As expected, yesterday the Solicitor General filed a petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court in FERC v. Electric Power Supply Association, asking the Supreme Court to review a May 23, 2014 decision from a divided panel of the D.C. Circuit that invalidated FERC’s Order 745.
Order 745 directs Regional Transmission Organizations (RTOs) and Independent System Operators (ISOs) to establish rules that compensate demand response resources at the wholesale market price—the same rate that electric power suppliers receive for selling electricity. A group of organizations affiliated with generators of electricity sued FERC, alleging that Order 745 had overstepped the agency’s authority. A majority of the D.C. Circuit panel (Brown, Silberman) agreed, holding that Order 745 exceeds FERC’s jurisdiction over wholesale electricity markets under the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. § 824. The panel majority reasoned that, because demand response involves decisions by end users regarding their energy use, it is inherently “part of the retail market.” Judge Edwards dissented.
The government’s petition disagrees, arguing that demand response is not categorically part of the retail market because Order 745 regulates transactions in the same markets in which wholesale electricity transactions occur. As the petition explains, demand response providers participate directly in the wholesale markets. Order 745 “regulates the price that wholesale purchasers of power pay—through the wholesale rate established in auction markets run by wholesale market operators—for a reduction in consumption by demand-response providers.” Noting this, the government’s cert petition argues that FERC has plenary authority over the wholesale electricity markets, and that because Order 745 regulates transactions that take place in the wholesale markets, FERC has the authority to regulate them.
Moreover, claims the government, FERC has the authority under the Federal Power Act to regulate not only a rate charged for a transaction in a wholesale market, but also a “practice . . . affecting such rate.” 16 U.S.C. § 824e(a). FERC claims that “rules that wholesale-market operators employ in their auction markets” - including setting the level of compensation for demand response - fall squarely within this provision. FERC also argues that it is due Chevron step two deference for its interpretation of the Federal Power Act about demand response.
Because the panel majority characterized demand response as merely a decision not to purchase electricity in the retail market, the government’s petition notes (p. 18) that the decision “appears to bar FERC from regulating any aspect of demand-response participation in the wholesale markets.” FERC therefore argues that hearing the case is of national importance, because reduced demand response participation would have broad debilitating effects on the wholesale electricity markets. The government’s petition explains that demand response has important functions in wholesale markets, leading to lower electricity prices, enhanced grid reliability, and increased competition.
The D.C. Circuit panel majority reasoned in broad-brush strokes that misunderstand the context in which FERC is operating. If the Supreme Court grants certiorari in this case, it can give FERC the flexibility it needs to allow electricity markets to realize the benefits that demand response can confer.
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Joel Eisen | January 16, 2015
As expected, yesterday the Solicitor General filed a petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court in FERC v. Electric Power Supply Association, asking the Supreme Court to review a May 23, 2014 decision from a divided panel of the D.C. Circuit that invalidated FERC’s Order 745. Order 745 directs Regional Transmission Organizations (RTOs) and Independent […]
Sandra Zellmer | January 15, 2015
In almost any other appellate court, winning over a simple majority of the justices means that you win the case. Not so in Nebraska. Last Friday, in Thompson v. Heineman, a majority of the Nebraska Supreme Court found the Keystone XL Pipeline routing law, LB 1161, which granted the Governor the power to approve Keystone’s […]
James Goodwin | January 14, 2015
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Sidney A. Shapiro | January 13, 2015
Today, the House of Representatives voted to pass the Regulatory Accountability Act of 2015, which would amend the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) to add over 74 new procedural requirements to the rule-making process, including more than 29 new “documentation” requirements. The goal of administrative procedure is to ensure that the government’s adoption of regulation is accountable […]
Rena Steinzor | January 9, 2015
A year ago, about 300,000 people in and around Charleston, West Virginia, lost their drinking water source when thousands of gallons of a toxic chemical known as MCHM (4-methylcyclohexanemethanol) leaked into the nearby Elk River through a hole in a rusted-out storage tank. Last month, the wheels of justice began to catch up with the […]
Erin Kesler | January 9, 2015
This week, House Republicans re-introduced the “Regulatory Accountability Act of 2015,” (H.R. 185). Proponents of the bill are claiming that it would “modernize” the rule-making process and streamline government inefficiencies. In fact, the RAA would bog down attempts by federal agencies to protect our health, safety and environment in red tape by adding over 74 new requirements […]
Matt Shudtz | December 23, 2014
We are closing out the “Path to Progress” series for this year with a potential bright spot. In its Fall 2014 Regulatory Agenda, the Obama Administration set a target date of March 2015 for finalizing new rules designed to prevent and minimize the consequences of derailments in trains carrying crude oil and other highly hazardous […]
Erin Kesler | December 19, 2014
Today, the EPA announced national standards governing coal waste from coal-fired power plants, also known as coal ash. The rule does not treat coal ash as a hazardous material, but as household garbage. CPR President and University of Maryland law professor Rena Steinzor reacted to the classification: It’s bitterly disappointing that the electric utility industry, which earns profits hand over fist, has succeeded […]
Anne Havemann | December 18, 2014
The main tool available to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to limit the amount of pollution discharged into the nation’s waterways is a system of permits issued to polluters that restricts how much they may discharge. This permitting scheme, the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES), requires permittees to monitor their operations and report back […]