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HomeMy WebLinkAboutItem 8.1 PG&E Relicensing Hydro Elect Power Plant I OW-4-fl CITY OF DUBLIN AGENDA STATEMENT • Meeting Date: August 9, 1982 SUBJECT: PG&E request for support for relicensing hydro electric power plants EXHIBITS ATTACHED: Letter from PG&E, dated July 29, 1982; Excerpts from 1980 FERC Opinion No. 88, Pg. 58 to 62; Sample resolution RECOMMENDATION: Consider - a FINANCIAL STATEMENT: None DESCRIPTION: • At its meeting of June 14, 1982, the Council discussed PG&E's request for support for relicensing its hydro electric power plants. The Council continued the matter to review 1 ) the purpose and intent of the Northern California Power Agency (NCPA) , 2) the 1980 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) decision, and 3) the rate regulations that would apply to NCPA. The three items which Council wanted to review are discussed as follows: 1 . NCPA is a joint-powers authority for the purpose of developing alternative energy sources and to provide a broader base from which to respond to PG&E rate increases. In essence, each city which is a member of NCPA is seeking the best possible price of energy for the benefit of its residents. 2. The 1980 FERC decision gives municipalities preference over corporate applicants if the FERC finds the plans of the municipalities and the plans of the corporation are 'equally well adapted. . .to converve and utilize in the public interest the water resources of the region. ' • The FERC will use a broad assessment of 'public interest' to include: a) both physical and non-physical considerations, including social impacts such as economic costs and benefits. b) consideration of the varying circumstances and needs of the era. c) changes in benefit from the public associated with corporate applicant, to the public associated with the municipalities, and • d) the spreading of hydro power benefits to as much of the public as possible. Copies To: ITEM NO. ® 0 AGENDA STATEMENT PG&E request Page 2 The municipal preference will only take place as a tie breaker if the municipalities plan and the corporate plan are determined by FERC as equally well adapted to serve the public interest. In the final analysis, it is the FERC that will determine the public interest of each application. 3. The NCPA would not be subject to the State PUC for rate regulations. The local municipalities would each control their own rates. Any surplus revenues could go to that City's treasury or could be used to reduce the rates of residents in that city. Attached is a sample resolution supplied by PG&E for Council consideration. Mr. Lou Holveck of PG&E will attend the Council meeting to answer questions on the matter. • NOTE: The complete 1980 FERC Opinion No. 88 and Opinion No. 88-A are available for review in the office. • • PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY 1P-0 14'IS + 998 MURRIETA BOULEVARD LIVERMORE, CALIFORNIA 94550 RECEIVED July 29, 1982 AUG U 2 1982 City of Dublin DUBLIN PLANNING P. O. Box 2340 Dublin, CA 94568 Attention: Mr. Larry Tong Re: Hydro Relicensing Dear Mr. Tong: At the June 14 City Council meetiing, the City Council requested additional information on the relicensing of certain PGa"ndE hydroelectric plants. Following are our responses to the questions raised as I understand them. Question 1 - What is the purpose and intent of NCPA? Answer 1 - NCPA is a joint power organization formed under the -laws of the State of California. It consists of municipally-owned utilities, who through the joint power agency vehicle, are attempting to obtain, among other things, sources of generation for their own utility distribution systems. Question 2 - Do we have a copy available of the 1980 FERC decision? Answer 2 - Attached is a copy of the decision consisting of two parts: Opinion No 88 and Opinion No. 88-A. Pages 59-62 of Opinion No. 88 are particularly interesting, as they speak of some considerations FERC will make in its evaluation of the "public interest". Question 3 - How much excess power do they anticipate receiving that they will be able to sell to the five southern California cities? Answer 3 - In both the Mokelumne and the Rock Creek/Cresta application, representa- tions have been made that power will go to Southern California. However, only in the Rock Creek/Cresta application have the Southern Cities applied as a joint applicant. Based on Exhibit B of that application, the parties have agreed that the Southern Cities will get 35.31 percent of the power divided as follows: Anaheim - 20.30% Azusa - 1.95% Banning - 0.69% Colton - 1.20% Riverside- 11.17% a . • City of Dublin Attention: Mr. Larry Tong -2- July 29, 1982 As previously indicated to your City Council, this issue is of concern to us as it impacts all our rate payers and customers. The loss of this portion of our lowest cost electricity source will have to be replaced at a higher cost utilizing more expensive sources. The higher cost of electricity will then be reflected in the rates our customers (including the City of Dublin) must pay. I will plan to be in attendance at your next Council meeting to answer any questions that may arise. Sincerely, L. R. Holveck Livermore Manager LRH:11 Attachment UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION OPINION NO. 88 t City of Bountiful , Utah ) Utah Power and Light Company ) Docket No . EL78-43 City of Santa Clara, California ) ; Pacific Gas and Electric Company ) 1 OPINION AND ORDER DECLARING ( MUNICIPAL PREFERENCE APPLICABLE '( TO HYDRO-ELECTRIC RELICENSINGS f • • l • Issued: June 27, 1980 1 I. ,. Nwe 1 Docket No. EL78-43 - 57 - Congress intended that a State' s or municipality' s entitlement to preference should depend upon an evaluation by the Commission of public interest factors reflected in the competing p g plans before the Commission. As Congressmen Doremus and Raker said on the floor of the House (Dove, at 623-5) : MR. DOREMUS. You have got to leave the discretion to determine whether the plans are adequate to serve the public interest with somebody, and necessarily it must be with the commission created in the bill. MR. RAKER. That being the case they should be allowed that discretion, and not be directed absolutely to grant the application. MR. DOREMUS. They would still have the discretion to determine whether the plans submitted by the State or municipality were adapted to conserve [sic. ] the public interests. As discussed in previous sections, Congress envisioned probable private development of water power resources with ultimate public ownership possible. 55/ The FWPA was enacted at a time when private interests were prepared to proceed to ;t a much greater extent than the federal, State and local . governments were, with financing and building hydropower projects. Congress concluded at the time the FWPA was passed that the public interest would best be served by rapid development of water power resources -- by private or public entities -- leaving the possibility of transfer of the hydro-facilities from private to public ownership at a later date should the Commission determine that the public interest could equally well be served by the public entities assuming ownership and the right to operate the facilities . • As early as 1908, President Roosevelt' s landmark Rainy River veto message sought water power legislation that would leave "to future generations the power or authority to renew or extend the concession [license] in accordance with the conditions which may prevail at the time. " And Merrill ' s memo- randum of October 31, 1917 , called for statutory "provisions that will leave the way open for future public ownership and operation if the experience of the next fifty years shall have established the wisdom of such a policy. " 55/ Senate Report No. 180, 66th Congress, lst Session, quoted on page 27. I I `1 Docket No. EL78-43 - 58 - Merrill ' s proposal for a purely discretionary municipal preference 56/ was modified in its movement through Congress into a preference that is mandatory should the Commission, in the exercise of its judgment, determine, in the words of Congressman Doremus, that "the plans are adequate to serve the public interest" . (Emphasis added. ) Congress in 1920 was focusing on our nation' s water power • sites and equated the "public interest" with the prompt develop- ment of those sites . But Congress provided for the possibility of eventual public ownership even where the private interests undertook the responsibility for that development. This possi- bility was made dependent upon an evaluation by the Commission, at the time a license expires , of how the public interest would best be served by choosing among the various alternatives . In sum, the Commission finds and hereby declares that the statutory scheme of the FP is one in which a municipal or State applicant competing for a successor license against a citizen or corporate applicant is entitled by Section 7(a) to a preference if the Commission finds that the plans of the State or municipality are, in the words of Section 7 (a) , equally well adapted, or shall within a reasonable time to be fixed by the Commission be made equally well adapted, to conserve and utilize in the public interest the water • resources of the region. . . . Thus , in determining which competing applicant will receive a successor license, it is important to look not only at the "tie-breaker rule" , but also to how the Commission will determine whether the plans are "equally well adapted" . Put differently, whether there is a tie to be broken by municipal preference will depend upon the factors that the Commission takes into account to determine how well each of the competing plans would conserve and utilize the water resources of the region in the public interest. The Commission does not have before it a record upon which a definitive statement can be made as to what showings should and must be made by the applicants in seeking to demon- strate how their plans compare. However, the record in this proceeding, the language of the statute itself, and the pertinent legislative history provide a basis for some generalizations about the public interest determination. 56/ See the first paragraph of Section 7 of the Administratio Bill , quoted on page 20 . n 0 I • Docket No. EL78-43 — 59 — First, we believe the statute contemplates a broad assess- ment, evaluating both physical and nonphysical considerations when the public interest is assessed. Congress did not direct ((I the Commission, in choosing among applicants, to limit its focus merely to plans in the physical or technical sense 57/ . to make beneficial public use of our nation' s waterways. A11 licensed water power projects are required by Section I10 (a) 58/ to be best adapted physically and technically to utilize our nation' s water resources for the benefit of the public and, to the extent that they also conserve those resources, to do so for the benefit of the public. We are specifically authorized by Section 10(a) to require modifications to secure plans (in the physical or technical sense) that will be best adapted to a comprehensive plan ( in the nonphysical as well as physical sense) for beneficial public uses . Thus, a project must be "best adapted" , physi- cally and technically, to beneficial public uses no matter t which applicant we select. During the oral argument, the Commission staff counsel suggested (Tr. 146 ) that our assessment of the "public interest" should be as broad as the commerce clause of the Constitution, and the general counsel of the American Public Power Association [ expressed his agreement (Tr. 187 ) . Without adopting that particu interpretation here, we agree with the characterization expressed by the attorney for Utah Power and Light Company (Tr. 190) that our decision ought to take into account "the public interest I in its broadest sense. " L 57/ See Footnote 53 . . 1. 58/ Section 10 provides, in pertinent part, All licenses issued under this Part shall be on the ,[ following conditions: (a) That the project adopted, including the maps, plans, and specifications, shall be such as I in the judgment of the Commission will be best adapted to a comprehensive plan for improving or I developing a waterway or waterways for the use or [ benefit of interstate or foreign commence, for the improvement and utilization of water power develop- ment, and for other beneficial public uses, including C recreational purposes; and if necessary in order to secure such plan the Commission shall have the authority to require the modification of any project and of the plans and specifications of the project works before approval . Emphasis added.] 1 Docket No. EL78-43 — 60 — To evaluate the public benefits that would attend a relicensing, necessitates consideration of physical and tech- nical factors as well as consideration of broader social impacts such as economic costs and benefits, the distribution of the benefits of hydropower and similar pertinent potential impacts. All of these would seem to play a role in the Commission' s determination as to whether plans are equally well adapted. Second, we believe that Congress did not intend the • "public interest" to be static or frozen as of 1920. To the contrary, the legislative history of the FWPA shows that one of the reasons why Congress rejected perpetual licenses was to reserve for future generations the decisions as to which segments of the public would receive the benefits of our nation' s water power resources . We believe that the "public interest" will vary with the circumstances and needs of the time period in which it is considered. Third, public interest implications of competition in relicensing decisions can be even more complex and complicated than for initial licenses. When issuing initial licenses for unconstructed projects, we are permitting the utilization of then unused or underused water resources. Our choice between public and private applicants for initial licenses for unconstructed projects results in allocating the benefits of relatively inexpensive renewable sources of energy to either a segment of the public associated with the public applicant, or the private applicant or a segment of the public associated with it, none of whom are then receiving those benefits. But our choice between public and private applicants for successor licenses may result in reallocating the benefits of water power resources then in use from the private applicant, or a segment of the public associated with it, to entity and the segment of the public associated withetheblic public entity. Moreover, transfer itself may have some effects, possibly disruptive, which are not present with initial licenses . Fourth, our relicensing decisions may have important implications for the concentration and distribution of the benefits of hydropower, and it is important to keep in mind that FWPA was an outgrowth of a widespread belief -- and an associated political movement -- that had a basic tenet that the benefits of hydropower should be spread widely. A basic goal of the FPA is to assure that hydropower benefits are enjoyed-by as -much of the public as possible. p ' Docket No . EL78-43 - 61 - As previously noted, it will be necessary to develop the 1 information on which to decide whether Bountiful, Santa Clara f and other municipalities are entitled to a preference, in . competing for a successor license, and it is important that ((, the Commission be provided with an adequate basis upon which ( to examine broad public interest considerations. • 1 Parties are encouraged to address such additional areas of consideration as they contend are pertinent to our selection of licensees for particular successor licenses . We emphasize, in this connection, that the "public interest" standard of [ Section 7 (a) has never been litigated in court and has been addressed in only a few Commission decisions. 59/ It would, therefore, be premature to address the applicability, relevancy and materiality of particular areas of consideration. We would expect such factors to vary from case to case. { In the final analysis, it is left to the Commission to determine the "public interest" in the light of the facts and contentions in each particular application. The processing and consideration of the pending applications in which States t and municipalities, and citizens or corporations, have requested successor licenses for the same water resources should go forward in the light of this declaratory order. 59/ Although it has never been disputed that the municipal preference is applicable to initial licensings, and although the Commission has been issuing initial water power licenses for almost 60 years, there are no court decisions and few Commission decisions on the "public interest" standard of Section 7 (a) . In Holyoke Water Power Co. , et al. , Project Nos. 2004 and 2014, 8 FPC 717371-51.9) , wherein it was said, at 487, that the f preference under Section 7 (a) "is not an absolute one" , a municipality that was unable and unwilling to meet its competitor' s plans was denied an initial license. And in Pacific Northwest Power Company, Project Nos. 2243 and 2273 , 31 FPC 247 (1964) ; affirmed sub nom Washington Public Power Supply System v. Federal Power Commission, 358 F.2d 840 (D.C. Cir. 1966) ; reversed on other grounds sub nom Udall v. Federal Power Commission, 387 U.S. 428 196777 a Commission majority indicated by way of dictum, at 270, that after a hearing . . .we would then determine if preference accrues to the [municipality] , and the effect of such a preference, if any, in the light of all the other factors relevant to a disposition of these [competing licensing] applications . . . . I . Docket No. EL78-43 - 62 - •I Finally, the Commission' s Opinion Nos . 36 and 36A (Escondido Mutual Water Company, et al . , Project No. 176) , involving a successor license and discussed briefly in Footnote 10, are subject to a pending appeal . By the Commission. ( SEAL ) .1 4;ftarTAe.V.14"..4( .1 Kenneth F. Plumb , I Secretary. 1 I I 1 1 • Sloe RESOLUTION NO. • A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF DUBLIN A RESOLUTION IN SUPPORT OF RELICENSING OF HYDROELECTRIC PROJECTS TO THE PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY WHEREAS, the Pacific Gas and Electric Company has. over the past 100 years developed a safe, reliable, and economic system of hydroelectric generating facilities for the benefit of its customers living throughout central and northern California; and, WHEREAS, PG&E's 3.4 million customers represent an area population of over 9 million people who now enjoy the benefits offthis power PG&E generates without the use of fossil fuels; and, WHEREAS, certain of these hydroelectric facilities, consisting of projects licensed by the Federal Power Commission, now known as the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) are subject to consideration for relicense by FERC; and, WHEREAS, efforts are being made by certain municipal entities to secure for themselves six PG&E powerhouses on the Mokelumne and Feather Rivers through application to FERC; efforts which, if successful , would transfer ownership and operation of these hydroelectric facilities away from PG&E and divert the low cost power away from PG&E's customers and into their hands ; and, WHEREAS, it would be directly contrary to the best interests of the citizens of Dublin and to the best interests of the millions of PG&E customers throughout northern and central California whose rates have supported PG&E's ownership and operation of these facilities , if the Rock Creek and Cresta plants on the Feather River (Project No. 1922) and the Mokelumne River Project (Project No. 137) were cut out of the hydroelectric generating system PG&E uses to serve them; and, WHEREAS, if these projects were to be transferred to the municipalities seeking them, PG&E's customers will be forced to pay, every year, increased costs for electricity from oil or gas fired generating facilities in amounts up to $100,000,000; and, WHEREAS, the continued ownership, operation and improvement of its hydro- electric generating facilities by PG&E is essential to the social and economic well being of the people of northern and central California; and, WHEREAS, retention of these projects by PG&E is the only course providing for the fullest improvement and utilization of these resoureces in the public interest, NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the City of Dublin hereby urges and requests that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission promptly grant Pacific Gas and Electric Company's relicensing applications and to reject the applica- tions of the municipalities and associations seeking to take these projects away from PG&E and its customers, BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that copies of this resolution be provided to: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission U. S. Senators (Appropriate U. S. Congressmen) (Appropriate State Senators) (Appropriate State Assemblymen) California Public Utility Commission Pacific Gas and Electric Company PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED, this day of August, 1982, by the following vote: AYES: COUNCILMEMBERS NOES: ABSENT: Mayor ATTEST: City Clerk