Public Utility Transmission Rate Changes To Address Accumulated Deferred Income Taxes, 59331-59343 [2018-25370]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
(f) Compliance
Comply with this AD within the
compliance times specified, unless already
done.
(g) Required Action
Before February 6, 2020, replace each EDP
having part number (P/N) 53098–04 with an
improved EDP, having P/N 53098–06, in
accordance with the Accomplishment
Instructions of Airbus Service Bulletin A350–
29–P013, dated March 12, 2018.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
(h) Parts Installation Prohibition
At the applicable time specified in
paragraph (h)(1) or (h)(2) of this AD: No
person may install an EDP having P/N
53098–04 on any airplane.
(1) For airplanes that, as of the effective
date of this AD, have any EDP having P/N
53098–04 installed: After modification of the
airplane as specified by paragraph (g) of this
AD.
(2) For airplanes that, as of the effective
date of this AD, are post-Modification 112192
and do not have any EDP having P/N 53098–
04 installed: As of the effective date of this
AD.
(i) Other FAA AD Provisions
The following provisions also apply to this
AD:
(1) Alternative Methods of Compliance
(AMOCs): The Manager, International
Section, Transport Standards Branch, FAA,
has the authority to approve AMOCs for this
AD, if requested using the procedures found
in 14 CFR 39.19. In accordance with 14 CFR
39.19, send your request to your principal
inspector or local Flight Standards District
Office, as appropriate. If sending information
directly to the International Section, send it
to the attention of the person identified in
paragraph (j)(2) of this AD. Information may
be emailed to: 9-ANM-116-AMOCREQUESTS@faa.gov. Before using any
approved AMOC, notify your appropriate
principal inspector, or lacking a principal
inspector, the manager of the local flight
standards district office/certificate holding
district office.
(2) Contacting the Manufacturer: For any
requirement in this AD to obtain corrective
actions from a manufacturer, the action must
be accomplished using a method approved
by the Manager, International Section,
Transport Standards Branch, FAA; or the
European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA); or
Airbus SAS’s EASA Design Organization
Approval (DOA). If approved by the DOA,
the approval must include the DOAauthorized signature.
(3) Required for Compliance (RC): If any
service information contains procedures or
tests that are identified as RC, those
procedures and tests must be done to comply
with this AD; any procedures or tests that are
not identified as RC are recommended. Those
procedures and tests that are not identified
as RC may be deviated from using accepted
methods in accordance with the operator’s
maintenance or inspection program without
obtaining approval of an AMOC, provided
the procedures and tests identified as RC can
be done and the airplane can be put back in
an airworthy condition. Any substitutions or
changes to procedures or tests identified as
RC require approval of an AMOC.
(j) Related Information
(1) Refer to Mandatory Continuing
Airworthiness Information (MCAI) EASA AD
2018–0178, dated August 23, 2018, for
related information. This MCAI may be
found in the AD docket on the internet at
https://www.regulations.gov by searching for
and locating Docket No. FAA–2018–0962.
(2) For more information about this AD,
contact Kathleen Arrigotti, Aerospace
Engineer, International Section, Transport
Standards Branch, FAA, 2200 South 216th
St., Des Moines, WA 98198; telephone and
fax 206–231–3218.
(3) For service information identified in
this AD, contact Airbus SAS, Airworthiness
Office—EAL, Rond-Point Emile Dewoitine
No: 2, 31700 Blagnac Cedex, France;
telephone +33 5 61 93 36 96; fax +33 5 61
93 45 80; email continuedairworthiness.a350@airbus.com; internet
https://www.airbus.com. You may view this
service information at the FAA, Transport
Standards Branch, 2200 South 216th St., Des
Moines, WA. For information on the
availability of this material at the FAA, call
206–231–3195.
Issued in Des Moines, Washington, on
November 8, 2018.
Chris Spangenberg,
Acting Director, System Oversight Division,
Aircraft Certification Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–25386 Filed 11–21–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
18 CFR Part 35
[Docket No. RM19–5–000]
Public Utility Transmission Rate
Changes To Address Accumulated
Deferred Income Taxes
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (Commission) is
proposing to require all public utility
transmission providers with
SUMMARY:
59331
transmission rates under an Open
Access Transmission Tariff (OATT), a
transmission owner tariff, or a rate
schedule to revise those rates to account
for changes caused by the Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act of 2017 (Tax Cuts and Jobs
Act). Specifically, for transmission
formula rates, the Commission is
proposing to require that public utilities
deduct excess accumulated deferred
income taxes (ADIT) from or add
deficient ADIT to their rate bases and
adjust their income tax allowances by
amortized excess or deficient ADIT. The
Commission is also proposing to require
all public utilities with transmission
formula rates to incorporate a new
permanent worksheet into their
transmission formula rates that will
annually track ADIT information.
Additionally, the Commission is
proposing to require all public utilities
with transmission stated rates to
determine the amount of excess and
deferred income tax caused by the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act’s reduction to the
federal corporate income tax rate and
return or recover this amount to or from
customers.
DATES:
Comments are due December 24,
2018.
Comments, identified by
docket number, may be filed
electronically at https://www.ferc.gov in
acceptable native applications and
print-to-PDF, but not in scanned or
picture format. For those unable to file
electronically, comments may be filed
by mail or hand-delivery to: Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission,
Secretary of the Commission, 888 First
Street NE, Washington, DC 20426. The
Comment Procedures Section of this
document contains more detailed filing
procedures.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Noah Lichtenstein (Technical
Information), Office of Energy Market
Regulation, Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street NE,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502–
8696, noah.lichtenstein@ferc.gov.
Joshua Walters (Legal Information),
Office of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street NE, Washington, DC
20426, (202) 502–6098,
joshua.walters@ferc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
Table of Contents
Paragraph
numbers
I. Background ............................................................................................................................................................................................
A. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act ..................................................................................................................................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
7
7
59332
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
Paragraph
numbers
B. Overview of Public Utility Transmission Rates ..........................................................................................................................
C. Order No. 144 and 18 CFR 35.24 ................................................................................................................................................
D. Notice of Inquiry ..........................................................................................................................................................................
II. Discussion ............................................................................................................................................................................................
A. Ensuring Rate Base Neutrality .....................................................................................................................................................
1. NOI ..........................................................................................................................................................................................
2. Comments ...............................................................................................................................................................................
3. Proposed Requirements .........................................................................................................................................................
a. Formula Rates .................................................................................................................................................................
b. Stated Rates .....................................................................................................................................................................
B. Return or Recovery of Excess or Deficient ADIT ........................................................................................................................
1. NOI ..........................................................................................................................................................................................
2. Comments ...............................................................................................................................................................................
3. Proposed Requirements .........................................................................................................................................................
a. Formula Rates .................................................................................................................................................................
b. Stated Rates .....................................................................................................................................................................
C. Support for Excess and Deficient ADIT Calculation and Amortization ...................................................................................
1. NOI ..........................................................................................................................................................................................
2. Comments ...............................................................................................................................................................................
3. Proposed Requirements .........................................................................................................................................................
a. Formula Rates .................................................................................................................................................................
b. Stated Rates .....................................................................................................................................................................
III. Proposed Compliance Procedures .....................................................................................................................................................
IV. Information Collection Statement ......................................................................................................................................................
V. Environmental Analysis ......................................................................................................................................................................
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification ............................................................................................................................................
VII. Comment Procedures ........................................................................................................................................................................
VIII. Document Availability .....................................................................................................................................................................
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
1. In this Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (Proposed Rule), we are
proposing to require all public utility
transmission providers with
transmission rates under an Open
Access Transmission Tariff (OATT), a
transmission owner tariff, or a rate
schedule to revise those rates to account
for changes caused by the Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act of 2017 (Tax Cuts and Jobs
Act).1 These proposed reforms are
designed to address the effects of the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on the
Accumulated Deferred Income Taxes
(ADIT) reflected in all transmission
rates under an OATT, a transmission
owner tariff, or a rate schedule of public
utility transmission providers. The
proposed reforms are intended to ensure
that ratepayers receive the benefits of
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, and that the
public utility transmission formula and
1 An Act to provide for reconciliation pursuant to
titles II and V of the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2018, Pub. L. 115–97, 131
Stat. 2054 (2017) (Tax Cuts and Jobs Act). In
proposing this new requirement, the Commission
relies on existing Commission regulations relating
to tax normalization for public utilities as those
regulations apply to public utilities with
transmission formula or stated rates. See 18 CFR
35.24. In this Proposed Rule, the Commission does
not propose any generic reforms as to non-public
utilities or the non-transmission rates of public
utilities. While any conclusions that the
Commission makes in this proceeding may be
relevant to such rates, they will be addressed on a
case-by-case basis. Furthermore, to the extent any
entity believes that the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
renders any existing Commission-jurisdictional rate
unjust and unreasonable, that entity may submit a
complaint to the Commission.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
stated rates are just and reasonable and
not unduly discriminatory or
preferential following the enactment of
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. The
proposed reforms are also intended to
ensure that transmission formula and
stated rates meet the Commission’s tax
normalization requirements such that
the income tax component of those rates
is calculated as though the taxable
income were recognized in the same
period and amount by the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) and the
Commission.2
2. The proposed reforms generally fall
into three categories and apply to public
utilities with transmission formula rates
and stated rates in different ways. First,
we propose to require all public utilities
with transmission formula rates to
include a mechanism in their formula
rates to deduct any excess ADIT from or
add any deficient ADIT to their rate
bases. This will ensure that rate base
continues to be treated in a manner
similar to that prior to the Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act (i.e., that rate base neutrality is
preserved). As for public utilities with
transmission stated rates, we do not
2 In this Proposed Rule, the Commission refers to
comments filed in response to the Notice of Inquiry
issued March 15, 2018. Inquiry Regarding the Effect
of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on CommissionJurisdictional Rates, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 35,582
(2018) (NOI). A list of commenters in that
proceeding and the abbreviated names used in this
Proposed Rule appears in Appendix A. Any
comments to this Proposed Rule should be filed in
this proceeding, Docket No. RM19–5–000.
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
9
12
14
15
20
20
21
26
26
29
30
30
31
36
36
40
43
43
44
46
46
50
51
54
62
63
66
70
propose any new requirements
regarding rate base neutrality.
3. Second, we propose to require all
public utilities with transmission
formula rates to include a mechanism in
their formula rates that decreases or
increases their income tax allowances
by any amortized excess or deficient
ADIT, respectively. This reform will
help to ensure that public utilities with
transmission formula rates return excess
ADIT to or recover deficient ADIT from
ratepayers. As a result, ratepayers who
contributed to excess ADIT balances
will receive the benefit of the Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act.
4. With regard to public utility
transmission providers with stated rates,
we are proposing to require these
entities to determine the excess and
deficient ADIT caused by the Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act based on the ADIT
amounts approved in their last rate case
and then to return this amount to or
recover this amount from customers.
This reform is intended to increase the
likelihood that those customers who
contributed to the related ADIT
accounts receive the benefits of the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act.
5. Third, we propose to require all
public utilities with transmission
formula rates to incorporate a new
permanent worksheet into their
transmission formula rate that will
annually track information related to
excess or deficient ADIT. We believe
that this reform will increase the
transparency surrounding the
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
adjustment of rate bases and income tax
allowances to account for excess or
deficient ADIT by public utilities with
transmission formula rates. We do not
propose any additional worksheets for
public utilities with transmission stated
rates because we believe that existing
regulations require sufficient
transparency.
6. We seek comments on these
proposed reforms and areas for further
comment within 30 days after
publication of this Proposed Rule in the
Federal Register.
I. Background
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
A. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
7. On December 22, 2017, the
President signed into law the Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act. The Tax Cuts and Jobs
Act, among other things, reduced the
federal corporate income tax rate from
35 percent to 21 percent, effective
January 1, 2018. This means that,
beginning January 1, 2018, companies
subject to the Commission’s jurisdiction
will compute income taxes owed to the
IRS based on a 21 percent tax rate. The
tax rate reduction will result in less
corporate income tax expense going
forward.3
8. Importantly, the tax rate reduction
will also result in a reduction in ADIT
liabilities and ADIT assets on the books
of rate-regulated companies. ADIT
balances are accumulated on the
regulated books and records of public
utilities based on the requirements of
the Uniform System of Accounts. ADIT
arises from timing differences between
the method of computing taxable
income for reporting to the IRS and the
method of computing income for
regulatory accounting and ratemaking
purposes.4 As a result of the Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act reducing the federal
corporate income tax rate from 35
percent to 21 percent, a portion of an
ADIT liability that was collected from
customers will no longer be due from
public utilities to the IRS and is
considered excess ADIT, which must be
returned to customers in a cost of
service ratemaking context.
Additionally, for public utilities that
have an ADIT asset, the Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act will result in a reduction to
that ADIT asset, and public utilities may
seek to reflect in rates a portion of such
reductions. Public utilities are required
to adjust their ADIT assets and ADIT
liabilities for the effect of the change in
3 See Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Sec. 13001, 131 Stat.
at 2096.
4 See 18 CFR 35.24(d)(2).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
59333
tax rates in the period that the change
is enacted.5
challenge a rate in a proceeding
initiated under section 206 of the FPA.8
B. Overview of Public Utility
Transmission Rates
C. Order No. 144 and 18 CFR 35.24
9. The Commission is responsible for
ensuring that the rates, terms and
conditions of service for wholesale sales
and transmission of electric energy in
interstate commerce are just, reasonable,
and not unduly discriminatory or
preferential. With respect to the
transmission of electric energy in
interstate commerce, most jurisdictional
entities are subject to cost of service
regulation. Cost of service regulation
seeks to allow public utilities the
opportunity to (1) recover operating
costs, including income taxes, (2)
recover the cost of capital investments,
and (3) earn a just and reasonable return
on investments.6 Public utilities have
calculated their cost of service-based
transmission rates predominately by
using formula rates or stated rates.
These rates are contained in numerous
agreements, including a public utility’s
OATT, a regional transmission
operator’s or independent system
operator’s OATT, coordination
agreements, and wholesale distribution
agreements. In this Proposed Rule, we
focus on all public utilities with
transmission formula or stated rates that
are contained in an OATT, a
transmission owner tariff, or a rate
schedule.
10. When a public utility uses stated
rates, if the public utility seeks to
change its rate, it files a rate case at the
Commission to establish the cost of
service revenue requirement, allocate
costs to various customer groups, and
calculate rates. As an alternative, the
Commission permits public utilities to
establish rates through formulas, in
which the Commission accepts the
public utility’s cost of service
calculation methodologies and input
sources and allows the public utility to
update those inputs every year.
11. Public utilities must seek changes
to their transmission stated rates or
formula rates through filings with the
Commission under section 205 of the
Federal Power Act (FPA),7 while the
Commission and third parties can
5 See 18 CFR 35.24 and 18 CFR 154.305; see also
Regulations Implementing Tax Normalization for
Certain Items Reflecting Timing Differences in the
Recognition of Expenses or Revenues for
Ratemaking and Income Tax Purposes, Order No.
144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,254 (1981), order on
reh’g, Order No. 144–A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶
30,340 (1982).
6 See Pub. Sys. v. FERC, 709 F.2d 73, 75 (D.C. Cir.
1983).
7 See 16 U.S.C. 824d.
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
12. The purpose of tax normalization
is to match the tax effects of costs and
revenues with the recovery in rates of
those same costs and revenues.9 As
noted above, timing differences may
exist between the method of computing
taxable income for reporting to the IRS
and the method of computing income
for regulatory accounting and
ratemaking purposes. The tax effects of
these differences are placed in a
deferred tax account to be used in later
periods when the differences reverse.10
13. The Commission established this
policy of tax normalization in Order No.
144 where it required use of ‘‘the
provision for deferred taxes [(i.e.,
ADIT)] as a mechanism for setting the
tax allowance at the level of current tax
cost.’’ 11 In keeping with this
normalization policy, and as relevant to
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act’s reduction of
the federal corporate income tax rate,
the Commission in Order No. 144 also
required adjustments in the ADIT of
public utilities’ cost of service when
excessive or deficient ADIT has been
created as a result of changes in tax
rates.12 Furthermore, the Commission
required ‘‘a rate applicant to compute
the income tax component in its cost of
service by making provision for any
excess or deficiency in its deferred tax
reserves resulting . . . from tax rate
changes.’’13 The Commission required
that such provision be consistent with a
Commission-approved ratemaking
method made specifically applicable to
the rate applicant.14 Where no
ratemaking method has been made
specifically applicable, the Commission
required the rate applicant to advance
some method in its next rate case.15 The
Commission stated that it would
determine the appropriateness of any
proposed method on a case-by-case
basis, but as the issue is resolved in a
number of cases, a method with wide
applicability may be adopted.16 The
Commission codified the requirements
8 See
16 U.S.C. 824e(a).
No. 144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,254 at
31,522, 31,530.
10 Id. at 31,554.
11 Id. at 31,530.
12 Id. at 31,519.
13 Order No. 144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,254 at
31,560. See also 18 CFR 35.24(c)(1)(ii); 18 CFR
35.24(c)(2).
14 Order No. 144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,254 at
31,560. See also 18 CFR 35.24(c)(3).
15 Order No. 144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,254 at
31,560.
16 Id. See also 18 CFR 35.24(c)(3).
9 Order
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
59334
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
of Order No. 144 in its regulations in 18
CFR 35.24.17
D. Notice of Inquiry
14. Following the enactment of the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the Commission
issued the NOI seeking comments on,
among other things, whether, and if so,
how, the Commission should address
the effects of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
on ADIT.18 The Commission noted that
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act’s reduction to
the federal corporate income tax rate
would potentially create excess or
deficient ADIT on the books of public
utilities.19 As relevant to the reforms
proposed in this Proposed Rule, the
Commission sought comments on the
preservation of rate base neutrality and
how public utilities should make related
adjustments to their rate bases for excess
and deficient ADIT.20 The Commission
also sought comment on how public
utilities should adjust their income
allowances to return or recover excess
or deficient ADIT, respectively,21 as
well as the method used to return or
recover excess or deficient protected
and unprotected ADIT.22 Finally, the
Commission sought comment on
whether it should require public
utilities to provide to the Commission,
on a one-time basis, additional
information to show the computation of
excess or deficient ADIT and the
corresponding return of excess ADIT to
customers or recovery of deficient ADIT
from customers. If so, the Commission
also sought comments on what types of
information public utilities should
provide.23
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
II. Discussion
15. Since the issuance of Order No.
144, the landscape of public utility
17 Originally promulgated as part of Order 144,
the regulatory text was redesignated as 18 CFR
35.25 in Order No. 144–A. See Order No. 144–A,
FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,340 at 30,140. In Order
No. 545, the Commission again redesignated the
regulatory text to its present designation as 18 CFR
35.24. See Streamlining Electric Power Regulation,
Order No. 545, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,955, at
30,713 (1992) (cross-referenced at 61 FERC ¶
61,207).
18 NOI, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 35,582.
19 Id. P 13.
20 Id. PP 14–15.
21 Id. P 21.
22 Id. PP 17, 19. In the NOI, the Commission
referred to ‘‘plant-based’’ and ‘‘non-plant based’’
ADIT. We agree with commenters’ recommendation
to follow the IRS terminology of ‘‘protected’’ and
‘‘unprotected’’ ADIT instead of ‘‘plant-based’’ and
‘‘non-plant based’’ presented in the NOI. The IRS
terms for ‘‘protected’’ and ‘‘unprotected’’ are
directly associated with the IRS’ normalization
protections to ensure a tax payer maintains the
benefit of accelerated depreciation over the life of
the related asset. Accordingly, we have changed the
terms used in this Proposed Rule to better mirror
IRS terminology.
23 Id. P 23.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
transmission rates has changed
dramatically; that is, the vast majority of
public utilities now use formula rates
rather than stated rates. As described
above, unlike stated rates, which are
updated only through a rate case
initiated by a FPA section 205
application by the public utility or an
FPA section 206 action by the
Commission or a complaining third
party, inputs to formula rates are
updated annually to derive a charge
assessed to customers. Thus, a rate case
no longer remains the appropriate
vehicle for formula rates to reflect
excess or deficient ADIT in a public
utility’s cost of transmission service, as
contemplated by Order No. 144. The
public utility’s transmission formula
rate should include provisions that
accurately reflect excess or deficient
ADIT in a public utility’s cost of
transmission service during the annual
updates of the rest of the revenue
requirement.
16. Following the NOI, we have
determined that this near-industry-wide
transition from stated to formula rates
has caused a gap in the transmission
formula rates of public utilities such
that many, if not most, of those rates do
not contain provisions to fully reflect
any excess or deficient ADIT following
a change in tax rates, as required by
Order No. 144 and the Commission’s
regulations in 18 CFR 35.24. Two
components are necessary to maintain
an accurate cost of service following a
change in income tax rates, such as that
caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act: (1)
Preservation of rate base neutrality
through the removal of excess ADIT
from or addition of deficient ADIT to
rate base; and (2) the return of excess
ADIT to or recovery of deficient ADIT
from ratepayers.24
17. A review of public utility
transmission formula rates suggests that
only some transmission formula rates
contain the first component, while even
fewer contain the second. Consequently,
as discussed in greater detail below, we
propose to require public utilities with
transmission formula rates to revise
those rates to include these two
components. Additionally, to provide
greater transparency, we propose to
require all public utilities with
transmission formula rates to
incorporate a new permanent worksheet
into their transmission formula rates
that will annually track ADIT
information related to these two
components.
24 Id. P 13. While the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
decreased the federal corporate income tax rate, the
reforms proposed in this Proposed Rule are also
meant to ensure that transmission formula rates
reflect the effects of tax increases, as well.
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
18. Regarding public utilities with
transmission stated rates, we propose
maintaining Order No. 144’s
requirement that such public utilities
reflect any adjustments made to their
ADIT balances as a result of the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act (and any future tax
changes) in their next rate case.
However, to increase the likelihood that
those customers who contributed to the
related ADIT accounts receive the
benefit of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, we
propose to require public utilities with
transmission stated rates to (1)
determine any excess or deficient ADIT
caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and
(2) return or recover this amount to or
from customers. We believe that the
Commission’s existing regulations
already require all of the information
necessary to support the changes
proposed herein to reflect the effects of
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on a
transmission stated rate. Therefore, we
propose not to require any additional
worksheets.
19. The Commission generally does
not permit single-issue ratemaking.
However, similar to the Commission’s
actions following the Tax Cuts and Jobs
Act,25 given the limited scope of the
reforms proposed here, we propose that
compliance filings made in response to
this Proposed Rule’s final requirements
may be considered on a single-issue
basis.26
A. Ensuring Rate Base Neutrality
1. NOI
20. In the NOI, the Commission
sought comment on how to ensure that
rate base continues to be treated in a
manner similar to that prior to the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act (i.e., how to preserve
rate base neutrality), until excess and
deficient ADIT have been fully returned
or recovered in a just and reasonable
manner. The Commission also sought
comment on whether, and if so how,
public utilities should make
adjustments to rate base to reflect excess
and deficient ADIT. The Commission
asked that commenters address both
formula rates and stated rates.27
25 See AEP Appalachian Transmission Company,
Inc., 162 FERC ¶ 61,225 (2018); Alcoa Power
Generating Inc.—Long Sault Division, 162 FERC ¶
61,224 (2018).
26 See generally Indicated RTO Transmission
Owners, 161 FERC ¶ 61,018, at PP 13–14 (2017); see
also Rates Changes Relating to the Federal
Corporate Income Tax Rate for Public Utilities,
Order No. 475, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,752, order
on reh’g, 41 FERC ¶ 61,029 (1987) (allowing public
utilities to use a voluntary, abbreviated rate filing
procedure to reduce their rates to reflect a reduction
in the federal corporate income tax rate on a singleissue basis).
27 NOI, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 35,582 at PP 14–15.
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
2. Comments
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
21. Numerous public utilities and
other commenters assert that, in order to
preserve rate base neutrality,
unamortized balances of excess ADIT
must continue to be treated as an offset
to (i.e., a deduction from) rate base until
those balances are flowed back in their
entirety to customers.28 These
commenters generally note that,
following the passage of the Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act, public utilities transferred
excess ADIT to Account 254 (Other
Regulatory Liabilities) or Account 182.3
(Other Regulatory Assets), as
appropriate.29 Accordingly, these
commenters state that, just as the ADIT
balances were deducted from or added
to rate base, as appropriate, the
corresponding amounts recorded in
Accounts 254 and 182.3 should be
deducted from or added to rate base.
While generally agreeing that rate base
adjustments are necessary, several
commenters assert that there is no ‘‘onesize fits all’’ solution.30
22. Regarding public utilities with
formula rates, several commenters
support the addition of a line item to
formula rates for rate base adjustments
reflecting excess or deficient ADIT
recorded in Accounts 254 and 182.3.31
28 APPA and AMP, Comments to NOI, Docket No.
RM18–12–000, at 4–7 (filed on May 22, 2018)
(APPA and AMP NOI Comments); Avangrid,
Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18–12–000, at 5
(May 22, 2018) (Avangrid NOI Comments);
Consumer Advocates, Comments to NOI, Docket
No. RM18–12–000, at 4–5 (filed May 21, 2018)
(Consumer Advocates NOI Comments); DEMEC,
Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18–12–000, at 8
(filed May 21, 2018) (DEMEC NOI Comments);
Indicated Customers, Comments to NOI, Docket No.
RM18–12–000, at 3–6 (filed May 21, 2018)
(Indicated Customers NOI Comments); National
Grid, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18–12–000,
at 6–7 (filed May 21, 2018) (National Grid NOI
Comments); New York Transco, Comments to NOI,
Docket No. RM18–12–000, at 5 (filed May 22, 2018)
(New York Transco NOI Comments); Oklahoma
Attorney General, Comments to NOI, Docket No.
RM18–12–000, at 4 (filed May 22, 2018) (Oklahoma
Attorney General NOI Comments); PSEG,
Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18–12–000, at 4
(filed May 22, 2018) (PSEG NOI Comments).
29 Avangrid NOI Comments at 5; EEI, Comments
to NOI, Docket No. RM18–12–000, at 10 (filed May
22, 2018) (EEI NOI Comments).
30 Kentucky Municipals, Comments to NOI,
Docket No. RM18–12–000, at 3–5 (filed May 21,
2018) (Kentucky Municipals NOI Comments);
Exelon, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18–12–
000, at 11–12 (filed May 22, 2018) (Exelon NOI
Comments); TAPS, Comments to NOI, Docket No.
RM18–12–000, at 3 (filed May 21, 2018) (TAPS NOI
Comments); Indicated Transmission Owners,
Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18–12–000, at 7
(filed May 21, 2018) (Indicated Transmission
Owners NOI Comments) ((‘‘[t]here may be no
uniform way to achieve the Commission’s rate base
neutrality objective given differences between
companies in accounting methods and rate
structures.’’) (citation omitted)).
31 Oklahoma Attorney General NOI Comments at
4–5; PSEG NOI Comments at 4; Avangrid NOI
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
Many of these commenters suggest that
the Commission permit public utilities
to make single-issue FPA section 205
filings to make the appropriate changes
to their formula rates.32 EEI suggests
that the Commission should permit
utilities with formula rates requiring
adjustments to address these during
their next true-up annual informational
filing.33
23. Alternatively, APPA and AMP,
and Indicated Customers suggest that
any excess or deficient ADIT resulting
from the implementation of the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act be recorded to the
same ADIT accounts (e.g., Accounts
190, 281, 282, and 283) where the
original entries for the regulatory assets
and regulatory liabilities were
established.34 APPA and AMP state that
by keeping the excess or deficient ADIT
in sub-accounts within the original
ADIT accounts, it will be more
transparent and easier to track as the
balances are flowed back.35 As another
alternative, the Oklahoma Attorney
General asserts that the Commission
should consider requiring that the line
item currently used to offset rate base
with ADIT include both ADIT balances
in traditional ADIT-related accounts and
those excess ADIT balances in other
accounts identified by the
Commission.36
24. Other commenters note that such
a line item adjustment may not be
necessary in all cases.37 Specifically,
these commenters assert that certain
formula rates (e.g., certain MISO
Attachment O, AEP, Exelon, and
Eversource formula rates) already
provide for the inclusion of excess ADIT
in rate base and that the balances in
Accounts 254 and 182.3 will naturally
flow into rate base without any
modification.38
Comments at 5–9; Eversource, Comments to NOI,
Docket No. RM18–12–000, at 4 (filed May 22, 2018)
(Eversource NOI Comments); National Grid NOI
Comments at 7–8; TAPS NOI Comments at 4.
32 Eversource NOI Comments at 4–5; Indicated
Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 6; PSEG
NOI Comments at 4–5; National Grid NOI
Comments at 7–8.
33 EEI NOI Comments at 11.
34 APPA and AMP NOI Comments at 7–8;
Indicated Customers NOI Comments at 6–7.
35 APPA and AMP NOI Comments at 7–8.
36 Oklahoma Attorney General NOI Comments at
4–5.
37 Ameren, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18–
12–000, at 7–8 (filed May 21, 2018) (Ameren NOI
Comments); MISO Transmission Owners,
Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18–12–000, at 7
(filed May 21, 2018) (MISO Transmission Owners
NOI Comments); EEI NOI Comments at 11; Exelon
NOI Comments at 11–12.
38 AEP, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18–12–
000, at 3–4 (filed May 22, 2018) (AEP NOI
Comments); Ameren NOI Comments at 7–8; MISO
Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 7;
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
59335
25. Regarding public utilities with
stated rates, commenters generally agree
that adjustments are not necessary to
preserve rate base neutrality with
respect to stated rates.39 National Grid
and Avangrid state that, under cost-ofservice, both ADIT balances and
regulatory liability balances should be
deducted from rate base in calculating
the stated rate.40 Avangrid asserts that
rate base neutrality issues are not raised
with transmission stated rates because
these rates assume the same amount of
ADIT deduction to rate base without
regard to how the companies adjusted
their books and records.41
3. Proposed Requirements
a. Formula Rates
26. We propose to require all public
utilities with transmission formula rates
to include a mechanism in their formula
rates which deducts any excess ADIT
from or adds any deficient ADIT to their
rate bases under 18 CFR 35.24. As
described above, the Commission’s
regulations in 18 CFR 35.24 require
public utilities to reflect any excess or
deficient ADIT as a result of any
changes in tax rates in their next rate
case. As a result of the Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act’s reduction of the federal
corporate income tax from 35 percent to
21 percent, public utilities have
collected excess funds for their ADIT
liabilities and have not collected
sufficient funds for any ADIT assets. To
preserve rate base neutrality by
accurately matching the tax allowance
with the current tax cost as required by
Commission regulations, public utilities
with transmission formula rates must
include provisions in their formula rates
to adjust their ADIT for excess or
deficient ADIT.42 We believe our
proposal will ensure that public utilities
with transmission formula rates will
adjust their ADIT for any excess or
deficient ADIT caused by the Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act or any future changes to
tax rates which may give rise to excess
or deficient ADIT.
27. While we are proposing to require
public utilities with transmission
formula rates to include a mechanism to
adjust rate base for any excess or
deficient ADIT, we are not proposing to
prescribe a specific adjustment
mechanism which applies to all public
utilities with transmission formula
Eversource NOI Comments at 3–4; Exelon NOI
Comments at 11–12.
39 National Grid NOI Comments at 7–8; Avangrid
NOI Comments at 5–6; EEI NOI Comments at 11.
40 National Grid NOI Comments at 7–8; Avangrid
NOI Comments at 5–6.
41 Avangrid NOI Comments at 5–6.
42 Order No. 144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,254 at
31,530, 31,519.
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
59336
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
rates. We agree with commenters to the
NOI that prescribing a one-size-fits-all
approach, such as adding a line item, is
not appropriate and that the
Commission should instead allow
public utilities to propose any necessary
changes to their formula rates on an
individual basis. Recent filings and
comments submitted in the NOI suggest
that multiple approaches to modify rate
base may be just and reasonable. For
example, as noted by MISO
Transmission Owners,43 the
Commission accepted proposals by ITC
Companies and Ameren in which those
companies did not revise their formula
rates to modify their adjustments to rate
base by adding a new line item for rate
base.44 Instead, those companies
demonstrated that, while not visible in
their formula rates, their adjustments to
rate base were modified by any excess
or deficient ADIT prior to their input to
the formula rates. Accordingly, we also
propose that public utilities with
transmission formula rates may
demonstrate that their formula rates
already meet the proposed ADIT
adjustment requirements described in
this Proposed Rule.
28. We are not persuaded by
commenters to the NOI who suggest that
excess or deficient ADIT amounts
should be recorded to the same ADIT
accounts where the original entries for
the regulatory assets and regulatory
liabilities were established. The
Commission previously issued guidance
on this topic, finding that public
utilities are required to record a
regulatory asset (Account 182.3)
associated with deficient ADIT or
regulatory liability (Account 254)
associated with excess ADIT.45 As a
result, we do not propose any changes
to that specific accounting guidance.
b. Stated Rates
29. We do not propose any new
requirements regarding rate base
neutrality for public utilities with
transmission stated rates. As noted by
commenters to the NOI, stated rates are
calculated based in large part on
company data submitted, and
projections made, at the time of the last
rate case. Thus, while ADIT balances
may have changed as a result of the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act, so too will many
other aspects of the cost of service and
calculations that underlie the stated
rate, making it difficult to re-evaluate
43 MISO
Transmission Owners NOI Comments at
7.
44 Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 153
FERC ¶ 61,374 (2015); Midcontinent Indep. Sys.
Operator, Inc., 163 FERC ¶ 61,163 (2018).
45 See Accounting for Income Taxes, Docket No.
AI93–5–000, at 8 (1993).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
ADIT and its effect on rate base
following a change in tax rates without
fully evaluating a public utility’s entire
cost of service and rates.46 We believe
that the revisions we are proposing
below, related to the return or recovery
of excess or deficient ADIT, will
adequately address the effects of the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act on ADIT and will
avoid such complications. Therefore, we
do not propose to require adjustments to
the rate bases of public utilities with
transmission stated rates prior to their
next rate case on a generic basis.
B. Return or Recovery of Excess or
Deficient ADIT
1. NOI
30. In the NOI, the Commission asked
commenters to address how public
utilities with stated or formula rates
should adjust their income tax
allowance such that the allowance
would be decreased or increased by the
amortization of excess or deficient
ADIT, respectively.47 Additionally, the
Commission asked commenters how the
Average Rate Assumption Method, and
alternatively, the Reverse South Georgia
Method or South Georgia Method, as
appropriate, will be implemented in the
amortization of protected excess or
deficient ADIT and how quickly to
amortize unprotected excess or deficient
ADIT.48
2. Comments
31. Commenters generally support
adjusting public utilities’ income tax
allowances by the amortization of
excess or deficient ADIT. Many
commenters suggest adding a line item
or several line items to public utility
transmission formula rates to make this
adjustment,49 with some transmission
owners noting that they have already
submitted or now propose to submit
such revisions.50 MISO Transmission
46 The Commission previously acknowledged this
difficulty in Order No. 475. Order No. 475, FERC
Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,752 at 30,736.
47 NOI, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 35,582 at P 21.
48 Id. PP 17, 19. Under the South Georgia method,
a calculation is taken of the difference between the
amount actually in the deferred account and the
amount that would have been in the account had
normalization continuously been followed. Any
deficiency is collected from ratepayers (i.e., South
Georgia Method), and any excess is returned to
ratepayers (i.e., Reverse South Georgia Method),
over the remaining depreciable life of the plant that
caused the difference. Memphis Light, Gas and
Water Div. v. FERC, 707 F.2d 565, 569 (D.C. Cir.
1983).
49 Ameren NOI Comments at 15–16; Avangrid
NOI Comments at 11–12; MISO Transmission
Owners NOI Comments at 14–17; National Grid
NOI Comments at 15; New York Transco NOI
Comments at 10; Oklahoma Attorney General NOI
Comments at 6; PSEG NOI Comments at 10.
50 Ameren NOI Comments at 15–16; Avangrid
NOI Comments at 11–12; MISO Transmission
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Owners note that the Commission
accepted such a proposal by ITC Great
Plains.51 National Grid suggests that
adjustments to income tax allowances
could also be made through the
weighted cost of capital.52
32. Commenters also support
revisions to transmission stated rates to
reflect income tax allowance
adjustments for the amortization of
excess or deficient ADIT.53 TAPS states
that, to address these adjustments, it
supports an approach similar to utilityspecific investigations the Commission
opened with respect to the change in the
federal corporate income tax rate.54
However, TAPS expresses concern that
stated rate customers will find it
challenging to verify their utilities’
calculation and asserts that, thus, the
Commission should encourage utilities
to work with customers toward a
mutually acceptable solution and
require those utilities to file the return
mechanism, including detailed
documentation and worksheets so that
the calculation of excess ADIT can be
validated.55
33. Some commenters caution the
Commission against mandating that
public utilities adopt a single method to
adjust their formula rates’ income tax
allowances. Instead, these commenters
suggest that the Commission recognize
public utilities’ specific circumstances
by evaluating proposed modifications
on a case-by-case basis or recognizing
that some formula rates already adjust
the income tax allowance by the
amortization of excess or deficient ADIT
and, therefore, would not require
revision.56 Indicated Transmission
Owners argue that the Commission
should make any evaluations on a
single-issue basis.57 The Oklahoma
Attorney General suggests that the
Commission could use ongoing
proceedings, such as the show cause
proceedings initiated against public
utilities whose formula rates would not
automatically adjust to reflect the lower
federal corporate income tax rate of 21
Owners NOI Comments at 16–17; New York
Transco NOI Comments at 10.
51 MISO Transmission Owners NOI Comments at
15 (citing Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc.,
153 FERC ¶ 61,374). See also Midcontinent Indep.
Sys. Operator, Inc., 163 FERC ¶ 61,163.
52 National Grid NOI Comments at 15.
53 Avangrid NOI Comments at 9, National Grid
NOI Comments at 15, TAPS NOI Comments at 6.
54 TAPS NOI Comments at 6 (citing Alcoa Power
Generating Inc.—Long Sault Div., 162 FERC
¶ 61,224).
55 TAPS NOI Comments at 5–7.
56 Exelon NOI Comments at 14–15; Indicated
Customers NOI Comments at 12–13; MISO
Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 17.
57 Indicated Transmission Owners NOI
Comments at 11–12.
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
percent, to revise formula rates such
that the income tax allowance is
adjusted by the amortization of excess
or deficient ADIT.58
34. Consumer Advocates are
concerned that absent Commission
intervention, jurisdictional entities may
begin to amortize their excess ADIT,
thereby denying customers the full
benefit of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
Consumer Advocates argue that to the
extent any protected ADIT balances
have been amortized to date, the
Commission should require such excess
protected ADIT amortization credits to
be reversed and the liability balance
restored to that of the implementation
date of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.59
35. Regarding protected excess or
deficient ADIT, commenters agree that
the Commission has no need to change
its existing regulations or precedent or
depart from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act’s
normalization provisions.60 Regarding
unprotected excess or deficient ADIT,
commenters agree that the Commission
should adopt a case-by-case approach
for determining how quickly excess or
deficient unprotected ADIT should be
flowed back to or recovered from
customers.61
3. Proposed Requirements
a. Formula Rates
36. We propose to require all public
utilities with transmission formula rates
to include a mechanism in their formula
rates which decreases or increases their
income tax allowances by any amortized
excess or deficient ADIT, respectively,
58 Oklahoma
Attorney General NOI Comments at
6.
59 Consumer
Advocates NOI Comments at 4.
NOI Comments at 4–5; Ameren NOI
Comments at 11; APPA and AMP NOI Comments
at 5–6, 10; Avangrid NOI Comments at 8–9;
Consumer Advocates NOI Comments at 6–7;
DEMEC NOI Comments at 9; EEI NOI Comments at
14, 16–17; Eversource NOI Comments at 7; Exelon
NOI Comments at 13; Indicated Customers NOI
Comments at 8–9; Indicated Transmission Owners
NOI Comments at 8–9; Kentucky Municipals NOI
Comments at 6; MISO Transmission Owners NOI
Comments at 8–11; National Grid NOI Comments at
10–11; New York Transco NOI Comments at 7–8;
Oklahoma Attorney General NOI Comments at 6–
7; PSEG NOI Comments at 7–8.
61 AEP NOI Comments at 6–7 (‘‘However, in the
event the Commission develops a broadly
applicable amortization period, AEP recommends
that period be 25 years or longer’’); Avangrid NOI
Comments at 9–11; Dominion, Comments to NOI,
Docket No. RM18–12–000, at 12 (filed on May 21,
2018); EEI NOI Comments at 17–18; Enable
Interstate Pipelines, Comments to NOI, Docket No.
RM18–12–000, at 36–37 (filed on May 21, 2018);
Enbridge and Spectra, Comments to NOI, Docket
No. RM18–12–000, at 26 (filed May 21, 2018); EQT
Midstream, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18–
12–000, at 13–14 (filed May 21, 2018); Eversource
NOI Comments at 8–9; Exelon NOI Comments at
13–14; Indicated Transmission Owners NOI
Comments at 9–10; National Grid NOI Comments at
11–13; New York Transco NOI Comments at 9.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
60 AEP
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
under 18 CFR 35.24. Such a mechanism
is necessary because, as described
above, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act’s
reduction of the federal corporate
income tax rate from 35 percent to 21
percent means public utilities have
collected from customers funds in
excess of what is due to the IRS for
ADIT liabilities and, conversely for
ADIT assets, funds from customers
insufficient to satisfy IRS tax
obligations. Similar to the proposed rate
base adjustment requirements, these
proposed income tax allowance
adjustment requirements are intended to
satisfy Order No. 144’s requirement that
the income tax allowance match the
current tax cost and reflect the effects of
any future changes to tax rates that may
give rise to excess or deficient ADIT.
37. Similar to comments regarding
adjustments to rate base, we agree with
commenters to the NOI that prescribing
a one-size-fits-all approach is not
appropriate and that the public utilities
with transmission formula rates should
instead be allowed to propose any
necessary changes to their rates on an
individual basis. Accordingly, we do
not propose that all public utilities with
transmission formula rates must use a
single method to adjust their income tax
allowances for any amortized excess or
deficient ADIT. Many public utilities
with transmission formula rates use
different formats of rate templates or
formulas, and a single, prescriptive
method, such as the requirement of a
single line item, may not fully capture
or transparently convey the
amortization of excess or deficient
ADIT. Additionally, recent filings by
public utilities that proposed revisions
to their formula rate templates to reflect
changes in income tax rates by, among
other things, incorporating mechanisms
to return excess ADIT demonstrate that
company-specific variations are
necessary.62
38. Regarding the period over which
the amortization of excess or deficient
ADIT must occur, we believe that public
utilities should follow the guidance
provided in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act,
where available. As noted by
commenters to the NOI, the Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act provides a method of
general applicability and requires public
utilities to return excess protected
ADIT 63 no more rapidly than over the
62 See, e.g., Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator,
Inc., 153 FERC ¶ 61,374; Midcontinent Indep. Sys.
Operator, Inc., 163 FERC ¶ 61,163; Midcontinent
Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 164 FERC ¶ 61,113
(2018); Emera Maine, 165 FERC ¶ 61,086 (2018).
63 While the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act does not
mention deficient protected ADIT specifically, we
expect that public utilities will recover such
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
59337
life of the underlying asset using the
Average Rate Assumption Method, or,
where a public utility’s books and
underlying records do not contain the
vintage account data necessary, it must
use an alternative method.64 In contrast,
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act does not
specify what method public utilities
must use for excess or deficient
unprotected ADIT. We agree with
commenters to the NOI that, because
such a determination depends on the
specific facts and circumstances for
each public utility, a case-by-case
approach to amortizing excess or
deficient unprotected ADIT remains
appropriate.
39. Consumer Advocates are
concerned that a portion of the amounts
allowable to be returned to customers
under the Average Rate Assumption
Method schedule would not be
refunded due to the fact that any
proposed tariff provisions to return
excess ADIT as a result of this Proposed
Rule will not be effective until after
January 1, 2018. We acknowledge that
in applying a tax normalization method
(e.g., the Average Rate Assumption
Method), public utilities are required to
develop a schedule removing ADIT from
rate base and returning it to customers,
effective January 1, 2018, using the
fastest allowable method to return the
excess ADIT under the IRS’
normalization requirements. However,
these requirements represent only the
fastest allowable return schedule and do
not remove a public utility’s obligation
to return the excess ADIT. Any amounts
allowed to be returned under the
Average Rate Assumption Method
schedule prior to the effective date of
proposed tariff provisions made in
compliance with the Proposed Rule
should still be refunded to customers. In
other words, the full regulatory liability
for excess ADIT should be captured in
rates, beginning on the effective date of
any proposed tariff provision. We do not
believe that any specific reforms are
necessary to accomplish this because
public utilities should not amortize an
excess ADIT regulatory liability for
accounting purposes until it is included
in ratemaking.65
deficient ADIT in the same manner prescribed for
excess protected ADIT.
64 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Sec. 13001(b)(6)(A), 131
Stat. at 2099. If a public utility must use an
alternative method, Commission precedent
provides that the public utility should use the
Reverse South Georgia Method for excess ADIT or
the South Georgia Method for deficient ADIT. See
Memphis Light, Gas and Water Div. v. FERC, 707
F.2d at 569.
65 The description of Account 182.3 (Other
regulatory assets) states, ‘‘The amounts recorded in
this account are generally to be charged,
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
Continued
23NOP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
59338
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
b. Stated Rates
40. We propose to require all public
utilities with transmission stated rates
to (1) determine the excess and deficient
income tax caused by the Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act’s reduction to the federal
corporate income tax rate and (2) return
this amount to or recover this amount
from customers under 18 CFR 35.24. We
also propose for public utilities with
transmission stated rates to calculate
this excess or deficient ADIT using the
ADIT approved in their last rate cases.
We believe calculating excess or
deficient ADIT in this manner will
allow public utilities with transmission
stated rates to preserve their costs of
service as accepted in their last rate
case. We are not seeking to propose a
specific way for public utilities with
transmission stated rates to return or
recover the excess or deficient income
taxes to ratepayers; rather, we will
evaluate each proposal on an individual
basis. We believe the proposed reforms
will increase the likelihood that those
customers who contributed to the
related ADIT accounts receive the
benefit of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
41. TAPS expresses concern that the
customers of public utilities with
transmission stated rates will lack
sufficient information to evaluate any
proposals to return or recover excess or
deficient ADIT, respectively. We note
that the Commission’s regulations
require public utilities filing changes to
transmission rates to identify the effect
of tax changes on those rates.66
Accordingly, we expect that public
utilities with stated rates would include
in their compliance filings resulting
from this Proposed Rule supporting
information necessary to identify, at
minimum, the following: (1) How any
ADIT accounts were re-measured and
the excess or deficient ADIT contained
therein; (2) the accounting of any excess
or deficient amounts in Accounts 182.3
and 254; (3) whether the excess or
deficient ADIT is protected or
unprotected; (4) the accounts to which
the excess or deficient ADIT will be
amortized; and (5) the amortization
period of the excess or deficient ADIT
to be returned or recovered through the
rates.
42. Finally, as noted above, public
utilities with transmission stated rates
must conform to the Tax Cuts and Jobs
Act’s requirements regarding the period
over which the amortization of
protected excess or deficient ADIT must
occur. We will continue to analyze the
concurrently with the recovery of the amounts in
rates. . .’’ (emphasis added). 18 CFR part 101,
Account 182.3 (Other Regulatory Assets).
66 18 CFR 35.13; 18 CFR 35.24.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
appropriate amortization period for
unprotected ADIT on a case-by-case
basis.
C. Support for Excess and Deficient
ADIT Calculation and Amortization
1. NOI
43. In the NOI, the Commission
sought comment on whether it should
require public utilities to provide to the
Commission, on a one-time basis,
additional information, such as
supporting worksheets, to show the
computation of excess or deficient ADIT
and the corresponding flow-back of
excess ADIT to customers or recovery of
deficient ADIT from customers. The
Commission asked commenters to
address what types of information
public utilities already record for ADITrelated accounting and whether
balances and amortization of regulatory
liability and asset accounts,
computation of excess and deficient
ADIT, delineation between protected
and non-protected ADIT, and a
description of the allocation method
used to determine the transmissionrelated portion of excess or deficient
ADIT would be appropriate to include
in a supporting worksheet.67
2. Comments
44. Commenters were split regarding
the requirement to provide additional
worksheets. Some commenters assert
that the Commission should not require
any additional worksheets at this time.68
These commenters generally assert that
the implementation of general
worksheet requirements would be
burdensome on the industry.69 They
assert that any data should only be
required to be submitted on a company
by company basis, as necessary, rather
than require a one-time proceeding for
the purpose of all public utilities
providing the data showing whether and
how ADIT balances were re-measured.70
Certain commenters assert that the
Commission should not require
additional worksheets as transmission
formula rates and associated protocols
already include mechanisms to provide
details to customers.71 Avangrid
67 NOI,
FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 35,582 at P 23.
AEP NOI Comments at 8; Ameren NOI
Comments at 16–18; Avangrid NOI Comments at
13–14; EEI NOI Comments at 20–22; Exelon NOI
Comments at 15; Indicated Transmission Owners
NOI Comments at 12; MISO Transmission Owners
NOI Comments at 18–19; and PSEG NOI Comments
at 11–12.
69 See EEI NOI Comments at 20–21; Exelon NOI
Comments at 15.
70 EEI NOI Comments at 20.
71 See AEP NOI Comments at 8; Ameren NOI
Comments at 16–17; Avangrid NOI Comments at
13–14; Exelon NOI Comments at 15, Indicated
Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 12; and
68 See
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
similarly states that the formula rate
processes should be used to provide the
level of transparency to verify the
flowback of excess ADIT ultimately
prescribed by the Commission. EEI
states that if the Commission does
require additional supporting
information as part of EEI’s proposed
show cause orders, the Commission
should first provide its proposed
financial template, in a rulemaking, to
allow for review by public utilities and
stakeholders. EEI adds that this would
reduce the burden on individual public
utilities and the Commission and would
be similar to the approach leading up to
the Gas Tax Final Rule.72
45. Other commenters, however,
assert that the Commission should
require electric public utilities to
provide a one-time filing of additional
information to provide transparency
regarding excess and deficient ADIT,
and how rates will be impacted by any
changes.73 APPA and AMP urge the
Commission to require that supporting
information be filed regarding excess or
deficient ADIT, but not be limited to
only ADIT-related material. They assert
that public utilities should also
describe, with supporting schedules,
any current or projected effects on their
books associated with the Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act’s changes to bonus
depreciation, or any other potential raterelated impacts.74 APPA and AMP
further state that for public utilities with
transmission formula rates, the utilities
should provide as part of their annual
updates, calculations showing excess
ADIT amortization amounts that should
be flowed back to customers in the
applicable rate period. Consumer
Advocates state that in addition to
requiring a detailed worksheet
identifying all book tax timing
differences that comprise deferred tax
liability balances, the Commission
should evaluate the build-up of net
operating losses as deferred tax assets.
They assert that such balances should
not automatically be inserted as an
addition to regulated rate base.75 New
York Transco states that each public
utility should be permitted to compile
and present this additional information
in the manner it deems most efficient
and useful for stakeholders. New York
MISO Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 18–
19.
72 EEI NOI Comments at 21, n. 36.
73 See APPA and AMP NOI Comments at 17–18;
Consumer Advocates NOI Comments at 10–11;
DEMEC NOI Comments at 11–12; Eversource NOI
Comments at 11; Indicated Customers NOI
Comments at 15; National Grid NOI Comments at
15–16; and New York Transco NOI Comments at 11.
74 APPA and AMP NOI Comments at 17–18.
75 Consumer Advocates NOI Comments at 10–11.
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
Transco states that if stakeholders desire
additional information, any interested
party can seek that information
consistent with the formula rate
implementation protocols that address
information sharing. While not objecting
to the provision of additional
information, National Grid states that
the Commission should not impose this
requirement until after December 2018
as the additional information will not be
meaningful until after companies have
set the final rate change balance after
the filing of their fiscal year 2018 federal
corporate income tax returns.76
3. Proposed Requirements
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
a. Formula Rates
46. We propose to require all public
utilities with transmission formula rates
to incorporate a new permanent
worksheet into their transmission
formula rates that will annually track
information related to excess or
deficient ADIT under 18 CFR 35.24. We
believe that this reform is necessary to
provide interested parties adequate
transparency regarding how public
utilities with transmission formula rates
adjust their rate bases and income tax
allowances to account for excess or
deficient ADIT. We also believe that
requiring public utilities with
transmission formula rates to provide
this information on an annual basis
rather than a one-time basis will better
allow interested parties to follow excess
or deficient ADIT as it is included in an
annual revenue requirement and
provide transparency as to any future
changes in tax rates. We also believe
that updating the proposed worksheet
annually will better align with the
nature of the vast majority of formula
rates where calculation methodologies
and input sources are accepted prior to
those inputs being populated.
Consequently, we do not propose that
any worksheet be populated when
submitted to the Commission for
compliance, only that the function of
the worksheet be clear.
47. Similar to other reforms proposed
in this Proposed Rule, we do not
propose a pro forma worksheet that
must be adopted by all public utilities
with transmission formula rates; rather,
we propose requiring general categories
of information that each excess or
deficient ADIT tracking worksheet must
contain. We propose that each excess or
deficient ADIT worksheet must, at
minimum, include the following: (1)
How any ADIT accounts were remeasured and the excess or deficient
ADIT contained therein; (2) the
76 National
Grid NOI Comments at 16.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
accounting of any excess or deficient
amounts in Accounts 182.3 and 254; (3)
whether the excess or deficient ADIT is
protected or unprotected; (4) the
accounts to which the excess or
deficient ADIT are amortized; and (5)
the amortization period of the excess or
deficient ADIT being returned or
recovered through the rates. Because we
do not propose to define the form any
worksheet or worksheets must take,
only the information it must contain, we
propose evaluating such worksheet or
worksheets on an individual basis. We
also request comments on whether we
should consider additional guiding
principles to those described above.
48. We disagree with commenters to
the NOI that argue that providing such
information is overly burdensome for
the industry. Public utilities with
transmission formula rates will already
have gathered the information we
propose to require in the worksheets to
re-measure their ADIT balances and
develop amortization schedules
following the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act’s
reduction of the federal corporate
income tax rate. Further, the
Commission has already accepted
worksheets that convey information
similar to the proposed requirements
outlined above.77
49. We also disagree with commenters
to the NOI that public utilities’ existing
formula rate protocols should preclude
the Commission from proposing an
excess or deficient ADIT worksheet.
While the Commission established that
formula rate protocols should allow for
the provision of any information
necessary to understand the inputs to
the rate in order to provide sufficient
transparency to interested parties, the
Commission has since required public
utilities to revise their formula rates to
include greater detail where it has
deemed that certain inputs to the rate
are complex enough to warrant prior
understanding of their effect.78 As
related to excess and deficient ADIT, we
believe the proposed worksheet will
allow interested parties to ensure they
are receiving the benefits of the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act, as well as to track
77 See, e.g., Arizona Public Service Company,
Docket No. ER18–975–001 (May 22, 2018)
(delegated order).
78 See, e.g., Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator,
Inc., 153 FERC ¶ 61,374 at P 14 (directing certain
transmission companies to revise their transmission
formula rates to include worksheets to ensure
appropriate transparency). The Commission has
also regularly required certain revisions to new
formula rates to provide greater transparency. See,
e.g., Xcel Energy Sw. Transmission Co., LLC, 149
FERC ¶ 61,182 (2014); Xcel Energy Transmission
Dev. Co., LLC, 149 FERC ¶ 61,181 (2014);
Transource Wisconsin, LLC, 149 FERC ¶ 61,180
(2014); Transource Kansas, LLC, 151 FERC ¶ 61,010
(2015).
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
59339
over time any changes in the rate effects
of the tax change as, for example, assets
are sold or retired.
b. Stated Rates
50. As described above in the
proposal for return of excess ADIT or
recovery of deficient ADIT, we believe
that the Commission’s existing
regulations require public utilities with
transmission stated rates to provide
sufficient support for any proposed taxrelated changes. As a result, we do not
propose any additional information
requirements for public utilities with
transmission stated rates.
III. Proposed Compliance Procedures
51. We propose to require each public
utility with transmission stated or
formula rates to submit a compliance
filing within 90 days of the effective
date of any subsequent final rule in this
proceeding to revise its transmission
formula or stated rates, as necessary, to
demonstrate that it meets the
requirements set forth in any
subsequent final rule.
52. Some public utilities with
transmission formula rates may already
have mechanisms in place in their rates
that address the issues and concerns
addressed by any subsequent final rule.
Where these provisions would be
modified by any subsequent final rule,
the public utility must either comply
with any subsequent final rule or
demonstrate that these previously
approved variations continue to be
consistent with or superior to the
requirements of any subsequent final
rule.
53. The Commission will assess
whether each compliance filing satisfies
the proposed requirements stated above
and issue additional orders as necessary
to ensure that each public utility with
transmission stated or formula rates
meets the requirements of the
subsequent final rule.
IV. Information Collection Statement
54. The collection of information
contained in this Proposed Rule is
subject to review by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
regulations under section 3507(d) of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA).79 OMB’s regulations require
approval of certain informational
collection requirements imposed by an
agency.80 Upon approval of a
collection(s) of information, OMB will
assign an OMB control number and an
expiration date. Respondents subject to
the filing requirements will not be
79 44
80 5
U.S.C. 3507(d).
CFR 1320.11.
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
59340
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
penalized for failing to respond to these
collections of information unless the
collections of information display a
valid OMB control number.
55. The reforms proposed in this
Proposed Rule address public utilities
that have transmission formula rates
and transmission stated rates. The
reforms related to transmission formula
rates represent new requirements for
these entities under the Commission’s
regulations in 18 CFR 35.24, which we
believe are necessary because of the
dramatic changes in the rate structure of
the electric transmission industry since
this provision was originally
promulgated in 1981.81 These new
requirements would require each public
utility with a transmission formula rate
to revise its rate so that any excess or
deficient ADIT is properly reflected in
its revenue requirement following a
change in tax rates, such as those
established by the Tax Cuts and Jobs
Act. Additionally, each public utility
with a transmission formula rate would
be required to incorporate a new
permanent worksheet into its
transmission formula rate to increase
transparency.
56. The reforms required by this
Proposed Rule will require each public
utility with stated rates to calculate the
excess and deficient ADIT caused by the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and to return to
or recover from customers those
amounts. This reform is intended to
increase the likelihood that customers
who contributed to the excess ADIT
balance timely receive the benefits of
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
57. The reforms proposed in this
Proposed Rule would require
compliance filings with the Commission
by each public utility with transmission
stated or formula rates to allow the
Commission the opportunity to
determine whether each such public
utility met the requirements detailed in
this Proposed Rule.
58. We anticipate the reforms
proposed in this Proposed Rule, once
implemented, would not significantly
change currently existing burdens on an
ongoing basis. With regard to those
public utilities with transmission stated
RM19–5–000
or formula rates that believe that they
already comply with the reforms
proposed in this Proposed Rule, they
could demonstrate their compliance in
the filing required 90 days after the
effective date of the final revision in this
proceeding. We will submit the
proposed reporting requirements to
OMB for its review and approval under
section 3507(d) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act.82
59. While we expect the adoption of
the reforms proposed in this Proposed
Rule to provide significant benefits, the
Commission understands that
implementation can be a complex and
costly endeavor. We solicit comments
on the accuracy of provided burden and
cost estimates and any suggested
methods for minimizing the
respondents’ burdens.
60. Burden Estimate and Information
Collection Costs: We believe that the
burden estimates below are
representative of the average burden on
respondents. The estimated burden and
cost for the requirements contained in
this Proposed Rule follow.
NOPR
[Public utility transmission rate changes to address accumulated deferred income taxes]
Revising formula rates so that excess ADIT is deducted
and/or deficient ADIT is added to rate base (onetime) 84.
Revising formula rates so that any excess and/or deficient ADIT is amortized (one-time).
Revising transmission stated rates to return or recover
excess or deficient ADIT (one-time).
Requiring public utilities with transmission formula rates
to incorporate a new permanent worksheet that will
annually track ADIT information (one-time).
Total (Stated Rates) 85 .............................................
Total (Formula Rates) 86 ..........................................
Total ..................................................................
Cost to Comply: We have projected
the total cost of compliance as
follows: 87
81 See
discussion infra Section II.E.
U.S.C. 3507(d).
83 The loaded hourly wage figure (includes
benefits) is based on the average of the occupational
categories for 2017 found on the Bureau of Labor
Statistics website (https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/
naics2_22.htm):
Accountant (Occupation Code: 13–2011): $56.59.
Management (Occupation Code: 11–0000):
$94.28.
Legal (Occupation Code: 23–0000): $143.68.
Office and Administrative Support (Occupation
Code: 43–0000): $41.34.
These various occupational categories’ wage
figures are averaged and weighted equally as
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
82 44
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
Number of
respondents
Annual
number of
responses
per
respondent
Total
number of
responses
Average burden
and cost per
response 83
Total annual burden
hours and total
annual cost
Cost per
respondent
($)
(1)
(2)
(1) * (2) = (3)
(4)
(3) * (4) = (5)
(5) ÷ (1)
106
1
106
8 hours; $736 .......
848 hours; $78,016 ........
$736
106
1
106
8 hours; $736 .......
848 hours; $78,016 ........
736
31
1
31
15 hours; $1,380 ..
465 hours; $42,780 ........
1,380
106
1
106
40 hours; $3,680 ..
4,240 hours; $390,080 ...
3,680
....................
....................
....................
....................
31
318
...............................
...............................
465 hours; $42,780.
5,936 hours; $546,112.
....................
....................
349
...............................
6,532 hours; $588,892.
• Year 1: $546,112 ($5,152/utility) for
public utilities with transmission
formula rates; $42,780 ($1,380/utility)
for public utilities with transmission
stated rates.
• Year 2: $0.
follows: ($94.28/hour + $61.55/hour + $66.90/hour
+ $143.68/hour) ÷ 4 = $91.60/hour. The resulting
wage figure is rounded to $92.00/hour for use in
calculating wage figures in the NOPR in Docket No.
RM19–5–000.
84 One-time burdens apply in Year One only.
There will be no subsequent burden in Years 2 and
beyond.
85 Total for Public Utilities with Transmission
Stated Rates.
86 Total for Public Utilities with Transmission
Formula Rates.
87 For a public utility transmission provider with
transmission formula rates, the costs for Year 1
would consist of filing proposed changes to its
transmission formula rates, including the addition
of a new permanent worksheet, with the
Commission within 90 days of the effective date of
the final revision plus initial implementation. The
Commission does not expect any ongoing costs
beyond the initial compliance in Year 1. For a
public utility transmission provider with
transmission stated rates, the costs for Year 1 would
consist of filing proposed changes to its
transmission stated rates that allow it to return to
or recover from customers any excess or deficient
ADIT caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act with the
Commission within 90 days of the effective date of
the final revision plus initial implementation.
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
After Year 1, the reforms proposed in
this Proposed Rule, once implemented,
would not significantly change existing
burdens on an ongoing basis.
Title: FERC–516, Electric Rate
Schedules and Tariff Filings.
Action: Proposed revisions to an
information collection.
OMB Control No.: 1902–0096.
Respondents for this Proposal:
Businesses or other for profit and/or
not-for-profit institutions.
Frequency of Information: One-time
during year one.
Necessity of Information: The Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission makes
this Proposed Rule to ensure that (1)
rate base neutrality is preserved
following enactment of the Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act; (2) the reduction in ADIT on
the books of rate-regulated companies
that was collected from customers but is
no longer payable to the IRS due to the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is returned to or
recovered from ratepayers consistent
with general ratemaking principles; and
(3) there is increased transparency for
the process of excess and deficient ADIT
calculation and amortization.
Internal Review: We have reviewed
the proposed changes and have
determined that such changes are
necessary. These requirements conform
to the Commission’s need for efficient
information collection, communication,
and management within the energy
industry. We have specific, objective
support for the burden estimates
associated with the information
collection requirements.
61. Interested persons may obtain
information on the reporting
requirements by contacting the
following: Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE,
Washington, DC 20426 [Attention: Ellen
Brown, Office of the Executive Director],
email: DataClearance@ferc.gov, phone:
(202) 502–8663, fax: (202) 273–0873.
Comments concerning the collection of
information and the associated burden
estimate(s), may also be sent to the
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, 725 17th Street NW,
Washington, DC 20503 [Attention: Desk
Officer for the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, phone: (202)
395–0710, fax: (202) 395–7285]. Due to
security concerns, comments should be
sent electronically to the following
email address: oira_submission@
omb.eop.gov. Comments submitted to
OMB should include FERC–516 and
OMB Control No. 1902–0096.
V. Environmental Analysis
62. We are required to prepare an
Environmental Assessment or an
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
Environmental Impact Statement for any
action that may have a significant
adverse effect on the human
environment.88 The actions proposed to
be taken in this Proposed Rule fall
within the categorical exclusion under
section 380.4(a)(15) of the Commission’s
regulations. This section provides a
categorical exemption for approval of
actions under sections 205 and 206 of
the FPA relating to the filing of
schedules containing all rates and
charges for the transmission or sale of
electric energy subject to the
Commission’s jurisdiction, plus the
classification, practices, contracts and
regulations that affect rates, charges,
classification, and services.89 The
revisions proposed in this Proposed
Rule fall within the categorical
exemptions provided in the
Commission’s regulations, and as a
result neither an Environmental Impact
Statement nor an Environmental
Assessment is required.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Certification
63. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of
1980 (RFA) 90 generally requires a
description and analysis of proposed
rules that will have significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The RFA does
not mandate any particular outcome in
a rulemaking. It only requires
consideration of alternatives that are
less burdensome to small entities and an
agency explanation of why alternatives
were rejected.
64. The Small Business
Administration (SBA) revised its size
standards (effective January 22, 2014)
for electric utilities from a standard
based on megawatt hours to a standard
based on the number of employees,
including affiliates. Under SBA’s
standards, some transmission owners
will fall under the following category
and associated size threshold: Electric
bulk power transmission and control, at
500 employees.91
65. We estimate that the total number
of public utility transmission providers
with formula rates that would have to
develop revisions to their formula rates,
including the addition of a new
permanent worksheet, and make
compliance filings in response to this
Proposed Rule is 106. Of these, we
88 Regulations Implementing the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, Order No. 486,
FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 30,783 (1987) (crossreferenced at 41 FERC ¶ 61,284).
89 18 CFR 380.4(a)(15).
90 5 U.S.C. 601–612.
91 13 CFR 121.201, Sector 22 (Utilities), NAICS
code 221121 (Electric Bulk Power Transmission and
Control).
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
59341
estimate that approximately 43 percent
are small entities (approximately 46
entities). We estimate the average total
cost to each of these entities will be
$5,152 in Year 1 and $0 in subsequent
years. In addition, we estimate that the
total number of public utility
transmission providers with stated rates
that will have to calculate the excess
and deficient income tax to return to or
recover from customers is 31. Of these,
we estimate that approximately 43
percent are small entities
(approximately 13 entities). We estimate
the average total cost to each of these
entities will be between $1,380 in Year
One and $0 in subsequent years.
According to SBA guidance, the
determination of significance of impact
‘‘should be seen as relative to the size
of the business, the size of the
competitor’s business, and the impact
the regulation has on larger
competitors.’’ 92 We do not consider the
estimated burden to be a significant
economic impact. As a result, we certify
that the revisions proposed in this
Proposed Rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
VII. Comment Procedures
66. We invite interested persons to
submit comments on the matters and
issues proposed in this notice to be
adopted, including any related matters
or alternative proposals that
commenters may wish to discuss.
Comments are due December 24, 2018.
Comments must refer to Docket No.
RM19–5–000, and must include the
commenter’s name, the organization
they represent, if applicable, and their
address in their comments.
67. The Commission encourages
comments to be filed electronically via
the eFiling link on the Commission’s
website at https://www.ferc.gov. The
Commission accepts most standard
word processing formats. Documents
created electronically using word
processing software should be filed in
native applications or print-to-PDF
format and not in a scanned format.
Commenters filing electronically do not
need to make a paper filing.
68. Commenters that are not able to
file comments electronically must send
an original of their comments to:
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
Secretary of the Commission, 888 First
Street NE, Washington, DC, 20426.
69. All comments will be placed in
the Commission’s public files and may
92 U.S. Small Business Administration, A Guide
for Government Agencies How to Comply with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, at 18 (May 2012), https://
www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/advocacy/rfaguide_
0512_0.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
59342
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
be viewed, printed, or downloaded
remotely as described in the Document
Availability section below. Commenters
on this proposal are not required to
serve copies of their comments on other
commenters.
VIII. Document Availability
70. In addition to publishing the full
text of this document in the Federal
Register, the Commission provides all
interested persons an opportunity to
view and/or print the contents of this
document via the internet through the
Commission’s Home Page (https://
www.ferc.gov) and in the Commission’s
Public Reference Room during normal
502–6652 (toll free at 1–866–208–3676)
or email at ferconlinesupport@ferc.gov,
or the Public Reference Room at (202)
502–8371, TTY (202) 502–8659. Email
the Public Reference Room at
public.referenceroom@ferc.gov.
By direction of the Commission.
Commissioner McIntyre is not voting on this
order.
Issued: November 15, 2018.
Nathaniel J. Davis, Sr.,
Deputy Secretary.
Note: Appendix A will not be published in
the Federal Register.
Appendix A—List of Commenters to
NOI
Short name
Commenter
AEP .................................................
Ameren ............................................
American Electric Power Service Corporation.
Ameren Services Company on behalf of Union Electric Company d/b/a Ameren Missouri, Ameren Illinois
Company d/b/a Ameren Illinois, and Ameren Transmission Company of Illinois.
Association of Oil Pipe Lines.
American Public Gas Association.
American Public Power Association and American Municipal Power, Inc.
Avangrid Networks, Inc.
Berkshire Hathaway Energy Pipeline Group.
Boardwalk Pipeline Partners LP.
Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.
Office of the Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts; the Ohio Consumers’ Counsel; the
Maryland Office of People’s Counsel; the Nevada Bureau of Consumer Protection; the Delaware Division
of the Public Advocate; the Pennsylvania Office of Consumer Advocate; the Citizens Utility Board of
Wisconsin; and the Indiana Office of Utility Consumer Counselor.
Delaware Municipal Electric Corporation, Inc.
Dominion Energy Transmission, Inc.; Dominion Energy Carolina Gas Transmission, LLC; Dominion Energy
Quester Pipeline, LLC; Dominion Energy Overthrust Pipeline, LLC; and Questar Southern Trails Pipeline
Company.
Edison Electric Institute.
Enable Mississippi River Transmission, LLC and Enable Gas Transmission, LLC.
Enbridge Energy Partners, L.P. and Spectra Energy Partners, LP.
EQT Midstream Partners, LP.
Eversource Energy Service Company.
Exelon Corporation.
Central Electric Power Cooperative, Inc., North Carolina Electric Membership Corporation, Southern Maryland Electric Cooperative, Inc., and the New Jersey Division of Rate Counsel.
Atmos Energy Corporation; the City of Charlottesville, Virginia; the City of Richmond, Virginia; the Easton
Utilities Commission; Exelon Corporation; and Washington Gas Light Company.
American Electric Power Service Corporation; Dominion Energy Services, Inc., on behalf of Virginia Electric and Power Company d/b/a Dominion Energy Virginia; Duquesne Light Company; Exelon Corporation; FirstEnergy Service Company, on behalf of American Transmission Systems, Incorporated; Jersey
Central Power & Light Company; Mid-Atlantic Interstate Transmission, LLC; West Penn Power Company; The Potomac Edison Company; Monongahela Power Company; and PPL Electric Utilities Corp.
Interstate Natural Gas Association of America.
ITC Great Plains, LLC.
Frankfort Plant Board of Frankfort, Kentucky; Barbourville Utility Commission of the City of Barbourville,
City; Utilities Commission of the City of Corbin; and the Cities of Bardwell, Berea, Falmouth, Madisonville, and Providence, Kentucky.
Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America LLC; Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, L.L.C.; Southern Natural Gas Company, L.L.C.; Colorado Interstate Gas Company, L.L.C.; Wyoming Interstate Company,
L.L.C.; El Paso Natural Gas Company, L.L.C.; Mojave Pipeline Company, L.L.C.; Bear Creek Storage
Company, L.L.C.; Cheyenne Plains Gas Pipeline Company, L.L.C.; Elba Express Company, L.L.C.;
Kinder Morgan Louisiana Pipeline LLC; Southern LNG Company, L.L.C.; and TransColorado Gas Transmission Company LLC.
SFPP, L.P.; Calnev Pipe Line, LLC; and Kinder Morgan Cochin, LLC.
AOPL ...............................................
APGA ..............................................
APPA and AMP ..............................
Avangrid ..........................................
Berkshire .........................................
Boardwalk .......................................
CAPP ..............................................
Consumer Advocates ......................
DEMEC ...........................................
Dominion Energy Gas Pipelines .....
EEI ..................................................
Enable Interstate Pipelines .............
Enbridge and Spectra .....................
EQT Midstream ...............................
Eversource ......................................
Exelon .............................................
Indicated Customers .......................
Indicated Local Distribution Companies.
Indicated Transmission Owners .....
INGAA .............................................
ITC Great Plains .............................
Kentucky Municipals .......................
Kinder Morgan Entities ...................
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
business hours (8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Eastern time) at 888 First Street NE,
Room 2A, Washington, DC 20426.
71. From the Commission’s Home
Page on the internet, this information is
available on eLibrary. The full text of
this document is available on eLibrary
in PDF and Microsoft Word format for
viewing, printing, and/or downloading.
To access this document in eLibrary,
type the docket number excluding the
last three digits of this document in the
docket number field.
72. User assistance is available for
eLibrary and the Commission’s website
during normal business hours from the
Commission’s Online Support at 202–
Kinder Morgan Subsidiaries ............
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 226 / Friday, November 23, 2018 / Proposed Rules
Short name
Commenter
MISO Transmission Owners ...........
Ameren Services Company, as agent for Union Electric Company d/b/a Ameren Missouri, Ameren Illinois
Company d/b/a Ameren Illinois and Ameren Transmission Company of Illinois; American Transmission
Company LLC; Central Minnesota Municipal Power Agency; City Water, Light & Power (Springfield, IL);
Cleco Power LLC; Cooperative Energy; Dairyland Power Cooperative; Duke Energy Business Services,
LLC for Duke Energy Indiana, LLC; East Texas Electric Cooperative; Entergy Arkansas, Inc.; Entergy
Louisiana, LLC; Entergy Mississippi, Inc.; Entergy New Orleans, LLC; Entergy Texas, Inc.; Great River
Energy; Indiana Municipal Power Agency; Indianapolis Power & Light Company; International Transmission Company d/b/a ITCTransmission; ITC Midwest LLC; Lafayette Utilities System; Michigan Electric
Transmission Company, LLC; MidAmerican Energy Company; Minnesota Power (and its subsidiary Superior Water, L&P); Missouri River Energy Services; Montana-Dakota Utilities Co.; Northern Indiana Public Service Company LLC; Northern States Power Company, a Minnesota corporation, and Northern
States Power Company, a Wisconsin corporation, subsidiaries of Xcel Energy Inc.; Northwestern Wisconsin Electric Company; Otter Tail Power Company; Prairie Power Inc.; Southern Indiana Gas & Electric Company (d/b/a Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana); Southern Minnesota Municipal Power Agency;
Wabash Valley Power Association, Inc.; and Wolverine Power Supply Cooperative, Inc.
National Grid USA.
Aera Energy, LLC; Anadarko Energy Services Company; Apache Corporation; BP Energy Company;
ConocoPhillips Company; Hess Corporation; Occidental Energy Marketing, Inc.; Petrohawk Energy Corporation; and XTO Energy, Inc.
New York Transco LLC.
Mike Hunter, Oklahoma Attorney General.
PJM Interconnection, L.L.C.
Plains Pipeline, L.P.
Process Gas Consumers Group and American Forest and Paper Association.
National Grid ...................................
Natural Gas Indicated Shippers ......
New York Transco ..........................
Oklahoma Attorney General ...........
PJM .................................................
Plains ..............................................
Process Gas and American Forest
and Paper.
PSEG ..............................................
Tallgrass Pipelines ..........................
TAPS ...............................................
TransCanada ..................................
United Airlines Petitioners ...............
Williams ...........................................
Public Service Electric and Gas Company.
Trailblazer Pipeline Company LLC; Tallgrass Interstate Gas Transmission, LLC; and Rockies Express
Pipeline LLC.
Transmission Access Policy Study Group.
TransCanada Corporation.
United Airlines, Inc.; American Airlines, Inc.; Delta Air Lines, Inc.; Southwest Airlines, Co.; BP West Coast
Products LLC; ExxonMobil Oil Corporation; Chevron Products Company; HollyFrontier Refining & Marketing LLC; Valero Marketing and Supply Company; Airlines for America; and the National Propane Gas
Association.
Williams Companies, Inc.
2019, must be received by February 21,
2019. If no outlines of topics are
received by February 21, 2019, the
hearing will be cancelled.
[FR Doc. 2018–25370 Filed 11–21–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
26 CFR Part 20
[REG–106706–18]
RIN 1545–B072
Estate and Gift Taxes; Difference in the
Basic Exclusion Amount
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
and notification of public hearing.
AGENCY:
This document contains
proposed regulations addressing the
effect of recent legislative changes to the
basic exclusion amount used in
computing Federal gift and estate taxes.
The proposed regulations will affect
donors of gifts made after 2017 and the
estates of decedents dying after 2017.
DATES: Written and electronic comments
must be received by February 21, 2019.
Outlines of topics to be discussed at the
public hearing scheduled for March 13,
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:25 Nov 21, 2018
Jkt 247001
Send submissions to:
CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–106706–18), Room
5203, Internal Revenue Service, P.O.
Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station,
Washington, DC 20044. Submissions
also may be hand delivered Monday
through Friday between the hours of 8
a.m. and 5 p.m. to: CC:PA:LPD:PR
(REG–106706–18), Courier’s Desk,
Internal Revenue Service, 1111
Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20224, or sent electronically via the
Federal eRulemaking portal at https://
www.regulations.gov (IRS REG–106706–
18). The public hearing will be held in
the Auditorium, Internal Revenue
Service Building, 1111 Constitution
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20224.
ADDRESSES:
Internal Revenue Service
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
59343
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning the proposed regulations,
Deborah S. Ryan, (202) 317–6859;
concerning submissions of comments,
the hearing, and/or to be placed on the
building access list to attend the
hearing, Regina L. Johnson at (202) 317–
6901 (not toll-free numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Background
I. Overview
In computing the amount of Federal
gift tax to be paid on a gift or the
amount of Federal estate tax to be paid
at death, the gift and estate tax
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code
(Code) apply a unified rate schedule to
the taxpayer’s cumulative taxable gifts
and taxable estate on death to arrive at
a net tentative tax. The net tentative tax
then is reduced by a credit based on the
applicable exclusion amount (AEA),
which is the sum of the basic exclusion
amount (BEA) within the meaning of
section 2010(c)(3) of the Code and, if
applicable, the deceased spousal unused
exclusion (DSUE) amount within the
meaning of section 2010(c)(4). In certain
cases, the AEA also includes a restored
exclusion amount pursuant to Notice
2017–15, 2017–6 I.R.B. 783. Prior to
January 1, 2018, for estates of decedents
dying and gifts made beginning in 2011,
section 2010(c)(3) provided a BEA of $5
million, indexed for inflation after 2011.
The credit is applied first against the gift
tax, on a cumulative basis, as taxable
gifts are made. To the extent that any
credit remains at death, it is applied
against the estate tax.
E:\FR\FM\23NOP1.SGM
23NOP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 226 (Friday, November 23, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 59331-59343]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-25370]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
18 CFR Part 35
[Docket No. RM19-5-000]
Public Utility Transmission Rate Changes To Address Accumulated
Deferred Income Taxes
AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Commission) is
proposing to require all public utility transmission providers with
transmission rates under an Open Access Transmission Tariff (OATT), a
transmission owner tariff, or a rate schedule to revise those rates to
account for changes caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act). Specifically, for transmission formula rates, the
Commission is proposing to require that public utilities deduct excess
accumulated deferred income taxes (ADIT) from or add deficient ADIT to
their rate bases and adjust their income tax allowances by amortized
excess or deficient ADIT. The Commission is also proposing to require
all public utilities with transmission formula rates to incorporate a
new permanent worksheet into their transmission formula rates that will
annually track ADIT information. Additionally, the Commission is
proposing to require all public utilities with transmission stated
rates to determine the amount of excess and deferred income tax caused
by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's reduction to the federal corporate
income tax rate and return or recover this amount to or from customers.
DATES: Comments are due December 24, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Comments, identified by docket number, may be filed
electronically at https://www.ferc.gov in acceptable native applications
and print-to-PDF, but not in scanned or picture format. For those
unable to file electronically, comments may be filed by mail or hand-
delivery to: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Secretary of the
Commission, 888 First Street NE, Washington, DC 20426. The Comment
Procedures Section of this document contains more detailed filing
procedures.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Noah Lichtenstein (Technical Information), Office of Energy Market
Regulation, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street NE,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8696, [email protected].
Joshua Walters (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel,
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street NE, Washington,
DC 20426, (202) 502-6098, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
Paragraph
numbers
I. Background............................................... 7
A. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act................................ 7
[[Page 59332]]
B. Overview of Public Utility Transmission Rates........ 9
C. Order No. 144 and 18 CFR 35.24....................... 12
D. Notice of Inquiry.................................... 14
II. Discussion.............................................. 15
A. Ensuring Rate Base Neutrality........................ 20
1. NOI.............................................. 20
2. Comments......................................... 21
3. Proposed Requirements............................ 26
a. Formula Rates................................ 26
b. Stated Rates................................. 29
B. Return or Recovery of Excess or Deficient ADIT....... 30
1. NOI.............................................. 30
2. Comments......................................... 31
3. Proposed Requirements............................ 36
a. Formula Rates................................ 36
b. Stated Rates................................. 40
C. Support for Excess and Deficient ADIT Calculation and 43
Amortization...........................................
1. NOI.............................................. 43
2. Comments......................................... 44
3. Proposed Requirements............................ 46
a. Formula Rates................................ 46
b. Stated Rates................................. 50
III. Proposed Compliance Procedures......................... 51
IV. Information Collection Statement........................ 54
V. Environmental Analysis................................... 62
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification................ 63
VII. Comment Procedures..................................... 66
VIII. Document Availability................................. 70
1. In this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (Proposed Rule), we are
proposing to require all public utility transmission providers with
transmission rates under an Open Access Transmission Tariff (OATT), a
transmission owner tariff, or a rate schedule to revise those rates to
account for changes caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act).\1\ These proposed reforms are designed to address
the effects of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on the Accumulated Deferred
Income Taxes (ADIT) reflected in all transmission rates under an OATT,
a transmission owner tariff, or a rate schedule of public utility
transmission providers. The proposed reforms are intended to ensure
that ratepayers receive the benefits of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, and
that the public utility transmission formula and stated rates are just
and reasonable and not unduly discriminatory or preferential following
the enactment of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. The proposed reforms are
also intended to ensure that transmission formula and stated rates meet
the Commission's tax normalization requirements such that the income
tax component of those rates is calculated as though the taxable income
were recognized in the same period and amount by the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) and the Commission.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ An Act to provide for reconciliation pursuant to titles II
and V of the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year
2018, Pub. L. 115-97, 131 Stat. 2054 (2017) (Tax Cuts and Jobs Act).
In proposing this new requirement, the Commission relies on existing
Commission regulations relating to tax normalization for public
utilities as those regulations apply to public utilities with
transmission formula or stated rates. See 18 CFR 35.24. In this
Proposed Rule, the Commission does not propose any generic reforms
as to non-public utilities or the non-transmission rates of public
utilities. While any conclusions that the Commission makes in this
proceeding may be relevant to such rates, they will be addressed on
a case-by-case basis. Furthermore, to the extent any entity believes
that the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act renders any existing Commission-
jurisdictional rate unjust and unreasonable, that entity may submit
a complaint to the Commission.
\2\ In this Proposed Rule, the Commission refers to comments
filed in response to the Notice of Inquiry issued March 15, 2018.
Inquiry Regarding the Effect of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on
Commission-Jurisdictional Rates, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 35,582 (2018)
(NOI). A list of commenters in that proceeding and the abbreviated
names used in this Proposed Rule appears in Appendix A. Any comments
to this Proposed Rule should be filed in this proceeding, Docket No.
RM19-5-000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. The proposed reforms generally fall into three categories and
apply to public utilities with transmission formula rates and stated
rates in different ways. First, we propose to require all public
utilities with transmission formula rates to include a mechanism in
their formula rates to deduct any excess ADIT from or add any deficient
ADIT to their rate bases. This will ensure that rate base continues to
be treated in a manner similar to that prior to the Tax Cuts and Jobs
Act (i.e., that rate base neutrality is preserved). As for public
utilities with transmission stated rates, we do not propose any new
requirements regarding rate base neutrality.
3. Second, we propose to require all public utilities with
transmission formula rates to include a mechanism in their formula
rates that decreases or increases their income tax allowances by any
amortized excess or deficient ADIT, respectively. This reform will help
to ensure that public utilities with transmission formula rates return
excess ADIT to or recover deficient ADIT from ratepayers. As a result,
ratepayers who contributed to excess ADIT balances will receive the
benefit of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
4. With regard to public utility transmission providers with stated
rates, we are proposing to require these entities to determine the
excess and deficient ADIT caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act based on
the ADIT amounts approved in their last rate case and then to return
this amount to or recover this amount from customers. This reform is
intended to increase the likelihood that those customers who
contributed to the related ADIT accounts receive the benefits of the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
5. Third, we propose to require all public utilities with
transmission formula rates to incorporate a new permanent worksheet
into their transmission formula rate that will annually track
information related to excess or deficient ADIT. We believe that this
reform will increase the transparency surrounding the
[[Page 59333]]
adjustment of rate bases and income tax allowances to account for
excess or deficient ADIT by public utilities with transmission formula
rates. We do not propose any additional worksheets for public utilities
with transmission stated rates because we believe that existing
regulations require sufficient transparency.
6. We seek comments on these proposed reforms and areas for further
comment within 30 days after publication of this Proposed Rule in the
Federal Register.
I. Background
A. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
7. On December 22, 2017, the President signed into law the Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, among other things, reduced
the federal corporate income tax rate from 35 percent to 21 percent,
effective January 1, 2018. This means that, beginning January 1, 2018,
companies subject to the Commission's jurisdiction will compute income
taxes owed to the IRS based on a 21 percent tax rate. The tax rate
reduction will result in less corporate income tax expense going
forward.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Sec. 13001, 131 Stat. at 2096.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. Importantly, the tax rate reduction will also result in a
reduction in ADIT liabilities and ADIT assets on the books of rate-
regulated companies. ADIT balances are accumulated on the regulated
books and records of public utilities based on the requirements of the
Uniform System of Accounts. ADIT arises from timing differences between
the method of computing taxable income for reporting to the IRS and the
method of computing income for regulatory accounting and ratemaking
purposes.\4\ As a result of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act reducing the
federal corporate income tax rate from 35 percent to 21 percent, a
portion of an ADIT liability that was collected from customers will no
longer be due from public utilities to the IRS and is considered excess
ADIT, which must be returned to customers in a cost of service
ratemaking context. Additionally, for public utilities that have an
ADIT asset, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act will result in a reduction to
that ADIT asset, and public utilities may seek to reflect in rates a
portion of such reductions. Public utilities are required to adjust
their ADIT assets and ADIT liabilities for the effect of the change in
tax rates in the period that the change is enacted.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 18 CFR 35.24(d)(2).
\5\ See 18 CFR 35.24 and 18 CFR 154.305; see also Regulations
Implementing Tax Normalization for Certain Items Reflecting Timing
Differences in the Recognition of Expenses or Revenues for
Ratemaking and Income Tax Purposes, Order No. 144, FERC Stats. &
Regs. ] 30,254 (1981), order on reh'g, Order No. 144-A, FERC Stats.
& Regs. ] 30,340 (1982).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Overview of Public Utility Transmission Rates
9. The Commission is responsible for ensuring that the rates, terms
and conditions of service for wholesale sales and transmission of
electric energy in interstate commerce are just, reasonable, and not
unduly discriminatory or preferential. With respect to the transmission
of electric energy in interstate commerce, most jurisdictional entities
are subject to cost of service regulation. Cost of service regulation
seeks to allow public utilities the opportunity to (1) recover
operating costs, including income taxes, (2) recover the cost of
capital investments, and (3) earn a just and reasonable return on
investments.\6\ Public utilities have calculated their cost of service-
based transmission rates predominately by using formula rates or stated
rates. These rates are contained in numerous agreements, including a
public utility's OATT, a regional transmission operator's or
independent system operator's OATT, coordination agreements, and
wholesale distribution agreements. In this Proposed Rule, we focus on
all public utilities with transmission formula or stated rates that are
contained in an OATT, a transmission owner tariff, or a rate schedule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See Pub. Sys. v. FERC, 709 F.2d 73, 75 (D.C. Cir. 1983).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
10. When a public utility uses stated rates, if the public utility
seeks to change its rate, it files a rate case at the Commission to
establish the cost of service revenue requirement, allocate costs to
various customer groups, and calculate rates. As an alternative, the
Commission permits public utilities to establish rates through
formulas, in which the Commission accepts the public utility's cost of
service calculation methodologies and input sources and allows the
public utility to update those inputs every year.
11. Public utilities must seek changes to their transmission stated
rates or formula rates through filings with the Commission under
section 205 of the Federal Power Act (FPA),\7\ while the Commission and
third parties can challenge a rate in a proceeding initiated under
section 206 of the FPA.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See 16 U.S.C. 824d.
\8\ See 16 U.S.C. 824e(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Order No. 144 and 18 CFR 35.24
12. The purpose of tax normalization is to match the tax effects of
costs and revenues with the recovery in rates of those same costs and
revenues.\9\ As noted above, timing differences may exist between the
method of computing taxable income for reporting to the IRS and the
method of computing income for regulatory accounting and ratemaking
purposes. The tax effects of these differences are placed in a deferred
tax account to be used in later periods when the differences
reverse.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Order No. 144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 30,254 at 31,522,
31,530.
\10\ Id. at 31,554.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
13. The Commission established this policy of tax normalization in
Order No. 144 where it required use of ``the provision for deferred
taxes [(i.e., ADIT)] as a mechanism for setting the tax allowance at
the level of current tax cost.'' \11\ In keeping with this
normalization policy, and as relevant to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's
reduction of the federal corporate income tax rate, the Commission in
Order No. 144 also required adjustments in the ADIT of public
utilities' cost of service when excessive or deficient ADIT has been
created as a result of changes in tax rates.\12\ Furthermore, the
Commission required ``a rate applicant to compute the income tax
component in its cost of service by making provision for any excess or
deficiency in its deferred tax reserves resulting . . . from tax rate
changes.''\13\ The Commission required that such provision be
consistent with a Commission-approved ratemaking method made
specifically applicable to the rate applicant.\14\ Where no ratemaking
method has been made specifically applicable, the Commission required
the rate applicant to advance some method in its next rate case.\15\
The Commission stated that it would determine the appropriateness of
any proposed method on a case-by-case basis, but as the issue is
resolved in a number of cases, a method with wide applicability may be
adopted.\16\ The Commission codified the requirements
[[Page 59334]]
of Order No. 144 in its regulations in 18 CFR 35.24.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Id. at 31,530.
\12\ Id. at 31,519.
\13\ Order No. 144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 30,254 at 31,560. See
also 18 CFR 35.24(c)(1)(ii); 18 CFR 35.24(c)(2).
\14\ Order No. 144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 30,254 at 31,560. See
also 18 CFR 35.24(c)(3).
\15\ Order No. 144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 30,254 at 31,560.
\16\ Id. See also 18 CFR 35.24(c)(3).
\17\ Originally promulgated as part of Order 144, the regulatory
text was redesignated as 18 CFR 35.25 in Order No. 144-A. See Order
No. 144-A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 30,340 at 30,140. In Order No. 545,
the Commission again redesignated the regulatory text to its present
designation as 18 CFR 35.24. See Streamlining Electric Power
Regulation, Order No. 545, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 30,955, at 30,713
(1992) (cross-referenced at 61 FERC ] 61,207).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Notice of Inquiry
14. Following the enactment of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the
Commission issued the NOI seeking comments on, among other things,
whether, and if so, how, the Commission should address the effects of
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on ADIT.\18\ The Commission noted that the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's reduction to the federal corporate income tax
rate would potentially create excess or deficient ADIT on the books of
public utilities.\19\ As relevant to the reforms proposed in this
Proposed Rule, the Commission sought comments on the preservation of
rate base neutrality and how public utilities should make related
adjustments to their rate bases for excess and deficient ADIT.\20\ The
Commission also sought comment on how public utilities should adjust
their income allowances to return or recover excess or deficient ADIT,
respectively,\21\ as well as the method used to return or recover
excess or deficient protected and unprotected ADIT.\22\ Finally, the
Commission sought comment on whether it should require public utilities
to provide to the Commission, on a one-time basis, additional
information to show the computation of excess or deficient ADIT and the
corresponding return of excess ADIT to customers or recovery of
deficient ADIT from customers. If so, the Commission also sought
comments on what types of information public utilities should
provide.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ NOI, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 35,582.
\19\ Id. P 13.
\20\ Id. PP 14-15.
\21\ Id. P 21.
\22\ Id. PP 17, 19. In the NOI, the Commission referred to
``plant-based'' and ``non-plant based'' ADIT. We agree with
commenters' recommendation to follow the IRS terminology of
``protected'' and ``unprotected'' ADIT instead of ``plant-based''
and ``non-plant based'' presented in the NOI. The IRS terms for
``protected'' and ``unprotected'' are directly associated with the
IRS' normalization protections to ensure a tax payer maintains the
benefit of accelerated depreciation over the life of the related
asset. Accordingly, we have changed the terms used in this Proposed
Rule to better mirror IRS terminology.
\23\ Id. P 23.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Discussion
15. Since the issuance of Order No. 144, the landscape of public
utility transmission rates has changed dramatically; that is, the vast
majority of public utilities now use formula rates rather than stated
rates. As described above, unlike stated rates, which are updated only
through a rate case initiated by a FPA section 205 application by the
public utility or an FPA section 206 action by the Commission or a
complaining third party, inputs to formula rates are updated annually
to derive a charge assessed to customers. Thus, a rate case no longer
remains the appropriate vehicle for formula rates to reflect excess or
deficient ADIT in a public utility's cost of transmission service, as
contemplated by Order No. 144. The public utility's transmission
formula rate should include provisions that accurately reflect excess
or deficient ADIT in a public utility's cost of transmission service
during the annual updates of the rest of the revenue requirement.
16. Following the NOI, we have determined that this near-industry-
wide transition from stated to formula rates has caused a gap in the
transmission formula rates of public utilities such that many, if not
most, of those rates do not contain provisions to fully reflect any
excess or deficient ADIT following a change in tax rates, as required
by Order No. 144 and the Commission's regulations in 18 CFR 35.24. Two
components are necessary to maintain an accurate cost of service
following a change in income tax rates, such as that caused by the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act: (1) Preservation of rate base neutrality through the
removal of excess ADIT from or addition of deficient ADIT to rate base;
and (2) the return of excess ADIT to or recovery of deficient ADIT from
ratepayers.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Id. P 13. While the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act decreased the
federal corporate income tax rate, the reforms proposed in this
Proposed Rule are also meant to ensure that transmission formula
rates reflect the effects of tax increases, as well.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
17. A review of public utility transmission formula rates suggests
that only some transmission formula rates contain the first component,
while even fewer contain the second. Consequently, as discussed in
greater detail below, we propose to require public utilities with
transmission formula rates to revise those rates to include these two
components. Additionally, to provide greater transparency, we propose
to require all public utilities with transmission formula rates to
incorporate a new permanent worksheet into their transmission formula
rates that will annually track ADIT information related to these two
components.
18. Regarding public utilities with transmission stated rates, we
propose maintaining Order No. 144's requirement that such public
utilities reflect any adjustments made to their ADIT balances as a
result of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (and any future tax changes) in
their next rate case. However, to increase the likelihood that those
customers who contributed to the related ADIT accounts receive the
benefit of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, we propose to require public
utilities with transmission stated rates to (1) determine any excess or
deficient ADIT caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and (2) return or
recover this amount to or from customers. We believe that the
Commission's existing regulations already require all of the
information necessary to support the changes proposed herein to reflect
the effects of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on a transmission stated rate.
Therefore, we propose not to require any additional worksheets.
19. The Commission generally does not permit single-issue
ratemaking. However, similar to the Commission's actions following the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act,\25\ given the limited scope of the reforms
proposed here, we propose that compliance filings made in response to
this Proposed Rule's final requirements may be considered on a single-
issue basis.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See AEP Appalachian Transmission Company, Inc., 162 FERC ]
61,225 (2018); Alcoa Power Generating Inc.--Long Sault Division, 162
FERC ] 61,224 (2018).
\26\ See generally Indicated RTO Transmission Owners, 161 FERC ]
61,018, at PP 13-14 (2017); see also Rates Changes Relating to the
Federal Corporate Income Tax Rate for Public Utilities, Order No.
475, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 30,752, order on reh'g, 41 FERC ] 61,029
(1987) (allowing public utilities to use a voluntary, abbreviated
rate filing procedure to reduce their rates to reflect a reduction
in the federal corporate income tax rate on a single-issue basis).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Ensuring Rate Base Neutrality
1. NOI
20. In the NOI, the Commission sought comment on how to ensure that
rate base continues to be treated in a manner similar to that prior to
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (i.e., how to preserve rate base neutrality),
until excess and deficient ADIT have been fully returned or recovered
in a just and reasonable manner. The Commission also sought comment on
whether, and if so how, public utilities should make adjustments to
rate base to reflect excess and deficient ADIT. The Commission asked
that commenters address both formula rates and stated rates.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ NOI, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 35,582 at PP 14-15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 59335]]
2. Comments
21. Numerous public utilities and other commenters assert that, in
order to preserve rate base neutrality, unamortized balances of excess
ADIT must continue to be treated as an offset to (i.e., a deduction
from) rate base until those balances are flowed back in their entirety
to customers.\28\ These commenters generally note that, following the
passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, public utilities transferred
excess ADIT to Account 254 (Other Regulatory Liabilities) or Account
182.3 (Other Regulatory Assets), as appropriate.\29\ Accordingly, these
commenters state that, just as the ADIT balances were deducted from or
added to rate base, as appropriate, the corresponding amounts recorded
in Accounts 254 and 182.3 should be deducted from or added to rate
base. While generally agreeing that rate base adjustments are
necessary, several commenters assert that there is no ``one-size fits
all'' solution.\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ APPA and AMP, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at
4-7 (filed on May 22, 2018) (APPA and AMP NOI Comments); Avangrid,
Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 5 (May 22, 2018)
(Avangrid NOI Comments); Consumer Advocates, Comments to NOI, Docket
No. RM18-12-000, at 4-5 (filed May 21, 2018) (Consumer Advocates NOI
Comments); DEMEC, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 8
(filed May 21, 2018) (DEMEC NOI Comments); Indicated Customers,
Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 3-6 (filed May 21, 2018)
(Indicated Customers NOI Comments); National Grid, Comments to NOI,
Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 6-7 (filed May 21, 2018) (National Grid
NOI Comments); New York Transco, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-
12-000, at 5 (filed May 22, 2018) (New York Transco NOI Comments);
Oklahoma Attorney General, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000,
at 4 (filed May 22, 2018) (Oklahoma Attorney General NOI Comments);
PSEG, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 4 (filed May 22,
2018) (PSEG NOI Comments).
\29\ Avangrid NOI Comments at 5; EEI, Comments to NOI, Docket
No. RM18-12-000, at 10 (filed May 22, 2018) (EEI NOI Comments).
\30\ Kentucky Municipals, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-
000, at 3-5 (filed May 21, 2018) (Kentucky Municipals NOI Comments);
Exelon, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 11-12 (filed May
22, 2018) (Exelon NOI Comments); TAPS, Comments to NOI, Docket No.
RM18-12-000, at 3 (filed May 21, 2018) (TAPS NOI Comments);
Indicated Transmission Owners, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-
000, at 7 (filed May 21, 2018) (Indicated Transmission Owners NOI
Comments) ((``[t]here may be no uniform way to achieve the
Commission's rate base neutrality objective given differences
between companies in accounting methods and rate structures.'')
(citation omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
22. Regarding public utilities with formula rates, several
commenters support the addition of a line item to formula rates for
rate base adjustments reflecting excess or deficient ADIT recorded in
Accounts 254 and 182.3.\31\ Many of these commenters suggest that the
Commission permit public utilities to make single-issue FPA section 205
filings to make the appropriate changes to their formula rates.\32\ EEI
suggests that the Commission should permit utilities with formula rates
requiring adjustments to address these during their next true-up annual
informational filing.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ Oklahoma Attorney General NOI Comments at 4-5; PSEG NOI
Comments at 4; Avangrid NOI Comments at 5-9; Eversource, Comments to
NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 4 (filed May 22, 2018) (Eversource
NOI Comments); National Grid NOI Comments at 7-8; TAPS NOI Comments
at 4.
\32\ Eversource NOI Comments at 4-5; Indicated Transmission
Owners NOI Comments at 6; PSEG NOI Comments at 4-5; National Grid
NOI Comments at 7-8.
\33\ EEI NOI Comments at 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
23. Alternatively, APPA and AMP, and Indicated Customers suggest
that any excess or deficient ADIT resulting from the implementation of
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act be recorded to the same ADIT accounts (e.g.,
Accounts 190, 281, 282, and 283) where the original entries for the
regulatory assets and regulatory liabilities were established.\34\ APPA
and AMP state that by keeping the excess or deficient ADIT in sub-
accounts within the original ADIT accounts, it will be more transparent
and easier to track as the balances are flowed back.\35\ As another
alternative, the Oklahoma Attorney General asserts that the Commission
should consider requiring that the line item currently used to offset
rate base with ADIT include both ADIT balances in traditional ADIT-
related accounts and those excess ADIT balances in other accounts
identified by the Commission.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ APPA and AMP NOI Comments at 7-8; Indicated Customers NOI
Comments at 6-7.
\35\ APPA and AMP NOI Comments at 7-8.
\36\ Oklahoma Attorney General NOI Comments at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
24. Other commenters note that such a line item adjustment may not
be necessary in all cases.\37\ Specifically, these commenters assert
that certain formula rates (e.g., certain MISO Attachment O, AEP,
Exelon, and Eversource formula rates) already provide for the inclusion
of excess ADIT in rate base and that the balances in Accounts 254 and
182.3 will naturally flow into rate base without any modification.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ Ameren, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 7-8
(filed May 21, 2018) (Ameren NOI Comments); MISO Transmission
Owners, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 7 (filed May 21,
2018) (MISO Transmission Owners NOI Comments); EEI NOI Comments at
11; Exelon NOI Comments at 11-12.
\38\ AEP, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 3-4 (filed
May 22, 2018) (AEP NOI Comments); Ameren NOI Comments at 7-8; MISO
Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 7; Eversource NOI Comments at 3-
4; Exelon NOI Comments at 11-12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
25. Regarding public utilities with stated rates, commenters
generally agree that adjustments are not necessary to preserve rate
base neutrality with respect to stated rates.\39\ National Grid and
Avangrid state that, under cost-of-service, both ADIT balances and
regulatory liability balances should be deducted from rate base in
calculating the stated rate.\40\ Avangrid asserts that rate base
neutrality issues are not raised with transmission stated rates because
these rates assume the same amount of ADIT deduction to rate base
without regard to how the companies adjusted their books and
records.\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ National Grid NOI Comments at 7-8; Avangrid NOI Comments at
5-6; EEI NOI Comments at 11.
\40\ National Grid NOI Comments at 7-8; Avangrid NOI Comments at
5-6.
\41\ Avangrid NOI Comments at 5-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Proposed Requirements
a. Formula Rates
26. We propose to require all public utilities with transmission
formula rates to include a mechanism in their formula rates which
deducts any excess ADIT from or adds any deficient ADIT to their rate
bases under 18 CFR 35.24. As described above, the Commission's
regulations in 18 CFR 35.24 require public utilities to reflect any
excess or deficient ADIT as a result of any changes in tax rates in
their next rate case. As a result of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's
reduction of the federal corporate income tax from 35 percent to 21
percent, public utilities have collected excess funds for their ADIT
liabilities and have not collected sufficient funds for any ADIT
assets. To preserve rate base neutrality by accurately matching the tax
allowance with the current tax cost as required by Commission
regulations, public utilities with transmission formula rates must
include provisions in their formula rates to adjust their ADIT for
excess or deficient ADIT.\42\ We believe our proposal will ensure that
public utilities with transmission formula rates will adjust their ADIT
for any excess or deficient ADIT caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act or
any future changes to tax rates which may give rise to excess or
deficient ADIT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ Order No. 144, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 30,254 at 31,530,
31,519.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
27. While we are proposing to require public utilities with
transmission formula rates to include a mechanism to adjust rate base
for any excess or deficient ADIT, we are not proposing to prescribe a
specific adjustment mechanism which applies to all public utilities
with transmission formula
[[Page 59336]]
rates. We agree with commenters to the NOI that prescribing a one-size-
fits-all approach, such as adding a line item, is not appropriate and
that the Commission should instead allow public utilities to propose
any necessary changes to their formula rates on an individual basis.
Recent filings and comments submitted in the NOI suggest that multiple
approaches to modify rate base may be just and reasonable. For example,
as noted by MISO Transmission Owners,\43\ the Commission accepted
proposals by ITC Companies and Ameren in which those companies did not
revise their formula rates to modify their adjustments to rate base by
adding a new line item for rate base.\44\ Instead, those companies
demonstrated that, while not visible in their formula rates, their
adjustments to rate base were modified by any excess or deficient ADIT
prior to their input to the formula rates. Accordingly, we also propose
that public utilities with transmission formula rates may demonstrate
that their formula rates already meet the proposed ADIT adjustment
requirements described in this Proposed Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ MISO Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 7.
\44\ Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 153 FERC ] 61,374
(2015); Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 163 FERC ] 61,163
(2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
28. We are not persuaded by commenters to the NOI who suggest that
excess or deficient ADIT amounts should be recorded to the same ADIT
accounts where the original entries for the regulatory assets and
regulatory liabilities were established. The Commission previously
issued guidance on this topic, finding that public utilities are
required to record a regulatory asset (Account 182.3) associated with
deficient ADIT or regulatory liability (Account 254) associated with
excess ADIT.\45\ As a result, we do not propose any changes to that
specific accounting guidance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ See Accounting for Income Taxes, Docket No. AI93-5-000, at
8 (1993).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Stated Rates
29. We do not propose any new requirements regarding rate base
neutrality for public utilities with transmission stated rates. As
noted by commenters to the NOI, stated rates are calculated based in
large part on company data submitted, and projections made, at the time
of the last rate case. Thus, while ADIT balances may have changed as a
result of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, so too will many other aspects of
the cost of service and calculations that underlie the stated rate,
making it difficult to re-evaluate ADIT and its effect on rate base
following a change in tax rates without fully evaluating a public
utility's entire cost of service and rates.\46\ We believe that the
revisions we are proposing below, related to the return or recovery of
excess or deficient ADIT, will adequately address the effects of the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on ADIT and will avoid such complications.
Therefore, we do not propose to require adjustments to the rate bases
of public utilities with transmission stated rates prior to their next
rate case on a generic basis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ The Commission previously acknowledged this difficulty in
Order No. 475. Order No. 475, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 30,752 at
30,736.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Return or Recovery of Excess or Deficient ADIT
1. NOI
30. In the NOI, the Commission asked commenters to address how
public utilities with stated or formula rates should adjust their
income tax allowance such that the allowance would be decreased or
increased by the amortization of excess or deficient ADIT,
respectively.\47\ Additionally, the Commission asked commenters how the
Average Rate Assumption Method, and alternatively, the Reverse South
Georgia Method or South Georgia Method, as appropriate, will be
implemented in the amortization of protected excess or deficient ADIT
and how quickly to amortize unprotected excess or deficient ADIT.\48\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ NOI, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 35,582 at P 21.
\48\ Id. PP 17, 19. Under the South Georgia method, a
calculation is taken of the difference between the amount actually
in the deferred account and the amount that would have been in the
account had normalization continuously been followed. Any deficiency
is collected from ratepayers (i.e., South Georgia Method), and any
excess is returned to ratepayers (i.e., Reverse South Georgia
Method), over the remaining depreciable life of the plant that
caused the difference. Memphis Light, Gas and Water Div. v. FERC,
707 F.2d 565, 569 (D.C. Cir. 1983).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Comments
31. Commenters generally support adjusting public utilities' income
tax allowances by the amortization of excess or deficient ADIT. Many
commenters suggest adding a line item or several line items to public
utility transmission formula rates to make this adjustment,\49\ with
some transmission owners noting that they have already submitted or now
propose to submit such revisions.\50\ MISO Transmission Owners note
that the Commission accepted such a proposal by ITC Great Plains.\51\
National Grid suggests that adjustments to income tax allowances could
also be made through the weighted cost of capital.\52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ Ameren NOI Comments at 15-16; Avangrid NOI Comments at 11-
12; MISO Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 14-17; National Grid
NOI Comments at 15; New York Transco NOI Comments at 10; Oklahoma
Attorney General NOI Comments at 6; PSEG NOI Comments at 10.
\50\ Ameren NOI Comments at 15-16; Avangrid NOI Comments at 11-
12; MISO Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 16-17; New York Transco
NOI Comments at 10.
\51\ MISO Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 15 (citing
Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 153 FERC ] 61,374). See
also Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 163 FERC ] 61,163.
\52\ National Grid NOI Comments at 15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
32. Commenters also support revisions to transmission stated rates
to reflect income tax allowance adjustments for the amortization of
excess or deficient ADIT.\53\ TAPS states that, to address these
adjustments, it supports an approach similar to utility-specific
investigations the Commission opened with respect to the change in the
federal corporate income tax rate.\54\ However, TAPS expresses concern
that stated rate customers will find it challenging to verify their
utilities' calculation and asserts that, thus, the Commission should
encourage utilities to work with customers toward a mutually acceptable
solution and require those utilities to file the return mechanism,
including detailed documentation and worksheets so that the calculation
of excess ADIT can be validated.\55\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ Avangrid NOI Comments at 9, National Grid NOI Comments at
15, TAPS NOI Comments at 6.
\54\ TAPS NOI Comments at 6 (citing Alcoa Power Generating
Inc.--Long Sault Div., 162 FERC ] 61,224).
\55\ TAPS NOI Comments at 5-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
33. Some commenters caution the Commission against mandating that
public utilities adopt a single method to adjust their formula rates'
income tax allowances. Instead, these commenters suggest that the
Commission recognize public utilities' specific circumstances by
evaluating proposed modifications on a case-by-case basis or
recognizing that some formula rates already adjust the income tax
allowance by the amortization of excess or deficient ADIT and,
therefore, would not require revision.\56\ Indicated Transmission
Owners argue that the Commission should make any evaluations on a
single-issue basis.\57\ The Oklahoma Attorney General suggests that the
Commission could use ongoing proceedings, such as the show cause
proceedings initiated against public utilities whose formula rates
would not automatically adjust to reflect the lower federal corporate
income tax rate of 21
[[Page 59337]]
percent, to revise formula rates such that the income tax allowance is
adjusted by the amortization of excess or deficient ADIT.\58\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ Exelon NOI Comments at 14-15; Indicated Customers NOI
Comments at 12-13; MISO Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 17.
\57\ Indicated Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 11-12.
\58\ Oklahoma Attorney General NOI Comments at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
34. Consumer Advocates are concerned that absent Commission
intervention, jurisdictional entities may begin to amortize their
excess ADIT, thereby denying customers the full benefit of the Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act. Consumer Advocates argue that to the extent any protected
ADIT balances have been amortized to date, the Commission should
require such excess protected ADIT amortization credits to be reversed
and the liability balance restored to that of the implementation date
of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.\59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ Consumer Advocates NOI Comments at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
35. Regarding protected excess or deficient ADIT, commenters agree
that the Commission has no need to change its existing regulations or
precedent or depart from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's normalization
provisions.\60\ Regarding unprotected excess or deficient ADIT,
commenters agree that the Commission should adopt a case-by-case
approach for determining how quickly excess or deficient unprotected
ADIT should be flowed back to or recovered from customers.\61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ AEP NOI Comments at 4-5; Ameren NOI Comments at 11; APPA
and AMP NOI Comments at 5-6, 10; Avangrid NOI Comments at 8-9;
Consumer Advocates NOI Comments at 6-7; DEMEC NOI Comments at 9; EEI
NOI Comments at 14, 16-17; Eversource NOI Comments at 7; Exelon NOI
Comments at 13; Indicated Customers NOI Comments at 8-9; Indicated
Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 8-9; Kentucky Municipals NOI
Comments at 6; MISO Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 8-11;
National Grid NOI Comments at 10-11; New York Transco NOI Comments
at 7-8; Oklahoma Attorney General NOI Comments at 6-7; PSEG NOI
Comments at 7-8.
\61\ AEP NOI Comments at 6-7 (``However, in the event the
Commission develops a broadly applicable amortization period, AEP
recommends that period be 25 years or longer''); Avangrid NOI
Comments at 9-11; Dominion, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000,
at 12 (filed on May 21, 2018); EEI NOI Comments at 17-18; Enable
Interstate Pipelines, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at
36-37 (filed on May 21, 2018); Enbridge and Spectra, Comments to
NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 26 (filed May 21, 2018); EQT
Midstream, Comments to NOI, Docket No. RM18-12-000, at 13-14 (filed
May 21, 2018); Eversource NOI Comments at 8-9; Exelon NOI Comments
at 13-14; Indicated Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 9-10;
National Grid NOI Comments at 11-13; New York Transco NOI Comments
at 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Proposed Requirements
a. Formula Rates
36. We propose to require all public utilities with transmission
formula rates to include a mechanism in their formula rates which
decreases or increases their income tax allowances by any amortized
excess or deficient ADIT, respectively, under 18 CFR 35.24. Such a
mechanism is necessary because, as described above, the Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act's reduction of the federal corporate income tax rate from 35
percent to 21 percent means public utilities have collected from
customers funds in excess of what is due to the IRS for ADIT
liabilities and, conversely for ADIT assets, funds from customers
insufficient to satisfy IRS tax obligations. Similar to the proposed
rate base adjustment requirements, these proposed income tax allowance
adjustment requirements are intended to satisfy Order No. 144's
requirement that the income tax allowance match the current tax cost
and reflect the effects of any future changes to tax rates that may
give rise to excess or deficient ADIT.
37. Similar to comments regarding adjustments to rate base, we
agree with commenters to the NOI that prescribing a one-size-fits-all
approach is not appropriate and that the public utilities with
transmission formula rates should instead be allowed to propose any
necessary changes to their rates on an individual basis. Accordingly,
we do not propose that all public utilities with transmission formula
rates must use a single method to adjust their income tax allowances
for any amortized excess or deficient ADIT. Many public utilities with
transmission formula rates use different formats of rate templates or
formulas, and a single, prescriptive method, such as the requirement of
a single line item, may not fully capture or transparently convey the
amortization of excess or deficient ADIT. Additionally, recent filings
by public utilities that proposed revisions to their formula rate
templates to reflect changes in income tax rates by, among other
things, incorporating mechanisms to return excess ADIT demonstrate that
company-specific variations are necessary.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ See, e.g., Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 153
FERC ] 61,374; Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 163 FERC ]
61,163; Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 164 FERC ] 61,113
(2018); Emera Maine, 165 FERC ] 61,086 (2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
38. Regarding the period over which the amortization of excess or
deficient ADIT must occur, we believe that public utilities should
follow the guidance provided in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, where
available. As noted by commenters to the NOI, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
provides a method of general applicability and requires public
utilities to return excess protected ADIT \63\ no more rapidly than
over the life of the underlying asset using the Average Rate Assumption
Method, or, where a public utility's books and underlying records do
not contain the vintage account data necessary, it must use an
alternative method.\64\ In contrast, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act does not
specify what method public utilities must use for excess or deficient
unprotected ADIT. We agree with commenters to the NOI that, because
such a determination depends on the specific facts and circumstances
for each public utility, a case-by-case approach to amortizing excess
or deficient unprotected ADIT remains appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ While the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act does not mention deficient
protected ADIT specifically, we expect that public utilities will
recover such deficient ADIT in the same manner prescribed for excess
protected ADIT.
\64\ Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Sec. 13001(b)(6)(A), 131 Stat. at
2099. If a public utility must use an alternative method, Commission
precedent provides that the public utility should use the Reverse
South Georgia Method for excess ADIT or the South Georgia Method for
deficient ADIT. See Memphis Light, Gas and Water Div. v. FERC, 707
F.2d at 569.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
39. Consumer Advocates are concerned that a portion of the amounts
allowable to be returned to customers under the Average Rate Assumption
Method schedule would not be refunded due to the fact that any proposed
tariff provisions to return excess ADIT as a result of this Proposed
Rule will not be effective until after January 1, 2018. We acknowledge
that in applying a tax normalization method (e.g., the Average Rate
Assumption Method), public utilities are required to develop a schedule
removing ADIT from rate base and returning it to customers, effective
January 1, 2018, using the fastest allowable method to return the
excess ADIT under the IRS' normalization requirements. However, these
requirements represent only the fastest allowable return schedule and
do not remove a public utility's obligation to return the excess ADIT.
Any amounts allowed to be returned under the Average Rate Assumption
Method schedule prior to the effective date of proposed tariff
provisions made in compliance with the Proposed Rule should still be
refunded to customers. In other words, the full regulatory liability
for excess ADIT should be captured in rates, beginning on the effective
date of any proposed tariff provision. We do not believe that any
specific reforms are necessary to accomplish this because public
utilities should not amortize an excess ADIT regulatory liability for
accounting purposes until it is included in ratemaking.\65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ The description of Account 182.3 (Other regulatory assets)
states, ``The amounts recorded in this account are generally to be
charged, concurrently with the recovery of the amounts in rates. .
.'' (emphasis added). 18 CFR part 101, Account 182.3 (Other
Regulatory Assets).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 59338]]
b. Stated Rates
40. We propose to require all public utilities with transmission
stated rates to (1) determine the excess and deficient income tax
caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's reduction to the federal
corporate income tax rate and (2) return this amount to or recover this
amount from customers under 18 CFR 35.24. We also propose for public
utilities with transmission stated rates to calculate this excess or
deficient ADIT using the ADIT approved in their last rate cases. We
believe calculating excess or deficient ADIT in this manner will allow
public utilities with transmission stated rates to preserve their costs
of service as accepted in their last rate case. We are not seeking to
propose a specific way for public utilities with transmission stated
rates to return or recover the excess or deficient income taxes to
ratepayers; rather, we will evaluate each proposal on an individual
basis. We believe the proposed reforms will increase the likelihood
that those customers who contributed to the related ADIT accounts
receive the benefit of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
41. TAPS expresses concern that the customers of public utilities
with transmission stated rates will lack sufficient information to
evaluate any proposals to return or recover excess or deficient ADIT,
respectively. We note that the Commission's regulations require public
utilities filing changes to transmission rates to identify the effect
of tax changes on those rates.\66\ Accordingly, we expect that public
utilities with stated rates would include in their compliance filings
resulting from this Proposed Rule supporting information necessary to
identify, at minimum, the following: (1) How any ADIT accounts were re-
measured and the excess or deficient ADIT contained therein; (2) the
accounting of any excess or deficient amounts in Accounts 182.3 and
254; (3) whether the excess or deficient ADIT is protected or
unprotected; (4) the accounts to which the excess or deficient ADIT
will be amortized; and (5) the amortization period of the excess or
deficient ADIT to be returned or recovered through the rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ 18 CFR 35.13; 18 CFR 35.24.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
42. Finally, as noted above, public utilities with transmission
stated rates must conform to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's requirements
regarding the period over which the amortization of protected excess or
deficient ADIT must occur. We will continue to analyze the appropriate
amortization period for unprotected ADIT on a case-by-case basis.
C. Support for Excess and Deficient ADIT Calculation and Amortization
1. NOI
43. In the NOI, the Commission sought comment on whether it should
require public utilities to provide to the Commission, on a one-time
basis, additional information, such as supporting worksheets, to show
the computation of excess or deficient ADIT and the corresponding flow-
back of excess ADIT to customers or recovery of deficient ADIT from
customers. The Commission asked commenters to address what types of
information public utilities already record for ADIT-related accounting
and whether balances and amortization of regulatory liability and asset
accounts, computation of excess and deficient ADIT, delineation between
protected and non-protected ADIT, and a description of the allocation
method used to determine the transmission-related portion of excess or
deficient ADIT would be appropriate to include in a supporting
worksheet.\67\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ NOI, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 35,582 at P 23.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Comments
44. Commenters were split regarding the requirement to provide
additional worksheets. Some commenters assert that the Commission
should not require any additional worksheets at this time.\68\ These
commenters generally assert that the implementation of general
worksheet requirements would be burdensome on the industry.\69\ They
assert that any data should only be required to be submitted on a
company by company basis, as necessary, rather than require a one-time
proceeding for the purpose of all public utilities providing the data
showing whether and how ADIT balances were re-measured.\70\ Certain
commenters assert that the Commission should not require additional
worksheets as transmission formula rates and associated protocols
already include mechanisms to provide details to customers.\71\
Avangrid similarly states that the formula rate processes should be
used to provide the level of transparency to verify the flowback of
excess ADIT ultimately prescribed by the Commission. EEI states that if
the Commission does require additional supporting information as part
of EEI's proposed show cause orders, the Commission should first
provide its proposed financial template, in a rulemaking, to allow for
review by public utilities and stakeholders. EEI adds that this would
reduce the burden on individual public utilities and the Commission and
would be similar to the approach leading up to the Gas Tax Final
Rule.\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ See AEP NOI Comments at 8; Ameren NOI Comments at 16-18;
Avangrid NOI Comments at 13-14; EEI NOI Comments at 20-22; Exelon
NOI Comments at 15; Indicated Transmission Owners NOI Comments at
12; MISO Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 18-19; and PSEG NOI
Comments at 11-12.
\69\ See EEI NOI Comments at 20-21; Exelon NOI Comments at 15.
\70\ EEI NOI Comments at 20.
\71\ See AEP NOI Comments at 8; Ameren NOI Comments at 16-17;
Avangrid NOI Comments at 13-14; Exelon NOI Comments at 15, Indicated
Transmission Owners NOI Comments at 12; and MISO Transmission Owners
NOI Comments at 18-19.
\72\ EEI NOI Comments at 21, n. 36.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
45. Other commenters, however, assert that the Commission should
require electric public utilities to provide a one-time filing of
additional information to provide transparency regarding excess and
deficient ADIT, and how rates will be impacted by any changes.\73\ APPA
and AMP urge the Commission to require that supporting information be
filed regarding excess or deficient ADIT, but not be limited to only
ADIT-related material. They assert that public utilities should also
describe, with supporting schedules, any current or projected effects
on their books associated with the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's changes to
bonus depreciation, or any other potential rate-related impacts.\74\
APPA and AMP further state that for public utilities with transmission
formula rates, the utilities should provide as part of their annual
updates, calculations showing excess ADIT amortization amounts that
should be flowed back to customers in the applicable rate period.
Consumer Advocates state that in addition to requiring a detailed
worksheet identifying all book tax timing differences that comprise
deferred tax liability balances, the Commission should evaluate the
build-up of net operating losses as deferred tax assets. They assert
that such balances should not automatically be inserted as an addition
to regulated rate base.\75\ New York Transco states that each public
utility should be permitted to compile and present this additional
information in the manner it deems most efficient and useful for
stakeholders. New York
[[Page 59339]]
Transco states that if stakeholders desire additional information, any
interested party can seek that information consistent with the formula
rate implementation protocols that address information sharing. While
not objecting to the provision of additional information, National Grid
states that the Commission should not impose this requirement until
after December 2018 as the additional information will not be
meaningful until after companies have set the final rate change balance
after the filing of their fiscal year 2018 federal corporate income tax
returns.\76\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ See APPA and AMP NOI Comments at 17-18; Consumer Advocates
NOI Comments at 10-11; DEMEC NOI Comments at 11-12; Eversource NOI
Comments at 11; Indicated Customers NOI Comments at 15; National
Grid NOI Comments at 15-16; and New York Transco NOI Comments at 11.
\74\ APPA and AMP NOI Comments at 17-18.
\75\ Consumer Advocates NOI Comments at 10-11.
\76\ National Grid NOI Comments at 16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Proposed Requirements
a. Formula Rates
46. We propose to require all public utilities with transmission
formula rates to incorporate a new permanent worksheet into their
transmission formula rates that will annually track information related
to excess or deficient ADIT under 18 CFR 35.24. We believe that this
reform is necessary to provide interested parties adequate transparency
regarding how public utilities with transmission formula rates adjust
their rate bases and income tax allowances to account for excess or
deficient ADIT. We also believe that requiring public utilities with
transmission formula rates to provide this information on an annual
basis rather than a one-time basis will better allow interested parties
to follow excess or deficient ADIT as it is included in an annual
revenue requirement and provide transparency as to any future changes
in tax rates. We also believe that updating the proposed worksheet
annually will better align with the nature of the vast majority of
formula rates where calculation methodologies and input sources are
accepted prior to those inputs being populated. Consequently, we do not
propose that any worksheet be populated when submitted to the
Commission for compliance, only that the function of the worksheet be
clear.
47. Similar to other reforms proposed in this Proposed Rule, we do
not propose a pro forma worksheet that must be adopted by all public
utilities with transmission formula rates; rather, we propose requiring
general categories of information that each excess or deficient ADIT
tracking worksheet must contain. We propose that each excess or
deficient ADIT worksheet must, at minimum, include the following: (1)
How any ADIT accounts were re-measured and the excess or deficient ADIT
contained therein; (2) the accounting of any excess or deficient
amounts in Accounts 182.3 and 254; (3) whether the excess or deficient
ADIT is protected or unprotected; (4) the accounts to which the excess
or deficient ADIT are amortized; and (5) the amortization period of the
excess or deficient ADIT being returned or recovered through the rates.
Because we do not propose to define the form any worksheet or
worksheets must take, only the information it must contain, we propose
evaluating such worksheet or worksheets on an individual basis. We also
request comments on whether we should consider additional guiding
principles to those described above.
48. We disagree with commenters to the NOI that argue that
providing such information is overly burdensome for the industry.
Public utilities with transmission formula rates will already have
gathered the information we propose to require in the worksheets to re-
measure their ADIT balances and develop amortization schedules
following the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's reduction of the federal
corporate income tax rate. Further, the Commission has already accepted
worksheets that convey information similar to the proposed requirements
outlined above.\77\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ See, e.g., Arizona Public Service Company, Docket No. ER18-
975-001 (May 22, 2018) (delegated order).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
49. We also disagree with commenters to the NOI that public
utilities' existing formula rate protocols should preclude the
Commission from proposing an excess or deficient ADIT worksheet. While
the Commission established that formula rate protocols should allow for
the provision of any information necessary to understand the inputs to
the rate in order to provide sufficient transparency to interested
parties, the Commission has since required public utilities to revise
their formula rates to include greater detail where it has deemed that
certain inputs to the rate are complex enough to warrant prior
understanding of their effect.\78\ As related to excess and deficient
ADIT, we believe the proposed worksheet will allow interested parties
to ensure they are receiving the benefits of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act,
as well as to track over time any changes in the rate effects of the
tax change as, for example, assets are sold or retired.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ See, e.g., Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 153
FERC ] 61,374 at P 14 (directing certain transmission companies to
revise their transmission formula rates to include worksheets to
ensure appropriate transparency). The Commission has also regularly
required certain revisions to new formula rates to provide greater
transparency. See, e.g., Xcel Energy Sw. Transmission Co., LLC, 149
FERC ] 61,182 (2014); Xcel Energy Transmission Dev. Co., LLC, 149
FERC ] 61,181 (2014); Transource Wisconsin, LLC, 149 FERC ] 61,180
(2014); Transource Kansas, LLC, 151 FERC ] 61,010 (2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Stated Rates
50. As described above in the proposal for return of excess ADIT or
recovery of deficient ADIT, we believe that the Commission's existing
regulations require public utilities with transmission stated rates to
provide sufficient support for any proposed tax-related changes. As a
result, we do not propose any additional information requirements for
public utilities with transmission stated rates.
III. Proposed Compliance Procedures
51. We propose to require each public utility with transmission
stated or formula rates to submit a compliance filing within 90 days of
the effective date of any subsequent final rule in this proceeding to
revise its transmission formula or stated rates, as necessary, to
demonstrate that it meets the requirements set forth in any subsequent
final rule.
52. Some public utilities with transmission formula rates may
already have mechanisms in place in their rates that address the issues
and concerns addressed by any subsequent final rule. Where these
provisions would be modified by any subsequent final rule, the public
utility must either comply with any subsequent final rule or
demonstrate that these previously approved variations continue to be
consistent with or superior to the requirements of any subsequent final
rule.
53. The Commission will assess whether each compliance filing
satisfies the proposed requirements stated above and issue additional
orders as necessary to ensure that each public utility with
transmission stated or formula rates meets the requirements of the
subsequent final rule.
IV. Information Collection Statement
54. The collection of information contained in this Proposed Rule
is subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
regulations under section 3507(d) of the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (PRA).\79\ OMB's regulations require approval of certain
informational collection requirements imposed by an agency.\80\ Upon
approval of a collection(s) of information, OMB will assign an OMB
control number and an expiration date. Respondents subject to the
filing requirements will not be
[[Page 59340]]
penalized for failing to respond to these collections of information
unless the collections of information display a valid OMB control
number.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ 44 U.S.C. 3507(d).
\80\ 5 CFR 1320.11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
55. The reforms proposed in this Proposed Rule address public
utilities that have transmission formula rates and transmission stated
rates. The reforms related to transmission formula rates represent new
requirements for these entities under the Commission's regulations in
18 CFR 35.24, which we believe are necessary because of the dramatic
changes in the rate structure of the electric transmission industry
since this provision was originally promulgated in 1981.\81\ These new
requirements would require each public utility with a transmission
formula rate to revise its rate so that any excess or deficient ADIT is
properly reflected in its revenue requirement following a change in tax
rates, such as those established by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
Additionally, each public utility with a transmission formula rate
would be required to incorporate a new permanent worksheet into its
transmission formula rate to increase transparency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ See discussion infra Section II.E.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
56. The reforms required by this Proposed Rule will require each
public utility with stated rates to calculate the excess and deficient
ADIT caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and to return to or recover
from customers those amounts. This reform is intended to increase the
likelihood that customers who contributed to the excess ADIT balance
timely receive the benefits of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
57. The reforms proposed in this Proposed Rule would require
compliance filings with the Commission by each public utility with
transmission stated or formula rates to allow the Commission the
opportunity to determine whether each such public utility met the
requirements detailed in this Proposed Rule.
58. We anticipate the reforms proposed in this Proposed Rule, once
implemented, would not significantly change currently existing burdens
on an ongoing basis. With regard to those public utilities with
transmission stated or formula rates that believe that they already
comply with the reforms proposed in this Proposed Rule, they could
demonstrate their compliance in the filing required 90 days after the
effective date of the final revision in this proceeding. We will submit
the proposed reporting requirements to OMB for its review and approval
under section 3507(d) of the Paperwork Reduction Act.\82\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ 44 U.S.C. 3507(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
59. While we expect the adoption of the reforms proposed in this
Proposed Rule to provide significant benefits, the Commission
understands that implementation can be a complex and costly endeavor.
We solicit comments on the accuracy of provided burden and cost
estimates and any suggested methods for minimizing the respondents'
burdens.
60. Burden Estimate and Information Collection Costs: We believe
that the burden estimates below are representative of the average
burden on respondents. The estimated burden and cost for the
requirements contained in this Proposed Rule follow.
RM19-5-000 NOPR
[Public utility transmission rate changes to address accumulated deferred income taxes]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual
number of Total Cost per
Number of responses number of Average burden and cost Total annual burden hours and respondent
respondents per responses per response \83\ total annual cost ($)
respondent
(1) (2) (1) * (2) = (4)........................ (3) * (4) = (5).................. (5) / (1)
(3)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revising formula rates so that 106 1 106 8 hours; $736.............. 848 hours; $78,016............... $736
excess ADIT is deducted and/or
deficient ADIT is added to rate
base (one-time) \84\.
Revising formula rates so that any 106 1 106 8 hours; $736.............. 848 hours; $78,016............... 736
excess and/or deficient ADIT is
amortized (one-time).
Revising transmission stated rates 31 1 31 15 hours; $1,380........... 465 hours; $42,780............... 1,380
to return or recover excess or
deficient ADIT (one-time).
Requiring public utilities with 106 1 106 40 hours; $3,680........... 4,240 hours; $390,080............ 3,680
transmission formula rates to
incorporate a new permanent
worksheet that will annually track
ADIT information (one-time).
Total (Stated Rates) \85\...... ........... ........... 31 ........................... 465 hours; $42,780...............
Total (Formula Rates) \86\..... ........... ........... 318 ........................... 5,936 hours; $546,112............
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total...................... ........... ........... 349 ........................... 6,532 hours; $588,892............
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\83\ The loaded hourly wage figure (includes benefits) is based
on the average of the occupational categories for 2017 found on the
Bureau of Labor Statistics website (https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/naics2_22.htm):
Accountant (Occupation Code: 13-2011): $56.59.
Management (Occupation Code: 11-0000): $94.28.
Legal (Occupation Code: 23-0000): $143.68.
Office and Administrative Support (Occupation Code: 43-0000):
$41.34.
These various occupational categories' wage figures are averaged
and weighted equally as follows: ($94.28/hour + $61.55/hour +
$66.90/hour + $143.68/hour) / 4 = $91.60/hour. The resulting wage
figure is rounded to $92.00/hour for use in calculating wage figures
in the NOPR in Docket No. RM19-5-000.
\84\ One-time burdens apply in Year One only. There will be no
subsequent burden in Years 2 and beyond.
\85\ Total for Public Utilities with Transmission Stated Rates.
\86\ Total for Public Utilities with Transmission Formula Rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost to Comply: We have projected the total cost of compliance as
follows: \87\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ For a public utility transmission provider with
transmission formula rates, the costs for Year 1 would consist of
filing proposed changes to its transmission formula rates, including
the addition of a new permanent worksheet, with the Commission
within 90 days of the effective date of the final revision plus
initial implementation. The Commission does not expect any ongoing
costs beyond the initial compliance in Year 1. For a public utility
transmission provider with transmission stated rates, the costs for
Year 1 would consist of filing proposed changes to its transmission
stated rates that allow it to return to or recover from customers
any excess or deficient ADIT caused by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
with the Commission within 90 days of the effective date of the
final revision plus initial implementation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year 1: $546,112 ($5,152/utility) for public utilities
with transmission formula rates; $42,780 ($1,380/utility) for public
utilities with transmission stated rates.
Year 2: $0.
[[Page 59341]]
After Year 1, the reforms proposed in this Proposed Rule, once
implemented, would not significantly change existing burdens on an
ongoing basis.
Title: FERC-516, Electric Rate Schedules and Tariff Filings.
Action: Proposed revisions to an information collection.
OMB Control No.: 1902-0096.
Respondents for this Proposal: Businesses or other for profit and/
or not-for-profit institutions.
Frequency of Information: One-time during year one.
Necessity of Information: The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
makes this Proposed Rule to ensure that (1) rate base neutrality is
preserved following enactment of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act; (2) the
reduction in ADIT on the books of rate-regulated companies that was
collected from customers but is no longer payable to the IRS due to the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is returned to or recovered from ratepayers
consistent with general ratemaking principles; and (3) there is
increased transparency for the process of excess and deficient ADIT
calculation and amortization.
Internal Review: We have reviewed the proposed changes and have
determined that such changes are necessary. These requirements conform
to the Commission's need for efficient information collection,
communication, and management within the energy industry. We have
specific, objective support for the burden estimates associated with
the information collection requirements.
61. Interested persons may obtain information on the reporting
requirements by contacting the following: Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE, Washington, DC 20426 [Attention:
Ellen Brown, Office of the Executive Director], email:
[email protected], phone: (202) 502-8663, fax: (202) 273-0873.
Comments concerning the collection of information and the associated
burden estimate(s), may also be sent to the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th Street
NW, Washington, DC 20503 [Attention: Desk Officer for the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, phone: (202) 395-0710, fax: (202) 395-
7285]. Due to security concerns, comments should be sent electronically
to the following email address: [email protected]. Comments
submitted to OMB should include FERC-516 and OMB Control No. 1902-0096.
V. Environmental Analysis
62. We are required to prepare an Environmental Assessment or an
Environmental Impact Statement for any action that may have a
significant adverse effect on the human environment.\88\ The actions
proposed to be taken in this Proposed Rule fall within the categorical
exclusion under section 380.4(a)(15) of the Commission's regulations.
This section provides a categorical exemption for approval of actions
under sections 205 and 206 of the FPA relating to the filing of
schedules containing all rates and charges for the transmission or sale
of electric energy subject to the Commission's jurisdiction, plus the
classification, practices, contracts and regulations that affect rates,
charges, classification, and services.\89\ The revisions proposed in
this Proposed Rule fall within the categorical exemptions provided in
the Commission's regulations, and as a result neither an Environmental
Impact Statement nor an Environmental Assessment is required.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ Regulations Implementing the National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969, Order No. 486, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 30,783 (1987)
(cross-referenced at 41 FERC ] 61,284).
\89\ 18 CFR 380.4(a)(15).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
63. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA) \90\ generally
requires a description and analysis of proposed rules that will have
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The RFA does not mandate any particular outcome in a rulemaking. It
only requires consideration of alternatives that are less burdensome to
small entities and an agency explanation of why alternatives were
rejected.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ 5 U.S.C. 601-612.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
64. The Small Business Administration (SBA) revised its size
standards (effective January 22, 2014) for electric utilities from a
standard based on megawatt hours to a standard based on the number of
employees, including affiliates. Under SBA's standards, some
transmission owners will fall under the following category and
associated size threshold: Electric bulk power transmission and
control, at 500 employees.\91\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ 13 CFR 121.201, Sector 22 (Utilities), NAICS code 221121
(Electric Bulk Power Transmission and Control).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
65. We estimate that the total number of public utility
transmission providers with formula rates that would have to develop
revisions to their formula rates, including the addition of a new
permanent worksheet, and make compliance filings in response to this
Proposed Rule is 106. Of these, we estimate that approximately 43
percent are small entities (approximately 46 entities). We estimate the
average total cost to each of these entities will be $5,152 in Year 1
and $0 in subsequent years. In addition, we estimate that the total
number of public utility transmission providers with stated rates that
will have to calculate the excess and deficient income tax to return to
or recover from customers is 31. Of these, we estimate that
approximately 43 percent are small entities (approximately 13
entities). We estimate the average total cost to each of these entities
will be between $1,380 in Year One and $0 in subsequent years.
According to SBA guidance, the determination of significance of impact
``should be seen as relative to the size of the business, the size of
the competitor's business, and the impact the regulation has on larger
competitors.'' \92\ We do not consider the estimated burden to be a
significant economic impact. As a result, we certify that the revisions
proposed in this Proposed Rule will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ U.S. Small Business Administration, A Guide for Government
Agencies How to Comply with the Regulatory Flexibility Act, at 18
(May 2012), https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/advocacy/rfaguide_0512_0.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VII. Comment Procedures
66. We invite interested persons to submit comments on the matters
and issues proposed in this notice to be adopted, including any related
matters or alternative proposals that commenters may wish to discuss.
Comments are due December 24, 2018. Comments must refer to Docket No.
RM19-5-000, and must include the commenter's name, the organization
they represent, if applicable, and their address in their comments.
67. The Commission encourages comments to be filed electronically
via the eFiling link on the Commission's website at https://www.ferc.gov. The Commission accepts most standard word processing
formats. Documents created electronically using word processing
software should be filed in native applications or print-to-PDF format
and not in a scanned format. Commenters filing electronically do not
need to make a paper filing.
68. Commenters that are not able to file comments electronically
must send an original of their comments to: Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, Secretary of the Commission, 888 First Street NE,
Washington, DC, 20426.
69. All comments will be placed in the Commission's public files
and may
[[Page 59342]]
be viewed, printed, or downloaded remotely as described in the Document
Availability section below. Commenters on this proposal are not
required to serve copies of their comments on other commenters.
VIII. Document Availability
70. In addition to publishing the full text of this document in the
Federal Register, the Commission provides all interested persons an
opportunity to view and/or print the contents of this document via the
internet through the Commission's Home Page (https://www.ferc.gov) and
in the Commission's Public Reference Room during normal business hours
(8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Eastern time) at 888 First Street NE, Room 2A,
Washington, DC 20426.
71. From the Commission's Home Page on the internet, this
information is available on eLibrary. The full text of this document is
available on eLibrary in PDF and Microsoft Word format for viewing,
printing, and/or downloading. To access this document in eLibrary, type
the docket number excluding the last three digits of this document in
the docket number field.
72. User assistance is available for eLibrary and the Commission's
website during normal business hours from the Commission's Online
Support at 202-502-6652 (toll free at 1-866-208-3676) or email at
[email protected], or the Public Reference Room at (202) 502-
8371, TTY (202) 502-8659. Email the Public Reference Room at
[email protected].
By direction of the Commission. Commissioner McIntyre is not
voting on this order.
Issued: November 15, 2018.
Nathaniel J. Davis, Sr.,
Deputy Secretary.
Note: Appendix A will not be published in the Federal Register.
Appendix A--List of Commenters to NOI
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Short name Commenter
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AEP............................... American Electric Power Service
Corporation.
Ameren............................ Ameren Services Company on behalf of
Union Electric Company d/b/a Ameren
Missouri, Ameren Illinois Company d/
b/a Ameren Illinois, and Ameren
Transmission Company of Illinois.
AOPL.............................. Association of Oil Pipe Lines.
APGA.............................. American Public Gas Association.
APPA and AMP...................... American Public Power Association
and American Municipal Power, Inc.
Avangrid.......................... Avangrid Networks, Inc.
Berkshire......................... Berkshire Hathaway Energy Pipeline
Group.
Boardwalk......................... Boardwalk Pipeline Partners LP.
CAPP.............................. Canadian Association of Petroleum
Producers.
Consumer Advocates................ Office of the Attorney General of
the Commonwealth of Massachusetts;
the Ohio Consumers' Counsel; the
Maryland Office of People's
Counsel; the Nevada Bureau of
Consumer Protection; the Delaware
Division of the Public Advocate;
the Pennsylvania Office of Consumer
Advocate; the Citizens Utility
Board of Wisconsin; and the Indiana
Office of Utility Consumer
Counselor.
DEMEC............................. Delaware Municipal Electric
Corporation, Inc.
Dominion Energy Gas Pipelines..... Dominion Energy Transmission, Inc.;
Dominion Energy Carolina Gas
Transmission, LLC; Dominion Energy
Quester Pipeline, LLC; Dominion
Energy Overthrust Pipeline, LLC;
and Questar Southern Trails
Pipeline Company.
EEI............................... Edison Electric Institute.
Enable Interstate Pipelines....... Enable Mississippi River
Transmission, LLC and Enable Gas
Transmission, LLC.
Enbridge and Spectra.............. Enbridge Energy Partners, L.P. and
Spectra Energy Partners, LP.
EQT Midstream..................... EQT Midstream Partners, LP.
Eversource........................ Eversource Energy Service Company.
Exelon............................ Exelon Corporation.
Indicated Customers............... Central Electric Power Cooperative,
Inc., North Carolina Electric
Membership Corporation, Southern
Maryland Electric Cooperative,
Inc., and the New Jersey Division
of Rate Counsel.
Indicated Local Distribution Atmos Energy Corporation; the City
Companies. of Charlottesville, Virginia; the
City of Richmond, Virginia; the
Easton Utilities Commission; Exelon
Corporation; and Washington Gas
Light Company.
Indicated Transmission Owners..... American Electric Power Service
Corporation; Dominion Energy
Services, Inc., on behalf of
Virginia Electric and Power Company
d/b/a Dominion Energy Virginia;
Duquesne Light Company; Exelon
Corporation; FirstEnergy Service
Company, on behalf of American
Transmission Systems, Incorporated;
Jersey Central Power & Light
Company; Mid-Atlantic Interstate
Transmission, LLC; West Penn Power
Company; The Potomac Edison
Company; Monongahela Power Company;
and PPL Electric Utilities Corp.
INGAA............................. Interstate Natural Gas Association
of America.
ITC Great Plains.................. ITC Great Plains, LLC.
Kentucky Municipals............... Frankfort Plant Board of Frankfort,
Kentucky; Barbourville Utility
Commission of the City of
Barbourville, City; Utilities
Commission of the City of Corbin;
and the Cities of Bardwell, Berea,
Falmouth, Madisonville, and
Providence, Kentucky.
Kinder Morgan Entities............ Natural Gas Pipeline Company of
America LLC; Tennessee Gas Pipeline
Company, L.L.C.; Southern Natural
Gas Company, L.L.C.; Colorado
Interstate Gas Company, L.L.C.;
Wyoming Interstate Company, L.L.C.;
El Paso Natural Gas Company,
L.L.C.; Mojave Pipeline Company,
L.L.C.; Bear Creek Storage Company,
L.L.C.; Cheyenne Plains Gas
Pipeline Company, L.L.C.; Elba
Express Company, L.L.C.; Kinder
Morgan Louisiana Pipeline LLC;
Southern LNG Company, L.L.C.; and
TransColorado Gas Transmission
Company LLC.
Kinder Morgan Subsidiaries........ SFPP, L.P.; Calnev Pipe Line, LLC;
and Kinder Morgan Cochin, LLC.
[[Page 59343]]
MISO Transmission Owners.......... Ameren Services Company, as agent
for Union Electric Company d/b/a
Ameren Missouri, Ameren Illinois
Company d/b/a Ameren Illinois and
Ameren Transmission Company of
Illinois; American Transmission
Company LLC; Central Minnesota
Municipal Power Agency; City Water,
Light & Power (Springfield, IL);
Cleco Power LLC; Cooperative
Energy; Dairyland Power
Cooperative; Duke Energy Business
Services, LLC for Duke Energy
Indiana, LLC; East Texas Electric
Cooperative; Entergy Arkansas,
Inc.; Entergy Louisiana, LLC;
Entergy Mississippi, Inc.; Entergy
New Orleans, LLC; Entergy Texas,
Inc.; Great River Energy; Indiana
Municipal Power Agency;
Indianapolis Power & Light Company;
International Transmission Company
d/b/a ITCTransmission; ITC Midwest
LLC; Lafayette Utilities System;
Michigan Electric Transmission
Company, LLC; MidAmerican Energy
Company; Minnesota Power (and its
subsidiary Superior Water, L&P);
Missouri River Energy Services;
Montana-Dakota Utilities Co.;
Northern Indiana Public Service
Company LLC; Northern States Power
Company, a Minnesota corporation,
and Northern States Power Company,
a Wisconsin corporation,
subsidiaries of Xcel Energy Inc.;
Northwestern Wisconsin Electric
Company; Otter Tail Power Company;
Prairie Power Inc.; Southern
Indiana Gas & Electric Company (d/b/
a Vectren Energy Delivery of
Indiana); Southern Minnesota
Municipal Power Agency; Wabash
Valley Power Association, Inc.; and
Wolverine Power Supply Cooperative,
Inc.
National Grid..................... National Grid USA.
Natural Gas Indicated Shippers.... Aera Energy, LLC; Anadarko Energy
Services Company; Apache
Corporation; BP Energy Company;
ConocoPhillips Company; Hess
Corporation; Occidental Energy
Marketing, Inc.; Petrohawk Energy
Corporation; and XTO Energy, Inc.
New York Transco.................. New York Transco LLC.
Oklahoma Attorney General......... Mike Hunter, Oklahoma Attorney
General.
PJM............................... PJM Interconnection, L.L.C.
Plains............................ Plains Pipeline, L.P.
Process Gas and American Forest Process Gas Consumers Group and
and Paper. American Forest and Paper
Association.
PSEG.............................. Public Service Electric and Gas
Company.
Tallgrass Pipelines............... Trailblazer Pipeline Company LLC;
Tallgrass Interstate Gas
Transmission, LLC; and Rockies
Express Pipeline LLC.
TAPS.............................. Transmission Access Policy Study
Group.
TransCanada....................... TransCanada Corporation.
United Airlines Petitioners....... United Airlines, Inc.; American
Airlines, Inc.; Delta Air Lines,
Inc.; Southwest Airlines, Co.; BP
West Coast Products LLC; ExxonMobil
Oil Corporation; Chevron Products
Company; HollyFrontier Refining &
Marketing LLC; Valero Marketing and
Supply Company; Airlines for
America; and the National Propane
Gas Association.
Williams.......................... Williams Companies, Inc.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[FR Doc. 2018-25370 Filed 11-21-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717-01-P