Public Hearing and Opportunities for Public Review and Comment, 66963-66966 [2012-27306]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 217 / Thursday, November 8, 2012 / Notices
Tentative Agenda
1. U–233 Waste Briefing/Update
2. Site-Wide Environmental Impact
Statement Briefing/Update
3. Nye County Drilling Presentation
4. Industrial Sites-Closing Use
Restriction Sites Presentation
Public Participation: The EM SSAB,
Nevada, welcomes the attendance of the
public at its advisory committee
meetings and will make every effort to
accommodate persons with physical
disabilities or special needs. If you
require special accommodations due to
a disability, please contact Barbara
Ulmer at least seven days in advance of
the meeting at the phone number listed
above. Written statements may be filed
with the Board either before or after the
meeting. Individuals who wish to make
oral presentations pertaining to agenda
items should contact Barbara Ulmer at
the telephone number listed above. The
request must be received five days prior
to the meeting and reasonable provision
will be made to include the presentation
in the agenda. The Deputy Designated
Federal Officer is empowered to
conduct the meeting in a fashion that
will facilitate the orderly conduct of
business. Individuals wishing to make
public comments will be provided a
maximum of five minutes to present
their comments.
Minutes: Minutes will be available by
writing to Barbara Ulmer at the address
listed above or at the following Web
site: https://nv.energy.gov/nssab/
MeetingMinutes.aspx.
Issued at Washington, DC on November 2,
2012.
LaTanya R. Butler,
Acting Deputy Committee Management
Officer.
[FR Doc. 2012–27300 Filed 11–7–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Bonneville Power Administration
[BPA File No. OS–14]
Public Hearing and Opportunities for
Public Review and Comment
Bonneville Power
Administration (BPA), Department of
Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Notice of Proposed 2014
Oversupply Rates.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY:
On March 6, 2012, BPA filed
its Oversupply Management Protocol
with the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (Docket No. EL11–44) as an
amendment to BPA’s Open Access
Transmission Tariff. The protocol
SUMMARY:
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authorizes BPA to displace generation
in its balancing authority area with
Federal hydropower and provide
compensation to generators for certain
costs related to the displacement. BPA
is holding the OS–14 rate proceeding to
establish a rate to recover the costs
incurred under the protocol.
DATES: Persons wishing to intervene and
become parties to the proceeding must
file a petition to intervene, via U.S. Mail
or electronic mail, no later than 5:00
p.m. on November 15, 2012. A
prehearing conference will be held at
9:00 a.m. on November 14, 2012.
Written comments by non-party
participants must be received by
February 15, 2013, to be considered in
the Administrator’s Record of Decision.
ADDRESSES:
1. Petitions to intervene should be
directed to Hearing Clerk—L–7,
Bonneville Power Administration, 905
NE 11th Ave., Portland, Oregon 97232,
or may be emailed to rateclerk@bpa.gov.
In addition, copies of the petition must
be served concurrently on BPA’s
General Counsel directed to Mr. Allen
Chan, LT–7, Office of General Counsel,
905 NE 11th Ave., Portland, Oregon
97232, or via email to acchan@bpa.gov
(see section III.A. for more information
regarding interventions).
2. Written comments by participants
should be submitted to the Public
Engagement Office—DKE–7, Bonneville
Power Administration, P.O. Box 14428,
Portland, Oregon 97293. You may also
email your comments to www.bpa.gov/
comment. BPA requests that all
comments and documents intended to
be part of the Official Record in this rate
proceeding contain the designation OS–
14 in the subject line of the email.
3. The prehearing conference will be
held in the BPA Rates Hearing Room,
2nd floor, 911 NE 11th Ave., Portland,
Oregon 97232.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Heidi Helwig—DKE–7, Public Affairs
Specialist, Bonneville Power
Administration, P.O. Box 3621,
Portland, Oregon 97208–3621; by
phone at 503–230–3458 or toll free at
1–800–622–4519; or via email to
hyhelwig@bpa.gov.
Responsible Officials: Mr. Raymond D.
Bliven, Power Rates Manager, and Ms.
Rebecca E. Fredrickson, Transmission
Rates Manager.
BPA Attorney Advisor: Mr. Allen Chan
is the principal BPA attorney in this
matter. Mr. Chan may be contacted by
U.S. Mail at: Mr. Allen Chan, Office
of General Counsel, LT–7, Bonneville
Power Administration, P.O. Box 3621,
Portland, OR 97208–3621 or via email
at: acchan@bpa.gov.
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Part I—Introduction and Procedural
Background
The Pacific Northwest Electric Power
Planning and Conservation Act
(Northwest Power Act) provides that
BPA must establish and periodically
review and revise its rates so that they
recover, in accordance with sound
business principles, the costs associated
with the acquisition, conservation, and
transmission of electric power,
including amortization of the Federal
investment in the Federal Columbia
River Power System (FCRPS) over a
reasonable number of years and BPA’s
other costs and expenses. The
Northwest Power Act also requires that
BPA’s rates be established based on the
record of a formal hearing, and for
transmission rates only, that the costs of
the Federal transmission system be
equitably allocated between Federal and
non-Federal power utilizing the system.
This proceeding is being conducted
under the rule for general rate
proceedings, section 1010.9 of BPA’s
Procedures. A proposed schedule for the
proceeding is provided below. A final
schedule will be established by the
Hearing Officer at the prehearing
conference.
BPA Direct Case November 14, 2012
Prehearing Conference November 14,
2012
Parties File Petition to Intervene
November 15, 2012
Motions to Strike December 7, 2012
Data Request Deadline December 7,
2012
Answers to Motions to Strike
December 14, 2012
Data Response Deadline December 14,
2012
Parties file Direct Case January 18,
2013
Clarification January 29–February 1,
2013
Motions to Strike February 6, 2013
Data Request Deadline February 6,
2013
Answers to Motions to Strike February
13, 2013
Data Response Deadline February 13,
2013
Close of Participant Comments
February 15, 2013
Litigants file Rebuttal March 5, 2013
Clarification March 7–8, 2013
Motions to Strike March 13, 2013
Data Request Deadline March 13, 2013
Answers to Motions to Strike March
20, 2013
Data Response Deadline March 20,
2013
Cross-Examination March 25–29, 2013
Initial Briefs Filed April 29, 2013
Oral Argument May 9, 2013
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Draft ROD issued June 11, 2013
Briefs on Exceptions June 28, 2013
Final ROD—Final Studies July 22,
2013
Section 1010.7 of BPA’s Procedures
prohibits ex parte communications. The
ex parte rule applies to all BPA and
DOE employees and contractors. Except
as provided below, any outside
communications with BPA and/or DOE
personnel regarding the merits of any
issue in BPA’s rate proceeding by other
Executive Branch agencies, Congress,
existing or potential BPA customers
(including tribes), and nonprofit or
public interest groups are considered
outside communications and are subject
to the ex parte rule. The general rule
does not apply to communications
relating to: (1) Matters of procedure only
(the status of the rate proceeding, for
example); (2) exchanges of data in the
course of business or under the Freedom
of Information Act; (3) requests for
factual information; (4) matters for
which BPA is responsible under statutes
other than the ratemaking provisions; or
(5) matters which all parties agree may
be made on an ex parte basis. The ex
parte rule remains in effect until the
Administrator’s Final ROD is issued,
which is scheduled to occur on or about
July 22, 2013.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Part II—Description of the Rate
Proceeding
A. Purpose of the Hearing
During periods of high water flows on
the Columbia River, primarily during
the spring and early summer, BPA, the
Army Corps of Engineers (Corps), and
the Bureau of Reclamation (Bureau)
must take all reasonable actions to avoid
excess spill in order to protect
endangered fish and other aquatic
species in accordance with the Clean
Water Act, Endangered Species Act, and
court orders. At times, spilling water
over the dams, rather than running
water through the turbines to generate
electricity, increases the levels of
nitrogen, oxygen, and other gases in the
water, beyond state water quality
standards. To meet applicable
environmental responsibilities, during
periods of high flows BPA, the Corps,
and the Bureau attempt to moderate
spill and avoid total dissolved gases
(TDG) beyond state water quality
standards by running more water
through the turbines.
To avoid spilling water beyond
approved TDG levels, other generation
serving load is reduced or shut down
and an equal amount of additional
hydroelectric generation is delivered to
that load. In May 2011, the BPA
Administrator issued a Final Record of
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Decision adopting an Interim
Environmental Redispatch policy, under
which BPA could displace generation
within its balancing authority area with
free Federal hydropower. On June 13,
2011, a group of wind customers filed
a complaint with the Commission,
requesting, among other things, that the
Commission use its authority under
section 211A of the Federal Power Act
to order BPA to cease its environmental
redispatch policy because it failed to
provide transmission service on terms
and conditions that are comparable to
those under which BPA provides
service to itself and that are not unduly
discriminatory or preferential.
On December 7, 2011, the
Commission issued an order finding
that BPA’s environmental redispatch
policy failed to provide comparable
transmission service and ordered BPA
to file revisions to its Open Access
Transmission Tariff to comply with the
order. On March 6, 2012, BPA filed the
Oversupply Management Protocol with
the Commission, under which
generators can elect to be compensated
for certain costs related to displacement.
Such costs are limited to (1) Production
tax credits; (2) renewable energy credits
unbundled from the sale of energy; and
(3) for contracts executed prior to March
6, 2012, costs related to bundled sales
of renewable energy credits and energy.
The Oversupply Management Protocol
is set to expire on March 30, 2013.
This OS–14 rate proceeding will
establish rates to recover the costs
already incurred under the Oversupply
Management Protocol, and any future
costs incurred up to September 30,
2015, in the event the Oversupply
Management Protocol is renewed after it
expires on March 30, 2013. The
extension of the effective period of the
rates is contingent on further guidance
from the Commission. BPA will revise
its proposal as necessary to conform to
such guidance. BPA is proposing to
adopt a power rate to collect 50 percent
of the costs from power customers and
a new control area services rate to
collect the other 50 percent of the costs
from those generators that elect to be
compensated for displacement.
B. The National Environmental Policy
Act
BPA is in the process of assessing the
potential for environmental effects
resulting from implementation of the
proposed OS–14 rates, consistent with
the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA). BPA has previously prepared
an Environmental Clearance
Memorandum, dated March 23, 2012,
for the Oversupply Management
Protocol, which considered
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environmental implications of the
protocol and documented the
categorical exclusion of the protocol
from further NEPA review. BPA will
evaluate whether the OS–14 rate
proposal is covered within the scope of
this previous NEPA documentation or
whether additional NEPA
documentation is necessary for any
aspects of the OS–14 rate proposal. If
additional NEPA documentation is
necessary, a preliminary review of the
OS–14 rate proposal indicates that it
involves primarily administrative and
financial matters that appear to fall
within a class of actions that are also
categorically excluded from further
NEPA review pursuant to applicable
NEPA regulations. Persons may submit
comments regarding potential
environmental effects of the proposal to
Katherine Pierce, NEPA Compliance
Officer, KEC–4, Bonneville Power
Administration, 905 NE 11th Avenue,
Portland, OR 97232. Any such
comments received by the comment
deadline for Participant Comments
identified in section III.A. below will be
considered by BPA’s NEPA compliance
staff in its environmental evaluation of
the OS–14 rate proposal.
C. Oversupply Workshops
In preparation for the OS–14 rate
proceeding, BPA staff held three public
workshops with customers and
interested parties from March 2012
through May 2012. BPA published
notices for all workshops, which were
well attended. During the workshops,
BPA staff presented and discussed
information about the potential costs
arising from oversupply conditions, the
functionalization of oversupply costs
between power and transmission, and
the allocation of the functionalized costs
among customers. BPA also shared
drafts of rate schedule language for the
oversupply rates and potential
procedural schedules. Staff has used the
comments received at the workshops to
assist in constructing the Initial
Proposal.
Part III—Public Participation
A. Distinguishing Between
‘‘Participants’’ and ‘‘Parties’’
BPA distinguishes between
‘‘participants in’’ and ‘‘parties to’’ the
hearing. Apart from the formal hearing
process, BPA will receive written
comments, views, opinions, and
information from ‘‘participants,’’ who
are defined in BPA’s Procedures as
persons who may submit comments
without being subject to the duties of, or
having the privileges of, parties.
Participants’ written comments will be
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 217 / Thursday, November 8, 2012 / Notices
made part of the official record and
considered by the Administrator.
Participants are not entitled to
participate in the prehearing conference;
may not cross-examine parties’
witnesses, seek discovery, or serve or be
served with documents; and are not
subject to the same procedural
requirements as parties. BPA customers
whose rates are subject to this
proceeding, or their affiliated customer
groups, may not submit participant
comments. Persons who are members or
employees of organizations that have
intervened in the rate proceeding may
submit general comments as
participants but may not use the
comment procedures to address specific
issues raised by their intervenor
organization.
Written comments by participants
will be included in the record if they are
received by February 15, 2013, and
should be submitted to the address
listed in the ADDRESSES section of this
notice.
Entities or persons become parties to
the proceeding by filing petitions to
intervene, which must state the name
and address of the entity or person
requesting party status and their interest
in the hearing. BPA customers and
affiliated customer groups will be
granted intervention based on a petition
filed in conformance with BPA’s
Procedures. Other petitioners must
explain their interests in sufficient
detail to permit the Hearing Officer to
determine whether such petitioners
have a relevant interest in the hearing.
Pursuant to Rule 1010.1(d) of BPA’s
Procedures, BPA waives the
requirement in Rule 1010.4(d) that an
opposition to an intervention petition be
filed and served 24 hours before the
prehearing conference. Any opposition
to an intervention petition must instead
be made at the prehearing conference.
Any party, including BPA, may oppose
a petition for intervention. All timely
petitions will be ruled on by the Hearing
Officer. Late interventions are strongly
disfavored. Opposition to an untimely
petition to intervene must be filed and
received by BPA within two days after
service of the petition.
BPA is holding the OS–14 rate
proceeding at the same time as the BP–
14 rate proceeding for power,
transmission, and ancillary and control
area service rates. However, these
proceedings are separate. As a result,
entities or persons wishing to intervene
in both dockets must file separate
petitions to intervene, and all filings
must be made in the rate proceeding to
which the filing pertains.
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B. Developing the Record
The record will include, among other
things, the transcripts of the hearing;
testimony, evidence, and argument
entered into the record by BPA and the
parties; written comments from
participants; and other material
accepted into the record by the Hearing
Officer. The Hearing Officer then will
review the record and certify the record
to the Administrator for final decision.
Parties will have the opportunity to
file initial briefs after the close of crossexamination. BPA then will issue a
Draft Record of Decision that will
include the Administrator’s preliminary
decisions. Parties may file briefs on
exceptions, after which the
Administrator will issue the Final
Record of Decision establishing the rate.
The Administrator will develop a
final rate based on the entire record. The
Administrator will serve copies of the
Final Record of Decision on all parties
and will file its rates with the
Commission for confirmation and
approval.
Part IV—Oversupply OS–14
A. Scope of the Oversupply Rate
Proceeding
Pursuant to Rule 1010.3(f) of BPA’s
Procedures, the Administrator limits the
scope of this proceeding to issues
concerning the rates for recovering the
costs of the Oversupply Management
Protocol described in Part II.A of this
notice. In particular, the following
issues are not part of the scope of the
case, and the Hearing Officer is directed
to strike all testimony concerning these
issues: the terms of the Oversupply
Management Protocol; whether the
Oversupply Management Protocol
complies with the Commission’s Order
issued on December 7, 2011; whether
BPA took all actions to avoid using the
Oversupply Management Protocol,
including the payment of negative
prices to generators outside of BPA’s
balancing authority area; the scope of
BPA’s environmental obligations;
program levels and program level
forecasts for any BPA program; and rates
previously established or to be
established in any other rate case. In
addition, potential environmental
impacts are not an issue in this
proceeding. Environmental impacts are
addressed in a concurrent NEPA
process. See section II.B. Pursuant to
§ 1010.3(f) of BPA’s Procedures, the
Administrator directs the Hearing
Officer to exclude from the record all
argument, testimony, or other evidence
that seeks in any way to address the
potential environmental impacts of the
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rate being developed in this OS–14 rate
proceeding.
B. Summary of the 2014 Oversupply
Rate Proposal
The proposed OS–14 rates are formula
rates designed to recover BPA’s
oversupply costs. See Part II.A for a
description of oversupply, the
Oversupply Management Protocol, and
BPA’s incurrence of costs to mitigate
oversupply conditions.
The rates will recover the following
costs incurred between March 31, 2012,
and September 30, 2015 (again, costs
will be recovered for periods after
March 30, 2013, if the protocol is
renewed and pending Commission
guidance): (1) Costs of an independent
evaluator; and (2) payments to
generators for (a) production tax credits,
(b) renewable energy credits, and (3)
losses with respect to certain power
sales contracts. Under the proposed
formula rates, BPA would recover actual
costs rather than forecast costs, therefore
avoiding the need to perform a later
true-up between forecast costs and
actual costs.
The OS–14 rate proposal consists of
two parts: (1) A power rate that applies
as a separate charge to the Priority Firm
Power (PF–14) rate, the Industrial Firm
Power (IP–14) rate, and the New
Resource Firm Power (NR–14) rate; and
(2) a new control area service rate. The
oversupply costs to be recovered would
be allocated equally between the power
rate and the control area services rate—
one-half of the costs to the power
Oversupply rate and the other half to
the control area service Oversupply rate.
The costs would then be charged to the
customers that are subject to the two
rates.
The power Oversupply rate would be
charged to customers subject to PF–14,
IP–14, and NR–14 rates. The
Oversupply charge would be 50 percent
of the costs incurred under the
Oversupply Management Protocol
multiplied by the customer’s load,
divided by the sum of all power
customers’ load. For PF customers’
loads, BPA proposes to use the lesser of
each customer’s Rate Period High Water
Mark (RHWM) and the customer’s net
requirement. For IP customers’ loads,
BPA proposes to use each customer’s
contract energy load. Currently, there
are no customers being served at the NR
rate and BPA does not expect any such
customers during the effective period of
the OS–14 rates.
The control area service Oversupply
rate would be charged to each generator
that elects compensation pursuant to the
Oversupply Management Protocol,
based on the facility nameplate capacity
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in kilowatts. The control area service
charge would be 50 percent of the costs
incurred under the Oversupply
Management Protocol multiplied by the
nameplate capacity of each participating
generator, divided by the sum of all
generating facility nameplate capacities
of all participating generators.
BPA proposes to bill for costs
incurred prior to the effective date of the
OS–14 rate after the effective date of the
OS–14 rate. BPA would include charges
for costs incurred after the effective date
on the bill for the month those costs
were incurred, subject to a rate cap as
discussed below. BPA proposes to make
the OS–14 rates effective until all costs
have been billed and such bills have
been fully paid.
BPA is proposing to cap the total
amount that would be billed under each
Oversupply rate at $4,000,000 in any
one month. The rate cap would allow
the billing to be spread over several
months to ease the cash flow effect on
customers. Any oversupply costs in
excess of the cap will carry over to
subsequent months’ bills until the
balance is completely billed.
Part V—Proposed Oversupply Rate
Schedules
BPA’s proposed 2014 control area
service Oversupply Rate Schedule and
power General Rate Schedule Provision
Oversupply Rate are a part of this notice
and are available for viewing and
downloading on BPA’s Web site at
www.bpa.gov/goto/OS14Schedule
Copies of the proposed rate schedules
also are available for viewing in BPA’s
Public Reference Room at the BPA
Headquarters, 1st Floor, 905 NE 11th
Avenue, Portland, OR 97232.
Issued this 29th day of October, 2012.
Stephen J. Wright,
Administrator and Chief Executive Officer.
[FR Doc. 2012–27306 Filed 11–7–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Bonneville Power Administration
[BPA File No. BP–14]
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Fiscal Year (FY) 2014–2015 Proposed
Power and Transmission Rate
Adjustments; Public Hearing and
Opportunities for Public Review and
Comment
Bonneville Power
Administration (BPA or Bonneville),
Department of Energy (DOE).
ACTIONS: Notice of FY 2014–2015
Proposed Power and Transmission Rate
Adjustments.
AGENCY:
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BPA is holding a consolidated
rate proceeding, Docket No. BP–14, to
establish power and transmission rates
for FY 2014–2015.
The Pacific Northwest Electric Power
Planning and Conservation Act
(Northwest Power Act) provides that
BPA must establish and periodically
review and revise its rates so that they
recover, in accordance with sound
business principles, the costs associated
with the acquisition, conservation, and
transmission of electric power,
including amortization of the Federal
investment in the Federal Columbia
River Power System (FCRPS) over a
reasonable number of years and BPA’s
other costs and expenses. The
Northwest Power Act also requires that
BPA’s rates be established based on the
record of a formal hearing, and for
transmission rates only, that the costs of
the Federal transmission system be
equitably allocated between Federal and
non-Federal power utilizing the system.
By this notice, BPA announces the
commencement of a power and
transmission rate adjustment proceeding
for power, transmission, control area
services, and ancillary services rates
proposed to be effective on October 1,
2013.
DATES: Anyone wishing to become a
party to the BP–14 proceeding must
provide written notice, via U.S. Mail or
electronic mail, which must be received
by BPA no later than 3:00 p.m. on
November 15, 2012.
The BP–14 rate adjustment
proceeding begins with a prehearing
conference at 9:00 a.m. on November 14,
2012, in the BPA Rates Hearing Room,
2nd floor, 911 NE 11th Avenue,
Portland, Oregon 97232.
Written comments by non-party
participants must be received by
February 15, 2013, to be considered in
the Administrator’s Record of Decision
(ROD).
ADDRESSES:
1. Petitions to intervene should be
directed to: Hearing Clerk—L–7,
Bonneville Power Administration, 905
NE 11th Avenue, Portland, Oregon
97232, or may be emailed to
rateclerk@bpa.gov. In addition, copies
of the petition must be served
concurrently on BPA’s General Counsel
and directed to both Mr. Peter J. Burger,
LP–7, and Mr. Barry Bennett, LC–7,
Office of General Counsel, 905 NE 11th
Avenue, Portland, Oregon 97232, or via
email to pjburger@bpa.gov and
bbennett@bpa.gov (see section III.A. for
more information regarding
interventions).
2. Written comments by participants
should be submitted to the Public
SUMMARY:
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Engagement Office, DKE–7, Bonneville
Power Administration, P.O. Box 14428,
Portland, Oregon 97293. Participants
may also submit comments by email at:
www.bpa.gov/comment. BPA requests
that all comments and documents
intended to be part of the Official
Record in this rate proceeding contain
the designation BP–14 in the subject
line.
Ms.
Heidi Y. Helwig, DKC–7, Public Affairs
Specialist, Bonneville Power
Administration, P.O. Box 3621,
Portland, Oregon 97208; by phone toll
free at 1–800–622–4520; or via email to
hyhelwig@bpa.gov.
Responsible Officials: Mr. Raymond
D. Bliven, Power Rates Manager, is the
official responsible for the development
of BPA’s power rates, and Ms. Rebecca
E. Fredrickson, Transmission Rates
Manager, is the official responsible for
the development of BPA’s transmission,
ancillary and control area services
(ACS) rates.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Table of Contents
Part I. Introduction and Procedural
Background
Part II. Scope of 2014 Rate Proceeding
Part III. Public Participation in BP–14
Part IV. Summary of Rate Proposals
Part V. Proposed 2014 Rate Schedules
Part I—Introduction and Procedural
Background
Section 7(i) of the Northwest Power
Act, 16 U.S.C. 839e(i), requires that
BPA’s rates be established according to
certain procedures, including
publication in the Federal Register of
this notice of the proposed rates; one or
more hearings conducted as
expeditiously as practicable by a
Hearing Officer; opportunity for both
oral presentation and written
submission of views, data, questions,
and arguments related to the proposed
rates; and a decision by the
Administrator based on the record.
BPA’s rate proceedings are further
governed by BPA’s Procedures
Governing Bonneville Power
Administration Rate Hearings, 51
Federal Register 7611 (1986), which
implement and expand the statutory
requirements.
This proceeding is being conducted
under the rule for general rate
proceedings, section 1010.4 of BPA’s
Procedures. A proposed schedule for the
proceeding is provided below. A final
schedule will be established by the
Hearing Officer at the prehearing
conference.
BPA Direct Case
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November 14, 2012
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 217 (Thursday, November 8, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 66963-66966]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-27306]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Bonneville Power Administration
[BPA File No. OS-14]
Public Hearing and Opportunities for Public Review and Comment
AGENCY: Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), Department of Energy
(DOE).
ACTION: Notice of Proposed 2014 Oversupply Rates.
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SUMMARY: On March 6, 2012, BPA filed its Oversupply Management Protocol
with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Docket No. EL11-44) as
an amendment to BPA's Open Access Transmission Tariff. The protocol
authorizes BPA to displace generation in its balancing authority area
with Federal hydropower and provide compensation to generators for
certain costs related to the displacement. BPA is holding the OS-14
rate proceeding to establish a rate to recover the costs incurred under
the protocol.
DATES: Persons wishing to intervene and become parties to the
proceeding must file a petition to intervene, via U.S. Mail or
electronic mail, no later than 5:00 p.m. on November 15, 2012. A
prehearing conference will be held at 9:00 a.m. on November 14, 2012.
Written comments by non-party participants must be received by February
15, 2013, to be considered in the Administrator's Record of Decision.
ADDRESSES:
1. Petitions to intervene should be directed to Hearing Clerk--L-7,
Bonneville Power Administration, 905 NE 11th Ave., Portland, Oregon
97232, or may be emailed to rateclerk@bpa.gov. In addition, copies of
the petition must be served concurrently on BPA's General Counsel
directed to Mr. Allen Chan, LT-7, Office of General Counsel, 905 NE
11th Ave., Portland, Oregon 97232, or via email to acchan@bpa.gov (see
section III.A. for more information regarding interventions).
2. Written comments by participants should be submitted to the
Public Engagement Office--DKE-7, Bonneville Power Administration, P.O.
Box 14428, Portland, Oregon 97293. You may also email your comments to
www.bpa.gov/comment. BPA requests that all comments and documents
intended to be part of the Official Record in this rate proceeding
contain the designation OS-14 in the subject line of the email.
3. The prehearing conference will be held in the BPA Rates Hearing
Room, 2nd floor, 911 NE 11th Ave., Portland, Oregon 97232.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Heidi Helwig--DKE-7, Public Affairs Specialist, Bonneville Power
Administration, P.O. Box 3621, Portland, Oregon 97208-3621; by phone at
503-230-3458 or toll free at 1-800-622-4519; or via email to
hyhelwig@bpa.gov.
Responsible Officials: Mr. Raymond D. Bliven, Power Rates Manager, and
Ms. Rebecca E. Fredrickson, Transmission Rates Manager.
BPA Attorney Advisor: Mr. Allen Chan is the principal BPA attorney in
this matter. Mr. Chan may be contacted by U.S. Mail at: Mr. Allen Chan,
Office of General Counsel, LT-7, Bonneville Power Administration, P.O.
Box 3621, Portland, OR 97208-3621 or via email at: acchan@bpa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Part I--Introduction and Procedural Background
The Pacific Northwest Electric Power Planning and Conservation Act
(Northwest Power Act) provides that BPA must establish and periodically
review and revise its rates so that they recover, in accordance with
sound business principles, the costs associated with the acquisition,
conservation, and transmission of electric power, including
amortization of the Federal investment in the Federal Columbia River
Power System (FCRPS) over a reasonable number of years and BPA's other
costs and expenses. The Northwest Power Act also requires that BPA's
rates be established based on the record of a formal hearing, and for
transmission rates only, that the costs of the Federal transmission
system be equitably allocated between Federal and non-Federal power
utilizing the system.
This proceeding is being conducted under the rule for general rate
proceedings, section 1010.9 of BPA's Procedures. A proposed schedule
for the proceeding is provided below. A final schedule will be
established by the Hearing Officer at the prehearing conference.
BPA Direct Case November 14, 2012
Prehearing Conference November 14, 2012
Parties File Petition to Intervene November 15, 2012
Motions to Strike December 7, 2012
Data Request Deadline December 7, 2012
Answers to Motions to Strike December 14, 2012
Data Response Deadline December 14, 2012
Parties file Direct Case January 18, 2013
Clarification January 29-February 1, 2013
Motions to Strike February 6, 2013
Data Request Deadline February 6, 2013
Answers to Motions to Strike February 13, 2013
Data Response Deadline February 13, 2013
Close of Participant Comments February 15, 2013
Litigants file Rebuttal March 5, 2013
Clarification March 7-8, 2013
Motions to Strike March 13, 2013
Data Request Deadline March 13, 2013
Answers to Motions to Strike March 20, 2013
Data Response Deadline March 20, 2013
Cross-Examination March 25-29, 2013
Initial Briefs Filed April 29, 2013
Oral Argument May 9, 2013
[[Page 66964]]
Draft ROD issued June 11, 2013
Briefs on Exceptions June 28, 2013
Final ROD--Final Studies July 22, 2013
Section 1010.7 of BPA's Procedures prohibits ex parte
communications. The ex parte rule applies to all BPA and DOE employees
and contractors. Except as provided below, any outside communications
with BPA and/or DOE personnel regarding the merits of any issue in
BPA's rate proceeding by other Executive Branch agencies, Congress,
existing or potential BPA customers (including tribes), and nonprofit
or public interest groups are considered outside communications and are
subject to the ex parte rule. The general rule does not apply to
communications relating to: (1) Matters of procedure only (the status
of the rate proceeding, for example); (2) exchanges of data in the
course of business or under the Freedom of Information Act; (3)
requests for factual information; (4) matters for which BPA is
responsible under statutes other than the ratemaking provisions; or (5)
matters which all parties agree may be made on an ex parte basis. The
ex parte rule remains in effect until the Administrator's Final ROD is
issued, which is scheduled to occur on or about July 22, 2013.
Part II--Description of the Rate Proceeding
A. Purpose of the Hearing
During periods of high water flows on the Columbia River, primarily
during the spring and early summer, BPA, the Army Corps of Engineers
(Corps), and the Bureau of Reclamation (Bureau) must take all
reasonable actions to avoid excess spill in order to protect endangered
fish and other aquatic species in accordance with the Clean Water Act,
Endangered Species Act, and court orders. At times, spilling water over
the dams, rather than running water through the turbines to generate
electricity, increases the levels of nitrogen, oxygen, and other gases
in the water, beyond state water quality standards. To meet applicable
environmental responsibilities, during periods of high flows BPA, the
Corps, and the Bureau attempt to moderate spill and avoid total
dissolved gases (TDG) beyond state water quality standards by running
more water through the turbines.
To avoid spilling water beyond approved TDG levels, other
generation serving load is reduced or shut down and an equal amount of
additional hydroelectric generation is delivered to that load. In May
2011, the BPA Administrator issued a Final Record of Decision adopting
an Interim Environmental Redispatch policy, under which BPA could
displace generation within its balancing authority area with free
Federal hydropower. On June 13, 2011, a group of wind customers filed a
complaint with the Commission, requesting, among other things, that the
Commission use its authority under section 211A of the Federal Power
Act to order BPA to cease its environmental redispatch policy because
it failed to provide transmission service on terms and conditions that
are comparable to those under which BPA provides service to itself and
that are not unduly discriminatory or preferential.
On December 7, 2011, the Commission issued an order finding that
BPA's environmental redispatch policy failed to provide comparable
transmission service and ordered BPA to file revisions to its Open
Access Transmission Tariff to comply with the order. On March 6, 2012,
BPA filed the Oversupply Management Protocol with the Commission, under
which generators can elect to be compensated for certain costs related
to displacement. Such costs are limited to (1) Production tax credits;
(2) renewable energy credits unbundled from the sale of energy; and (3)
for contracts executed prior to March 6, 2012, costs related to bundled
sales of renewable energy credits and energy. The Oversupply Management
Protocol is set to expire on March 30, 2013.
This OS-14 rate proceeding will establish rates to recover the
costs already incurred under the Oversupply Management Protocol, and
any future costs incurred up to September 30, 2015, in the event the
Oversupply Management Protocol is renewed after it expires on March 30,
2013. The extension of the effective period of the rates is contingent
on further guidance from the Commission. BPA will revise its proposal
as necessary to conform to such guidance. BPA is proposing to adopt a
power rate to collect 50 percent of the costs from power customers and
a new control area services rate to collect the other 50 percent of the
costs from those generators that elect to be compensated for
displacement.
B. The National Environmental Policy Act
BPA is in the process of assessing the potential for environmental
effects resulting from implementation of the proposed OS-14 rates,
consistent with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). BPA has
previously prepared an Environmental Clearance Memorandum, dated March
23, 2012, for the Oversupply Management Protocol, which considered
environmental implications of the protocol and documented the
categorical exclusion of the protocol from further NEPA review. BPA
will evaluate whether the OS-14 rate proposal is covered within the
scope of this previous NEPA documentation or whether additional NEPA
documentation is necessary for any aspects of the OS-14 rate proposal.
If additional NEPA documentation is necessary, a preliminary review of
the OS-14 rate proposal indicates that it involves primarily
administrative and financial matters that appear to fall within a class
of actions that are also categorically excluded from further NEPA
review pursuant to applicable NEPA regulations. Persons may submit
comments regarding potential environmental effects of the proposal to
Katherine Pierce, NEPA Compliance Officer, KEC-4, Bonneville Power
Administration, 905 NE 11th Avenue, Portland, OR 97232. Any such
comments received by the comment deadline for Participant Comments
identified in section III.A. below will be considered by BPA's NEPA
compliance staff in its environmental evaluation of the OS-14 rate
proposal.
C. Oversupply Workshops
In preparation for the OS-14 rate proceeding, BPA staff held three
public workshops with customers and interested parties from March 2012
through May 2012. BPA published notices for all workshops, which were
well attended. During the workshops, BPA staff presented and discussed
information about the potential costs arising from oversupply
conditions, the functionalization of oversupply costs between power and
transmission, and the allocation of the functionalized costs among
customers. BPA also shared drafts of rate schedule language for the
oversupply rates and potential procedural schedules. Staff has used the
comments received at the workshops to assist in constructing the
Initial Proposal.
Part III--Public Participation
A. Distinguishing Between ``Participants'' and ``Parties''
BPA distinguishes between ``participants in'' and ``parties to''
the hearing. Apart from the formal hearing process, BPA will receive
written comments, views, opinions, and information from
``participants,'' who are defined in BPA's Procedures as persons who
may submit comments without being subject to the duties of, or having
the privileges of, parties. Participants' written comments will be
[[Page 66965]]
made part of the official record and considered by the Administrator.
Participants are not entitled to participate in the prehearing
conference; may not cross-examine parties' witnesses, seek discovery,
or serve or be served with documents; and are not subject to the same
procedural requirements as parties. BPA customers whose rates are
subject to this proceeding, or their affiliated customer groups, may
not submit participant comments. Persons who are members or employees
of organizations that have intervened in the rate proceeding may submit
general comments as participants but may not use the comment procedures
to address specific issues raised by their intervenor organization.
Written comments by participants will be included in the record if
they are received by February 15, 2013, and should be submitted to the
address listed in the ADDRESSES section of this notice.
Entities or persons become parties to the proceeding by filing
petitions to intervene, which must state the name and address of the
entity or person requesting party status and their interest in the
hearing. BPA customers and affiliated customer groups will be granted
intervention based on a petition filed in conformance with BPA's
Procedures. Other petitioners must explain their interests in
sufficient detail to permit the Hearing Officer to determine whether
such petitioners have a relevant interest in the hearing. Pursuant to
Rule 1010.1(d) of BPA's Procedures, BPA waives the requirement in Rule
1010.4(d) that an opposition to an intervention petition be filed and
served 24 hours before the prehearing conference. Any opposition to an
intervention petition must instead be made at the prehearing
conference. Any party, including BPA, may oppose a petition for
intervention. All timely petitions will be ruled on by the Hearing
Officer. Late interventions are strongly disfavored. Opposition to an
untimely petition to intervene must be filed and received by BPA within
two days after service of the petition.
BPA is holding the OS-14 rate proceeding at the same time as the
BP-14 rate proceeding for power, transmission, and ancillary and
control area service rates. However, these proceedings are separate. As
a result, entities or persons wishing to intervene in both dockets must
file separate petitions to intervene, and all filings must be made in
the rate proceeding to which the filing pertains.
B. Developing the Record
The record will include, among other things, the transcripts of the
hearing; testimony, evidence, and argument entered into the record by
BPA and the parties; written comments from participants; and other
material accepted into the record by the Hearing Officer. The Hearing
Officer then will review the record and certify the record to the
Administrator for final decision.
Parties will have the opportunity to file initial briefs after the
close of cross-examination. BPA then will issue a Draft Record of
Decision that will include the Administrator's preliminary decisions.
Parties may file briefs on exceptions, after which the Administrator
will issue the Final Record of Decision establishing the rate.
The Administrator will develop a final rate based on the entire
record. The Administrator will serve copies of the Final Record of
Decision on all parties and will file its rates with the Commission for
confirmation and approval.
Part IV--Oversupply OS-14
A. Scope of the Oversupply Rate Proceeding
Pursuant to Rule 1010.3(f) of BPA's Procedures, the Administrator
limits the scope of this proceeding to issues concerning the rates for
recovering the costs of the Oversupply Management Protocol described in
Part II.A of this notice. In particular, the following issues are not
part of the scope of the case, and the Hearing Officer is directed to
strike all testimony concerning these issues: the terms of the
Oversupply Management Protocol; whether the Oversupply Management
Protocol complies with the Commission's Order issued on December 7,
2011; whether BPA took all actions to avoid using the Oversupply
Management Protocol, including the payment of negative prices to
generators outside of BPA's balancing authority area; the scope of
BPA's environmental obligations; program levels and program level
forecasts for any BPA program; and rates previously established or to
be established in any other rate case. In addition, potential
environmental impacts are not an issue in this proceeding.
Environmental impacts are addressed in a concurrent NEPA process. See
section II.B. Pursuant to Sec. 1010.3(f) of BPA's Procedures, the
Administrator directs the Hearing Officer to exclude from the record
all argument, testimony, or other evidence that seeks in any way to
address the potential environmental impacts of the rate being developed
in this OS-14 rate proceeding.
B. Summary of the 2014 Oversupply Rate Proposal
The proposed OS-14 rates are formula rates designed to recover
BPA's oversupply costs. See Part II.A for a description of oversupply,
the Oversupply Management Protocol, and BPA's incurrence of costs to
mitigate oversupply conditions.
The rates will recover the following costs incurred between March
31, 2012, and September 30, 2015 (again, costs will be recovered for
periods after March 30, 2013, if the protocol is renewed and pending
Commission guidance): (1) Costs of an independent evaluator; and (2)
payments to generators for (a) production tax credits, (b) renewable
energy credits, and (3) losses with respect to certain power sales
contracts. Under the proposed formula rates, BPA would recover actual
costs rather than forecast costs, therefore avoiding the need to
perform a later true-up between forecast costs and actual costs.
The OS-14 rate proposal consists of two parts: (1) A power rate
that applies as a separate charge to the Priority Firm Power (PF-14)
rate, the Industrial Firm Power (IP-14) rate, and the New Resource Firm
Power (NR-14) rate; and (2) a new control area service rate. The
oversupply costs to be recovered would be allocated equally between the
power rate and the control area services rate--one-half of the costs to
the power Oversupply rate and the other half to the control area
service Oversupply rate. The costs would then be charged to the
customers that are subject to the two rates.
The power Oversupply rate would be charged to customers subject to
PF-14, IP-14, and NR-14 rates. The Oversupply charge would be 50
percent of the costs incurred under the Oversupply Management Protocol
multiplied by the customer's load, divided by the sum of all power
customers' load. For PF customers' loads, BPA proposes to use the
lesser of each customer's Rate Period High Water Mark (RHWM) and the
customer's net requirement. For IP customers' loads, BPA proposes to
use each customer's contract energy load. Currently, there are no
customers being served at the NR rate and BPA does not expect any such
customers during the effective period of the OS-14 rates.
The control area service Oversupply rate would be charged to each
generator that elects compensation pursuant to the Oversupply
Management Protocol, based on the facility nameplate capacity
[[Page 66966]]
in kilowatts. The control area service charge would be 50 percent of
the costs incurred under the Oversupply Management Protocol multiplied
by the nameplate capacity of each participating generator, divided by
the sum of all generating facility nameplate capacities of all
participating generators.
BPA proposes to bill for costs incurred prior to the effective date
of the OS-14 rate after the effective date of the OS-14 rate. BPA would
include charges for costs incurred after the effective date on the bill
for the month those costs were incurred, subject to a rate cap as
discussed below. BPA proposes to make the OS-14 rates effective until
all costs have been billed and such bills have been fully paid.
BPA is proposing to cap the total amount that would be billed under
each Oversupply rate at $4,000,000 in any one month. The rate cap would
allow the billing to be spread over several months to ease the cash
flow effect on customers. Any oversupply costs in excess of the cap
will carry over to subsequent months' bills until the balance is
completely billed.
Part V--Proposed Oversupply Rate Schedules
BPA's proposed 2014 control area service Oversupply Rate Schedule
and power General Rate Schedule Provision Oversupply Rate are a part of
this notice and are available for viewing and downloading on BPA's Web
site at www.bpa.gov/goto/OS14Schedule Copies of the proposed rate
schedules also are available for viewing in BPA's Public Reference Room
at the BPA Headquarters, 1st Floor, 905 NE 11th Avenue, Portland, OR
97232.
Issued this 29th day of October, 2012.
Stephen J. Wright,
Administrator and Chief Executive Officer.
[FR Doc. 2012-27306 Filed 11-7-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P