Entergy Texas, Inc. v. Public Utility Commission of Texas, Office of Public Utility Counsel, and Texas Industrial Energy Consumers ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                     ACCEPTED
    03-14-00709-CV
    5172242
    THIRD COURT OF APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    5/6/2015 11:42:47 AM
    JEFFREY D. KYLE
    CLERK
    NO. 03-14-00709-CV
    FILED IN
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS    3rd COURT OF APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    FOR THE THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS5/6/2015 11:42:47 AM
    AUSTIN, TEXAS           JEFFREY D. KYLE
    Clerk
    ENTERGY TEXAS, INC.
    Appellants,
    v.
    PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION OF TEXAS
    Appellee.
    Appeal from the 53rd Judicial District Court, Travis County, Texas
    The Honorable Amy Clark Meachum, Judge Presiding
    APPELLEE TEXAS INDUSTRIAL ENERGY CONSUMERS’
    ORAL ARGUMENT EXHIBITS
    MAY 6, 2015
    Rex D. VanMiddlesworth
    rex.vanmiddlesworth@tklaw.com
    State Bar No. 20449400
    Benjamin Hallmark
    benjamin.hallmark@tklaw.com
    State Bar No. 24069865
    THOMPSON & KNIGHT LLP
    98 San Jacinto Blvd., Suite 1900
    Austin, TX 78701
    Telephone: (512) 469-6100
    Facsimile: (512) 469-6180
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE TEXAS
    INDUSTRIAL ENERGY CONSUMERS
    INDEX
    ETI sought to define unrecovered costs as “lost revenues” at the PUC ...............1
    Selected evidence before the PUC on the amount of unrecovered costs..............2
    Costs to Serve a CGS Customer Under Revised CGS Program...........................5
    Selected findings of fact from pages 10-16 of the PUC’s Interim Order .............6
    Excerpt from D. 38951 Interim Order ..................................................................7
    Comparison of ETI’s reply brief quotations of the PUC’s orders
    to the actual orders ................................................................................................8
    i
    ORAL ARGUMENT EXHIBIT – TIEC 1
    ETI sought to define unrecovered costs as “lost revenues” at the PUC
    The purpose of this Rider is to provide a mechanism for recovery of such lost base rate
    revenues that were included in the Company’s last general rate case proceeding . . .
    Excerpt of ETI’s proposed CGSUSC Rider in Docket No. 37744 1
    Unrecovered Costs should be defined as the embedded production costs and any other
    related base rate costs that would have been recovered through traditional rates charged to
    CGS Customers that will no longer be recovered from the CGS Customers. These are costs that
    the CGS Customers would have paid under their traditional rate schedules if they had not
    switched to the CGS program.
    Excerpt of ETI witness Phillip May’s February 2012 supplemental direct testimony 2
    . . . ETI is seeking recovery of “unrecovered costs” which the Company has defined as its
    embedded generation costs . . .
    Excerpt of ETI witness J. Stephen Dingle’s February 2012 supplemental rebuttal testimony 3
    Q       . . . And is it still the purpose of ETI to provide a mechanism for recovery of lost base
    rate revenues. Answer? Will you read your answer there?
    A       (May) Yes, the tariff is intended to recover those costs that would go unrecovered as a
    result of this tariff.
    Hearing testimony of ETI witness Phillip May at April 2012 PUC hearing 4
    The PUC’s conclusion of law on unrecovered costs:
    PURA § 39.452(b) does not allow for the recovery of lost revenue or embedded
    generation costs. 5
    Excerpt of ETI’s Motion for Rehearing at the PUC:
    As the ALJ determined and the evidence clearly demonstrates, "the 'unrecovered costs'
    referenced in PURA § 39.452(b) and the 'lost revenue' that ETI has calculated as the measure of
    the unrecovered costs are one and the same in the ratesetting context." 6
    1
    AR Part II, Binder 3, ETI Ex. 9 (Direct Testimony of Phillip R. May at PRM-1 at p.5) (emphasis added).
    2
    AR Part II, Binder 3, ETI Ex. 91 (Supplemental Direct Testimony of Phillip R. May at 5-6) (emphasis added).
    3
    AR Part II, Binder 3, ETI Ex. 95 (Supplemental Rebuttal Testimony of J. Stephen Dingle at 12) (emphasis added).
    4
    AR Part III, Binder 5, Vol. B (Tr. at 98, Apr. 19, 2012) (emphasis added).
    5
    AR Part I, Binder 2, Item 119 (Final Order of the Public Utility Commission at CoL 2) (emphasis added).
    6
    AR Part I, Binder 2, Item 121 (Motion for Rehearing of Entergy Texas Inc. at 4) (emphasis added).
    1
    ORAL ARGUMENT EXHIBIT – TIEC 2
    Selected evidence before the PUC on the amount of unrecovered costs
    Excerpts from supplemental direct testimony of TIEC expert witness Jeffry Pollock
    ETI's costs that could potentially be unrecovered as a result of the implementation of the
    contemplated CGS Program are the expenditures that ETI would incur to provide service to
    CGS Customers once a CGS tariff is implemented. These expenditures include the start-up and
    on-going costs to develop and maintain the CGS Program and the cost of providing backup
    power to CGS Customers if CGS Supply becomes unavailable.
    CGS Customers should pay ETI's reasonable start-up and on-going program and
    implementation costs for the CGS Program. CGS Customers would also pay backup power
    costs through a Fixed Cost Contribution Fee and the Unserved Energy Rate. Consequently, no
    unrecovered costs would exist that need to be allocated to other customers and customer
    classes. 1
    ...
    Q       WOULD ANY UNRECOVERED COSTS EXIST AFTER START-UP, ON-GOING
    AND BACKUP POWER COSTS ARE PAID BY THE CGS CUSTOMER?
    A       No. Recall that, under the CGS Program described in the Stipulation, the CGS
    Customer would effectively buy its own capacity and energy from the CGS Supplier.
    With the exception of the capacity credit and fixed fuel factor, a CGS Customer will pay
    ETI a retail rate that includes all other charges the customer would pay as a firm
    customer, including a transmission and distribution rate and all other applicable tariffs
    (e.g., Rider TTC, HRC, SRC, SCO, AFC and FF charges, if applicable). There would
    be no other unrecovered costs. 2
    ...
    With the proposed cap, the CGS Program would at most have the effect of slowing ETI's load
    growth, not reducing its load. As load grows, each additional kW and kWh sold will provide a
    contribution to all fixed costs, including embedded generation capacity costs. Any reduction in
    embedded generation cost recovery that may be attributable to the CGS Program may be more
    than offset by the increased revenues resulting from load growth. Stated differently, as long as
    ETI continues to collect the same amount of revenue or more as its embedded generation costs
    established for a test-year, it cannot claim that any costs are unrecovered, irrespective of how
    it defines unrecovered costs. Instead, those costs are simply being recovered from new
    customers or through growth in the demand of existing customers. 3
    1
    AR Part II, Binder 4, TIEC Ex. 15 (Supplemental Direct Testimony and Exhibits of Jeffry Pollock at 8) (emphasis
    added).
    2
    
    Id. at 16
    (emphasis added).
    3
    
    Id. at 21
    (emphasis added).
    2
    ORAL ARGUMENT EXHIBIT – TIEC 2
    Excerpts from supplemental direct testimony of Cities expert witness Karl Nalepa
    The current CGS program has been designed such that no production costs need go
    unrecovered. The current CGS program is designed so that over the long term the CGS
    customer will pay for any production costs incurred by ETI on the CGS customer's behalf--either
    through the CGS rate and fixed cost contribution charge or through the unserved energy rate.
    Unlike the originally-proposed program which was designed to serve energy only, the CGS
    customer under the current proposal would contract for its own firm capacity and energy so
    would not be supplied either capacity or energy by ETI . . . .
    The Fixed Cost Contribution Fee, which should recover the fixed production costs incurred
    on behalf of LIPS CGS Customers, is $1.10/kw/month based on costs established in Docket No.
    37744. Should production costs change in the current base rate case, Docket No. 39896, the
    fixed production costs of the CGS customer would also change. 4
    Excerpts from cross-examination of TIEC expert witness Jeffry Pollock at April 2012 hearing
    Q      Well, I take it from your testimony that you're saying the only kind of unrecovered costs
    the company will experience are the costs of putting the program together and administering
    it?
    A      (Pollock) Yes. Based on the parameters of the program that is now before the
    Commission where capacity is basically -- potentially and hopefully would be treated as firm
    capacity, that would be the case. 5
    ...
    Q      And based on this exhibit, you conclude that they’ll have enough -- there will be enough
    load growth to offset any unrecovered costs.
    A       (Pollock) Correct. 6
    Excerpt of examination of Cities expert witness Karl Nalepa at April 2012 hearing
    Q      Mr. Nalepa, Mr. Neinast was asking you whether Entergy would still serve the CGS
    customers, and I think he had an example of a customer -- a LIPS customer of a hundred
    megawatts, 80 megawatts stayed on LIPS and 20 megawatts moved to the CGS program. Can
    you kind of explain the difference between what he’s saying -- or what I interpreted, I guess, as
    serving the customer and where the capacity would actually come from?
    A      (Nalepa) Sure. The capacity agreement is between the CGS customer, and we’ll call it
    the QF as a supplier, but physically the QF -- or Entergy would purchase energy from the QF and
    4
    AR Part II, Binder 3, Citiex Ex. 6C (Supplemental Direct Testimony of Karl J. Nalepa at 10-11) (footnote omitted)
    (emphasis added).
    5
    AR Part III, Binder 5, Vol. B ( Tr. at 166, Apr. 12, 2012) (emphasis added).
    6
    
    Id. at 171
    (emphasis added).
    3
    ORAL ARGUMENT EXHIBIT – TIEC 2
    then -- at avoided cost. Entergy would resell it to the CGS customer at avoided cost. So they’re
    still connected, but the supply is dedicated from a specific supplier to a specific customer.
    Q     So would ETI necessarily then be incurring production costs to serve the CGS
    customer?
    A          (Nalepa) No, not at all. 7
    7
    
    Id. at 196-97
    (emphasis added).
    4
    ORAL ARGUMENT EXHIBIT – TIEC 3
    Costs to Serve a CGS Customer Under Revised CGS Program
    [Demonstrative Exhibit]
    Cost            Recovery Method               Who Pays              Cost to ETI          Finding of Fact 1
    CGS Supplier-             CGS customer                    $0         FoF 41(A)(1), B(1), (C)(2)
    Capacity                 Customer contract                                                    p. 18
    CGS Supplier       CGS customer                           $0         FoF 41(D)(1)
    Energy                   charges ETI                                                          p. 19
    avoided cost under
    PUCT Rate
    Schedule LQF,
    which is passed
    through to the CGS
    customer
    CGS customer
    Backup power             pays ETI unserved         CGS customer                    $0         FoF 41(E), (F)
    energy charge at                                                     p. 19-20
    105% of avoided
    cost + Fixed Cost
    Contribution Fee
    of $1.10 per
    kW/mo
    Transmission
    and                      PUCT tariff               CGS customer                    $0         FoF 41(C)(3)
    Distribution                                                                                  p. 18
    Other
    applicable rates Applicable PUCT                   CGS customer                    $0         FoF 41(C)(5)
    (e.g., Rider     tariff                                                                       p. 19
    TTC, HRC,
    SRC, SCO,
    AFC)
    Implementation To-be-filed                         CGS customer or
    Costs          CGS Rider                           LIPS customer                   $0         FoF 57(B)
    Administrative           To-be-filed               CGS customer or
    Costs                    CGS Rider                 LIPS customer                   $0         FoF 57(B)
    1
    AR Part II, Binder 1, Item 119 (Final Order of the Public Utility Commission of Texas).
    5
    ORAL ARGUMENT EXHIBIT – TIEC 4
    Selected findings of fact from pages 10-16 of the PUC’s Interim Order 1
    25.        The parties agreed that there will be a 115 MW cap on the CGS program.
    28.        The parties agreed that there will be a cap of 10 CGS purchase agreements.
    29.        The parties, except ETI, agreed that to the extent there are costs unrecovered as a result of
    the implementation of a CGS tariff, those costs should be borne solely by customers taking
    service under the CGS tariff, i.e., CGS customers. ETI did not oppose this stipulation.
    30.E. CGS customer fixed-cost contribution
    1. The level of compensation to ETI from CGS customers for CGS service will include a
    monthly fixed charge called a fixed-cost contribution.
    2. The fixed-cost contribution will be $1.10 per kW of CGS load per month.
    3. Revenues from the fixed-cost contribution will reduce any otherwise unrecovered costs
    associated with the program.
    30.F.2 The structure of the CGS unserved energy tariffed rate will include an agreed energy
    charge and agreed O&M adder.
    32.        The parties stipulated that based on an assessment of load requirements and generating
    capability, the [Strategic Resource Plan] projects that ETI has an incremental net resource
    deficiency of 260 MW in 2012 and 504 MW in 2013.
    34.        The parties stipulated that CGS purchase agreements are resources that will be included
    in the Entergy System’s portfolio of supply resources, consistent with the terms and conditions
    related to the delivery requirements of those purchase agreements (e.g., degree of dispatchability,
    term, degree of firmness).
    38.        PURA § 39.452(b) provides for the utility to be able to recover any costs unrecovered as
    a result of the implementation of the tariff.
    40.        The Commission finds that the costs that will be unrecovered as a result of the
    implementation of the CGS program tariff are the costs to implement and administer the
    CGS program tariff. (emphasis added)
    1
    AR Part I, Binder I, Item 77 (Interim Order of the Public Utility Commission).
    6
    ORAL ARGUMENT EXHIBIT – TIEC 5
    PUC Docket No. 38951                              Interim Order                                      Page 6 of 17
    ETI argued that unrecovered costs should be defined as the embedded production costs
    and any other related base rate costs that would have been recovered through traditional rates
    charged to CGS customers that will no longer be recovered due to the CGS program.14 TIEC
    took the position that unrecovered costs should not include ETI's hypothetical lost revenues and
    that the costs that could be unrecovered as a result of implementation of the tariff should include
    the expenditures actually incurred by ETI to implement and maintain the CGS program.ts Cities
    and OPUC agreed with TIEC that unrecovered costs are not the same thing as unrecovered
    revenues. 16 Cities also noted that it would be unreasonable to allow ETI to continue to incur
    costs for a customer the utility no longer plans to serve. 17
    In making its determination of the definition of unrecovered costs, the Commission
    follows the precedent set in CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC v. Pub. Util. Comm 'n,
    
    354 S.W.3d 899
    (Tex. App-Austin, 2011 no pet.) where the Third Court of Appeals found that
    because the language of PURA § 39.905 did not specifically provide for recovery of "lost
    revenues" and that in at least two other provisions of PURA 18 the legislature expressly
    distinguishes "costs" from "revenues," the term "costs," as used by the legislature in
    PURA § 39.905, is not intended to include lost revenues.19                           Like PURA § 39.905,
    PURA § 39.452(b) only provides for "costs unrecovered as a result of implementation of the
    tariff' and does not specifically provide for the utility to recover lost revenues or any other type
    of costs.
    Based on the evidence and testimony, the Commission finds that the proper interpretation
    of "costs unrecovered as a result of implementation of the CGS program tariff' is costs to
    implement and administer the CGS program tariff. Such unrecovered costs do not include lost
    revenues, embedded generation costs, or any other types of costs. The Commission reverses the
    proposal for decision on this issue.
    14 Supplemental Direct Testimony, Exhibits, and Workpapers of Phillip R. May, ETI Ex. 91 at 6.
    " s Supplemental Direct Testimony of Jeffry Pollock, TIEC Ex. 15 at 14-15.
    "' Supplemental Direct Testimony of Karl Nalepa, Cities Ex. 6C at 7 and Supplemental Cross Rebuttal
    Testimony of Clarence Johnson, OPUC Ex. 8 at 6.
    " Supplemental Direct Testimony of Karl Nalepa, Cities Ex. 6C at 7-8.
    18 PURA § 55.024(b) and PURA § 56.025(e).
    19 CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric, LLC v. Pub. Util. Comm'n, 
    354 S.W.3d 899
    , 903-904
    (Tex.Civ.App-Austin, 2011)
    7
    000000006
    ORAL ARGUMENT EXHIBIT – TIEC 6
    Comparison of ETI’s reply brief quotations of the PUC’s orders to the actual orders
    The PUC’s Interim Order (p. 6):
    Based on the evidence and testimony, the Commission finds that the proper interpretation of
    “costs unrecovered as a result of implementation of the CGS program tariff” is costs to
    implement and administer the CGS program tariff. Such unrecovered costs do not include lost
    revenues, embedded generation costs, or any other types of costs. The Commission reverses the
    proposal for decision on this issue.
    ETI’s quotation of the foregoing in its reply brief (p. 5) (emphasis ETI’s):
    [T]he proper interpretation of “costs unrecovered as a result of implementation of the CGS
    program tariff” is costs to implement and administer the CGS program tariff. Such unrecovered
    costs do not include lost revenues, embedded generation costs, or any other types of costs. The
    Commission reverses the proposal for decision on this issue.
    ---
    The PUC’s Final Order at finding of fact 20:
    The Commission held the hearing on the merits on April 19, 2012, and issued an interim order
    on June 12, 2012 that adopted the unopposed issues and ruled that the types of costs that will be
    considered ETI's unrecovered costs for purposes of PURA § 39.452(b) are those costs necessary
    to implement and administer the CGS program and are not to be defined to include lost revenues,
    embedded generation costs, or any other types of costs.
    ETI’s quotation of the foregoing in its reply brief at 6 (emphasis ETI’s):
    the types of costs that will be considered ETI’s unrecovered costs for purposes of PURA
    § 39.452(b) are those costs necessary to implement and administer the CGS program and are not
    to be defined to include lost revenues, embedded generation costs, or any other types of costs.
    ---
    The PUC’s finding of fact on unrecovered costs (FoF 40 in Interim Order and FoF 51 in Final
    Order):
    The Commission finds that the costs that will be unrecovered as a result of the implementation of
    the CGS program tariff are the costs to implement and administer the CGS program tariff.
    ETI’s reply brief:
    [This finding of fact is not quoted in ETI’s reply brief or appellant’s brief.]
    8
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    As required by Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.5, I certify that on the
    6th day of May, 2015, the foregoing document was electronically filed with the
    Clerk of the Court using the electronic case filing system of the Court, and that a
    true and correct copy was served on the following lead counsel for all parties listed
    below via electronic service:
    Counsel for Entergy Texas, Inc.              John F. Williams
    Marnie A. McCormick
    Duggins Wren Mann & Romero, LLP
    600 Congress Ave., Ste. 1900
    Austin, Texas 78701
    Counsel for the Public Utility Commission    Elizabeth R. B. Sterling
    of Texas                                     Megan M. Neal
    Environmental Protection Division
    Office of the Attorney General
    P.O. Box 12548
    Austin, Texas 78711-2548
    Counsel for Office of Public Utility         Sara J. Ferris
    Counsel                                      Office of Public Utility Counsel
    1701 N. Congress Ave., Ste. 9-180
    P.O. Box 12397
    Austin, Texas 78711-2397
    /s/ Benjamin Hallmark
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-14-00709-CV

Filed Date: 5/6/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/29/2016