service requested by a transmission
customer as compared to the total MW of transmission service requests
included in the cluster study.\24\ Green Borders argues that the change
was not directed by the Commission and therefore should be rejected.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Protest at 30.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
17. Green Borders also argues that the effective date of Terra-
Gen's tariff, including the clustering provisions, should have been
made effective retroactive to 60 days after Green Borders' valid
transmission request made in May 2007.\25\ Green Borders, citing the
Commission's guidance that the Terra-Gen OATT will dictate how the
assignment of available transmission capacity will be initially
allocated, asserts that it is unfair and discriminatory to now allow
Terra-Gen to extend the ``window'' for initial capacity until Terra-
Gen's affiliated projects are completed, thereby allowing Terra-Gen to
``dump Green Borders' request from 2007 into the same lottery.'' \26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Id.
\26\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Commission Determination
18. We will accept Terra-Gen's proposed clustering provisions as
consistent with Commission precedent.\27\ Like the proposal accepted in
Midwest ISO, Terra-Gen's clustering proposal would allocate the cluster
study costs to customers participating in the cluster based on the MW
of capacity they are requesting. Furthermore, we find this pro rata
allocation of the cost of the cluster study among eligible customers is
consistent with cost causation principles as customer requests that
require more study expenditures should pay the commensurate costs
related to their request. Nothing in the January 14 Order precludes
Terra-Gen from proposing additional deviations from the pro forma
tariff, so long as these proposals are consistent with or superior to
the pro forma tariff, and we find the clustering provisions to be
consistent with or superior to the pro forma tariff.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ See, e.g., Midwest Independent Transmission System
Operator, Inc., 126 FERC ] 61,108, at P 23-25 (2009); accepting
compliance filing detailing that costs of cluster studies are shared
``pro rata among customers * * * based on MWs of service
requested.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
19. We also find that Green Borders' argument regarding the
effective date of the OATT is an impermissible collateral attack on the
January 14 Order. In the January 14 Order, we denied Green Borders'
request for a priority position in the transmission service queue. In
addition, we directed that all transmission service requests made
within the first 60 days of the effective date of the Terra-Gen OATT be
treated as being submitted simultaneously and subject to a lottery
system, if necessary, for assigning available transfer capability
(ATC), consistent with section 2.1 of the pro forma tariff.\28\ Green
Borders now seeks to inject a request for an effective date back to
2007 on the presumption that it may obtain a more favorable position in
the transmission queue for service on the Dixie Valley Line. We find
this is a collateral attack on the January 14 Order and will therefore
reject it. No party has provided cause for the Commission to consider a
retroactive effective date for Terra-Gen's proposed OATT. As discussed
above, Terra-Gen's OATT shall become effective, as modified as
discussed in this order, on May 14, 2011.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ January 14 Order, 134 FERC ] 61,027 at P 17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Service Exempted From the OATT
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
20. Terra-Gen's proposed OATT modifies section 2.1 of the pro forma
OATT to grandfather Terra-Gen's existing use of 60 MW of capacity on
the Dixie Valley Line outside of the rates, terms, and conditions of
the OATT, based on the Commission's prior confirmation of priority. The
provisions in section 2.1 also propose that, if the Commission awards
any additional priority rights to Terra-Gen or its affiliates to the
planned expansion capacity on the Dixie Valley Line, such service would
also be taken outside of the rates, terms, and conditions of the OATT.
21. In support of its proposal, Terra-Gen argues that the
grandfathering provision mirrors what was previously approved by the
Commission in Sagebrush. Specifically, Terra-Gen points out that, in
Sagebrush, the Commission excluded from the OATT existing transmission
service as well as planned expansion for which the Sagebrush partners
had been granted priority in Aero Energy. \29\ Terra-Gen also argues
that all provisions proposing modifications to accommodate
grandfathered service\30\ are consistent with or superior to the pro
forma OATT because they implement the September 16 Order and preserve
Terra-Gen's expectations with respect to its historic use of the Dixie
Valley Line. Additionally, in order to comply with the January 14
Order, which found that Terra-Gen had failed to explain the rules or
agreements it would use to implement the proposed grandfathered
service, Terra-Gen asserts that the proposed grandfathering provision
includes language that Terra-Gen and any affiliates' use of the Dixie
Valley Line capacity shall be subject to a future assignment, co-
tenancy, and shared facilities agreement governing their rights with
respect to each other. Finally, Terra-Gen explains that the proposed
provisions provide that any future requests for additional firm
transmission capacity, whether made by Terra-Gen, a Terra-Gen
affiliate, or an unaffiliated third party, will be governed by the
terms of the OATT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ See Terra-Gen March 15 Filing at 10 (citing Sagebrush, 130
FERC ] 61,093 at P 27).
\30\ In addition to the proposed section 2.1a, Terra-Gen
indicates that it made additional modifications to the proposed OATT
to reflect that it does not apply to service grandfathered by the
Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Protest
22. Green Borders asserts that, in contrast to the circumstances
present in Sagebrush, where the Commission had the opportunity to
review agreements related to prioritized service for an affiliate and
did so prior to the triggering of the OATT filing obligation in that
proceeding, Terra-Gen has failed
[[Page 28976]]
to provide any such agreements despite a Commission directive to do so.
Green Borders also argues that Terra-Gen has failed to comply with the
requirement in Order No. 888, which requires that public utilities must
take service under the same tariff used by others or demonstrate why
they should be allowed to do otherwise. Accordingly, Green Borders
urges the Commission to reject Terra-Gen's proposed grandfathering
provision (Section 2.1a).
iii. Commission Determination
23. We will allow Terra-Gen to utilize transmission service outside
of the OATT for the 60 MW of existing service. However, the Commission
will require that all other service must be taken under the rates,
terms, and conditions of the OATT. In Order No. 888,\31\ the Commission
determined that functional unbundling of wholesale services is
necessary to implement non-discriminatory open access transmission
service. As a result, the Commission required that a public utility
take transmission services (including ancillary services) for all of
its new wholesale sales and purchases of energy, with the exception of
transmission service used by native load, under the same tariff of
general applicability as do others, and a public utility must state
separate rates for wholesale generation, transmission, and ancillary
services.\32\ The principles underlying that policy also require a
transmission provider such as Terra-Gen to provide all new service
pursuant to the provisions of an OATT, while existing service may
continue under prior arrangements.
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\31\ See Promoting Wholesale Competition Through Open Access
Non-discriminatory Transmission Services by Public Utilities and
Recovery of Stranded Costs by Public Utilities and Transmitting
Utilities, Order No. 888, 61 FR 21,540 (May 10, 1996), FERC Stats. &
Regs. ] 31,036, at 31,654 (1996).
\32\ Id. The Commission has consistently indicated that native
(retail) load customers of the transmission provider do not take
transmission service under the OATT, but are required to designate
network load and network resources in a manner consistent with the
OATT. In this instance, the only service under the Terra-Gen OATT is
point-to-point transmission service, and Terra-Gen does not have any
retail load, as it has proposed to remove network service and native
load service requirement from the proposed OATT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
24. Contrary to Terra-Gen's assertions, its OATT proposal with
respect to priority and grandfathering of future planned service is
inconsistent with Commission policy, as well as Order No. 888, which
requires that all new transmission be provided pursuant to an OATT.\33\
Terra-Gen is correct that, in Sagebrush, we excluded from the OATT
planned expansion for which the Sagebrush partners had previously been
granted priority.\34\ However, our determination in Sagebrush to exempt
the 33 MW which had been granted priority was made almost three years
after priority had been granted in Aero Energy, LLC,\35\ and the
parties had expected, during that intervening time, that the 33 MW
would be exempt from the OATT, as we did not impose an obligation to
file an OATT. In contrast, here, the obligation to file an OATT was
triggered by Green Border's valid transmission service request made on
May 8, 2007, prior to Terra-Gen's attempt to establish priority for
future service let alone a Commission order granting such priority. In
addition, here there was never any question that there would be an
obligation to file an OATT, as was the case in Aero Energy; there was
thus no assumption that service could be taken pursuant to an existing
agreement as in Sagebrush. Thus, in considering any future use of the
Dixie Valley Line, whether it be priority service to Terra-Gen itself,
or to a third-party such as Green Borders, the Commission will apply
its usual open access principals, which require that future service be
taken subject to the OATT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Id. at 31,654.
\34\ Sagebrush, 130 FERC ] 61,093 at P 27 & n.49.
\35\ 118 FERC ] 61,204, at P 19 (2007) (Aero Energy).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
25. In the instant case, Terra-Gen proposes tariff language that
would allow Terra-Gen to continue its existing service and initiate new
transmission service to itself, for any Commission approved priority
rights associated with its generation, outside of the rates, terms, and
conditions of the OATT. Such a provision is not consistent with or
superior to the pro forma OATT. Accordingly, Terra-Gen must revise its
proposed grandfathering provision (Section 2.1a) in order to reflect
that all future users of planned transmission capacity, for which
priority may be granted, must take service subject to the terms of the
OATT.
c. Ancillary Services
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
26. Terra-Gen requests waiver of the requirement to provide any
ancillary services to customers of the Dixie Valley Line. Terra-Gen
states that it does not operate a balancing area or have the generation
resources necessary to provide ancillary services to third-parties
seeking to take transmission service on the Dixie Valley Line. Terra-
Gen notes that in the January 14 Order, the Commission granted waiver
to Terra-Gen for the requirement to provide the ancillary services
stated in Schedules 3 through 6 and Schedule 9 of the pro forma
OATT.\36\ In addition to the waivers granted in the January 14 Order,
Terra-Gen now also requests waiver of the requirement to provide
Scheduling, System Control and Load Dispatch Services (Service Schedule
1) and Reactive Power and Voltage Support Service (Service Schedule
2).\37\ Finally, Terra-Gen seeks waiver of the requirement to act as an
agent to assist third parties in obtaining ancillary services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Transmittal Letter at 6, citing January 14 Order, 134 FERC
] 61,027 at P 48. These schedules are Regulation and Frequency
Response (Schedule 3), Energy Imbalance Service (Schedule 4),
Operating Reserve-Spinning Reserve Service (Schedule 5), Operating
Reserve-Supplemental Reserve Service (Schedule 6), and Generator
Imbalance Service (Schedule 9), and Section 1.2 and Section 3 of the
pro forma OATT.
\37\ Id. at 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
27. Terra-Gen explains that that scheduling of transmission service
on the Dixie Valley Line is dependent of the ability to schedule on the
SoCal Edison downstream transmission system. It continues that SoCal
Edison currently provides the scheduling service for Terra-Gen's
existing service and that any transmission customer may make similar
arrangements with SoCal Edison. Terra-Gen also states that transmission
customers may alternatively contract with a scheduling coordinator
operating in the California Independent System Operator Corporation
(CAISO) market in order to obtain all necessary ancillary services,
including Scheduling and Reactive Power services.
28. As a result of its request for waiver, Terra-Gen proposes to
include a new Schedule 12 provision stating that Terra-Gen will not
provide ancillary services or contract to supply ancillary services and
thus requires that transmission customers either self-supply ancillary
services or contract with a CAISO certified Scheduling Coordinator in
order to obtain any necessary ancillary services, including scheduling
service and reactive power. Terra-Gen also proposes to modify section
13.8 (Scheduling of Firm Point-To-Point Transmission Service) and
section 14.6 (Scheduling of Non-Firm Point-to-Point Transmission
Service) \38\ of its proposed tariff in order to state that
transmission service must be scheduled by a CAISO certified Scheduling
Coordinator.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Transmittal Letter at 13-14. Terra-Gen's transmittal stated
that sections 13.6 and 14.8 were modified, but apparently this is a
typographical error as sections 13.8 and 14.6 are instead modified
in the clean tariff included in the submittal.
\39\ Terra-Gen has included as section 1.42a, a new definition
to the pro forma OATT denoting that Scheduling Coordinator means
``an entity that the California Independent System Operator has
certified as a Scheduling Coordinator.''
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[[Page 28977]]
ii. Protest
29. Green Borders asserts that Terra-Gen's request for waiver of
all ancillary service obligations does not meet the Commission's
``consistent with or superior to'' test.\40\ Green Borders argues that
Terra-Gen has not provided sufficient information to justify a
deviation from the pro forma OATT. Green Borders, citing the January 14
Order, asserts that Terra-Gen was required to explain how scheduling
and reactive services may be obtained and who the balancing area
authority is for the Dixie Valley Line, which are required for the
Commission to evaluate Terra-Gen's requested waiver. Green Borders also
argues that Terra-Gen's reliance on Sagebrush is misplaced.\41\ Green
Borders states that, unlike the situation presented in Sagebrush,
Terra-Gen demonstrates in its OATT that it will make no effort to
either provide the services or to act as an agent to procure the
services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Protest at 16.
\41\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
30. Green Borders argues that Terra-Gen has failed to comply with
the January 14 Order by failing to fully explain how scheduling
services are to be provided. Green Borders asserts that the Commission
should reject the proposed scheduling provisions provided in sections
13.8 and 14.6, as these provisions provide no specificity regarding the
scheduling requirements that will be imposed by the Scheduling
Coordinator. Green Borders states, for example, that the proposed
revisions do not provide any indication of what time of day schedules
will be required for service over the Dixie Valley Line, how many times
a day scheduling changes will be permitted, and under what
circumstances or what the charge for such service will be, if any.
iii. Commission Determination
31. In the January 14 Order, the Commission found that Terra-Gen
had demonstrated that a deletion of the provisions for ancillary
services may be justified.\42\ The Commission stated that waiver of
these services was appropriate because transmission customers may
either obtain these ancillary services from a third-party participating
in the CAISO market or enter into appropriate agreements for similar
service, as Terra-Gen currently does.\43\ We continue to find that
waiver of ancillary service schedules 3 through 6 and 9 is justified
based on the fact that the Dixie Valley Line is a limited and discrete
transmission line. Therefore, consistent with the January 14 Order, we
will grant waiver of these provisions.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ January 14 Order, 134 FERC ] 61,027 at P 48.
\43\ Id.
\44\ Id. See also Sagebrush, 130 FERC ] 61,093 at P 29; MATL,
116 FERC ] 61,071 at P 58.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
32. We also will grant Terra-Gen's request for waiver of the
obligation to provide scheduling services. Terra-Gen currently does not
provide scheduling for its own use. Terra-Gen's line interconnects only
to the CAISO controlled grid, and the CAISO is the balancing area
authority in which the Dixie Valley Line is located.\45\ Because any
output from a third-party generator using the Terra-Gen facilities will
sink to the CAISO controlled grid, we agree that scheduling service may
be obtained from any scheduling coordinator operating in the CAISO
market. Alternatively, any transmission customer can seek certification
as a scheduling coordinator and schedule for itself. Terra-Gen does not
need to supply scheduling service since certified scheduling
coordinators will provide the necessary schedules for users of the
Dixie Valley Line to the CAISO to perform scheduling and dispatch
functions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ Pursuant to the North American Electric Reliability
Corporation (NERC) Registry, Terra-Gen Dixie Valley is listed as
only a Generator Owner and Generator Operator. Because the Dixie
Valley Line is only connected to SoCal Edison, the CAISO must be the
Balancing Area Authority.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
33. Consistent with Commission precedent, the Commission also will
grant Terra-Gen's request for waiver of the obligation to provide
reactive service.\46\ The Dixie Valley Line is not a network grid
supported by multiple resources from which ancillary services can be
provided. We also agree with Terra-Gen that requiring it to provide
reactive services from its existing Dixie Valley plant would impair a
pre-existing contractual obligation that it has with SoCal Edison.
Furthermore, reactive services are generally necessary as close to the
load as practicable. There is no load served on the Dixie Valley Line;
rather, all energy transmitted will sink to the CAISO system, thereby
allowing reactive services to be obtained from the CAISO-controlled
grid through the CAISO market. Accordingly, based on the design of the
facilities, Terra-Gen need not be the provider of reactive services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ Sagebrush, 130 FERC ] 61,093 at P 29 and n.52.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
34. Finally, we will grant Terra-Gen's request for waiver of the
obligation to act as agent to assist third-parties in obtaining any
ancillary services, including scheduling and reactive power services.
In this instance, because the Dixie Valley Line interconnects only to
the CAISO market, third-party users may freely obtain the requisite
services by entering into bilateral agreements or otherwise obtaining
them from the competitive market. Based upon the current design and use
of the Dixie Valley Line, for example only delivering energy to a
Commission-approved organized market, with no load being served off of
the line prior to delivery to the CAISO-controlled system, we find that
the agent provisions are not necessary at this time. Accordingly, we
find that the revised sections 13.8 and 14.6 are just and reasonable.
d. Transmission Losses
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
35. In response to concerns raised by the Commission in the January
14 Order,\47\ Terra-Gen proposes a formula in Schedule 10 of its
proposed OATT to address the allocation of line losses to transmission
customers on the Dixie Valley Line. Specifically, Terra-Gen proposes a
formula to calculate the incremental line losses that are directly
attributable to a specific customer at the time the customer
interconnects with the Dixie Valley Line. According to Terra-Gen, the
proposed formula makes the determination of the line losses associated
with each new customer transparent and ensures that line losses are
being determined in a uniform and fair manner.\48\ Terra-Gen states
that application of the proposed formula will guarantee that each
transmission customer is responsible for the line losses attributable
to the customer's specific transmission request.\49\ Terra-Gen further
states that the proposed OATT provision is consistent with Commission
policy that customers should bear the costs they cause.\50\
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\47\ See January 14 Order, 134 FERC ] 61,027 at P 49.
\48\ Transmittal Letter at 8.
\49\ Id.
\50\ Id. (citing Quachita Power, LLC v. Entergy La., Inc., 120
FERC ] 61,059, at P 10 (2007); Commonwealth Edison & Commonwealth
Edison of Ind., Inc., 123 FERC ] 61,122, at P 22 (2008)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Protest
36. Green Borders opposes Terra-Gen's proposed assignment of line
losses. First, Green Borders argues that Terra-Gen's shift from average
line losses in the November 15 OATT filing to incremental line losses
in the March 15 compliance filing goes beyond what the Commission
directed Terra-Gen to do in the compliance filing.\51\ Second, Green
Borders states that Terra-Gen has failed to provide support for the
[[Page 28978]]
proposed treatment of losses.\52\ Third, Green Borders argues that
Terra-Gen's proposed treatment of line losses is contrary to Commission
precedent. Specifically, Green Borders argues that Terra-Gen's proposal
is inconsistent with the policy that a transmission provider cannot use
incremental losses while charging average rates.\53\
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\51\ Protest at 27.
\52\ Id. at 27-28.
\53\ Id. at 28-29 (citing Mw. Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator,
Inc., 129 FERC ] 61,172, at P 22 (2009)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Commission Determination
37. We find that Terra-Gen's proposed treatment of line losses is
not consistent with Commission policy.\54\ Specifically, under current
Commission policy, it is unreasonable for Terra-Gen to assign
incremental line losses while charging an average embedded cost rate
for existing transmission service on the Dixie Valley Line.\55\ We note
that the two cases cited by Terra-Gen in support of the proposed
assignment of line losses are not on point. Specifically, Quachita
Power, LLC v. Entergy La., Inc.,\56\ addresses the treatment of
transmission credits resulting from a customer-financed system upgrade,
and Commonwealth Edison & Commonwealth Edison of Ind., Inc., \57\
addresses the treatment of losses associated with service over non-
jurisdictional distribution facilities. The facts at issue in both
cases cited by Terra-Gen are not analogous to the situation here, where
the Commission's policy clearly requires like treatment for both the
development of transmission rates and the assignment of line
losses.\58\ To the extent that Terra-Gen charges an average embedded
cost rate to existing transmission service customers, it must assign
losses on an average basis. Should Terra-Gen prefer to assign losses on
an incremental basis, it is free to propose a rate methodology that is
consistent with Commission policy. Accordingly, we do not find Terra-
Gen's incremental loss proposal just and reasonable and we will require
a further compliance filing proposing a loss compensation methodology
that is consistent with Commission policy and precedent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ See Sithe/Independence Power Partners LP v. FERC, 165 F.3d
944, 334 U.S. App. DC 157 (DC Cir. 1999); Northern States Power Co.,
59 FERC ] 61,100, at 61,369, reh'g denied, 60 FERC ] 61,076, at
61,252-53 & n.25 (1992), clarification denied, 64 FERC ] 61,111, at
61,920 (1993), aff'd sub nom. Northern States Power Co. v. FERC, 30
F.3d 177, 308 U.S. App. DC 115 (DC Cir. 1994).
\55\ We note that Terra-Gen's proposed form of service agreement
notes that it may seek to charge a new transmission customer either
the average embedded cost rate stated in the OATT, or propose an
incremental transmission charge based on the cost of expansion of
the Dixie Valley Line caused by the transmission request.
\56\ 120 FERC ] 61,059 (2007).
\57\ 123 FERC ]61,122 (2008).
\58\ See Midwest ISO, Inc., 129 FERC ] 61,172, at P 34 (2009);
Sithe/Independence Power Partners LP v. FERC, 165 F.3d 944, 334 U.S.
App. DC 157 (DC Cir. 1999); Northern States Power Co., 59 FERC ]
61,100, at 61,369, reh'g denied, 60 FERC ] 61,076, at 61,252-53 &
n.25 (1992), clarification denied, 64 FERC ] 61,111, at 61,920
(1993), aff'd sub nom. Northern States Power Co. v. FERC, 30 F.3d
177, 308 U.S. App. DC 115 (DC Cir. 1994).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
e. Creditworthiness
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
38. Terra-Gen proposes to modify the pro forma creditworthiness
procedures in Attachment L. Specifically, Terra-Gen proposes several
alternatives for transmission customers to demonstrate
creditworthiness. First, Terra-Gen would allow a customer to establish
creditworthiness by demonstrating that it has a credit rating of BBB+/
Baa1 or better, and posting a letter of credit equal to three months of
its reservation charges at the time it executes its service
agreement.\59\ Alternatively, if a customer does not have a credit
rating of BBB+/Baa1, a transmission customer must post a letter of
credit equivalent to twelve months of reservation charges.\60\ For
customers seeking transmission service for less than one year, the
customer must be investment grade or provide a letter of credit equal
to two times the estimated monthly charges for service. Terra-Gen's
Attachment L also provides that the transmission customer and Terra-Gen
may agree on an alternative credit support arrangement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ Terra-Gen OATT at Attachment L, Section 1.2(i).
\60\ Both the three months of reservations or twelve months of
reservations apply to customers seeking long-term point-to-point
transmission service.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Protest
39. Green Borders argues that Terra-Gen's proposed creditworthiness
procedures are not reasonable and are inconsistent with industry
commercial practices. Green Borders states that, while the proposed
creditworthiness provisions are a step forward from those the
Commission rejected in the January 14 Order, the provisions raise
questions about discrimination against unaffiliated generators.\61\
Green Borders argues that the precedent to which Terra-Gen refers in
support of it rating level to determine creditworthy parties is
inconsistent with other parties in the market and is not commercially
reasonable.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ Green Borders Protest at 21.
\62\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Commission Determination
40. In Order No. 890, the Commission explained that an Attachment L
filing must specify both the qualitative and quantitative criteria that
the transmission provider will use to determine the level of secured
and unsecured credit required of customers. In addition, the Commission
required transmission providers to address six specific elements
regarding the transmission provider's credit requirements.\63\ We find
that Terra-Gen's proposed Attachment L provisions include both
quantitative and qualitative creditworthiness criteria, consistent with
Commission policy.\64\ We agree with Terra-Gen that the nature of its
business as only a generator developer and operator that is not a
publicly held entity from which it can obtain additional financial
resources, supports higher creditworthiness standards in order to
ensure that it is not financially harmed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ Order No. 890, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,241 at P 1656-61.
See also NorthWestern Corp., 128 FERC ] 61,202, at P 8-9 (2009).
\64\ Id. See also Policy on Electric Creditworthiness, 109 FERC
] 61,186 (2004).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
41. We also find that the provisions for non-creditworthy parties,
whereby those customers must provide a letter of credit of up to twelve
months of reservation charges, to be just and reasonable. Terra-Gen is
not a transmission owner and operator in the traditional sense. For
example, it does not plan for native load growth and other uses for
which transmission expansion is required. Accordingly, there are
limitations on its ability to expand the Dixie Valley Line without
these additional credit supports.
42. Additionally, we find acceptable the proposed credit
requirements of a letter of credit equal to two times the expected
monthly charge for service requests of less than one year. We disagree
with Green Borders at this time that the threshold credit rating of
BBB+/Baa1 is unreasonable. We also note that section 1.9 of Attachment
L provides that other forms of security may be agreed to between Terra-
Gen and its customers. In that regard, we remind Terra-Gen that any
additional creditworthiness provision that is agreed to that deviates
from the terms and conditions of Attachment L must be filed with the
Commission.
43. However, we still have some concerns regarding the proposal.
Terra-Gen has not explained why it is necessary to require a letter of
credit, or to otherwise require a cash deposit, for creditworthy
parties. Consistent with the provisions of section 17.2 of the OATT,
among other things, customers must submit a deposit when requesting
[[Page 28979]]
transmission service.\65\ If these parties are creditworthy, we agree
with Green Borders that the additional deposit requirements proposed by
Terra-Gen might be unnecessary. Accordingly, Terra-Gen is required to
explain why additional deposits for creditworthy customers are
necessary, or delete the letter of credit provision for creditworthy
parties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ Deposits for system impact studies and interconnection
studies and the requirement to fund system expansions required by
the transmission service request are required elsewhere in the OATT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
44. While we accept the creditworthiness provisions, subject to
further explanation or revision from Terra-Gen, to the extent a
transmission customer believes that the transmission provider has
discriminated in the application of its creditworthiness standards,
that customer may contact the Commission's enforcement hotline or file
a complaint pursuant to section 206 of the Federal Power Act (FPA).\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ 16 U.S.C. 824e (2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
f. Attachment C--Methodology for Calculating ATC
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
45. Terra-Gen requests waivers of certain Attachment C (calculation
of available transfer capability) requirements, to the extent necessary
to accept its proposed Attachment C provisions. Terra-Gen asserts that
its Attachment C methodology is consistent with or superior to the pro
forma OATT because it provides necessary information for assessing the
transfer capability of the Dixie Valley Line while avoiding the
imposition of unnecessary costs, such as those associated with various
modeling requirements. In addition, Terra-Gen commits to reassess its
proposed Available Transfer Capability (ATC) methodology in the event
there is a modification to or addition of a transmission component on
the Dixie Valley Line. Finally, until such time as Terra-Gen has an
available Web site, Terra-Gen requests a limited waiver from the
requirement to include a link to its ATC methodology.\67\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ Terra-Gen suggests that it anticipates having an
operational Web site within ninety days from the date upon which its
filing was made and commits to amending its ATC provision to include
a link to its ATC methodology once the Web site becomes available.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
46. Pursuant to the Commission's January 14 Order, Terra-Gen
identifies the Rated System Path Methodology, described in North
American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) Reliability Standard
MOD-29-1a, as the methodology it employs to calculate ATC. Terra-Gen
further states that it has included a process flow diagram illustrating
the steps taken in calculating ATC, as well as definitions of the ATC
components. Terra-Gen also includes an algorithm that it states would
apply to its scheduling, operating and planning horizons, but suggests
that ATC calculations for SoCal Edison would provide more useful
information because application of Terra-Gen's methodology results in
an ATC of zero.
47. In support of its ATC calculation, Terra-Gen states that
service on the Dixie Valley Line is contingent on the line being in
service and on SoCal Edison having sufficient ATC to schedule
deliveries from the line onto its system. Terra-Gen asserts that the
methodologies approved by NERC for the calculation of ATC demonstrate
that ATC is meaningless when applied to a single radial transmission
line with one point of interconnection. Specifically, Terra-Gen asserts
that Total Transfer Capability (TTC) is zero because a single radial
transmission line with one point of interconnection cannot sustain an
N-1 contingency and, thus, ATC is also zero.
ii. Protest
48. Green Borders states that Terra-Gen's calculations of TTC and
ATC as zero are in error, and that these calculations are an attempt to
reserve capacity on the Dixie Valley Line for Terra-Gen's affiliates
while denying service to others.\68\ Green Borders argues that Terra-
Gen has incorrectly applied NERC standards to arrive at a value of zero
for TTC. Green Borders asserts that the NERC Reliability Standard MOD-
29-1a is intended to ensure that contingencies will not result in
reliability problems elsewhere on the system when the contingency
occurs.\69\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ Protest at 25.
\69\ Protest, Exhibit GBG-4; Testimony of David Becher at 5:8-
11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
49. Green Borders argues that if TTC and ATC are always zero for a
radial line, then there is no need for an OATT because no capacity
would ever be available until a second circuit is built.\70\ Green
Borders states that Terra-Gen is inconsistent in arguing that TTC is
zero and also arguing that existing users should have priority service
on the line, as a TTC value of zero should preclude any transfers on
the line.\71\ Finally, Green Borders argues Terra-Gen is wrong that ETC
(capacity held by existing users) reduces both TTC and ATC, as the
equations proposed by Terra-Gen show that ETC reduces only ATC.\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ Testimony of David Becher at 5:15-16.
\71\ Protest at 24, Testimony of David Becher at 6:16-17.
\72\ Testimony of David Becher at 7:4-13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Commission Determination
50. In the January 14 Order, we directed Terra-Gen to address
certain deficiencies with its proposed Attachment C. Specifically, we
directed Terra-Gen to include certain algorithms for calculating ATC
for the scheduling, operating, and planning horizons, explain the
application of all algorithms it includes, provide an ATC process flow
diagram and an Internet link to its ATC data and algorithms, and revise
its proposed definitions of ATC components to comply with the
requirements of Order No. 890.\73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ January 14 Order, 134 FERC ] 61,027 at P 58.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
51. With respect to the aforementioned directives, we find that
Terra-Gen has substantially complied inasmuch as it has attempted to
provide the Commission with the missing information that was identified
in the January 14 Order. However, we find that Terra-Gen's treatment of
ATC in Attachment C is contradictory, when considering a TTC value of
zero, and we will therefore reject Terra-Gen's proposed Attachment C.
Moreover, it is illogical for Terra-Gen to state that TTC on the Dixie
Valley Line is zero, while simultaneously arguing that there is
capacity available to accommodate any grandfathered service but not
service for other potential users. Insofar as Terra-Gen's Attachment C
will always yield a TTC value of zero regardless of the line's actual
capacity, we find that such methodology is not consistent with or
superior to the pro forma tariff, and is thus not just and reasonable.
52. In prior orders, we have found that different transmission
provider business models and unique layouts and the resulting different
services offered may justify differences in the OATT applicable to such
facilities as compared to an OATT governing more traditional integrated
network transmission facilities.\74\ For example, as discussed
previously in this order, we will not require Terra-Gen to provide
network service on the Dixie Valley Line as it makes little sense to
provide such service.\75\ Similarly, we find here that Terra-Gen's
assertion that application of the N-1 analysis in computing transfer
capability makes little sense because the Dixie Valley Line is a radial
tie line, and do not find it to be reasonable. This standard, as
applied to the Dixie Valley Line, will always result in zero for ATC
[[Page 28980]]
and TTC, regardless of whether there may actually be capacity
available. Accordingly, we will direct Terra-Gen to re-file Attachment
C establishing the TTC value for the line based on the most limiting
component of the line, electrical characteristics, or other factors
(such as ground clearance) that impact reliable operation, and which is
consistent with the fact that that an allocation of capacity to
existing users implies that TTC on the Dixie Valley Line must exceed
zero.\76\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ See, e.g., MATL, 116 FERC ] 61,071, at P 57-58.
\75\ Id. See also Sagebrush, 130 FERC ] 61,093 at P 29.
\76\ While we recognize that the downstream ATC at the SoCal
Edison system interface may limit the realizable ATC on the Dixie
Valley Line, service from the point where Terra-Gen's line
interconnect with SoCal Edison's line is a separate matter not
covered under Terra-Gen's OATT and, as such, is beyond the scope of
this proceeding. Additionally, because we reject the proposed
Attachment C, we find it unnecessary to address the limited request
for waiver of the requirement to provide an Internet link to the ATC
calculation data and methodology.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
g. Transmission Planning Process--Attachment K
i. Terra-Gen Tariff Provisions
53. In the January 14 Order, the Commission addressed Terra-Gen's
proposed planning process. The Commission found that Terra-Gen's
planning process satisfied the coordination, transparency, and regional
participation principles. The Commission also found that Terra-Gen's
proposed planning process satisfactorily addressed how it would recover
the cost of planning activities. However, the Commission found that
Terra-Gen partially complied with the openness, information exchange,
comparability, and dispute resolution principles. In addition, the
Commission found that Terra-Gen did not satisfy the economic planning
or cost allocation principles.
54. As a result of the January 14 Order, Terra-Gen proposes an
Attachment K that is directed at addressing the guidance provided in
the January 14 Order. Specifically, Terra-Gen addresses further the
openness, information exchange, comparability, dispute resolution,
economic planning, and cost allocation principles.
ii. Protest
55. Green Borders comments that, while Terra-Gen's proposed
planning process addresses the guidance in the January 14 Order, the
Commission should require Terra-Gen to make further revisions to the
comparability, economic planning, and cost allocation principles.
56. With regard to comparability, Green Borders points out that
Terra-Gen's proposal provides Terra-Gen with sole discretion for
selecting which projects to undertake, based on factors over which
Terra-Gen has sole discretion to consider. Green Borders asserts that,
under such a process, stakeholders would not be able to ensure that
Terra-Gen is not discriminating against unaffiliated generators and
using the transmission planning process to allocate the cost of self-
serving projects to multiple parties.\77\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ Protest at 18.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
57. Green Borders also asserts that Terra-Gen's economic planning
proposal could lead to discriminatory planning and ignores the
interests of stakeholders in the planning process.\78\ For example,
Green Borders points out that, while a transmission customer must
assist in gathering the information for conducting the economic study,
the provisions do not provide an opportunity for the requesting
customer to participate in, oversee, or observe the study.
Additionally, Green Borders asserts that Terra-Gen's proposal to
reserve sole discretion of which economic studies are highest priority
is unreasonable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
58. Finally, Green Borders asserts that Terra-Gen's cost allocation
proposal doesn't satisfy the guidance provided in the January 14 Order.
Green Borders states that, while the Commission required that Terra-Gen
include a method by which Terra-Gen would allocate the costs of new
transmission facilities that do not fit under existing rate structures,
Terra-Gen's OATT only provides that the cost allocation of facilities
will be pursuant to the tariff.\79\ Green Borders asks that the
Commission require Terra-Gen to provide greater specificity regarding
the allocation of costs that are not already contemplated by the
existing rate schedules.\80\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ Id. at 19.
\80\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Commission Determination
59. Consistent with our findings in the January 14 Order, we
continue to find that Terra-Gen complies with the coordination,
transparency, and regional participation principles.\81\ For the same
reasons, Terra-Gen also satisfactorily addresses the recovery of
planning costs.\82\ In addition, Terra-Gen has addressed the openness,
information exchange, and dispute resolution principles, based upon the
guidance in the January 14 Order. For example, Terra-Gen has addressed
the openness principle by modifying its provisions to allow any
stakeholder to participate in the planning process. Terra-Gen also
addressed the information exchange by explaining how interested parties
may submit data to the planning process and provided the milestones and
timeframes for data submission and stakeholder review of the plan.
Terra-Gen has also specified the process by which disputes arising
during the planning process will be handled. Accordingly, in addition
to meeting the coordination principle, transparency principle, regional
participation principle, and the recovery of planning costs, we find
that Terra-Gen satisfactorily complies with the openness, information
exchange and dispute resolution principles.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ See January 14 Order, 134 FERC ] 61,027 at P 68, P 76, and
P 89, respectively.
\82\ Id. P 98.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
60. While we find that Terra-Gen complies with the principles
addressed above, we address below the comparability, economic planning,
and cost allocation principles, as addressed by Terra-Gen in the
instant filing.
Comparability
61. In the January 14 Order, the Commission found that Terra-Gen's
Attachment K partially complied with the comparability principle.
However, the Commission noted that Terra-Gen had not addressed how its
proposed planning provisions comply with Order No. 890-A.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\83\ January 14 Order, 134 FERC ] 61,027 at P 83.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
62. Terra-Gen addresses the requirement of the January 14 Order by
modifying its Attachment K to clarify that all interested stakeholders
in the transmission planning process may participate in the Planning
Advisory Group, including providers of transmission and non-
transmission alternatives. Additionally, Terra-Gen has clarified ho