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Energy Policy Act of 2005

On August 8, 2005, President Bush signed into law the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (the "Act")1. The Act is the most comprehensive energy legislation enacted in the United States in over a decade and contains provisions that affect all sectors of the U.S. energy industry. We have summarized below several provisions of the Act that may be of particular interest to our clients engaged in the electric power and liquefied natural gas industries.2 For more information on the matters set forth herein, please contact Dave Domansky, Liz Thomas or Eric Freedman at (206) 623-7580.

Executive Summary

Repeal of PUHCA: The Act repeals the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 ("PUHCA").3 As a result, the broad regulatory powers provided to the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") over the finances and operations of "registered holding companies" have been abolished. In addition, the Act has eliminated the restrictions imposed by PUHCA upon (a) the acquisition of the voting securities of public utilities, (b) the geographic operating territory of public utilities and (c) lines of business of holding companies and public utilities. In place of those restrictions, the Act creates limited oversight of holding companies by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC").

Amendments to PURPA: The Act amends certain portions of the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 ("PURPA"),4 including PURPA’s "mandatory purchase obligation" requiring that electric utilities purchase the energy and capacity of "qualifying facilities" at the purchasing utility’s avoided cost. The Act provides that no electric utility shall be required to enter into a new contract or obligation to purchase electric energy from a PURPA qualifying facility if FERC finds that the qualifying facility has nondiscriminatory access to independent and competitive markets.

Hydroelectric Provisions: The Act amends certain provisions of the Federal Power Act5 (the "FPA") to provide parties to hydroelectric licensing proceedings an opportunity to propose alternative license conditions, in lieu of conditions proposed by certain resource agencies possessing mandatory conditioning authority under the FPA. Such agencies must now consider the applicant’s proposed alternative conditions, with a trial-type hearing for resolution of disputed factual issues, and must document the reasons for any rejection of the alternative. The Act also provides financial incentives for new or expanded hydroelectric generating capacity.
Siting of Interstate Transmission Facilities: The Act authorizes the Secretary of Energy, based on certain findings, to designate as a "national electric transmission corridor" any geographic area experiencing electric energy transmission capacity constraints or congestion that adversely affects consumers. The Act gives FERC authority to issue one or more permits for the construction or modification of electric transmission facilities that are located in a national electric transmission corridor if FERC makes certain findings described in the Act.

Siting of Liquefied Natural Gas Facilities: The Act amends the Natural Gas Act6 to grant FERC the exclusive authority to approve or deny an application for the siting, construction, expansion or operation of an onshore liquefied natural gas ("LNG") terminal or any LNG terminal located in state waters. These provisions are designed to preempt claims that a state has jurisdiction to approve or deny development of LNG terminals proposed to be located within the boundaries of such state.
Protection of Transmission Contracts in the Pacific Northwest: The Act amends the FPA to protect the existing firm transmission rights of certain electric utilities or persons located in the Pacific Northwest.

Summary

I. Repeal of PUHCA

The Act repeals PUHCA and replaces PUHCA with the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 2005 ("New PUHCA"). The repeal of PUHCA has the following primary consequences:

The concept of "registered holding companies" has been abolished. As a result, the broad powers of the SEC to regulate the finances and operations of registered holding companies - and the complex web of exemptions that have enabled certain companies to avoid such regulation - have been eliminated.

The restrictions placed upon the acquisition of the voting securities of "electric utility companies" and "gas utility companies" (as each term is defined in PUHCA) have been eliminated. Under PUHCA, a person could not acquire more than 5% of a "public-utility company" (as defined in PUHCA) if such person already owned 5% or more of another public-utility company, or through such purchase would acquire more than 5% of two or more public-utility companies.

In place of such restrictions, the Act amends Section 203(a) of the FPA7 (which requires FERC review and approval of the sale of FERC-jurisdictional assets) to require prior FERC approval if a holding company which includes in its holding company system a "transmitting utility" (as defined in the Act) or an "electric utility company" (as defined in the Act) seeks to purchase or acquire a security with a value over $10,000,000, or seeks directly or indirectly to merge with a transmitting utility, an electric utility company or a holding company which has in its holding company system a transmitting utility or electric utility company with a value greater than $10,000,000.

Holding companies and their public utility subsidiaries will no longer be limited to owning and operating a "single integrated utility system."
FERC, rather than the SEC, will have jurisdiction and authority to enforce New PUHCA.
New PUHCA is a radically scaled-back version of PUHCA. The principal provisions of New PUHCA provide that:

Each "holding company" and its "subsidiaries" are required to maintain and make available to FERC such books, accounts and other records as FERC determines are relevant to the costs incurred by a "public utility" or "natural gas company" that is within the "holding company system" of such holding company and necessary or appropriate for the protection of utility customers with respect to jurisdictional rates. State utility commissions will have access to such records to the extent that any such commission has jurisdiction to regulate a public-utility company within such holding company system. (The terms "holding company," "holding company system," "public-utility company," "public utility," "natural gas company" and "subsidiaries" have the meanings assigned to such terms in the Act.)

With a couple of limited exceptions, all holding companies are subject to New PUHCA’s financial records requirements. Although such requirements are much less onerous than the financial requirements that have been imposed by PUHCA on registered holding companies, many more companies will be subject to the financial records requirements of New PUHCA than have been subject to the financial requirements of PUHCA, as a result of the more limited exceptions provided by New PUHCA.
In general, a "holding company" is any company that directly or indirectly owns, controls or holds with power to vote 10% or more of the outstanding voting securities of a public-utility company or of a holding company of any public-utility company.8

The Act directs FERC to issue rules to exempt from New PUHCA’s financial record requirements any person that is a holding company solely with respect to one or more qualifying facilities, exempt wholesale generators or foreign utility companies.
FERC also has authority to exempt a person or transaction from New PUHCA’s financial records requirements if such records are not relevant to the jurisdictional rates of the applicable public utility or natural gas company.
New PUHCA will take effect six months following the date of enactment of the Act.
II. Amendment of PURPA

The PURPA amendments affect "electric utilities" and "qualifying facilities" (as each term is defined in PURPA) in the following manner:

The Act terminates the "mandatory purchase obligation" imposed by PURPA. Under the mandatory purchase obligation, an electric utility is required to purchase at the purchasing utility’s avoided cost the energy and capacity made available to such utility by a qualifying facility.
Although the Act does not adversely affect existing qualifying facilities, the Act provides that no electric utility shall be required to enter into a new contract or obligation to purchase electric energy from a qualifying facility if FERC finds that the qualifying facility has nondiscriminatory access to:
"(A)(i) independently administered, auction-based day ahead and real time wholesale markets for the sale of electric energy; and (ii) wholesale markets for long-term sales of capacity and electric energy; or
(B)(i) transmission and interconnection services that are provided by a Commission-approved regional transmission entity and administered pursuant to an open access transmission tariff that affords nondiscriminatory treatment to all customers; and (ii) competitive wholesale markets that provide a meaningful opportunity to sell capacity, including long-term and short-term sales, and electric energy, including long-term, short-term and real-time sales, to buyers other than the utility to which the qualifying facility is interconnected. In determining whether a meaningful opportunity to sell exists, the Commission shall consider, among other factors, evidence of transactions within the relevant market; or
(C) wholesale markets for the sale of capacity and electric energy that are, at a minimum, of comparable competitive quality as markets described in subparagraphs (A) and (B)."
Any electric utility may file an application with FERC for relief from PURPA’s mandatory purchase obligation on a service territory-wide basis.
The Act deletes the ownership limitations applicable to qualifying facilities, meaning that electric utility companies and holding companies may now own up to 100% of the equity interests in one or more qualifying facilities.
The Act also amends the "mandatory sale obligation" which currently requires that electric utilities sell power to qualifying facilities on a nondiscriminatory basis. Under the Act, no electric utility shall be required to enter into a new contract or obligation to sell electric energy to a qualifying facility if FERC finds that (i) competing retail electric suppliers are willing and able to sell and deliver electric energy to the qualifying facility and (ii) the electric utility is not required by state law to sell electric energy in its service territory.
III. Hydroelectric Provisions

The Act amends the two provisions of the FPA - Sections 4(e) and 189 - that confer mandatory hydroelectric license conditioning authority on the U.S. Departments of Interior, Commerce and Agriculture.
The Act amends both provisions to give hydroelectric license applicants and other parties a right to a written determination, from any agency possessing mandatory conditioning authority, with respect to the conditions imposed by the agency. This determination is to be made on the record, after a trial-type hearing on disputed factual issues.
The Act requires the conditioning agency to accept any condition proposed by the license applicant if the agency determines that such alternative condition provides for adequate protection of reserved lands (in the case of conditions under Section 4(e)) or is no less protective than the agency’s proposed fishway (in the case of conditions under Section 1, and if the alternative is less costly or results in improved operations.
Collectively, the Departments of Interior, Commerce and Agriculture are required to promulgate such regulations within 90 days of enactment of the Act.
The Act provides a 10-year, 0.9 cents/kWh production tax credit for new energy at existing generating facilities and at dams not previously used for generation.
The Act also authorizes, subject to appropriation, incentive payments for certain new hydropower developments and for certain efficiency enhancements.
IV. Siting of Interstate Transmission Facilities

The Act amends the FPA to require that the Secretary of Energy conduct a study of electric transmission congestion within one year of enactment of the Act and every three years thereafter. Following each such study, the Secretary is required to issue a report and may designate as a "national electric transmission corridor" any geographic area experiencing electric energy transmission capacity constraints or congestion that adversely affects consumers.

The Act authorizes FERC to issue one or more permits for the construction or modification of electric transmission facilities in a national electric transmission corridor if FERC makes certain findings set forth in the Act. In addition, if a permit is granted by FERC for the construction of electric transmission facilities, but the permit holder cannot acquire or agree to compensation for necessary rights-of-way for such facilities, the permit holder may initiate eminent domain proceedings in federal or state court to acquire the right-of-way.

The Department of Energy is designated as the lead agency for purposes of coordination of all applicable federal authorizations and related environmental reviews of transmission facilities in national electric transmission corridors. In the event that any agency denies a federal authorization or fails within the time period specified in the Act to decide whether to issue such authorization, the applicant or any state in which the facilities would be located may file an appeal to the President of the United States. Within 90 days of filing the appeal, the President may issue the authorization with any appropriate conditions or deny the application.
The Act also authorizes any three or more contiguous states to enter into an interstate compact, subject to approval by Congress, establishing regional siting agencies. FERC does not have authority to issue a permit for the construction or modification of transmission facilities within a state that is a party to an interstate compact, except in certain limited circumstances if the parties to the compact are in disagreement.
The interstate transmission facility siting provisions of the Act do not apply to the Electric Reliability Council of Texas.
V. Siting of LNG Facilities

The Act amends the Natural Gas Act to grant FERC the exclusive authority to approve or deny an application for the siting, construction, expansion or operation of an onshore LNG terminal or any LNG terminal located in state waters.
Although the Act gives FERC exclusive authority over such matters, the Act does preserve certain existing rights of, and provides certain rights to, the states. Except as specifically provided in the Act, the Act does not affect the rights of the states under the Coastal Zone Management Act, the Clean Air Act or the Federal Water Pollution Control Act.
The Governor of any state in which an LNG terminal is proposed to be located is required to designate a lead state agency to consult with FERC regarding state and local safety considerations. The state agency may, at any time within 30 days after the filing of the LNG siting application with FERC, furnish an advisory report on state and local safety considerations with respect to an application.

VI. Protection of Transmission Contracts in the Pacific Northwest

The Act adds to the FPA a new provision that protects the existing firm transmission rights of certain electric utilities or persons located in the Pacific Northwest.10 The new provision precludes FERC from requiring that an "electric utility or person" convert to tradable or financial rights (i) firm transmission rights held pursuant to contract or by reason of ownership of transmission facilities or (ii) firm transmission rights obtained by exercise of contract or tariff rights associated with such firm transmission rights. An "electric utility or person" is an electric utility or person that (a) as of the date of enactment of the Act holds firm transmission rights pursuant to contract or by reason of ownership of transmission facilities and (b) is located (1) in the Pacific Northwest or (2) in any other portion of the U.S. located within the geographic area proposed for the Grid West regional transmission organization.


8 The "holding company" definition has a narrower scope than the definition of "holding company" set forth in Section 2(a)(7) of PUHCA, which permitted the SEC to declare a company to be a holding company if regulation was necessary "in the public interest or for the protection of investors or consumers…." Back to article.

9 16 U.S.C. §§ 797(e) and 811. Back to article.

Publication Date
8.8.2005
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After 70 years, consumers have lost this valuable energy protection.

The only people who will benefit are large utilities buying up small ones and the stock brokers handling the transactions.