FERC Update April 1, 2008 New Orleans, LA National Association of Regulatory Utilities Commissioners...
-
Upload
frank-dawson -
Category
Documents
-
view
218 -
download
1
Transcript of FERC Update April 1, 2008 New Orleans, LA National Association of Regulatory Utilities Commissioners...
FERC UpdateApril 1, 2008
New Orleans, LA
National Association of Regulatory Utilities
CommissionersStaff Subcommittee on Accounting and Finance
FERC Update
Steven D. Hunt, CPA
Division of Financial Regulation
Office of Enforcement
Washington, DC
3
Disclaimer
The views and comments presented are my own and do not represent, nor are they to be interpreted to represent the views, comments, or positions of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
4
AGENDA
Commission MembersCommission Members Organizational Changes Form 2 Final Rule Form 1 NOPR Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on
Affiliate Transactions Blanket Authorization Under Section
203
5
Chairman Kelliher
Nominated by President George W. Bush to a Republican seat on the Commission, and was sworn in on November 20, 2003, for his first term and on December 21, 2007 for his second term.
He was designated Chairman of the Commission by President Bush, effective July 9, 2005.
Before becoming a Commissioner, Mr. Kelliher was Senior Policy Advisor to Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham. In that capacity, he advised the Secretary on a wide range of energy policy matters. Mr. Kelliher helped develop the National Energy Policy. He had served as Senior Policy Advisor to the Secretary since the inauguration of President George W. Bush.
Education: Georgetown University, School of Foreign Service, B.S.F.S., 1983; American University Washington College of Law, J.D., Magna Cum Laude, 1994.
6
Commissioner Kelly
Suedeen G. Kelly is a Commissioner at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, confirmed to a term that expires June 30, 2009.
Previously she was a Professor of Law at the University of New Mexico School of Law, where she taught energy law, public utility regulation, administrative law and legislative process. She also worked with the law firm of Modrall, Sperling, Roehl, Harris & Sisk in Albuquerque from 2000 through 2003.
In 2000, Ms. Kelly served as counsel to the California Independent System Operator. In 1999, she worked as a Legislative Aide to U.S. Senator Jeff Bingaman.
She received a B.A. With Distinction in Chemistry from the University of Rochester and a J.D. cum laude from Cornell Law School. She is admitted to the bars of New Mexico and the District of Columbia.
7
Commissioner Moeller
Commissioner Philip D. Moeller was nominated by President Bush, and sworn into office on July 24, 2006, by Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts, for a term expiring June 30, 2010.
From 1997 through 2000, Mr. Moeller served as an energy policy advisor to U.S. Senator Slade Gorton (R-Washington) where he worked on electricity policy, electric system reliability, hydropower, energy efficiency, nuclear waste, energy and water appropriations and other energy legislation.
Before becoming a Commissioner, Mr. Moeller headed the Washington, D.C., office of Alliant Energy Corporation, an electric and natural gas utility company based in Madison, Wisconsin. Prior to Alliant Energy, Mr. Moeller worked in the Washington office of Calpine Corporation.
Mr. Moeller was born in Chicago, and grew up on a ranch near Spokane, Washington.
He received a B.A. in Political Science from Stanford University.
8
Commissioner Spitzer Marc Spitzer was nominated by President Bush to the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and confirmed by the U.S. Senate for a term expiring June 30, 2011.
Mr. Spitzer was elected in 2000 to the Arizona Corporation Commission (ACC) and in 2002 was elected ACC Chairman by his colleagues.
As Chairman, he focused on policies encouraging expansion of natural gas infrastructure, specifically distribution and storage; creating a demand side management policy; enhancing the ACC’s renewables standard; and advancing consumer privacy concerns in telecommunications. As Chairman, he established a legacy of balancing competing interests, while ensuring Arizonans receive safe, economical and reliable utility services.
After graduating from Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, he attended the University of Michigan School of Law.
9
Commissioner Wellinghoff
Commissioner Jon Wellinghoff was nominated by President Bush, and sworn into office on July 31, 2006, by U.S. Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, for a term expiring June 30, 2008.
Before coming to the Commission, Mr. Wellinghoff was a shareholder with a Nevada law firm. He has concentrated his practice in the fields of energy law and utility regulation for the past thirty years.
Mr. Wellinghoff was appointed by the Attorney General of Nevada to serve as the state's first Consumer Advocate for Customers of Public Utilities. While Consumer Advocate, He served two terms as Consumer Advocate, and personally participated in dozens of complex utility rate and regulatory matters on behalf of Nevada Consumers.
Education: Antioch School of Law, Washington, D.C., JD, 1975; Howard University, Washington, D.C., M.A.T., Mathematics, 1972; and University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada, BS, Mathematics, 1971.
10
AGENDA
Commission Members Organizational ChangesOrganizational Changes Form 2 Final Rule Form 1 NOPR Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on
Affiliate Transactions Blanket Authorization Under Section
203
11
Organizational Changes
12
AGENDA
Commission Members Organizational Changes Form 2 Final RuleForm 2 Final Rule Form 1 NOPR Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on
Affiliate Transactions Blanket Authorization Under Section
203
13
Form No. 2 Final Rule
Docket No. RM07-9-000, Order No. 710Revisions to Forms, Statements, and Reporting
Requirements for Natural Gas Pipelines NOPR Issued September 20, 2007 Final Rule Issued March 20, 2008 Comments Due 45 days after published in
Federal Register
14
Form No. 2 Final Rule
Proposed Changes in NOPR:Additional revenue informationAdditional information to identify costs
associated with affiliated transactionsAdditional information on incremental facilities
and discounted and negotiated ratesEliminate FERC Form No. 11Extend the filing date of CPA Certification
Statement to May 18
15
Form No. 2 Final Rule Purpose:
To expand & update the forms to reflect current market and cost information relevant to pipelines and their customers
To provide, in greater detail, information the Commission needs to carry out its regulatory responsibilities
To provide pipeline customers the information they need to assess the justness and reasonableness of pipeline rates
16
Form No. 2 Final Rule
Final Rule:Acquisition & Disposition of Shipper-supplied
Gas• Add Page 521 A & B to Forms 2, 2-A & 3-Q
• Difference of gas received from shippers & gas consumed in pipeline operations, monthly
• Disposition of excess gas & accounting given to disposition• Source of gas used to meet any deficiency & accounting
basis of gas
• Add Page 520 (Gas Account-Natural Gas) to Form 3-Q
• Footnote to Page 520 – Gas purchased applicable to each gas pipeline expense account
17
Form No. 2 Final Rule
Final Rule:Other Gas Dispositions
• Pages 300-301 (Gas Operating Revenues) – Expand detail to report sales amounts reported in Accounts 480-484 on individual lines
• Page 308 (Other Gas Revenues (Account 495))• Add to Form 2-A• Modify schedule to specify certain types of revenues• List environmental credits earned in a footnote
18
Form No. 2 Final Rule
Final Rule:Affiliate Transactions
• Add Page 358 (Transactions with Associated (Affiliated) Companies) to Forms 2 & 2-A
• Describe good or service transacted• Name of the associated company• FERC account charged or credited• Amount charged or credited• $250,000 cost threshold
• Page 358 & Page 357 (Charges for Outside Professional and Other Consultative Services)
• Report the total of all services < $250,000
19
Form No. 2 Final Rule
Final Rule:Incremental Pricing Policy
• Add Page 217 (Non-Traditional Rate Treatment Afforded New Projects) to Forms 2 & 2-A
• Name of facility• Docket Number• Rate treatment (e.g., incremental)• Amount of plant in service & accumulated depreciation• Amount of accumulated deferred income taxes• Amount of operating & maintenance expense• Amount of depreciation expense• Amount of incremental revenues and other expenses
20
Form No. 2 Final Rule
Final Rule:Discounted & Negotiated Rate Services
• Add Page 313 (Discounted and Negotiated Rate Services) to Forms 2 & 2-A
• Report revenues and volumes applicable to discounted and negotiated rate services provided during the reporting period
State Income Tax Expense• Amend Pages 262-263 (Taxes Accrued, Prepaid and
Charged During Year, Distribution of Taxes Charged)• New column to report state & local income tax rates• Add schedule to Form 2-A
21
Form No. 2 Final Rule
Final Rule:Deferred Income Taxes
• Add instruction to each deferred tax schedule requiring a summary of the type and amount of deferred income taxes reported in the beginning & end of year balances
• Pages 234-235 (Accumulated Deferred Income Taxes)• Pages 274-275 (Accumulated Deferred Income Taxes-
Other Property)• Pages 276-277 (Accumulated Deferred Income Taxes-
Other)
22
Form No. 2 Final Rule
Final Rule: Regulatory Assets and Liabilities
• Page 232 (Other Regulatory Assets) & Page 274 (Other Regulatory Liabilities)
• Add footnote citation for each regulatory asset & liability to identify regulatory approval
• New column to identify amounts written-off during period as non-recoverable or non-refundable
Employee Pensions and Benefits• Amend instructions to Page 122.1 – Disclose the amount of
cost recognized in the filer’s financial statements for each plan and the basis for determining the filer’s share of the total plan costs
• Add Page 352 (Employee Pensions and Benefits) to Forms 2 & 2-A
23
Form No. 2 Final Rule Final Rule:
Capital Structure & Rate of Return• Page 218a
• Amend instructions to require the name of the entity whose capital structure is reported in a footnote
• When reporting common equity at line 5, column d• Indicate if the ROR was approved in a rate case• Indicate if the ROR was calculated in a black-box
settlement• Indicate if the ROR was an actual three-year average
24
Form No. 2 Final Rule Final Rule:
Costs & Revenues (Trackers & Surcharges)• Summary of the revenues and expenses associated
with tracked costs in the footnotes to the financial statements
Form No. 11• Eliminated• Replaced with new schedule in the Form No. 2 & 2-A
• “Monthly Quantity & Revenue Data by Rate Schedule”
25
Form No. 2 Final Rule Final Rule:
CPA Certification Statement• Filing date extended to May 18
Non-Filing Status NotificationRequests for extension of time
• Pipeline must show good cause
Effective Date – January 1, 2008• First quarter 2009 Form 3-Q• Calendar year 2008 Form 2 and 2-A
26
AGENDA
Commission Members Organizational Changes Form 2 Final Rule Form 1 NOPRForm 1 NOPR Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on
Affiliate Transactions Blanket Authorization Under Section
203
27
Form No. 1 NOPR
Docket No. RM08-5-000 Proposes changes to FERC Form Nos. 1, 1-
F, and 3-QNotice of Inquiry issued February 15, 2007
NOPR Issued January 18, 2008 Comments Due March 14, 2008
28
Form No. 1 NOPR
Purpose of Form 1 Provide basic financial and operational
information to allow the Commission, customers, and competitors to monitor a utility’s rates for jurisdictional services
Provide information needed to perform a preliminary rate assessment and determine whether a complaint may be warranted
29
Form No. 1 NOPR
Purpose of NOPR:To improve the forms, reports, and
statements to provide, in fuller detail, the information the Commission needs to carry out its responsibilities to ensure that rates are J&R, and to provide others the information they need to assess the justness and reasonableness of electric rates.
30
Form No. 1 NOPR
Proposed Conclusions:Demand Response Data
• Should not be collected in Form No. 1
Formula Rates• If inputs to a formula rate deviate from Form No.
1, filer must explain in a footnote
Defining “major” & “nonmajor” utilities• Request specific suggestions
31
Form No. 1 NOPR
Proposed Conclusions:Waiver for utilities who are not public utilities
under Part II of the FPA• Morenci Water & Electric Co., 121 FERC ¶
61,024 (2007)
Non-Calendar Fiscal Year• Utility may file Form 1 (unaudited) each April and
file a second Form 1 (audited) at end of fiscal year with CPA Certification
32
Form No. 1 NOPR Proposed Conclusions:
Affiliated Transactions• Add Page 429 (Transactions with Associated
(Affiliated) Companies)• Description of the good or service charged or credited• Name of the associated company• FERC account charged or credited• Amount charged or credited
Other Revenues – Page 300• Revenues not otherwise specified on Pages 328-
300 must be provided in a footnote to Page 300
33
Form No. 1 NOPR
Proposed Conclusions:Higher Threshold Levels
• Page 216 (Construction Work in Progress) – Report projects with balances < $1 million
• Pages 232, 233, 269 & 278 (Other Regulatory Assets, Misc. Deferred Debits, Other Deferred Credits & Other Regulatory Liabilities) – Raise the balance limit for grouping items to $100,000
34
Form No. 1 NOPR
Proposed Conclusions:Higher Threshold Levels
• Page 352 & 253 (Research & Development) – Raise the cost of R&D items to be listed to $50,000
Notification of Non-Filing Status• Utility currently required to file Form No. 1 or 1-F
that determines it is no longer required to file must notify the Commission of change in filing status
Extension of Time Requests• Must show good cause
35
Form No. 1 NOPR
Proposed Conclusions:Technical Corrections
Proposed effective date:Form 3-Q – First calendar quarter of 2009Form 1 and 1-F – April 2010 for calendar year
2009
36
AGENDA
Commission Members Organizational Changes Form 2 Final Rule Form 1 NOPR Cross-Subsidization Restrictions Cross-Subsidization Restrictions
on Affiliate Transactionson Affiliate Transactions Blanket Authorization Under Section
203
37
Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on Affiliate Transactions
Docket No. RM07-15-000; Order No. 707Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on Affiliate
Transactions NOPR Issued July 20, 2007 Final Rule Issued February 21, 2008 Amends 18 C.F.R. Part 35
38
Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on Affiliate Transactions
Purpose: To provide certainty to public utilities and
customers with respect to the pricing standard that must be applied to certain affiliate transactions.
Scope:Franchised public utilities that have captive
customers or that own or provide transmission service over jurisdictional transmission facilities.
39
Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on Affiliate Transactions
Requirements:Commission approval of all wholesale sales
between a franchised public utility with captive customers and a market-regulated power sales affiliate
Franchised public utility with captive customers must provide non-power goods and services to a market-regulated power sales affiliate or a non-utility affiliate at a price that is the higher of cost or market price
40
Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on Affiliate Transactions
Requirements:Franchised public utility with captive
customers cannot purchase non-power goods or services from a market-regulated power sales affiliate or a non-utility affiliate at a price above market price, unless
Franchised public utility with captive customers receive non-power goods and services from a centralized service company at cost.
41
Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on Affiliate Transactions
Effective:March 31, 2008Applies to any contracts, agreements or
arrangements entered into on or after the effective date
42
AGENDA
Commission Members Organizational Changes Form 2 Final Rule Form 1 NOPR Cross-Subsidization Restrictions on
Affiliate Transactions Blanket Authorization Under Blanket Authorization Under
Section 203Section 203
43
Blanket Authorization Under Section 203
Docket No. RM07-21-000; Order No. 708 NOPR Issued July 20, 2007 Final Rule Issued February 21, 2008 Amends 18 C.F.R. Part 33 Adds five blanket authorizations under
Section 203(a)(1)
44
Blanket Authorization Under Section 203
Purpose:To facilitate investment in the electric utility
industryTo ensure public utility customers are
adequately protected from any adverse effects of changes in control
To ensure that transactions qualifying under the section 203(a)(2) blanket authorization would not have to seek approval under section 203(a)(1)
45
Blanket Authorization Under Section 203
Blanket Authorization NOPRProposes pre-authorization for a public utility
to dispose of less than 10% of its voting securities to a public utility holding company
• Holding company and any associate companies MUST own less than 10% (in aggregate) of the outstanding voting interest of that public utility
Final Rule Adopts Blanket Authorization NOPRProvides 4 additional blanket authorizations
46
Blanket Authorization Under Section 203
Final Rule:Provides blanket authorization for a public
utility to transfer its outstanding voting securities to any holding company granted a blanket authorization under section 203(a)(2) in:
• 18 C.F.R. 33.1(c)(8)• 18 C.F.R. 33.1(c)(9)• 18 C.F.R. 33.1(c)(10)
47
Blanket Authorization Under Section 203
Final Rule:§ 33.1(c)(8) - Grants a blanket authorization
under section 203(a)(2) to a person that is a holding company solely with respect to one or more exempt wholesale generators (EWGs), foreign utility companies (FUCOs), or qualifying facilities (QFs) to acquire the securities of additional EWGs, FUCOs, or QFs
• 10% in aggregate limitation
48
Blanket Authorization Under Section 203
Final Rule:§ 33.1(c)(9) – Grants a conditional blanket
authorization under section 203(a)(2) to a holding company, or a subsidiary of that company, that is regulated by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Bank or by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, under the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 as amended by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999
49
Blanket Authorization Under Section 203
Final Rule:§ 33.1(c)(10) – Grants a limited blanket
authorization under section 203(a)(2) to a holding company, or a subsidiary of that company, for the acquisition of securities of a public utility or a holding company that includes a public utility for purposes of underwriting activities or hedging transactions
50
Blanket Authorization Under Section 203
Final Rule: Provides blanket authorization for the acquisition or
disposition of a jurisdictional contract where:• Neither the acquirer nor transferor has captive customers or
owns or provides transmission service over jurisdiction transmission facilities
• The contract does not convey control over the operation of a generation or transmission facility
• The parties to the transaction are neither affiliates nor associate companies,
• The acquirer is a public utility
51
Where to Find More Information
52
Where to Find More Information
53
Compliance and Clarification Filings
54
Thank you for your attention!
Steven D. Hunt Federal Energy Regulatory Commission 888 First Street, NE Washington, DC 20426 (202) 502-6084 [email protected]