SHERIDAN, District Judge.
This non-jury case was tried before the Court over thirteen separate days in April and May, 2013. After trial, the parties submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law as well as briefs, and thereafter, summations were heard. The Court, having considered the parties' submissions and having deliberated over the facts and the law, submits this memorandum as its decision.
In broad terms, the issue before the Court is whether the New Jersey Long-Term Capacity Pilot Project Act, P.L. 2001, c. 9, approved Jan. 28, 2011, codified at N.J.S.A. §§ 48:3-51, 48:3-98.2-.4 ("LCAPP" or "Act"), should be declared unconstitutional as violating the Supremacy Clause, and whether the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities ("NJBPU", "BPU", or as referred to herein as the "Board") should be enjoined from engaging in activities in furtherance of the Act because the LCAPP is preempted by the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. § 824 et seq.. That is, whether actions by the State of New Jersey taken pursuant to the LCAPP intrude upon and interfere with the authority delegated to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (as referred to herein, "FERC" or "Commission") by the Federal Power Act.
Before proceeding to the substance of this case, the Court provides two cautionary observations regarding writing style and organization and a general reservation as to the presentation and scope of the findings within this decision. First, on writing style. The electric energy industry has its own jargon which makes great use of acronyms. With so many acronyms being used, the testimony and briefs become like alphabet soup where all the letters swirl around and may confuse the reader. As such, a list of acronyms which have been substantially agreed upon by the parties is attached as Rider A. The Court minimizes use of these acronyms in this
New Jersey Board of Public Utilities. The defendants are Robert M. Hanna
CPV Power Development, Inc. CPV Power Development, Inc. ("CPV") is an Intervenor/Defendant. CPV is a Delaware corporation that, through its subsidiaries, is engaged in the development, ownership, and management of natural gas-fired facilities in North America (T. 1587, 10-24). CPV owns and manages a natural gas-fired generation facility in Riverside County, California, and has taken steps to develop other natural gas-fired facilities, including
The Plaintiffs are a group of wholesale, retail, and marketing companies who produce and sell energy and are located within the PJM market
Plaintiff Calpine Corporation is an electric generation and marketing corporation with a number of subsidiaries. It is a publicly traded, independent power producer based in Houston, Texas which operates ninety-one (91) power plants throughout the United States and Canada. The Calpine generation companies are physically located in the PJM market and participate in the PJM wholesale energy and capacity markets.
Plaintiff Exelon Generation Company, LLC is a Pennsylvania corporation headquartered in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania. Exelon Generation is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Exelon Corporation. Exelon Generation's business consists of owning and operating electric generating facilities, wholesale power marketing operations, and competitive retail supply operations. Exelon Generation sells energy and capacity in the PJM interstate market and competes in PJM's wholesale capacity auctions.
The PPL Parties are a group of related companies principally located in Allentown, Pennsylvania which are market and generation subsidiaries of PPL Corporation. They are physically located in the PJM market and participate in the PJM wholesale energy and capacity markets. Together they control or own about 19,000 megawatts of generating capacity in the United States, some of which is located within the PJM market.
Plaintiff PSEG Power, LLC is a Delaware limited liability company, headquartered in Newark, New Jersey. PSEG Power is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc., PSEG Power owns approximately 11,850 megawatts of generating capacity within the PJM area, approximately 9,950 megawatts of which is located in New Jersey. PSEG Power sells energy and capacity at wholesale in interstate commerce, including in PJM's capacity and energy markets.
Plaintiff Public Service Electric and Gas Company ("PSE & G"), a subsidiary of Public Service Enterprise Group, is located in New Jersey and is one of the largest combined electric and gas companies in the United States. It is also New Jersey's oldest and largest publicly owned utility. PSE & G currently serves nearly three quarters of New Jersey's population from Bergen to Gloucester Counties.
Plaintiff Atlantic City Electric Company, based in New Jersey, is a subsidiary of Pepco Holdings, Inc., which provides electric service to approximately 547,000 customers in southern New Jersey. Pepco Holdings, Inc. is one of the largest energy delivery companies in the Mid-Atlantic region, serving about 1.9 million customers in Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maryland and New Jersey.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("Commission" or "FERC") and
Pursuant to the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. § 824 et seq., the Commission has federal statutory authority to regulate the transmission of electric energy in interstate commerce and the sale of electric energy at wholesale in interstate commerce. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 5). In this case, the scope of the Commission's jurisdiction in regulating the sale of electric capacity in the wholesale market, and whether such jurisdiction is exclusive or concurrent with the Board's jurisdiction, is at issue. The applicable federal statute from which the Commission derives its authority reads:
(b) Use or sale of electric energy in interstate commerce.
PJM Interconnection, LLC is a voluntary association of different energy stakeholders which includes administrative bodies and electric generators.
PJM was originally founded in 1927. The name "PJM" is the brainchild of its earliest members who were from the states of "Pennsylvania (P), New Jersey (J), Maryland (M)". (T. 410, 22 through T. 411, 8). It was formed as a "power pool" for traditional utilities which recognized that a regional transmission organization could easily accommodate sharing of electric capacity more efficiently (T. 39, 5-10). The sharing of electrical capacity through such arrangements drastically drops consumer costs by limiting the number of electrical generation facilities required for peak hour production. As noted above, PJM operates pursuant to a tariff filed by PJM with the Commission called the "Open Access Transmission Tariff." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 23).
PJM has been a relatively successful operation. For instance, today, PJM is the "largest centrally dispatched power market ... in the world," covering 60 million customers and 185,000 megawatts.
Gradually, the traditional utilities within PJM transferred operational control of all their transmission to PJM. Currently, PJM is responsible for "[m]anaging a regional transmission grid encompassing all or part of thirteen states and the District of Columbia." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 11).
PJM, under the supervision of the Commission, is "responsible for planning the electric system to preserve the reliability of the electricity supply" in New Jersey. (Pl.'s Ex. 45, at 27). That is, PJM "plan[s] expansions to transmission to improve the ability to transmit energy from where it is generated to serve load." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 11). Most importantly, PJM is also responsible for the "dispatching" of generation in real time. It does this from "a very sophisticated control room in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania ... which looks like an air traffic control system." (T. 50, 6-13). From this control room, PJM "direct[s] this generator[], to ramp up [and]... to ramp down all in real time. Because over this 13 state area they must insure that supply and demand are matched almost perfectly in real time." (T. 50, 12-13). Despite these functions, PJM has no authority to construct or build a power plant, and likewise it has no authority to retire antiquated power plants. (Def.'s Ex. 183).
There were a number of witnesses who testified at trial, each of whom is identified below. All of these witnesses were very professional and proficient in their careers, and the Court weighed their credibility in light of these qualifications.
William L. Massey obtained his Law Degree from the University of Arkansas School of Law in 1973, and later earned an LLM from Georgetown University Law Center in 1985. Upon his law school graduation, he clerked for the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. He later became Chief Counsel for U.S. Senator Dale Bumpers of Arkansas, where he focused on energy matters before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. President Clinton later appointed Mr. Massey to be a Commissioner of the Commission where he served for over ten years. Mr. Massey currently serves as a partner in the Washington, DC office of the law firm Covington and Burling and is an Adjunct Professor at the Georgetown University Law Center. Mr. Massey was qualified as an expert "in the history and evolution of the electricity industry." (T. 23, 12-15).
Joseph Dominguez is the Senior Vice-President for Governmental and Regulatory Affairs and Public Policy for Exelon Corporation. He obtained a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mechanical Engineering from the New Jersey Institute of Technology and a Law Degree from Rutgers University School of Law. He previously worked at the law firm of White & Williams in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and served as an Assistant United States Attorney in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
Robert D. Willig, Ph.D. is a Professor of Economics and Public Affairs at Princeton University. Professor Willig studied
Michael Cudwadie is employed by PPL Energy Plus as Vice-President of Trading East. In that role, he is responsible for the hedging and trading activities of 9,000 megawatts of generation in the PJM markets. He has a Bachelor's Degree in Accounting from Pennsylvania State University, and an MBA from Lehigh University.
Zamir Rauf has been employed by Calpine Corporation as its Chief Financial Officer since 2008. In that role, he is responsible for the accounting and treasury functions of Calpine which include project finance, investor relations and risk management.
Daniel Cregg is the Vice-President of Finance for PSEG Power within PSEG Services Corporation. In this role, he develops business plans and near term earnings forecasts, prepares forecasts of market direction and analyzes elements of major investment decisions. He has a Bachelor's Degree in Accounting from Lehigh University and an MBA from the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business.
Anthony Robinson is employed by PSE & G as Director of Basic Generation Service and Basic Gas Supply Service. He has a Bachelor's Degree in Economics, Applied Math and Statistics from Stoney Brook University. (T. 939, 14-17).
James P. Giuliano is Director of the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities' Division of Reliability and Security. He is responsible for natural gas pipeline safety, underground damage prevention and emergency management and security. He has a Bachelor's Degree in Communications, and has completed many state certifications in courses related to his job.
Oden Sherman Knight is the Senior Vice President of Marketing and Organization at CPV where he manages power sales and gas purchases. (T. 1584, 16). He has a Bachelor's Degree in Mechanical Engineering from Stanford University and a Masters in Business from Columbia University (T. 1584, 4-7).
Craig R. Roach is a principal of Boston Pacific Company, a consulting firm which focuses on power plant development. He has a Bachelor's Degree in Economics from John Carroll University and a Doctorate in Economics from the University of Wisconsin. Mr. Roach was qualified as an expert in the design and implementation of competitive procurements and competitive markets for electricity.
Mr. Richard L. Levitan was the Board's advisor for implementation of the LCAPP. He has served as President of the consulting firm Levitan & Associates since its founding in 1989. The firm provides management consulting and analytic expertise to regional transmission organizations and short form independent system operators. He is a graduate of Cornell University and received a Masters with a specialization in Energy Economics from Harvard University.
Energy is "the actual electricity" that electric generators produce and which residential and business consumers ultimately use
Energy is a product in interstate commerce. Regardless of which generator dispenses the energy, it ordinarily travels through interstate commerce to reach its destination. In 1927, the Supreme Court held that the interstate commerce clause prohibits states from regulating the rates for wholesale energy sales between utilities in different states because those sales are interstate transactions. Pub. Utils. Comm'n of R.I. v. Attleboro Steam & Elec. Co., 273 U.S. 83, 47 S.Ct. 294, 71 L.Ed. 549 (1927); (Stipulated Facts ¶ 4). Surprisingly, no witness precisely described the logistics of an energy delivery transaction (i.e., how energy is transmitted from a generator to a consumer) except to say that the delivery of energy is overseen by PJM and PJM routes energy through its transmission system. (T. 50, 6-13)
Amount of Energy. Energy is usually measured in megawatts. One megawatt of electricity powers approximately 1,000 households. Usually, megawatts are associated with lengths of time such as "per day" or "per hour." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 18).
Capacity. "Capacity" is defined as "the ability to produce electricity when called upon." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 17). In essence, capacity is the ability to produce sufficient energy to meet demand. At certain times, such as during the summer months when temperatures increase, demand for energy increases. Regardless of fluctuations, there must be sufficient capacity to meet the demand of high energy use at all times.
Capacity Resources. "Capacity resources include electric generation facilities (e.g., nuclear, natural gas, coal, wind, or solar), demand resources (i.e., the ability to call upon consumers to reduce their electricity demand), and energy efficiency resources (measures that reduce demand)." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 19).
Reliability. "Reliability" is the delivery of electricity to customers in the amounts desired and within acceptable standards for frequency, duration and magnitude of outages and other adverse conditions or events. (T. 81, 23 through T. 83, 12). According to Mr. Levitan, electric reliability means being able to "keep consumers' lights on" under duress and maintaining the power system when operating contingencies arise. (T. 1549, 8-11); see also I/M/O the Petition of Public Service Gas and Electric Company for a Determination Pursuant to the Provisions of N.J.S.A. 40:55D-19 (Susquehanna-Roseland Transmission Line). Resource adequacy is a key component of reliability. (T. 1549, 6-14). The key factor in meeting the reliability standard is having sufficient generators and transmission lines available to
Generation Plants. Generation plants are categorized into three types — base load, mid-merit, and peaking plants. The parties agree on the definition of base load and mid-merit. A base load plant is a plant that operates all or most of the time. A mid-merit plant, such as a combinedcycle gas turbine, is a plant that operates less than a base load plant but more than a peaking plant. The parties disagree on the definition of a peaking plant; but generally, a peaking plant is "a gas turbine, a simple cycle unit, a unit that is typically run sparingly, a unit that has certain technology characteristics that allow it to get started from a cold stand-by mode, and achieve full operation in just a few minutes." (T. 1289, 12-16).
In the beginning of the twentieth century, the New Jersey Legislature, like many other state legislatures at the time, enacted a statute creating a public utility to oversee the operation of electric and gas utilities. During the early stages of utility regulation, states had exclusive authority over such utilities. During this time, the energy industry "was dominated by vertically integrated utility companies" (hereinafter, referred to as "traditional utilities")
Typically, the traditional utility was granted an exclusive right by state and local governments to provide electric service to all consumers located in a defined territory. The traditional utility also had other powers, such as eminent domain authority, that would allow it to construct and operate power plants and local distribution networks to connect those power plants to local customers. In return, the traditional utility obligated itself to operate as a "common carrier" with the duty to provide service on a non-discriminatory basis, and to subject its rates to regulation by a state public utility commission. The regulatory standards adopted by state commissions permitted rates that would reimburse utilities for their costs incurred in providing service and debt incurred in financing the construction of power plants and other equipment. The standards were also meant to afford investors in these utilities a reasonable rate of return. This structure enabled the traditional utility to raise capital through the issuance of stock or selling of debt, which, in turn, would allow the utility to expand its facilities. Recovery of and on an investment in a traditional utility, however, was always subject to a "prudence review" by the Board in New Jersey. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 2).
In 1927, the Supreme Court of the United States decided the landmark case Pub. Utils. Comm'n of R.I. v. Attleboro Steam & Elec. Co., 273 U.S. 83, 47 S.Ct. 294, 71 L.Ed. 549 (1927). In that case, the Public Utilities Commission of Rhode Island attempted to regulate the sale of electricity from the Narragansett Electric Lighting Company to the Attleboro Steam & Electric Company located in Massachusetts. The Court struck down the Public Utilities Commission of Rhode Island's efforts deeming that its regulation had placed a direct burden on interstate commerce. The Court's decision ultimately created a regulatory gap wherein no regulator had the authority to oversee interstate transactions made by traditional utilities.
Before the advent of federal authority in the electric power industry, a traditional utility "performed three main operational tasks: it built, owned, and operated electric power plants; it transmitted electricity from the power plants to the area of service in which it enjoyed a monopoly; and it distributed the electricity to its customers in that area of service using its local distribution network, that is, the poles and wires that it owned and maintained." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 1). Each traditional utility was, in essence, a "single company" that "generated power, transmitted that power, and distributed that power to its own customers, the homes and businesses that it serves". (T. 2008, 13-18). In these early years, there was little to no relationship among the traditional utility companies, so each company generally only produced sufficient capacity to service its own customers' needs. Each traditional utility had a service territory established by state regulation, a monopoly for electricity service within that territory, and an obligation to serve all customers in that service territory. "[I]n return for fulfilling that obligation to serve all customers, [traditional utilities] were given an assurance of a reasonable rate of return." (T. 27, 16-21); (Stipulated Facts ¶ 2). As a result, a traditional utility's sales of electricity to residential and business users within its service territory were considered retail sales to consumers and "largely regulated at the state level." (T. 25, 5-6); (T. 30, 12-13); (Stipulated Facts ¶ 5).
Often the lack of interaction among traditional utilities created inefficiencies because each utility would construct its own power plants to meet peak electric demand; that is, each traditional utility "was insuring that it had enough capacity to serve its own load." (T. 37, 16-18). Because electricity demand peaks at limited times throughout the year, a utility may have needed to build a power plant that runs only "10, 15, 20, 50 hours a year." (T. 35, 3-13). As a result, each traditional utility tended to have "plants that [were] sitting idle most of the time, because they [were] needed for a few hours." (T. 37, 16-24). "[T]hat created some inefficiencies in the sense [that] ... too many power plants to provide this capability were being built." (T. 37, 16-24).
In the early twentieth century, some electric utilities smartened up, adjusted their strategy, and "began to sell power or standby capacity to each other." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 3). In order to accomplish this, the traditional utilities "built high voltage transmission lines among them in order to transact such `wholesale' purchases and sales. This allowed utilities to
As the traditional utilities engaged in increased wholesale sales and capacity purchases, the need for federal regulation became more obvious. In order to manage stand-by capacity sales, PJM was created to ensure reliability by managing interstate transmission lines and, in more recent years, by designing and operating wholesale auctions.
In the 1980s, when governmental deregulation of business entities was a prevalent feature of federal policymaking, some federal legislators brainstormed that the structure for sales of energy and energy capacity could be modified from one in which sales were made at a governmentally imposed rate to one that was more economically efficient, competitive and based on the economic theory of supply and demand. This idea ultimately culminated in several initiatives during the 1990s.
In 1992, Congress enacted the Energy Policy Act of 1992 ("EPAct"), Pub. L. No. 102-486, 106 Stat. 2776, which authorized the Commission to ease restrictions on access to interstate transmission wires. This allowed more electric generators to provide energy to a broader area, and recognized the concept of separating generation facilities from other parts of traditional utilities. That is, the generation segment of a traditional utility could operate separately from the other segments of the utility. A key objective of the Energy Policy Act was to "encourage[e] the development of independent generators" — sometimes referred to as "independent power producers" — "that could sell into the marketplace." (T. 44, 11 through T. 46, 25).
In 1996, the Commission issued Order Number 888 which required "transmission owners in the United States ... to offer access to their transmission wires to third-parties... on a non-discriminatory basis." (T. 45, 12-19). "Order 888 opened the transmission grid, and competition began to develop, and .... wholesale markets were actually emerging regionally." (T. 47, 12-16). In 1996, through Orders 888 and 889, the Commission "established national open-access rules that required all transmission-owning utilities under its jurisdiction — i.e., those utilities that `own, control, or operate transmission facilities used for transmitting electric energy in interstate transmission' — to provide non-discriminatory transmission access under standardized tariffs. One significant impact of Orders 888 and 889 was to increase the opportunity for non-utility generators to sell their power to additional markets." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 8).
In December 1999, the Commission issued Order 2000 which encouraged industry participants to organize themselves into large regional entities called regional transmission organizations ("RTO"). The creation of such organizations "allow[ed] for regional operation of the transmission system and provide[d], among other things, a platform for regional wholesale electricity markets." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 9). Notably, PJM is an RTO.
(a) the "regional capacity market, called the reliability pricing model (RPM), annually sets the price of capacity" three years forward. The controversy in this case involves the regional capacity market. (T. 74, 23-24).
(b) the energy markets price the cost of energy produced by the generators and used by consumers. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 20). PJM operates a "day ahead" energy market, meaning "generators offer to supply power into the market a day ahead of real time." The day ahead market is a "planning tool that PJM uses to [e]nsure that it knows a day ahead of time what resources are going to be available 24 hours thereafter, when the generation is actually dispatched to keep the lights on." PJM also operates a "real time energy market, which is an hourly market that is close to the time of operation. And capacity resources bid into that market, and offer to supply ... the actual electricity." (T. 74, 21 through T. 75, 23); and
(c) the ancillary services markets price the sale of "ancillary services" such as "spinning reserves and load-following services" to improve reliability. (T. 74, 21 through T. 75, 23).
Following the federal lead, many traditional utilities chose to restructure by separating their generation functions from their transmission and distribution functions. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 6). According to Mr. Massey, there were two methods to accomplish this. First, the traditional utilities could sell or transfer their power plants to a competitive generation company. Second, the traditional utilities could "create an affiliate corporation ... within a holding company to own the generation." (T. 53, 13-21). During the 1990s, many states restructured their electric industries to promote competitive markets in wholesale power generation. "Typically, the [s]tate-ordered restructuring resulted in the unbundling of [traditional] utilities into separate generation, transmission, and distribution companies. The distribution entities came to be known as `Electric Distribution Companies' or `EDCs[.]'" (Stipulated Facts ¶ 6). In some cases, "restructuring also enabled third parties with no distribution assets to compete in the sale of electricity at retail." (Id.) These entities are referred to as "Load Serving Entities" ("LSEs") (Id.).
In 1999, New Jersey followed suit. It restructured its utilities in a slightly different format than described above, but with the same result. In enacting the Electric Discount and Energy Competition Act ("NJ Energy Competition Act"), N.J.S.A. § 48:3-49 et seq., the New Jersey legislature unbundled the sale of energy to retail customers. The consumer could choose to be served by one of several load serving entities which would compete to provide service. These LSEs would deliver the energy through an electric distribution company ("EDC"). (T. 59, 2-9). As Mr. Dominguez explained in his testimony, the driving force behind the NJ Energy Competition Act was "customer choice" — that customers would have the right to choose their electricity suppliers or LSE. (Id.) Although the New Jersey Legislature focused on the benefit to the consumer, the NJ Energy Competition Act also "required the State's [traditional] electric utilities to divest themselves of electricity generation
At the time of enactment, the New Jersey Legislature recognized the magnitude of this fundamental change by declaring that "this bill would effectively end the system of government regulation of the electricity generation industry, which has existed in New Jersey since the years when Woodrow Wilson served as Governor." Electric Discount and Energy Competition Act, P.L. 1999, c. 23. eff. Jan. 25, 1999. Hence, the NJ Energy Competition Act recognized the demise of the traditional utility and the transformation of the electric energy industry into a more market driven system. Further, although the federal and state statutory amendments opened new competitive markets through restructuring, the State retained its authority over the siting and construction of power plants. (T. 167, 9 through T. 169, 6). So, after restructuring by the federal and New Jersey governments, the electric energy industry operates in the following manner:
(a) generators may sell energy and capacity at wholesale prices to PJM or negotiate power supply agreements (T. 64, 11 through T. 65, 4);
(b) PJM transmits and sells energy to load serving entities ("LSEs"); and
(c) LSEs sell to consumers and distribute the energy through electric distribution companies ("EDCs") which have monopolistic service areas and operate as common carriers. Since the EDC transmits the electric to consumers within its monopolistic area, it receives a delivery fee from the LSE.
In New Jersey, there are four EDCs: Rockland Electric Company, Public Service Electric & Gas Company ("PSE & G"), Jersey Central Power & Light Company ("JCP & L"), and Atlantic City Electric. (Pl.'s Ex. 45, at 16-17). Each EDC owns and operates the local distribution wires located within its service territory. (T. 66, 17-22). After the restructuring, the State's utilities "became more commonly known as `electric distribution companies' (`EDCs') because they were responsible for distributing electricity over local distribution networks." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 7). An EDC is sometimes referred to as the "local utility," but "the term EDC, electric distribution company, is intended to convey that this company is in the business of delivering electricity." (T. 56, 6-12). The electricity sold to retail customers by LSEs is delivered by the EDC within their local distribution networks.
The 2008 New Jersey Energy Master Plan authorized by the Board summarized the importance of the NJ Energy Competition Act:
Despite deregulation which provided generators with more decision making powers, the Commission and PJM do not have substantial authority to require construction of power plants, prevent retirement of generation, select the generation technologies that will be constructed, or require demand resource or energy efficiency programs as a means of addressing resource adequacy. (Def.'s Ex. 563). However, as previously noted, the restructuring of the traditional utilities required PJM and the Commission to institute three competitive markets which effect energy and capacity prices. The market of primary interest in this case is the regional capacity market called the reliability pricing model ("RPM").
The RPM is intended to "secure sufficient capacity resources to meet standards for serving the highest aggregate demand of the region's electric customers." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 12). To meet that objective, the RPM "establishes an annual Base Residual Auction (`BRA') [or "RPM Auction"] through which PJM administers procurements of capacity." (Id.)
The RPM conducts the RPM Auction each May to secure the capacity that will be needed three years in the future. (T. 419, 3-8); (Stipulated Facts ¶ 25). New Jersey is a voluntary member of PJM and is a part of the RPM market. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 13). RPM is a provision of the PJM tariff which is approved by the Commission. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 23); (T. 80, 25 through T. 81, 4); (Def.'s Ex. 184). As the parties stipulated:
Generally, "The [RPM Auction] is a `forward market,' meaning capacity is sold three years in advance of when it is needed. For example, the auction held in May 2012 [which is the subject of this lawsuit] concerned offers to sell capacity to be `delivered' beginning June 1, 2015, through May 31, 2016." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 27).
RPM was designed to provide price signals for both new and existing generation. PJM Interconnection, LLC, 132 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,173, 61,870 (2010). The Commission has emphasized that "RPM was designed to provide long-term forward price signals,
"In the [RPM Auction] capacity resources... bid to supply capacity to PJM for one year beginning three years in the future, each offering to supply a particular quantity of capacity at an offer price." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 28). The bids of capacity resources are "stacked" from lowest-cost bids to highest-cost bids to construct a supply curve. (T. 92, 19-25). PJM also constructs a demand curve that is based on a forecast of peak electricity demand ("peak load"), plus a reserve margin. (T. 661, 13 through T. 662, 19). The PJM "reserve margin" is typically around 15 percent or more. The reserve margin addresses the possibility that "some plants might fail, might not be able to meet their obligation," or that there could be a "transmission outage." (T. 89, 25 through T. 90, 13). As Mr. Massey indicated, "[i]t also takes into account the fact that ... [it is] hard to forecast electricity usage perfectly." (T. 90, 2-3). "And so this reserve margin is an insurance policy." (T. 90, 7). "The price of capacity in the [RPM Auction] is set by the intersection of supply and demand and is referred to as the `clearing price.' That is, any capacity supplier that bids at or below the clearing price `clears' the [RPM] auction and receives the clearing price for that capacity. Any capacity supplier that bids above the clearing price fails to `clear' the [RPM] auction, and its capacity does not sell in the auction." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 29). The clearing prices for capacity sold in the RPM are the Commission approved rates for capacity sales made in PJM territory. (Pl.'s Ex. 26). When a generation resource has cleared the auction, it obligates itself to run through the delivery year. (T. 473, 22 through T. 474, 7). Thus, a capacity resource that clears the RPM Auction commits itself to make any investments necessary to fulfill its obligation. It also obligates itself to bid into the PJM energy and ancillary services markets. (T. 426, 1 through T. 473, 17).
As Mr. Dominguez testified, RPM is designed to procure the least expensive mix of resources that are necessary to keep the lights on for that one year period, three years hence. (T. 414, 14-18). Generally, the RPM Auction says to market participants "I am willing to serve capacity for one entire year three years forward." (T. 414, 14-18). "The purpose" of RPM was to "guarantee[] that the reliability target in PJM is met in the least cost possible way." (T. 763, 13-23). As PJM has explained to the Board, its "RPM Capacity Market is designed to commit the least-cost set of capacity resources to ensure that [Commission]-established resource adequacy targets are met in the PJM footprint on a three-year forward basis." (Pl.'s Ex. 230, at 10).
Generally, the single clearing price encourages capacity resources to operate more efficiently while keeping prices low. "[A] competitive market with a single, market-clearing price creates incentives for sellers to minimize their costs, because cost-reductions increase a seller's profits. And when many sellers work to minimize their costs, competition among them keeps prices as low as possible.... This market result benefits customers, because over time it results in an industry with more efficient sellers and lower prices." PJM Interconnection, LLC, 117 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,331, 62,678 (2006); (Pl.'s Ex. 19, at 57); (T. 436, 8-24). As Mr. Massey indicated, since there is a single price for the commodity,
Despite the goal of reaching a highly competitive price through the RPM Auction, price varies in certain areas of the PJM market. For example, in New Jersey the price is higher than that in western Pennsylvania because the transmission costs associated with delivering the energy in New Jersey are more costly. (Def.'s Ex. 204). "For purposes of the RPM, PJM is divided into regions known as [Locational Deliverability Areas, or] LDAs." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 30). "New Jersey is located in a Locational Deliverability Area called `EMAAC,' which also includes parts of Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. EMAAC is located within a wider [LDA] called `MAAC,' which includes EMAAC, additional parts of Pennsylvania and Maryland, and the District of Columbia." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 31). According to the parties, within EMAAC, "there are smaller LDAs, including (within New Jersey), one called `PSEG', and within the PSEG LDA, another one called `PSEG North.'" (Stipulated Facts ¶ 33). As the parties explained:
Prices are often different among the LDAs leading to "price separation." As the Commission has explained, "[c]apacity market prices must be locational in order to be fully effective. Because of transmission constraints, capacity in one location is not always deliverable to loads in other locations[.]" (Pl.'s Ex. 26, at 34). As such, separate capacity prices are necessary to reflect the differences in costs and capacity needs among the locations. "Further, if a single capacity price is set for the entire region, capacity prices do not reflect the need for generation" in those particular locations. (Id.) For instance, as Mr. Dominguez stated "higher price for capacity gives a signal to those in the generation industry to consider developing a new plant or resource within the LDA because a better profit could be realized." (T. 445, 24 through T. 446, 12). "[T]his price differential is reflective of the transmission constraints in moving power from west to east into New Jersey and [signals] the need for resources to be located inside New Jersey." (Pl.'s Ex. 75, at 7).
From its initial inception in the early 2000s, the Board did not accept the RPM theory. Rather, the Board predicted that RPM would curtail development of new generation into New Jersey. The Board recommended that new generators should be given assurances to overcome fears regarding the risk of long term financing packages of potential financiers. The Board also complained that the RPM functions unfairly against new generators. First, the Board argued that the long term price signals of the RPM Auction were insufficient to attract new generators in New Jersey since little development had occurred. (Pl.'s Ex. 197). Second, the
Mr. Butler requested that the Commission undertake "additional dialogue ... to shape the short term and long term needs of [the] wholesale electricity market[,]" rather than adopting the RPM. (Id. at 6). Notwithstanding New Jersey's policy objections, the Commission approved RPM because it disagreed with New Jersey's argument that "the [RPM] Settlement will raise prices without improving reliability." (Pl.'s Ex. 19, at 30); (T. 103, 11, through T. 104, 5).
In 2007, despite the Board's objections, the RPM rule was adopted which included the minimum offer price rule ("MOPR"). PJM subsequently adopted new rules on how the RPM would operate. These rules contemplated, among other things, who may enter into the RPM market and how each generator may bid (T. 2653, 2-8). Most notably, the MOPR governed biddings by new capacity resources. Over the last several years, the MOPR has been modified several times by PJM in 2011 and 2013. Some of these modifications occurred based on the facts of this case.
The RPM Auction is not based on a pure open bidding process. For instance, an existing generator which previously operated as a part of a traditional utility is permitted to bid at zero. (T. 1652, 23 through T. 1653, 2). The rationale for permitting such bids is that these generation facilities have been operating longer than projected so capital costs have been recaptured. As such, the capital costs are deemed to be zero.
(i) a conduct screen (i.e., a benchmark price used to determine whether a sell offer may be competitively low and thus warrants mitigation upward (described below); (ii) an impact screen test that compares the capacity clearing price with and without mitigation; and (iii) an incentive test, or net-short requirement (designed to distinguish between sellers who are net buyers and may have incentives to depress market clearing prices below competitive levels and sellers of planned generation who may have incentives to increase market clearing prices above competitive levels. (Def.'s Ex. 331).
Several exemptions applied to the MOPR's application including the "state mandated" and the "unit-specific" exemptions. When the MOPR was initially adopted, there was an exemption from the MOPR requirements if the project was undertaken pursuant to a state regulation or mandate (T. 1654, 12-15). According to Mr. Knight, a state mandated entrant could bid as an existing generator — price taker, and "bid whatever they wanted to bid." (T. 1654, 18). In addition, there was a unit-specific exemption applying to new gas-fired generation. Such unit-specific exemptions permitted bids down to 80% of the benchmark price upon a showing that the net cone costs were at that level. Such a bid may be lower than the administrative benchmark price.
As noted above, the MOPR was changed through tariff modifications in 2011 (MOPR II) and 2013 (MOPR III). MOPR II eliminated the exemption that previously permitted developers of certain state-sponsored projects from bidding as "price takers." It also raised the "price floor" for new entrants' bids from 80% to 90% of PJM's benchmark price. (Def.'s Ex., at ¶¶ 24, 43, 66). According to Mr. Knight's testimony, in May 2013, the Commission further ruled that: (1) state-sponsored projects should be subject to the MOPR (which led the Commission to eliminate the "state exemption"); (2) the default MOPR level should be 100% of net cone; and (3) new projects should be allowed to demonstrate that their own projected costs will be lower than the benchmark price and should be able to pass a MOPR screen based on those projected costs. (MOPR III). (T. 1679, 20 through T. 1680, 3).
In addition to the MOPR screens, there was another accommodation for new entrants called the New Entry Price Adjustment ("NEPA.") (Def.'s Ex. 238). The NEPA provision was intended to make investments in new generation less risky. The NEPA assures developers of projects in local deliverable areas ("LDAs") that after their facilities become operational they will continue to receive, for a period of subsequent years, the capacity price of the RPM Auction that prevailed at their time of their entry. In 2006, concerns regarding how long the NEPA guarantee should operate were addressed by PJM and the Commission. PJM and FERC ultimately settled on a period of three years. (Def.'s Ex. 238). Despite the MOPR and NEPA adjustments, the RPM costs left New Jersey residents with higher electricity prices due to associated transmission costs. These higher costs displeased the Board.
In addition to the RPM, two other energy issues arose in New Jersey at this time which adversely affected the industry and its regulations. First, PJM forecasted that the amount of energy required for
In 2010, PJM disclosed to the Board that reliability issues may arise due to insufficient transmission capabilities in New Jersey. According to the PJM: "Based on the latest studies performed by PJM and the transmission owners, PJM, PPL and PSE & G concluded that there are 23 potential electric reliability violations that are expected to occur beginning in 2012, and extending out through PJM's 15-year planning horizon of 2022." (Def.'s Ex. 565, at 12). These violations had the potential to cause brownouts or blackouts. Since the violations were projected to occur within two or three years, the Board became concerned about whether transmission capabilities could be improved in such a short period of time. PJM found that this reliability issue could only be addressed in one of two ways — increased transmission through the construction of the Susquehanna-Roseland transmission line ("Susquehanna Connection") or construction of additional generation in or near the location where the reliability violations would occur. (Def.'s Ex. 563, at 33). Given the difficulties associated with implementing either of these contingency plans in such a short period of time, from the Board's perspective, New Jersey was at risk. As Mr. Roach summarized, "this is really, to put it mildly [an issue that] ... [got] their attention." (T. 1893, 22 through T. 1894, 2).
In 2008, newly imposed environmental regulations cast their shadow over the New Jersey energy industry when the federal and state governments partially prohibited coal-fired plants from being operated unless significant environmental modifications were made. At that time, federal environmental rules required 12 to 19 gigawatts of capacity in the PJM territory, which amounted to about 7 to 11 percent of all PJM generation, be retired or renovated. (T. 1612, 7 through T. 1613, 15). In addition, about a year later, New Jersey adopted the High Energy Demand Day Rule ("HEDD") which created a potential reliability issue by limiting the number of hours that certain electric generating units could operate. (T. 1897, 9-24). In short, from a resource adequacy or capacity perspective, the Board believed that New Jersey was vulnerable to the shutdown of 11,000 megawatts of coal-fired generation. (Pl.'s Ex. 127); (T. 1289, 22 through T. 1290, 9);(T. 1896, 21 through T. 1898, 10). As Mr. Roach explained it, the Board thought, "I've got to put iron in the ground[.] I've got to get a new power plant locally to protect against these things." (T. 1894, 12-16).
The Board undertook several measurers to address its concerns. First, the Board appealed the Commission's decision implementing
The Board's petition of review of the Commission's decision was summarily denied by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. In its decision, the Circuit Court concluded "that the Commission had a substantial basis on which to conclude that the RPM was an appropriate tool for increasing reliability in electricity markets, that the RPM did precisely what it was intended to do, even during the transition period before the three-year lag could take effect, and that the price hikes in its wake were attributable to legitimate causes." Md. PSC v. FERC, 632 F.3d 1283, 1286 (D.C.Cir.2011). The Court did not specifically address the Board's or the State of Maryland's contentions regarding lack of reliability, the regional nature of increased capacity prices, or the impact of the newly implemented environmental regulations governing coal-fired plants. Rather, the court seemed to accept the Commission's determination that the "rates were just and reasonable" at face value. Id. at 1285.
On January 28, 2011, the New Jersey Legislature, with the Board's support, enacted the LCAPP Act which authorized the construction of several gas-fired generators in or near New Jersey. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 35). The purpose of LCAPP was "[t]o address the lack of incentives under the reliability pricing model" by fostering the "construction of new, efficient generation... [to] ensure[] sufficient generation is available to the region, and thus the users in the State in a timely and orderly manner[.]" N.J.S.A. § 48:3-98(d)(2); (Stipulated Fact ¶ 36). In general terms, the LCAPP Act established a "pilot program," overseen by the Board, to issue "Standard Offer Capacity Agreements" ("SOCAs") to selected eligible generators. N.J.S.A. § 48:3-98.3. The statute requires New Jersey's four electric distribution companies ("EDCs") to enter such contracts with eligible generators and obligates these EDCs to pay any difference between the RPM Auction price and their actual development costs approved by the Board. N.J.S.A. § 48:3-98.3(c)(9). The LCAPP contemplated the awarding of SOCAs for 2,000 megawatts of generation capacity. It further directed that the selected LCAPP generators were to "participate in and clear the annual base residual auction [RPM Auction] conducted by the PJM ... for each delivery year of the entire term of the agreement." N.J.S.A. § 48:3-98.3(c)(12). In addition, the statute directed the Board to conduct a competitive solicitation of capacity and required winning bidders to enter into SOCAs lasting no longer than fifteen years with the State's electric distribution companies (EDCs). N.J.S.A. § 48:3-98.3(c)(1)-(4); see also (T. 121, 7 through T. 122, 24). The main purpose of the legislation was to provide a transaction structure that would result in new power plants being constructed in the PJM territory that benefit New Jersey. The New Jersey Legislature was ultimately interested in ensuring that new resources were constructed in time to help mitigate the reliability risks discussed above. N.J.S.A. § 48:3-98.2(b); see also (T. 1368, 17 through T. 1377, 1)
More specifically, the LCAPP statute required:
With the LCAPP, the New Jersey Legislature and the Board concluded that they would have to act to increase electric generation in the State due to the fact that the Commission's policies were not creating new capacity. As Dr. Roach noted in his testimony, the LCAPP created "some tension" between the Commission and the Board. (T. 2034, 25 through T. 2035, 1). One area of tension is summarized in the LCAPP. Within the statement of findings, the Legislature noted that the New Entry Price Adjustment was insufficient. It stated:
More specifically, the legislative findings declared that the Board would "allow new resources to qualify and receive a guaranteed capacity price for a longer period of time" than the RPM permitted. Id.
Moreover, LCAPP mirrors or overlaps the RPM Auction procedure. For instance, LCAPP requires that the price within a SOCA must be expressed in a "price per megawatt day" which is the same standard used in the RPM. Compare N.J.S.A. § 48:3-98.3(c)(2) with (Stipulated Facts ¶ 8) (stating that "the price of capacity in RPM is generally measured in dollars per megawatt-day ("$/MW-day")).
Between 2008 and 2012, the transmission, reliability and environmental issues evolved. That is, many of the Board's concerns had subsided through the deliberate actions of PJM stakeholders and/or economic circumstances. As Mr. Roach characterized it, New Jersey "dodged a bullet." (T. 1894, 23 through 1895, 7). For example, PJM's reliability forecasts failed to predict the 2009 recession, and therefore overstated the amount of capacity required. (Pl.'s Exs. 34, 65, 116, 275, 362). Accordingly, PJM reissued forecasts with lower usage estimates which minimized PJM's reliability concerns. During the trial, there was little to no evidence that this revised usage data proved to be false.
In addition, PJM recommended the construction of the Susquehanna Connection, a new 145-mile high voltage transmission line to move electricity from Berwick, Pennsylvania to Roseland, New Jersey. Presently, officials of PJM and PSE & G anticipate that construction on the project should be completed in 2014 or 2015. This project has the potential to solve the reliability violations that PJM projected. (Def.'s Ex. 563). Despite its ongoing construction, the Board argues that the length of time needed to complete the Susquehanna Connection project has left New Jersey vulnerable to outages. As such, according to the Board, new generation within New Jersey is needed to alleviate future reliability issues.
Lastly, the retirement of coal-fired plants has been an ongoing process. Despite the Board's concerns, PJM has found that within its territory the RPM had sufficient bidders to cushion or absorb the impact of these shutdowns. In addition, through the RPM Auction, PJM has acquired more than sufficient capacity to serve its territory. As PJM reported, although changes in environmental rules have led to significant retirements, "[t]he announced generation retirements sen[t] a strong signal that there would be a need for new resources, and [the 2012] auction witnessed a record number of new generation offers." (Def.'s Ex. 204, at 2); (T. 1084, 15-22). In fact, the 2012 RPM Auction cleared enough capacity to have a 20.2% reserve margin — significantly above the 15.4% reserve margin usually reserved. It is noteworthy that one of the Board's witnesses confirmed that sufficient generation exists. Specifically, Mr. James Giuliano, Director of Reliability and Security of the Board, testified that he could not recall any power outages caused by insufficient generation. (T. 1104, 15-19).
In the first quarter of 2011, following enactment of the LCAPP, two significant events occurred. First, the Board appointed Levitan & Associates to be the
Levitan's evaluation of generators' proposals through the eligibility, prequalification and commercial proposal stages was based on an evaluation process "consistent with the LCAPP Law that [was] centered on the maximization of economic, environmental and community benefits from the standpoint of ratepayers in New Jersey." (Pl.'s Ex. 178, at 11). Specifically, "[a]pplicants were first reviewed in light of the requirements in the LCAPP Law to be an eligible generator. Eligible generators were then further reviewed to determine whether they should be prequalified on the basis of showing environmental, economic and community benefits, and the demonstration of meeting the proposed in-service date with reasonable certainty." (Id.). Furthermore, "[t]he evaluation of commercial proposals was completed in parallel with the prequalification review." (Id.).
According to Mr. Levitan, the "community benefits" aspect of the prequalification assessment concerned "the developer's ability to drum up support in the community to achieve the [LCAPP Act's] aggressive [construction] milestones." (T. 1313, 7-15). The benefit sought was the timely construction of a qualifying new generation facility within the PJM territory. In evaluating the economic benefit of potential projects, Levitan "look[ed] at the completeness of the technology and operating data forms ... [to] facilitate [its] analysis in the next phase." (T. 1312, 22 through T. 1313, 3).
In total, thirty-four (34) generation projects submitted prequalification applications to Levitan. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 43). Many of these projects were disqualified for various reasons. Notably, Levitan eliminated twenty-one (21) of the projects because they "were tied to existing generation units and therefore did not meet the condition of being a new generation facility." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 45). The Board and Levitan also eliminated four (4) projects because they "were characterized as peaking units, rather than base load or mid-merit units as required by the LCAPP." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 46). After three (3) generators withdrew their applications, only six (6) generators were prequalified. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 48). Of the six generation facilities that prequalified, Levitan recommended, and the Board later approved, that three be awarded SOCAs. These generators were Hess (625.0 MW of capacity), NRG (680.1 MW of capacity), and CPV (663.4 MW of capacity). (Stipulated Facts ¶ 54). All three of these generator projects are located in New Jersey. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 52).
After the prequalification stage was completed, Levitan drafted the SOCA for each generator. The material terms of the three SOCAs are identical; they differ only with respect to the SOCA price, the quantity of capacity awarded, and the name of the generator. (T. 1368, 7-11). Herein the Court utilizes the SOCA of CPV as an example.
The Board awarded CPV a SOCA with a fifteen-year term. (Pl.'s Ex. 203). Each SOCA contains an Attachment F, which provides the schedule of Standard Offer Capacity Prices for the LCAPP generator
Delivery Year Standard Offer Capacity (ending May 31st) Price ($MW-day) 2016 286.03 2017 294.61 2018 303.45 2019 312.55 2020 321.93 2021 331.59 2022 341.54 2023 351.79 2024 362.34 2025 373.21 2026 384.41 2027 395.94 2028 407.82 2029 420.05 2030 432.65
Notably, CPV's SOCA has provisions which relate to PJM activity. For instance, the SOCA refers to the RPM, the RPM Auction and/or other actions that occur within PJM. (Pl.'s Ex. 203). The SOCA responsibilities which correlate to PJM activities are listed below:
In addition to these terms, the term "delivery year" corresponds to the RPM availability requirement. Specifically, "Delivery Year" means "each 12-month period from June 1st through May 31st numbered according to the calendar year." (Pl.'s Ex. 203). The term is the same under the SOCA. The SOCA obligates the generator to qualify within the RPM by clearing the RPM Auction and acting in accordance with PJM rules. The SOCA dictates the procedure:
The electric distribution companies have one broad obligation to the Board under the SOCA. (Pl.'s Ex. 203). That is, they must report their compliance with the abovementioned obligations to the Board. The SOCA reads, in relevant part:
In addition, the SOCA sets forth a formula to make payments or receive refunds based on the SOCA amount and the clearing price at the RPM auction. The SOCA states:
Under the SOCAs, "the LCAPP generators receive the payment set forth in the SOCAs only if they successfully sell the capacity from their facilities in the RPM base residual auction." (Stipulated Facts ¶ 56). The SOCAs also require the winning bidder to use all commercially reasonable efforts to construct an electric generation facility prior to the "commencement date" of its RPM obligation. (Stipulated Facts ¶ 58).
Finally, the SOCA requires that eligible generators maintain all approvals they have with PJM, and to "comply with Commission and RPM rules." The agreement sets forth:
In accordance with the terms of its SOCA, CPV (as well as the other two eligible generators) sought admission into the RPM Auction. According to Mr. Knight, as part of CPV's admissions process, representatives of CPV met with PJM to discuss the impacts of the MOPR II revisions and what information CPV would be required to submit. In response to a request for information issued by PJM, CPV sent an application consisting of more than 600 pages of materials. Within its application, CPV claimed it was exempt under the unit-specific exemption of MOPR II adopted in 2011, not the state mandated exemption provided for in the original MOPR. Under MOPR II, CPV could bid into the RPM auction at less than the minimum offer price floor (90 percent of net cone) if it could demonstrate that its actual costs were less than the benchmark price. (T. 1661:21 through T. 1673, 23); (Def.'s Ex. 51).
In determining whether CPV qualified for a unit-specific exemption pursuant to MOPR II, PJM did not consider any out-of-market payments that CPV would receive through New Jersey's LCAPP program. (Def.'s Ex. 183, 751); (T. 1674, 14 through T. 1675). Pursuant to its practice under the MOPR screen, PJM advised CPV that it would accept a bid of no less than $151.24/MW-day, which is the level at which CPV bid. (T. 1678, 18-20). The May 2012 RPM Auction cleared at $167.46/MW-day. (Def.'s Ex. 204); (Stipulated Facts ¶ 59). According to Mr. Knight, the RPM Auction price was different than the Board's approved costs due to "a difference in timing, and then secondarily a difference in the view on energy." (T. 1677, 12). With regard to the other eligible generator projects, Hess Corp's project cleared the auction while NRG's proposed project did not. Adamantly opposed, the four electric distribution companies signed the SOCAs under protest.
Plaintiffs' witnesses testified that their respective companies rely on the forward price signals of the RPM Auction in deciding whether to develop new generation resources or make investments in existing resources within a specific market. According to these witnesses, the LCAPP makes it more difficult for these companies to make such business decisions because they can no longer rely on the RPM Auction price signals to evaluate their future costs and predict future revenue streams. In the view of the plaintiffs, the RPM Auction clearing price ($167.46) was essentially displaced and supplanted by the SOCA price written into the SOCA contracts ($286.03), causing less predictability in the energy capacity markets.
Zamir Rauf, Plaintiff Calpine's Chief Financial Officer, testified that the RPM Auction price signals play a "huge role" in Calpine's assessment as to whether an investment
As Mr. Rauf plainly stated, in light of the LCAPP, Calpine would "put[] less money in PJM than [the company] otherwise would have, and [Calpine] would probably either be reinvesting that money in other regions, or buying back [its] stock." (T. 1132, 6-12).
PSEG Power also had similar concerns regarding the impact of the LCAPP. According to Daniel Cregg, the LCAPP Act "dramatically change[d] how we look at what the market is." (T. 888, 20 through T. 889, 8). He noted that PSEG Power "shifted entirely away from ... looking at it as a merchant opportunity" and began rationalizing that the "opportunity [was] not going to be there for [them] this year". (T. 879, 2-7). In the May 2012 RPM Auction, PSEG Power bid its Essex County project "at a fairly high level" in order to serve "as a backstop to the extent that the LCAPP units [did not] bid." (T. 886, 22 through 888, 12). In other words, "absent the LCAPP Act ... there might have been a price signal that would have been there" for the Essex County project, but instead, "the LCAPP units did bid in, and as a result [PSEG Power's Essex] unit did not clear." (T. 887, 4-8).
The LCAPP also had an impact on the operations of Exelon, as discussed by Mr. Dominguez during his testimony. Specifically, he testified that the RPM price signal "tells [Exelon] whether to make investments in existing plants; whether to increase the capacity of existing plants; whether to do environmental retrofits; [and] whether to keep plants open." (T. 527, 2-10). Mr. Dominguez further testified that, given its impact on Exelon's business strategies, the RPM is "fundamental
PPL has also had to modify its business strategies in light of the requirements imposed by the LCAPP. Michael Cudwadie, Vice President for PPL EnergyPlus, testified that PPL relies on capacity forward market prices and energy forward market prices to make decisions regarding investments in new and existing generation, including whether to upgrade units, add pollution control equipment, or retire specific units. (T. 1041, 18-24).
The effects of the LCAPP described by these witnesses were echoed at trial by Plaintiffs' experts Mr. Massey and Professor Willig. For example, Mr. Massey declared that "[t]he entire fabric of the contract in my judgment makes it a price for capacity. It so happens that the contract calls it a standard offer capacity price, I... can hypothesize about a lot of things, but I don't know what can be clearer than that." (T. 296, 19-23). Mr. Massey elaborated by stating that "[t]he price is measured in terms of the netting of revenues, is measured in terms of comparing the standard offer capacity price, with the price determined in the PJM capacity market. It's all about capacity pricing." (T. 298:2-10). Furthermore, the payments under the SOCA are "inextricably linked to the sale of wholesale capacity." (T. 298, 2-10).
Similarly, Professor Willig described the effect of the LCAPP as "wiping out the pricing mechanism of PJM ... [and] taking it away and putting this alternative, the SOCA price, in the place of the market price." (T. 638, 22 through T. 639, 1). Professor Willig opined that the "architecture" of the RPM Auction was appropriately designed to address concerns in the energy capacity market (T. 763, 19-23) and that the RPM clearing price "is being displaced,... overridden, [or] supplanted, by the SOCA price through this mechanism which is written into the SOCA contract and governed by the LCAPP." (T. 637, 15-18).
Professor Willig further stated that the LCAPP would actually undermine new generation projects because all future investors would insist on receiving similar government assistance. He explained:
Defendants' Perspective
The defendants have a completely different view concerning the impact and effects of the LCAPP based on two factual disagreements with the plaintiffs. First, the defendants contend that the RPM and the SOCA are two separate and unrelated transactions. The fact that each provides a different price does not, according to the defendants, frustrate the purpose or goals of the RPM Auction because, in their view,
According to the defendants, the RPM and the SOCA are unrelated. As Mr. Knight of CPV testified, the SOCA is "something separate and distinct." (T. 1646, 6-13). In describing this distinction, Mr. Knight elaborated that the "SOCA is between CPV and the EDCs, and does not go through PJM or have to do with PJM." (T. 1646, 6-13). He further pointed out that "[CPV] sell[s] physical capacity and energy to PJM," and does "not sell any physical capacity to anybody else." (T. 1644, 12-22). Mr. Knight distinguished the SOCA price from the RPM Auction clearing price by stating:
Defendants further contend that because the SOCA is a purely financial contract, it is not subject to Commission oversight. (T. 1911, 13-16). In fact, Defendants liken the SOCA to other financial contracts such as swaps, collars, or contracts for differences. (T. 682,2 through T. 683, 7). While the latter term (contract for differences) was mentioned frequently throughout trial, it was not fully defined except as an instrument that is routinely used to manage commodity price risks. (T. 1347, 1-15). For example, Mr. Levitan explained that a contract for differences is a "financially settled mechanism that provides revenue assurance for the seller and risk management benefits for the buyer." (T. 1282: 10-18). In the view of the defendants, because the SOCAs do not involve the sale of actual physical energy capacity, they fall outside the jurisdictional authority of the Commission. (T. 1282, 10-18). Mr. Knight agreed with this analysis and likened the SOCAs to insurance policies indemnifying against forced power outages. He testified:
So, under the defendants' analysis, the SOCAs are ultimately just financial risk management tools through which no capacity or energy is bought or sold. (T. 1283, 17-24); (T. 1360, 9 through T. 1369, 10); (T. 1644, 9 through T. 1645, 9).
With the adoption of the MOPR III revisions, the defendants argue that issues between the Board and the Commission concerning participation of new generators in the RPM Auction are resolved; and since there is no controversy between the Board and the Commission, there is no need for the Court to impose any remedy. The Court, however, rejects this argument for several reasons. Although the Board and the Commission may now have a more
Since the Board retained authority over the siting of generation facilities, a question arose as to whether the Board had any alternative means to incentivize construction of new generation facilities besides enacting a statute like the LCAPP. The parties agree that the Board had a number of ways to support and encourage the development of generation projects. These include the utilization of tax exempt bonding authority, the granting of property tax relief, the ability to enter into favorable site lease agreements on public lands, the gifting of environmentally damaged properties for brownfield development, and the relaxing or acceleration of permit approvals. (T. 266, 25-26 through T. 267, 6); (T. 1313-14 through T. 1316, 2).
As opposed to the facts set forth above, to which the Court has given considerable weight, the trial record reveals an extensive number of other facts which were given little weight in this decision. Those facts, and the reasons they were given little weight, are discussed below.
First, Defendants presented a plethora of facts about initiatives in Maryland and Connecticut which they believe present issues similar to those being considered in this case. The Maryland initiative is subject to a separate ongoing lawsuit. As Mr. Roach testified, it is based upon reimbursement of 400 megawatts of new demand response as opposed to a capacity requirement. (T. 2066, 20-24). Any analysis of the Maryland proposal would necessarily require this Court to review a set of facts as substantial as those presented herein. Based on the facts presented at trial, the Court is not able to discern whether Maryland's proposal is sufficiently similar to the LCAPP. As such, the Court considers the value in comparing and contrasting the Maryland initiative and the LCAPP to be minimal for purposes of this opinion.
In regards to the Connecticut proposal, the defendants contend that a Connecticut peaking facility has a very similar financial structure as a New Jersey peaking facility under the LCAPP. (T. 1377, 24 through T. 1379, 11). Evidently, PSEG Power or one of its subsidiaries previously accounted for SOCA-like payments to a New Haven generator as financial contracts. According to the defendants, the payments in question were not listed as energy or capacity contracts required to be filed with the Commission. (Def.'s Ex. 630). The defendants argue that this supports their proposition that SOCAs are purely financial instruments. The Court, however, did not have sufficient information to fully analyze the Connecticut payments and, therefore, gave the defendants argument little weight. In the Court's view, the most compelling evidence regarding how the SOCAs should be defined under the law was adduced by the witnesses at trial. Therefore, in terms of credibility, the evidence regarding the Connecticut contracts was of little value.
a. Comments to President Solomon made by Frank Perrotti, Assistant Director of the Board, in which he stated that the LCAPP has the "potential to drive out other forms of investment or, at least, cause future developers to demand the same premiums before deploying capital." (Pl.'s Exs. 70, 406).
b. Comments made by President Solomon's aide Kristi Miller in which she stated that the LCAPP "could encourage future developers to demand identical premiums before deploying capital." (Pl.'s Ex. 406, at 20).
c. Comments made by CPV Chief Executive Officer Douglas Egan in which he indicated that in order to develop generation in New Jersey, a generator may need "out-of-market pricing" (Pl.'s Ex. 61) or "pricing that was higher than what was available at that point in time." (Pl.'s Ex. 409).
d. Comments made by the Board's Fed. R.Civ.P. 30(b)(6) designated witness, Mr. Dembia, in which he indicated that the LCAPP is a "guaranteed payout." (Pl.'s Ex. 406).
The Court gave little weight to these alleged admissions which occurred during the lobbying effort to enact the LCAPP. See Kentucky W. Va. Gas Co. v. Pennsylvania Pub. Util. Comm'n, 837 F.2d 600, 615 (3d Cir.1988). The Court found that the witnesses at trial presented the facts and issues in a forthright manner. Since the statements were not subject to crossexamination, and could not be assessed for credibility, the Court believes the constitutionality of the New Jersey statute and program is best determined by reviewing the merits of the case rather than relying on isolated statements.
Plaintiffs also introduced a report prepared by the Brattle Group for purposes of showing the successes of the RPM. The Brattle Group is a consulting firm hired by PJM to evaluate the RPM. (Pl.'s Ex. 49). No one from the Brattle Group testified at trial. As a result, the Brattle Group's report on the RPM Auction was not subject to cross-examination. As such, the Court gave the report little weight.
"Preemption is a doctrine of American constitutional law under which state and local governments are deprived of their power to act in a given area, whether or not the state or local law, rule or action is in direct conflict with federal law.... The analysis of a preemption dispute focuses upon statutory construction ... in the context of a constitutional framework of sovereignty, commerce regulation, or other predicate for federal powers."
According to the defendants, the Commission's oversight authority is "limited to sales of the actual physical electricity (or capacity) to a buyer." (Def.'s Post-Trial Br. at 11). Furthermore, the defendants contend that "[c]ontracts that do not effect a physical sale of electricity ... are not subject to [Commission] jurisdiction." (Id.). In the defendants' view, the SOCAs are purely financial contracts that do not involve physical sales of electricity.
The Court finds that the SOCAs occupy the same field of regulation as the Commission and intrude upon the Commission's authority to set wholesale energy prices through its preferred RPM Auction process. As previously discussed, many of the terms defined in the SOCAs make substantial use of RPM terminology. In addition, the SOCAs obligate eligible generators to:
(1) "qualify under the RPM rules as a capacity resource in an amount no less that the Awarded Capacity Amount for the [RPM Auction]" (Pl.'s Ex. 203, at 9);
(2) "comply with all obligations of a capacity resource under the RPM Rules" (Id.);
(3) "[s]ubmit supply offers ... in accordance with the RPM Rules" (Id.); and
(4) "[s]ubmit supply offers ... in accordance with PJM Market Rules[.]" (Id. at 9-10). The LCAPP Act itself defines the SOCA as a "capacity price ... to be received by eligible generators under a Board-approved SOCA." (Pl.'s Ex. 127, at 10). Furthermore, payment of the SOCA price is made only if the LCAPP generators successfully sell and deliver wholesale capacity to PJM. Given the fact that the SOCAs require eligible generators' to satisfy certain RPM rules and mandate that the generators undertake certain performance under those rules, the Court finds that the performance of the SOCAs is contingent upon clearing the RPM Auction. As such, the SOCAs are not separate from, and to the contrary, occupy the same field as the RPM Auction.
"Under the Supremacy Clause, federal law may supersede state law in several different ways." Hillsborough County v. Automated Med. Labs., Inc., 471 U.S. 707, 713, 105 S.Ct. 2371, 85 L.Ed.2d 714 (1985). Specifically, the Supreme Court has recognized three types of preemption: express preemption, implied conflict preemption, and field preemption. Id. In this case, Plaintiffs argue that the Federal Power Act supersedes the LCAPP under
Courts must begin their analysis of preemption questions by applying a presumption against preemption. Cipollone v. Liggett Group, Inc., 505 U.S. 504, 516, 112 S.Ct. 2608, 120 L.Ed.2d 407 (1992). "In areas of traditional state regulation, we assume that a federal statute has not supplanted state law unless Congress has made such an intention `clear and manifest.'" Bates v. Dow AgroSciences, 544 U.S. 431, 449, 125 S.Ct. 1788, 161 L.Ed.2d 687 (2005) (citing New York State Conference of Blue Cross & Blue Shield Plans v. Travelers Ins. Co., 514 U.S. 645, 655, 115 S.Ct. 1671, 131 L.Ed.2d 695 (1995)). "That assumption applies with particular force when Congress has legislated in a field traditionally occupied by the States." Altria Grp., Inc. v. Good, 555 U.S. 70, 77, 129 S.Ct. 538, 172 L.Ed.2d 398 (2008). Thus, when the "text of a pre-emption clause is susceptible of more than one plausible reading, courts ordinarily `accept the reading that disfavors pre-emption.'" Id. (citing Bates, 544 U.S. at 449, 125 S.Ct. 1788). See also Cipollone, 505 U.S. at 518, 112 S.Ct. 2608. Nonetheless, in the face of clear evidence, the presumption against preemption can be overcome. See Crosby v. Nat'l Foreign Trade Council, 530 U.S. 363, 374 n. 8, 120 S.Ct. 2288, 147 L.Ed.2d 352 (2000) (citing Hines v. Davidowitz, 312 U.S. 52, 67, 61 S.Ct. 399, 85 L.Ed. 581 (1941)). ("Assuming, arguendo, that some presumption against preemption is appropriate, we conclude ... that the state Act presents a sufficient obstacle to the full accomplishment of Congress's objectives under the federal Act to find it preempted."). While applying the presumption against the preemption, the Court reviews whether the Federal Power Act preempts the LCAPP under either the field preemption or conflict preemption theories.
Field preemption arises by implication when state law occupies a "field reserved for federal regulation." United States v. Locke, 529 U.S. 89, 111, 120 S.Ct. 1135, 146 L.Ed.2d 69 (2000). The Supreme Court has explained that "[f]ield preemption reflects a congressional decision to foreclose any state regulation in the area, even if it is parallel to federal standards." Arizona v. United States, ___ U.S. ___, 132 S.Ct. 2492, 2502, 183 L.Ed.2d 351 (2012). This occurs when "Congress has left no room for state regulation of these matters." Locke, 529 U.S. at 111, 120 S.Ct. 1135 (citing Fidelity Fed. Savings & Loan Ass'n v. de la Cuesta, 458 U.S. 141, 102 S.Ct. 3014, 73 L.Ed.2d 664 (1982)). The Supreme Court has explained that a congressional intent to occupy a field can be inferred when "[t]he scheme of federal regulation may be so pervasive as to make reasonable the inference that Congress left no room for the States to supplement it." Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator Corp., 331 U.S. 218, 230, 67 S.Ct. 1146, 91 L.Ed. 1447 (1947). It may also be inferred where "an Act of Congress `touches a field in which [the] federal interest is so dominant that the federal system will be assumed to preclude enforcement of state laws on the same subject.'" English v. General Elec. Co., 496 U.S. 72, 79, 110 S.Ct. 2270, 110 L.Ed.2d 65 (quoting Rice, 331 U.S. at 230, 67 S.Ct. 1146). Nonetheless, because field preemption typically arises in areas traditionally regulated by states under their police powers, "congressional intent to supersede state laws must be `clear and manifest.'" English, 496 U.S. at 79, 110 S.Ct. 2270 (quoting Jones v. Rath Packing Co., 430 U.S. 519, 525, 97 S.Ct. 1305, 51 L.Ed.2d 604 (1977)). Generally, "[t]he factors used to determine if the field has been fully occupied by federal power include the dominant
Since the Supreme Court's 1927 decision in Public Utils. Comm'n v. Attleboro Steam & Elec. Co., 273 U.S. 83, 47 S.Ct. 294, 71 L.Ed. 549 (1927), there has been a dominant federal interest over wholesale sales of electricity in interstate commerce. In that case, the Supreme Court invalidated an attempt by Rhode Island to regulate the rates charged by a Rhode Island plant selling electricity to a Massachusetts company, which resold the electricity to the City of Attleboro, Massachusetts. The Court found that the State's attempt to regulate rates "place[d] a direct burden upon interstate commerce" and, as a result, the "State [was] restrained by the force of the Commerce Clause." Id. at 89, 47 S.Ct. 294. Ever since the Court's ruling, the federal government has asserted jurisdiction over wholesale sales of electricity in interstate commerce. As noted in Section E of this memorandum, in the absence of any federal regulatory body, interstate wholesale electricity pricing was left entirely unregulated after the Attleboro decision. In order to fill that regulatory gap, Congress enacted the Federal Power Act which provided that the Commission shall have jurisdiction over "the transmission of electric energy in interstate commerce" and "the sale of electric energy at wholesale in interstate commerce." 16 U.S.C. § 824(b)(1). See New York v. FERC, 535 U.S. 1, 20-21, 122 S.Ct. 1012, 152 L.Ed.2d 47 (2002) ("It is clear that the enactment of the FPA in 1935 closed the `Attleboro gap' by authorizing federal regulation of interstate, wholesale sales of electricity — the precise subject matter beyond the jurisdiction of the States in Attleboro.... It is, however, perfectly clear that the original FPA did a good deal more than close the gap in state power identified in Attleboro. The FPA authorized federal regulation not only of wholesale sales that had been beyond the reach of state power, but also the regulation of wholesale sales that had been previously subject to state regulation.").
Plaintiffs contend that in enacting the Federal Power Act, Congress "chose to occupy the field of wholesale electricity sales, including the price at which electricity is sold at wholesale, and the terms and conditions under which such electricity is sold." (Pl.'s Post-Trial Br. at 12). Such a contention is supported by previous decisions in which courts have held that the Commission has the exclusive authority to regulate wholesale electricity sales and the transmission of energy in interstate commerce. As stated by Justice Scalia, "It is common ground that if FERC has jurisdiction over a subject, the States cannot have jurisdiction over the same subject." Miss. Power & Light Co. v. Miss. Ex rel. Moore, 487 U.S. 354, 377, 108 S.Ct. 2428, 101 L.Ed.2d 322 (1988) (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment). The Supreme Court has held that the Federal Power Act "left no power in the states to regulate licensees' sales for resale in interstate commerce." FPC v. S. Cal. Edison Co., 376 U.S. 205, 215, 84 S.Ct. 644, 11 L.Ed.2d 638 (1964). Moreover, the Court has repeatedly held that the federal statute "delegated to ... the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, exclusive authority to regulate the transmission and sale at wholesale of electric energy in interstate commerce, without regard to the source of production." New England Power Co. v. New Hampshire, 455 U.S. 331, 340, 102 S.Ct. 1096, 71 L.Ed.2d 188 (1982) (citing United States v. Pub. Utils. Comm'n of Co., 345 U.S. 295, 311, 73 S.Ct. 706, 97 L.Ed. 1020 (1953)). See also Nantahala Power & Light Co. v. Thornburg, 476 U.S. 953, 956, 106 S.Ct. 2349, 90 L.Ed.2d 943 (1986) (stating that
To support their proposition that the SOCAs are not "[c]ontracts ... effect[ing] a physical sale of electricity" and, therefore, "not subject to [Commission] jurisdiction[,]" the defendants rely on the case of New York Mercantile Exch., 74 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61, 311, 1996 WL 138734, 1996 F.E.R.C. LEXIS 454 (1996) ("NYMEX"); (Def.'s Post-Trial Br. at 12). In NYMEX, the Commission held that the Federal Power Act and its reporting requirements did not apply to an electricity futures contract that was approved for trading by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission ("CFTC") except if the "contract goes to delivery, the electric energy sold under the contract will be resold in interstate commerce, and the seller is a public utility." NYMEX, 74 F.E.R.C. at 61,984. Without reviewing all of the facts of NYMEX, the Court finds the case distinguishable for several reasons. First, no evidence was presented to indicate that the SOCAs have been approved for trading by a separate federal regulator. Second, there is a caveat in NYMEX that if a contract "goes to delivery" it may give rise to Commission jurisdiction. Here, the SOCA agreements are contingent upon the LCAPP generators' successful sale of capacity to PJM. Such capacity sales may constitute delivery within the meaning of NYMEX and, therefore, give rise to Commission jurisdiction.
The most credible testimony presented at trial confirming that the SOCA contracts are not purely financial contracts, and that they, therefore, intrude upon the exclusive jurisdiction of the Commission, was that of Professor Willig. He explained that, in economics, a purely financial arrangement is one that does not "involve any real performance." (T. 681, 5-6). He elaborated that "[a] financial deal does not involve any performance of a real side activity as part of the deal. So that's really the dividing line, and I think it's quite clear, it goes back to what we mean by price in economics, payment for performance." (T. 681, 21-24). Here, the SOCAs expressly condition payment on physical performance. As Professor Willig explained, under the SOCAs, the LCAPP generator has "got to build a plant, it's got to provide capacity, the capacity has to be available, had to be bid into RPM and into the auction, it has to clear the auction; there are all these elements of performance to which the SOCA payments are conditioned. So it's payment for performance." (T. 684, 10-15). Here, the LCAPP supplants the federal statute, and intrudes upon the exclusive jurisdiction of the Commission, by establishing the price that LCAPP generators will receive for their sales of capacity. The Court finds that in doing so, the LCAPP "places a direct burden upon interstate commerce" within the meaning of the Attleboro decision. Accordingly, the LCAPP Act invades the field occupied by Congress and is preempted by the Federal Power Act.
Defendants argue against preemption by stating that "Congress expressly reserved to the States exclusive jurisdiction to regulate generation." (Def.'s Post-Trial Br. at 23). According to the defendants, "State regulation of generation will not be pre-empted
The defendants also contend that preemption analysis "does not justify a `freewheeling judicial inquiry into whether a state statute is in tension with federal objectives.'" (Def.'s Post-Trial Br. at 23) (quoting Chamber of Commerce of U.S. v. Whiting, ___ U.S. ___, 131 S.Ct. 1968, 1985, 179 L.Ed.2d 1031 (2011)). Here, however, the Commission's exclusive authority over wholesale energy sales has existed since Attleboro and been confirmed by the Supreme Court and many lower courts decisions. An application of these prior decisions acknowledging the exclusive authority of the Commission to regulate wholesale electricity sales to the facts in this case certainly does not constitute "freewheeling."
Conflict preemption occurs where there is a conflict between a state law and a federal law. See Crosby, 530 U.S. at 372, 120 S.Ct. 2288 ("[E]ven if Congress has not occupied the field, state law is naturally preempted to the extent of any conflict with a federal statute."). Such a conflict occurs when "the challenged state law stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress." 132 S.Ct. at 2501. When confronting arguments that a law stands as an obstacle to Congressional objectives, a court must use its judgment: "What is a sufficient obstacle is a matter of judgment, to be informed by examining the federal statute as a whole and identifying its purpose and intended effects." Crosby, 530 U.S. at 373, 120 S.Ct. 2288. The court must look to "`the entire scheme of the statute'" and determine "`[i]f the purpose of the [federal] act cannot otherwise be accomplished — if its operation with its chosen field [would] be frustrated and its provisions be refused their natural effect.'" Id. (quoting Savage v. Jones, 225 U.S. 501, 533, 32 S.Ct. 715, 56 L.Ed. 1182 (1912)).
Where a state law conflicts with a federal law, the Court does not balance the competing federal and state interests. In fact, the Supreme Court has held that "[u]nder the Supremacy Clause of the Federal Constitution, `[t]he relative importance to the State of its own law is not material when there is a conflict with a valid federal law,' for `any state law, however clearly within a State's acknowledged power, which interferes with or is contrary to federal law, must yield.'" Felder v. Casey, 487 U.S. 131, 138, 108 S.Ct. 2302, 101 L.Ed.2d 123 (1988) (quoting Free v. Bland, 369 U.S. 663, 666, 82 S.Ct. 1089, 8 L.Ed.2d 180 (1962)); see also Gade v. Nat'l Solid Wastes Mgmt. Ass'n, 505 U.S. 88, 108, 112 S.Ct. 2374, 120 L.Ed.2d 73 (1992) ("[E]ven state regulation designed to protect
From reviewing the entire scheme of the RPM process, it is clear that the LCAPP Act poses as an obstacle to the Commission's implementation of the RPM. The testimonies of Messrs. Dominguez, Rauf and Cudwadie indicated that their companies rely on the competitive price signals of the RPM Auction to determine future company business plans. Each testified that the SOCA prices undermine their respective company's ability to use those RPM price signals to make sound business decisions. Each also contended that the future expansion of their respective companies would be contingent on whether the SOCA price continues to supplant the RPM Auction price. The effects described by the witnesses demonstrate that the SOCA's imposition of a government imposed price creates an obstacle to the Commission's preferred method for the wholesale sale of electricity in interstate commerce.
The Plaintiffs argue that the LCAPP Act also must be invalidated under the Commerce Clause. This argument concerns the procurement of the capacity wherein Plaintiffs argue that Board discriminated against out-of-state generators in its solicitation of bids to become eligible generators under the LCAPP. The "dormant" aspect of the Commerce Clause prohibits states from using their regulatory power to discriminate in favor of in-state producers at the expense of those out-of-state. C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown, 511 U.S. 383, 389-90, 114 S.Ct. 1677, 128 L.Ed.2d 399 (1994); W. Lynn Creamery, Inc. v. Healy, 512 U.S. 186, 192, 114 S.Ct. 2205, 129 L.Ed.2d 157 (1994); Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 502 U.S. 437, 454-55, 112 S.Ct. 789, 117 L.Ed.2d 1 (1992). The Supreme Court has defined forbidden discrimination as "differential treatment of in-state and out-of-state economic interests that benefits the former and burdens the latter." United Haulers Ass'n v. Oneida-Herkimer Solid Waste Mgmt. Auth., 550 U.S. 330, 338, 127 S.Ct. 1786, 167 L.Ed.2d 655 (2007) (quotation marks omitted): W. Lynn Creamery, 512 U.S. at 192, 114 S.Ct. 2205.
When a law discriminates against out-of-state producers on its face, the State bears the burden of demonstrating, "under rigorous scrutiny, that it has no other means to advance a legitimate local interest." C&A Carbone, 511 U.S. at 392, 114 S.Ct. 1677. "Statutes that discriminate by `practical effect and design,' rather than explicitly on the face of the regulation, are similarly subjected to heightened scrutiny." Tri-M Group, LLC v. Sharp, 638 F.3d 406, 427 n. 28 (3d Cir.2011).
The plaintiffs argue that the "community benefit" points awarded to generators in New Jersey effectively prohibited out-of-state generators from competing to be eligible generators under the LCAPP Act. According to the plaintiff's, the LCAPP Act — through its express consideration of economic and community benefits — favored in-state enterprises over out-of-state enterprises." (Pl.'s Post-Trial Br. at 48). To demonstrate this, the plaintiffs rely on the following evidence: (1) President Solomon's letter to Governor Christie that mentions a preference for in-state generators (Pl.'s Ex. 84); (2) the initial draft of the LCAPP legislation that promoted construction of qualified in-state electric generators (even though such language was deleted prior to enactment) (Pl.'s Ex. 94); (3) language in the LCAPP which required the Board to consider the "economic[] and community benefits" of a
Despite the abovementioned evidence, the plaintiffs fail to overcome the most persuasive evidence that substantiates the reasons the State is seeking in-state development. A significant portion of the trial focused on locational deliverability areas (LDAs). (Stipulated Fact ¶ 30). As previously noted, New Jersey is located in such an area that is known as EMAAC. In addition, there are two other locational deliverability areas within New Jersey known as PSEG and PS North (T. 1529, 3-13). Generally, these LDAs have higher capacity prices than other PJM areas due to transmission costs. Even the Plaintiffs agree that a capacity price cannot be set for an entire region. (Pl.'s Ex. 26, at 34). As a result, there is separation in price which is authorized by PJM and the Commission. The record as a whole supports the proposition that the closer the generation facility is to the delivery area, transmission costs will subside. As Mr. Herling concluded when discussing the reliability crisis, reliability issues could only be resolved in one of two ways — transmission via the Susquehanna Connection or additional generation in or near the location where the reliability issue will occur. (Def.'s Ex. 563, at 33) (emphasis added). As such, it appears reasonable that the Board would incentivize construction in areas where reliability concerns are in flux. As such, the Board has the authority to incentivize construction within New Jersey. What is good for the goose is good for the gander. As such, the incentive for community benefits to generators in New Jersey appears reasonable. Since Plaintiffs have not briefed or argued the commerce clause in such a fashion, the Court finds that Plaintiff has not met its burden of proof.
Based on the foregoing facts and law, the Court declares that the Long Term Capacity Agreement Pilot Program Act (LCAPP) is preempted by the Federal Power Act and in violation of the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution; and is therefore null and void.
GLOSSARY OF ACRONYMS BGS Basic Generation Service BPU OR NJBPU The Board of Public Utilities of the State of New Jersey; also referred to as "the Board" BRA Base Residual Auction CC Combined cycle COD Commercial Operation Date CONE Cost of New Entry CT Combustion Turbine DAM Day Ahead Market DG Distributed Generation DR Demand Response EDC Electric Distribution Company EDECA Electric Discount and Energy Competition Act EE Energy Efficiency EMAAC Easter Mid-Atlantic Area Council EMP Energy Master Plan
FERC Federal Energy Regulatory Commission FPA Federal Power Act FRR Fixed Resource Requirement GT Gas turbine GW Gigawatt GWh Gigawatt hour HEDD High Energy Demand Day ICAP Installed Capacity ISO Independent System Operator KW Kilowatt KWh Kilowatt hour LCAPP Long Term Capacity Agreement Pilot Program LDA Locational Deliverability Area LMP Locational Marginal Price LSE Load Serving Entity MAAC Mid-Atlantic Area Council MAAP Mid-Atlantic Power Pathway MOPR Minimum Offer Price Rule MW Megawatt MWh Megawatt Hour NEPA New Entry Price Adjustment NERC North American Electric Reliability Corporation NRC Nuclear Regulatory Commission P3 PJM Power Providers Group PATH Potomac-Appalachian Transmission Highline PJM PJM Interconnection, LLC PPA Power Purchase Agreement RCP Resource Clearing Price RMR Reliability Must Run RPM Reliability Pricing Model RPS Renewable Portfolio Standard RTEP Regional Transmission Expansion Plan RTM Real Time Market RTO Regional Transmission Organization SIS System Impact Study SOCA Standard Offer Capacity Agreement TO Transmission Owner TRAIL Trans-Allegheny Interstate Line TRC Total Resource Cost UCAP Unforced Capacity VRR Variable Resource Requirement