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Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) is an independent agency of the United States government that regulates the interstate transmission and wholesale sale of electricity and natural gas and regulates the prices of interstate transport of petroleum by pipeline. FERC also reviews proposals to build interstate natural gas pipelines, natural gas storage projects, and liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals, in addition to licensing non-federal hydropower projects.

Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
Agency overview
FormedOctober 1, 1977; 46 years ago (1977-10-01)
Preceding
JurisdictionU.S. government
HeadquartersWashington, D.C., U.S.
Agency executive
Parent departmentUnited States Department of Energy
Websitewww.FERC.gov

FERC was created by the U.S. Congress in 1977 in the aftermath of the 1973 oil crisis. FERC is an independent agency, despite being part of the U.S. Department of Energy. It is headed by five commissioners who are nominated by the U.S. president and confirmed by the U.S. Senate. There may be no more than three commissioners of one political party serving on the commission at any given time.[1]

Primary duties edit

The responsibilities of FERC include the following:

  • Regulating the transmission and sale of natural gas for resale in interstate commerce;
  • Regulating the transmission of oil by pipelines in interstate commerce;
  • Regulating the transmission and wholesale sales of electricity in interstate commerce;
  • Licensing and inspecting private, municipal, and state hydroelectric projects;
  • Approving the siting of and abandonment of interstate natural gas facilities, including pipelines, storage and liquefied natural gas;
  • Ensuring the reliability of high voltage interstate transmission system;
  • Monitoring and investigating energy markets;
  • Using civil penalties and other means against energy organizations and individuals who violate FERC rules in the energy markets;
  • Overseeing environmental matters related to natural gas and hydroelectricity projects and major electricity policy initiatives; and
  • Administering accounting and financial reporting regulations and regulating businesses of regulated companies.

Jurisdiction and authorities edit

FERC is a large independent regulatory agency within the United States Department of Energy that participates in business oversight.[2]: 12  The President and Congress do not generally review FERC decisions, but the decisions are reviewable by the federal courts. FERC is self-funding, in that Congress sets its budget through annual and supplemental appropriations and FERC is authorized to raise revenue to reimburse the United States Treasury for its appropriations, through annual charges to the natural gas, oil, and electric industries it regulates.[3]

FERC is independent of the Department of Energy political structure because FERC activities "shall not be subject to further view by the Secretary [of Energy] or any officer or employee of the Department".[4] The Department of Energy can, however, participate in FERC proceedings as a third party.

FERC has promoted voluntary formation of regional transmission organizations (RTOs) and Independent System Operators (ISOs) to eliminate the potential for undue discrimination in access to the electric grid; regional and interregional transmission planning and cost allocation through the landmark Order No. 1000.

FERC investigated the alleged manipulation of electricity market by Enron and other energy companies, and their role in the California electricity crisis. FERC has collected more than $6.3 billion from California electric market participants through settlements.[5] Since passage of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, FERC has imposed, through settlements and orders, more than $1 billion in civil penalties and disgorgement of unjust profits to address violations of its anti-market manipulation and other rules.

FERC regulates approximately 1,600 hydroelectric projects in the U.S. It is largely responsible for permitting construction of a large network of interstate natural gas pipelines. FERC also works closely with the United States Coast Guard to review the safety, security, and environmental impacts of proposed LNG terminals and associated shipping.

Commissioners edit

FERC is composed of up to five commissioners who are appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate to staggered five-year terms. The President appoints one of the commissioners to be the chairman of FERC, the administrative head of the agency. FERC is a bipartisan body; no more than three commissioners may be of the same political party. Commissioners may continue in office past the end of their term if a successor has not yet been confirmed, up to the end of the current session of Congress. The commissioners are:

Name Party Took office Term expires
Willie L. Phillips (Chair) Democratic December 3, 2021 June 30, 2026
Allison Clements Democratic December 8, 2020 June 30, 2024
Mark C. Christie Republican January 4, 2021 June 30, 2025
Vacant June 30, 2027
Vacant June 30, 2028

Past commissioners edit

Commissioners[6] Years Served
Don S. Smith December 13, 1973 – June 30, 1979 (Served as FPC)
Charles B. Curtis August 10, 1977 – December 31, 1980
Georgiana Sheldon August 11, 1977 – July 19, 1985
Matthew Holden, Jr. October 28, 1977 – August 31, 1981
George R. Hall October 28, 1977 – May 8, 1981
J. David Hughes September 8, 1980 – July 13, 1984
C.M. Butler III June 5, 1981 – October 7, 1983
Anthony G. Sousa September 1, 1981 – July 30, 1988
Oliver G. Richard III August 31, 1982 – July 12, 1985
Raymond J. O'Connor November 10, 1983 – January 31, 1986
Charles G. Stalon July 14, 1984 – November 10, 1989
C.M. Naeve November 4, 1985 – April 30, 1988
Charles A. Trabandt November 4, 1985 – March 31, 1993
Martha O. Hesse October 6, 1986 – November 28, 1989
Jerry J. Langdon October 4, 1988 – June 5, 1993
Elizabeth Anne Moler October 7, 1988 – June 16, 1997
Martin L. Allday November 13, 1989 – October 20, 1993
Branko Terzic October 20, 1990 – May 24, 1993
James J. Hoecker May 20, 1993 – January 18, 2001
Donald F. Santa, Jr. May 20, 1993 – June 30, 1997
William L. Massey May 20, 1993 – December 9, 2003
Vicky A. Bailey May 20, 1993 – January 28, 2000
Curtis L. Hebert Jr. November 14, 1997 – August 31, 2001
Linda Key Breathitt November 13, 1997 – November 22, 2002
Patrick H. Wood III June 5, 2001 – July 8, 2005
Nora Mead Brownell June 12, 2001 – July 21, 2006
Joseph T. Kelliher November 21, 2003 – March 13, 2009
Suedeen G. Kelly November 24, 2003 – December 24, 2009
Marc Spitzer July 21, 2006 – December 14, 2011
Jon Wellinghoff July 31, 2006 – November 24, 2013
Philip D. Moeller July 24, 2006 – October 30, 2015
John R. Norris January 11, 2010 – August 20, 2014
Cheryl LaFleur July 13, 2010 – August 30, 2019
Tony Clark June 15, 2012 – September 30, 2016
Norman Bay August 4, 2014 – February 3, 2017
Colette D. Honorable January 5, 2015 – June 30, 2017
Robert Powelson August 10, 2017 – August 10, 2018
Kevin J. McIntyre December 7, 2017 – January 2, 2019
Neil Chatterjee August 8, 2017 – August 30, 2021
Richard Glick November 29, 2017 – January 3, 2023
Bernard L. McNamee December 11, 2018 – September 4, 2020
James Danly March 30, 2020 – January 3, 2024

Chairmen edit

Chairmen[7] Years Served
Charles B. Curtis October 1, 1977 – January 1, 1981
Georgiana Sheldon (Acting) January 2, 1981 – June 5, 1981
C.M. Butler III June 5, 1981 – October 5, 1983
Raymond J. O'Connor November 10, 1983 – January 31, 1986
Anthony G. Sousa (Acting) February 1, 1986 – October 5, 1986
Martha O. Hesse October 6, 1986 – November 19, 1989
Martin L. Allday November 21, 1989 – February 5, 1993
Elizabeth Anne Moler February 5, 1993 – June 16, 1997
James J. Hoecker June 19, 1997 – January 18, 2001
William L. Massey January 19, 2001 – January 21, 2001
Curtis L. Hebert Jr. January 22, 2001 – August 31, 2001
Patrick H. Wood III September 1, 2001 – July 8, 2005
Joseph T. Kelliher July 9, 2005 – January 23, 2009
Jon Wellinghoff (Acting) January 23, 2009 – March 19, 2009
Jon Wellinghoff March 19, 2009 – November 24, 2013
Cheryl LaFleur (Acting) November 25, 2013 – July 30, 2014
Cheryl LaFleur July 30, 2014 – April 14, 2015
Norman Bay April 15, 2015 – January 23, 2017
Cheryl LaFleur (Acting) January 23, 2017 – August 10, 2017
Neil Chatterjee August 10, 2017 – December 7, 2017
Kevin J. McIntyre December 7, 2017 – October 24, 2018
Neil Chatterjee October 24, 2018 – November 5, 2020
James Danly November 5, 2020 – January 21, 2021
Richard Glick January 21, 2021 – January 3, 2023
Willie L. Phillips January 3, 2023 – present
(Acting: January 3, 2023 – February 9, 2024)

History edit

Federal Power Commission edit

The Federal Power Commission (FPC), which preceded FERC, was established by Congress in 1920 to allow cabinet members to coordinate federal hydropower development.

In 1935, the FPC was transformed into an independent regulatory agency with five members nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. The FPC was authorized to regulate both hydropower and interstate electricity.

Natural Gas Act of 1938 edit

In 1938, the Natural Gas Act gave FPC jurisdiction over interstate natural gas pipelines and wholesale sales. In 1942, this jurisdiction was expanded to cover the licensing of more natural gas facilities. In 1954, the Supreme Court decision in Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Wisconsin extended FPC jurisdiction over all wellhead sales of natural gas in interstate commerce.

Birth of DOE; FPC Becomes FERC edit

In response to the 1973 oil crisis, Congress passed the Department of Energy Organization Act in 1977, to consolidate various energy-related agencies into a Department of Energy. Congress insisted that a separate independent regulatory body be retained, and the FPC was renamed the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), preserving its independent status within the department.[8] Its most basic mandate was to "determine whether wholesale electricity prices were unjust and unreasonable and, if so, to regulate pricing and order refunds for overcharges to ratepayers."[9] FERC was also given added responsibility to hear appeals of DOE oil price control determinations and to conduct all "on the record" hearings for DOE.[10] As a result, DOE does not have any administrative law judges. As a further protection, when the Department of Energy proposes a rule, it must refer the proposal to FERC, and FERC can take over the proceeding if FERC determines that the rulemaking "may significantly affect" matters in its jurisdiction.[11] The DOE Act also transferred the regulation of interstate oil pipelines from the Interstate Commerce Commission to FERC.[12] However, the FERC lost some jurisdiction over the imports and exports of gas and electricity.

In 1978, FERC was given additional responsibilities for harmonizing the regulation of wellhead gas sales in both the intrastate and interstate markets. FERC also administered a program to foster new cogeneration and small power production under the Public Utilities Regulatory Policy Act of 1978, which was passed as part of the National Energy Act of 1978. The National Energy Act included the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978, which reduced the scope of federal price regulation, to bring greater competition to both the natural gas and electric industry.

In 1989, Congress ended federal regulation of wellhead natural gas prices, with the passage of the Natural Gas Wellhead Decontrol Act of 1989.[13]

Order 888 edit

In 1996, FERC issued Order 888, which spurred the creation of regional transmission organizations in the United States. This would impact existing electric power pools by rebranding themselves as independent transmission operators. Electric utilities in some regions began to spin off their generation units as separate companies that would compete in a wholesale electric market administered by the RTOs.[14] Once FERC had created the framework for Regional Transmission Organizations with Order No. 888, several such RTOs were approved. The pre-existing multi-state power pool called PJM (Pennsylvania, Jersey, Maryland), the New York Independent System Operator (NYISO), and the Independent Sysoperator New England (ISO-NE) were early adopters. California, with the backing of its state and Congressional policymakers, sought approval of a controversial scheme to set up its ISO, called California ISO, based near Sacramento, CA. FERC approved it without changes because California had warned that it would not accept any changes. Enron charged one of its policy analysts to figure out how to make the most of the flawed rules put in place for the California electricity market. Enron had success with its fraudulent market transactions.

Energy Policy Act of 2005 edit

In 2001, the George W. Bush administration sought to give the authority of eminent domain to FERC to circumvent state and local bureaucratic processes which often slowed the siting of new transmission projects. This expansion of power was most fiercely opposed by Bush's own Republican party as being an expansion of federal power. Legal battles over the issue ended with the 2005 Energy Bill (Energy Policy Act of 2005) which was passed with approval of Democrats and Republicans.

The Energy Policy Act of 2005 expanded FERC's authority to protect the reliability and cybersecurity of the bulk power system through the establishment and enforcement of mandatory standards, as well as greatly expanding FERC authority to impose civil penalties on entities that manipulate the electricity and natural gas markets. The Energy Policy Act of 2005 also gave FERC additional responsibilities and authority. Among the many provisions of the law, FERC was given what is known as "backstop" siting authority which allows FERC to overrule any denial of transmission projects by a state within established corridors of transmission congestion "to expand transmission in limited regions of the country facing transmission constraints."[15][16]

Order 1000 edit

In 2010, FERC issued Order 1000, which required RTOs to create regional transmission plans and identify transmission needs based on public policy. Cost allocation reforms were included, possibly to reduce barriers faced by non incumbent transmission developers.[17]

Order 841 edit

In February 2018, FERC issued Order 841, which required wholesale markets to open up to individual storage installations, regardless of interconnection point (transmission, distribution or behind-the-meter).[18][19] The Order was challenged in court by the state public utility commissions via the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC), the American Public Power Association, and others who claimed that FERC overstepped its jurisdiction by regulating how local electric distribution and behind-the-meter facilities are administered, i.e., in not providing an opt out of wholesale market access for energy storage facilities located at the distribution level or behind-the-meter. A United States courts of appeals court (the D.C. Circuit) issued an order in July 2020 that upheld Order 841 and dismissed the petitioners' complaints.[20][21][22]

Order 2222 edit

FERC issued Order 2222 on September 17, 2020, enabling distributed energy resources such as batteries and demand response to participate in regional wholesale electricity markets.[23][24] Market operators submitted initial compliance plans by early 2022.[25] The Supreme Court had ruled in 2016 in FERC v. Electric Power Supply Ass'n that the agency had the authority to regulate demand response transactions.[26]

Criticism edit

FERC has been subject to criticism and increasing activism by people from communities affected by its decisions approving pipeline and related projects.[27] They contend that FERC "blithely greenlights too many pipelines, export terminals and other gas infrastructure"[27] and that FERC's structure in which it recovers its annual operating costs directly from the entities it regulates creates bias in favor of the issuance of pipeline certificates.[28] Some of the critics have disrupted several regular open meetings of the Commission[29] and staged a couple of week-long blockades of FERC's headquarters in Washington, D.C., to make their points.[30] "Pipelines are facing unprecedented opposition," Commissioner LaFleur remarked to the National Press Club in a 2015 speech. "We have a situation here."[31][32][33]

FERC's decisions in those cases are often upheld by the courts. In a July 1, 2014, decision, No Gas Pipeline v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. Circuit) said that pipeline applicants are not likely to pursue many certificates that are hopeless. "The fact that they generally succeed in choosing to expend their resources on applications that serve their own financial interests does not mean that an agency which recognizes merit in such applications is biased," the court said.[34] Others have directly disputed FERC's critics by pointing out, "FERC is a creature of law. It follows a careful administrative path to regulate only a portion of natural gas such as interstate pipelines and LNG import and export terminals. That regulation includes extensive environmental review, driven by many federal laws enacted by Congress, signed by the president, and reviewed and upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. If the agency were to adopt the path [suggested by these critics], FERC's decisions would routinely be overturned by the federal courts."[35]

The United States District Court for the District of Columbia also dismissed a case involving allegations of structural bias on the part of FERC. The plaintiffs contended that the Omnibus Budget Act of 1986 funding mechanism requires the commission to recover its budget through proportional charges on regulated entities, therefore making FERC biased in favor of the industry from which it gets its funding. But in an order issued March 22, 2017, the court said the plain language of the statute indicates that FERC does not have control over its own budget. "The Commission's budget cannot be increased by approving pipelines; rather, [the statute] requires the Commission to make adjustments to 'eliminate any overrecovery or underrecovery.' If Plaintiffs are unhappy with Congress's chosen appropriations to the Commission..., Plaintiffs' recourse lies with their legislative representatives."[28]

In New Jersey, the FERC approval of the PennEast Pipeline was met with widespread criticism by environmental groups, which called the decision highly partisan. "FERC has once again demonstrated its tremendous bias for, and partnership with, the pipeline industry," said Maya van Rossum, leader of the Delaware Riverkeeper Network. Doug O'Malley, president of Environment New Jersey, called the FERC approval of the pipeline a "disaster." David Pringle, state campaign director of Clean Water Action and 2018 Congressional candidate, suggested the FERC was serving a partisan interest over the interests of the people of New Jersey, suggesting "The FERC needs to remember it works for the people of the United States not PennEast."[36] These criticisms were unfounded as the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals on July 10, 2018, rejected the Delaware Riverkeeper Network and Maya Van Rossum's claim that FERC has an incentive to award pipeline certificates because it collects its operating expenses from regulated parties. Upholding a lower court ruling, the D.C. Circuit also rejected the Delaware Riverkeeper Network's challenge to FERC's use of tolling orders to meet its statutory deadlines for acting on rehearing applications.[37]

However, the D.C. Circuit has provided additional guidance concerning Commission procedures, stating that in one case FERC failed to consider the cumulative environmental impact of four projects that had been separately proposed by the same pipeline. The D.C. Circuit held that the projects were not financially independent and were "a single pipeline" that was "linear and physically interdependent," so the cumulative environmental impacts should have been considered concurrently.[38] In a separate decision, the D.C. Circuit later sustained the commission's conduct of separate environmental assessments when it clarified that the "critical" factor was that all of the pipeline's projects were either under construction or pending before FERC for environmental review at the same time, noting that the projects lacked temporal overlap.[39] Furthermore, in another case, the D.C. Circuit sustained the commission's use of a separate environmental assessment when it reasoned that the projects in dispute were "unrelated" and did not depend on one another for their justification.[40] This guidance has allowed FERC to address additional claims of improper segmentation.[41]

FERC's leaders have stressed many times since the onset of the increased activism that the proper way to oppose a proposed new infrastructure project is by participating in the related proceeding by submitting comments and participating in public comment sessions, site visits and scoping meetings, since FERC decisions can be appealed up to the Supreme Court.

Federal versus state authority edit

There are regions of the country where the state public utility commission and the FERC regulated Regional Transmission Organization operate in identical footprints (such as in New York State). Where this occurs, state policy makers and FERC frequently clash as to the extent of federal power and influence within the state.

The planning and siting of public policy and renewable power plants and merchant transmission lines can be contentious, because the planning process must proceed through both entities. For example, in New York State, any large (more than 20 MW for the NYISO or 2 MW for the state Siting Committee) generation or merchant transmission facility must proceed through both the planning process of the NYISO, which operates on a two-year cycle at minimum with an inclusive class year pool of new projects evaluated simultaneously, and the siting process of the state Board on Electric Siting and the Environment. Prior to the formation of the NYISO, the planning process was determined mostly by the state siting board (although the utilities' power pool might have had its own closed door planning session) and large generation projects were developed by the utilities themselves.[42][43] The dual planning process provides an opportunity for other market participants to drag out the process legally, not including the other state and/or federal environmental, trade (if an international connection with Canada is requested), and local certification and regulation processes that need to be met.

The controversy similarly applies to various electric wholesale-market issues within the RTO, when a state public utility commission asserts that its retail ratepayers (under state regulation) will be impacted by wholesale-market stakeholder decisions and reforms (under federal-level regulation). In contrast, prior to the formation of the NYISO in 1999 in New York, wholesale energy prices were set within a utility's state rate case proceeding. Examples of contentious issues in New York include the NYISO's development of buyer-side mitigation (price floors) in its capacity market,[44] proxy peaking-unit specifications during the demand-curve reset (that helps set capacity market prices),[45][46] the state's granting of zero-emissions credits to wholesale-market participating nuclear power plants,[47] and the creation of a new capacity zone amidst state and transmission owner policy initiatives.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Cama, Timothy (June 29, 2017). "Trump taps Dem Senate aide for energy commission". The Hill. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  2. ^ Van Loo, Rory (2018-08-01). "Regulatory Monitors: Policing Firms in the Compliance Era". Faculty Scholarship.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 April 2014. Retrieved 9 Apr 2014.
  4. ^ 42 U.S.C. § 7172(g)
  5. ^ "FERC: Addressing the 2000-2001 Western Energy Crisis". large.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2024-03-19.
  6. ^ "Past Commissioners".
  7. ^ "Past FERC Chairmen".
  8. ^ 42 U.S.C. § 7134
  9. ^ "Regulation - What Is Ferc? | Blackout | FRONTLINE". Pbs.org. Retrieved 2018-12-22.
  10. ^ 42 U.S.C. § 7172(d).
  11. ^ 42 U.S.C. § 7174.
  12. ^ 42 U.S.C. §7172(b) (since repealed)
  13. ^ "Statute" (PDF). Gpo.gov.
  14. ^ . Ferc.gov. Archived from the original on 19 December 2016. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  15. ^ U.S. Department of Energy (December 2009). (PDF). Emp.lbl.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-07-08. Retrieved 2018-12-22.
  16. ^ Rossi, Jim (December 21, 2009). "The Trojan Horse of Electric Power Transmission Line Siting Authority". Law.lclark.edu. Retrieved 2018-12-22.
  17. ^ . Ferc.gov. Archived from the original on 30 October 2018. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  18. ^ Ko, Ted (2019-10-17). "Let's kill 'utility-' or 'grid-scale' storage". Utility Dive. Retrieved 2019-10-17.
  19. ^ Konidena, Rao (2019). "FERC Order 841 levels the playing field for energy storage". MRS Energy & Sustainability. 6: 1–3. doi:10.1557/mre.2019.5. S2CID 182646294 – via CambridgeCore.
  20. ^ Jeff St. John (July 10, 2020). "'Enormous Step' for Energy Storage as Court Upholds FERC Order 841, Opening Wholesale Markets". www.greentechmedia.com. Retrieved January 16, 2021.
  21. ^ "FERC Order 841: US about to take 'most important' step towards clean energy future". www.energy-storage.news. July 13, 2020. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  22. ^ Sean Baur (September 1, 2020). "Going beyond Order 841 to more meaningful FERC storage policy". Retrieved January 16, 2021.
  23. ^ "FERC Opens Wholesale Markets to Distributed Resources: Landmark Action Breaks Down Barriers to Emerging Technologies, Boosts Competition". FERC. Retrieved 2022-04-07.
  24. ^ "'Game-Changer' FERC Order Opens Up Wholesale Grid Markets to Distributed Energy Resources". www.greentechmedia.com. Retrieved 2022-04-07.
  25. ^ "FERC Order 2222: Experts offer cheers and jeers for first round of filings". Canary Media. Retrieved 2022-04-07.
  26. ^ FERC v. Electric Power Supply Assn., No. 14–840, 577 U. S. ____, slip op. at 2, 33–34 (2016).
  27. ^ a b FERC faces heightened scrutiny as gas projects proliferate, Hannah Northey, E&E, November 3, 2014.
  28. ^ a b Delaware Riverkeepers Network v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, No. 16-CU-416 (D. D.C. March 22, 2017).
  29. ^ See for example RTO Insider, Protesters Interrupt FERC Open Meeting, Michael Brooks, 1/26/2015.
  30. ^ Meet the People Making Life a Little More Difficult for FERC this Week, RTO Insider-May 26, 2015.
  31. ^ "NPC Luncheon with Cheryl LaFleur, chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission". National Press Club. 15 January 2015. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  32. ^ "NATIONAL PRESS CLUB LUNCHEON WITH FERC CHAIRMAN CHERYL LAFLEUR : SUBJECT: PLANS FOR REDUCING GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS" (PDF). Press.org. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  33. ^ Zullo, Robert (December 22, 2017). "New FERC chief:Pipeline permit policies to be reviewed". Richmond Times-Dispatch. Richmond, Virginia. p. A5. FERC faces several lawsuits over its approval of pipeline projects, which critics say amounts to a rubber stamp that, in turn confers handsome rates of return and powers of eminent domain to seize private property without adequately vetting whether they serve true public purpose.
  34. ^ NO GAS PIPELINE, Petitioner v. FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION, Respondent Statoil Natural Gas, LLC, et al., Intervenors (Nos. 12–1470, 12–1474, 12–1475). Decided: July 1, 2014
  35. ^ FERC Protests Make No Sense, Kennedy Maize, Powermag.com, May 24, 2016.
  36. ^ Deak, Mike (August 17, 2016). "Activists critical of federal hearing on PennEast pipeline". My Central Jersey. Archived from the original on 2021-07-31. Retrieved July 31, 2021.
  37. ^ Delaware Riverkeeper Network and Maya Van Rossum v. FERC, No. 17-5084 (D.C. Cir. 2018)
  38. ^ See, Delaware Riverkeeper Network v. FERC, 13-1015, U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.
  39. ^ Minisink Residents for Environmental Preservation and Safety et al v. FERC (No. 12-1481)
  40. ^ Myersville Citizens for a Rural Cmty., Inc., v. FERC, 783 F.3d 1301, 1326-7 (D.C. Cir. 2015)
  41. ^ Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Company, LLC, 149 FERC ¶ 61,258 (2014).
  42. ^ NYISO 30 OATT Attachment X
  43. ^ "Board on Electric Generation Siting and the Environment". 3.dps.my.gov. Retrieved November 7, 2018.
  44. ^ (PDF). Ferc.gov. February 3, 2017. pp. 1–2. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 30, 2018. Retrieved November 7, 2018.
  45. ^ Rich Heidorn Jr. (January 24, 2017). . RTO Insider. Archived from the original on November 8, 2018. Retrieved November 8, 2018.
  46. ^ (PDF). October 3, 2016. pp. i, ii, 48–52. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 8, 2018. Retrieved November 7, 2018.
  47. ^ Rory D. Sweeney (June 3, 2018). . RTO Insider. Archived from the original on November 8, 2018. Retrieved November 7, 2018.

Further reading edit

External links edit

federal, energy, regulatory, commission, ferc, independent, agency, united, states, government, that, regulates, interstate, transmission, wholesale, sale, electricity, natural, regulates, prices, interstate, transport, petroleum, pipeline, ferc, also, reviews. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission FERC is an independent agency of the United States government that regulates the interstate transmission and wholesale sale of electricity and natural gas and regulates the prices of interstate transport of petroleum by pipeline FERC also reviews proposals to build interstate natural gas pipelines natural gas storage projects and liquefied natural gas LNG terminals in addition to licensing non federal hydropower projects Federal Energy Regulatory CommissionAgency overviewFormedOctober 1 1977 46 years ago 1977 10 01 PrecedingFederal Power CommissionJurisdictionU S governmentHeadquartersWashington D C U S Agency executiveWillie L Phillips ChairmanParent departmentUnited States Department of EnergyWebsitewww FERC gov FERC was created by the U S Congress in 1977 in the aftermath of the 1973 oil crisis FERC is an independent agency despite being part of the U S Department of Energy It is headed by five commissioners who are nominated by the U S president and confirmed by the U S Senate There may be no more than three commissioners of one political party serving on the commission at any given time 1 Contents 1 Primary duties 2 Jurisdiction and authorities 3 Commissioners 3 1 Past commissioners 3 2 Chairmen 4 History 4 1 Federal Power Commission 4 2 Natural Gas Act of 1938 4 3 Birth of DOE FPC Becomes FERC 4 4 Order 888 4 5 Energy Policy Act of 2005 4 6 Order 1000 4 7 Order 841 4 8 Order 2222 5 Criticism 5 1 Federal versus state authority 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksPrimary duties editThe responsibilities of FERC include the following Regulating the transmission and sale of natural gas for resale in interstate commerce Regulating the transmission of oil by pipelines in interstate commerce Regulating the transmission and wholesale sales of electricity in interstate commerce Licensing and inspecting private municipal and state hydroelectric projects Approving the siting of and abandonment of interstate natural gas facilities including pipelines storage and liquefied natural gas Ensuring the reliability of high voltage interstate transmission system Monitoring and investigating energy markets Using civil penalties and other means against energy organizations and individuals who violate FERC rules in the energy markets Overseeing environmental matters related to natural gas and hydroelectricity projects and major electricity policy initiatives and Administering accounting and financial reporting regulations and regulating businesses of regulated companies Jurisdiction and authorities editFERC is a large independent regulatory agency within the United States Department of Energy that participates in business oversight 2 12 The President and Congress do not generally review FERC decisions but the decisions are reviewable by the federal courts FERC is self funding in that Congress sets its budget through annual and supplemental appropriations and FERC is authorized to raise revenue to reimburse the United States Treasury for its appropriations through annual charges to the natural gas oil and electric industries it regulates 3 FERC is independent of the Department of Energy political structure because FERC activities shall not be subject to further view by the Secretary of Energy or any officer or employee of the Department 4 The Department of Energy can however participate in FERC proceedings as a third party FERC has promoted voluntary formation of regional transmission organizations RTOs and Independent System Operators ISOs to eliminate the potential for undue discrimination in access to the electric grid regional and interregional transmission planning and cost allocation through the landmark Order No 1000 FERC investigated the alleged manipulation of electricity market by Enron and other energy companies and their role in the California electricity crisis FERC has collected more than 6 3 billion from California electric market participants through settlements 5 Since passage of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 FERC has imposed through settlements and orders more than 1 billion in civil penalties and disgorgement of unjust profits to address violations of its anti market manipulation and other rules FERC regulates approximately 1 600 hydroelectric projects in the U S It is largely responsible for permitting construction of a large network of interstate natural gas pipelines FERC also works closely with the United States Coast Guard to review the safety security and environmental impacts of proposed LNG terminals and associated shipping Commissioners editFERC is composed of up to five commissioners who are appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate to staggered five year terms The President appoints one of the commissioners to be the chairman of FERC the administrative head of the agency FERC is a bipartisan body no more than three commissioners may be of the same political party Commissioners may continue in office past the end of their term if a successor has not yet been confirmed up to the end of the current session of Congress The commissioners are Name Party Took office Term expires Willie L Phillips Chair Democratic December 3 2021 June 30 2026 Allison Clements Democratic December 8 2020 June 30 2024 Mark C Christie Republican January 4 2021 June 30 2025 Vacant June 30 2027 Vacant June 30 2028 Past commissioners edit Commissioners 6 Years Served Don S Smith December 13 1973 June 30 1979 Served as FPC Charles B Curtis August 10 1977 December 31 1980 Georgiana Sheldon August 11 1977 July 19 1985 Matthew Holden Jr October 28 1977 August 31 1981 George R Hall October 28 1977 May 8 1981 J David Hughes September 8 1980 July 13 1984 C M Butler III June 5 1981 October 7 1983 Anthony G Sousa September 1 1981 July 30 1988 Oliver G Richard III August 31 1982 July 12 1985 Raymond J O Connor November 10 1983 January 31 1986 Charles G Stalon July 14 1984 November 10 1989 C M Naeve November 4 1985 April 30 1988 Charles A Trabandt November 4 1985 March 31 1993 Martha O Hesse October 6 1986 November 28 1989 Jerry J Langdon October 4 1988 June 5 1993 Elizabeth Anne Moler October 7 1988 June 16 1997 Martin L Allday November 13 1989 October 20 1993 Branko Terzic October 20 1990 May 24 1993 James J Hoecker May 20 1993 January 18 2001 Donald F Santa Jr May 20 1993 June 30 1997 William L Massey May 20 1993 December 9 2003 Vicky A Bailey May 20 1993 January 28 2000 Curtis L Hebert Jr November 14 1997 August 31 2001 Linda Key Breathitt November 13 1997 November 22 2002 Patrick H Wood III June 5 2001 July 8 2005 Nora Mead Brownell June 12 2001 July 21 2006 Joseph T Kelliher November 21 2003 March 13 2009 Suedeen G Kelly November 24 2003 December 24 2009 Marc Spitzer July 21 2006 December 14 2011 Jon Wellinghoff July 31 2006 November 24 2013 Philip D Moeller July 24 2006 October 30 2015 John R Norris January 11 2010 August 20 2014 Cheryl LaFleur July 13 2010 August 30 2019 Tony Clark June 15 2012 September 30 2016 Norman Bay August 4 2014 February 3 2017 Colette D Honorable January 5 2015 June 30 2017 Robert Powelson August 10 2017 August 10 2018 Kevin J McIntyre December 7 2017 January 2 2019 Neil Chatterjee August 8 2017 August 30 2021 Richard Glick November 29 2017 January 3 2023 Bernard L McNamee December 11 2018 September 4 2020 James Danly March 30 2020 January 3 2024 Chairmen edit Chairmen 7 Years Served Charles B Curtis October 1 1977 January 1 1981 Georgiana Sheldon Acting January 2 1981 June 5 1981 C M Butler III June 5 1981 October 5 1983 Raymond J O Connor November 10 1983 January 31 1986 Anthony G Sousa Acting February 1 1986 October 5 1986 Martha O Hesse October 6 1986 November 19 1989 Martin L Allday November 21 1989 February 5 1993 Elizabeth Anne Moler February 5 1993 June 16 1997 James J Hoecker June 19 1997 January 18 2001 William L Massey January 19 2001 January 21 2001 Curtis L Hebert Jr January 22 2001 August 31 2001 Patrick H Wood III September 1 2001 July 8 2005 Joseph T Kelliher July 9 2005 January 23 2009 Jon Wellinghoff Acting January 23 2009 March 19 2009 Jon Wellinghoff March 19 2009 November 24 2013 Cheryl LaFleur Acting November 25 2013 July 30 2014 Cheryl LaFleur July 30 2014 April 14 2015 Norman Bay April 15 2015 January 23 2017 Cheryl LaFleur Acting January 23 2017 August 10 2017 Neil Chatterjee August 10 2017 December 7 2017 Kevin J McIntyre December 7 2017 October 24 2018 Neil Chatterjee October 24 2018 November 5 2020 James Danly November 5 2020 January 21 2021 Richard Glick January 21 2021 January 3 2023 Willie L Phillips January 3 2023 present Acting January 3 2023 February 9 2024 History editFederal Power Commission edit The Federal Power Commission FPC which preceded FERC was established by Congress in 1920 to allow cabinet members to coordinate federal hydropower development In 1935 the FPC was transformed into an independent regulatory agency with five members nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate The FPC was authorized to regulate both hydropower and interstate electricity Natural Gas Act of 1938 edit In 1938 the Natural Gas Act gave FPC jurisdiction over interstate natural gas pipelines and wholesale sales In 1942 this jurisdiction was expanded to cover the licensing of more natural gas facilities In 1954 the Supreme Court decision in Phillips Petroleum Co v Wisconsin extended FPC jurisdiction over all wellhead sales of natural gas in interstate commerce Birth of DOE FPC Becomes FERC edit In response to the 1973 oil crisis Congress passed the Department of Energy Organization Act in 1977 to consolidate various energy related agencies into a Department of Energy Congress insisted that a separate independent regulatory body be retained and the FPC was renamed the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission FERC preserving its independent status within the department 8 Its most basic mandate was to determine whether wholesale electricity prices were unjust and unreasonable and if so to regulate pricing and order refunds for overcharges to ratepayers 9 FERC was also given added responsibility to hear appeals of DOE oil price control determinations and to conduct all on the record hearings for DOE 10 As a result DOE does not have any administrative law judges As a further protection when the Department of Energy proposes a rule it must refer the proposal to FERC and FERC can take over the proceeding if FERC determines that the rulemaking may significantly affect matters in its jurisdiction 11 The DOE Act also transferred the regulation of interstate oil pipelines from the Interstate Commerce Commission to FERC 12 However the FERC lost some jurisdiction over the imports and exports of gas and electricity In 1978 FERC was given additional responsibilities for harmonizing the regulation of wellhead gas sales in both the intrastate and interstate markets FERC also administered a program to foster new cogeneration and small power production under the Public Utilities Regulatory Policy Act of 1978 which was passed as part of the National Energy Act of 1978 The National Energy Act included the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978 which reduced the scope of federal price regulation to bring greater competition to both the natural gas and electric industry In 1989 Congress ended federal regulation of wellhead natural gas prices with the passage of the Natural Gas Wellhead Decontrol Act of 1989 13 Order 888 edit In 1996 FERC issued Order 888 which spurred the creation of regional transmission organizations in the United States This would impact existing electric power pools by rebranding themselves as independent transmission operators Electric utilities in some regions began to spin off their generation units as separate companies that would compete in a wholesale electric market administered by the RTOs 14 Once FERC had created the framework for Regional Transmission Organizations with Order No 888 several such RTOs were approved The pre existing multi state power pool called PJM Pennsylvania Jersey Maryland the New York Independent System Operator NYISO and the Independent Sysoperator New England ISO NE were early adopters California with the backing of its state and Congressional policymakers sought approval of a controversial scheme to set up its ISO called California ISO based near Sacramento CA FERC approved it without changes because California had warned that it would not accept any changes Enron charged one of its policy analysts to figure out how to make the most of the flawed rules put in place for the California electricity market Enron had success with its fraudulent market transactions Energy Policy Act of 2005 edit In 2001 the George W Bush administration sought to give the authority of eminent domain to FERC to circumvent state and local bureaucratic processes which often slowed the siting of new transmission projects This expansion of power was most fiercely opposed by Bush s own Republican party as being an expansion of federal power Legal battles over the issue ended with the 2005 Energy Bill Energy Policy Act of 2005 which was passed with approval of Democrats and Republicans The Energy Policy Act of 2005 expanded FERC s authority to protect the reliability and cybersecurity of the bulk power system through the establishment and enforcement of mandatory standards as well as greatly expanding FERC authority to impose civil penalties on entities that manipulate the electricity and natural gas markets The Energy Policy Act of 2005 also gave FERC additional responsibilities and authority Among the many provisions of the law FERC was given what is known as backstop siting authority which allows FERC to overrule any denial of transmission projects by a state within established corridors of transmission congestion to expand transmission in limited regions of the country facing transmission constraints 15 16 Order 1000 edit In 2010 FERC issued Order 1000 which required RTOs to create regional transmission plans and identify transmission needs based on public policy Cost allocation reforms were included possibly to reduce barriers faced by non incumbent transmission developers 17 Order 841 edit In February 2018 FERC issued Order 841 which required wholesale markets to open up to individual storage installations regardless of interconnection point transmission distribution or behind the meter 18 19 The Order was challenged in court by the state public utility commissions via the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners NARUC the American Public Power Association and others who claimed that FERC overstepped its jurisdiction by regulating how local electric distribution and behind the meter facilities are administered i e in not providing an opt out of wholesale market access for energy storage facilities located at the distribution level or behind the meter A United States courts of appeals court the D C Circuit issued an order in July 2020 that upheld Order 841 and dismissed the petitioners complaints 20 21 22 Order 2222 edit FERC issued Order 2222 on September 17 2020 enabling distributed energy resources such as batteries and demand response to participate in regional wholesale electricity markets 23 24 Market operators submitted initial compliance plans by early 2022 25 The Supreme Court had ruled in 2016 in FERC v Electric Power Supply Ass n that the agency had the authority to regulate demand response transactions 26 Criticism editFERC has been subject to criticism and increasing activism by people from communities affected by its decisions approving pipeline and related projects 27 They contend that FERC blithely greenlights too many pipelines export terminals and other gas infrastructure 27 and that FERC s structure in which it recovers its annual operating costs directly from the entities it regulates creates bias in favor of the issuance of pipeline certificates 28 Some of the critics have disrupted several regular open meetings of the Commission 29 and staged a couple of week long blockades of FERC s headquarters in Washington D C to make their points 30 Pipelines are facing unprecedented opposition Commissioner LaFleur remarked to the National Press Club in a 2015 speech We have a situation here 31 32 33 FERC s decisions in those cases are often upheld by the courts In a July 1 2014 decision No Gas Pipeline v Federal Energy Regulatory Commission the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit D C Circuit said that pipeline applicants are not likely to pursue many certificates that are hopeless The fact that they generally succeed in choosing to expend their resources on applications that serve their own financial interests does not mean that an agency which recognizes merit in such applications is biased the court said 34 Others have directly disputed FERC s critics by pointing out FERC is a creature of law It follows a careful administrative path to regulate only a portion of natural gas such as interstate pipelines and LNG import and export terminals That regulation includes extensive environmental review driven by many federal laws enacted by Congress signed by the president and reviewed and upheld by the U S Supreme Court If the agency were to adopt the path suggested by these critics FERC s decisions would routinely be overturned by the federal courts 35 The United States District Court for the District of Columbia also dismissed a case involving allegations of structural bias on the part of FERC The plaintiffs contended that the Omnibus Budget Act of 1986 funding mechanism requires the commission to recover its budget through proportional charges on regulated entities therefore making FERC biased in favor of the industry from which it gets its funding But in an order issued March 22 2017 the court said the plain language of the statute indicates that FERC does not have control over its own budget The Commission s budget cannot be increased by approving pipelines rather the statute requires the Commission to make adjustments to eliminate any overrecovery or underrecovery If Plaintiffs are unhappy with Congress s chosen appropriations to the Commission Plaintiffs recourse lies with their legislative representatives 28 In New Jersey the FERC approval of the PennEast Pipeline was met with widespread criticism by environmental groups which called the decision highly partisan FERC has once again demonstrated its tremendous bias for and partnership with the pipeline industry said Maya van Rossum leader of the Delaware Riverkeeper Network Doug O Malley president of Environment New Jersey called the FERC approval of the pipeline a disaster David Pringle state campaign director of Clean Water Action and 2018 Congressional candidate suggested the FERC was serving a partisan interest over the interests of the people of New Jersey suggesting The FERC needs to remember it works for the people of the United States not PennEast 36 These criticisms were unfounded as the D C Circuit Court of Appeals on July 10 2018 rejected the Delaware Riverkeeper Network and Maya Van Rossum s claim that FERC has an incentive to award pipeline certificates because it collects its operating expenses from regulated parties Upholding a lower court ruling the D C Circuit also rejected the Delaware Riverkeeper Network s challenge to FERC s use of tolling orders to meet its statutory deadlines for acting on rehearing applications 37 However the D C Circuit has provided additional guidance concerning Commission procedures stating that in one case FERC failed to consider the cumulative environmental impact of four projects that had been separately proposed by the same pipeline The D C Circuit held that the projects were not financially independent and were a single pipeline that was linear and physically interdependent so the cumulative environmental impacts should have been considered concurrently 38 In a separate decision the D C Circuit later sustained the commission s conduct of separate environmental assessments when it clarified that the critical factor was that all of the pipeline s projects were either under construction or pending before FERC for environmental review at the same time noting that the projects lacked temporal overlap 39 Furthermore in another case the D C Circuit sustained the commission s use of a separate environmental assessment when it reasoned that the projects in dispute were unrelated and did not depend on one another for their justification 40 This guidance has allowed FERC to address additional claims of improper segmentation 41 FERC s leaders have stressed many times since the onset of the increased activism that the proper way to oppose a proposed new infrastructure project is by participating in the related proceeding by submitting comments and participating in public comment sessions site visits and scoping meetings since FERC decisions can be appealed up to the Supreme Court Federal versus state authority edit There are regions of the country where the state public utility commission and the FERC regulated Regional Transmission Organization operate in identical footprints such as in New York State Where this occurs state policy makers and FERC frequently clash as to the extent of federal power and influence within the state The planning and siting of public policy and renewable power plants and merchant transmission lines can be contentious because the planning process must proceed through both entities For example in New York State any large more than 20 MW for the NYISO or 2 MW for the state Siting Committee generation or merchant transmission facility must proceed through both the planning process of the NYISO which operates on a two year cycle at minimum with an inclusive class year pool of new projects evaluated simultaneously and the siting process of the state Board on Electric Siting and the Environment Prior to the formation of the NYISO the planning process was determined mostly by the state siting board although the utilities power pool might have had its own closed door planning session and large generation projects were developed by the utilities themselves 42 43 The dual planning process provides an opportunity for other market participants to drag out the process legally not including the other state and or federal environmental trade if an international connection with Canada is requested and local certification and regulation processes that need to be met The controversy similarly applies to various electric wholesale market issues within the RTO when a state public utility commission asserts that its retail ratepayers under state regulation will be impacted by wholesale market stakeholder decisions and reforms under federal level regulation In contrast prior to the formation of the NYISO in 1999 in New York wholesale energy prices were set within a utility s state rate case proceeding Examples of contentious issues in New York include the NYISO s development of buyer side mitigation price floors in its capacity market 44 proxy peaking unit specifications during the demand curve reset that helps set capacity market prices 45 46 the state s granting of zero emissions credits to wholesale market participating nuclear power plants 47 and the creation of a new capacity zone amidst state and transmission owner policy initiatives See also editCategory Federal Energy Regulatory Commission chairpersons 21st century fossil fuel regulations in the United States Custody transfer High voltage direct current North American Electric Reliability Corporation NERC United States energy law Scenic Hudson Preservation Conference v Federal Power Commission Title 18 of the Code of Federal Regulations BIG WIRES Act Proposed electrical transmission legislation directing FERC to mandate minimum interregional capacityReferences edit Cama Timothy June 29 2017 Trump taps Dem Senate aide for energy commission The Hill Retrieved 3 November 2017 Van Loo Rory 2018 08 01 Regulatory Monitors Policing Firms in the Compliance Era Faculty Scholarship About FERC Archived from the original on 8 April 2014 Retrieved 9 Apr 2014 42 U S C 7172 g FERC Addressing the 2000 2001 Western Energy Crisis large stanford edu Retrieved 2024 03 19 Past Commissioners Past FERC Chairmen 42 U S C 7134 Regulation What Is Ferc Blackout FRONTLINE Pbs org Retrieved 2018 12 22 42 U S C 7172 d 42 U S C 7174 42 U S C 7172 b since repealed Statute PDF Gpo gov FERC Landmark Orders Order No 888 Ferc gov Archived from the original on 19 December 2016 Retrieved 3 January 2019 U S Department of Energy December 2009 NATIONAL ELECTRIC TRANSMISSION CONGESTION STUDY PDF Emp lbl gov Archived from the original PDF on 2017 07 08 Retrieved 2018 12 22 Rossi Jim December 21 2009 The Trojan Horse of Electric Power Transmission Line Siting Authority Law lclark edu Retrieved 2018 12 22 FERC Industries Order No 1000 Transmission Planning and Cost Allocation Ferc gov Archived from the original on 30 October 2018 Retrieved 3 January 2019 Ko Ted 2019 10 17 Let s kill utility or grid scale storage Utility Dive Retrieved 2019 10 17 Konidena Rao 2019 FERC Order 841 levels the playing field for energy storage MRS Energy amp Sustainability 6 1 3 doi 10 1557 mre 2019 5 S2CID 182646294 via CambridgeCore Jeff St John July 10 2020 Enormous Step for Energy Storage as Court Upholds FERC Order 841 Opening Wholesale Markets www greentechmedia com Retrieved January 16 2021 FERC Order 841 US about to take most important step towards clean energy future www energy storage news July 13 2020 Retrieved January 16 2020 Sean Baur September 1 2020 Going beyond Order 841 to more meaningful FERC storage policy Retrieved January 16 2021 FERC Opens Wholesale Markets to Distributed Resources Landmark Action Breaks Down Barriers to Emerging Technologies Boosts Competition FERC Retrieved 2022 04 07 Game Changer FERC Order Opens Up Wholesale Grid Markets to Distributed Energy Resources www greentechmedia com Retrieved 2022 04 07 FERC Order 2222 Experts offer cheers and jeers for first round of filings Canary Media Retrieved 2022 04 07 FERC v Electric Power Supply Assn No 14 840 577 U S slip op at 2 33 34 2016 a b FERC faces heightened scrutiny as gas projects proliferate Hannah Northey E amp E November 3 2014 a b Delaware Riverkeepers Network v Federal Energy Regulatory Commission No 16 CU 416 D D C March 22 2017 See for example RTO Insider Protesters Interrupt FERC Open Meeting Michael Brooks 1 26 2015 Meet the People Making Life a Little More Difficult for FERC this Week RTO Insider May 26 2015 NPC Luncheon with Cheryl LaFleur chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission National Press Club 15 January 2015 Retrieved 3 January 2019 NATIONAL PRESS CLUB LUNCHEON WITH FERC CHAIRMAN CHERYL LAFLEUR SUBJECT PLANS FOR REDUCING GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS PDF Press org Retrieved 3 January 2019 Zullo Robert December 22 2017 New FERC chief Pipeline permit policies to be reviewed Richmond Times Dispatch Richmond Virginia p A5 FERC faces several lawsuits over its approval of pipeline projects which critics say amounts to a rubber stamp that in turn confers handsome rates of return and powers of eminent domain to seize private property without adequately vetting whether they serve true public purpose NO GAS PIPELINE Petitioner v FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION Respondent Statoil Natural Gas LLC et al Intervenors Nos 12 1470 12 1474 12 1475 Decided July 1 2014 FERC Protests Make No Sense Kennedy Maize Powermag com May 24 2016 Deak Mike August 17 2016 Activists critical of federal hearing on PennEast pipeline My Central Jersey Archived from the original on 2021 07 31 Retrieved July 31 2021 Delaware Riverkeeper Network and Maya Van Rossum v FERC No 17 5084 D C Cir 2018 See Delaware Riverkeeper Network v FERC 13 1015 U S Court of Appeals for the D C Circuit Minisink Residents for Environmental Preservation and Safety et al v FERC No 12 1481 Myersville Citizens for a Rural Cmty Inc v FERC 783 F 3d 1301 1326 7 D C Cir 2015 Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Company LLC 149 FERC 61 258 2014 NYISO 30 OATT Attachment X Board on Electric Generation Siting and the Environment 3 dps my gov Retrieved November 7 2018 ORDER GRANTING COMPLAINT IN PART AND DENYING IN PART PDF Ferc gov February 3 2017 pp 1 2 Archived from the original PDF on June 30 2018 Retrieved November 7 2018 Rich Heidorn Jr January 24 2017 FERC OKs NYISO Demand Curve Reset RTO Insider Archived from the original on November 8 2018 Retrieved November 8 2018 COMMENTS OF THE STATE ENTITIES ON NYISO STAFF RECOMMENDATIONS REGARDING ICAP DEMAND CURVE PARAMETERS PDF October 3 2016 pp i ii 48 52 Archived from the original PDF on November 8 2018 Retrieved November 7 2018 Rory D Sweeney June 3 2018 Analyst FERC Asserts Role in Handling Nuke Subsidies RTO Insider Archived from the original on November 8 2018 Retrieved November 7 2018 Further reading editGies Erica Making the Consumer an Active Participant in the Grid The New York Times November 29 2010 Discusses distributed generation and the U S Federal Energy Regulatory Commission White Richard 2012 Railroaded The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0393342376 External links editOfficial site Electricity LNG Terminals Natural Gas Hydroelectric Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in the Federal Register Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Federal Energy Regulatory Commission amp oldid 1219171957, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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