Order Establishing Briefing Schedule: Duke Energy Corporation Progress Energy, Inc.; Carolina Power & Light Company, 22660-22661 [2018-10402]
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22660
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 95 / Wednesday, May 16, 2018 / Notices
A copy of any motion to intervene or
protest must be served upon each
representative of the applicant specified
in the particular application. If an
intervener files comments or documents
with the Commission relating to the
merits of an issue that may affect the
responsibilities of a particular resource
agency, they must also serve a copy of
the document on that resource agency.
A copy of all other filings in reference
to this application must be accompanied
by proof of service on all persons listed
in the service list prepared by the
Commission in this proceeding, in
accordance with 18 CFR 4.34(b) and
385.2010.
Dated: May 9, 2018.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–10442 Filed 5–15–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket Nos. ER12–1338–003; ER12–1347–
004]
Order Establishing Briefing Schedule:
Duke Energy Corporation Progress
Energy, Inc.; Carolina Power & Light
Company
Before Commissioners: Kevin J. McIntyre,
Chairman; Cheryl A. LaFleur, Neil
Chatterjee, Robert F. Powelson, and
Richard Glick.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
1. On July 14, 2017, the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia (D.C. Circuit) issued a
decision,1 vacating in part the
Commission’s acceptance of a Joint
Dispatch Agreement (JDA) between
Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC (Duke
Energy Carolinas) and Carolina Power &
Light Company (CP&L) 2 and remanding
the matter to the Commission for further
consideration. The court found that
certain provisions in the JDA result in
disparate rate treatment between nativeload and non-native-load wholesale
customers and that the Commission had
not offered a valid reason for such a
disparity.3 Also, the court found that the
Commission failed to sufficiently
respond to several arguments raised by
the City of Orangeburg, South Carolina
1 Orangeburg, South Carolina v. FERC, 862 F.3d
1071 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (Orangeburg v. FERC).
2 Duke Energy Corp., 139 FERC 61,193 (2012)
(JDA Order), order denying reh’g, 151 FERC 61,242
(2015) (JDA Rehearing Order) (together, JDA
Orders).
3 Orangeburg v. FERC, 862 F.3d at 1084 (citing
Black Oak Energy, LLC v. FERC, 725 F.3d 230, 239
(D.C. Cir. 2013) (Black Oak)).
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17:34 May 15, 2018
Jkt 244001
(Orangeburg) regarding certain
regulatory conditions in the JDA that
Duke Energy Carolinas and CP&L agreed
to include pursuant to proceedings
before the North Carolina Public
Utilities Commission (North Carolina
Commission). As discussed below, we
establish a briefing schedule to develop
a better record on which to make a
determination on these two issues.
I. Background
A. Case History
2. The history of this case is
recounted at length in earlier
Commission orders.4
3. As relevant here, in 2012, Duke
Energy Corporation (Duke) and Progress
Energy, Inc. (Progress) filed on behalf of
Duke Energy Carolinas and CP&L a JDA
that provided for the joint dispatch of
Duke Energy Carolinas’ and CP&L’s
respective generation facilities to serve
their loads.5 In accepting the JDA, the
Commission found that the allocation of
the lowest energy cost under the JDA to
the native-load customers of Duke
Energy Carolinas and CP&L is not
unduly discriminatory.6 The
Commission stated that this finding was
consistent with Order No. 2000,
wherein it acknowledged that ‘‘in areas
without retail choice, state commissions
have the authority to ‘require a utility to
sell its lowest cost power to native load,
as [they] always [have].’ ’’ 7 Also, the
Commission found that sections 3.2
(c)(ii)–(iv) of the JDA,8 which listed
4 City of Orangeburg, South Carolina, 151 FERC
61,241, PP 3–10 (2015) (dismissing Orangeburg’s
petition for declaratory order); JDA Order, 139
FERC 61,193 at PP 2–4; JDA Rehearing Order, 151
FERC 61,242 at 2–4.
5 The JDA provides that the savings from the joint
dispatch—in fuel, purchased power, and related
savings—will go directly to retail and wholesale
customers in North Carolina and South Carolina.
JDA Order, 139 FERC 61,193 at P 6.
6 Id. P 45.
7 Id. P 45 (quoting from Regional Transmission
Organizations, Order No. 2000, FERC Stats. & Regs.
31,089 (1999) (Order No. 2000), order on reh’g,
Order No. 2000–A, FERC Stats. & Regs. 31,092
(2000), aff’d sub nom. Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1 of
Snohomish County, Washington v. FERC, 272 F.3d
607 (D.C. Cir. 2001)).
8 Section 3.2 (c)(ii)–(iv) of the JDA states:
(ii) Neither [Duke Energy Carolinas] nor [CP&L]
may make or incur a charge under this Agreement
except in accordance with North Carolina law and
the rules, regulations and orders of the [North
Carolina Commission] promulgated thereunder;
(iii) Neither [Duke Energy Carolinas] nor [CP&L]
may seek to reflect in its North Carolina retail rates
(i) any costs incurred under this Agreement
exceeding the amount allowed by the [North
Carolina Commission] or (ii) any revenue level
earned under the Agreement other than the amount
imputed by the [North Carolina Commission]; and
(iv) Neither [Duke Energy Carolinas] nor [CP&L]
will assert in any forum that the [North Carolina
Commission’s] authority to assign, allocate, make
pro forma adjustments to or disallow revenues or
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Frm 00050
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
certain regulatory conditions that the
parties agreed to include in the JDA
pursuant to proceedings before North
Carolina Commission, pertain to retail
ratemaking and, therefore, should be
removed from the agreement.9
4. Orangeburg requested rehearing,
which the Commission denied in the
JDA Rehearing Order.10 In that order,
the Commission affirmed its finding that
the JDA’s pricing methodology (i.e.,
allocating the lowest cost resources to
serve the parties’ native loads, while
allocating the higher cost resources to
off-system sales (non-native load
customers)) is just and reasonable.11 In
addition, the Commission held that this
methodology does not unduly
discriminate against Orangeburg, which
is neither a native-load customer of
Duke Energy Carolinas nor CP&L.12
With that determination, the
Commission declined to make a finding
with respect to Orangeburg’s other
arguments, such as the lawfulness of the
North Carolina Commission’s regulatory
conditions.13
B. D.C. Circuit Remand
5. In Orangeburg v. FERC, the court
stated that, in accepting the JDA, the
Commission approved certain
provisions that established disparate
treatment between native-load and nonnative-load wholesale customers.14 The
court stated that, ‘‘according to
Orangeburg, these JDA provisions
operate against the backdrop of [the
North Carolina Commission’s]
functional veto over which wholesale
customers fit into the former category.
The court stated that, for the orders to
survive review, the Commission must
have offer[ed] a valid reason for the
disparity between native load and nonnative load wholesale customers ‘‘under
these circumstances.15 The court found
that the Commission’s exclusive
costs for retail ratemaking and regulatory
accounting and reporting purposes is preempted
and [Duke Energy Carolinas] and [CP&L] will bear
the full risk of any preemptive effects of federal law
with respect to this Agreement.
JDA Order, 139 FERC 61,193 at P 23.
9 Id. P 37. Also, the Commission noted that
‘‘beyond requiring the removal of these provisions
from the JDA, we offer no view on the North
Carolina Commission’s authority to impose or apply
such requirements in its proceeding.’’ Id.
10 JDA Rehearing Order, 151 FERC 61,242 at P 1.
11 Id. PP 12–13.
12 Id. at P 13.
13 Id.
14 Orangeburg v. FERC, 862 F.3d at 1074, 1081
(wholesale customers are treated differently based
on their native-load status. . . . The JDA divides
the world into two categories of customers: Native
load and non-native load. Only native-load
customers—including wholesale customers—enjoy
access to the most reliable and lowest cost power.’’).
15 Id. at 1084 (citing Black Oak Energy, 725 F.3d
at 239) (internal quotation marks omitted).
E:\FR\FM\16MYN1.SGM
16MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 95 / Wednesday, May 16, 2018 / Notices
reliance on Order No. 2000 for
approving the JDA’s disparate treatment
and responding to Orangeburg’s
overlapping Federal Power Act,
preemption, and Commerce Clause
arguments was untenable for a number
of reasons.16 The court concluded that
because the Commission [has not]
offer[ed] a valid reason for the disparity,
the court could not affirm [the
Commission’s] approval of the JDA
provisions that establish disparate
treatment of native-load and non-nativeload wholesale customers, and
incorporates [the North Carolina
Commission’s] potentially unlawful
regulatory regime.17 Accordingly, the
court vacated in part the JDA Orders
and remanded the matter to the
Commission for further explanation
regarding its approval of the JDA.18
II. Discussion
6. We establish a briefing schedule to
allow the parties and other interested
persons to address the two issues noted
below that the D.C. Circuit raised in its
decision. Further briefing on these
issues will help develop a better record
for the Commission to respond to the
court’s directive to reconsider these
issues.
7. We request briefing on the
following issues, in particular:
(a) Is the JDA’s disparate treatment of
native and non-native load wholesale
customers unduly discriminatory or
preferential? In answering this question,
please address the following:
(i) Explain why the JDA treats native
and non-native load wholesale
customers disparately and whether the
differences between these customers
justify the disparate treatment.
(ii) Specify in detail the contractual
provisions in current or future
wholesale contracts that would qualify
a wholesale customer for native load
treatment under the JDA,19 as well as
any contractual provisions that would
disqualify a wholesale customer for
native load treatment under the JDA.
(iii) Explain why wholesale sales
between Duke Energy Carolinas and
CP&L are excluded from the definition
of non-native load sales and how the
JDA would treat such a sale between the
utilities.
(b) Do the North Carolina
Commission’s regulatory conditions 20
impermissibly interfere with this
Commission’s jurisdiction over
wholesale ratemaking, in violation of
the Federal Power Act 21 or the
Commerce Clause of the United States
Constitution? 22
8. We require Duke Energy Carolinas
and CP&L to submit—and others may
submit—initial briefs on or before 45
days from the date of this order. Reply
briefs must be submitted on or before 30
days following the due date of the initial
briefs. Any person who is not currently
a party to the proceeding and who
wishes to submit a brief must file a
notice of intervention or motion to
intervene, as appropriate.
The Commission Orders
(A) Duke Energy Carolinas and CP&L
are required to submit, and other parties
are hereby permitted to submit initial
briefs on or before forty-five (45) days of
the date of this order, as discussed in
the body of this order.
(B) Parties are hereby permitted to file
reply briefs on or before thirty (30) days
of the date of filing of initial briefs.
(C) All interested persons who wish to
submit briefs but that are not currently
parties to Docket Nos. ER12–1338–003
or ER12–1347–004 may submit notices
of intervention or motions to intervene,
as appropriate, within 21 days of the
date of this order. The briefing schedule
described in Ordering Paragraphs (A)
and (B) will apply to such persons.
(D) The Secretary is hereby directed to
publish this order in the Federal
Register.
By the Commission.
Issued: May 10, 2018.
Nathaniel J. Davis, Sr.,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–10402 Filed 5–15–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
16 Id.
at 1085–1087.
17 Id. at 1087.
18 Id.
19 The JDA provides that Native Load Customers
include wholesale customers that have native load
served by Duke Energy Carolinas or CP&L, for
which Duke Energy Carolinas or CP&L has an
obligation pursuant to current or future wholesale
contracts, for the length of such contracts, to engage
in planning and to sell and deliver electric capacity
and energy in a manner comparable to the
[utilities’] service to its Retail Native Load
Customers. Duke Energy Carolinas, FERC Electric
Tariff, Rate Schedule No. 341 at Article I,
Definitions.
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17:34 May 15, 2018
Jkt 244001
20 Here, we are referring to the regulatory
conditions that were in section 3.2 (c)(ii)–(iv) of the
JDA, which the JDA Order required be removed.
21 16 U.S.C. 824e(a) (2012); see, e.g., Nantahala
Power and Light Company v. Thornburg, 476 U.S.
953 (1986); Mississippi Power & Light Company v.
Mississippi ex rel. Moore, 487 US 354 (1988).
22 U.S. Const. art. 1, 8, cl. 3; see, e.g., New
England Power Company, 455 U.S. 331 (1982).
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4703
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22661
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. RD18–4–000]
Commission Information Collection
Activities (FERC–725G); Comment
Request; Revision
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of revised information
collection and request for comments.
AGENCY:
In compliance with the
requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission
(Commission or FERC) is soliciting
public comments on revisions to the
information collection, FERC–725G
(Reliability Standards for the Bulk
Power System: PRC Reliability
Standards) in Docket No. RD18–4–000
and will be submitting FERC–725G to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review of the information
collection requirements.
DATES: Comments on the collection of
information are due July 16, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
identified by Docket No. RD18–4–000
by either of the following methods:
• eFiling at Commission’s Website:
https://www.ferc.gov/docs-filing/
efiling.asp.
• Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier:
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
Secretary of the Commission, 888 First
Street NE, Washington, DC 20426.
Instructions: All submissions must be
formatted and filed in accordance with
submission guidelines at: https://
www.ferc.gov/help/submissionguide.asp. For user assistance, contact
FERC Online Support by email at
ferconlinesupport@ferc.gov, or by phone
at: (866) 208–3676 (toll-free), or (202)
502–8659 for TTY.
Docket: Users interested in receiving
automatic notification of activity in this
docket or in viewing/downloading
comments and issuances in this docket
may do so at https://www.ferc.gov/docsfiling/docs-filing.asp.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ellen Brown may be reached by email
at DataClearance@FERC.gov, telephone
at (202) 502–8663, and fax at (202) 273–
0873.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: FERC–725G, Reliability
Standards for the Bulk Power System:
PRC Reliability Standards.
OMB Control No.: 1902–0252.
Type of Request: Revision of FERC–
725G information collection
requirements.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\16MYN1.SGM
16MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 95 (Wednesday, May 16, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 22660-22661]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-10402]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
[Docket Nos. ER12-1338-003; ER12-1347-004]
Order Establishing Briefing Schedule: Duke Energy Corporation
Progress Energy, Inc.; Carolina Power & Light Company
Before Commissioners: Kevin J. McIntyre, Chairman; Cheryl A.
LaFleur, Neil Chatterjee, Robert F. Powelson, and Richard Glick.
1. On July 14, 2017, the United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia (D.C. Circuit) issued a decision,\1\ vacating in
part the Commission's acceptance of a Joint Dispatch Agreement (JDA)
between Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC (Duke Energy Carolinas) and Carolina
Power & Light Company (CP&L) \2\ and remanding the matter to the
Commission for further consideration. The court found that certain
provisions in the JDA result in disparate rate treatment between
native-load and non-native-load wholesale customers and that the
Commission had not offered a valid reason for such a disparity.\3\
Also, the court found that the Commission failed to sufficiently
respond to several arguments raised by the City of Orangeburg, South
Carolina (Orangeburg) regarding certain regulatory conditions in the
JDA that Duke Energy Carolinas and CP&L agreed to include pursuant to
proceedings before the North Carolina Public Utilities Commission
(North Carolina Commission). As discussed below, we establish a
briefing schedule to develop a better record on which to make a
determination on these two issues.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Orangeburg, South Carolina v. FERC, 862 F.3d 1071 (D.C. Cir.
2017) (Orangeburg v. FERC).
\2\ Duke Energy Corp., 139 FERC 61,193 (2012) (JDA Order), order
denying reh'g, 151 FERC 61,242 (2015) (JDA Rehearing Order)
(together, JDA Orders).
\3\ Orangeburg v. FERC, 862 F.3d at 1084 (citing Black Oak
Energy, LLC v. FERC, 725 F.3d 230, 239 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (Black
Oak)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Background
A. Case History
2. The history of this case is recounted at length in earlier
Commission orders.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ City of Orangeburg, South Carolina, 151 FERC 61,241, PP 3-10
(2015) (dismissing Orangeburg's petition for declaratory order); JDA
Order, 139 FERC 61,193 at PP 2-4; JDA Rehearing Order, 151 FERC
61,242 at 2-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. As relevant here, in 2012, Duke Energy Corporation (Duke) and
Progress Energy, Inc. (Progress) filed on behalf of Duke Energy
Carolinas and CP&L a JDA that provided for the joint dispatch of Duke
Energy Carolinas' and CP&L's respective generation facilities to serve
their loads.\5\ In accepting the JDA, the Commission found that the
allocation of the lowest energy cost under the JDA to the native-load
customers of Duke Energy Carolinas and CP&L is not unduly
discriminatory.\6\ The Commission stated that this finding was
consistent with Order No. 2000, wherein it acknowledged that ``in areas
without retail choice, state commissions have the authority to `require
a utility to sell its lowest cost power to native load, as [they]
always [have].' '' \7\ Also, the Commission found that sections 3.2
(c)(ii)-(iv) of the JDA,\8\ which listed certain regulatory conditions
that the parties agreed to include in the JDA pursuant to proceedings
before North Carolina Commission, pertain to retail ratemaking and,
therefore, should be removed from the agreement.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The JDA provides that the savings from the joint dispatch--
in fuel, purchased power, and related savings--will go directly to
retail and wholesale customers in North Carolina and South Carolina.
JDA Order, 139 FERC 61,193 at P 6.
\6\ Id. P 45.
\7\ Id. P 45 (quoting from Regional Transmission Organizations,
Order No. 2000, FERC Stats. & Regs. 31,089 (1999) (Order No. 2000),
order on reh'g, Order No. 2000-A, FERC Stats. & Regs. 31,092 (2000),
aff'd sub nom. Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1 of Snohomish County,
Washington v. FERC, 272 F.3d 607 (D.C. Cir. 2001)).
\8\ Section 3.2 (c)(ii)-(iv) of the JDA states:
(ii) Neither [Duke Energy Carolinas] nor [CP&L] may make or
incur a charge under this Agreement except in accordance with North
Carolina law and the rules, regulations and orders of the [North
Carolina Commission] promulgated thereunder;
(iii) Neither [Duke Energy Carolinas] nor [CP&L] may seek to
reflect in its North Carolina retail rates (i) any costs incurred
under this Agreement exceeding the amount allowed by the [North
Carolina Commission] or (ii) any revenue level earned under the
Agreement other than the amount imputed by the [North Carolina
Commission]; and
(iv) Neither [Duke Energy Carolinas] nor [CP&L] will assert in
any forum that the [North Carolina Commission's] authority to
assign, allocate, make pro forma adjustments to or disallow revenues
or costs for retail ratemaking and regulatory accounting and
reporting purposes is preempted and [Duke Energy Carolinas] and
[CP&L] will bear the full risk of any preemptive effects of federal
law with respect to this Agreement.
JDA Order, 139 FERC 61,193 at P 23.
\9\ Id. P 37. Also, the Commission noted that ``beyond requiring
the removal of these provisions from the JDA, we offer no view on
the North Carolina Commission's authority to impose or apply such
requirements in its proceeding.'' Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Orangeburg requested rehearing, which the Commission denied in
the JDA Rehearing Order.\10\ In that order, the Commission affirmed its
finding that the JDA's pricing methodology (i.e., allocating the lowest
cost resources to serve the parties' native loads, while allocating the
higher cost resources to off-system sales (non-native load customers))
is just and reasonable.\11\ In addition, the Commission held that this
methodology does not unduly discriminate against Orangeburg, which is
neither a native-load customer of Duke Energy Carolinas nor CP&L.\12\
With that determination, the Commission declined to make a finding with
respect to Orangeburg's other arguments, such as the lawfulness of the
North Carolina Commission's regulatory conditions.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ JDA Rehearing Order, 151 FERC 61,242 at P 1.
\11\ Id. PP 12-13.
\12\ Id. at P 13.
\13\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. D.C. Circuit Remand
5. In Orangeburg v. FERC, the court stated that, in accepting the
JDA, the Commission approved certain provisions that established
disparate treatment between native-load and non-native-load wholesale
customers.\14\ The court stated that, ``according to Orangeburg, these
JDA provisions operate against the backdrop of [the North Carolina
Commission's] functional veto over which wholesale customers fit into
the former category. The court stated that, for the orders to survive
review, the Commission must have offer[ed] a valid reason for the
disparity between native load and non-native load wholesale customers
``under these circumstances.\15\ The court found that the Commission's
exclusive
[[Page 22661]]
reliance on Order No. 2000 for approving the JDA's disparate treatment
and responding to Orangeburg's overlapping Federal Power Act,
preemption, and Commerce Clause arguments was untenable for a number of
reasons.\16\ The court concluded that because the Commission [has not]
offer[ed] a valid reason for the disparity, the court could not affirm
[the Commission's] approval of the JDA provisions that establish
disparate treatment of native-load and non-native-load wholesale
customers, and incorporates [the North Carolina Commission's]
potentially unlawful regulatory regime.\17\ Accordingly, the court
vacated in part the JDA Orders and remanded the matter to the
Commission for further explanation regarding its approval of the
JDA.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Orangeburg v. FERC, 862 F.3d at 1074, 1081 (wholesale
customers are treated differently based on their native-load status.
. . . The JDA divides the world into two categories of customers:
Native load and non-native load. Only native-load customers--
including wholesale customers--enjoy access to the most reliable and
lowest cost power.'').
\15\ Id. at 1084 (citing Black Oak Energy, 725 F.3d at 239)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
\16\ Id. at 1085-1087.
\17\ Id. at 1087.
\18\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Discussion
6. We establish a briefing schedule to allow the parties and other
interested persons to address the two issues noted below that the D.C.
Circuit raised in its decision. Further briefing on these issues will
help develop a better record for the Commission to respond to the
court's directive to reconsider these issues.
7. We request briefing on the following issues, in particular:
(a) Is the JDA's disparate treatment of native and non-native load
wholesale customers unduly discriminatory or preferential? In answering
this question, please address the following:
(i) Explain why the JDA treats native and non-native load wholesale
customers disparately and whether the differences between these
customers justify the disparate treatment.
(ii) Specify in detail the contractual provisions in current or
future wholesale contracts that would qualify a wholesale customer for
native load treatment under the JDA,\19\ as well as any contractual
provisions that would disqualify a wholesale customer for native load
treatment under the JDA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ The JDA provides that Native Load Customers include
wholesale customers that have native load served by Duke Energy
Carolinas or CP&L, for which Duke Energy Carolinas or CP&L has an
obligation pursuant to current or future wholesale contracts, for
the length of such contracts, to engage in planning and to sell and
deliver electric capacity and energy in a manner comparable to the
[utilities'] service to its Retail Native Load Customers. Duke
Energy Carolinas, FERC Electric Tariff, Rate Schedule No. 341 at
Article I, Definitions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(iii) Explain why wholesale sales between Duke Energy Carolinas and
CP&L are excluded from the definition of non-native load sales and how
the JDA would treat such a sale between the utilities.
(b) Do the North Carolina Commission's regulatory conditions \20\
impermissibly interfere with this Commission's jurisdiction over
wholesale ratemaking, in violation of the Federal Power Act \21\ or the
Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution? \22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Here, we are referring to the regulatory conditions that
were in section 3.2 (c)(ii)-(iv) of the JDA, which the JDA Order
required be removed.
\21\ 16 U.S.C. 824e(a) (2012); see, e.g., Nantahala Power and
Light Company v. Thornburg, 476 U.S. 953 (1986); Mississippi Power &
Light Company v. Mississippi ex rel. Moore, 487 US 354 (1988).
\22\ U.S. Const. art. 1, 8, cl. 3; see, e.g., New England Power
Company, 455 U.S. 331 (1982).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. We require Duke Energy Carolinas and CP&L to submit--and others
may submit--initial briefs on or before 45 days from the date of this
order. Reply briefs must be submitted on or before 30 days following
the due date of the initial briefs. Any person who is not currently a
party to the proceeding and who wishes to submit a brief must file a
notice of intervention or motion to intervene, as appropriate.
The Commission Orders
(A) Duke Energy Carolinas and CP&L are required to submit, and
other parties are hereby permitted to submit initial briefs on or
before forty-five (45) days of the date of this order, as discussed in
the body of this order.
(B) Parties are hereby permitted to file reply briefs on or before
thirty (30) days of the date of filing of initial briefs.
(C) All interested persons who wish to submit briefs but that are
not currently parties to Docket Nos. ER12-1338-003 or ER12-1347-004 may
submit notices of intervention or motions to intervene, as appropriate,
within 21 days of the date of this order. The briefing schedule
described in Ordering Paragraphs (A) and (B) will apply to such
persons.
(D) The Secretary is hereby directed to publish this order in the
Federal Register.
By the Commission.
Issued: May 10, 2018.
Nathaniel J. Davis, Sr.,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-10402 Filed 5-15-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717-01-P