80_FR_17715 80 FR 17653 - Open Access and Priority Rights on Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities

80 FR 17653 - Open Access and Priority Rights on Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities

DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 62 (April 1, 2015)

Page Range17653-17682
FR Document2015-06953

In this Final Rule, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is amending its regulations to waive the Open Access Transmission Tariff requirements, the Open Access Same-Time Information System requirements, and the Standards of Conduct requirements, under certain conditions, for the ownership, control, or operation of Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities (ICIF). This Final Rule finds that those seeking interconnection and transmission service over ICIF that are subject to the blanket waiver adopted herein may follow procedures applicable to requests for interconnection and transmission service under sections 210, 211, and 212 of the FPA, which also allows the contractual flexibility for entities to reach mutually agreeable access solutions. This Final Rule establishes a modified rebuttable presumption for a five-year safe harbor period to reduce risks to ICIF owners eligible for the blanket waiver during the critical early years of their projects. Finally, this Final Rule modifies, as described in detail below, several elements of the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, including the entities eligible for the OATT waiver, the date on which the safe harbor begins, the rebuttable presumption that the ICIF owner should not be required to expand its facilities during the safe harbor, and the facilities covered by the Final Rule.

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 62 (Wednesday, April 1, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 62 (Wednesday, April 1, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 17653-17682]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-06953]



[[Page 17653]]

Vol. 80

Wednesday,

No. 62

April 1, 2015

Part IV





Department of Energy





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 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission





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18 CFR Part 35





 Open Access and Priority Rights on Interconnection Customer's 
Interconnection Facilities; Final Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / 
Rules and Regulations

[[Page 17654]]


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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

18 CFR Part 35

[RM14-11-000; Order No. 807]


Open Access and Priority Rights on Interconnection Customer's 
Interconnection Facilities

AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: In this Final Rule, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission 
is amending its regulations to waive the Open Access Transmission 
Tariff requirements, the Open Access Same-Time Information System 
requirements, and the Standards of Conduct requirements, under certain 
conditions, for the ownership, control, or operation of Interconnection 
Customer's Interconnection Facilities (ICIF). This Final Rule finds 
that those seeking interconnection and transmission service over ICIF 
that are subject to the blanket waiver adopted herein may follow 
procedures applicable to requests for interconnection and transmission 
service under sections 210, 211, and 212 of the FPA, which also allows 
the contractual flexibility for entities to reach mutually agreeable 
access solutions. This Final Rule establishes a modified rebuttable 
presumption for a five-year safe harbor period to reduce risks to ICIF 
owners eligible for the blanket waiver during the critical early years 
of their projects. Finally, this Final Rule modifies, as described in 
detail below, several elements of the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 
including the entities eligible for the OATT waiver, the date on which 
the safe harbor begins, the rebuttable presumption that the ICIF owner 
should not be required to expand its facilities during the safe harbor, 
and the facilities covered by the Final Rule.

DATES: This rule will become effective June 30, 2015.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Becky Robinson (Technical Information), Office of Energy Policy and 
Innovation, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street NE., 
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8868, [email protected].
Brian Gish (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel--Energy 
Markets, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street NE., 
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8998, [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

                              Order No. 807
                               Final Rule
 
                                                        Paragraph Nos.
 
I. Introduction....................................                    1
II. Background.....................................                    6
    A. Development of ICIF Policies................                    6
III. Need for Reform...............................                   18
    A. Commission Proposal.........................                   18
    B. Comments....................................                   19
    C. Commission Determination....................                   33
IV. Proposed Reforms...............................                   41
    A. Eligible ICIF...............................                   41
        1. Commission Proposal.....................                   41
        2. Comments................................                   42
        3. Commission Determination................                   43
    B. Grant Blanket Waivers to Eligible ICIF                         44
     Owners........................................
        1. Blanket Waivers.........................                   44
        2. Requirement That ICIF Owners Must Sell                     59
         Electricity To Qualify for the Waiver.....
        3. Status of the Third-Party Requester.....                   76
        4. Non-Public Utilities....................                   79
        5. Applicability to Industrial Power                          83
         Systems' Tie Lines........................
        6. Applicability of the Blanket Waiver to                     85
         Additional Regulations....................
        7. Existing Agreements and Waivers.........                   88
        8. Existing OATTs..........................                   90
        9. Revoking the Blanket Waiver.............                   94
    C. Interconnection and Transmission Under                        104
     Sections 210 and 211 of the Federal Power Act.
        1. Sections 210 and 211....................                  104
        2. Voluntary Arrangements..................                  115
        3. Interaction With the Transmission System                  119
        4. Scope of Regulations To Be Modified.....                  128
        5. Reliability Standards...................                  131
    D. Safe Harbor.................................                  133
        1. Whether and To What Extent There Should                   133
         Be a Safe Harbor Period...................
        2. Starting Point for the Safe Harbor                        141
         Period....................................
        3. Length of the Safe Harbor Period........                  147
    E. Affiliate Concerns..........................                  153
        1. Commission Proposal.....................                  153
        2. Comments................................                  154
        3. Commission Determination................                  165
    F. Miscellaneous...............................                  170
        1. Treatment of Line Losses on ICIF........                  170
        2. Applicability of the Commission's                         172
         ``Prior Notice'' Policy...................
        3. Technical Aspects of Interconnection....                  174
        4. Implementation..........................                  176
V. Information Collection Statement................                  177
VI.8 Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis...........                  184
VII. Document Availability.........................                  185
VIII. Effective Date and Congressional Notification                  188
Regulatory Text
Appendix A: List of Short Names of Commenters on
 the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
 


[[Page 17655]]

I. Introduction

    1. In this Final Rule, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission 
(FERC or Commission) is amending its regulations to waive the Open 
Access Transmission Tariff (OATT) requirements of 18 CFR 35.28, the 
Open Access Same-Time Information System (OASIS) requirements of 18 CFR 
37, and the Standards of Conduct requirements 18 CFR 358, under certain 
conditions, for the ownership, control, or operation of Interconnection 
Customer's Interconnection Facilities (ICIF).\1\ This Final Rule finds 
that those seeking interconnection and transmission service over ICIF 
that are subject to the blanket waiver adopted herein may follow 
procedures applicable to requests for interconnection and transmission 
service under sections 210, 211, and 212 of the Federal Power Act 
(FPA), which also allows the contractual flexibility for entities to 
reach mutually agreeable access solutions.\2\ This Final Rule 
establishes a modified rebuttable presumption for a five-year safe 
harbor period to reduce risks to ICIF owners \3\ eligible for the 
blanket waiver during the critical early years of their projects. 
Finally, this Final Rule modifies, as described in detail below, 
several elements of the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NOPR), including 
the entities eligible for the OATT waiver, the date on which the safe 
harbor begins, the rebuttable presumption that the ICIF owner should 
not be required to expand its facilities during the safe harbor, and 
the facilities covered by the Final Rule.\4\
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    \1\ The jurisdictional interconnection facilities for which this 
Final Rule grants a waiver have sometimes in the past been referred 
to informally as ``generator tie lines,'' but, in the Notice of 
Proposed Rulemaking, the Commission used the term ICIF as defined in 
the pro forma documents issued with Order No. 2003. As discussed 
below, infra section IV.A Eligible ICIF, we continue to use the term 
``ICIF'' throughout this Final Rule but clarify there that we intend 
the term to encompass a broader scope. Standardization of Generator 
Interconnection Agreements and Procedures, Order No. 2003, 68 FR 
49845 (Aug. 19, 2003), FERC Stats. & Regs. ]31,146, at Appendix C, 
Appendix 6, Article 1 (2003), order on reh'g, Order No. 2003-A, 69 
FR 15932 (Mar. 26, 2004), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,160, order on 
reh'g, Order No. 2003-B, 70 FR 265 (Jan. 4, 2005), FERC Stats. & 
Regs. ] 31,171 (2004), order on reh'g, Order No. 2003-C, 70 FR 37661 
(Jun. 30, 2005), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,190 (2005), aff'd sub nom. 
Nat'l Ass'n of Regulatory Util. Comm'rs v. FERC, 475 F.3d 1277 (D.C. 
Cir. 2007), cert denied, 552 U.S. 1230 (2008).
    \2\ 16 U.S.C. 824i, 824j, and 824k.
    \3\ In this Final Rule, the term ``ICIF owners'' includes those 
who operate or control ICIF.
    \4\ Open Access and Priority Rights on Interconnection 
Customer's Interconnection Facilities, Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking, 79 FR 31061 (May 30, 2014), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 
(2014), corrected, 79 FR 35501 (June 23, 2014).
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    2. We find that requiring the filing of an OATT is not necessary to 
prevent unjust or unreasonable rates or unduly discriminatory behavior 
with respect to ICIF, over which interconnection and transmission 
services can be ordered pursuant to sections 210, 211, and 212 of the 
FPA.\5\ Further, we conclude that the Commission's policies requiring 
the ICIF owner to make excess capacity available to third parties 
unless it can justify its planned use of the line impose risks and 
burdens on ICIF owners and create regulatory inefficiencies that are 
not necessary given the goals that the Commission seeks to achieve 
through such policies. Based on comments received as part of our 
consideration of the treatment of ICIF, we understand that generation 
developers may develop new projects in phases and build interconnection 
facilities large enough to accommodate the development of all planned 
phases. The Commission's existing policy has led ICIF owners to file 
petitions for declaratory orders demonstrating plans and milestones for 
future generation development to reserve for themselves currently 
excess ICIF capacity that they built for such purposes. In the vast 
majority of cases, the Commission has granted the petition, based on 
confidential documentation filed by the ICIF owner, with a limited 
description of the plans and milestones the Commission deemed 
dispositive. Further, the Commission's existing policy of treating ICIF 
the same as other transmission facilities for OATT purposes, including 
the requirement to file an OATT following a third-party request, 
creates undue burden for ICIF owners without a corresponding 
enhancement of access given the ICIF owner's typical ability to 
establish priority rights.
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    \5\ As discussed infra, the blanket waiver will apply only to 
entities that are either directly subject to section 210 or have 
voluntarily committed to comply with section 210.
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    3. Granting an OATT waiver to ICIF owners and providing that third-
party access be governed by sections 210, 211, and 212 will enable ICIF 
owners and third parties, where possible, to reach mutually agreeable 
and voluntary arrangements that provide ICIF access to third parties, 
while protecting a third party's right to request that the Commission 
order interconnection and transmission service over ICIF. We find that 
providing this contractual flexibility may remove barriers to an ICIF 
owner's willingness to enter into such an agreement with a third party.
    4. We recognize that ICIF owners often construct ICIF to 
accommodate multiple generation project phases and intend for their 
subsequent generation projects to use what is initially excess capacity 
on the ICIF. We believe that the safe harbor period established by this 
Final Rule will enable these ICIF owners to focus in the early stages 
of development on building generation.
    5. We find that the reforms adopted herein re-balance the burden on 
ICIF owners and encourage efficient generation and interconnection 
facility development, while maintaining access to available capacity 
for third parties where appropriate.

II. Background

A. Development of ICIF Policies

    6. Under section 201(b) of the FPA, the Commission has jurisdiction 
over all facilities used for the transmission of electric energy in 
interstate commerce.\6\ Under section 201(e) of the FPA, any person who 
owns or operates facilities subject to the jurisdiction of the 
Commission is a public utility.\7\ The Commission is charged with the 
responsibility under sections 205 and 206 of the FPA to ensure that a 
public utility's rates, charges, and classifications of service are 
just and reasonable and not unduly discriminatory or preferential.\8\
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    \6\ 16 U.S.C. 824(b).
    \7\ 16 U.S.C. 824(e). Section 201(f) of the FPA exempts certain 
governmental entities and electric cooperatives from being a public 
utility.
    \8\ 16 U.S.C. 824d and 824e.
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    7. In Order No. 888, the Commission, relying upon its authority 
under sections 205 and 206 of the FPA, established non-discriminatory 
open access to electric transmission service as the foundation 
necessary to develop competitive bulk power markets in the United 
States.\9\ Order No. 888, codified in section 35.28 of the Commission's 
regulations, requires that any public utility that owns, controls, or 
operates facilities used for the transmission of electric energy in 
interstate commerce must file an OATT and comply with other related 
requirements. The Commission in Order No. 888 did not specifically 
address transmission facilities associated with the

[[Page 17656]]

interconnection of electric generating units to the transmission grid.
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    \9\ Promoting Wholesale Competition Through Open Access Non-
Discriminatory Transmission Services by Public Utilities; Recovery 
of Stranded Costs by Public Utilities and Transmitting Utilities, 
Order No. 888, 61 FR 21540 (May 10, 1996), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 
31,036 (1996), order on reh'g, Order No. 888-A, 62 FR 12274 (Mar. 
14, 1997), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,048, order on reh'g, Order No. 
888-B, 81 FERC ] 61,248 (1997), order on reh'g, Order No. 888-C, 82 
FERC ] 61,046 (1998), aff'd in relevant part sub nom. Transmission 
Access Policy Study Group v. FERC, 225 F.3d 667 (D.C. Cir. 2000), 
aff'd sub nom. New York v. FERC, 535 U.S. 1 (2002).
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    8. At the same time, the Commission issued Order No. 889,\10\ which 
promulgated the Open Access Same-Time Information System (OASIS) and 
Standards of Conduct requirements in Part 37 of the Commission's 
regulations to ensure the contemporaneous disclosure of certain 
information and prevent transmission providers from engaging in non-
discriminatory behavior in favor of their marketing affiliates.\11\
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    \10\ Open Access Same-Time Information System and Standards of 
Conduct, Order No. 889, 61 FR 21737 (May 10, 1996), FERC Stats. & 
Regs. ] 31,035 (1996), order on reh'g, Order No. 889-A, FERC Stats. 
& Regs. ] 31,049 (1997), reh'g denied, Order No. 889-B, 81 FERC ] 
61,253 (1997).
    \11\ Although originally promulgated by Order No. 889, the 
Commission has since relocated the Standards of Conduct to Part 358 
and adopted a number of changes, most recently revised by Order No. 
717. Standards of Conduct for Transmission Providers, Order No. 717, 
FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,280 (2008).
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    9. In Order No. 2003, the Commission found that interconnection 
service plays a crucial role in bringing generation into the market to 
meet the growing needs of electricity customers and competitive 
electricity markets.\12\ The Commission reiterated that 
``[i]nterconnection is a critical component of open access transmission 
service,'' and that ``the Commission may order generic interconnection 
terms and procedures pursuant to its authority to remedy undue 
discrimination and preferences under sections 205 and 206 of the 
Federal Power Act.'' \13\ The Commission concluded that there was a 
pressing need for a uniformly applicable set of procedures and a pro 
forma agreement to form the basis of interconnection service for large 
generators, and thus promulgated the pro forma Large Generator 
Interconnection Procedures (LGIP) and the pro forma Large Generator 
Interconnection Agreement (LGIA) \14\ to be included in every public 
utility's OATT.\15\
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    \12\ Order No. 2003, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,146 at P 11.
    \13\ Id. PP 12, 20.
    \14\ As discussed above, throughout this Final Rule, the terms 
LGIP and LGIA refer to the pro forma versions of those documents.
    \15\ Order No. 2003 established rules for a Large Generating 
Facility, defined as a generating facility with a capacity of more 
than 20 MW. Similarly, in Order No. 2006, the Commission established 
the pro forma Small Generator Interconnection Procedures and the pro 
forma Small Generator Interconnection Agreement for interconnecting 
small generators (no larger than 20 MW). Standardization of Small 
Generator Interconnection Agreements and Procedures, Order No. 2006, 
FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,180, order on reh'g, Order No. 2006-A, FERC 
Stats. & Regs. ] 31,196 (2005), order granting clarification, Order 
No. 2006-B, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,221 (2006).
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    10. Article 11.1 of the LGIA provides that the ``Interconnection 
Customer shall design, procure, construct, install, own and/or control 
Interconnection Customer Interconnection Facilities . . . at its sole 
expense.'' The LGIA defines ICIF as ``all facilities and equipment, as 
identified in Appendix A of the Standard Large Generator 
Interconnection Agreement, that are located between the Generating 
Facility and the Point of Change of Ownership, including any 
modification, addition, or upgrades to such facilities and equipment 
necessary to physically and electrically interconnect the Generating 
Facility to the Transmission Provider's Transmission System. 
Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities are sole use 
facilities.'' \16\ The LGIA defines ``Interconnection Facilities'' \17\ 
as the:
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    \16\ LGIA Article 1. Section 1 of the LGIP includes identical 
definitions to those in Article 1 of the LGIA.
    \17\ Unless otherwise indicated, capitalized terms herein have 
the same definition as in the Commission's LGIA or in the OATT, as 
applicable.

Transmission Provider's Interconnection Facilities and the 
Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities. Collectively, 
Interconnection Facilities include all facilities and equipment 
between the Generating Facility and the Point of Interconnection, 
including any modification, additions or upgrades that are necessary 
to physically and electrically interconnect the Generating Facility 
to the Transmission Provider's Transmission System. Interconnection 
Facilities are sole use facilities and shall not include 
Distribution Upgrades, Stand Alone Network Upgrades or Network 
Upgrades.\18\
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    \18\ LGIA Article 1. See supra n.1.

Finally, the LGIA defines Transmission Provider's Interconnection 
Facilities as ``those Interconnection Facilities that are located 
between the Point of Interconnection \19\ with the grid and the Point 
of Change of Ownership,\20\ and which are owned, controlled, or 
operated by the transmission provider.'' \21\
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    \19\ The Point of Interconnection is defined in Article 1 of the 
LGIA as the point where the Interconnection Facilities connect to 
the Transmission Provider's Transmission System.
    \20\ The Point of Change of Ownership is defined in Article 1 of 
the LGIA as the point, as set forth in Appendix A to the LGIA, where 
the Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities connect to 
the Transmission Provider's Interconnection Facilities. LGIP section 
11.2 states that the Transmission Provider and Interconnection 
Customer shall negotiate the provisions of the appendices to the 
LGIA.
    \21\ LGIA Article 1.
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    11. In general, Interconnection Facilities are constructed to 
enable a generation facility or multiple generation facilities to 
transmit power to the integrated transmission grid. Interconnection 
Facilities are typically radial in nature, with a single point of 
interconnection with the network grid, and over which power flows in 
one direction toward the transmission grid.\22\ Depending on the 
circumstances, Interconnection Facilities may range in length, but can 
span considerable distances and represent significant transmission 
capacity.\23\
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    \22\ In limited circumstances, power may flow from the grid to 
supply station power in the event no power is being produced at the 
generating facility.
    \23\ See, e.g., Bayonne Energy Center, LLC, 136 FERC ] 61,019 
(2011) (involving a 6.75-mile, 345-kV interconnection facility); 
Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC, 132 FERC ] 61,215 (2010) (Terra-Gen I), 
reh'g denied, 134 FERC ] 61,021 (2011), order on request for 
priority rights, 137 FERC ] 61,179 (2011), order on reh'g, 147 FERC 
] 61,122 (2014) (involving a 214-mile, 230-kV interconnection 
facility). See also, e.g., Southern Company Serv., Inc., Docket No. 
ER12-554-000 (Jan. 6, 2012) (delegated letter order) (involving an 
approximately 2000 foot interconnection facility).
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    12. In a series of cases since Order No. 2003 became effective, 
issues have been raised regarding the extent to which, if at all, third 
parties should be able to have access rights for transmission on the 
facilities located between the generating facility and the Point of 
Change of Ownership at which the Transmission Provider's 
Interconnection Facilities begin, i.e., ICIF. Applications have come 
before the Commission as petitions for declaratory order and requests 
for service under sections 210 and 211. In each of these, the 
Commission has put the onus on the developer, if it would like to 
preempt a third party's use, to demonstrate that it has plans to use 
the currently excess capacity.
    13. In Milford Wind Corridor, LLC, the Commission recognized that 
it has granted waivers of the OATT requirements on a case-by-case basis 
for ICIF owners who demonstrate that their ICIF are limited and 
discrete and there is no outstanding request by a third party to access 
the ICIF.\24\
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    \24\ Milford Wind Corridor, LLC, 129 FERC ] 61,149, at P 24 
(2009) (Milford).
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    14. At issue in these cases was whether the entity that owns and/or 
controls ICIF to serve its or its affiliates' generation project or 
projects has any priority right over third-party requesters to use the 
capacity on its ICIF. Where an ICIF owner has specific, pre-existing 
generator expansion plans with milestones for construction of 
generation facilities and can demonstrate that it has made material 
progress toward meeting those milestones, the Commission granted 
priority rights for excess capacity on the ICIF for those future 
generation

[[Page 17657]]

projects.\25\ For example in Aero Energy, LLC,\26\ before ordering 
service over the Sagebrush line pursuant to FPA sections 210 and 211, 
the Commission provided the opportunity for the ICIF owner to 
demonstrate that it had pre-existing contractual obligations or other 
specific plans that would prevent it from providing the requested firm 
transmission service to the third party.\27\ As a result, the 
Commission found that one of the Sagebrush partners had shown that it 
had pre-existing expansion plans that, at some future date, would 
require firm transmission capacity, and that two other Sagebrush 
partners had not shown that they had pre-existing expansion plans that 
would require additional transmission capacity.
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    \25\ Alta Wind I, LLC, 134 FERC ] 61,109, at PP 16-17 (2011); 
Milford, 129 FERC ] 61,149 at P 22; Aero Energy LLC, 116 FERC ] 
61,149, at P 28 (2006) Aero Modification Order. Such plans and 
initial progress also must pre-date a valid request for service. 
Terra-Gen I, 132 FERC ] 61,215 at P 53.
    \26\ Aero Energy LLC, 115 FERC ] 61,128 (2006) (Aero Proposed 
Order), order granting modification, 116 FERC ] 61,149 (2006) (Aero 
Modification Order), final order, 118 FERC ] 61,204 (2007), reh'g 
denied, 120 FERC ] 61,188 (2007) (Aero Rehearing Order) 
(collectively, Aero).
    \27\ Aero Modification Order, 116 FERC ] 61,149 at P 28.
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    15. The Commission has also considered, on a case-by-case basis, 
petitions for declaratory order requesting that an ICIF owner be 
granted priority over third parties to use capacity on its ICIF.\28\ In 
Milford, the Commission granted such priority, finding that Milford had 
shown that it had specific plans for phased development of its 
generation. The Commission in Milford summarized the Aero precedent as 
providing that:
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    \28\ See, e.g., Milford, 129 FERC ] 61,149 at P 24; Terra-Gen I, 
132 FERC ] 61,215 at P 49.

    A transmission owner that filed specific expansion plans with 
definite dates and milestones for construction, and had made 
material progress toward meeting its milestones, had priority over 
later transmission requests.\29\
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    \29\ Milford, 129 FERC ] 61,149 at P 22.

This required demonstration necessary to claim priority rights has been 
referred to as the ``specific plans and milestones'' showing. This 
granting of priority rights preserves the ability of the generation 
developer to deliver its future output to the point of interconnection 
with the integrated transmission grid, so long as it can make the 
relevant showing to the Commission sufficient to justify priority.\30\ 
The Commission has also found that an affiliate of the ICIF owner that 
is developing its own generator projects also may obtain priority 
rights to the capacity on the ICIF by meeting the ``specific plans and 
milestones'' standard with respect to future use.\31\
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    \30\ The Aero precedent cited above is the only instance where 
the Commission has not granted priority rights upon an attempted 
plans and milestones demonstration.
    \31\ See NextEra Energy Resources, LLC, 142 FERC ] 61,043, at P 
26 (2013).
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    16. Notwithstanding the ability of an ICIF owner to request 
priority rights, where an ICIF owner has received a third-party request 
for service, the Commission has required that the ICIF owner file an 
OATT.\32\
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    \32\ Subsequent to ordering transmission under FPA sections 210 
and 211 in Aero, the Commission granted market-based rates to 
several Sagebrush affiliates on the condition that Sagebrush file an 
OATT for its line if any third party filed a request for service on 
the line. EDFD Handsome-Lake, 127 FERC ] 61,243, at P 15 (2009). 
Such a request was made, and Sagebrush filed an OATT for its 
interconnection facility. Sagebrush, a California Partnership, 130 
FERC ] 61,093, order on reh'g, 132 FERC ] 61,234 (2010). In Peetz 
Logan, the generation owner filed an OATT in response to a request 
for third-party interconnection and transmission services over its 
existing 78.2-mile, 230-kV ICIF that had been used to connect three 
affiliated wind generation projects to the grid. Peetz Logan 
Interconnect, LLC, 136 FERC ] 61,075 (2011) (Peetz Logan). In Sky 
River, the Commission rejected the filing of an executed Common 
Facilities Agreement providing a third party the right to access and 
utilize Sky River, LLC's interest in a nine-mile 230-kV ``generator 
tie-line.'' Instead, the Commission required that any service by 
non-owners over the line must be made pursuant to an OATT. Sky 
River, LLC, 134 FERC ] 61,064 (2011) (Sky River). Also, in Terra-
Gen, the generator owner of a 214-mile, 230-kV radial 
interconnection facility was ordered by the Commission to file an 
OATT in response to a request for third-party transmission service. 
Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC, 134 FERC ] 61,027 (2011), order on 
reh'g, 135 FERC ] 61,134 (2011), order granting extension of time, 
136 FERC ] 61,026 (2011), order on reh'g, 147 FERC ] 61,122 (2014).
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    17. In summary, the Commission's existing policy since 2009 is 
that, because ICIF are facilities used for the transmission of electric 
energy in interstate commerce, those who own, control, or operate ICIF 
must either have an OATT on file or receive a waiver of the OATT 
requirement.\33\ Section 35.28(d) provides that any public utility 
subject to OATT, OASIS, and Standards of Conduct requirements may file 
a request for a waiver for good cause shown.\34\ The Commission grants 
such requests for waiver where the public utility owns only limited and 
discrete facilities or is a small utility.\35\ Even if a waiver of the 
OATT is granted for ICIF, the ICIF owner is subject to the requirement 
that, if a request for transmission service over the facilities is 
made, it would have to file an OATT within 60 days of the request \36\ 
and comply with any additional requirements then in effect for public 
utility transmission providers. The ICIF owner would thus become 
subject to all of the relevant pro forma OATT requirements, unless it 
successfully seeks and receives approval for deviations from the pro 
forma OATT.
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    \33\ See Milford, 129 FERC ] 61,149 at P 24 (noting that the 
fact that the facilities merely tie a generator to the grid does not 
render a line exempt from the Commission's regulation of 
transmission facilities). See also Evergreen Wind Power III, LLC, 
135 FERC ] 61,030, at P 15 n.18 (2011) (granting request for waiver 
of the OATT requirement in the context of a request for market-based 
rate authority).
    \34\ The Commission has the general statutory authority to waive 
its regulations as it may find necessary or appropriate. UtiliCorp 
United Inc., 99 FERC ] 61,280, at P 12 (2002); see also Pacific Gas 
and Electric Co., 99 FERC ] 61,045, at P 5 (2002) (``It is however 
well established that, with or without an explicit provision to that 
effect, an agency may waive its regulations in appropriate 
cases.''). Similarly, section 358.1(d) of the Commission's 
regulations provides that a transmission provider may seek a waiver 
from all or some of the requirements of Part 358.
    \35\ See, e.g., Prairie Breeze Wind Energy LLC, 145 FERC ] 
61,290, at P 26 (2013); Ebensburg Power Company, 145 FERC ] 61,265, 
at P 27 (2013); CSOLAR IV South, LLC, 143 FERC ] 61,275, at P 16 
(2013).
    \36\ Milford, 129 FERC ] 61,149 at P 27. See Termoelectrica 
U.S., LLC, 105 FERC ] 61,087, at P 11 (2003); Black Creek Hydro, 
Inc., 77 FERC ] 61,232, at 61,941 (1996).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

III. Need for Reform

A. Commission Proposal

    18. The Commission issued a NOPR in this proceeding on May 15, 
2014. In the NOPR, the Commission proposed to grant a blanket waiver 
for ICIF of all OATT, OASIS, and Standards of Conduct requirements in 
circumstances where a public utility is subject to such requirements 
solely because it owns, controls, or operates ICIF and sells electric 
energy from its generating facility. The Commission also proposed a 
safe harbor period of five years during which there would be a 
rebuttable presumption that: (1) The eligible ICIF owner has definitive 
plans to use its capacity without having to make a demonstration 
through a specific plans and milestones showing; and (2) the eligible 
ICIF owner should not be required to expand its facilities.\37\ The 
Commission found, on a preliminary basis, that there was a need for 
reform because OATT requirements as applied to ICIF may impose risks 
and burdens on generators and create regulatory inefficiencies that are 
not necessary to achieve the Commission's open access goals. The 
Commission also preliminarily found that there was a need to reform its 
requirements for achieving non-discriminatory access over ICIF so as 
not to discourage competitive generation development with unnecessary 
burdens, while ensuring non-discriminatory access by eligible 
transmission customers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \37\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 54.

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[[Page 17658]]

B. Comments

    19. The Commission received 24 comments and one reply comment on 
the NOPR.\38\ Of those, 21 commenters \39\ generally support the need 
for reform and the NOPR proposals. Commenters state that the 
Commission's existing policy is unduly burdensome and unnecessary \40\ 
and that it does not meet the goal of promoting development of 
generation facilities while ensuring not unduly discriminatory open 
access to transmission facilities.\41\ Commenters argue that ICIF 
owners are focused on developing new generation resources and the time, 
effort and cost of complying with the OATT requirements under the 
Commission's existing policy hinders generation development.\42\ 
Commenters support the Commission's goal of reducing regulatory burdens 
and promoting development of generation facilities while ensuring open 
access to transmission facilities and support the Commission's proposal 
to revise its current ICIF policies.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \38\ See Appendix A for a list of NOPR commenters.
    \39\ These include AWEA, BHE, BP Wind, Linden, DTE, E.ON, EEI, 
ELCON, EPSA, First Wind, Invenergy, ITC, MISO, MISO TOs, NextEra, 
NRG, Recurrent, SEIA, Sempra, Southern, and Terra-Gen. SWP also 
commented on the NOPR, but did not express support or opposition to 
the proposed changes overall.
    \40\ AWEA at 1; E.ON at 2; and NextEra at 3.
    \41\ EEI at 2.
    \42\ AWEA at 2; Linden at 3; and E.ON at 2.
    \43\ BHE at 1; EEI at 2; and ELCON at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    20. Terra-Gen states that the NOPR proposals are essential to 
minimize the business and regulatory risks faced by generation owners 
and developers.\44\ Further, Terra-Gen argues that the Commission's 
existing ICIF policy allows third parties to impose substantial and 
potentially unrecoverable regulatory compliance and other costs on 
generation owners by requesting access to ICIF without making a showing 
that the third party is ``ready, willing, and able to pay the 
reasonable costs of transmission services plus a reasonable rate of 
return on such costs.'' \45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ Terra-Gen at 1.
    \45\ Terra-Gen at 1 (citing New York State Electric & Gas Corp. 
v. FERC, 638 F.2d 388, 402 (2d. Cir. 1980), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 
821 (1981)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    21. Linden states that ICIF owners generally plan to use the excess 
capacity on their ICIF for their own purposes and that the Commission's 
existing policy imposes a risk of losing that capacity if another party 
makes a request for service.\46\ ELCON argues that an ICIF owner should 
retain the rights over its ICIF for its own future projected use.\47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ Linden at 4.
    \47\ ELCON at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    22. MISO supports revising the Commission's ICIF policy because it 
argues that the existing policy: (1) Creates disincentives to develop 
more efficient, high-voltage ICIF by expanding the costs and 
responsibilities of generation owners; (2) imposes transmission owner 
requirements on entities that are not in the business of providing 
transmission service to third parties; and (3) creates concerns over 
the interaction of ICIF with the transmission system, and the reliable 
interconnection of projects to the transmission system.\48\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \48\ MISO at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    23. Commenters argue that ICIF are unique and the Commission's open 
access requirements and pro forma OATT were not designed for and are 
not appropriate for these facilities.\49\ MISO asserts that use of an 
OATT by an ICIF owner raises complicated issues regarding seams 
agreements between the transmission provider and the ICIF owner and 
issues related to Order No. 1000-compliance regional transmission 
planning and cost allocation.\50\ MISO also notes that using OATTs for 
access to ICIF could create different interconnection processes for 
different ICIF within the MISO footprint, thus complicating the 
interconnection process.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \49\ BP Wind at 4; Linden at 3; ELCON at 2; and E.ON at 2.
    \50\ MISO at 5.
    \51\ MISO at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    24. On the other hand, APPA, TAPS, and NCPA state that they support 
the Commission's goal of promoting generation development, but assert 
that the NOPR proposals would erode the Commission's open access 
transmission policies.\52\ APPA and TAPS argue that the Commission 
should instead address the concerns identified in the NOPR in a manner 
that preserves the open access underpinnings of competitive markets and 
its reliance on market-based rates to ensure just and reasonable 
wholesale sales, and meets its statutory obligation to eliminate undue 
discrimination in transmission service. APPA and TAPS contend that the 
NOPR, as proposed, fundamentally erodes open access by making it 
effectively impossible for subsequent competitive generation developers 
to interconnect with the ICIF owner's facilities for long periods of 
time, if ever.\53\ NCPA states that while it supports the Commission's 
desire to promote generation development, it shares the concerns 
expressed by APPA and TAPS that the NOPR imperils the open access 
underpinnings for competitive markets by cutting back on the 
significant procedural reforms initiated by this Commission in Order 
Nos. 888 and 889, and supports the alternatives proposed by APPA and 
TAPS, as described below, by which the Commission could achieve the 
NOPR's objectives without unnecessarily reducing the protection from 
discrimination that those orders provided.\54\ Similarly, NRECA states 
that it appreciates the Commission's concerns about imposing the entire 
open access regime on entities that only own ICIF, but contends that 
reducing this burden must not come at the expense of ensuring that 
load-serving entities have access to facilities to serve their 
loads.\55\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ APPA and TAPS at 2 and NCPA at 3.
    \53\ APPA and TAPS at 2.
    \54\ NCPA at 3.
    \55\ NRECA at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    25. APPA and TAPS \56\ argue that the NOPR fails to demonstrate the 
need to change the requirement that an ICIF owner file an OATT upon 
receipt of a third-party request for service, noting that the NOPR 
itself recognizes that third-party requests to ICIF owners for service 
are ``infrequen[t]'' and ``relatively rare.'' \57\ They also contend 
that the NOPR has not demonstrated that the proposed procedures would 
cost less than existing requirements, arguing that the lengthy and 
costly procedures of sections 210 and 211 could not possibly be less 
expensive for ICIF owners on an industry-wide basis. They argue that 
the NOPR proposals will therefore be ineffective at reducing the 
regulatory costs of ICIF owners and may function as a bar to open 
access.\58\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \56\ NCPA states that it supports the comments submitted by APPA 
and TAPS. NCPA at 1 and 3.
    \57\ APPA and TAPS at 20 (citing NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 
32,701 at PP 32, 36).
    \58\ APPA and TAPS at 21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    26. APPA and TAPS contend that the NOPR would invite ICIF owners to 
close off access to what could well be significant highways to areas 
ripe for renewable resource development.\59\ APPA and TAPS argue that 
the NOPR would allow an ICIF owner to hold that transmission corridor 
hostage, block efficient expansion, and deny access to competitors. 
They add that the ICIF owner is likely to be the competitor of the 
third party seeking interconnection and transmission service over the 
ICIF, giving the ICIF owner strong incentive to use its control over 
ICIF to the advantage of its own generation resources.\60\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \59\ APPA and TAPS at 8 (citing NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 
32,701 at P 9, n.16).
    \60\ APPA and TAPS at 8-9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    27. APPA and TAPS also state that the Commission cannot assume that 
open access principles need not apply to ICIF

[[Page 17659]]

because competitors can build their own, arguing that such lines 
require extensive permitting, and that it is often more difficult to 
obtain siting approvals for a second line once a first line has been 
permitted.\61\ They contend that, even where it is possible to obtain 
necessary siting approvals for duplicative lines, inefficient build-out 
of the grid would make it more costly than necessary to access new 
generation resources, burdening those resources and consumers, as well 
as undermining competitive wholesale markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \61\ APPA and TAPS at 9-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    28. APPA and TAPS contend that departure from the Commission's non-
discriminatory access requirements cannot be excused by the fact that 
usage of ICIF has been requested infrequently thus far, arguing that 
ICIF access may well become more common in the future given the 
increasing dependence on renewable resources.
    29. APPA, TAPS, and NRECA suggest alternatives to the NOPR 
proposals. APPA and TAPS state that the Commission could grant a 
blanket waiver of OATT, OASIS, and Standards of Conduct requirements, 
but require ICIF owners to submit a standardized, more limited OATT 
within 60 days of a third-party service request. APPA and TAPS argue 
that the modified OATT should not remove core elements of open access, 
including the obligation to expand and the development of rates for 
point-to-point service, but could eliminate provisions for network 
transmission service and ancillary services.\62\ They state that this 
will reduce the regulatory burden on ICIF owners and eliminate the need 
to apply for special waivers on a case-by-case basis, while preserving 
key limitations on the ICIF owner's ability to discriminate and create 
barriers to entry to competitive markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \62\ APPA and TAPS at 21-22.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    30. APPA and TAPS state that the Commission could address the 
concern that the existing policy creates too low a bar for third-party 
requests to trigger the requirement for an ICIF owner to file an OATT 
by specifying clarified and heightened thresholds for a service request 
to trigger the requirement to file. They add that the Commission could 
approve fee structures that enable an ICIF owner to insist upon 
reasonable deposits before the obligation to file a notice of receipt 
of a service request and, subsequently, an OATT is triggered.\63\ They 
argue that such additional deposits would discourage speculative 
service requests that trigger a first-time OATT filing and fully 
address the specific ICIF owner regulatory burden that the NOPR 
identifies. They contend that while the extra deposit would increase 
costs for the first entity that seeks service from the ICIF owner's 
corporate family, the amount of the deposit would be much lower than 
the costs of requesting, negotiating, and litigating service under 
sections 210 and 211.\64\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \63\ APPA and TAPS at 23.
    \64\ APPA and TAPS at 23-24.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    31. NRECA suggests that the Commission could implement a procedure 
under which a prospective customer seeking service on ICIF must submit 
a request that is fully supported by specified information, followed by 
the necessary studies and the parties cooperating to reach an agreement 
for service within a specified period of time, such as 90 days.\65\ 
NRECA adds that if the parties are not able to reach an agreement, the 
ICIF owner would file an unexecuted service proposal with the 
Commission.\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \65\ NRECA at 5-6.
    \66\ NRECA at 6-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    32. NRECA argues that its proposed procedures would address the 
Commission's concern that the existing policy ``creates too low a bar 
for third-party requests for service'' because those seeking service 
would be required to provide adequate information to support their 
requests. NRECA also argues that its proposal would alleviate the 
concern that an ICIF owner may be required to file an OATT due to a 
service request by a requester that subsequently fails to pursue any 
further development, because a mere service request would no longer 
trigger that requirement. In addition, NRECA contends that its proposal 
would promote flexibility by requiring the parties to work together to 
attempt to reach an agreement.\67\


---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \67\ NRECA at 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Commission Determination

    33. We believe this Final Rule will relieve regulatory burdens and 
unnecessary risks from generation developers to encourage the 
development of new generation and efficient interconnection facilities 
and promote competition while ensuring access to transmission on a not 
unduly discriminatory basis.
    34. Our action is supported by comments on the NOPR, the technical 
conference,\68\ and Notice of Inquiry.\69\ Specifically, we appreciate 
that filing and maintaining an OATT can be burdensome to ICIF owners 
who do not seek to provide transmission service. Adding a potential 
OATT obligation to a generation project can introduce an additional 
element of risk for the developer and its lenders that they would not 
have if the project were not subject to the potential obligation to 
file and maintain a transmission tariff. The risk stems from the policy 
to require an ICIF owner to file an OATT within 60 days of a request 
for service by a third party and must begin interconnection studies. 
The ICIF owner's obligation can be triggered with minimal effort by a 
third party requester, thus a request for service may not sufficiently 
distinguish third party requesters who have a well-supported request 
for service from those that do not. We are aware of situations where 
the ICIF owner received a request for service triggering the 
requirement that the owner file an OATT, but the requester then failed 
to pursue any further development.\70\ This is an additional risk for 
the ICIF owner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \68\ Priority Rights to New Participant-Funded Transmission, 
March 15, 2011 Technical Conference, AD11-11-000.
    \69\ Open Access and Priority Rights on Interconnection 
Facilities, Notice of Inquiry, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 35,574 (cross-
referenced at 139 FERC ] 61,051 (2012).
    \70\ See NextEra at 5 (``Two of the three NextEra subsidiaries 
that received inquiries triggering OATT filings with respect to 
their ICIF--Sagebrush and Peetz Logan--never had customers actually 
pursue transmission or interconnection service following the initial 
inquiries'') and Terra-Gen at 2 (``Dixie Valley . . . incurred 
substantial costs in attempting to comply with the Commission's OATT 
requirements over several years, only to find that it would have no 
way to recover those costs because the customer that requested 
transmission service ultimately did not become a transmission 
customer'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    35. We also agree that a number of sections of the pro forma OATT, 
such as the provisions regarding network service, ancillary services, 
and planning requirements, are arguably inapplicable to most or all 
ICIF owners. Although ICIF owners may propose deviations from the pro 
forma OATT, the Commission's existing process of handling these 
proposed deviations on a case-by-case basis can impose the risk of a 
time-consuming proceeding with an uncertain outcome.
    36. Moreover, interconnecting with ICIF often involves unique 
circumstances that would benefit from negotiations to tailor individual 
access agreements. However, the existing policy limits an ICIF owner's 
contractual flexibility and does not allow parties to use common 
facility agreements or have service governed outside of an OATT.\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \71\ Sky River, 134 FERC ] 61,064 at P 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    37. In addition, it is common for an ICIF owner to initially have 
excess capacity on its ICIF when it plans to bring generation into 
commercial service in stages. The Commission has

[[Page 17660]]

a process for granting priority rights to the ICIF owner for such 
excess capacity on a case-by-case basis. However, filing a petition for 
declaratory order to establish priority rights can be a significant 
burden for the ICIF owner because the Commission's existing policy of 
requiring a demonstration of ``specific plans and milestones'' can 
require substantial effort and resources on the part of the ICIF owner 
to make the necessary showings. Further, these priority rights do not 
diminish the risk and potential burden that the ICIF owner may have to 
file an OATT within 60 days of a request for service.
    38. Contrary to APPA and TAPS' argument that the proposed revisions 
will likely cost more to implement than the Commission's existing OATT 
requirements,\72\ other commenters assert that the risks described 
above fall on all ICIF owners and therefore that the Commission's 
existing policy imposes costs,\73\ despite the fact that it is unlikely 
that any third party would request OATT service on most ICIF. The 
Commission has issued numerous individual orders granting waivers of 
OATT, OASIS, and Standards of Conduct to ICIF owners, but in only four 
instances did a third-party request access on ICIF such that the filing 
of an OATT was required.\74\ Although only a small percentage of ICIF 
owners have actually had to file an OATT, all ICIF owners are subject 
to the additional risks and potential regulatory burdens discussed 
above, including possibly having to file an OATT on 60 days' notice in 
response to a request for service, and possibly losing some of the ICIF 
capacity planned for future use to a requesting third party. In 
response to commenters concerns that the process under sections 210 and 
211 is more expensive for potential transmission customers than the 
existing process, we note that the cost of any process has many 
variables. This Final Rule specifically allows for voluntary 
interconnection agreements, which may be a more efficient process than 
currently exists. Under our existing policy, while a potential 
transmission customer may trigger an ICIF owner's OATT obligation by 
making a simple request for service, the potential customer often bears 
the expense to be a party to what are sometimes controversial 
proceedings. We find that the proposed reforms will avoid the expense 
of requests that are unlikely to be successful. Accordingly, we find 
that reforming the open access transmission requirements in this narrow 
set of circumstances is appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \72\ APPA and TAPS at 20.
    \73\ AWEA at 2 and E.ON at 2.
    \74\ Between January 1, 2009, and January 1, 2014, the 
Commission issued approximately 80 orders granting waiver of OATT, 
OASIS, and Standards of Conduct requirements to ICIF owners.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    39. We find that APPA and TAPS' concerns that the NOPR would allow 
an ICIF owner to close off access to significant highways to areas ripe 
for renewable resource development overlook practical considerations of 
infrastructure development. The approach taken in this Final Rule 
recognizes that, often, an ICIF owner anticipates that it will use its 
excess ICIF capacity, and seeks to reduce unnecessary regulatory 
burdens. The Commission precedent with respect to priority use has 
given ICIF owners the opportunity to demonstrate that they had pre-
existing contractual obligations or other specific plans that would 
prevent them from providing the requested transmission service at a 
future date.\75\ In balancing the considerations, we are persuaded that 
the process under sections 210 and 211 allows an ICIF owner to be 
reasonably assured of being able to use that extra capacity, while also 
providing a mechanism for expansion. Without such reasonable assurance, 
there is no incentive for a developer to shoulder the extra expense of 
ICIF sized larger than their initial project.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \75\ See, e.g., Aero Modification Order, 116 FERC ] 61,149 at P 
28.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    40. Moreover, we agree with NRECA that it is important to promote 
flexibility by encouraging the ICIF owner and the third party to work 
together to attempt to reach an agreement. As discussed further below, 
this Final Rule adopts a framework that includes opportunities for the 
ICIF owner and third party to reach mutually agreeable solutions, 
either as part of a proceeding under sections 210 and 211, or in such a 
way that obviates the need to bring a proceeding under sections 210 and 
211 to the Commission.

IV. Proposed Reforms

A. Eligible ICIF

1. Commission Proposal
    41. In the NOPR, the Commission defined the facilities that were 
subject to the rule as ICIF because that term already had a specific 
definition in the pro forma LGIA and LGIP.\76\ The Commission proposed 
to apply the NOPR reforms to any public utility that is subject to 
OATT, OASIS, and Standards of Conduct requirements solely because it 
owns, controls, or operates ICIF, in whole or in part, and sells 
electric energy from its generating facility, as those terms are 
defined in the pro forma LGIP and the pro forma LGIA adopted in Order 
No. 2003. The LGIA and LGIP define ICIF as ``all facilities and 
equipment, as identified in Appendix A of the LGIA, that are located 
between the generating facility and the Point of Change of Ownership, 
including any modification, addition, or upgrades to such facilities 
and equipment necessary to physically and electrically interconnect the 
generating facility to the transmission provider's transmission 
system.'' \77\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \76\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at PP 1 and 35.
    \77\ LGIA Article 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Comments
    42. First Wind and Invenergy recommend that the Commission not 
define the interconnection facilities subject to the waiver with 
reference to the LGIA and LGIP, but simply as those facilities located 
between the generating facility and the point of interconnection to the 
transmission provider's transmission system. This is because some 
interconnection agreements predate Order No. 2003 which first defined 
ICIF; some may be implemented under the small generator interconnection 
procedures under Order No. 2006; and some agreements were entered into 
with non-Commission jurisdictional transmission providers. They argue 
that the definition of ICIF and generating facility should be revised 
to encompass facilities that may not be installed under the 
Commission's LGIA/LGIP arrangements.\78\ Similarly, AWEA seeks 
clarification that ICIF owners who do not have interconnection 
agreements under pro forma arrangements or those that have shared 
facilities agreements (or similar understandings) also qualify for the 
blanket waiver.\79\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \78\ First Wind at 11-12 and Invenergy at 4-6.
    \79\ AWEA at 7-8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Commission Determination
    43. We expand our definition of what interconnection facilities are 
subject to the Final Rule to include ICIF as well as comparable 
jurisdictional interconnection facilities that are the subject of 
interconnection agreements other than an LGIA. For those 
interconnection customers that have entered into an LGIA, these 
facilities will be those defined as ICIF in the LGIA and LGIP. For 
those interconnection customers that have entered into interconnection 
agreements other than an LGIA, these facilities will be the comparable 
set of interconnection facilities as those described as ICIF in the 
LGIA. Therefore, the term ICIF

[[Page 17661]]

should be read in this Final Rule to encompass this broader scope. We 
use the term ``comparable'' set of interconnection facilities because 
the definition of ICIF in the LGIA is made with reference to specific 
facilities listed in an appendix to the LGIA and to terms defined 
elsewhere in the LGIA. Therefore, we cannot apply literally the 
definition of ICIF in the LGIA to describe facilities in 
interconnection agreements other than the LGIA. Generally, this 
comparable set of facilities would include all facilities and equipment 
that are located between an interconnection customer's generating 
facility and the point where such facilities connect to the 
transmission provider's interconnection facilities (called the ``point 
of change of ownership'' in the LGIA) that are necessary to physically 
and electrically interconnect the interconnection customer's generating 
facility to the transmission provider's facilities that are used to 
provide transmission service (called the ``point of interconnection'' 
in the LGIA).

B. Grant Blanket Waivers to Eligible ICIF Owners

1. Blanket Waivers
a. Commission Proposal
    44. The Commission proposed to add sub-paragraph (d)(2) to 18 CFR 
35.28 to grant a blanket waiver of all OATT, OASIS, and Standards of 
Conduct requirements to any public utility that is subject to such 
requirements solely because it owns, controls, or operates ICIF, in 
whole or in part, and sells electric energy from its generating 
facility, as those terms are defined in the LGIP and LGIA.\80\ The 
Commission proposed that the blanket waiver would apply to all eligible 
existing and future ICIF owners, and explained that the limitation to 
ICIF owners that sell electric energy was meant to ensure that the 
proposed blanket waiver would only apply in situations where sections 
210 and 211 would provide interconnection and transmission access to a 
customer that seeks service over the ICIF.\81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \80\ The Commission also proposed to make non-substantive 
revisions to what is currently 18 CFR 35.28(d) in order to update 
certain cross-references in that paragraph.
    \81\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Comments
    45. The majority of commenters support the Commission's proposal to 
grant a blanket waiver of all OATT, OASIS, and Standards of Conduct 
requirements to public utility ICIF owners. Commenters agree with the 
Commission's preliminary findings in the NOPR that a blanket waiver is 
justified because such facilities do not typically present the concerns 
about discriminatory conduct that the Commission's OATT, OASIS, and 
Standards of Conduct requirements were intended to address.\82\ 
Commenters agree that the Commission's existing practice of requiring 
an OATT for ICIF discourages generation development and results in a 
disincentive to be the first developer in an area to build ICIF, while 
creating a relative advantage for subsequent competing generation 
developers in that area.\83\ Additionally, they argue that the 
Commission's existing practice unreasonably causes developers of ICIF 
to incur significant costs in response to mere written third-party 
requests unaccompanied by any deposit. Commenters agree that the 
requirement to file an OATT following any third-party request creates a 
regulatory burden without a corresponding enhancement of access.\84\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \82\ EEI at 3 and BHE at 6-7.
    \83\ EEI at 8-9; BHE at 6-7; and E.ON at 2.
    \84\ EEI at 8-9; BHE at 6-7; and E.ON at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    46. Commenters state that the OATT is not a good fit for the 
services that can be provided over ICIF, and argue that such limited 
service is not comparable to the integrated network, point-to-point, 
and ancillary services provided under the pro forma OATT.\85\ E.ON 
agrees that the current OATT requirement can be seen as burdensome by 
ICIF owners who do not seek to be in the business of providing 
transmission service, can introduce an additional element of risk for 
the developer and its lenders that they would not have if the project 
were not subject to the potential obligation to file and maintain a 
transmission tariff, and limits an ICIF owner's contractual flexibility 
if it chooses to provide third-party access by mutual agreement.\86\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \85\ NextEra at 4-5 and E.ON at 2.
    \86\ E.ON at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    47. Commenters state that the Commission's existing policy of 
requiring an ICIF owner to file an OATT or seek a waiver that would be 
revoked only upon a third-party request for service creates too low a 
bar for third-party requests for service and could lead to competitive 
mischief.\87\ BHE argues that ICIF owners are focused on developing new 
generation resources and that, given the infrequency of third-party 
requests and the absence of disputes before the Commission, it is more 
reasonable and efficient to address third-party requests to access 
available ICIF capacity as they arise on an individual basis.\88\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \87\ BHE at 6-7 and E.ON at 2.
    \88\ BHE at 6-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    48. Some commenters argue that adjudicating such OATT waiver 
requests and OATT tariff filings on a case-by-case basis has led to 
confusion and uncertainty in the industry with respect to compliance 
with the Commission's open access requirements as applied to ICIF.\89\ 
DTE argues that there is a filing burden associated with making a 
waiver request, as well as some uncertainty about the actions that 
would need to be taken in the unlikely event that these requests for 
waiver were not granted. DTE states that the proposed blanket waiver 
would remove any uncertainty regarding the current status of existing 
eligible ICIF owners that may have been awaiting the Commission's 
direction on this matter before making the determination of whether or 
not to seek a ``limited and discrete'' waiver from the OATT, OASIS and 
Standards of Conduct regulations.\90\ Similarly, NextEra argues that 
the implication of the description of existing policy in the NOPR is 
that a significant number of generation owners should be taking actions 
to address existing open access requirements. NextEra points out that, 
in the NOPR, the Commission notes that this lack of clarity extends to 
whether market-based rate applicants that own ICIF, or have affiliates 
that own ICIF, must file an OATT or seek a waiver from OATT 
requirements in order to show a lack of vertical market power. NextEra 
argues that the proposed waiver will provide much needed certainty for 
ICIF owners by clearly identifying those entities that are not subject 
to OATT, OASIS, or Standards of Conduct requirements.\91\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \89\ NextEra at 3-4.
    \90\ DTE at 2.
    \91\ NextEra at 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    49. Southern agrees that the blanket waiver approach appears to be 
appropriate given that very few generator tie lines have the 
characteristics (e.g., long length, excess capacity) that would make 
them more feasible for interconnection by another generator than the 
transmission system.\92\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \92\ Southern at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    50. In contrast, APPA and TAPS state that creating and maintaining 
two different standards for access to transmission facilities is 
problematic in a dynamic grid, adding that ICIF that look like radial 
lines at the fringe of the system today may be a more central part of 
the network in a decade or two.\93\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \93\ APPA and TAPS at 10.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 17662]]

    51. APPA and TAPS argue that the Commission has long required 
market-based rate sellers that own transmission to demonstrate 
mitigation of vertical market power by showing that they and their 
affiliates either have filed an OATT or received a waiver for every 
transmission facility that they own, operate, or control, and to offer 
third parties service comparable to the service the market-based rate 
sellers and their affiliates provide themselves. APPA and TAPS contend 
that the proposed blanket waiver does not clarify the manner by which 
ICIF owners can address concerns about vertical market power when they 
seek market-based rate authority, but rather that it magnifies those 
concerns by discarding an essential foundation for allowing the ICIF 
owner and its affiliates to enjoy market-based rates.\94\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \94\ APPA and TAPS at 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    52. APPA and TAPS state that they would not oppose an initial grant 
of a blanket waiver of the requirement that each ICIF owner must file 
an individual request for waiver of OATT, OASIS, and Standards of 
Conduct, provided that such waivers would be revoked upon receipt of a 
third-party request for service on the ICIF.\95\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \95\ APPA and TAPS at 20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    53. APPA and TAPS argue that the NOPR places no limit on the 
proposed blanket waiver, extending it to periods when there is no 
reasonable expectation that the ICIF owner is still in the project 
development mode.
    54. NRECA states that it does not object to exempting certain ICIF 
owners from the mandate to file an OATT and related requirements for 
limited and discrete facilities, but that any such waiver should be 
revoked if the entity no longer meets those criteria.\96\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \96\ NRECA at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    55. We adopt the proposed blanket waiver with modifications as 
discussed below.\97\ We believe the proposal as modified addresses the 
concerns of commenters while meeting our purpose of reducing 
unnecessary burden and providing clarity and certainty to developers. 
Such a waiver is justified because the usually limited and discrete 
nature of ICIF and ICIF's dedicated interconnection purpose means that 
such facilities do not typically present the concerns about 
discriminatory conduct that the Commission's OATT, OASIS, and Standards 
of Conduct requirements were intended to address. Because third-party 
requests to use ICIF have been relatively rare, it is more efficient to 
address such situations as they arise on an individual basis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \97\ Certain aspects of the blanket ICIF waiver adopted herein 
differ from the NOPR proposal. E.g., see infra PP 73-75 for the 
Commission determination on the public utilities eligible for the 
blanket waiver and supra P 43 for the Commission determination on 
the ICIF eligible for the blanket waiver.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    56. Further, the ICIF waiver would remove regulatory burdens on 
competitive generation developers without sacrificing the Commission's 
ability to require open access in appropriate circumstances. 
Specifically, we find that a blanket waiver will remedy the undue 
burden on ICIF owners under our existing policy to file an OATT or seek 
a waiver that would be revoked upon a third-party request for service 
from ICIF owners. We find that the time, effort, and cost of complying 
with the requirements of a public utility transmission provider in 
these circumstances unduly burden generation development efforts. In 
addition, we agree with commenters that the existing policy creates too 
low a bar for third-party requests for service. Specifically, an 
existing waiver of the OATT is revoked as soon as the ICIF owner 
receives a third-party request for service, even if that request meets 
few of the information and other requirements for transmission service 
under the pro forma OATT.
    57. Finally, we agree with DTE and NextEra that providing a blanket 
waiver of the OATT for ICIF owners will clarify how they meet the OATT 
filing or OATT waiver requirements involved when seeking market-based 
rate authority.\98\ APPA and TAPS argue that the blanket waiver does 
not explain how sellers would address vertical market power for 
purposes of market-based rate authority. However, this Final Rule 
simply provides an additional method for obtaining waiver of the OATT 
requirements. Therefore, to the extent that a market-based rate seller 
or any of its affiliates owns, operates, or controls transmission 
facilities, the Commission will require that, in order to satisfy the 
Commission's market-based rate vertical market power requirements in 18 
CFR 35.37(d), it either must have a Commission-approved OATT on file, 
receive waiver of the OATT requirement under 18 CFR 35.28(d)(1), or 
satisfy the requirements for blanket waiver under 18 CFR 35.28(d)(2). 
Market-based rate filings cannot be used as the vehicle by which 
applicants may obtain determinations on whether they qualify for an 
ICIF blanket waiver.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \98\ To demonstrate the absence of vertical market power in a 
market power analysis, a seller or its affiliate that owns, 
operates, or controls transmission facilities must have an OATT on 
file unless waived. See 18 CFR 35.37(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    58. As discussed further below, the blanket waiver adopted herein 
only applies in situations where sections 210, 211, and 212 would 
provide interconnection and transmission access to a customer that 
seeks service over the ICIF. This ensures that we are only waiving the 
OATT requirements in circumstances where there is an alternative for 
third parties to seek not unduly discriminatory access.
2. Requirement That ICIF Owners Must Sell Electricity To Qualify for 
the Waiver
a. Commission Proposal
    59. The Commission proposed to grant the blanket waiver to any 
public utility that is subject to the Commission's OATT, OASIS, and 
Standards of Conduct requirements solely because it owns, controls, or 
operates ICIF, in whole or in part, and sells electric energy from its 
generating facility. The Commission's proposal to limit the waiver to 
ICIF owners who sell electric energy was intended to ensure that any 
public utility with an OATT blanket waiver would be subject to an 
interconnection order under section 210. This requirement was seen as 
necessary so as not to create a gap and leave a potential customer 
without a means of obtaining an interconnection with ICIF once the OATT 
interconnection procedures were waived.\99\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \99\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at PP 35, 43.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    60. Section 210 of the FPA provides, in relevant part, ``Upon 
application of any electric utility . . . the Commission may issue an 
order requiring (A) the physical connection of . . . the transmission 
facilities of any electric utility, with the facilities of such 
applicant.'' \100\ An ``electric utility'' is defined as ``a person or 
Federal or State agency . . . that sells electric energy.'' \101\ Thus, 
the NOPR granted the waiver only to those that qualified as an electric 
utility to ensure that section 210 would be applicable. The Commission 
stated that it believes that there would be a relatively small number 
of ICIF owners who could not be subject to orders under sections 210 
and 211, and sought comments on whether this limitation on which public 
utilities can take advantage of the blanket waiver is appropriate. The 
Commission noted that ICIF owners who were not electric

[[Page 17663]]

utilities had the option to seek waiver on a case-by-case basis.\102\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \100\ 16 U.S.C. 824i(a)(1)(A).
    \101\ 16 U.S.C. 796(22).
    \102\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at PP 51-52.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Comments
    61. Some commenters argue that it is common for separate ICIF-only 
companies to be created and owned by a generation company or an 
affiliate, so that an entity separate from the generation company is 
used to own, operate, and manage the ICIF.\103\ Further, these 
commenters argue that it is unnecessary to exclude from the waiver and 
safe harbor those entities that do not sell electric energy, and that 
the Commission can and should modify the proposal to make the waiver 
applicable to entities that only own the ICIF but do not sell electric 
energy. They also argue that the Commission routinely grants OATT 
waivers for such companies under the limited and discrete facilities 
factor.\104\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \103\ Recurrent at 4; First Wind at 4-8; Invenergy at 7-11; BP 
Wind at 4-5; E.ON at 6; ITC at 8; NextEra at 7-9; SEIA at 4-5; 
Sempra at 3-6; and MISO TOs at 5-6.
    \104\ First Wind at 4-8 and Invenergy at 7-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    62. Recurrent, SEIA, and Sempra argue that ICIF-only companies 
often are employed when the generation project is developed in phases, 
and separate companies own the discrete portions of the generating 
facility that is the subject of a LGIA.\105\ SEIA states that 
establishing a separate entity can facilitate management of the 
jointly-owned ICIF, assist in establishing a single point of contact 
with the interconnected transmission owner and operator, and can 
facilitate the addition of other ICIF users.\106\ Sempra states that 
the ICIF-only entity structure has also been utilized because of tax 
regulations and other permitting considerations.\107\ BP Wind notes 
that sometimes a separate stand-alone entity is formed to own the ICIF 
because an RTO requests to have a single point of contact for multiple 
generators interconnecting at the same point on the grid.\108\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \105\ Sempra at 3 (citing, e.g., Wolverine Creek Goshen 
Interconnection LLC, Docket Nos. ER06-267-000 (Letter Order dated 
Jan. 13 2006), Wolverine Creek Energy LLC, et al., Docket Nos. ER12-
1280-000 and ER12-1281-000 (May 9, 2012) (unpublished letter order 
accepting amended common facilities agreement for filing), and Maine 
GenLead, LLC, 146 FERC ] 61,223 (2014)).
    \106\ SEIA at 4.
    \107\ Sempra at 3 (citing, e.g., Docket No. ER03-175-000, 
``Request of Termoelectrica U.S., LLC for Rehearing, and Expedited 
Consideration and/or Stay'' at n.6 (filed Feb. 10, 2003) (TDM 
Rehearing Request), and Termoelectrica U.S., LLC, 105 FERC ] 61,087 
(2003) (order granting rehearing relating to OATT waivers), Docket 
No. EC14-80-000, ``Application for Authorization to Transfer 
Jurisdictional Facilities Pursuant to section 203 of the Federal 
Power Act and Request for Expedited Action'' at pp. 5-6 (describing 
the planned ownership structure of future cross-border 
interconnection facilities), and Energia Sierra Juarez U.S., LLC, 
Docket No. EC14-80-000 (May 29, 2014) (letter order approving 
transfer)).
    \108\ BP Wind at 4-5. MISO's comments seem to support this 
point, stating, ``from an operational and reliability perspective, 
MISO needs to have a single Interconnection Customer entity at each 
distinct Point of Interconnection to the Transmission System with 
whom MISO can coordinate. That entity must have the authority to 
control any other generators that interconnect to its ICIF on its 
side of the Point of Interconnection.'' MISO at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    63. E.ON argues that an ICIF-only entity should be afforded the 
same opportunity to obtain a blanket waiver as entities that sell 
electricity because this type of entity only exists to accommodate a 
generator company's phased access to the grid.\109\ Recurrent states 
that when an interconnection company structure is used, the physical 
arrangement is identical to where the same entity owns the generation 
and the ICIF--the only difference is that a separate entity, the 
interconnection company, owns all or a portion of the ICIF and no 
generation.\110\ SEIA asserts that the Commission should not impose 
unnecessary burdens on developers based on their use of this ownership 
structure.\111\ ITC argues that the ICIF owned by an ICIF-only entity 
will be functionally identical to situations where generators own ICIF, 
and the service is likely to be the same.\112\ BP Wind agrees that the 
Commission should ensure that ICIF-only entities are not precluded from 
being eligible for the proposed blanket waiver on a technicality, so 
long as the facilities are utilized to interconnect generating 
facilities to the transmission grid.\113\ BP Wind argues that these 
interconnection-only entities, like generators that directly own 
interconnection facilities, do not seek to be in the transmission 
business.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \109\ E.ON at 6-7.
    \110\ Recurrent at 5-6.
    \111\ SEIA at 4-5.
    \112\ ITC at 12-13.
    \113\ BP Wind at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    64. First Wind and Invenergy argue that, if the Commission does not 
extend the blanket waiver to ICIF-only entities, the rule would be 
discriminatory because there is no basis to distinguish the two types 
of ICIF entities other than corporate structure, and ICIF-only entities 
would face the undue burdens identified in the NOPR.\114\ ITC and MISO 
TOs argue that to provide a blanket waiver to ICIF owners that sell 
electric energy, but to require ICIF owners that do not sell electric 
energy to file an OATT or seek waiver thereof, serves no clear purpose 
and imposes precisely the same burdens and regulatory inefficiencies 
identified as the basis for the Commission's NOPR, in a manner which 
discriminates against non-sellers of electric energy.\115\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \114\ First Wind at 4-8 and Invenergy at 7-11.
    \115\ ITC at 12-13 and MISO TOs at 5-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    65. ITC also is concerned that the Commission's proposal to limit 
eligibility for the waiver may have unintended consequences. For 
example, given the practical burdens associated with the operation and 
maintenance of ICIF, ICIF owners may wish to divest such facilities to 
transmission owners with more experience operating these types of 
facilities, and more resources for meeting the reliability requirements 
of such operation. ITC argues that failure to extend the blanket waiver 
in such scenarios may discourage such transactions, thereby imposing 
reliability and operational burdens on generator owners who may not be 
willing or able to carry them out.\116\ MISO TOs quote the NOPR as 
stating that the pro forma OATT is not a good fit for ICIF and that 
these facilities do not typically present all the concerns the OATT is 
intended to address; MISO TOs assert that the same is true whether the 
ICIF owner happens to sell electric energy from its generating facility 
or not.\117\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \116\ ITC at 13.
    \117\ MISO TOs at 5-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    66. Recurrent and Sempra further argue that the Commission has 
addressed these types of ownership arrangements in the context of 
``exempt wholesale generator'' (EWG) status pursuant to section 32 of 
the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 2005 (PUHCA).\118\ Recurrent 
states that the Commission has held that an entity that does not own 
generation facilities but does own a radial interconnection line used 
solely to connect wholesale-only generating facilities to the 
transmission grid qualifies as an EWG. Recurrent argues that section 
32(a)(2) of PUHCA states that the term ``eligible facility'' includes 
interconnecting transmission facilities necessary to effect a sale of 
electric energy at wholesale, and that an entity may be an EWG if it 
owns ``all or part of one or more eligible facilities.'' Recurrent 
states that with respect to the

[[Page 17664]]

statutory requirement that an EWG ``sell electric energy at 
wholesale,'' the Commission has imputed the generation owner's sales of 
wholesale power to the interconnection company, in order to satisfy the 
statutory requirement, in all of the proceedings that have addressed 
this issue.\119\ Recurrent argues that in decisions involving requests 
for waivers of OATT and related requirements, and in those involving 
EWG status, the Commission appropriately has not elevated form over 
substance and has not differentiated its regulatory treatment of 
interconnection companies from its treatment of a ``single entity'' 
that owns both generation and ICIF.\120\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \118\ Sempra at 4-5 (citing, e.g., Wolverine Creek Goshen 
Interconnection LLC, 111 FERC ] 62,209 (2005) (Wolverine Creek 
Goshen); Sagebrush, 103 FERC ] 61,332 (2003) (Sagebrush); 
Termoelectrica U.S., LLC, 102 FERC ] 61,019 (2003) (Termoelectrica); 
Peetz Logan Interconnect, LLC, Docket No. EG06-84-000, ``Notice of 
Exempt Wholesale Generator Status'' (Sept. 27, 2006); Bishop Hill 
Interconnection LLC, Docket No. EG12-24-000, ``Notice of Self-
Certification of Exempt Wholesale Generator Status'' (Jan. 20, 
2012); Maine GenLead LLC, Docket No. EG14-23-000, ``Notice of Self-
Certification of Exempt Wholesale Generator Status'' (Jan. 24, 
2014)).
    \119\ Recurrent at 6.
    \120\ Recurrent at 6-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    67. Several commenters suggest potential ways to fix the section 
210 applicability issue with respect to ICIF-only entities, such that 
the blanket waiver and safe harbor would apply to ICIF-only companies, 
and section 210 would preserve the ``backstop'' ability of third 
parties to obtain a Commission order requiring the ICIF-only company to 
interconnect with and provide transmission services to the third party. 
Recurrent proposes that the Commission grant the blanket waiver to an 
ICIF owner that does not sell electric energy if the interconnection 
company files a request for waiver that includes a commitment that if 
the Commission issues an order requiring the interconnection company to 
provide transmission services to a third party pursuant to section 211 
of the FPA--to which the interconnection company is subject--the 
interconnection company agrees to voluntarily provide interconnection 
to the third party.\121\ SEIA states that it supports Recurrent's 
proposal.\122\ Similarly E.ON states that the section 210 applicability 
concern could be alleviated by having the ICIF-only entity 
affirmatively submit to the Commission's section 210 jurisdiction as a 
condition to being afforded the blanket waiver.\123\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \121\ Recurrent at 9-10.
    \122\ SEIA at 5 (citing Recurrent at 9-10).
    \123\ E.ON at 7. E.ON also offers a redline of the proposed 
regulations to effect this change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    68. Sempra states that, although ICIF-only entities may not sell 
the power produced by their affiliates, they are an indispensable part 
of the sales transaction, and are typically party to the 
interconnection agreement along with or as agent for the affiliated 
generator.\124\ Therefore, Sempra argues, for the purpose of section 
210 applicability, it would be appropriate to impute the electricity 
sales of an affiliated generator, as the Commission does in the EWG 
context, as discussed above, and extend that blanket waiver and safe 
harbor to the ICIF-only entity.\125\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \124\ Sempra at 4.
    \125\ Sempra at 4-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    69. First Wind and Invenergy argue that the Commission's concern 
about entities not being able to use section 210 to request 
interconnection service can be addressed by the Commission creating an 
equivalent obligation by regulation for requesting interconnection from 
an ICIF entity, and then review requests under section 210 
standards.\126\ Similarly, BP Wind argues that the Commission should 
revise its regulations so that ICIF-only entities that receive a 
request for interconnection service would process the request in 
accordance with requirements similar to those set forth in section 210 
of the FPA.\127\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \126\ First Wind at 4-8 and Invenergy at 7-11. Invenergy also 
offers a redline of the proposed regulations to effect this change.
    \127\ BP Wind at 5-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    70. NextEra requests that the Commission clarify that ICIF owners 
that have authorization from the Commission to sell electric energy at 
market-based rates or that are EWGs are engaged in the sale of electric 
energy for purposes of determining application of the proposed waiver 
and application of section 210. NextEra argues that this would ensure 
consistency between the Commission's use of similar terms and with 
Commission precedent with respect to EWGs.\128\ NextEra states that 
there may be instances in which an ICIF owner is not currently engaged 
in sales of electricity yet is authorized by the Commission to engage 
in such sales under a market-based rates tariff, so it should qualify 
as an electric utility.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \128\ NextEra at 7-9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    71. ITC argues that section 210(d) provides that the Commission 
may, on its own motion, issue an order requiring any action described 
in subsection (a)(1) if the Commission determines that such order meets 
the requirements of subsection (c). ITC interprets this to mean that 
the Commission may issue an interconnection order on its own motion, 
regardless of whether the ICIF owner qualifies as an electric utility 
by selling energy.
    72. BP Wind argues that, if the Commission does not allow ICIF-only 
entities to forego filing an OATT, it should at a minimum not require 
such companies to file an OATT with the Commission until after 
completion of interconnection studies by the interconnecting utility 
and the requesting party has committed to move forward with its 
project.\129\ ITC argues that if the Commission does not extend the 
blanket waiver to ICIF-only entities, the Commission should provide the 
option for ineligible entities to file a less burdensome and more 
narrowly tailored OATT that governs the terms of interconnections via 
the LGIP and LGIA.\130\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \129\ BP Wind at 7.
    \130\ ITC at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    73. The proposal to limit the waiver to ICIF owners that also sell 
electricity was intended to prevent the creation of a regulatory gap 
and ensure that potential customers are not deprived of the ability to 
seek interconnection with ICIF as a result of the waiver of ICIF 
owners' OATT obligation. We believe that the initial assessment in the 
NOPR that relatively few entities that own and/or operate ICIF would be 
excluded from the blanket waiver by the requirement that they sell 
electricity may be incorrect. We also believe that the value of 
reducing regulatory burdens, which is a goal of this Final Rule, 
applies equally to ICIF owners who sell electricity and to those that 
do not. Therefore, we conclude that we should extend the blanket waiver 
to ICIF owners who do not sell electricity, but, in doing so, we must 
ensure that no potential customers are deprived of their ability to 
seek interconnection with ICIF by the waiver of the ICIF owner's OATT 
obligation. To expand the entities eligible for the blanket OATT 
waiver, we adopt the following procedure to allow ICIF-only entities to 
be eligible for the blanket OATT waiver. Any public utility to which 
the blanket waiver stated in section 35.28(d)(2) of the regulations 
adopted herein applies, but which does not sell electric energy, will 
receive the blanket waiver upon filing an informational statement with 
the Commission, as provided for in those regulations adopted 
herein.\131\ In the statement, the entity must declare that, ``In order 
to satisfy the requirements for a blanket waiver as described in 
section 35.28(d)(2) of the Commission's regulations, [entity] commits 
to comply with and be bound by the obligations and procedures 
applicable to electric utilities under section 210 of the FPA.'' This 
informational statement may be brief, requiring only the name and 
contact information for the entity making the statement, and the 
affirmative declaration described in the previous

[[Page 17665]]

sentence. These section 210 statements are to be filed in the following 
docket, Docket No. AD15-9-000. The Commission will take no action in 
response to these statements, but the blanket waiver will be applicable 
upon filing this informational statement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \131\ We will not issue a public notice, accept comments, or 
issue an order on the informational filings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    74. The purpose of this section 210 statement is to create a 
publically available record of ICIF-only entities that are taking 
advantage of the blanket OATT waiver, and of the fact that, even though 
these entities are not electric utilities, they are subject to an 
application to the Commission under section 210 for an interconnection 
order. Through this process, our intent is to extend the benefits of 
the blanket OATT waiver to ICIF-only entities, protect the rights of 
potential interconnection customers, and minimize the regulatory burden 
to accomplish these goals. If an entity submits such a statement and 
later objects to or fails to comply with section 210 obligations and 
procedures, its blanket waiver will be deemed to have been 
revoked.\132\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \132\ A section 210 informational statement would remain 
operative if the public utility that filed it had a change in 
ownership. However, if the original public utility with an 
informational statement sold the facilities to a different entity, 
the new entity would have to satisfy the criteria for a waiver 
(including, for instance, not owning network transmission 
facilities), and if it does not, it would be subject to OATT 
requirements. It is the party's responsibility to ensure that its 
regulatory filings are up to date.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    75. Accordingly, we are revising section 35.28(d)(2) of the 
regulations to incorporate this extension of the blanket waiver to 
entities that are not electric utilities, upon the filing of the 
section 210 statement described above. The safe harbor protections at 
section 35.28(d)(2)(ii)(B) will also be available to those entities 
eligible for the blanket waiver, as discussed below.
3. Status of the Third-Party Requester
a. Commission Proposal
    76. In the NOPR, the Commission stated, ``To the extent that either 
the third-party requester or ICIF owner does not meet applicable 
requirements for purposes of sections 210 and 211, but where the third-
party requester would be eligible for OATT service, the ICIF waiver 
would not apply.'' \133\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \133\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 51.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Comments
    77. AWEA, First Wind, and Invenergy argue that a public utility's 
eligibility for the blanket waivers should not depend on the status of 
any such potential third party that might seek access to ICIF. They 
argue that the waiver would not provide the expected benefits of 
reducing risks if it would not apply in the circumstance of an 
ineligible third-party requester. They argue that the Commission does 
not explain how an ICIF owner would be expected to deal with requests 
from such a third-party requester. These parties argue that, if the 
Commission is concerned about this, it should by regulation require 
such entities to follow procedures under sections 210 and 211.\134\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \134\ AWEA at 14; First Wind 8-9; and Invenergy at 11-12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    78. We agree with commenters that making the applicability of the 
blanket waiver to the ICIF owner dependent on the status of a potential 
third-party requester would create unnecessary uncertainty for ICIF 
owners. Accordingly, we clarify that applicability of the blanket 
waiver will not depend on the status of the third-party requester. The 
applicability of the blanket waiver does, however, depend on the status 
of the ICIF owner or the ICIF owner's willingness to file a section 210 
statement, as described above.
4. Non-Public Utilities
a. Commission Proposal
    79. The Commission proposed to grant a blanket waiver of all OATT, 
OASIS, and Standards of Conduct requirements to any public utility that 
is subject to such requirements solely because it owns, controls, or 
operates ICIF, in whole or in part, and sells electric energy from its 
generating facility.\135\ The NOPR did not specify how the blanket 
waiver would apply to non-public utilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \135\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Comments
    80. APPA and TAPS state that, in the event the Commission modifies 
its regulations to create blanket waivers for public utility ICIF 
owners, the same blanket waiver and safe harbor should also apply to 
non-jurisdictional utilities for purposes of satisfying reciprocity 
obligations.\136\ APPA, TAPS, and SWP explain that non-public utilities 
are not directly subject to OATT, OASIS, and Standards of Conduct 
requirements, but are obligated to provide reciprocal service over 
transmission they own, operate, or control as a condition of taking 
service under a public utility's OATT. APPA and TAPS state that, to the 
extent a non-public utility is subject to reciprocity solely because it 
owns, controls, or operates ICIF and sells energy from its generation 
facility, it should be able to point to any blanket waiver adopted by 
the Final Rule for public utilities as eliminating its obligation to 
individually file for ``limited and discrete'' waivers to satisfy 
reciprocity obligations, thereby avoiding the burden on it and the 
Commission associated with such waivers. They state that any 
restrictions or safe harbors adopted with respect to section 210 or 211 
proceedings regarding public utility ICIF should also be available to 
such a non-public utility.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \136\ APPA and TAPS at 27-29.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    81. NCPA and SWP contend that the Final Rule should make clear that 
any blanket waiver adopted in this proceeding applies to eligible 
public utilities and non-public utilities alike, arguing that treating 
similarly situated utilities differently in this respect would be 
unduly discriminatory.\137\ SWP states that non-public utilities may 
request waivers from these obligations according to the same criteria 
as public utilities. SWP also argues that there is no justification for 
conferring an advantage on public utilities that non-public utilities 
do not share.\138\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \137\ NCPA at 4 and SWP at 4.
    \138\ SWP at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    82. The blanket waiver made available to public utilities under 
this Final Rule is also available, as commenters suggest, to non-public 
utilities with a reciprocity obligation.
5. Applicability to Industrial Power Systems' Tie Lines
a. Comments
    83. ELCON comments that many industrials own and operate combined 
heat and power systems or other types of generation that are primarily 
dedicated to their own consumption needs, and that ambiguity with the 
scope of the NOPR may arise because of commonly used nomenclature, 
because dedicated lines operated by industrials are often referred to 
as one type of ``generator tie line.'' ELCON argues that the NOPR 
should be revised to clarify that the regulations respecting third-
party rights to interconnection facilities, even as newly constrained, 
do not apply to the generator tie lines operated by industrials and 
dedicated to their own internal consumption.\139\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \139\ ELCON at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Commission Determination
    84. We decline to revise the proposed regulation as ELCON suggests. 
ELCON's argument that the NOPR's discussion of third-party rights to 
request interconnection and transmission on ICIF should not apply to 
electric lines from industrial-owned combined heat

[[Page 17666]]

and power systems raises an issue that is not the subject of this 
rulemaking. This Final Rule does not make any determination with 
respect to the applicability of the Commission's OATT requirements to 
any particular lines or types of lines. Rather, it applies to any 
transmission providers who are subject to the requirements of section 
35.28 of our regulations, i.e., any public utility that owns, controls, 
or operates facilities used for the transmission of electric energy in 
interstate commerce.\140\

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \140\ 18 CFR 35.28(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

6. Applicability of the Blanket Waiver to Additional Regulations
a. Commission Proposal
    85. In the NOPR, the Commission proposed that the blanket waiver 
would apply to section 35.28 of the Commission's regulation, which 
relates to OATT requirements, Part 37, which relates to OASIS 
requirements, and Part 358, which relates to Standards of Conduct for 
Transmission Providers.\141\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \141\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Comments
    86. Linden argues that the blanket waiver should be expanded to 
also apply to all of Parts 34, 35, 41, 50, 101, and 141 (except 
sections 141.14 and 141.15) of the Commission's regulations with 
respect to any provision of transmission service or interconnection 
service or other sharing with respect to ICIF.\142\ Linden contends 
that this is consistent with the Commission's findings in an order on a 
proposed shared facilities agreement between Linden and its affiliate, 
in which the Commission found that such regulations are waived with 
respect to Linden.\143\
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    \142\ Linden at 8.
    \143\ Linden at 8 (citing Cogen Technologies Linden Venture, 
L.L.P., 127 FERC ] 61,181, at P 20 (2009)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    87. While we recognize that waiver of the provisions mentioned by 
Linden have, under certain circumstances, been granted by the 
Commission, we decline to expand the scope of this Final Rule. The 
blanket waivers granted in this Final Rule are the same as those that 
could be requested on a case-by-case basis for good cause shown in the 
Commission's pre-existing regulations at 18 CFR 35.28(d). Whether to 
grant additional waivers on a generic basis was not something proposed 
to be addressed in this proceeding.
7. Existing Agreements and Waivers
a. Comments
    88. Linden contends that the Commission should clarify that the 
blanket waiver will apply regardless of whether a public utility has 
already granted access to its ICIF pursuant to a Commission-accepted 
agreement. Linden argues that the fact that an owner and/or operator of 
ICIF has allowed a third-party to use its ICIF pursuant to a 
Commission-accepted agreement does not change the nature of such ICIF, 
and the blanket waiver should accordingly continue to apply.\144\ 
Linden states that, at the very least, the Commission should clarify 
that all existing waivers that have been granted to public utilities 
like Linden will continue to apply.\145\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \144\ Linden at 7.
    \145\ Linden at 7-8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Commission Determination
    89. We affirm granting access over ICIF via an existing agreement, 
such as a common facilities agreement or shared use agreement, does not 
affect an ICIF owner's eligibility for the blanket waiver granted by 
this Final Rule. Further, we affirm that, if an entity has previously 
received a specific waiver of the OATT and related obligations pursuant 
to the Commission's ``limited and discrete'' or ``small entity'' 
standards, the blanket waiver will supersede the existing waiver.\146\ 
If, as Linden postulates, an entity has received a case-specific waiver 
that waives requirements in addition to those waived by the blanket 
waiver, the blanket waiver would not rescind the broader waiver.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \146\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 40.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

8. Existing OATTs
a. Commission Proposal
    90. The Commission proposed that the grant of a blanket waiver 
would have no automatic impact on an OATT already on file or on service 
already being taken under it, but the Commission might on a case-by-
case basis consider requests to withdraw an OATT on file for ICIF if no 
third party is taking service under it.\147\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \147\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 40.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Comments
    91. AWEA, Terra-Gen, and NextEra assert that an ICIF owner with an 
OATT on file should be able to withdraw its OATT if there are no third 
parties taking, or currently pursuing a request for, interconnection or 
transmission service.\148\ AWEA and Terra-Gen ask that the Commission: 
(1) Clarify that this cancellation policy will apply when the ICIF 
owner has no existing customers and that any new service requests 
submitted after such a filing has been made must proceed under sections 
210, 211, and 212; and (2) provide an expedited process to grant such 
requests to withdraw such OATTs.\149\ Terra-Gen states that it incurred 
substantial costs in attempting to comply with the Commission's OATT 
requirements over several years, only to find that it could not recover 
those costs because the customer that requested transmission service 
ultimately did not become a transmission customer. Terra-Gen argues 
that this experience underscores the importance of the Commission's 
proposal to provide a case-by-case mechanism to accept cancellation of 
OATTs filed by ICIF owners that have proven to be unnecessary because 
no third parties are taking service under them.\150\ NextEra requests 
that the Commission clarify its statement in the NOPR that withdrawal 
of an OATT ``if no party is taking service under it'' was not intended 
to preclude the ability of an ICIF owner with an OATT on file from 
exercising its rights under section 205 of the FPA to propose 
alternative tariff structures in the future, as appropriate to the 
facts and circumstances of service available on the ICIF.\151\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \148\ AWEA at 17; NextEra at 10; and Terra-Gen at 2.
    \149\ AWEA at 17 and Terra-Gen at 4.
    \150\ Terra-Gen at 2.
    \151\ NextEra at 10-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    92. AWEA further contends that the blanket waivers should also 
automatically apply to those that already have OATTs on file. AWEA 
states that ICIF owners that currently have an OATT on file are in need 
of the proposed reforms just as much as future ICIF owners, and argues 
that providing blanket waivers to this group as well would provide 
consistency and certainty to these entities.\152\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \152\ AWEA at 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    93. In the instance where an ICIF owner has an OATT on file and no 
third parties are taking service, the Commission will consider a 
request to withdraw an OATT on a case-by-case basis. Thus, we decline 
to automatically apply blanket waivers to those that already have OATTs 
on file. We believe this is appropriate in order to give any potential 
customer actively pursuing service sufficient notice before allowing a 
filed OATT to be withdrawn. As such, we decline to establish a separate 
process for cancelling existing OATTs because the Commission will 
consider the specific circumstances of each

[[Page 17667]]

request to withdraw an OATT already on file.
9. Revoking the Blanket Waiver
a. Commission Proposal
    94. In the NOPR, the Commission proposed that the blanket waiver 
would not be automatically revoked by a service request, but could be 
revoked in a Commission order if the Commission determines that it is 
in the public interest to do so pursuant to a proceeding under sections 
210 and 211. The Commission also proposed that the waiver would be 
deemed to be revoked as of the date the public utility ceases to 
satisfy the qualifications for such waiver (e.g., it owns, controls, or 
operates transmission facilities that are not ICIF, or the corporate 
structure changes such that the ICIF owner is no longer the entity that 
sells electric energy from its Generating Facility). The Commission 
sought comment on the circumstances under which and the mechanism by 
which the Commission should revoke the proposed waiver.\153\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \153\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 38.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    95. The Commission also proposed that, if an OATT waiver were 
revoked because of such a change in circumstances, the waivers of OASIS 
and Standards of Conduct would also be revoked, without prejudice to 
the ICIF owner filing a request to continue its waivers of OASIS and 
Standards of Conduct pursuant to the waiver criteria then in 
effect.\154\ In the instance where the Commission revokes the ICIF 
waiver by order, the Commission noted that it may determine whether the 
OASIS and Standards of Conduct waivers should be continued based on the 
criteria that are in effect.\155\
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    \154\ Waivers of the Standards of Conduct may be granted for 
good cause pursuant to 18 CFR 358.1(d).
    \155\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 39.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Comments
    96. NextEra, BHE, and AWEA agree that revocation of the blanket 
waiver should be considered on a case-by-case basis and believe that 
the processes set forth in sections 210 and 211 of the FPA and section 
2.20 of the Commission's regulations are sufficient to evaluate 
potential revocation of waivers granted to ICIF owners.\156\ If, for 
example, the Commission were to determine that an ICIF owner employed 
market power against the third party requesting service over the ICIF, 
it would be reasonable for the Commission to consider the revocation of 
waiver or other enforcement remedies.\157\ Similarly, AWEA asserts that 
the only plausible basis for revocation of the waiver, besides losing 
eligibility, is if an ICIF owner refuses to provide transmission access 
following proceedings under sections 210, 211, and 212. AWEA seeks 
clarification on what, if any, other criteria might be used by the 
Commission to determine that it is in the public interest to revoke 
such a waiver and requests the Commission to provide clear criteria for 
what would constitute a waiver revocation.\158\ BHE states that the 
waiver should only be revoked in limited circumstances, such as when a 
third party is granted access under sections 210 and 211 of the FPA or 
when material circumstances change such that the ICIF owner no longer 
satisfies the waiver qualification.\159\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \156\ NextEra at 9-10; BHE at 7-8; and AWEA at 8.
    \157\ NextEra at 10.
    \158\ AWEA at 9.
    \159\ BHE at 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    97. AWEA states that acquisition of transmission facilities should 
not automatically trigger revocation of the blanket waiver. AWEA argues 
that service over such transmission facilities will be subject to 
applicable open access regulations but that ICIFs are distinct 
facilities that exist for the limited purpose of connecting generation 
to the grid.\160\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \160\ AWEA at 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    98. With respect to the revocation process, AWEA recommends that 
the Commission provide an ICIF owner with reasonable advanced notice 
detailing the reasons for potential revocation, and give the ICIF owner 
an opportunity to dispute and to cure the reasons for such a potential 
revocation.\161\ AWEA suggests that the Commission first issue a show 
cause order to the waiver holder to address why the waiver should not 
be revoked and provide an opportunity for the waiver holder to make 
that demonstration.\162\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \161\ AWEA at 9-10.
    \162\ AWEA at 10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    99. AWEA recommends that the Commission outline the process to 
reinstitute an ICIF owner's waiver if, after revocation of a waiver, it 
is discovered that the waiver revocation was unnecessary, such as, for 
example, if the requirement to file an OATT proves to be unnecessary 
because of the failure of the requesting third party to take 
transmission service.\163\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \163\ AWEA at 10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    100. AWEA supports the Commission proposals that (1) if the OATT 
waiver is revoked, the Commission may determine whether the OASIS and 
Standards of Conduct waivers should continue to be based on the 
criteria in effect; \164\ and (2) if the OATT waiver is revoked due to 
loss of eligibility, the OASIS and Standards of Conduct waivers will 
also be revoked without prejudice to the entity filing a request to 
continue the OASIS and Standards of Conduct waivers.\165\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \164\ AWEA at 10-11.
    \165\ AWEA at 10-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    101. We adopt the NOPR proposal that the blanket waiver would not 
be automatically revoked by a service request, but could be revoked in 
a Commission order if the Commission determines that it is in the 
public interest to do so pursuant to a proceeding under sections 210 
and 211 of the FPA. We also adopt the NOPR proposal that the waiver 
would be deemed to be revoked as of the date the public utility ceases 
to satisfy the qualifications for such waiver. Additionally, if the 
ICIF that are covered by a blanket waiver become integrated into a 
transmission system such that they can no longer be considered ICIF, 
the blanket waiver would be deemed to have been revoked. To the extent 
that a dispute arises regarding whether a facility is eligible for the 
waiver, the Commission will address such a dispute at that time.
    102. If the OATT waiver is automatically revoked because of a 
change in circumstances, we affirm that the waivers of OASIS and 
Standards of Conduct would also be revoked, without prejudice to the 
ICIF owner filing a request to continue its waivers of OASIS and 
Standards of Conduct pursuant to the waiver criteria then in effect.
    103. We decline to elaborate on the specific circumstances that 
would lead to the revocation of the blanket waiver other than ceasing 
to satisfy the qualifications for such waiver, because it is not 
possible to anticipate every circumstance that would result in a 
revocation. Revocation of the blanket waiver in circumstances other 
than ceasing to satisfy the qualifications for such waiver will be 
determined by the Commission under applicable statutory and regulatory 
provisions. Any instance of revocation, however, would be the result of 
a Commission proceeding, so the ICIF owner would have notice of the 
revocation and full due process rights to respond. Moreover, under 
sections 210 and 211 the Commission may direct service to be provided 
under an interconnection and transmission service agreement without 
directing that the ICIF owner file an OATT. However, the Commission 
reserves the right to revoke the blanket waiver and require the filing 
of an OATT to ensure open access in appropriate circumstances.

[[Page 17668]]

C. Interconnection and Transmission Under Sections 210 and 211 of the 
Federal Power Act

1. Sections 210 and 211
    104. Sections 210 and 211 of the FPA describe the process for 
seeking Commission-ordered interconnection and transmission services. 
Section 210 of the FPA provides, in relevant part, ``Upon application 
of any electric utility . . . the Commission may issue an order 
requiring (A) the physical connection of . . . the transmission 
facilities of any electric utility, with the facilities of such 
applicant.'' \166\ An ``electric utility'' is defined as ``a person or 
Federal or State agency . . . that sells electric energy.'' \167\ 
Section 211 provides that ``any electric utility, Federal power 
marketing agency, or any other person generating electric energy for 
sale or resale'' may apply to the Commission for an order requiring a 
``transmitting utility'' to provide transmission services, including 
enlargement of facilities if necessary.\168\ The term ``transmitting 
utility'' is defined as an entity that ``owns, operates, or controls 
facilities used for the transmission of electric energy . . . in 
interstate commerce . . . for the sale of electric energy at 
wholesale.'' \169\ For a third party to obtain interconnection services 
and transmission services, an application must be made under both 
sections 210 and 211.\170\ An applicant may consolidate the 
applications for the Commission's consideration.\171\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \166\ 16 U.S.C. 824i(a)(1)(A).
    \167\ 16 U.S.C. 796(22).
    \168\ 16 U.S.C. 824j.
    \169\ 16 U.S.C. 796(23).
    \170\ Tres Amigas LLC, 130 FERC ] 61,205, at P 43, reh'g denied, 
132 FERC ] 61,232 (2010). In Laguna Irrigation District, the 
Commission explained that ``[n]othing in our [section 210] 
interconnection order requires transmission service. Rather, 
transmission service will be obtained by Laguna pursuant to other 
transmission tariffs or agreements.'' 95 FERC ] 61,305, at 62,038 
(2001), aff'd sub nom. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. FERC, 44 Fed. 
Appx. 170 (9th Cir. 2002) (unpublished); see also City of Corona, 
California v. Southern California Edison Co., 104 FERC ] 61,085, at 
PP 7-10 (2003) (Corona's application under section 210 did not 
constitute a request for transmission under section 211).
    \171\ See Aero Proposed Order, 115 FERC ] 61,128.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    105. An application under section 210 must show that the 
interconnection: (1) Is in the public interest; (2) would either 
encourage conservation of energy or capital, optimize efficient use of 
facilities and resources, or improve reliability; and (3) meets the 
requirements of section 212.\172\ The requirements of section 212 are 
discussed further below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \172\ 16 U.S.C. 824i(c); Aero Proposed Order, 115 FERC ] 61,128 
at PP 15-16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    106. An application under section 211 requires that the third party 
seeking transmission service first make a good faith request for 
service, complying with 18 CFR 2.20, specifying details as to how much 
capacity is requested and for what period, at least 60 days before 
making an application to the Commission for an order requiring 
transmission service.\173\ The Commission may grant an application 
under section 211 if the application is in the public interest and 
otherwise meets the requirements under section 212.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \173\ See 16 U.S.C. 824j(a) (``No order may be issued under this 
subsection unless the applicant has made a request for transmission 
services to the transmitting utility that would be the subject of 
such order at least 60 days prior to its filing of an application 
for such order.''); 18 CFR 2.20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    107. Section 212 further requires that, before issuing a final 
order under either section 210 or 211, the Commission must issue a 
proposed order setting a reasonable time for the parties to agree to 
terms and conditions for carrying out the order, including allocation 
of costs. If parties can agree to terms within that time, the 
Commission may issue a final order approving those terms. If parties do 
not agree, the Commission will weigh the positions of the parties and 
issue a final order establishing the terms of costs, compensation, and 
other terms of interconnection and transmission and directing 
service.\174\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \174\ 16 U.S.C. 824k(c)(2); Aero Proposed Order, 115 FERC ] 
61,128 at PP 17-18 (providing parties 28 days to negotiate and 
provide briefing on issues of disagreement).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

a. Commission Proposal
    108. The Commission proposed in the NOPR that, if a third party 
seeks to use ICIF that qualify for the blanket waiver discussed above, 
an eligible entity seeking interconnection and transmission service on 
ICIF would need to follow the rules and regulations applicable to 
requests for service under sections 210 and 211 (subject to the safe 
harbor presumption proposed in the NOPR).\175\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \175\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 41.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    109. As discussed above, the Commission's current practice with 
respect to allowing an ICIF owner to have priority use of excess 
transmission capacity it has built is to allow the ICIF owner to 
demonstrate specific plans and milestones for any planned future 
generation development by the ICIF owner or its affiliates. Consistent 
with that practice, the Commission proposed in the NOPR to find that, 
outside of the safe harbor period and to the extent the ICIF owner can 
demonstrate specific plans and milestones for its and/or its 
affiliates' future use of the ICIF, with respect to ICIF that are 
eligible for the blanket waiver discussed above, it is generally in the 
public interest under sections 210 and 211 to allow an ICIF owner to 
retain priority rights to the use of excess capacity on ICIF that it 
plans to use to interconnect its own or its affiliates' future 
generation projects.\176\ Thus, the Commission proposed to make 
priority determinations for use of ICIF, in the event of a third party 
request, in the process under sections 210 and 211. The Commission 
sought comment on whether an ICIF owner's or affiliate's planned future 
use of the ICIF is an appropriate consideration to factor into a 
proceeding under sections 210 and 211.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \176\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 47.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    110. Any disputes as to the extent of excess capacity on ICIF or 
the ICIF owner's future plans to use such excess capacity would be 
resolved, subject to the safe harbor presumption discussed below, 
during the proceedings under sections 210 and 211, using an excess 
capacity analysis similar to that used in Aero and Milford, in which 
the ICIF owner must demonstrate specific plans and milestones for the 
future use of its ICIF. Even if an ICIF owner were able to demonstrate 
in such a proceeding that no excess capacity exists, if supported by 
the record in the case, the Commission could order the eligible ICIF 
owner to expand its facilities to provide interconnection and 
transmission service under sections 210 and 211.\177\ Section 212 
requires that the eligible ICIF owners would be fully compensated for 
any required expansion.\178\ This is similar to the rights and 
obligations under the pro forma OATT.\179\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \177\ 16 U.S.C. 824i(a)(1)(D) (``The Commission may issue an 
order requiring . . . such increase in transmission capacity as may 
be necessary. . . .''); 16 U.S.C. 824j(a) (``Any electric utility . 
. . may apply to the Commission for an order under this subsection 
requiring a transmitting utility to provide transmission services 
(including any enlargement of transmission capacity necessary to 
provide such services) to the applicant.'').
    \178\ Section 212(a) provides that an order under section 211 
shall require the transmitting utility subject to the order to 
provide wholesale transmission services at rates, charges, terms, 
and conditions which permit the recovery by such utility of all the 
costs incurred in connection with the transmission services and 
necessary associated services, including, but not limited to, an 
appropriate share, if any, of legitimate, verifiable and economic 
costs, including taking into account any benefits to the 
transmission system of providing the transmission service, and the 
costs of any enlargement of transmission facilities.
    \179\ Section 15.4 of the pro forma OATT states that f the 
Transmission Provider determines that it cannot accommodate a 
Completed Application for Firm Point-To-Point Transmission Service 
because of insufficient capability on its Transmission System, the 
Transmission Provider will use due diligence to expand or modify its 
Transmission System to provide the requested Firm Transmission 
Service, consistent with its planning obligations in Attachment K, 
provided the Transmission Customer agrees to compensate the 
Transmission Provider for such costs pursuant to the terms of 
Section 27.

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[[Page 17669]]

b. Comments
    111. Most commenters support the NOPR proposal that third parties 
seeking to use ICIF subject to the blanket waiver should do so pursuant 
to sections 210 and 211. AWEA, BHE, EEI, NextEra, Recurrent, and 
Southern argue that this approach will protect the ICIF owner from 
speculative requests for transmission service.\180\ NextEra and BHE 
further argue that the requirements of sections 210 and 211 also 
protect the interests of third parties seeking to use ICIF.\181\ 
NextEra and Southern also support the NOPR's proposal to evaluate, in 
the course of a proceeding under sections 210 and 211, whether an ICIF 
owner's ``specific plans and milestones'' justify priority rights to 
use excess capacity on the ICIF, to the extent the safe harbor is not 
applicable.\182\ Finally, NextEra and AWEA contend that the framework 
under sections 210 and 211 provides the flexibility necessary for ICIF 
owners and third parties to reach mutually agreeable arrangements 
tailored to their respective needs.\183\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \180\ Recurrent at 4; Southern at 7; NextEra at 11-14; AWEA at 
12-13; BHE at 8; and EEI at 16.
    \181\ NextEra at 11-14 and BHE at 8.
    \182\ NextEra at 11-14.
    \183\ NextEra at 11-14 and AWEA at 12-13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    112. APPA and TAPS argue that the NOPR, as proposed, would erect an 
impassable barrier to accessing ICIF. APPA, TAPS, and NRECA argue that 
a proceeding under sections 210 and 211 is time-consuming, burdensome, 
and expensive.\184\ They state that Order No. 888 expressly found those 
statutory processes to be too cumbersome and time-consuming to provide 
non-discriminatory access and placed customers ``at a severe 
disadvantage compared to the transmission owner.'' \185\ They contend 
that by limiting requesters to access only through sections 210 and 
211, even if the request is received many years after the ICIF is 
energized and there is ample unused capacity, the NOPR creates a potent 
and permanent obstacle to open access that enhances the ICIF owner's 
vertical market power without any justification.\186\ NRECA argues that 
prospective customers should not have to initiate such a proceeding 
with the Commission in order to demonstrate entitlement to service on 
these Commission-jurisdictional lines.\187\ APPA and TAPS also contend 
that the NOPR has not demonstrated that the proposed procedures will 
cost less than existing requirements, arguing that the lengthy and 
costly procedures of sections 210 and 211 could not possibly be less 
expensive for ICIF owners on an industry-wide basis.\188\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \184\ APPA and TAPS at 11-12.
    \185\ APPA and TAPS at 12 (citing to Order No. 888, FERC Stats. 
& Regs. ] 31,036 at 31,646).
    \186\ APPA and TAPS at 24-25.
    \187\ NRECA at 5.
    \188\ APPA and TAPS at 20-21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    113. We find that with respect to ICIF eligible for the blanket 
waiver discussed above, it is appropriate for entities seeking 
interconnection and transmission service on ICIF to follow the rules 
and regulations applicable to requests for service under sections 210 
and 211 (subject to the safe harbor discussed below).\189\ Given the 
risk of investment in generation and ICIF, it is appropriate to provide 
an ICIF owner with priority rights over the use of the excess capacity 
on ICIF that it plans to use to interconnect its own or its affiliates' 
future generation projects to the extent the ICIF owner can demonstrate 
specific plans and milestones for its and/or its affiliates' future use 
of the ICIF. In addition, we find that given the relatively small 
percentage of ICIF owners that have actually had to file an OATT,\190\ 
requiring the entity requesting service over ICIF to pursue such 
service under sections 210 and 211 will not overly burden potential 
customers of service on ICIF. The process under sections 210 and 211 
assures third-party entities requesting service on ICIF and eligible 
ICIF owners alike that they will have specified procedural rights as 
set forth in sections 210, 211, and 212 of the FPA and appropriately 
balances ICIF owners' and third parties' rights to service on ICIF. 
Further, this framework provides the contractual flexibility that some 
commenters suggest is not available under our existing policy so that 
contractual arrangements (e.g., transmission service agreements, 
interconnection agreements, and/or shared facilities agreements) can be 
tailored to the special situations for ICIF in determining the 
appropriate terms and conditions of service, as many of the pro forma 
OATT provisions are not applicable to service over ICIF. Finally, we 
recognize that our existing policy to allow an ICIF owner to retain 
priority rights if it has plans to use the ICIF capacity and is making 
progress to achieve those plans can involve a potential transmission or 
interconnection customer in complex proceedings associated with a 
request for service. Thus, we believe the reforms adopted herein will 
not meaningfully change the expense potential customers incur to obtain 
service.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \189\ Such third-party requests for service could include 
requests for firm, nonfirm, conditional, or interim service. See, 
e.g., 18 CFR 2.20(b)(9).
    \190\ See supra P 38.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    114. APPA and TAPS are correct that the Commission in Order No. 888 
found section 211 to provide insufficient relief as a general method of 
enabling more competitive generation to obtain open access transmission 
service. As a result, Order No. 888 required that public utilities file 
an OATT to provide readily available, comparable service at known 
rates, terms, and conditions. In this Final Rule, the Commission finds 
that the filing of an OATT and compliance with certain regulations are 
not necessary to prevent unjust and unreasonable rates or unduly 
discriminatory behavior with respect to ICIF. ICIF are sole-use, 
limited and discrete, radial in nature, and not part of an integrated 
transmission network, and third-party requests to use ICIF are 
infrequent. Case-by-case determinations under sections 210 and 211 are 
not appropriate for the large number of transmission service requests 
on the integrated grid, but are appropriate for the few expected 
requests for service on ICIF, each of which would likely have different 
circumstances. We find that, for this set of circumstances, the 
framework of sections 210 and 211 provide a sufficient means for third-
party access to ICIF.
2. Voluntary Arrangements
a. Comments
    115. First Wind and Invenergy ask the Commission to confirm that 
ICIF owners may continue to enter into shared use agreements with 
affiliates without requiring the affiliated party to utilize sections 
210, 211 and 212 to obtain access.\191\ Similarly, Linden requests that 
the Commission clarify that the Commission's proposed process does not 
preclude an ICIF owner and a non-affiliated entity seeking service to 
mutually agree upon an appropriate arrangement outside of the context 
of a proceeding under sections 210 or 211, if the parties file any 
resulting mutually agreed upon arrangement pursuant to section 205 of 
the FPA.\192\ Linden contends that the new proposed section 
35.28(d)(2)(ii) suggests that the parties must use the process before 
the Commission that is outlined in sections 210, 211, and 212 of the 
FPA and the

[[Page 17670]]

Commission's corresponding regulations. Linden asserts that even where 
sections 210 and 211 apply, section 212(c)(1) of the FPA requires that 
the Commission ``set a reasonable time for parties . . . to agree to 
terms and conditions under which such order is to be carried out'' and 
that the Commission generally directs the parties to negotiate 
appropriate agreements.\193\ Accordingly, Linden recommends that the 
Commission should consider revising section 35.28(d)(2)(ii) to 
explicitly allow for the possibility that parties may arrive at 
mutually agreeable arrangements without undergoing a proceeding under 
sections 210 and 211 at the Commission.\194\ Linden further states that 
parties to the relevant arrangements should be allowed flexibility to 
negotiate appropriate terms and conditions without restriction as to 
the form or nature of the agreement for greater regulatory efficiency, 
and recommends that the Commission add an additional section 35.28(iii) 
explicitly acknowledging that parties may mutually agree on rates, 
terms and conditions, subject to Commission review and acceptance.\195\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \191\ First Wind at 15 and Invenergy at 14-15.
    \192\ Linden at 4-5.
    \193\ Linden at 5.
    \194\ Linden at 5-6.
    \195\ Linden at 6-7.
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    116. E.ON asks the Commission to clarify that the blanket waiver 
should not be jeopardized if a planned phase of a generation project is 
owned by a non-affiliate.\196\ Similarly, NRG and E.ON ask for 
clarification that voluntarily negotiating a bilateral agreement with a 
third party that is seeking access to the ICIF during the safe harbor 
period, discussed below, would not jeopardize the continuation of the 
safe harbor period.\197\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \196\ E.ON at 13.
    \197\ NRG at 3-4 and E.ON at 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Commission Determination
    117. We clarify that the availability of the process under sections 
210 and 211 does not preclude the opportunity for an ICIF owner and an 
entity seeking service, including an affiliate, to mutually agree, 
outside of the process under sections 210 and 211, to an arrangement 
for service over the ICIF. In fact, this flexibility benefits both the 
ICIF owner and an entity seeking service, as it allows the parties the 
opportunity to craft an agreement appropriate for the circumstances and 
potentially expedite access to ICIF. In that case, availability of the 
process under sections 210 and 211 provides protection to entities 
seeking service by allowing them to seek service under the process 
under sections 210 and 211 if an agreement cannot be reached. 
Furthermore, we likewise clarify that this flexibility applies both to 
affiliates and non-affiliates of the ICIF owner, such that ICIF owners 
may enter into shared use agreements with affiliates or non-affiliates, 
without requiring a proceeding under sections 210 and 211 to obtain 
access. Finally, we clarify that a shared-use agreement or bilateral 
agreement with either an affiliate or non-affiliate will not in itself 
jeopardize the applicability of the blanket waiver or the continuation 
of the safe harbor period, discussed below. We find that this will 
allow flexibility and promote mutually agreeable arrangements for 
sharing facilities. In any case, ICIF owners that are public utilities 
would still be subject to the statutory requirement of sections 205 and 
206 forbidding unduly discriminatory practices.
    118. We agree that our use of the term ``shall'' in new section 
35.28(d)(2)(ii) may have inadvertently given the impression that 
voluntary agreements without resort to sections 210 and 211 were not 
allowed. We did not intend that, and therefore change the word 
``shall'' to ``may'' in section 35.28(d)(2)(ii). Indeed, the 
flexibility to enter into voluntary agreements is inherent in the 
process under sections 210 and 211. As Linden points out, section 212 
recognizes that parties should have a reasonable time to agree to terms 
and conditions,\198\ and section 211 requires that a third party must 
have submitted a good faith request for service at least 60 days before 
it may submit a section 211 application before the Commission. Nothing 
in sections 210 or 211 precludes entities from arriving at mutual 
agreements prior to or instead of seeking to establish a process under 
sections 210 and 211. Accordingly, we confirm that an ICIF owner and an 
entity seeking service may mutually agree to an arrangement for 
interconnection and transmission service over the ICIF, without 
initiating a process under sections 210 and 211.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \198\ See 16 U.S.C. 824k(c)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Interaction With the Transmission System
a. Comments
    119. AWEA states that a third party requesting service on an ICIF 
should be required to submit an appropriate interconnection or 
transmission service request to the transmission provider with whom the 
ICIF are interconnected within 30 days of the good faith request to the 
owner of the ICIF and/or within a reasonable time before an application 
under sections 210 and 211 is made. NextEra argues for a similar 
requirement, stating that the third party should make a request to the 
transmission provider within 60 days following the completion of a 
feasibility study by the ICIF owner in order for a subsequent petition 
under sections 210 or 211 of the FPA to be considered in good 
faith.\199\ AWEA explains that, even if the proposed reforms were put 
into place, failing to require such a submittal could lead to gaming 
opportunities by unaffiliated generators who may wish to establish a 
queue position on an ICIF, while avoiding upfront costs associated with 
actually injecting power into a transmission provider's network 
grid.\200\ AWEA argues that it is reasonable to make such a requirement 
because it is critical for system reliability that all three of the 
relevant parties are involved in any interconnection of new generation 
to the grid.\201\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \199\ NextEra at 14-15.
    \200\ AWEA at 16-17.
    \201\ AWEA at 17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    120. MISO and the MISO TOs suggest that the Commission should 
require the new interconnection customer who requests to interconnect 
to the existing ICIF to enter into an agreement with the existing 
interconnection customer before allowing the new interconnection 
customer to enter the binding portion of the governing interconnection 
procedures.\202\ They argue this is reasonable because adding 
generating facilities to existing ICIF will complicate the existing 
interconnection process and require coordination with the relevant RTO 
or the use of existing RTO interconnection procedures to ensure that 
new interconnections to ICIFs will not adversely impact the reliable 
operation of the transmission system.\203\
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    \202\ MISO at 7 and MISO TOs at 5.
    \203\ MISO at 5-6 and MISO TOs at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    121. While ITC does not oppose the reforms proposed in the NOPR, 
ITC is concerned that the Commission's proposal to rely exclusively on 
sections 210 and 211 of the FPA to govern third-party interconnections 
on ICIF fails to provide sufficient clarity on the precise contractual 
relationship that will exist between the ICIF owner, a third party 
proposing to interconnect with ICIF, the transmission provider, and the 
impacted transmission owner (provided these are separate entities). ITC 
recommends that the Commission provide additional guidance in the Final 
Rule on the process for establishing contractual relationships between 
these four types of parties, the nature of these contractual 
relationships, and how

[[Page 17671]]

successful applications will fit into the relevant transmission 
provider study processes necessary to ensure that such connections 
occur safely and reliably. Specifically, ITC recommends that the 
Commission include in the Final Rule requirements that: (1) 
Interconnection requests approved under sections 210 and 211 must 
proceed under the LGIP of the transmission provider to which the ICIF 
owner is interconnected; and (2) the third party must enter into a 
separate LGIA with the impacted transmission owner and facilities 
agreement with the ICIF owner.\204\ Given that the transmission owner 
owns and operates facilities to which the shared ICIF are 
interconnected, the third party should be required to enter into an 
LGIA with the impacted transmission owner. This will clearly establish 
the rights and obligations of all parties and, more importantly, ensure 
that the appropriate reliability studies are conducted prior to 
allowing an interconnection.\205\ The MISO TOs agree with ITC that the 
Commission should modify its NOPR proposal to require greater 
coordination with the transmission provider and transmission owner 
because this will lessen the likelihood of operational and reliability 
problems while lessening the OATT, OASIS, and Standards of Conduct 
burdens on ICIF owners that the Commission seeks to alleviate.\206\
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    \204\ ITC at 7-8.
    \205\ ITC at 11.
    \206\ MISO TOs at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    122. Similarly, EPSA recommends that the Commission should 
encourage parties to utilize appropriate existing LGIA and LGIP 
provisions regarding terms, conditions and procedures in the Final Rule 
because the provisions of the LGIA and LGIP (e.g., section 9.9.2 of the 
LGIA) work well for the interconnection process and that augmenting the 
process under sections 210, 211 and 212 with these procedures will 
offer clarity to industry stakeholders.
    123. EEI requests that the Commission not be prescriptive with 
respect to a mechanism for interconnection or transmission under this 
rule, and states that under the framework under sections 210 and 211, 
the ICIF owner, the eligible entity seeking interconnection to the ICIF 
and the transmission provider will have flexibility on how to develop 
the terms and conditions of the interconnection to the ICIF and any 
associated transmission delivery service over the ICIF.\207\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \207\ EEI at 16-17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    124. Southern asserts that the ICIF owner, the party seeking 
interconnection to the ICIF, and the transmission provider should have 
the flexibility to develop appropriate arrangements for both 
interconnection and transmission service that meet all parties' needs 
so long as the new interconnection customer is able to interconnect its 
generating facility and acquire transmission service on terms and 
conditions that are similar to other customers. Therefore, Southern 
contends, the Commission should not be prescriptive with respect to the 
mechanism to be used for interconnection or transmission service under 
this rule as long as all affected parties agree to jointly study and 
provide interconnection and transmission service for the new generator 
requesting interconnection, with the new generator's commitment to bear 
the expense of such work. Moreover, Southern notes that the Commission 
would retain oversight over the third-party requests for service over 
the ICIF because it would have an opportunity to review such 
arrangements under FPA sections 210, 211 and 212 and amendments to 
existing interconnection agreements under section 205.\208\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \208\ Southern at 7-8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Commission Determination
    125. Commenters appear to be conflating the scope of this Final 
Rule--access to ICIF--with requirements for access to the network/
integrated grid. As such, we decline to prescribe additional 
requirements for access to the network/integrated transmission system 
by entities seeking to interconnect with ICIF or a process for how 
requests to interconnect with ICIF must fit into the transmission 
provider's study processes. We reaffirm the existing policy that third-
party requesters are obligated to obtain service on the transmission 
facilities at or beyond the Point of Change of Ownership as well as 
those facilities beyond the Point of Interconnection with ICIF pursuant 
to the relevant existing OATT and interconnection procedures.\209\ The 
existing policy, under which third-party requesters are obligated to 
obtain service on the transmission facilities beyond the ICIF pursuant 
to the relevant existing OATT and interconnection procedures, will 
maintain the reliability of the network transmission system by ensuring 
that the appropriate studies are conducted. At the same time, the 
Commission's existing policy provides the flexibility for the entity 
seeking interconnection to the ICIF, the ICIF owner, and the public 
utility transmission provider to develop arrangements for the 
interconnection to the ICIF and any associated transmission delivery 
service over the ICIF.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \209\ In addition, an application under section 211 requires 
that the third party seeking transmission first make a good faith 
request for service, complying with 18 CFR 2.20, specifying details 
as to how much capacity is requested and for what period, at least 
60 days before making an application to the Commission for an order 
requiring transmission service. The Commission may grant an 
application under section 211 if the application is in the public 
interest and otherwise meets the requirements under section 212. As 
part of the evaluation of whether the third party seeking 
transmission service made a good faith request for service, the 
Commission may look to see what measures, if any, the third party 
has taken to acquire service on the network transmission system 
beyond the ICIF.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    126. In response to AWEA's assertion that failing to require a 
third party seeking service on ICIF to submit an interconnection or 
transmission service request to the transmission provider with whom the 
ICIF are interconnected could lead to gaming opportunities by 
unaffiliated generators, we find that the process under sections 210 
and 211 will limit speculative requests for transmission service from 
the ICIF owner and deter attempts to game the interconnection process. 
We are not persuaded that additional protection is needed at this time. 
The framework under sections 210 and 211 assures that ICIF owners have 
specified procedural rights as set forth in sections 210 and 211 of the 
FPA.
    127. We conclude that the existing policy, that third-party 
requesters are obligated to obtain service on the transmission 
facilities at or beyond the Point of Change of Ownership as well as 
those facilities beyond the Point of Interconnection pursuant to the 
relevant OATT and interconnection procedures, strikes the right balance 
between ensuring reliability, providing flexibility, and protecting the 
rights of the ICIF owner. Accordingly, we decline to further prescribe 
how a third-party seeking service over ICIF pursuant to sections 210 
and 211 also gains access to the networked transmission provider's 
transmission system.
4. Scope of Regulations To Be Modified
a. Commission Proposal
    128. In the NOPR, the Commission proposed to add subsection 
35.28(d)(2) to the Commission's regulations for the purpose of setting 
forth the terms of the blanket OATT waiver, and did not propose to 
revise other regulations.\210\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \210\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Comments
    129. E.ON argues that section 2.20 of the Commission's regulations, 
which

[[Page 17672]]

implements the section 211 process with respect to making and 
responding to ``good faith'' requests for transmission services, should 
be amended as to its applicability to ICIF because an ICIF owner cannot 
fulfill all of the requirements of a traditional transmission provider 
in that regulation. For example, section 2.20 requires the transmitting 
utility to respond to the requester with a date by which a response 
will be sent to the requester and a statement of any fees associated 
with responding to its request (e.g., initial studies), and if the 
transmitting utility determines it cannot provide the requested service 
with existing capacity, then it must provide studies and data regarding 
constraints and offer an executable agreement wherein the requester 
agrees to reimburse the transmitting utility for all costs of 
performing any studies.\211\ E.ON argues that the Commission should 
clarify that the section 2.20 process requires the third-party 
requester to arrange and pay for all required studies with the ICIF's 
transmission provider, and that the ICIF owner has no obligation to 
arrange and pay for all such studies. E.ON argues that this would 
encompass impacts on the ICIF, interconnecting transmission owner's 
interconnection facilities and transmission facilities, the 
transmission provider's grid and any other affected entities' 
facilities.\212\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \211\ E.ON at 13-14.
    \212\ E.ON at 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    130. We see no reason to revise section 2.20 of our regulations. We 
do not expect the ICIF owner to study the networked transmission 
system, but only to study the capacity available on its ICIF. Further, 
we believe that section 2.20 is clear that the requesting party pays 
for any studies associated with a request for service over ICIF.\213\ 
Given the nature of the study to determine available capacity on the 
ICIF (typically by comparing the thermal rating of the facilities to 
the existing commitments on the line) and that the ICIF owner should 
have the information necessary to perform such studies, this is likely 
to be a fairly straightforward process that is best performed by the 
ICIF owner. Accordingly, the transparency and timing requirements of 
section 2.20 should not prove overly burdensome for ICIF owners and do 
not require revision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \213\ See 18 CFR 2.20(c)(1) and 18 CFR 2.20(c)(4)(iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

5. Reliability Standards
a. Comments
    131. ITC requests that the Commission clarify how the proposed 
interconnection process interacts with the requirements of NERC 
Reliability Standard FAC-001-1 (Facility Connection Requirements).\214\ 
This standard applies to all transmission owners and those generator 
owners that have an executed agreement to evaluate the reliability 
impact of interconnecting a third party facility to the generator 
owner's existing facility that is used to interconnect to the 
interconnected transmission systems.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \214\ ITC at 11-12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Commission Determination
    132. We clarify that nothing in this Final Rule changes the 
requirement to comply with all Commission-approved mandatory 
Reliability Standards, including FAC-001-1.

D. Safe Harbor

1. Whether and To What Extent There Should be a Safe Harbor Period
a. Commission Proposal
    133. To reduce risks to ICIF owners eligible for the blanket waiver 
discussed above during the critical early years of their projects, the 
Commission proposed a safe harbor period of five years during which 
there would be a rebuttable presumption that: (1) The eligible ICIF 
owner has definitive plans to use its capacity without having to make a 
demonstration through a specific plans and milestones showing; and (2) 
the eligible ICIF owner should not be required to expand its 
facilities. A third-party requester for service on ICIF during the safe 
harbor period could attempt to rebut these presumptions, but it would 
have the burden of proof to show that the owner and/or operator does 
not have definitive plans to use its capacity and the public interest 
under sections 210 and 211 is better served by granting access to the 
third party than by allowing the eligible ICIF owner to reserve its 
ICIF capacity for its own future use.
b. Comments
    134. Many commenters \215\ support the proposed safe harbor period, 
during which a developer of a generator tie line would be presumed to 
have priority rights to the capacity on the generator tie lines it 
funded for five years from the date the line is energized. However, a 
few commenters oppose the safe harbor, and a few others argue it should 
be strengthened.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \215\ AWEA at 5; BHE at 3; BP Wind at 4; E.ON at 10; EEI at 4; 
EPSA at 6; ELCON at 2-3; First Wind at 2; Invenergy at 2; NextEra at 
6; NRG at 3; Recurrent at 3; Sempra at 2; SEIA at 3; Southern at 6; 
and Terra-Gen at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    135. APPA and TAPS argue that the NOPR's proposed safe harbor cuts 
back on the relief otherwise available under sections 210, 211, and 
212, and all but ensures absolute foreclosure of competitors from 
access to ICIF.\216\ They explain that in order to rebut the 
presumptions, a requester would have the burden of proof to show that 
the ICIF owner lacks definitive plans to use its capacity, and that the 
public interest under sections 210 and 211 is better served by granting 
access to the third party than by allowing the ICIF owner to reserve 
its ICIF capacity for its own future use. They contend that the 
proposed presumption is effectively irrebuttable because the 
Commission's determinations as to whether the ICIF owner and its 
affiliates have definitive plans have been based on confidential 
demonstrations available only to the ICIF owner and its affiliates. 
They note that the bar on any ``expansion'' during the safe harbor 
period may also foreclose all interconnections, even if the definitive 
plans presumption were somehow surmounted, because while the NOPR does 
not define the term ``expansion,'' modifications to the ICIF owner's 
facilities will be necessary in any interconnection of a competitor's 
generator.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \216\ APPA and TAPS at 14-15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    136. NRECA argues that the Commission should not implement its 
proposed safe harbor creating a rebuttable presumption against 
transmission access for five years in cases where the customer 
requesting service on the ICIF needs it to serve load efficiently.\217\ 
NRECA states that load has little or minimal impact on the available 
capacity of ICIF, and, in many cases may actually increase the 
capability of ICIF with counterflow. NRECA states that the burden of 
proof should be on the ICIF owner to demonstrate that it has specific 
plans to use the transmission capacity in such a way that would prevent 
it from providing access to a load-serving transmission customer, 
adding that the Commission cannot reasonably require a prospective 
customer to prove a negative--that the owner has no such plans--when 
all of the relevant information is in the hands of the owner.\218\ 
NRECA also argues that the Commission has not provided any 
justification for granting a five-year presumption against requiring an 
ICIF

[[Page 17673]]

owner to expand its facilities to accommodate a service request when 
sections 210 and 211 of the FPA provide for potential increases in 
transmission capacity as necessary.\219\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \217\ NRECA at 7.
    \218\ NRECA at 8.
    \219\ NRECA at 8 (citing 16 U.S.C. 824i(a)(1) (``Upon 
application . . . the Commission may issue an order requiring . . . 
such increase in transmission capacity as may be necessary to carry 
out the purposes of any order under subparagraph (A) or (B)''); 16 
U.S.C. 824j(a) (``Any electric utility . . . may apply to the 
Commission for an order under this subsection requiring a 
transmitting utility to provide transmission services (including any 
enlargement of transmission capacity necessary to provide such 
services) to the applicant.'')).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    137. On the other hand, AWEA and E.ON support the safe harbor 
concept but urge the Commission to consider removing the rebuttable 
presumption standard. E.ON expresses concern that the safe harbor the 
Commission proposes would not relieve the interconnection customer of 
the regulatory compliance burden, because a third party could still 
initiate the process under sections 210 and 211 during the safe harbor 
period and thus force the ICIF owner to demonstrate specific plans and 
milestones in order to sustain the rebuttable presumption.\220\ 
Further, while the NOPR proposed to rebuttably presume that an ICIF 
owner should not be required to expand the ICIF during the five-year 
safe harbor period, E.ON argues that it is unclear how a rebuttable 
presumption would apply in that context and what might be rebutted. 
E.ON argues that what is clear is that the ICIF owner needs to be 
unencumbered during the safe harbor period, so that it may focus on 
developing and bringing online successive phases of new 
generation.\221\ More generally, AWEA contends that if the generation 
developer dedicates the extra capital and builds ICIF that accommodate 
more capacity than needed for initial generation, it is because the 
generation developer plans to develop more generation in future phases. 
Accordingly, AWEA believes that removing the rebuttable presumption is 
appropriate because it will clarify that the generation developer and 
owner of the ICIF have sole use of the excess capacity, without the 
need to defend the right to that capacity.\222\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \220\ E.ON at 10.
    \221\ E.ON at 11-12.
    \222\ AWEA at 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    138. We will adopt the safe harbor period, but we will modify it to 
remove the rebuttable presumption that the ICIF owner should not be 
required to expand its facilities. During the safe harbor period, there 
will be a rebuttable presumption that the eligible ICIF owner has 
definitive plans to use its capacity without having to make a 
demonstration through a specific plans and milestones showing. We 
believe this Final Rule will relieve regulatory burdens and unnecessary 
risks from generation developers to encourage the development of new 
generation and efficient interconnection facilities and promote 
competition while ensuring access to transmission on a not unduly 
discriminatory basis. Under this Final Rule, the ICIF owner gains a 
degree of protection through the reduced likelihood that a third-party 
requester could rebut the presumption that an ICIF owner has plans to 
use all of its capacity. However, by making the presumption rebuttable 
rather than absolute, a third-party requester with strong evidence has 
the opportunity to gain access to the ICIF, even during the safe 
harbor.
    139. The proposal in the NOPR that the safe harbor period would 
also contain a rebuttable presumption that the ICIF owner should not 
have to expand its facilities was intended to provide generation 
developers an initial opportunity to establish their generation 
projects while limiting the burden and distraction of studying requests 
to expand its ICIF and potentially expanding those facilities to 
accommodate third party use. However, upon consideration of the 
comments, we believe such a rebuttable presumption could prevent third-
party access without providing a substantial ease of burden for the 
ICIF owner.\223\ We conclude that eliminating this presumption strikes 
an appropriate balance by providing certainty to an ICIF owner over its 
planned capacity without hindering expansion of the facility in 
question when a potential customer requesting that expansion is willing 
to carry the burden associated with that possible expansion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \223\ We would expect that, in any order under sections 210 and 
211, we would require the potential customer requesting expansion to 
pay all costs to study the request to expand and to take full 
responsibility for the costs to expand and operate the ICIF.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    140. With regard to NRECA's argument that load-serving entities' 
use of ICIF has minimal or positive impact on available ICIF capacity, 
we find that such arguments are based on an unlikely scenario that 
assumes away the intended function of the interconnection facilities at 
issue in this Final Rule. By definition, the facilities at issue are 
not part of the integrated transmission system, so it is a slim 
possibility that a load-serving entity would be in a position to make 
use of ICIF to serve load by counterflowing power relative to the 
generation associated with the ICIF. However, a load-serving entity may 
make arguments to support such a scenario in a proceeding under 
sections 210 and 211.
2. Starting Point for the Safe Harbor Period
a. Commission Proposal
    141. In the NOPR, the Commission proposed that the safe harbor 
period begin on the ICIF energization date. Because the energization 
date is not always publicly available, the Commission proposed that any 
eligible ICIF owner seeking to take advantage of the safe harbor must 
file an informational filing with the Commission (requiring no 
Commission action) documenting: (1) The ICIF energization date; (2) 
details sufficient to identify the ICIF at issue, such as location and 
Point of Interconnection; \224\ and (3) identification of the ICIF 
owner. For generators that are already operating as of the effective 
date of the Final Rule, the Commission proposed to allow them to seek 
safe harbor status by filing at the Commission to document the 
information listed above, and that the safe harbor would expire five 
years after the initial energization of their ICIF.\225\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \224\ See supra n. 19.
    \225\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 56.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Comments
    142. E.ON, AWEA, First Wind, and NRG argue that ICIF energization 
is not the proper starting date for the safe harbor period and that the 
safe harbor period should instead begin when the first generating 
facility using the ICIF achieves commercial operation, the commercial 
operation date.\226\ E.ON argues that the point in the interconnection 
process where access to the grid begins is the appropriate starting 
point for the safe harbor period.\227\ E.ON states that, prior to this, 
the interconnecting transmission owner's interconnection facilities and 
network upgrades may not be complete and available for use and that all 
necessary interconnecting transmission owner's network upgrades may not 
be scheduled for completion for years after the ICIF are 
energized.\228\ E.ON adds

[[Page 17674]]

that, if the safe harbor begins on the ICIF energization date, it may 
only encourage energization to be delayed as long as possible in order 
to have as long a safe harbor period as is needed to support future 
phase's priority use of the ICIF.\229\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \226\ The Commercial Operation Date is defined in the LGIP and 
LGIA as the date on which the Generating Facility commences 
generating electricity for sale, excluding electricity generated 
during on-site test operations and commissioning of the Generating 
Facility, as agreed to by the Parties pursuant to Appendix E to the 
Standard Large Generator Interconnection Agreement.
    \227\ E.ON at 8.
    \228\ E.ON at 9.
    \229\ E.ON at 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    143. AWEA and First Wind explain that for many wind projects the 
ICIF may be energized well before commercial operation of the wind 
project begins in order to provide backfeed power to the construction 
site.\230\ Accordingly, AWEA contends that the ``energization date'' 
would significantly limit the safe harbor period for phased development 
projects.\231\ First Wind and NRG argues that the commercial operation 
date not only provides a more appropriate starting date, but it also is 
a date that is routinely documented for other purposes (e.g., under 
Appendix E of the LGIA, the customer is required to provide written 
documentation of the commercial operation date, and power purchase 
agreements will have the commercial operation date.\232\ NRG also 
argues that the commercial operation date is universally 
understandable.\233\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \230\ First Wind at 16.
    \231\ AWEA at 15-16.
    \232\ First Wind at 16 and NRG at 4.
    \233\ NRG at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    144. NRG and Linden argue that the Commission should decline to 
adopt the requirement that owners of existing and new ICIFs submit an 
informational filing to get the benefit of the safe harbor provision. 
NRG argues that the Commission is already generally aware of the 
commercial operation date for interconnection facilities through 
market-based rate, exempt wholesale generator, and interconnection 
agreement filings. NRG further argues that the commercial operation 
date is an established and verifiable date, and interconnection 
facility owners are often required to provide notice of the commercial 
operation date to various parties under different project agreements. 
Additionally, third-parties that seek to interconnect can contact the 
ICIF owner directly and ask for the same information detailed in the 
informational filing, and ICIF owners can be required to provide the 
commercial operation date upon request. NRG argues that if there is any 
dispute regarding the commercial operation date, the third party can go 
to the Commission and seek clarification of the commercial operation 
date.\234\ Linden argues that the informational filing proposal would 
simply require numerous public utilities to make filings that will 
never be needed until and unless an entity seeks service over the 
ICIF.\235\ It argues that no policy would be served by requiring public 
utilities to preserve rights through an otherwise unnecessary 
informational filing.\236\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \234\ NRG at 5.
    \235\ Linden at 9-10.
    \236\ Linden at 9-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    145. MISO supports the Commission's proposal to require 
interconnection customers to submit their ICIF energization date to the 
Commission. Currently, MISO interconnection customers submit their test 
dates, which are very close to the energization date, to MISO's 
resource integration group as part of the Generator Interconnection 
Agreement milestones.\237\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \237\ MISO at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    146. We will modify the proposal and will use the commercial 
operation date instead of the energization date. We find commenters' 
argument convincing that the commercial operation date is the 
preferable starting point for the safe harbor period. The ICIF may be 
energized to provide needed backfeed power for construction equipment 
well before the first generator is ready to produce test power, thus 
shortening the safe harbor period and undermining the goal to give the 
generation project sufficient time to develop. Using the energization 
date would likely disadvantage certain developers who must energize 
their ICIF early in the construction process because of their 
particular circumstances, while other developers are not required to do 
so. Although commenters argue that the commercial operation date is 
frequently documented in other contexts, we are not aware of a publicly 
available source that would consistently provide the commercial 
operation date for ICIF. Commenters' suggestion that potential 
customers request information from the ICIF owner or seek relief from 
the Commission creates an unnecessary barrier to potential customers 
and is inconsistent with the transparency we require for other elements 
of transmission and interconnection service. Accordingly, we will 
require, consistent with the NOPR proposal, that any eligible ICIF 
owner seeking to take advantage of the safe harbor must file an 
informational filing with the Commission (requiring no Commission 
action) stating: (1) The ICIF commercial operation date, as we define 
it below; (2) details sufficient to identify the ICIF at issue, such as 
location and Point of Interconnection; and (3) identification of the 
ICIF owner seeking to take advantage of the safe harbor.\238\ For ICIF 
that are already in commercial operation as of the effective date of 
the Final Rule, the ICIF owner may seek safe harbor status by filing at 
the Commission to provide the information listed above, and the safe 
harbor would expire five years after the commercial operation date of 
its ICIF. ICIF owners making such an informational filing should file 
under the following docket, Docket No. AD15-9-000, so that any 
interested third party will be able to easily identify the relevant 
filing and determine when a safe harbor is applicable. We consider the 
commercial operation date of ICIF to be the date those facilities are 
first used to transmit energy for sale, excluding use for on-site 
testing and commissioning of the generating facility.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \238\ We do not intend to issue a public notice, accept 
comments, or issue an order on the informational filings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Length of the Safe Harbor Period
a. Commission Proposal
    147. In the NOPR, the Commission proposed a safe harbor period of 
five years during which there would be a rebuttable presumption that: 
(1) The eligible ICIF owner has definitive plans to use its capacity 
without having to make a demonstration through a specific plans and 
milestones showing; and (2) the eligible ICIF owner should not be 
required to expand its facilities.\239\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \239\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 54.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Comments
    148. Several commenters argue for a seven-year safe harbor 
period.\240\ EEI argues that a presumption of five years from the date 
the line is energized is only minimally sufficient and providing an 
additional two years of safe harbor protection would allow the eligible 
ICIF owner to focus on building generation and achieving commercial 
operation during the safe harbor period.\241\ NextEra argues that a 
safe harbor of five years effectively presumes that the second phase 
will be completed without any delays and that the developer will not 
pursue development in additional phases. NextEra argues that a seven-
year safe harbor would more fully achieve the Commission's stated 
goals.\242\ EPSA and NRG agree that a seven-year period would better 
support ICIF project development, and argue that a seven-year time 
period is supported by section 3.3.1 of the pro forma LGIP under which 
the expected in-service date of a new

[[Page 17675]]

generating facility or increase in capacity of an existing facility 
should not be more than seven years from the date the interconnection 
request is received by the transmission provider.\243\ SEIA states that 
a seven-year safe harbor period would ensure adequate time for 
financing and construction of additional generation capacity. SEIA 
asserts that analysis of the dozen largest solar projects expected to 
be online by 2016 reveals the median time from development to 
commercial operation is nearly six years. A seven-year safe harbor will 
ensure that most, if not all, future phases of a solar power plant can 
be constructed within the safe harbor timeframe.\244\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \240\ EEI at 14; NextEra at 17; EPSA at 6-7; NRG at 3-4; and 
SEIA at 4.
    \241\ EEI at 14.
    \242\ NextEra at 17.
    \243\ EPSA at 6-7 and NRG at 3-4.
    \244\ SEIA at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    149. Some commenters argue for a ten-year safe harbor period. BHE 
also agrees that the proposed five-year duration is impractically short 
given the commercial and permitting realities generation developers 
face and, argues the safe harbor should be for ten years from the date 
that the ICIF is energized.\245\ AWEA argues that the proposed five-
year period should be extended to ten years in order to reduce the 
risks encountered by generation developers developing phased generation 
projects. AWEA explains that often times a wind generation project may 
be planned in three or four phases, which could not reasonably be 
expected to reach completion in a five-year period. According to AWEA, 
a ten-year safe harbor period would provide developers the appropriate 
amount of time and reasonable incentive needed to develop the ICIF 
necessary for the development of new, cost-effective wind energy 
resources.\246\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \245\ BHE at 12-13.
    \246\ AWEA at 15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    150. As discussed above, APPA, TAPS, and NRECA argue that the 
Commission should not implement a safe harbor period of any 
duration.\247\ Additionally, APPA and TAPS argue that the monopoly on 
ICIF will extend for longer than the five years of the safe harbor 
period.\248\ They argue that in order to avoid the safe harbor barrier, 
a requester must not file its application under sections 210 and 211 
until after the five-year period. They point out that it will take some 
time for the Commission to issue a final order requiring 
interconnection and transmission service, and additional studies or 
modifications may be required even after a final order. Therefore, they 
contend, the proposed safe harbor effectively grants to the ICIF owner 
and its affiliates a monopoly over use of its ICIF for six years at a 
minimum. They argue that such a result cannot be harmonized with the 
Commission's obligations to remedy undue discrimination in transmission 
service and its reliance on competitive markets to ensure just and 
reasonable wholesale prices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \247\ See supra PP 135-136.
    \248\ APPA and TAPS at 15-16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. Commission Determination
    151. We adopt in this Final Rule the five-year safe harbor period. 
It represents a balancing of interests. On the one hand, we want to 
relieve regulatory burdens and unnecessary risks from generation 
developers to encourage the development of new generation and promote 
competition. On the other hand, we want to ensure not unduly 
discriminatory access to transmission which also promotes competition. 
We find that using the commercial operation date as the starting point 
for the safe harbor period eliminates some of the concerns regarding 
sufficient time for safe harbor protection. As such, we decline to 
increase the safe harbor period from five years to either seven or ten 
years.
    152. We disagree with APPA and TAPS that the safe harbor protection 
is effectively a minimum of six years instead of five. That is, the 
rebuttable presumption that the ICIF owner has definitive plans to use 
its capacity, without having to make a demonstration through a specific 
plans and milestones showing, ends five years after the commercial 
operation date. The fact that it takes time to get service under 
sections 210 and 211 does not change the fact that, at the end of the 
five year safe harbor period, if there were to be an application under 
sections 210 and 211, the ICIF owner would need to show it has plans to 
use any remaining capacity on the ICIF and is making progress to 
completing those plans. In any event, we note that any request for 
interconnection or transmission service takes time to prepare and 
process, whether it is addressed to an ICIF owner pursuant to sections 
210 and 211 or a public utility under its OATT.

E. Affiliate Concerns

1. Commission Proposal
    153. In the NOPR,\249\ the Commission sought comments on whether to 
extend the proposed reforms to generators whose ownership or operation 
of transmission facilities is limited to ICIF, but who are affiliated 
with a public utility transmission provider and are within or adjacent 
to the public utility transmission provider's footprint (ICIF-Owning 
Affiliates).\250\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \249\ NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 32,701 at P 59.
    \250\ For generators owned by a public utility transmission 
provider within its footprint, transmission service on the 
generator's interconnection facilities has generally been governed 
by the public utility transmission provider's OATT. See Puget Sound 
Energy, Inc., 133 FERC ] 61,160 (2010), reh'g denied 139 FERC ] 
61,241 (2012).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Comments
    154. Several commenters argue that ICIF-Owning Affiliates should be 
eligible for the blanket waiver.\251\ Commenters assert that excluding 
ICIF-Owning Affiliates from the proposed waivers would bestow an unfair 
advantage on their competitors without providing any regulatory 
benefits.\252\ Southern emphasizes that ICIF-Owning Affiliates function 
separately from the public utility transmission provider and are 
independent generators.\253\ BHE argues that the same reasons that 
warrant the Commission replacing its current case-by-case approach to 
granting waivers apply irrespective of corporate structure.\254\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \251\ Southern at 4-5; EEI at 11-13; BHE at 8-11; Sempra at 6-9; 
BP Wind 7-10; First Wind at 10; AWEA at 16; and NextEra 18-20.
    \252\ EEI at 9; BHE at 8-10; and Southern at 4-5.
    \253\ Southern at 4-5.
    \254\ BHE at 8-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    155. BP Wind, Sempra, and First Wind take issue with the 
Commission's stated concern in the NOPR that the generator's 
vertically-integrated utility affiliate, if granted the blanket waiver, 
may take steps to structure its development projects to limit or deny 
access to transmission facilities. BP Wind emphasizes that there are 
various reasons why a company would place ownership of generation and 
associated generation interconnection facilities into a separate legal 
entity that are not in any way for the purpose of limiting access to 
generator interconnection facilities.\255\ First Wind argues that, as a 
practical matter, a transmission owner will not attempt to push 
facilities that are not properly defined as ICIF into the ICIF 
classification in order to remove them from availability under their 
OATTs or to secure priority rights, because it would violate the OATT 
and shift costs to the generation affiliate that would otherwise be 
recovered from OATT customers.\256\ Further, Sempra argues that the 
Commission has for years granted OATT waivers to ICIF-owning generators 
interconnected to their affiliated utility systems because the 
facilities in question are sole-use, limited and discrete, radial in 
nature,

[[Page 17676]]

and not part of an integrated transmission network.\257\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \255\ BP Wind at 8-9.
    \256\ First Wind at 10.
    \257\ Sempra at 8 (citing the TDM Rehearing Request at n. 20, 
pointing to the then-significant number of OATT waivers granted to 
such affiliated entities as of 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    156. Several commenters argue that there are sufficient protections 
already in place to deter such behavior. Sempra notes that the 
Commission-jurisdictional interconnection process and the Commission's 
Standards of Conduct provide additional protections to affiliated and 
unaffiliated generators alike, and that further protection is provided 
when the interconnection process is administered by an RTO or ISO.\258\ 
Sempra also states that if the Commission is made aware that a 
vertically-integrated utility has structured its generation and 
interconnection facilities development in such a way that 
inappropriately limits access to those facilities, the Commission 
could, among other things, revoke the blanket waiver and safe harbor 
treatment for those facilities.\259\ Further, BHE asserts that 
affiliate restrictions and enforcement tools all function to achieve 
non-discriminatory access over ICIF for third parties and that the 
procedures under sections 210 and 211 of the FPA provide an extra level 
of protection.\260\ Southern agrees that the Commission's concerns with 
respect to anti-competitive behavior by a transmission provider should 
be addressed by the Commission's open access requirements, the 
Standards of Conduct, and the code of conduct.\261\ BHE contends that 
the Commission should extend eligibility for the proposed blanket 
waiver not only to affiliates of the transmission provider, but also to 
the wholesale generation function of a vertically-integrated utility, 
irrespective of whether the ICIF is physically located within or 
adjacent to the affiliated public utility transmission provider's 
footprint.\262\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \258\ Sempra at 8.
    \259\ Sempra at 8-9.
    \260\ BHE at 10.
    \261\ Southern at 5.
    \262\ BHE at 2, 10-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    157. BP Wind and AWEA argue that the Commission should at least 
extend eligibility of the blanket waiver to ICIF-owning Affiliates 
where they are geographically separate from the public utility 
transmission provider's footprint.\263\ Southern, BP Wind, and NextEra 
question how ICIF-owning Affiliates will be treated if they do not 
receive the blanket waiver. Southern argues that a wholesale generator 
affiliate that is not a part of a vertically-integrated utility's OATT, 
and whose ownership/operation of transmission facilities is limited to 
ICIF, should not be required to be added to the public utility's OATT 
because this could shift the costs of the ICIF to native load customers 
of the transmission provider and create other complexities for the 
transmission provider (e.g., compliance with Standards of 
Conduct).\264\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \263\ BP Wind at 7-8 and AWEA at 16.
    \264\ Southern at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    158. BP Wind points out that excluding ICIF-owning Affiliates from 
the blanket waiver could disadvantage jointly owned projects, as 
unaffiliated generator owners would effectively lose the value 
associated with their blanket waiver if they share ownership in a 
common set of ICIF with a generator that is affiliated with a public 
utility transmission provider.\265\ Similarly, if the Commission 
declines to extend the blanket waiver to ICIF-owning Affiliates, 
NextEra questions: (1) How ICIF-owning Affiliates could request the 
waiver on a case-by-case basis; (2) whether, without a waiver, each 
ICIF-owning Affiliate is required to file its own OATT, resulting in 
holding companies with numerous OATTs on file, even for facilities 
located in the affiliated public utility transmission provider's 
footprint; and (3) whether the ICIF-owning Affiliates have to transfer 
ownership or control of their facilities to the affiliated public 
utility transmission provider.\266\ In the event the Commission does 
extend the blanket waiver to ICIF-owning Affiliates, BHE asks the 
Commission to confirm that, in instances where a third party is granted 
a request for service under sections 210 and 211 over an incumbent 
utility generator's ICIF, that incumbent utility generator can fulfill 
its access responsibility by transferring operational control and 
responsibility for the relevant ICIF to its transmission provider to 
ensure non-discriminatory access over the ICIF.\267\ Additionally, BHE 
asks the Commission to clarify its expectations, in this scenario, as 
to whether the ICIF should be treated by the transmission provider as 
Transmission Provider's Interconnection Facilities and managed under 
Article 9.9.2 of the Commission's pro forma LGIA.\268\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \265\ BP Wind at 8-9.
    \266\ NextEra at 18-20.
    \267\ BHE at 17-18.
    \268\ BHE at 17-18.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    159. Linden states that in the event that the Commission limits the 
applicability of the blanket waiver to non-affiliates, it requests that 
the Commission clarify that any such limitation would not apply to an 
affiliate of a merchant transmission provider.\269\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \269\ Linden at 8-9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    160. Southern and BHE also argue that the Commission should extend 
the safe harbor protection to ICIF-owning Affiliates because such 
generators are similarly situated to and operate the same as other 
wholesale generators. Southern believes that all wholesale generators 
and ICIF owners would benefit from the proposed safe harbor 
period.\270\ BHE requests that the Commission also extend eligibility 
for the safe harbor presumption to incumbent utility generators.\271\ 
BHE asserts that wholesale generator ICIF owners share the same 
commercial risks of having their specific generation expansion plans 
pre-empted by a competing unaffiliated generation developer and burden 
of pursuing a declaratory order from the Commission in order to reserve 
capacity for their future plans.\272\ According to BHE, any concerns 
with extending the safe harbor presumption beyond non-affiliates are 
reasonably mitigated without limiting the presumption to non-affiliated 
ICIF owners. BHE explains that under Commission rules, all generators 
seeking transmission interconnection and/or transmission service are to 
be treated comparably. BHE further notes that employees of a public 
utility with captive customers and its affiliates with market-based 
rate authority are to operate separately to the maximum extent 
practical.\273\ BHE also contends that it would be unduly 
discriminatory to deny incumbent utility generator and ICIF-owning 
Affiliates identical access to the safe harbor presumption, given that 
existing policy is equally burdensome, and creates the same regulatory 
uncertainty with respect to priority rights for all ICIF owners.\274\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \270\ Southern at 6.
    \271\ BHE at 13.
    \272\ BHE at 14.
    \273\ BHE at 15.
    \274\ BHE at 16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    161. BHE argues that, at a minimum, eligibility for the proposed 
safe harbor presumption should be extended to ICIF-owning 
Affiliates.\275\ BHE also argues that the safe harbor presumption 
should be applied to ICIF-owning Affiliates irrespective of whether the 
ICIF is physically located within or adjacent to the affiliated public 
utility transmission provider's footprint.\276\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \275\ BHE at 3-4.
    \276\ BHE at 3-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    162. In contrast, some commenters argue that the Commission should 
not extend the proposed reforms to entities that are affiliated with a 
public utility

[[Page 17677]]

transmission provider.\277\ APPA and TAPS contend that the NOPR's 
treatment of affiliates is inconsistent and contrary to the 
Commission's market-based rate policies which have been crafted over 
decades to protect customers from the use of control over transmission 
facilities to erect barriers to competition in favor of the owner's 
corporate family.\278\ They state that, while the NOPR does not 
consider the ICIF owner's affiliates in defining eligibility for the 
blanket waiver or safe harbor, potentially even if the ICIF owner's 
affiliate is a transmission provider, the Commission proposes to 
continue its policy of allowing the ICIF owner to point to its 
affiliate's planned usage to demonstrate definitive plans to use any 
remaining ICIF capacity after the safe harbor period.\279\ APPA and 
TAPS argue that by ignoring affiliates in determining eligibility for 
waiver or safe harbor while allowing ICIF owners to use those same 
affiliates to fend off third-party access, the NOPR would incent 
utilities to organize their corporate structures to maximize their 
opportunities to block third-party competitive generation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \277\ APPA and TAPS at 16-17 and NRECA at 9-10.
    \278\ APPA and TAPS at 16-17.
    \279\ APPA and TAPS at 17 (citing to NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 
32,701 proposed section 35.28(d)(2)(ii)(A)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    163. APPA and TAPS also contend that transmission providers are 
already ``in the business of providing transmission service'' and are 
subject to Standards of Conduct, and thus face no significant 
additional burden from the requirements the Commission proposes to 
waive. NRECA adds that such entities should not be granted privileges 
that are intended for generators that are completely independent of 
transmission providers. They argue that if extended to affiliates of 
transmission providers, the proposed reforms would incent transmission 
providers to structure generation and ICIF development to avoid open 
access and transmission planning obligations.\280\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \280\ APPA and TAPS at 18 and NRECA at 9-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    164. APPA and TAPS contend that any ICIF policy changes should 
exclude affiliates of transmission providers from eligibility for the 
blanket waiver or safe harbor status at least within the transmission 
provider's planning region.\281\ They argue that requiring transmission 
provider-affiliated ICIF owners within the transmission provider's 
planning region to utilize the transmission provider's existing OATT 
processes, rather than artificially walling-off such ICIF from access 
and transmission planning and expansion obligations, is necessary to 
prevent the transmission provider from evading its affirmative 
obligation to work within its transmission planning region to create a 
regional transmission plan. They assert that, at an absolute minimum, 
ICIF owners affiliated with transmission providers should be excluded 
from the blanket waiver and safe harbor as to any ICIF within the 
transmission provider's footprint or an adjacent system.\282\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \281\ APPA and TAPS at 25-27.
    \282\ APPA and TAPS at 26-27.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Commission Determination
    165. We conclude that the blanket waiver and safe harbor should 
apply to a public utility transmission provider's affiliates whose 
ownership/operation of transmission facilities is limited to ICIF, 
regardless of geographic location. An ICIF-Owning Affiliate, as we use 
the term here, is a corporate entity that is separate from, and 
functions independently from, an affiliated public utility transmission 
provider that owns, controls, or operates non-ICIF transmission 
facilities. As such, the ICIF-Owning Affiliate is comparable to other 
independent generation companies that own ICIF within the public 
utility transmission provider's footprint. Like other independent 
generation companies, an ICIF-Owning Affiliate faces the risk and 
potential burden of having to file an OATT if it receives a third-party 
request for service. The undue discrimination provisions of section 205 
and section 206 and the Commission's existing Standards of Conduct 
rules should prevent undue discrimination and ensure that the 
transmission provider's open access and transmission planning 
obligations are not circumvented. However, we decline to extend the 
blanket waiver to ICIF that are controlled or operated by the 
generation units of vertically-integrated public utilities (Generation 
Functions), as requested by BHE.
    166. We disagree with APPA and TAPS that extending the reforms 
adopted herein to ICIF-Owning Affiliates would constitute a departure 
from the Commission's requirements that transmission service be not 
unduly discriminatory. Sections 205 and 206 of the FPA continue to 
govern the behavior of the ICIF-Owning Affiliates and public utility 
transmission providers after the reforms adopted herein become 
effective. Therefore, ICIF-Owning Affiliates and public utility 
transmission providers are prohibited from engaging in unduly 
preferential or unduly discriminatory behavior. In addition, the 
independent functioning and transparency requirements of the Standards 
of Conduct under Part 358 of the Commission's regulations impose 
specific requirements governing the relationship between the ICIF-
Owning Affiliates and the transmission provider.\283\ While a waiver of 
the Standards of Conduct for the ICIF-Owning Affiliate would relieve it 
of the obligation to comply with the Standards of Conduct that require 
separation of transmission and marketing functions, that waiver has no 
effect on the transmission provider's obligation to comply with the 
Standards of Conduct consistent with Part 358 of the Commission's 
regulations.\284\ The Standards of Conduct also require, among other 
things, a transmission provider to treat all transmission customers, 
affiliated and non-affiliated, on a not unduly discriminatory basis, 
and prohibits the transmission provider from making or granting any 
undue preference or advantage to any person with respect to the 
transmission or sale of electric energy.\285\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \283\ 18 CFR pt. 358.
    \284\ ICIF Generator Affiliates are typically making sales for 
resale in interstate commerce and meet the Commission's definition 
of marketing affiliates. See 18 CFR 358.3(a) and (c).
    \285\ 18 CFR 358.4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    167. We disagree with APPA and TAPS' claim that granting the waiver 
to ICIF-Owning Affiliates would be inconsistent and contrary to the 
Commission's market-based rate policies by failing to consider the 
ICIF-Owning Affiliates in defining eligibility for market-based rates. 
The Commission considers the ICIF-Owning Affiliates when granting 
market-based rate authority. The market-based rate requirement under 
section 35.37(d) requires a seller that owns, operates, or controls 
transmission facilities, or whose affiliates own, operate, or control 
transmission facilities, to have on file with the Commission an OATT as 
described in section 35.28. However, the Commission allows sellers to 
rely on Commission-granted OATT waivers to satisfy the vertical market 
power part of

[[Page 17678]]

the requirement.\286\ As noted above,\287\ the waiver in section 
35.28(d)(2) is an additional way in which to satisfy the vertical 
market power requirements for transmission. Market-based rate authority 
is conditioned on compliance with the Affiliate Restrictions in section 
35.39 of the Commission's regulations. Like the Standards of Conduct, 
the Affiliate Restrictions include independent functioning requirements 
as well as information sharing prohibitions.\288\ Thus, with the 
statutory prohibitions and implementing regulations, public utility 
transmission providers are not permitted to organize their corporate 
structures in a way that would block third-party competitive 
generation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \286\ Market-Based Rates for Wholesale Sales of Electric Energy, 
Capacity and Ancillary Services by Public Utilities, Order No. 697, 
72 FR 39904 (July 20, 2007), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,252 at P 408, 
clarified, 121 FERC ] 61,260 (2007), clarified, 124 FERC ] 61,055, 
order on reh'g, Order No. 697-A, 73 FR 25832 (May 7, 2008), FERC 
Stats. & Regs. ] 31,268, order on reh'g, Order No. 697-B, 73 FR 
79610 (Dec. 30, 2008), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,285 (2008), order on 
reh'g, Order No. 697-C, 74 FR 30924 (June 29, 2009), FERC Stats. & 
Regs. ] 31,291 (2009), order on reh'g, Order No. 697-D, 75 FR 14342 
(Mar. 25, 2010), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,305 (2010), aff'd sub nom. 
Mont. Consumer Counsel v. FERC, 659 F.3d 910 (9th Cir. 2011), cert. 
denied, 133 S. Ct. 26 (2012).
    \287\ See supra P 57.
    \288\ See 18 CFR 35.39(c) and Sec.  35.39(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    168. Moreover, we note that entities may file a complaint under 
section 206 with the Commission if they believe discrimination is 
occurring. Also, in determining whether a third party has rebutted the 
presumption under this Final Rule that an ICIF owner has definitive 
plans to use excess capacity on the ICIF during the safe harbor period, 
the affiliate relationship between the ICIF owner and a public utility 
transmission provider may be a factor in that determination. Finally, 
as a backstop, we note that the Commission possesses ample statutory 
remedies to address violations of the applicable regulations and 
statutes. As noted by Sempra, if the Commission became aware that a 
public utility transmission provider and an ICIF-Owning Affiliate 
structured their transmission, generation, and interconnection 
facilities development in such a way that inappropriately limits access 
to those facilities, the Commission could, among other things, revoke 
the blanket waiver and safe harbor treatment for the ICIF-Owning 
Affiliate. Accordingly, the Commission's existing rules, in concert 
with other tools available to hold entities accountable, are sufficient 
to ensure comparable treatment of affiliates and non-affiliates, and 
enforce the Commission's requirements prohibiting undue discrimination 
without the provisions waived through this Final Rule.
    169. We find that it is not appropriate to grant the blanket waiver 
to Generation Functions. The public utility transmission provider has 
certain rights and obligations, one of which is to administer the 
transmission grid pursuant to its existing OATT. Where a Generation 
Function of the public utility transmission provider is an ICIF owner, 
we find it appropriate, in the event of a third-party request, for the 
request to be processed pursuant to its affiliated public utility 
transmission provider's OATT.

F. Miscellaneous

1. Treatment of Line Losses on ICIF
a. Comments
    170. NRG requests that the Commission explicitly state that all 
transmission line losses associated with a third party gaining access 
to an incumbent owner's interconnection facility be borne solely by the 
third party. NRG argues that as more capacity is transmitted on these 
interconnection facilities and the excess capacity on these facilities 
diminishes, line losses will continue to increase to the detriment of 
the incumbent interconnection facility owner.\289\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \289\ NRG at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Commission Determination
    171. We find the NRG's argument to be beyond the scope of the 
proceeding. Treatment of line losses on ICIF should be negotiated 
between the parties using the ICIF.
2. Applicability of the Commission's ``Prior Notice'' Policy
a. Comments
    172. First Wind and Invenergy ask the Commission to confirm that 
its Prior Notice policy \290\ also applies to requests for ICIF access. 
In Prior Notice, the Commission, among other things, found that 
transmission study contracts and charges, while jurisdictional, do not 
have to be filed unless they are the subject of a complaint filed by 
the transmission requester under section 206 of the Federal Power Act 
alleging that the rates charged for a transmission feasibility study 
are unjust, unreasonable or unduly discriminatory, or preferential. 
First Wind and Invenergy contend that the Commission should confirm 
that this Prior Notice policy applies not only to transmission requests 
under section 211, but also to interconnection requests under section 
210 and to any requests for ICIF access.\291\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \290\ Prior Notice and Filing Requirements Under Part II of the 
Federal Power Act 64 FERC ] 61,139, clarified, 65 FERC ] 61,081, at 
61,508 (1993) (Prior Notice).
    \291\ First Wind at 12-14 and Invenergy at 12-13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Commission Determination
    173. We decline to address the Commission's filing requirements as 
they are beyond the scope of the proceeding.
3. Technical Aspects of Interconnection
a. Comments
    174. BHE states that third-party access to an ICIF should only be 
allowed at a point past the high side (transmission side) of a 
collector bus, and not on the low side (generator side) of the 
collector bus. It argues that such access to the generator side of the 
collector introduces technical system protection and control 
complexities that would be impractical to accommodate, requiring an 
inordinate amount of coordination between interconnecting generation 
projects and may even compromise the reliability of the interconnecting 
facilities.\292\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \292\ BHE at 19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Commission Determination
    175. We find BHE's argument to be beyond the scope of the 
proceeding. Disputes regarding technical requirements of the reliable 
interconnection of third-party generators should be addressed in 
particular proceedings under sections 210 and 211.
4. Implementation
    176. For those entities that satisfy the eligibility requirements 
set forth in this Final Rule, the blanket waiver will be effective as 
of the effective date of this Final Rule. For those entities that must 
file a statement of compliance with section 210 of the FPA in order to 
achieve eligibility, the blanket waiver will be effective as of the 
latter of the effective date of this Final Rule or the date the 
statement of compliance is filed. If an entity has a case-specific 
request for waiver of OATT requirements pending as of the date that the 
entity becomes eligible for the blanket waiver, the blanket waiver will 
apply as of that date, and the entity should file to withdraw the 
waiver request to the extent it has been rendered moot by the blanket 
waiver. As discussed in section IV.B.7 above, an entity that has 
already been issued a waiver of the same requirements waived by the 
blanket waiver and is eligible for

[[Page 17679]]

the blanket waiver will be deemed to be operating under the blanket 
waiver without further filings necessary with respect to the issued 
waiver. However, as discussed in section IV.B.8 above, the blanket 
waiver will have no automatic impact on existing OATTs that govern 
service requests over ICIF, although the Commission will consider a 
request to withdraw an OATT on a case-by-case basis if no third parties 
are taking service under it. With respect to the informational 
statement regarding the commercial operation date of the ICIF discussed 
in section IV.D.2 above, we note that such statement need only be filed 
if the ICIF owner seeks to take advantage of the five-year safe harbor 
period.

V. Information Collection Statement

    177. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) regulations require 
approval of certain information collection and data retention 
requirements imposed by agency rules.\293\ Upon approval of a 
collection(s) of information, OMB will assign an OMB control number and 
an expiration date. Respondents subject to the filing requirements of a 
rule will not be penalized for failing to respond to these collections 
of information unless the collections of information display a valid 
OMB control number.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \293\ 5 CFR 1320.11(b) (2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    178. The Commission is submitting the proposed modifications to its 
information collections to OMB for review and approval in accordance 
with section 3507(d) of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.\294\ In 
the NOPR, the Commission solicited comments on the Commission's need 
for this information, whether the information will have practical 
utility, the accuracy of the burden estimates, ways to enhance the 
quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be collected or 
retained, and any suggested methods for minimizing respondents' burden, 
including the use of automated information techniques. The Commission 
included a table that listed the estimated public reporting burdens for 
the proposed reporting requirements, as well as a projection of the 
costs of compliance for the reporting requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \294\ 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) (2012).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    179. The Commission did not receive any comments specifically 
addressing the burden estimates provided in the NOPR. However, the 
Commission has made changes to its proposal that are adopted in this 
Final Rule.
    180. First, the regulations adopted in the Final Rule give a 
blanket waiver of OATT, OASIS, and Standards of Conduct filing 
requirements, to all ICIF owners, including those that do not sell 
electric energy. Under the Final Rule, an ICIF owner that does not sell 
electric energy is required to make an informational filing stating 
that it commits to comply with and be bound by the obligations and 
procedures applicable to electric utilities under section 210 of the 
FPA in order to receive the blanket waiver. We have increased the 
burden estimate in the table below to reflect this filing.
    181. Second, the Commission revised the beginning of the safe 
harbor period from the ICIF energization date to the ICIF commercial 
operation date. The Commission recognizes that most ICIF owners will 
likely make a brief notification filing documenting: (1) The ICIF 
commercial operation date; (2) details sufficient to identify the ICIF 
at issue, such as location and Point of Interconnection; and (3) 
identification of the ICIF owner. However, because the filing is 
similar to that proposed in the NOPR, we are not modifying the 
estimated public reporting burdens for this proposed reporting 
requirement in the table below. The Commission believes that the 
revised burden estimates below are representatives of the average 
burden on respondents.

[[Page 17680]]



                           RM14-11 (Open Access and Priority Rights on Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                                  Average
                                                                                Annual  number                   burden and   Total  annual    Average
                                                                    Number of    of  responses   Total  number    cost per    burden  hours    cost per
                                                                   respondents        per        of  responses    response     and  total     respondent
                                                                                  respondent                       \295\      annual  cost       ($)
                                                                           (1)             (2)     (1) * (2) =          (4)     (3) * (4) =    (5) / (1)
                                                                                                           (3)                          (5)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Individual Requests for Waiver (FERC-917)........................           16              -1             -16           10            -160        -$947
                                                                                                                       $947        -$15,146
OATT Filings (FERC-917)..........................................            1              -1              -1          100            -100      -$9,466
                                                                                                                     $9,466         -$9,466
Petitions for Declaratory Order requesting priority rights (FERC-            1              -1              -1           30             -30      -$2,840
 582)............................................................                                                    $2,840         -$2,840
Safe Harbor Commercial Operation Date Filing (average of first              39               1              39            1              39          $95
 three years) \296\ (FERC-917)...................................                                                       $95          $3,692
ICIF Owner that Does Not Sell Electric Energy Filing to Receive             19               1              19            1              19          $95
 Blanket Waiver (average of first three years) \297\ (FERC-917)..                                                       $95          $1,799
                                                                  --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total........................................................  ...........  ..............              40  ...........            -232     -$13,063
                                                                                                                                   -$21,961
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Cost to Comply: The Commission has projected the cost of compliance 
with the safe harbor commercial operation date filing to be $7,573 in 
the initial year and $1,704 in subsequent years, as new ICIF owners 
make safe harbor filings for their new projects. In addition, the 
Commission has projected the cost of compliance for ICIF owners that do 
not sell electric energy to make an informational filing stating that 
it commits to comply with and be bound by the obligations and 
procedures applicable to electric utilities under section 210 of the 
FPA in order to receive the blanket waiver to be $3,786 in the initial 
year and $852 in subsequent years, as new ICIF owners make such 
filings. This is offset by the reduction in burden associated with the 
waiver of filing requirements of $27,452 per year. As an average for 
the first three years, this amounts to a net reduction in burden of 
$21,961.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \295\ The estimates for cost per response are derived using the 
following formula: Average Burden Hours per Response * $94.66 per 
Hour = Average Cost per Response. The hourly cost figure represents 
a combined hourly rate of an attorney ($131.00), economist ($71.00), 
engineer ($65.34), and administrative staff ($38.63), with a 50 
percent weighting on the attorney's rate (i.e. [$131(1/2) + 
$71.00(1/6) + $65.34(1/6) + $38.63(1/6)]/4 = $94.66. The estimated 
hourly costs (salary) are based on Bureau of Labor and Statistics 
information (available at http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/naics2_22.htm, and are adjusted to include benefits by assuming that 
salary accounts for 68.7 percent of total compensation). See http://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.nr0.htm.
    \296\ The average number of filings for the first three years is 
computed as follows. The Commission expects approximately 80 safe 
harbor filings in the first year, which represents the number of 
waiver filings over a historical five-year period and thus the 
approximate number of existing entities which will be able to take 
advantage of the five- year safe harbor period as of the effective 
date of the Final Rule in this proceeding. In the subsequent two 
years, the Commission expects approximately 18 safe harbor filings 
per year, which represents the historical number of OATT waiver 
filings (16), OATT filings (1), and petitions for declaratory order 
(1) per year. Going forward, we would expect the entities complying 
with the Final Rule would avoid these filings and that the relevant 
entities would instead avail themselves of the safe harbor period. 
The average of the three-year period then is (80 + 18 + 18)/3 = 39.
    \297\ The average number of filings for the first three years is 
computed as follows. The Commission expects approximately 40 section 
210 applicability filings in the first year, which represents half 
the number of waiver filings over a historical five-year period. The 
Commission does not know the precise number of existing ICIF owners 
that do not sell electric energy. Of the 80 ICIF owner that have 
requested waiver in the past five years, the Commission reasons that 
some share of them do not sell electric energy, and we use 50 
percent as an estimate. While there is no five year limitation that 
applies to entities that may make this filing, we reason that this 
issue, while not new, has become more relevant in recent years 
because of an increase in generation owners retaining control of 
their ICIF; hence, we are not including in our estimate any estimate 
of the number of ICIF owners that do not sell electric energy that 
would have requested waiver prior to 2010. In the subsequent two 
years, the Commission expects approximately nine section 210 
applicability filings per year, which represents half the historical 
number of OATT waiver filings (16), OATT filings (1), and petitions 
for declaratory order (1) per year. Going forward, we would expect 
the entities complying with the Final Rule would avoid these filings 
and that the relevant entities would instead avail themselves of the 
blanket ICIF waiver. The average of the three-year period then is 
(40 + 9 + 9)/3 = 19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Total Annual Hours for Collection in initial year (120 hours) 
@$94.66 an hour = $11,359.
    Total Annual Hours for Collection in subsequent years (27 hours) 
@$94.66 an hour = $2,556.
    Total Annual Hours for Reduced Collection per year (290 hours) 
@$94.66 an hour = $27,452.
    Title: FERC-582, Electric Fees and Annual Charges; FERC-917, Non-
Discriminatory Open Access Transmission Tariff.
    Action: Revision of Currently Approved Collection of Information.
    OMB Control No. 1902-0132; 1902-0233.
    Respondents for this Rulemaking: Businesses or other for profit 
and/or not-for-profit institutions.
    Frequency of Information: As indicated in the table.
    Necessity of Information: The Commission is adopting these changes 
to its regulations related to which entities must file the pro forma 
OATT, establish and maintain an OASIS, and abide by its Standards of 
Conduct in order to eliminate unnecessary filings and increase 
certainty for entities that develop generation. The purpose of this 
Final Rule is to reduce regulatory burdens and promote development 
while continuing to ensure open access to transmission facilities. The 
safe harbor commercial operation date filing is necessary to ensure 
transparency as to the applicability of the safe harbor period.
    Internal Review: The Commission has reviewed the proposed changes 
and has determined that the changes are necessary. These requirements 
conform to the Commission's need for efficient information collection, 
communication, and management within the energy industry. The 
Commission has assured itself, by means of internal review, that there 
is specific, objective support for

[[Page 17681]]

the burden estimates associated with the information collection 
requirements.
    182. Interested persons may obtain information on the reporting 
requirements by contacting the following: Federal Energy Regulatory 
Commission, 888 First Street NE., Washington, DC 20426 [Attention: 
Ellen Brown, Office of the Executive Director], email: 
[email protected], Phone: (202) 502-8663, fax: (202) 273-0873.
    183. Comments on the requirements of this Final Rule can be sent to 
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management 
and Budget, 725 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20503 [Attention: Desk 
Officer for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission]. For security 
reasons, comments to OMB should be submitted by email to: 
[email protected]. Comments submitted to OMB should include 
Docket No. RM14-11-000 and OMB Control No. 1902-0132 and/or 1902-0233.

VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis

    184. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA) \298\ generally 
requires a description and analysis of final rules that will have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. 
The Small Business Administration (SBA) revised its size standard 
(effective January 22, 2014) for electric utilities from a standard 
based on megawatt hours to a standard based on the number of employees 
including affiliates.\299\ Under SBA's new size standards, ICIF owners 
likely come under the following category and associated size threshold: 
Electric bulk power transmission and control, at 500 employees.\300\ 
The Final Rule states that approximately 80 entities will be affected 
by the changes imposed. Of these, the Commission estimates that 
approximately 93.1 percent \301\ or 75 of these are small entities. In 
the Final Rule, the Commission estimates that, on average, each of the 
small entities to whom the Final Rule applies will incur one-time costs 
of $142 in order to: (1) Document its commercial operation date and 
thus avail itself of the safe harbor provision; and, (2) if the entity 
does not sell electricity, commit to comply with section 210 of the 
FPA.\302\ This is true for those existing entities that have already 
received waiver of the OATT prior to the issuance of the Final Rule, as 
well as for new entities. This cost will be offset for new entities by, 
on average, $1,525.\303\ As the Commission has previously explained, in 
determining whether a regulatory flexibility analysis is required, the 
Commission is required to examine only direct compliance costs that a 
rulemaking imposes on small business.\304\ It is not required to 
examine indirect economic consequences, nor is it required to consider 
costs that an entity incurs voluntarily. The Commission does not 
consider the estimated costs per small entity to have a significant 
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. Accordingly, 
the Commission certifies that the Final Rule will not have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \298\ 5 U.S.C. 601-612 (2014).
    \299\ SBA Final Rule on ``Small Business Size Standards: 
Utilities,'' 78 FR 77,343 (Dec. 23, 2013).
    \300\ 13 CFR 121.201, Sector 22, Utilities.
    \301\ The Small Business Administration sets the threshold for 
what constitutes a small business. Public utilities may fall under 
one of several different categories, each with a size threshold 
based on the company's number of employees, including affiliates, 
the parent company, and subsidiaries. The possible categories for 
the applicable entities have a size threshold ranging from 250 
employees to 1,000 employees. For the analysis in this final rule, 
we are using the 500 employee threshold for each applicable entity 
type.
    \302\ See supra n. 298. We estimate that all affected entities 
will make the safe harbor filing, but that only half do not sell 
electric energy and thus need to make the commitment to comply with 
section 210 of the FPA. Thus, $142 = (1) x ($94.66) + (1/2) x 
($94.66).
    \303\ This reduced burden amount is calculated by taking the 
total estimated burden reduction per year, $27,452, and dividing by 
18, the estimated number of filings avoided because of the new 
regulations.
    \304\ Credit Reforms in Organized Wholesale Electric Markets, 
133 FERC ] 61,060, at P 184 (2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

VII. Document Availability

    185. In addition to publishing the full text of this document in 
the Federal Register, the Commission provides all interested persons an 
opportunity to view and/or print the contents of this document via the 
Internet through FERC's Home Page (http://www.ferc.gov) and in FERC's 
Public Reference Room during normal business hours (8:30 a.m. to 5:00 
p.m. Eastern time) at 888 First Street NE., Room 2A, Washington, DC 
20426.
    186. From FERC's Home Page on the Internet, this information is 
available on eLibrary. The full text of this document is available on 
eLibrary in PDF and Microsoft Word format for viewing, printing, and/or 
downloading. To access this document in eLibrary, type the docket 
number excluding the last three digits of this document in the docket 
number field.
    187. User assistance is available for eLibrary and the FERC's Web 
site during normal business hours from FERC Online Support at (202) 
502-6652 (toll free at 1-866-208-3676) or email at 
[email protected], or the Public Reference Room at (202) 502-
8371, TTY (202) 502-8659. Email the Public Reference Room at 
[email protected].

VIII. Effective Date and Congressional Notification

    These regulations are effective June 30, 2015. The Commission has 
determined, with the concurrence of the Administrator of the Office of 
Information and Regulatory Affairs of OMB, that this rule is not a 
``major rule'' as defined in section 351 of the Small Business 
Regulatory Enforcement Act of 1996. The Commission will submit this 
Final Rule to both houses of Congress and the Government Accountability 
Office.

List of Subjects in 18 CFR Part 35

    Electric power rates, Electric utilities, Reporting and 
recordkeeping requirements.

    By the Commission.

    Issued: March 19, 2015.
Nathaniel J. Davis, Sr.,
Deputy Secretary.

    In consideration of the foregoing, the Commission amends Part 35, 
Chapter I, Title 18, Code of Federal Regulations, as follows:

PART 35--FILING OF RATE SCHEDULES AND TARIFFS

0
1. The authority citation for part 35 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 791a-825r, 2601-2645; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 42 
U.S.C. 7101-7352.


0
2. Amend Sec.  35.28 by revising paragraph (d) to read as follows:


Sec.  35.28  Non-discriminatory open access transmission tariff.

* * * * *
    (d) Waivers. (1) A public utility subject to the requirements of 
this section and 18 CFR parts 37 (Open Access Same-Time Information 
System) and 358 (Standards of Conduct for Transmission Providers) may 
file a request for waiver of all or part of such requirements for good 
cause shown.
    (2) The requirements of this section, 18 CFR parts 37 (Open Access 
Same-Time Information System) and 358 (Standards of Conduct for 
Transmission Providers) are waived for any public utility that is or 
becomes subject to such requirements solely because it owns, controls, 
or operates Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities, in 
whole or in part, as that term is defined in the standard generator 
interconnection procedures and

[[Page 17682]]

agreements referenced in paragraph (f) of this section, or comparable 
jurisdictional interconnection facilities that are the subject of 
interconnection agreements other than the standard generator 
interconnection procedures and agreements referenced in paragraph (f) 
of this section, if the entity that owns, operates, or controls such 
facilities either sells electric energy, or files a statement with the 
Commission that it commits to comply with and be bound by the 
obligations and procedures applicable to electric utilities under 
section 210 of the Federal Power Act.
    (i) The waivers referenced in this paragraph (d)(2) shall be deemed 
to be revoked as of the date the public utility ceases to satisfy the 
qualifications of this paragraph (d)(2), and may be revoked by the 
Commission if the Commission determines that it is in the public 
interest to do so. After revocation of its waivers, the public utility 
must comply with the requirements that had been waived within 60 days 
of revocation.
    (ii) Any eligible entity that seeks interconnection or transmission 
services with respect to the interconnection facilities for which a 
waiver is in effect pursuant to this paragraph (d)(2) may follow the 
procedures in sections 210, 211, and 212 of the Federal Power Act, 18 
CFR 2.20, and 18 CFR part 36. In any proceeding pursuant to this 
paragraph (d)(2)(ii):
    (A) The Commission will consider it to be in the public interest to 
grant priority rights to the owner and/or operator of interconnection 
facilities specified in this paragraph (d)(2) to use capacity thereon 
when such owner and/or operator can demonstrate that it has specific 
plans with milestones to use such capacity to interconnect its or its 
affiliate's future generation projects.
    (B) For the first five years after the commercial operation date of 
the interconnection facilities specified in this paragraph (d)(2), the 
Commission will apply the rebuttable presumption that the owner and/or 
operator of such facilities has definitive plans to use the capacity 
thereon, and it is thus in the public interest to grant priority rights 
to the owner and/or operator of such facilities to use capacity 
thereon.

    Note: Appendix A will not be published in the Code of Federal 
Regulations.

Appendix A: List of Short Names of Commenters on the Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking

Commenter (Short Name or Acronym)
American Public Power Association and Transmission Access Policy 
Study Group (APPA and TAPS)
American Wind Energy Association (AWEA)
Berkshire Hathaway Energy Company (BHE)
BP Wind Energy North America Inc. (BP Wind)
California Department of Water Resources State Water Project (SWP)
Cogen Technologies Linden Venture, L.P. (Linden)
DTE Energy Company (DTE)
Edison Electric Institute (EEI)
Electric Power Supply Association (EPSA)
Electricity Consumers Resource Council (ELCON)
E.ON Climate & Renewables North America (E.ON)
First Wind Energy, LLC (First Wind)
Invenergy Wind LLC, Invenergy Wind Development LLC, and Invenergy 
Thermal Development LLC (Invenergy)
ITC Transmission, Michigan Electric Transmission Company, LLC, ITC 
Midwest, LLC, and ITC Great Plains, LLC (ITC)
Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc. (MISO)
MISO Transmission Owners (MISO TOs)
National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA)
NextEra Energy, Inc. (NextEra)
Northern California Power Agency (NCPA)
The NRG Companies (NRG)
Recurrent Energy (Recurrent)
Sempra U.S. Gas & Power, LLC (Sempra)
Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA)
Southern Company Services, Inc. (Southern)
Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC (Terra-Gen)

[FR Doc. 2015-06953 Filed 3-31-15; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6717-01-P



                                                                                                      Vol. 80                           Wednesday,
                                                                                                      No. 62                            April 1, 2015




                                                                                                      Part IV


                                                                                                      Department of Energy
                                                                                                      Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
                                                                                                      18 CFR Part 35
                                                                                                      Open Access and Priority Rights on Interconnection Customer’s
                                                                                                      Interconnection Facilities; Final Rule
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                                                 17654                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY                                                       for the ownership, control, or operation                                    the date on which the safe harbor
                                                                                                                            of Interconnection Customer’s                                               begins, the rebuttable presumption that
                                                 Federal Energy Regulatory                                                  Interconnection Facilities (ICIF). This                                     the ICIF owner should not be required
                                                 Commission                                                                 Final Rule finds that those seeking                                         to expand its facilities during the safe
                                                                                                                            interconnection and transmission                                            harbor, and the facilities covered by the
                                                 18 CFR Part 35                                                             service over ICIF that are subject to the                                   Final Rule.
                                                 [RM14–11–000; Order No. 807]                                               blanket waiver adopted herein may                                           DATES: This rule will become effective
                                                                                                                            follow procedures applicable to requests                                    June 30, 2015.
                                                 Open Access and Priority Rights on                                         for interconnection and transmission                                        FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                 Interconnection Customer’s                                                 service under sections 210, 211, and 212                                    Becky Robinson (Technical
                                                 Interconnection Facilities                                                 of the FPA, which also allows the                                             Information), Office of Energy Policy
                                                 AGENCY:  Federal Energy Regulatory                                         contractual flexibility for entities to                                       and Innovation, Federal Energy
                                                 Commission.                                                                reach mutually agreeable access                                               Regulatory Commission, 888 First
                                                                                                                            solutions. This Final Rule establishes a                                      Street NE., Washington, DC 20426,
                                                 ACTION: Final rule.
                                                                                                                            modified rebuttable presumption for a                                         (202) 502–8868,
                                                 SUMMARY:  In this Final Rule, the Federal                                  five-year safe harbor period to reduce                                        Becky.Robinson@ferc.gov.
                                                 Energy Regulatory Commission is                                            risks to ICIF owners eligible for the                                       Brian Gish (Legal Information), Office of
                                                 amending its regulations to waive the                                      blanket waiver during the critical early                                      the General Counsel—Energy Markets,
                                                 Open Access Transmission Tariff                                            years of their projects. Finally, this Final                                  Federal Energy Regulatory
                                                 requirements, the Open Access Same-                                        Rule modifies, as described in detail                                         Commission, 888 First Street NE.,
                                                 Time Information System requirements,                                      below, several elements of the Notice of                                      Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502–
                                                 and the Standards of Conduct                                               Proposed Rulemaking, including the                                            8998, Brian.Gish@ferc.gov.
                                                 requirements, under certain conditions,                                    entities eligible for the OATT waiver,                                      SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

                                                                                                                                                 ORDER NO. 807
                                                                                                                                                  FINAL RULE
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               Paragraph Nos.

                                                 I. Introduction ...........................................................................................................................................................................                  1
                                                 II. Background ...........................................................................................................................................................................                   6
                                                       A. Development of ICIF Policies ......................................................................................................................................                                 6
                                                 III. Need for Reform ..................................................................................................................................................................                     18
                                                       A. Commission Proposal ...................................................................................................................................................                            18
                                                       B. Comments ......................................................................................................................................................................                    19
                                                       C. Commission Determination ..........................................................................................................................................                                33
                                                 IV. Proposed Reforms ...............................................................................................................................................................                        41
                                                       A. Eligible ICIF ..................................................................................................................................................................                   41
                                                           1. Commission Proposal ............................................................................................................................................                               41
                                                           2. Comments ...............................................................................................................................................................                       42
                                                           3. Commission Determination ...................................................................................................................................                                   43
                                                      B. Grant Blanket Waivers to Eligible ICIF Owners .........................................................................................................                                             44
                                                           1. Blanket Waivers .....................................................................................................................................................                          44
                                                           2. Requirement That ICIF Owners Must Sell Electricity To Qualify for the Waiver .............................................                                                                     59
                                                           3. Status of the Third-Party Requester ......................................................................................................................                                     76
                                                           4. Non-Public Utilities ...............................................................................................................................................                           79
                                                           5. Applicability to Industrial Power Systems’ Tie Lines .........................................................................................                                                 83
                                                           6. Applicability of the Blanket Waiver to Additional Regulations .........................................................................                                                        85
                                                           7. Existing Agreements and Waivers ........................................................................................................................                                       88
                                                           8. Existing OATTs ......................................................................................................................................................                          90
                                                           9. Revoking the Blanket Waiver ................................................................................................................................                                   94
                                                      C. Interconnection and Transmission Under Sections 210 and 211 of the Federal Power Act ...................................                                                                           104
                                                           1. Sections 210 and 211 .............................................................................................................................................                            104
                                                           2. Voluntary Arrangements ........................................................................................................................................                               115
                                                           3. Interaction With the Transmission System ..........................................................................................................                                           119
                                                           4. Scope of Regulations To Be Modified ..................................................................................................................                                        128
                                                           5. Reliability Standards ..............................................................................................................................................                          131
                                                      D. Safe Harbor ...................................................................................................................................................................                    133
                                                           1. Whether and To What Extent There Should Be a Safe Harbor Period ..............................................................                                                                133
                                                           2. Starting Point for the Safe Harbor Period .............................................................................................................                                       141
                                                           3. Length of the Safe Harbor Period ..........................................................................................................................                                   147
                                                      E. Affiliate Concerns .........................................................................................................................................................                       153
                                                           1. Commission Proposal ............................................................................................................................................                              153
                                                           2. Comments ...............................................................................................................................................................                      154
                                                           3. Commission Determination ...................................................................................................................................                                  165
                                                       F. Miscellaneous ................................................................................................................................................................                    170
                                                           1. Treatment of Line Losses on ICIF .........................................................................................................................                                    170
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                                                           2. Applicability of the Commission’s ‘‘Prior Notice’’ Policy ..................................................................................                                                  172
                                                           3. Technical Aspects of Interconnection ..................................................................................................................                                       174
                                                           4. Implementation ......................................................................................................................................................                         176
                                                 V. Information Collection Statement .......................................................................................................................................                                177
                                                 VI.8 Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis ................................................................................................................................                                  184
                                                 VII. Document Availability ......................................................................................................................................................                          185
                                                 VIII. Effective Date and Congressional Notification ...............................................................................................................                                        188
                                                 Regulatory Text
                                                 Appendix A: List of Short Names of Commenters on the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking



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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                      17655

                                                 I. Introduction                                             2. We find that requiring the filing of                multiple generation project phases and
                                                                                                          an OATT is not necessary to prevent                       intend for their subsequent generation
                                                    1. In this Final Rule, the Federal                    unjust or unreasonable rates or unduly                    projects to use what is initially excess
                                                 Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC                       discriminatory behavior with respect to                   capacity on the ICIF. We believe that the
                                                 or Commission) is amending its                           ICIF, over which interconnection and                      safe harbor period established by this
                                                 regulations to waive the Open Access                     transmission services can be ordered                      Final Rule will enable these ICIF owners
                                                 Transmission Tariff (OATT)                               pursuant to sections 210, 211, and 212                    to focus in the early stages of
                                                 requirements of 18 CFR 35.28, the Open                   of the FPA.5 Further, we conclude that                    development on building generation.
                                                 Access Same-Time Information System                      the Commission’s policies requiring the                     5. We find that the reforms adopted
                                                 (OASIS) requirements of 18 CFR 37, and                   ICIF owner to make excess capacity                        herein re-balance the burden on ICIF
                                                 the Standards of Conduct requirements                    available to third parties unless it can                  owners and encourage efficient
                                                 18 CFR 358, under certain conditions,                    justify its planned use of the line                       generation and interconnection facility
                                                 for the ownership, control, or operation                 impose risks and burdens on ICIF                          development, while maintaining access
                                                 of Interconnection Customer’s                            owners and create regulatory                              to available capacity for third parties
                                                 Interconnection Facilities (ICIF).1 This                 inefficiencies that are not necessary                     where appropriate.
                                                 Final Rule finds that those seeking                      given the goals that the Commission
                                                 interconnection and transmission                                                                                   II. Background
                                                                                                          seeks to achieve through such policies.
                                                 service over ICIF that are subject to the                Based on comments received as part of                     A. Development of ICIF Policies
                                                 blanket waiver adopted herein may                        our consideration of the treatment of
                                                 follow procedures applicable to requests                                                                             6. Under section 201(b) of the FPA,
                                                                                                          ICIF, we understand that generation                       the Commission has jurisdiction over all
                                                 for interconnection and transmission                     developers may develop new projects in
                                                 service under sections 210, 211, and 212                                                                           facilities used for the transmission of
                                                                                                          phases and build interconnection                          electric energy in interstate commerce.6
                                                 of the Federal Power Act (FPA), which                    facilities large enough to accommodate
                                                 also allows the contractual flexibility for                                                                        Under section 201(e) of the FPA, any
                                                                                                          the development of all planned phases.                    person who owns or operates facilities
                                                 entities to reach mutually agreeable                     The Commission’s existing policy has
                                                 access solutions.2 This Final Rule                                                                                 subject to the jurisdiction of the
                                                                                                          led ICIF owners to file petitions for                     Commission is a public utility.7 The
                                                 establishes a modified rebuttable                        declaratory orders demonstrating plans
                                                 presumption for a five-year safe harbor                                                                            Commission is charged with the
                                                                                                          and milestones for future generation                      responsibility under sections 205 and
                                                 period to reduce risks to ICIF owners 3                  development to reserve for themselves
                                                 eligible for the blanket waiver during                                                                             206 of the FPA to ensure that a public
                                                                                                          currently excess ICIF capacity that they                  utility’s rates, charges, and
                                                 the critical early years of their projects.              built for such purposes. In the vast
                                                 Finally, this Final Rule modifies, as                                                                              classifications of service are just and
                                                                                                          majority of cases, the Commission has                     reasonable and not unduly
                                                 described in detail below, several                       granted the petition, based on
                                                 elements of the Notice of Proposed                                                                                 discriminatory or preferential.8
                                                                                                          confidential documentation filed by the                     7. In Order No. 888, the Commission,
                                                 Rulemaking (NOPR), including the                         ICIF owner, with a limited description
                                                 entities eligible for the OATT waiver,                                                                             relying upon its authority under
                                                                                                          of the plans and milestones the                           sections 205 and 206 of the FPA,
                                                 the date on which the safe harbor                        Commission deemed dispositive.
                                                 begins, the rebuttable presumption that                                                                            established non-discriminatory open
                                                                                                          Further, the Commission’s existing                        access to electric transmission service as
                                                 the ICIF owner should not be required                    policy of treating ICIF the same as other
                                                 to expand its facilities during the safe                                                                           the foundation necessary to develop
                                                                                                          transmission facilities for OATT                          competitive bulk power markets in the
                                                 harbor, and the facilities covered by the                purposes, including the requirement to
                                                 Final Rule.4                                                                                                       United States.9 Order No. 888, codified
                                                                                                          file an OATT following a third-party                      in section 35.28 of the Commission’s
                                                                                                          request, creates undue burden for ICIF                    regulations, requires that any public
                                                    1 The jurisdictional interconnection facilities for
                                                                                                          owners without a corresponding                            utility that owns, controls, or operates
                                                 which this Final Rule grants a waiver have               enhancement of access given the ICIF
                                                 sometimes in the past been referred to informally                                                                  facilities used for the transmission of
                                                 as ‘‘generator tie lines,’’ but, in the Notice of        owner’s typical ability to establish                      electric energy in interstate commerce
                                                 Proposed Rulemaking, the Commission used the             priority rights.                                          must file an OATT and comply with
                                                 term ICIF as defined in the pro forma documents             3. Granting an OATT waiver to ICIF
                                                 issued with Order No. 2003. As discussed below,                                                                    other related requirements. The
                                                                                                          owners and providing that third-party
                                                 infra section IV.A Eligible ICIF, we continue to use                                                               Commission in Order No. 888 did not
                                                                                                          access be governed by sections 210, 211,
                                                 the term ‘‘ICIF’’ throughout this Final Rule but                                                                   specifically address transmission
                                                 clarify there that we intend the term to encompass       and 212 will enable ICIF owners and
                                                                                                                                                                    facilities associated with the
                                                 a broader scope. Standardization of Generator            third parties, where possible, to reach
                                                 Interconnection Agreements and Procedures, Order         mutually agreeable and voluntary
                                                 No. 2003, 68 FR 49845 (Aug. 19, 2003), FERC Stats.                                                                   6 16 U.S.C. 824(b).
                                                 & Regs. ¶31,146, at Appendix C, Appendix 6,
                                                                                                          arrangements that provide ICIF access to                    7 16 U.S.C. 824(e). Section 201(f) of the FPA
                                                 Article 1 (2003), order on reh’g, Order No. 2003–        third parties, while protecting a third                   exempts certain governmental entities and electric
                                                 A, 69 FR 15932 (Mar. 26, 2004), FERC Stats. & Regs.      party’s right to request that the                         cooperatives from being a public utility.
                                                 ¶ 31,160, order on reh’g, Order No. 2003–B, 70 FR        Commission order interconnection and                        8 16 U.S.C. 824d and 824e.
                                                 265 (Jan. 4, 2005), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,171
                                                 (2004), order on reh’g, Order No. 2003–C, 70 FR
                                                                                                          transmission service over ICIF. We find                     9 Promoting Wholesale Competition Through

                                                                                                          that providing this contractual                           Open Access Non-Discriminatory Transmission
                                                 37661 (Jun. 30, 2005), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,190                                                                Services by Public Utilities; Recovery of Stranded
                                                 (2005), aff’d sub nom. Nat’l Ass’n of Regulatory         flexibility may remove barriers to an                     Costs by Public Utilities and Transmitting Utilities,
                                                 Util. Comm’rs v. FERC, 475 F.3d 1277 (D.C. Cir.          ICIF owner’s willingness to enter into                    Order No. 888, 61 FR 21540 (May 10, 1996), FERC
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                                                 2007), cert denied, 552 U.S. 1230 (2008).
                                                    2 16 U.S.C. 824i, 824j, and 824k.
                                                                                                          such an agreement with a third party.                     Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,036 (1996), order on reh’g, Order
                                                                                                             4. We recognize that ICIF owners                       No. 888–A, 62 FR 12274 (Mar. 14, 1997), FERC
                                                    3 In this Final Rule, the term ‘‘ICIF owners’’
                                                                                                                                                                    Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,048, order on reh’g, Order No.
                                                 includes those who operate or control ICIF.              often construct ICIF to accommodate                       888–B, 81 FERC ¶ 61,248 (1997), order on reh’g,
                                                    4 Open Access and Priority Rights on                                                                            Order No. 888–C, 82 FERC ¶ 61,046 (1998), aff’d in
                                                 Interconnection Customer’s Interconnection                 5 As discussed infra, the blanket waiver will           relevant part sub nom. Transmission Access Policy
                                                 Facilities, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 79 FR         apply only to entities that are either directly subject   Study Group v. FERC, 225 F.3d 667 (D.C. Cir. 2000),
                                                 31061 (May 30, 2014), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701       to section 210 or have voluntarily committed to           aff’d sub nom. New York v. FERC, 535 U.S. 1
                                                 (2014), corrected, 79 FR 35501 (June 23, 2014).          comply with section 210.                                  (2002).



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                                                 17656              Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 interconnection of electric generating                     10. Article 11.1 of the LGIA provides               Interconnection Facilities are typically
                                                 units to the transmission grid.                         that the ‘‘Interconnection Customer                    radial in nature, with a single point of
                                                    8. At the same time, the Commission                  shall design, procure, construct, install,             interconnection with the network grid,
                                                 issued Order No. 889,10 which                           own and/or control Interconnection                     and over which power flows in one
                                                 promulgated the Open Access Same-                       Customer Interconnection Facilities . . .              direction toward the transmission
                                                 Time Information System (OASIS) and                     at its sole expense.’’ The LGIA defines                grid.22 Depending on the circumstances,
                                                 Standards of Conduct requirements in                    ICIF as ‘‘all facilities and equipment, as             Interconnection Facilities may range in
                                                 Part 37 of the Commission’s regulations                 identified in Appendix A of the                        length, but can span considerable
                                                 to ensure the contemporaneous                           Standard Large Generator                               distances and represent significant
                                                 disclosure of certain information and                   Interconnection Agreement, that are                    transmission capacity.23
                                                 prevent transmission providers from                     located between the Generating Facility                   12. In a series of cases since Order No.
                                                 engaging in non-discriminatory                          and the Point of Change of Ownership,                  2003 became effective, issues have been
                                                 behavior in favor of their marketing                    including any modification, addition, or               raised regarding the extent to which, if
                                                 affiliates.11                                           upgrades to such facilities and                        at all, third parties should be able to
                                                    9. In Order No. 2003, the Commission                 equipment necessary to physically and
                                                                                                                                                                have access rights for transmission on
                                                 found that interconnection service plays                electrically interconnect the Generating
                                                                                                                                                                the facilities located between the
                                                 a crucial role in bringing generation into              Facility to the Transmission Provider’s
                                                                                                                                                                generating facility and the Point of
                                                 the market to meet the growing needs of                 Transmission System. Interconnection
                                                                                                                                                                Change of Ownership at which the
                                                 electricity customers and competitive                   Customer’s Interconnection Facilities
                                                                                                                                                                Transmission Provider’s
                                                 electricity markets.12 The Commission                   are sole use facilities.’’ 16 The LGIA
                                                                                                                                                                Interconnection Facilities begin, i.e.,
                                                 reiterated that ‘‘[i]nterconnection is a                defines ‘‘Interconnection Facilities’’ 17
                                                                                                                                                                ICIF. Applications have come before the
                                                 critical component of open access                       as the:
                                                                                                                                                                Commission as petitions for declaratory
                                                 transmission service,’’ and that ‘‘the                  Transmission Provider’s Interconnection                order and requests for service under
                                                 Commission may order generic                            Facilities and the Interconnection Customer’s          sections 210 and 211. In each of these,
                                                 interconnection terms and procedures                    Interconnection Facilities. Collectively,
                                                                                                                                                                the Commission has put the onus on the
                                                 pursuant to its authority to remedy                     Interconnection Facilities include all
                                                                                                         facilities and equipment between the                   developer, if it would like to preempt a
                                                 undue discrimination and preferences
                                                                                                         Generating Facility and the Point of                   third party’s use, to demonstrate that it
                                                 under sections 205 and 206 of the
                                                                                                         Interconnection, including any modification,           has plans to use the currently excess
                                                 Federal Power Act.’’ 13 The Commission                  additions or upgrades that are necessary to            capacity.
                                                 concluded that there was a pressing                     physically and electrically interconnect the
                                                 need for a uniformly applicable set of                  Generating Facility to the Transmission
                                                                                                                                                                   13. In Milford Wind Corridor, LLC, the
                                                 procedures and a pro forma agreement                    Provider’s Transmission System.                        Commission recognized that it has
                                                 to form the basis of interconnection                    Interconnection Facilities are sole use                granted waivers of the OATT
                                                 service for large generators, and thus                  facilities and shall not include Distribution          requirements on a case-by-case basis for
                                                 promulgated the pro forma Large                         Upgrades, Stand Alone Network Upgrades or              ICIF owners who demonstrate that their
                                                 Generator Interconnection Procedures                    Network Upgrades.18                                    ICIF are limited and discrete and there
                                                 (LGIP) and the pro forma Large                          Finally, the LGIA defines Transmission                 is no outstanding request by a third
                                                 Generator Interconnection Agreement                     Provider’s Interconnection Facilities as               party to access the ICIF.24
                                                 (LGIA) 14 to be included in every public                ‘‘those Interconnection Facilities that                   14. At issue in these cases was
                                                 utility’s OATT.15                                       are located between the Point of                       whether the entity that owns and/or
                                                                                                         Interconnection 19 with the grid and the               controls ICIF to serve its or its affiliates’
                                                    10 Open Access Same-Time Information System          Point of Change of Ownership,20 and                    generation project or projects has any
                                                 and Standards of Conduct, Order No. 889, 61 FR          which are owned, controlled, or                        priority right over third-party requesters
                                                 21737 (May 10, 1996), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,035      operated by the transmission                           to use the capacity on its ICIF. Where an
                                                 (1996), order on reh’g, Order No. 889–A, FERC           provider.’’ 21
                                                 Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,049 (1997), reh’g denied, Order                                                            ICIF owner has specific, pre-existing
                                                 No. 889–B, 81 FERC ¶ 61,253 (1997).                        11. In general, Interconnection                     generator expansion plans with
                                                    11 Although originally promulgated by Order No.      Facilities are constructed to enable a                 milestones for construction of
                                                 889, the Commission has since relocated the             generation facility or multiple                        generation facilities and can
                                                 Standards of Conduct to Part 358 and adopted a          generation facilities to transmit power to
                                                 number of changes, most recently revised by Order                                                              demonstrate that it has made material
                                                 No. 717. Standards of Conduct for Transmission
                                                                                                         the integrated transmission grid.                      progress toward meeting those
                                                 Providers, Order No. 717, FERC Stats. & Regs.
                                                                                                           16 LGIA Article 1. Section 1 of the LGIP includes
                                                                                                                                                                milestones, the Commission granted
                                                 ¶ 31,280 (2008).                                                                                               priority rights for excess capacity on the
                                                    12 Order No. 2003, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,146      identical definitions to those in Article 1 of the
                                                 at P 11.                                                LGIA.                                                  ICIF for those future generation
                                                    13 Id. PP 12, 20.                                      17 Unless otherwise indicated, capitalized terms
                                                                                                                                                                   22 In limited circumstances, power may flow from
                                                    14 As discussed above, throughout this Final Rule,   herein have the same definition as in the
                                                                                                         Commission’s LGIA or in the OATT, as applicable.       the grid to supply station power in the event no
                                                 the terms LGIP and LGIA refer to the pro forma
                                                                                                           18 LGIA Article 1. See supra n.1.                    power is being produced at the generating facility.
                                                 versions of those documents.
                                                                                                           19 The Point of Interconnection is defined in           23 See, e.g., Bayonne Energy Center, LLC, 136
                                                    15 Order No. 2003 established rules for a Large

                                                 Generating Facility, defined as a generating facility   Article 1 of the LGIA as the point where the           FERC ¶ 61,019 (2011) (involving a 6.75-mile, 345-
                                                 with a capacity of more than 20 MW. Similarly, in       Interconnection Facilities connect to the              kV interconnection facility); Terra-Gen Dixie
                                                 Order No. 2006, the Commission established the          Transmission Provider’s Transmission System.           Valley, LLC, 132 FERC ¶ 61,215 (2010) (Terra-Gen
                                                 pro forma Small Generator Interconnection                 20 The Point of Change of Ownership is defined       I), reh’g denied, 134 FERC ¶ 61,021 (2011), order on
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                                                 Procedures and the pro forma Small Generator            in Article 1 of the LGIA as the point, as set forth    request for priority rights, 137 FERC ¶ 61,179
                                                 Interconnection Agreement for interconnecting           in Appendix A to the LGIA, where the                   (2011), order on reh’g, 147 FERC ¶ 61,122 (2014)
                                                 small generators (no larger than 20 MW).                Interconnection Customer’s Interconnection             (involving a 214-mile, 230-kV interconnection
                                                 Standardization of Small Generator Interconnection      Facilities connect to the Transmission Provider’s      facility). See also, e.g., Southern Company Serv.,
                                                 Agreements and Procedures, Order No. 2006, FERC         Interconnection Facilities. LGIP section 11.2 states   Inc., Docket No. ER12–554–000 (Jan. 6, 2012)
                                                 Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,180, order on reh’g, Order No.      that the Transmission Provider and Interconnection     (delegated letter order) (involving an approximately
                                                 2006–A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,196 (2005), order      Customer shall negotiate the provisions of the         2000 foot interconnection facility).
                                                 granting clarification, Order No. 2006–B, FERC          appendices to the LGIA.                                   24 Milford Wind Corridor, LLC, 129 FERC

                                                 Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,221 (2006).                           21 LGIA Article 1.                                   ¶ 61,149, at P 24 (2009) (Milford).



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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                       17657

                                                 projects.25 For example in Aero Energy,                  affiliate of the ICIF owner that is                        requests for waiver where the public
                                                 LLC,26 before ordering service over the                  developing its own generator projects                      utility owns only limited and discrete
                                                 Sagebrush line pursuant to FPA sections                  also may obtain priority rights to the                     facilities or is a small utility.35 Even if
                                                 210 and 211, the Commission provided                     capacity on the ICIF by meeting the                        a waiver of the OATT is granted for
                                                 the opportunity for the ICIF owner to                    ‘‘specific plans and milestones’’                          ICIF, the ICIF owner is subject to the
                                                 demonstrate that it had pre-existing                     standard with respect to future use.31                     requirement that, if a request for
                                                 contractual obligations or other specific                   16. Notwithstanding the ability of an                   transmission service over the facilities is
                                                 plans that would prevent it from                         ICIF owner to request priority rights,                     made, it would have to file an OATT
                                                 providing the requested firm                             where an ICIF owner has received a                         within 60 days of the request 36 and
                                                 transmission service to the third party.27               third-party request for service, the                       comply with any additional
                                                 As a result, the Commission found that                   Commission has required that the ICIF                      requirements then in effect for public
                                                 one of the Sagebrush partners had                        owner file an OATT.32                                      utility transmission providers. The ICIF
                                                 shown that it had pre-existing                              17. In summary, the Commission’s                        owner would thus become subject to all
                                                 expansion plans that, at some future                     existing policy since 2009 is that,                        of the relevant pro forma OATT
                                                 date, would require firm transmission                    because ICIF are facilities used for the                   requirements, unless it successfully
                                                 capacity, and that two other Sagebrush                   transmission of electric energy in                         seeks and receives approval for
                                                 partners had not shown that they had                     interstate commerce, those who own,                        deviations from the pro forma OATT.
                                                 pre-existing expansion plans that would                  control, or operate ICIF must either have
                                                 require additional transmission                          an OATT on file or receive a waiver of                     III. Need for Reform
                                                 capacity.                                                the OATT requirement.33 Section                            A. Commission Proposal
                                                    15. The Commission has also                           35.28(d) provides that any public utility
                                                 considered, on a case-by-case basis,                     subject to OATT, OASIS, and Standards                         18. The Commission issued a NOPR
                                                 petitions for declaratory order                          of Conduct requirements may file a                         in this proceeding on May 15, 2014. In
                                                 requesting that an ICIF owner be granted                 request for a waiver for good cause                        the NOPR, the Commission proposed to
                                                 priority over third parties to use                       shown.34 The Commission grants such                        grant a blanket waiver for ICIF of all
                                                 capacity on its ICIF.28 In Milford, the                                                                             OATT, OASIS, and Standards of
                                                 Commission granted such priority,                           31 See NextEra Energy Resources, LLC, 142 FERC          Conduct requirements in circumstances
                                                 finding that Milford had shown that it                   ¶ 61,043, at P 26 (2013).                                  where a public utility is subject to such
                                                                                                             32 Subsequent to ordering transmission under
                                                 had specific plans for phased                                                                                       requirements solely because it owns,
                                                                                                          FPA sections 210 and 211 in Aero, the Commission
                                                 development of its generation. The                       granted market-based rates to several Sagebrush
                                                                                                                                                                     controls, or operates ICIF and sells
                                                 Commission in Milford summarized the                     affiliates on the condition that Sagebrush file an         electric energy from its generating
                                                 Aero precedent as providing that:                        OATT for its line if any third party filed a request       facility. The Commission also proposed
                                                                                                          for service on the line. EDFD Handsome-Lake, 127           a safe harbor period of five years during
                                                    A transmission owner that filed specific              FERC ¶ 61,243, at P 15 (2009). Such a request was
                                                                                                                                                                     which there would be a rebuttable
                                                 expansion plans with definite dates and                  made, and Sagebrush filed an OATT for its
                                                 milestones for construction, and had made                interconnection facility. Sagebrush, a California          presumption that: (1) The eligible ICIF
                                                 material progress toward meeting its                     Partnership, 130 FERC ¶ 61,093, order on reh’g, 132        owner has definitive plans to use its
                                                                                                          FERC ¶ 61,234 (2010). In Peetz Logan, the                  capacity without having to make a
                                                 milestones, had priority over later                      generation owner filed an OATT in response to a
                                                 transmission requests.29                                 request for third-party interconnection and                demonstration through a specific plans
                                                 This required demonstration necessary                    transmission services over its existing 78.2-mile,         and milestones showing; and (2) the
                                                 to claim priority rights has been referred               230-kV ICIF that had been used to connect three            eligible ICIF owner should not be
                                                                                                          affiliated wind generation projects to the grid. Peetz     required to expand its facilities.37 The
                                                 to as the ‘‘specific plans and                           Logan Interconnect, LLC, 136 FERC ¶ 61,075 (2011)
                                                 milestones’’ showing. This granting of                   (Peetz Logan). In Sky River, the Commission                Commission found, on a preliminary
                                                 priority rights preserves the ability of                 rejected the filing of an executed Common Facilities       basis, that there was a need for reform
                                                 the generation developer to deliver its
                                                                                                          Agreement providing a third party the right to             because OATT requirements as applied
                                                                                                          access and utilize Sky River, LLC’s interest in a
                                                 future output to the point of                            nine-mile 230-kV ‘‘generator tie-line.’’ Instead, the
                                                                                                                                                                     to ICIF may impose risks and burdens
                                                 interconnection with the integrated                      Commission required that any service by non-               on generators and create regulatory
                                                 transmission grid, so long as it can make                owners over the line must be made pursuant to an           inefficiencies that are not necessary to
                                                                                                          OATT. Sky River, LLC, 134 FERC ¶ 61,064 (2011)             achieve the Commission’s open access
                                                 the relevant showing to the Commission                   (Sky River). Also, in Terra-Gen, the generator owner
                                                 sufficient to justify priority.30 The                    of a 214-mile, 230-kV radial interconnection facility
                                                                                                                                                                     goals. The Commission also
                                                 Commission has also found that an                        was ordered by the Commission to file an OATT in           preliminarily found that there was a
                                                                                                          response to a request for third-party transmission         need to reform its requirements for
                                                   25 Alta Wind I, LLC, 134 FERC ¶ 61,109, at PP 16–
                                                                                                          service. Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC, 134 FERC             achieving non-discriminatory access
                                                                                                          ¶ 61,027 (2011), order on reh’g, 135 FERC ¶ 61,134
                                                 17 (2011); Milford, 129 FERC ¶ 61,149 at P 22; Aero      (2011), order granting extension of time, 136 FERC
                                                                                                                                                                     over ICIF so as not to discourage
                                                 Energy LLC, 116 FERC ¶ 61,149, at P 28 (2006) Aero       ¶ 61,026 (2011), order on reh’g, 147 FERC ¶ 61,122         competitive generation development
                                                 Modification Order. Such plans and initial progress      (2014).                                                    with unnecessary burdens, while
                                                 also must pre-date a valid request for service. Terra-
                                                 Gen I, 132 FERC ¶ 61,215 at P 53.
                                                                                                             33 See Milford, 129 FERC ¶ 61,149 at P 24 (noting
                                                                                                                                                                     ensuring non-discriminatory access by
                                                   26 Aero Energy LLC, 115 FERC ¶ 61,128 (2006)
                                                                                                          that the fact that the facilities merely tie a generator   eligible transmission customers.
                                                                                                          to the grid does not render a line exempt from the
                                                 (Aero Proposed Order), order granting modification,      Commission’s regulation of transmission facilities).
                                                 116 FERC ¶ 61,149 (2006) (Aero Modification              See also Evergreen Wind Power III, LLC, 135 FERC           Commission’s regulations provides that a
                                                 Order), final order, 118 FERC ¶ 61,204 (2007), reh’g     ¶ 61,030, at P 15 n.18 (2011) (granting request for        transmission provider may seek a waiver from all
                                                 denied, 120 FERC ¶ 61,188 (2007) (Aero Rehearing         waiver of the OATT requirement in the context of           or some of the requirements of Part 358.
                                                 Order) (collectively, Aero).                             a request for market-based rate authority).                   35 See, e.g., Prairie Breeze Wind Energy LLC, 145
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                                                   27 Aero Modification Order, 116 FERC ¶ 61,149 at
                                                                                                             34 The Commission has the general statutory             FERC ¶ 61,290, at P 26 (2013); Ebensburg Power
                                                 P 28.                                                    authority to waive its regulations as it may find          Company, 145 FERC ¶ 61,265, at P 27 (2013);
                                                   28 See, e.g., Milford, 129 FERC ¶ 61,149 at P 24;                                                                 CSOLAR IV South, LLC, 143 FERC ¶ 61,275, at P 16
                                                                                                          necessary or appropriate. UtiliCorp United Inc., 99
                                                 Terra-Gen I, 132 FERC ¶ 61,215 at P 49.                  FERC ¶ 61,280, at P 12 (2002); see also Pacific Gas        (2013).
                                                   29 Milford, 129 FERC ¶ 61,149 at P 22.                                                                               36 Milford, 129 FERC ¶ 61,149 at P 27. See
                                                                                                          and Electric Co., 99 FERC ¶ 61,045, at P 5 (2002)
                                                   30 The Aero precedent cited above is the only          (‘‘It is however well established that, with or            Termoelectrica U.S., LLC, 105 FERC ¶ 61,087, at P
                                                 instance where the Commission has not granted            without an explicit provision to that effect, an           11 (2003); Black Creek Hydro, Inc., 77 FERC
                                                 priority rights upon an attempted plans and              agency may waive its regulations in appropriate            ¶ 61,232, at 61,941 (1996).
                                                 milestones demonstration.                                cases.’’). Similarly, section 358.1(d) of the                 37 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 54.




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                                                 17658             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 B. Comments                                                22. MISO supports revising the                     competitive markets by cutting back on
                                                    19. The Commission received 24                       Commission’s ICIF policy because it                   the significant procedural reforms
                                                 comments and one reply comment on                       argues that the existing policy: (1)                  initiated by this Commission in Order
                                                 the NOPR.38 Of those, 21 commenters 39                  Creates disincentives to develop more                 Nos. 888 and 889, and supports the
                                                 generally support the need for reform                   efficient, high-voltage ICIF by                       alternatives proposed by APPA and
                                                 and the NOPR proposals. Commenters                      expanding the costs and responsibilities              TAPS, as described below, by which the
                                                 state that the Commission’s existing                    of generation owners; (2) imposes                     Commission could achieve the NOPR’s
                                                 policy is unduly burdensome and                         transmission owner requirements on                    objectives without unnecessarily
                                                 unnecessary 40 and that it does not meet                entities that are not in the business of              reducing the protection from
                                                 the goal of promoting development of                    providing transmission service to third               discrimination that those orders
                                                 generation facilities while ensuring not                parties; and (3) creates concerns over                provided.54 Similarly, NRECA states
                                                 unduly discriminatory open access to                    the interaction of ICIF with the                      that it appreciates the Commission’s
                                                 transmission facilities.41 Commenters                   transmission system, and the reliable                 concerns about imposing the entire
                                                 argue that ICIF owners are focused on                   interconnection of projects to the                    open access regime on entities that only
                                                 developing new generation resources                     transmission system.48                                own ICIF, but contends that reducing
                                                 and the time, effort and cost of                           23. Commenters argue that ICIF are                 this burden must not come at the
                                                 complying with the OATT requirements                    unique and the Commission’s open                      expense of ensuring that load-serving
                                                 under the Commission’s existing policy                  access requirements and pro forma                     entities have access to facilities to serve
                                                 hinders generation development.42                       OATT were not designed for and are not                their loads.55
                                                 Commenters support the Commission’s                     appropriate for these facilities.49 MISO                 25. APPA and TAPS 56 argue that the
                                                 goal of reducing regulatory burdens and                 asserts that use of an OATT by an ICIF                NOPR fails to demonstrate the need to
                                                 promoting development of generation                     owner raises complicated issues                       change the requirement that an ICIF
                                                 facilities while ensuring open access to                regarding seams agreements between the                owner file an OATT upon receipt of a
                                                 transmission facilities and support the                 transmission provider and the ICIF                    third-party request for service, noting
                                                 Commission’s proposal to revise its                     owner and issues related to Order No.                 that the NOPR itself recognizes that
                                                 current ICIF policies.43                                1000-compliance regional transmission                 third-party requests to ICIF owners for
                                                    20. Terra-Gen states that the NOPR                   planning and cost allocation.50 MISO                  service are ‘‘infrequen[t]’’ and
                                                 proposals are essential to minimize the                 also notes that using OATTs for access                ‘‘relatively rare.’’ 57 They also contend
                                                 business and regulatory risks faced by                  to ICIF could create different                        that the NOPR has not demonstrated
                                                 generation owners and developers.44                     interconnection processes for different               that the proposed procedures would
                                                 Further, Terra-Gen argues that the                      ICIF within the MISO footprint, thus                  cost less than existing requirements,
                                                 Commission’s existing ICIF policy                       complicating the interconnection                      arguing that the lengthy and costly
                                                 allows third parties to impose                          process.51                                            procedures of sections 210 and 211
                                                 substantial and potentially                                24. On the other hand, APPA, TAPS,                 could not possibly be less expensive for
                                                 unrecoverable regulatory compliance                     and NCPA state that they support the                  ICIF owners on an industry-wide basis.
                                                 and other costs on generation owners by                 Commission’s goal of promoting                        They argue that the NOPR proposals
                                                 requesting access to ICIF without                       generation development, but assert that               will therefore be ineffective at reducing
                                                 making a showing that the third party is                the NOPR proposals would erode the                    the regulatory costs of ICIF owners and
                                                 ‘‘ready, willing, and able to pay the                   Commission’s open access transmission                 may function as a bar to open access.58
                                                                                                                                                                  26. APPA and TAPS contend that the
                                                 reasonable costs of transmission                        policies.52 APPA and TAPS argue that
                                                                                                                                                               NOPR would invite ICIF owners to close
                                                 services plus a reasonable rate of return               the Commission should instead address
                                                                                                                                                               off access to what could well be
                                                 on such costs.’’ 45                                     the concerns identified in the NOPR in
                                                    21. Linden states that ICIF owners                                                                         significant highways to areas ripe for
                                                                                                         a manner that preserves the open access
                                                 generally plan to use the excess capacity                                                                     renewable resource development.59
                                                                                                         underpinnings of competitive markets
                                                 on their ICIF for their own purposes and                                                                      APPA and TAPS argue that the NOPR
                                                                                                         and its reliance on market-based rates to
                                                 that the Commission’s existing policy                                                                         would allow an ICIF owner to hold that
                                                                                                         ensure just and reasonable wholesale
                                                 imposes a risk of losing that capacity if                                                                     transmission corridor hostage, block
                                                                                                         sales, and meets its statutory obligation
                                                 another party makes a request for                                                                             efficient expansion, and deny access to
                                                                                                         to eliminate undue discrimination in
                                                 service.46 ELCON argues that an ICIF                                                                          competitors. They add that the ICIF
                                                                                                         transmission service. APPA and TAPS
                                                 owner should retain the rights over its                                                                       owner is likely to be the competitor of
                                                                                                         contend that the NOPR, as proposed,
                                                 ICIF for its own future projected use.47                                                                      the third party seeking interconnection
                                                                                                         fundamentally erodes open access by
                                                                                                                                                               and transmission service over the ICIF,
                                                                                                         making it effectively impossible for
                                                                                                                                                               giving the ICIF owner strong incentive
                                                   38 See Appendix A for a list of NOPR
                                                                                                         subsequent competitive generation
                                                 commenters.                                                                                                   to use its control over ICIF to the
                                                                                                         developers to interconnect with the ICIF
                                                   39 These include AWEA, BHE, BP Wind, Linden,                                                                advantage of its own generation
                                                                                                         owner’s facilities for long periods of
                                                 DTE, E.ON, EEI, ELCON, EPSA, First Wind,                                                                      resources.60
                                                 Invenergy, ITC, MISO, MISO TOs, NextEra, NRG,           time, if ever.53 NCPA states that while
                                                                                                                                                                  27. APPA and TAPS also state that the
                                                 Recurrent, SEIA, Sempra, Southern, and Terra-Gen.       it supports the Commission’s desire to                Commission cannot assume that open
                                                 SWP also commented on the NOPR, but did not             promote generation development, it
                                                 express support or opposition to the proposed                                                                 access principles need not apply to ICIF
                                                 changes overall.
                                                                                                         shares the concerns expressed by APPA
                                                   40 AWEA at 1; E.ON at 2; and NextEra at 3.            and TAPS that the NOPR imperils the                     54 NCPA   at 3.
                                                   41 EEI at 2.                                          open access underpinnings for
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                                                                                                                                                                 55 NRECA    at 2.
                                                   42 AWEA at 2; Linden at 3; and E.ON at 2.                                                                     56 NCPA states that it supports the comments
                                                   43 BHE at 1; EEI at 2; and ELCON at 2.                  48 MISO  at 4–5.                                    submitted by APPA and TAPS. NCPA at 1 and 3.
                                                   44 Terra-Gen at 1.                                      49 BPWind at 4; Linden at 3; ELCON at 2; and          57 APPA and TAPS at 20 (citing NOPR, FERC
                                                   45 Terra-Gen at 1 (citing New York State Electric     E.ON at 2.                                            Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at PP 32, 36).
                                                                                                           50 MISO at 5.
                                                 & Gas Corp. v. FERC, 638 F.2d 388, 402 (2d. Cir.                                                                58 APPA and TAPS at 21.

                                                 1980), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 821 (1981)).                51 MISO at 5.                                         59 APPA and TAPS at 8 (citing NOPR, FERC Stats.
                                                   46 Linden at 4.                                         52 APPA and TAPS at 2 and NCPA at 3.                & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 9, n.16).
                                                   47 ELCON at 2.                                          53 APPA and TAPS at 2.                                60 APPA and TAPS at 8–9.




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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                  17659

                                                 because competitors can build their                     address the specific ICIF owner                       Specifically, we appreciate that filing
                                                 own, arguing that such lines require                    regulatory burden that the NOPR                       and maintaining an OATT can be
                                                 extensive permitting, and that it is often              identifies. They contend that while the               burdensome to ICIF owners who do not
                                                 more difficult to obtain siting approvals               extra deposit would increase costs for                seek to provide transmission service.
                                                 for a second line once a first line has                 the first entity that seeks service from              Adding a potential OATT obligation to
                                                 been permitted.61 They contend that,                    the ICIF owner’s corporate family, the                a generation project can introduce an
                                                 even where it is possible to obtain                     amount of the deposit would be much                   additional element of risk for the
                                                 necessary siting approvals for                          lower than the costs of requesting,                   developer and its lenders that they
                                                 duplicative lines, inefficient build-out                negotiating, and litigating service under             would not have if the project were not
                                                 of the grid would make it more costly                   sections 210 and 211.64                               subject to the potential obligation to file
                                                 than necessary to access new generation                    31. NRECA suggests that the                        and maintain a transmission tariff. The
                                                 resources, burdening those resources                    Commission could implement a                          risk stems from the policy to require an
                                                 and consumers, as well as undermining                   procedure under which a prospective                   ICIF owner to file an OATT within 60
                                                 competitive wholesale markets.                          customer seeking service on ICIF must                 days of a request for service by a third
                                                    28. APPA and TAPS contend that                       submit a request that is fully supported              party and must begin interconnection
                                                 departure from the Commission’s non-                    by specified information, followed by                 studies. The ICIF owner’s obligation can
                                                 discriminatory access requirements                      the necessary studies and the parties                 be triggered with minimal effort by a
                                                 cannot be excused by the fact that usage                cooperating to reach an agreement for                 third party requester, thus a request for
                                                 of ICIF has been requested infrequently                 service within a specified period of                  service may not sufficiently distinguish
                                                 thus far, arguing that ICIF access may                  time, such as 90 days.65 NRECA adds                   third party requesters who have a well-
                                                 well become more common in the future                   that if the parties are not able to reach             supported request for service from those
                                                 given the increasing dependence on                      an agreement, the ICIF owner would file               that do not. We are aware of situations
                                                 renewable resources.                                    an unexecuted service proposal with the               where the ICIF owner received a request
                                                    29. APPA, TAPS, and NRECA suggest                    Commission.66                                         for service triggering the requirement
                                                 alternatives to the NOPR proposals.                        32. NRECA argues that its proposed                 that the owner file an OATT, but the
                                                 APPA and TAPS state that the                            procedures would address the                          requester then failed to pursue any
                                                 Commission could grant a blanket                        Commission’s concern that the existing                further development.70 This is an
                                                 waiver of OATT, OASIS, and Standards                    policy ‘‘creates too low a bar for third-             additional risk for the ICIF owner.
                                                 of Conduct requirements, but require                    party requests for service’’ because those               35. We also agree that a number of
                                                 ICIF owners to submit a standardized,                   seeking service would be required to                  sections of the pro forma OATT, such as
                                                 more limited OATT within 60 days of                     provide adequate information to support               the provisions regarding network
                                                 a third-party service request. APPA and                 their requests. NRECA also argues that                service, ancillary services, and planning
                                                 TAPS argue that the modified OATT                       its proposal would alleviate the concern              requirements, are arguably inapplicable
                                                 should not remove core elements of                      that an ICIF owner may be required to                 to most or all ICIF owners. Although
                                                 open access, including the obligation to                file an OATT due to a service request by              ICIF owners may propose deviations
                                                 expand and the development of rates for                 a requester that subsequently fails to                from the pro forma OATT, the
                                                 point-to-point service, but could                       pursue any further development,                       Commission’s existing process of
                                                 eliminate provisions for network                        because a mere service request would                  handling these proposed deviations on
                                                 transmission service and ancillary                      no longer trigger that requirement. In                a case-by-case basis can impose the risk
                                                 services.62 They state that this will                   addition, NRECA contends that its                     of a time-consuming proceeding with an
                                                 reduce the regulatory burden on ICIF                    proposal would promote flexibility by                 uncertain outcome.
                                                 owners and eliminate the need to apply                  requiring the parties to work together to                36. Moreover, interconnecting with
                                                 for special waivers on a case-by-case                   attempt to reach an agreement.67                      ICIF often involves unique
                                                 basis, while preserving key limitations                                                                       circumstances that would benefit from
                                                 on the ICIF owner’s ability to                                                                                negotiations to tailor individual access
                                                 discriminate and create barriers to entry               C. Commission Determination                           agreements. However, the existing
                                                 to competitive markets.                                    33. We believe this Final Rule will                policy limits an ICIF owner’s
                                                    30. APPA and TAPS state that the                     relieve regulatory burdens and                        contractual flexibility and does not
                                                 Commission could address the concern                    unnecessary risks from generation                     allow parties to use common facility
                                                 that the existing policy creates too low                developers to encourage the                           agreements or have service governed
                                                 a bar for third-party requests to trigger               development of new generation and                     outside of an OATT.71
                                                 the requirement for an ICIF owner to file               efficient interconnection facilities and                 37. In addition, it is common for an
                                                 an OATT by specifying clarified and                     promote competition while ensuring                    ICIF owner to initially have excess
                                                 heightened thresholds for a service                     access to transmission on a not unduly                capacity on its ICIF when it plans to
                                                 request to trigger the requirement to file.             discriminatory basis.                                 bring generation into commercial
                                                 They add that the Commission could                         34. Our action is supported by                     service in stages. The Commission has
                                                 approve fee structures that enable an                   comments on the NOPR, the technical
                                                 ICIF owner to insist upon reasonable                    conference,68 and Notice of Inquiry.69                   70 See NextEra at 5 (‘‘Two of the three NextEra

                                                 deposits before the obligation to file a                                                                      subsidiaries that received inquiries triggering OATT
                                                 notice of receipt of a service request                    64 APPA                                             filings with respect to their ICIF—Sagebrush and
                                                                                                                     and TAPS at 23–24.
                                                                                                                                                               Peetz Logan—never had customers actually pursue
                                                 and, subsequently, an OATT is                             65 NRECA    at 5–6.                                 transmission or interconnection service following
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                                                 triggered.63 They argue that such                         66 NRECA at 6–7.
                                                                                                                                                               the initial inquiries’’) and Terra-Gen at 2 (‘‘Dixie
                                                 additional deposits would discourage                      67 NRECA at 7.
                                                                                                                                                               Valley . . . incurred substantial costs in attempting
                                                                                                           68 Priority Rights to New Participant-Funded        to comply with the Commission’s OATT
                                                 speculative service requests that trigger
                                                                                                         Transmission, March 15, 2011 Technical                requirements over several years, only to find that
                                                 a first-time OATT filing and fully                      Conference, AD11–11–000.                              it would have no way to recover those costs because
                                                                                                           69 Open Access and Priority Rights on               the customer that requested transmission service
                                                   61 APPA and TAPS at 9–10.                             Interconnection Facilities, Notice of Inquiry, FERC   ultimately did not become a transmission
                                                   62 APPA and TAPS at 21–22.                                                                                  customer’’).
                                                                                                         Stats. & Regs. ¶ 35,574 (cross-referenced at 139
                                                   63 APPA and TAPS at 23.                               FERC ¶ 61,051 (2012).                                    71 Sky River, 134 FERC ¶ 61,064 at P 13.




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                                                 17660             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 a process for granting priority rights to               expense of requests that are unlikely to              operates ICIF, in whole or in part, and
                                                 the ICIF owner for such excess capacity                 be successful. Accordingly, we find that              sells electric energy from its generating
                                                 on a case-by-case basis. However, filing                reforming the open access transmission                facility, as those terms are defined in the
                                                 a petition for declaratory order to                     requirements in this narrow set of                    pro forma LGIP and the pro forma LGIA
                                                 establish priority rights can be a                      circumstances is appropriate.                         adopted in Order No. 2003. The LGIA
                                                 significant burden for the ICIF owner                      39. We find that APPA and TAPS’                    and LGIP define ICIF as ‘‘all facilities
                                                 because the Commission’s existing                       concerns that the NOPR would allow an                 and equipment, as identified in
                                                 policy of requiring a demonstration of                  ICIF owner to close off access to                     Appendix A of the LGIA, that are
                                                 ‘‘specific plans and milestones’’ can                   significant highways to areas ripe for                located between the generating facility
                                                 require substantial effort and resources                renewable resource development                        and the Point of Change of Ownership,
                                                 on the part of the ICIF owner to make                   overlook practical considerations of                  including any modification, addition, or
                                                 the necessary showings. Further, these                  infrastructure development. The                       upgrades to such facilities and
                                                 priority rights do not diminish the risk                approach taken in this Final Rule                     equipment necessary to physically and
                                                 and potential burden that the ICIF                      recognizes that, often, an ICIF owner                 electrically interconnect the generating
                                                 owner may have to file an OATT within                   anticipates that it will use its excess               facility to the transmission provider’s
                                                 60 days of a request for service.                       ICIF capacity, and seeks to reduce                    transmission system.’’ 77
                                                    38. Contrary to APPA and TAPS’                       unnecessary regulatory burdens. The                   2. Comments
                                                 argument that the proposed revisions                    Commission precedent with respect to
                                                 will likely cost more to implement than                 priority use has given ICIF owners the                   42. First Wind and Invenergy
                                                 the Commission’s existing OATT                          opportunity to demonstrate that they                  recommend that the Commission not
                                                 requirements,72 other commenters assert                 had pre-existing contractual obligations              define the interconnection facilities
                                                 that the risks described above fall on all              or other specific plans that would                    subject to the waiver with reference to
                                                 ICIF owners and therefore that the                      prevent them from providing the                       the LGIA and LGIP, but simply as those
                                                 Commission’s existing policy imposes                    requested transmission service at a                   facilities located between the generating
                                                 costs,73 despite the fact that it is                    future date.75 In balancing the                       facility and the point of interconnection
                                                 unlikely that any third party would                     considerations, we are persuaded that                 to the transmission provider’s
                                                 request OATT service on most ICIF. The                  the process under sections 210 and 211                transmission system. This is because
                                                 Commission has issued numerous                          allows an ICIF owner to be reasonably                 some interconnection agreements
                                                 individual orders granting waivers of                   assured of being able to use that extra               predate Order No. 2003 which first
                                                 OATT, OASIS, and Standards of                           capacity, while also providing a                      defined ICIF; some may be implemented
                                                 Conduct to ICIF owners, but in only four                mechanism for expansion. Without such                 under the small generator
                                                 instances did a third-party request                     reasonable assurance, there is no                     interconnection procedures under Order
                                                 access on ICIF such that the filing of an               incentive for a developer to shoulder the             No. 2006; and some agreements were
                                                 OATT was required.74 Although only a                    extra expense of ICIF sized larger than               entered into with non-Commission
                                                 small percentage of ICIF owners have                    their initial project.                                jurisdictional transmission providers.
                                                 actually had to file an OATT, all ICIF                     40. Moreover, we agree with NRECA                  They argue that the definition of ICIF
                                                 owners are subject to the additional                    that it is important to promote flexibility           and generating facility should be revised
                                                 risks and potential regulatory burdens                  by encouraging the ICIF owner and the                 to encompass facilities that may not be
                                                 discussed above, including possibly                     third party to work together to attempt               installed under the Commission’s LGIA/
                                                 having to file an OATT on 60 days’                      to reach an agreement. As discussed                   LGIP arrangements.78 Similarly, AWEA
                                                 notice in response to a request for                     further below, this Final Rule adopts a               seeks clarification that ICIF owners who
                                                 service, and possibly losing some of the                framework that includes opportunities                 do not have interconnection agreements
                                                 ICIF capacity planned for future use to                 for the ICIF owner and third party to                 under pro forma arrangements or those
                                                 a requesting third party. In response to                reach mutually agreeable solutions,                   that have shared facilities agreements
                                                 commenters concerns that the process                    either as part of a proceeding under                  (or similar understandings) also qualify
                                                 under sections 210 and 211 is more                      sections 210 and 211, or in such a way                for the blanket waiver.79
                                                 expensive for potential transmission                    that obviates the need to bring a                     3. Commission Determination
                                                 customers than the existing process, we                 proceeding under sections 210 and 211
                                                                                                         to the Commission.                                       43. We expand our definition of what
                                                 note that the cost of any process has
                                                                                                                                                               interconnection facilities are subject to
                                                 many variables. This Final Rule                         IV. Proposed Reforms                                  the Final Rule to include ICIF as well as
                                                 specifically allows for voluntary
                                                                                                         A. Eligible ICIF                                      comparable jurisdictional
                                                 interconnection agreements, which may
                                                                                                                                                               interconnection facilities that are the
                                                 be a more efficient process than                        1. Commission Proposal                                subject of interconnection agreements
                                                 currently exists. Under our existing
                                                                                                            41. In the NOPR, the Commission                    other than an LGIA. For those
                                                 policy, while a potential transmission
                                                                                                         defined the facilities that were subject to           interconnection customers that have
                                                 customer may trigger an ICIF owner’s
                                                                                                         the rule as ICIF because that term                    entered into an LGIA, these facilities
                                                 OATT obligation by making a simple
                                                                                                         already had a specific definition in the              will be those defined as ICIF in the
                                                 request for service, the potential
                                                                                                         pro forma LGIA and LGIP.76 The                        LGIA and LGIP. For those
                                                 customer often bears the expense to be
                                                                                                         Commission proposed to apply the                      interconnection customers that have
                                                 a party to what are sometimes
                                                                                                         NOPR reforms to any public utility that               entered into interconnection agreements
                                                 controversial proceedings. We find that
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                                                                                                         is subject to OATT, OASIS, and                        other than an LGIA, these facilities will
                                                 the proposed reforms will avoid the
                                                                                                         Standards of Conduct requirements                     be the comparable set of interconnection
                                                   72 APPA                                               solely because it owns, controls, or                  facilities as those described as ICIF in
                                                           and TAPS at 20.
                                                   73 AWEA  at 2 and E.ON at 2.
                                                                                                                                                               the LGIA. Therefore, the term ICIF
                                                   74 Between January 1, 2009, and January 1, 2014,        75 See, e.g., Aero Modification Order, 116 FERC
                                                                                                                                                                 77 LGIA
                                                                                                                                                                       Article 1.
                                                 the Commission issued approximately 80 orders           ¶ 61,149 at P 28.
                                                                                                                                                                 78 First
                                                                                                                                                                       Wind at 11–12 and Invenergy at 4–6.
                                                 granting waiver of OATT, OASIS, and Standards of          76 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at PP 1 and

                                                 Conduct requirements to ICIF owners.                    35.                                                     79 AWEA at 7–8.




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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                         17661

                                                 should be read in this Final Rule to                    the NOPR that a blanket waiver is                     ICIF capacity as they arise on an
                                                 encompass this broader scope. We use                    justified because such facilities do not              individual basis.88
                                                 the term ‘‘comparable’’ set of                          typically present the concerns about                     48. Some commenters argue that
                                                 interconnection facilities because the                  discriminatory conduct that the                       adjudicating such OATT waiver
                                                 definition of ICIF in the LGIA is made                  Commission’s OATT, OASIS, and                         requests and OATT tariff filings on a
                                                 with reference to specific facilities listed            Standards of Conduct requirements                     case-by-case basis has led to confusion
                                                 in an appendix to the LGIA and to terms                 were intended to address.82                           and uncertainty in the industry with
                                                 defined elsewhere in the LGIA.                          Commenters agree that the                             respect to compliance with the
                                                 Therefore, we cannot apply literally the                Commission’s existing practice of                     Commission’s open access requirements
                                                 definition of ICIF in the LGIA to                       requiring an OATT for ICIF discourages                as applied to ICIF.89 DTE argues that
                                                 describe facilities in interconnection                  generation development and results in a               there is a filing burden associated with
                                                 agreements other than the LGIA.                         disincentive to be the first developer in             making a waiver request, as well as
                                                 Generally, this comparable set of                       an area to build ICIF, while creating a               some uncertainty about the actions that
                                                 facilities would include all facilities and             relative advantage for subsequent                     would need to be taken in the unlikely
                                                 equipment that are located between an                   competing generation developers in that               event that these requests for waiver
                                                 interconnection customer’s generating                   area.83 Additionally, they argue that the             were not granted. DTE states that the
                                                 facility and the point where such                       Commission’s existing practice                        proposed blanket waiver would remove
                                                 facilities connect to the transmission                  unreasonably causes developers of ICIF                any uncertainty regarding the current
                                                 provider’s interconnection facilities                   to incur significant costs in response to             status of existing eligible ICIF owners
                                                 (called the ‘‘point of change of                        mere written third-party requests                     that may have been awaiting the
                                                 ownership’’ in the LGIA) that are                       unaccompanied by any deposit.                         Commission’s direction on this matter
                                                 necessary to physically and electrically                Commenters agree that the requirement                 before making the determination of
                                                 interconnect the interconnection                        to file an OATT following any third-                  whether or not to seek a ‘‘limited and
                                                 customer’s generating facility to the                   party request creates a regulatory                    discrete’’ waiver from the OATT, OASIS
                                                 transmission provider’s facilities that                 burden without a corresponding                        and Standards of Conduct regulations.90
                                                 are used to provide transmission service                enhancement of access.84                              Similarly, NextEra argues that the
                                                 (called the ‘‘point of interconnection’’ in
                                                                                                            46. Commenters state that the OATT                 implication of the description of
                                                 the LGIA).
                                                                                                         is not a good fit for the services that can           existing policy in the NOPR is that a
                                                 B. Grant Blanket Waivers to Eligible ICIF               be provided over ICIF, and argue that                 significant number of generation owners
                                                 Owners                                                  such limited service is not comparable                should be taking actions to address
                                                                                                         to the integrated network, point-to-                  existing open access requirements.
                                                 1. Blanket Waivers
                                                                                                         point, and ancillary services provided                NextEra points out that, in the NOPR,
                                                 a. Commission Proposal                                  under the pro forma OATT.85 E.ON                      the Commission notes that this lack of
                                                    44. The Commission proposed to add                   agrees that the current OATT                          clarity extends to whether market-based
                                                 sub-paragraph (d)(2) to 18 CFR 35.28 to                 requirement can be seen as burdensome                 rate applicants that own ICIF, or have
                                                 grant a blanket waiver of all OATT,                     by ICIF owners who do not seek to be                  affiliates that own ICIF, must file an
                                                 OASIS, and Standards of Conduct                         in the business of providing                          OATT or seek a waiver from OATT
                                                 requirements to any public utility that is              transmission service, can introduce an                requirements in order to show a lack of
                                                 subject to such requirements solely                     additional element of risk for the                    vertical market power. NextEra argues
                                                 because it owns, controls, or operates                  developer and its lenders that they                   that the proposed waiver will provide
                                                 ICIF, in whole or in part, and sells                    would not have if the project were not                much needed certainty for ICIF owners
                                                 electric energy from its generating                     subject to the potential obligation to file           by clearly identifying those entities that
                                                 facility, as those terms are defined in the             and maintain a transmission tariff, and               are not subject to OATT, OASIS, or
                                                 LGIP and LGIA.80 The Commission                         limits an ICIF owner’s contractual                    Standards of Conduct requirements.91
                                                 proposed that the blanket waiver would                  flexibility if it chooses to provide third-              49. Southern agrees that the blanket
                                                 apply to all eligible existing and future               party access by mutual agreement.86                   waiver approach appears to be
                                                 ICIF owners, and explained that the                        47. Commenters state that the                      appropriate given that very few
                                                 limitation to ICIF owners that sell                     Commission’s existing policy of                       generator tie lines have the
                                                 electric energy was meant to ensure that                requiring an ICIF owner to file an OATT               characteristics (e.g., long length, excess
                                                 the proposed blanket waiver would only                  or seek a waiver that would be revoked                capacity) that would make them more
                                                 apply in situations where sections 210                  only upon a third-party request for                   feasible for interconnection by another
                                                 and 211 would provide interconnection                   service creates too low a bar for third-              generator than the transmission
                                                 and transmission access to a customer                   party requests for service and could lead             system.92
                                                 that seeks service over the ICIF.81                     to competitive mischief.87 BHE argues                    50. In contrast, APPA and TAPS state
                                                 b. Comments                                             that ICIF owners are focused on                       that creating and maintaining two
                                                    45. The majority of commenters                       developing new generation resources                   different standards for access to
                                                 support the Commission’s proposal to                    and that, given the infrequency of third-             transmission facilities is problematic in
                                                 grant a blanket waiver of all OATT,                     party requests and the absence of                     a dynamic grid, adding that ICIF that
                                                 OASIS, and Standards of Conduct                         disputes before the Commission, it is                 look like radial lines at the fringe of the
                                                 requirements to public utility ICIF                     more reasonable and efficient to address              system today may be a more central part
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                                                 owners. Commenters agree with the                       third-party requests to access available              of the network in a decade or two.93
                                                 Commission’s preliminary findings in
                                                                                                           82 EEI at 3 and BHE at 6–7.                           88 BHE at 6–7.
                                                                                                           83 EEI at 8–9; BHE at 6–7; and E.ON at 2.             89 NextEra at 3–4.
                                                   80 The Commission also proposed to make non-
                                                                                                           84 EEI at 8–9; BHE at 6–7; and E.ON at 2.             90 DTE at 2.
                                                 substantive revisions to what is currently 18 CFR
                                                                                                           85 NextEra at 4–5 and E.ON at 2.                      91 NextEra at 7.
                                                 35.28(d) in order to update certain cross-references
                                                 in that paragraph.                                        86 E.ON at 2.                                         92 Southern at 4.
                                                   81 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 35.          87 BHE at 6–7 and E.ON at 2.                          93 APPA and TAPS at 10.




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                                                 17662              Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                    51. APPA and TAPS argue that the                      conduct that the Commission’s OATT,                   determinations on whether they qualify
                                                 Commission has long required market-                     OASIS, and Standards of Conduct                       for an ICIF blanket waiver.
                                                 based rate sellers that own transmission                 requirements were intended to address.                   58. As discussed further below, the
                                                 to demonstrate mitigation of vertical                    Because third-party requests to use ICIF              blanket waiver adopted herein only
                                                 market power by showing that they and                    have been relatively rare, it is more                 applies in situations where sections 210,
                                                 their affiliates either have filed an                    efficient to address such situations as               211, and 212 would provide
                                                 OATT or received a waiver for every                      they arise on an individual basis.                    interconnection and transmission access
                                                 transmission facility that they own,                        56. Further, the ICIF waiver would                 to a customer that seeks service over the
                                                 operate, or control, and to offer third                  remove regulatory burdens on                          ICIF. This ensures that we are only
                                                 parties service comparable to the service                competitive generation developers                     waiving the OATT requirements in
                                                 the market-based rate sellers and their                  without sacrificing the Commission’s                  circumstances where there is an
                                                 affiliates provide themselves. APPA and                  ability to require open access in                     alternative for third parties to seek not
                                                 TAPS contend that the proposed blanket                   appropriate circumstances. Specifically,              unduly discriminatory access.
                                                 waiver does not clarify the manner by                    we find that a blanket waiver will
                                                 which ICIF owners can address                                                                                  2. Requirement That ICIF Owners Must
                                                                                                          remedy the undue burden on ICIF
                                                 concerns about vertical market power                                                                           Sell Electricity To Qualify for the
                                                                                                          owners under our existing policy to file
                                                 when they seek market-based rate                                                                               Waiver
                                                                                                          an OATT or seek a waiver that would
                                                 authority, but rather that it magnifies
                                                                                                          be revoked upon a third-party request                 a. Commission Proposal
                                                 those concerns by discarding an
                                                                                                          for service from ICIF owners. We find
                                                 essential foundation for allowing the                                                                             59. The Commission proposed to
                                                                                                          that the time, effort, and cost of
                                                 ICIF owner and its affiliates to enjoy                                                                         grant the blanket waiver to any public
                                                                                                          complying with the requirements of a
                                                 market-based rates.94                                                                                          utility that is subject to the
                                                    52. APPA and TAPS state that they                     public utility transmission provider in
                                                                                                          these circumstances unduly burden                     Commission’s OATT, OASIS, and
                                                 would not oppose an initial grant of a                                                                         Standards of Conduct requirements
                                                 blanket waiver of the requirement that                   generation development efforts. In
                                                                                                          addition, we agree with commenters                    solely because it owns, controls, or
                                                 each ICIF owner must file an individual                                                                        operates ICIF, in whole or in part, and
                                                 request for waiver of OATT, OASIS, and                   that the existing policy creates too low
                                                                                                          a bar for third-party requests for service.           sells electric energy from its generating
                                                 Standards of Conduct, provided that                                                                            facility. The Commission’s proposal to
                                                 such waivers would be revoked upon                       Specifically, an existing waiver of the
                                                                                                          OATT is revoked as soon as the ICIF                   limit the waiver to ICIF owners who sell
                                                 receipt of a third-party request for                                                                           electric energy was intended to ensure
                                                 service on the ICIF.95                                   owner receives a third-party request for
                                                                                                          service, even if that request meets few               that any public utility with an OATT
                                                    53. APPA and TAPS argue that the                                                                            blanket waiver would be subject to an
                                                 NOPR places no limit on the proposed                     of the information and other
                                                                                                          requirements for transmission service                 interconnection order under section
                                                 blanket waiver, extending it to periods                                                                        210. This requirement was seen as
                                                 when there is no reasonable expectation                  under the pro forma OATT.
                                                                                                                                                                necessary so as not to create a gap and
                                                 that the ICIF owner is still in the project                 57. Finally, we agree with DTE and                 leave a potential customer without a
                                                 development mode.                                        NextEra that providing a blanket waiver               means of obtaining an interconnection
                                                    54. NRECA states that it does not                     of the OATT for ICIF owners will clarify              with ICIF once the OATT
                                                 object to exempting certain ICIF owners                  how they meet the OATT filing or                      interconnection procedures were
                                                 from the mandate to file an OATT and                     OATT waiver requirements involved                     waived.99
                                                 related requirements for limited and                     when seeking market-based rate
                                                 discrete facilities, but that any such                   authority.98 APPA and TAPS argue that                    60. Section 210 of the FPA provides,
                                                 waiver should be revoked if the entity                   the blanket waiver does not explain how               in relevant part, ‘‘Upon application of
                                                 no longer meets those criteria.96                        sellers would address vertical market                 any electric utility . . . the Commission
                                                                                                          power for purposes of market-based rate               may issue an order requiring (A) the
                                                 c. Commission Determination                                                                                    physical connection of . . . the
                                                                                                          authority. However, this Final Rule
                                                   55. We adopt the proposed blanket                      simply provides an additional method                  transmission facilities of any electric
                                                 waiver with modifications as discussed                   for obtaining waiver of the OATT                      utility, with the facilities of such
                                                 below.97 We believe the proposal as                      requirements. Therefore, to the extent                applicant.’’ 100 An ‘‘electric utility’’ is
                                                 modified addresses the concerns of                       that a market-based rate seller or any of             defined as ‘‘a person or Federal or State
                                                 commenters while meeting our purpose                     its affiliates owns, operates, or controls            agency . . . that sells electric
                                                 of reducing unnecessary burden and                       transmission facilities, the Commission               energy.’’ 101 Thus, the NOPR granted the
                                                 providing clarity and certainty to                       will require that, in order to satisfy the            waiver only to those that qualified as an
                                                 developers. Such a waiver is justified                   Commission’s market-based rate vertical               electric utility to ensure that section 210
                                                 because the usually limited and discrete                 market power requirements in 18 CFR                   would be applicable. The Commission
                                                 nature of ICIF and ICIF’s dedicated                      35.37(d), it either must have a                       stated that it believes that there would
                                                 interconnection purpose means that                       Commission-approved OATT on file,                     be a relatively small number of ICIF
                                                 such facilities do not typically present                 receive waiver of the OATT requirement                owners who could not be subject to
                                                 the concerns about discriminatory                        under 18 CFR 35.28(d)(1), or satisfy the              orders under sections 210 and 211, and
                                                                                                          requirements for blanket waiver under                 sought comments on whether this
                                                   94 APPA   and TAPS at 14.                              18 CFR 35.28(d)(2). Market-based rate                 limitation on which public utilities can
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                                                   95 APPA   and TAPS at 20.                              filings cannot be used as the vehicle by              take advantage of the blanket waiver is
                                                   96 NRECA at 4.
                                                                                                          which applicants may obtain                           appropriate. The Commission noted that
                                                   97 Certain aspects of the blanket ICIF waiver
                                                                                                                                                                ICIF owners who were not electric
                                                 adopted herein differ from the NOPR proposal. E.g.,
                                                 see infra PP 73–75 for the Commission                       98 To demonstrate the absence of vertical market
                                                                                                                                                                  99 NOPR,    FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at PP 35,
                                                 determination on the public utilities eligible for the   power in a market power analysis, a seller or its
                                                 blanket waiver and supra P 43 for the Commission         affiliate that owns, operates, or controls            43.
                                                                                                                                                                  100 16   U.S.C. 824i(a)(1)(A).
                                                 determination on the ICIF eligible for the blanket       transmission facilities must have an OATT on file
                                                 waiver.                                                  unless waived. See 18 CFR 35.37(d).                     101 16   U.S.C. 796(22).



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                  17663

                                                 utilities had the option to seek waiver                  own the ICIF because an RTO requests                    precisely the same burdens and
                                                 on a case-by-case basis.102                              to have a single point of contact for                   regulatory inefficiencies identified as
                                                                                                          multiple generators interconnecting at                  the basis for the Commission’s NOPR, in
                                                 b. Comments
                                                                                                          the same point on the grid.108                          a manner which discriminates against
                                                    61. Some commenters argue that it is                     63. E.ON argues that an ICIF-only                    non-sellers of electric energy.115
                                                 common for separate ICIF-only                            entity should be afforded the same                         65. ITC also is concerned that the
                                                 companies to be created and owned by                     opportunity to obtain a blanket waiver                  Commission’s proposal to limit
                                                 a generation company or an affiliate, so                 as entities that sell electricity because               eligibility for the waiver may have
                                                 that an entity separate from the                         this type of entity only exists to                      unintended consequences. For example,
                                                 generation company is used to own,                       accommodate a generator company’s                       given the practical burdens associated
                                                 operate, and manage the ICIF.103                         phased access to the grid.109 Recurrent                 with the operation and maintenance of
                                                 Further, these commenters argue that it                  states that when an interconnection                     ICIF, ICIF owners may wish to divest
                                                 is unnecessary to exclude from the                       company structure is used, the physical                 such facilities to transmission owners
                                                 waiver and safe harbor those entities                    arrangement is identical to where the                   with more experience operating these
                                                 that do not sell electric energy, and that               same entity owns the generation and the                 types of facilities, and more resources
                                                 the Commission can and should modify                     ICIF—the only difference is that a                      for meeting the reliability requirements
                                                 the proposal to make the waiver                          separate entity, the interconnection                    of such operation. ITC argues that
                                                 applicable to entities that only own the                 company, owns all or a portion of the                   failure to extend the blanket waiver in
                                                 ICIF but do not sell electric energy.                    ICIF and no generation.110 SEIA asserts                 such scenarios may discourage such
                                                 They also argue that the Commission                      that the Commission should not impose                   transactions, thereby imposing
                                                 routinely grants OATT waivers for such                   unnecessary burdens on developers                       reliability and operational burdens on
                                                 companies under the limited and                          based on their use of this ownership                    generator owners who may not be
                                                 discrete facilities factor.104                           structure.111 ITC argues that the ICIF                  willing or able to carry them out.116
                                                    62. Recurrent, SEIA, and Sempra                       owned by an ICIF-only entity will be                    MISO TOs quote the NOPR as stating
                                                 argue that ICIF-only companies often are                 functionally identical to situations                    that the pro forma OATT is not a good
                                                 employed when the generation project                     where generators own ICIF, and the                      fit for ICIF and that these facilities do
                                                 is developed in phases, and separate                     service is likely to be the same.112 BP                 not typically present all the concerns
                                                 companies own the discrete portions of                   Wind agrees that the Commission                         the OATT is intended to address; MISO
                                                 the generating facility that is the subject              should ensure that ICIF-only entities are               TOs assert that the same is true whether
                                                 of a LGIA.105 SEIA states that                           not precluded from being eligible for the               the ICIF owner happens to sell electric
                                                 establishing a separate entity can                       proposed blanket waiver on a                            energy from its generating facility or
                                                 facilitate management of the jointly-                    technicality, so long as the facilities are             not.117
                                                 owned ICIF, assist in establishing a                     utilized to interconnect generating                        66. Recurrent and Sempra further
                                                 single point of contact with the                         facilities to the transmission grid.113 BP              argue that the Commission has
                                                 interconnected transmission owner and                    Wind argues that these interconnection-                 addressed these types of ownership
                                                 operator, and can facilitate the addition                only entities, like generators that                     arrangements in the context of ‘‘exempt
                                                 of other ICIF users.106 Sempra states that               directly own interconnection facilities,                wholesale generator’’ (EWG) status
                                                 the ICIF-only entity structure has also                  do not seek to be in the transmission                   pursuant to section 32 of the Public
                                                 been utilized because of tax regulations                 business.                                               Utility Holding Company Act of 2005
                                                 and other permitting considerations.107                     64. First Wind and Invenergy argue                   (PUHCA).118 Recurrent states that the
                                                 BP Wind notes that sometimes a                           that, if the Commission does not extend                 Commission has held that an entity that
                                                 separate stand-alone entity is formed to                 the blanket waiver to ICIF-only entities,               does not own generation facilities but
                                                                                                          the rule would be discriminatory                        does own a radial interconnection line
                                                   102 NOPR,   FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at PP 51–     because there is no basis to distinguish                used solely to connect wholesale-only
                                                 52.                                                      the two types of ICIF entities other than               generating facilities to the transmission
                                                    103 Recurrent at 4; First Wind at 4–8; Invenergy
                                                                                                          corporate structure, and ICIF-only                      grid qualifies as an EWG. Recurrent
                                                 at 7–11; BP Wind at 4–5; E.ON at 6; ITC at 8;                                                                    argues that section 32(a)(2) of PUHCA
                                                 NextEra at 7–9; SEIA at 4–5; Sempra at 3–6; and          entities would face the undue burdens
                                                 MISO TOs at 5–6.                                         identified in the NOPR.114 ITC and                      states that the term ‘‘eligible facility’’
                                                    104 First Wind at 4–8 and Invenergy at 7–11.          MISO TOs argue that to provide a                        includes interconnecting transmission
                                                    105 Sempra at 3 (citing, e.g., Wolverine Creek
                                                                                                          blanket waiver to ICIF owners that sell                 facilities necessary to effect a sale of
                                                 Goshen Interconnection LLC, Docket Nos. ER06–            electric energy, but to require ICIF                    electric energy at wholesale, and that an
                                                 267–000 (Letter Order dated Jan. 13 2006),                                                                       entity may be an EWG if it owns ‘‘all or
                                                 Wolverine Creek Energy LLC, et al., Docket Nos.          owners that do not sell electric energy
                                                                                                          to file an OATT or seek waiver thereof,                 part of one or more eligible facilities.’’
                                                 ER12–1280–000 and ER12–1281–000 (May 9, 2012)
                                                 (unpublished letter order accepting amended              serves no clear purpose and imposes                     Recurrent states that with respect to the
                                                 common facilities agreement for filing), and Maine
                                                 GenLead, LLC, 146 FERC ¶ 61,223 (2014)).                   108 BP
                                                                                                                                                                    115 ITC  at 12–13 and MISO TOs at 5–6.
                                                    106 SEIA at 4.
                                                                                                                   Wind at 4–5. MISO’s comments seem to
                                                                                                                                                                    116 ITC  at 13.
                                                                                                          support this point, stating, ‘‘from an operational
                                                    107 Sempra at 3 (citing, e.g., Docket No. ER03–                                                                 117 MISO TOs at 5–6.
                                                                                                          and reliability perspective, MISO needs to have a
                                                 175–000, ‘‘Request of Termoelectrica U.S., LLC for       single Interconnection Customer entity at each            118 Sempra at 4–5 (citing, e.g., Wolverine Creek
                                                 Rehearing, and Expedited Consideration and/or            distinct Point of Interconnection to the                Goshen Interconnection LLC, 111 FERC ¶ 62,209
                                                 Stay’’ at n.6 (filed Feb. 10, 2003) (TDM Rehearing       Transmission System with whom MISO can                  (2005) (Wolverine Creek Goshen); Sagebrush, 103
                                                 Request), and Termoelectrica U.S., LLC, 105 FERC         coordinate. That entity must have the authority to      FERC ¶ 61,332 (2003) (Sagebrush); Termoelectrica
                                                 ¶ 61,087 (2003) (order granting rehearing relating to    control any other generators that interconnect to its   U.S., LLC, 102 FERC ¶ 61,019 (2003)
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                                                 OATT waivers), Docket No. EC14–80–000,                   ICIF on its side of the Point of Interconnection.’’     (Termoelectrica); Peetz Logan Interconnect, LLC,
                                                 ‘‘Application for Authorization to Transfer              MISO at 8.                                              Docket No. EG06–84–000, ‘‘Notice of Exempt
                                                 Jurisdictional Facilities Pursuant to section 203 of       109 E.ON at 6–7.                                      Wholesale Generator Status’’ (Sept. 27, 2006);
                                                 the Federal Power Act and Request for Expedited            110 Recurrent at 5–6.                                 Bishop Hill Interconnection LLC, Docket No. EG12–
                                                 Action’’ at pp. 5–6 (describing the planned                111 SEIA at 4–5.
                                                                                                                                                                  24–000, ‘‘Notice of Self-Certification of Exempt
                                                 ownership structure of future cross-border                                                                       Wholesale Generator Status’’ (Jan. 20, 2012); Maine
                                                                                                            112 ITC at 12–13.
                                                 interconnection facilities), and Energia Sierra                                                                  GenLead LLC, Docket No. EG14–23–000, ‘‘Notice of
                                                                                                            113 BP Wind at 6.
                                                 Juarez U.S., LLC, Docket No. EC14–80–000 (May 29,                                                                Self-Certification of Exempt Wholesale Generator
                                                 2014) (letter order approving transfer)).                  114 First Wind at 4–8 and Invenergy at 7–11.          Status’’ (Jan. 24, 2014)).



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                                                 17664              Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 statutory requirement that an EWG ‘‘sell                  affiliated generator, as the Commission               forward with its project.129 ITC argues
                                                 electric energy at wholesale,’’ the                       does in the EWG context, as discussed                 that if the Commission does not extend
                                                 Commission has imputed the generation                     above, and extend that blanket waiver                 the blanket waiver to ICIF-only entities,
                                                 owner’s sales of wholesale power to the                   and safe harbor to the ICIF-only                      the Commission should provide the
                                                 interconnection company, in order to                      entity.125                                            option for ineligible entities to file a less
                                                 satisfy the statutory requirement, in all                    69. First Wind and Invenergy argue                 burdensome and more narrowly tailored
                                                 of the proceedings that have addressed                    that the Commission’s concern about                   OATT that governs the terms of
                                                 this issue.119 Recurrent argues that in                   entities not being able to use section 210            interconnections via the LGIP and
                                                 decisions involving requests for waivers                  to request interconnection service can                LGIA.130
                                                 of OATT and related requirements, and                     be addressed by the Commission
                                                                                                                                                                 c. Commission Determination
                                                 in those involving EWG status, the                        creating an equivalent obligation by
                                                 Commission appropriately has not                          regulation for requesting                                73. The proposal to limit the waiver
                                                 elevated form over substance and has                      interconnection from an ICIF entity, and              to ICIF owners that also sell electricity
                                                 not differentiated its regulatory                         then review requests under section 210                was intended to prevent the creation of
                                                 treatment of interconnection companies                    standards.126 Similarly, BP Wind argues               a regulatory gap and ensure that
                                                 from its treatment of a ‘‘single entity’’                 that the Commission should revise its                 potential customers are not deprived of
                                                 that owns both generation and ICIF.120                    regulations so that ICIF-only entities                the ability to seek interconnection with
                                                    67. Several commenters suggest                         that receive a request for                            ICIF as a result of the waiver of ICIF
                                                 potential ways to fix the section 210                     interconnection service would process                 owners’ OATT obligation. We believe
                                                 applicability issue with respect to ICIF-                 the request in accordance with                        that the initial assessment in the NOPR
                                                 only entities, such that the blanket                      requirements similar to those set forth               that relatively few entities that own
                                                 waiver and safe harbor would apply to                     in section 210 of the FPA.127                         and/or operate ICIF would be excluded
                                                 ICIF-only companies, and section 210                         70. NextEra requests that the                      from the blanket waiver by the
                                                 would preserve the ‘‘backstop’’ ability of                Commission clarify that ICIF owners                   requirement that they sell electricity
                                                 third parties to obtain a Commission                      that have authorization from the                      may be incorrect. We also believe that
                                                 order requiring the ICIF-only company                     Commission to sell electric energy at                 the value of reducing regulatory
                                                 to interconnect with and provide                          market-based rates or that are EWGs are               burdens, which is a goal of this Final
                                                 transmission services to the third party.                 engaged in the sale of electric energy for            Rule, applies equally to ICIF owners
                                                 Recurrent proposes that the Commission                    purposes of determining application of                who sell electricity and to those that do
                                                 grant the blanket waiver to an ICIF                       the proposed waiver and application of                not. Therefore, we conclude that we
                                                 owner that does not sell electric energy                  section 210. NextEra argues that this                 should extend the blanket waiver to
                                                 if the interconnection company files a                    would ensure consistency between the                  ICIF owners who do not sell electricity,
                                                 request for waiver that includes a                        Commission’s use of similar terms and                 but, in doing so, we must ensure that no
                                                 commitment that if the Commission                         with Commission precedent with                        potential customers are deprived of
                                                 issues an order requiring the                             respect to EWGs.128 NextEra states that               their ability to seek interconnection
                                                 interconnection company to provide                        there may be instances in which an ICIF               with ICIF by the waiver of the ICIF
                                                 transmission services to a third party                    owner is not currently engaged in sales               owner’s OATT obligation. To expand
                                                 pursuant to section 211 of the FPA—to                     of electricity yet is authorized by the               the entities eligible for the blanket
                                                 which the interconnection company is                      Commission to engage in such sales                    OATT waiver, we adopt the following
                                                 subject—the interconnection company                       under a market-based rates tariff, so it              procedure to allow ICIF-only entities to
                                                 agrees to voluntarily provide                             should qualify as an electric utility.                be eligible for the blanket OATT waiver.
                                                 interconnection to the third party.121                       71. ITC argues that section 210(d)                 Any public utility to which the blanket
                                                 SEIA states that it supports Recurrent’s                  provides that the Commission may, on                  waiver stated in section 35.28(d)(2) of
                                                 proposal.122 Similarly E.ON states that                   its own motion, issue an order requiring              the regulations adopted herein applies,
                                                 the section 210 applicability concern                     any action described in subsection (a)(1)             but which does not sell electric energy,
                                                 could be alleviated by having the ICIF-                   if the Commission determines that such                will receive the blanket waiver upon
                                                 only entity affirmatively submit to the                   order meets the requirements of                       filing an informational statement with
                                                 Commission’s section 210 jurisdiction                     subsection (c). ITC interprets this to                the Commission, as provided for in
                                                 as a condition to being afforded the                      mean that the Commission may issue an                 those regulations adopted herein.131 In
                                                 blanket waiver.123                                        interconnection order on its own                      the statement, the entity must declare
                                                    68. Sempra states that, although ICIF-                 motion, regardless of whether the ICIF                that, ‘‘In order to satisfy the
                                                 only entities may not sell the power                      owner qualifies as an electric utility by             requirements for a blanket waiver as
                                                 produced by their affiliates, they are an                 selling energy.                                       described in section 35.28(d)(2) of the
                                                 indispensable part of the sales                              72. BP Wind argues that, if the                    Commission’s regulations, [entity]
                                                 transaction, and are typically party to                   Commission does not allow ICIF-only                   commits to comply with and be bound
                                                 the interconnection agreement along                       entities to forego filing an OATT, it                 by the obligations and procedures
                                                 with or as agent for the affiliated                       should at a minimum not require such                  applicable to electric utilities under
                                                 generator.124 Therefore, Sempra argues,                   companies to file an OATT with the                    section 210 of the FPA.’’ This
                                                 for the purpose of section 210                            Commission until after completion of                  informational statement may be brief,
                                                 applicability, it would be appropriate to                 interconnection studies by the                        requiring only the name and contact
                                                 impute the electricity sales of an                        interconnecting utility and the                       information for the entity making the
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                                                                                                           requesting party has committed to move                statement, and the affirmative
                                                   119 Recurrent  at 6.                                                                                          declaration described in the previous
                                                   120 Recurrent  at 6–7.                                    125 Sempra  at 4–6.
                                                   121 Recurrent at 9–10.                                    126 First
                                                                                                                     Wind at 4–8 and Invenergy at 7–11.            129 BP Wind at 7.
                                                   122 SEIA at 5 (citing Recurrent at 9–10).               Invenergy also offers a redline of the proposed         130 ITC at 8.
                                                   123 E.ON at 7. E.ON also offers a redline of the        regulations to effect this change.                       131 We will not issue a public notice, accept
                                                 proposed regulations to effect this change.                 127 BP Wind at 5–6.
                                                                                                                                                                 comments, or issue an order on the informational
                                                   124 Sempra at 4.                                          128 NextEra at 7–9.                                 filings.



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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                         17665

                                                 sentence. These section 210 statements                   reducing risks if it would not apply in              waiver adopted by the Final Rule for
                                                 are to be filed in the following docket,                 the circumstance of an ineligible third-             public utilities as eliminating its
                                                 Docket No. AD15–9–000. The                               party requester. They argue that the                 obligation to individually file for
                                                 Commission will take no action in                        Commission does not explain how an                   ‘‘limited and discrete’’ waivers to satisfy
                                                 response to these statements, but the                    ICIF owner would be expected to deal                 reciprocity obligations, thereby avoiding
                                                 blanket waiver will be applicable upon                   with requests from such a third-party                the burden on it and the Commission
                                                 filing this informational statement.                     requester. These parties argue that, if the          associated with such waivers. They state
                                                    74. The purpose of this section 210                   Commission is concerned about this, it               that any restrictions or safe harbors
                                                 statement is to create a publically                      should by regulation require such                    adopted with respect to section 210 or
                                                 available record of ICIF-only entities                   entities to follow procedures under                  211 proceedings regarding public utility
                                                 that are taking advantage of the blanket                 sections 210 and 211.134                             ICIF should also be available to such a
                                                 OATT waiver, and of the fact that, even                                                                       non-public utility.
                                                 though these entities are not electric                   c. Commission Determination                             81. NCPA and SWP contend that the
                                                 utilities, they are subject to an                           78. We agree with commenters that                 Final Rule should make clear that any
                                                 application to the Commission under                      making the applicability of the blanket              blanket waiver adopted in this
                                                 section 210 for an interconnection                       waiver to the ICIF owner dependent on                proceeding applies to eligible public
                                                 order. Through this process, our intent                  the status of a potential third-party                utilities and non-public utilities alike,
                                                 is to extend the benefits of the blanket                 requester would create unnecessary                   arguing that treating similarly situated
                                                 OATT waiver to ICIF-only entities,                       uncertainty for ICIF owners.                         utilities differently in this respect would
                                                 protect the rights of potential                          Accordingly, we clarify that                         be unduly discriminatory.137 SWP states
                                                 interconnection customers, and                           applicability of the blanket waiver will             that non-public utilities may request
                                                 minimize the regulatory burden to                        not depend on the status of the third-               waivers from these obligations
                                                 accomplish these goals. If an entity                     party requester. The applicability of the            according to the same criteria as public
                                                 submits such a statement and later                       blanket waiver does, however, depend                 utilities. SWP also argues that there is
                                                 objects to or fails to comply with section               on the status of the ICIF owner or the               no justification for conferring an
                                                 210 obligations and procedures, its                      ICIF owner’s willingness to file a section           advantage on public utilities that non-
                                                 blanket waiver will be deemed to have                    210 statement, as described above.                   public utilities do not share.138
                                                 been revoked.132
                                                    75. Accordingly, we are revising                      4. Non-Public Utilities                              c. Commission Determination
                                                 section 35.28(d)(2) of the regulations to                a. Commission Proposal                                  82. The blanket waiver made available
                                                 incorporate this extension of the blanket                   79. The Commission proposed to                    to public utilities under this Final Rule
                                                 waiver to entities that are not electric                 grant a blanket waiver of all OATT,                  is also available, as commenters suggest,
                                                 utilities, upon the filing of the section                OASIS, and Standards of Conduct                      to non-public utilities with a reciprocity
                                                 210 statement described above. The safe                  requirements to any public utility that is           obligation.
                                                 harbor protections at section                            subject to such requirements solely                  5. Applicability to Industrial Power
                                                 35.28(d)(2)(ii)(B) will also be available                because it owns, controls, or operates               Systems’ Tie Lines
                                                 to those entities eligible for the blanket               ICIF, in whole or in part, and sells
                                                 waiver, as discussed below.                                                                                   a. Comments
                                                                                                          electric energy from its generating
                                                 3. Status of the Third-Party Requester                   facility.135 The NOPR did not specify                   83. ELCON comments that many
                                                                                                          how the blanket waiver would apply to                industrials own and operate combined
                                                 a. Commission Proposal                                                                                        heat and power systems or other types
                                                                                                          non-public utilities.
                                                    76. In the NOPR, the Commission                                                                            of generation that are primarily
                                                 stated, ‘‘To the extent that either the                  b. Comments                                          dedicated to their own consumption
                                                 third-party requester or ICIF owner does                    80. APPA and TAPS state that, in the              needs, and that ambiguity with the
                                                 not meet applicable requirements for                     event the Commission modifies its                    scope of the NOPR may arise because of
                                                 purposes of sections 210 and 211, but                    regulations to create blanket waivers for            commonly used nomenclature, because
                                                 where the third-party requester would                    public utility ICIF owners, the same                 dedicated lines operated by industrials
                                                 be eligible for OATT service, the ICIF                   blanket waiver and safe harbor should                are often referred to as one type of
                                                 waiver would not apply.’’ 133                            also apply to non-jurisdictional utilities           ‘‘generator tie line.’’ ELCON argues that
                                                 b. Comments                                              for purposes of satisfying reciprocity               the NOPR should be revised to clarify
                                                                                                          obligations.136 APPA, TAPS, and SWP                  that the regulations respecting third-
                                                    77. AWEA, First Wind, and Invenergy                   explain that non-public utilities are not            party rights to interconnection facilities,
                                                 argue that a public utility’s eligibility for            directly subject to OATT, OASIS, and                 even as newly constrained, do not apply
                                                 the blanket waivers should not depend                    Standards of Conduct requirements, but               to the generator tie lines operated by
                                                 on the status of any such potential third                are obligated to provide reciprocal                  industrials and dedicated to their own
                                                 party that might seek access to ICIF.                    service over transmission they own,                  internal consumption.139
                                                 They argue that the waiver would not                     operate, or control as a condition of
                                                 provide the expected benefits of                                                                              b. Commission Determination
                                                                                                          taking service under a public utility’s
                                                                                                          OATT. APPA and TAPS state that, to                      84. We decline to revise the proposed
                                                    132 A section 210 informational statement would
                                                                                                          the extent a non-public utility is subject           regulation as ELCON suggests. ELCON’s
                                                 remain operative if the public utility that filed it
                                                 had a change in ownership. However, if the original      to reciprocity solely because it owns,               argument that the NOPR’s discussion of
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                                                 public utility with an informational statement sold      controls, or operates ICIF and sells                 third-party rights to request
                                                 the facilities to a different entity, the new entity     energy from its generation facility, it              interconnection and transmission on
                                                 would have to satisfy the criteria for a waiver                                                               ICIF should not apply to electric lines
                                                 (including, for instance, not owning network
                                                                                                          should be able to point to any blanket
                                                 transmission facilities), and if it does not, it would
                                                                                                                                                               from industrial-owned combined heat
                                                                                                             134 AWEA at 14; First Wind 8–9; and Invenergy
                                                 be subject to OATT requirements. It is the party’s
                                                 responsibility to ensure that its regulatory filings     at 11–12.                                              137 NCPA at 4 and SWP at 4.
                                                 are up to date.                                             135 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 35.     138 SWP at 5.
                                                    133 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 51.          136 APPA and TAPS at 27–29.                         139 ELCON at 2–3.




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                                                 17666             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 and power systems raises an issue that                  7. Existing Agreements and Waivers                     this cancellation policy will apply when
                                                 is not the subject of this rulemaking.                  a. Comments                                            the ICIF owner has no existing
                                                 This Final Rule does not make any                                                                              customers and that any new service
                                                 determination with respect to the                          88. Linden contends that the                        requests submitted after such a filing
                                                                                                         Commission should clarify that the                     has been made must proceed under
                                                 applicability of the Commission’s OATT
                                                                                                         blanket waiver will apply regardless of                sections 210, 211, and 212; and (2)
                                                 requirements to any particular lines or
                                                                                                         whether a public utility has already                   provide an expedited process to grant
                                                 types of lines. Rather, it applies to any               granted access to its ICIF pursuant to a
                                                 transmission providers who are subject                                                                         such requests to withdraw such
                                                                                                         Commission-accepted agreement.                         OATTs.149 Terra-Gen states that it
                                                 to the requirements of section 35.28 of                 Linden argues that the fact that an                    incurred substantial costs in attempting
                                                 our regulations, i.e., any public utility               owner and/or operator of ICIF has                      to comply with the Commission’s OATT
                                                 that owns, controls, or operates facilities             allowed a third-party to use its ICIF                  requirements over several years, only to
                                                 used for the transmission of electric                   pursuant to a Commission-accepted                      find that it could not recover those costs
                                                 energy in interstate commerce.140                       agreement does not change the nature of                because the customer that requested
                                                                                                         such ICIF, and the blanket waiver                      transmission service ultimately did not
                                                                                                         should accordingly continue to                         become a transmission customer. Terra-
                                                 6. Applicability of the Blanket Waiver to               apply.144 Linden states that, at the very              Gen argues that this experience
                                                 Additional Regulations                                  least, the Commission should clarify                   underscores the importance of the
                                                                                                         that all existing waivers that have been               Commission’s proposal to provide a
                                                 a. Commission Proposal
                                                                                                         granted to public utilities like Linden                case-by-case mechanism to accept
                                                   85. In the NOPR, the Commission                       will continue to apply.145                             cancellation of OATTs filed by ICIF
                                                 proposed that the blanket waiver would                  b. Commission Determination                            owners that have proven to be
                                                 apply to section 35.28 of the                                                                                  unnecessary because no third parties are
                                                                                                            89. We affirm granting access over
                                                 Commission’s regulation, which relates                                                                         taking service under them.150 NextEra
                                                                                                         ICIF via an existing agreement, such as
                                                 to OATT requirements, Part 37, which                                                                           requests that the Commission clarify its
                                                                                                         a common facilities agreement or shared
                                                 relates to OASIS requirements, and Part                                                                        statement in the NOPR that withdrawal
                                                                                                         use agreement, does not affect an ICIF
                                                 358, which relates to Standards of                                                                             of an OATT ‘‘if no party is taking
                                                                                                         owner’s eligibility for the blanket waiver
                                                 Conduct for Transmission Providers.141                                                                         service under it’’ was not intended to
                                                                                                         granted by this Final Rule. Further, we
                                                                                                         affirm that, if an entity has previously               preclude the ability of an ICIF owner
                                                 b. Comments                                                                                                    with an OATT on file from exercising its
                                                                                                         received a specific waiver of the OATT
                                                                                                         and related obligations pursuant to the                rights under section 205 of the FPA to
                                                    86. Linden argues that the blanket
                                                                                                         Commission’s ‘‘limited and discrete’’ or               propose alternative tariff structures in
                                                 waiver should be expanded to also                                                                              the future, as appropriate to the facts
                                                 apply to all of Parts 34, 35, 41, 50, 101,              ‘‘small entity’’ standards, the blanket
                                                                                                         waiver will supersede the existing                     and circumstances of service available
                                                 and 141 (except sections 141.14 and                                                                            on the ICIF.151
                                                 141.15) of the Commission’s regulations                 waiver.146 If, as Linden postulates, an
                                                                                                                                                                   92. AWEA further contends that the
                                                 with respect to any provision of                        entity has received a case-specific
                                                                                                         waiver that waives requirements in                     blanket waivers should also
                                                 transmission service or interconnection                                                                        automatically apply to those that
                                                                                                         addition to those waived by the blanket
                                                 service or other sharing with respect to                                                                       already have OATTs on file. AWEA
                                                                                                         waiver, the blanket waiver would not
                                                 ICIF.142 Linden contends that this is                                                                          states that ICIF owners that currently
                                                                                                         rescind the broader waiver.
                                                 consistent with the Commission’s                                                                               have an OATT on file are in need of the
                                                 findings in an order on a proposed                      8. Existing OATTs                                      proposed reforms just as much as future
                                                 shared facilities agreement between                     a. Commission Proposal                                 ICIF owners, and argues that providing
                                                 Linden and its affiliate, in which the                                                                         blanket waivers to this group as well
                                                                                                            90. The Commission proposed that                    would provide consistency and
                                                 Commission found that such regulations                  the grant of a blanket waiver would
                                                 are waived with respect to Linden.143                                                                          certainty to these entities.152
                                                                                                         have no automatic impact on an OATT
                                                 c. Commission Determination                             already on file or on service already                  c. Commission Determination
                                                                                                         being taken under it, but the                             93. In the instance where an ICIF
                                                   87. While we recognize that waiver of                 Commission might on a case-by-case                     owner has an OATT on file and no third
                                                 the provisions mentioned by Linden                      basis consider requests to withdraw an                 parties are taking service, the
                                                 have, under certain circumstances, been                 OATT on file for ICIF if no third party                Commission will consider a request to
                                                 granted by the Commission, we decline                   is taking service under it.147                         withdraw an OATT on a case-by-case
                                                 to expand the scope of this Final Rule.                 b. Comments                                            basis. Thus, we decline to automatically
                                                 The blanket waivers granted in this                                                                            apply blanket waivers to those that
                                                 Final Rule are the same as those that                      91. AWEA, Terra-Gen, and NextEra
                                                                                                                                                                already have OATTs on file. We believe
                                                 could be requested on a case-by-case                    assert that an ICIF owner with an OATT
                                                                                                                                                                this is appropriate in order to give any
                                                 basis for good cause shown in the                       on file should be able to withdraw its
                                                                                                                                                                potential customer actively pursuing
                                                 Commission’s pre-existing regulations at                OATT if there are no third parties
                                                                                                                                                                service sufficient notice before allowing
                                                                                                         taking, or currently pursuing a request
                                                 18 CFR 35.28(d). Whether to grant                                                                              a filed OATT to be withdrawn. As such,
                                                                                                         for, interconnection or transmission
                                                 additional waivers on a generic basis                                                                          we decline to establish a separate
                                                                                                         service.148 AWEA and Terra-Gen ask
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                                                 was not something proposed to be                        that the Commission: (1) Clarify that                  process for cancelling existing OATTs
                                                 addressed in this proceeding.                                                                                  because the Commission will consider
                                                                                                              144 Lindenat 7.                                   the specific circumstances of each
                                                   140 18 CFR 35.28(a).                                       145 Lindenat 7–8.
                                                   141 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 1.             146 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 40.     149 AWEA   at 17 and Terra-Gen at 4.
                                                   142 Linden at 8.                                           147 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 40.     150 Terra-Gen  at 2.
                                                   143 Linden at 8 (citing Cogen Technologies Linden          148 AWEA at 17; NextEra at 10; and Terra-Gen at     151 NextEra at 10–11.

                                                 Venture, L.L.P., 127 FERC ¶ 61,181, at P 20 (2009)).    2.                                                       152 AWEA at 11.




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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                          17667

                                                 request to withdraw an OATT already                     plausible basis for revocation of the                 revoked due to loss of eligibility, the
                                                 on file.                                                waiver, besides losing eligibility, is if an          OASIS and Standards of Conduct
                                                                                                         ICIF owner refuses to provide                         waivers will also be revoked without
                                                 9. Revoking the Blanket Waiver
                                                                                                         transmission access following                         prejudice to the entity filing a request to
                                                 a. Commission Proposal                                  proceedings under sections 210, 211,                  continue the OASIS and Standards of
                                                    94. In the NOPR, the Commission                      and 212. AWEA seeks clarification on                  Conduct waivers.165
                                                 proposed that the blanket waiver would                  what, if any, other criteria might be used            c. Commission Determination
                                                 not be automatically revoked by a                       by the Commission to determine that it
                                                 service request, but could be revoked in                is in the public interest to revoke such                 101. We adopt the NOPR proposal
                                                 a Commission order if the Commission                    a waiver and requests the Commission                  that the blanket waiver would not be
                                                 determines that it is in the public                     to provide clear criteria for what would              automatically revoked by a service
                                                 interest to do so pursuant to a                         constitute a waiver revocation.158 BHE                request, but could be revoked in a
                                                 proceeding under sections 210 and 211.                  states that the waiver should only be                 Commission order if the Commission
                                                 The Commission also proposed that the                   revoked in limited circumstances, such                determines that it is in the public
                                                 waiver would be deemed to be revoked                    as when a third party is granted access               interest to do so pursuant to a
                                                 as of the date the public utility ceases                under sections 210 and 211 of the FPA                 proceeding under sections 210 and 211
                                                                                                         or when material circumstances change                 of the FPA. We also adopt the NOPR
                                                 to satisfy the qualifications for such
                                                                                                         such that the ICIF owner no longer                    proposal that the waiver would be
                                                 waiver (e.g., it owns, controls, or
                                                                                                         satisfies the waiver qualification.159                deemed to be revoked as of the date the
                                                 operates transmission facilities that are
                                                                                                            97. AWEA states that acquisition of                public utility ceases to satisfy the
                                                 not ICIF, or the corporate structure
                                                                                                         transmission facilities should not                    qualifications for such waiver.
                                                 changes such that the ICIF owner is no
                                                                                                         automatically trigger revocation of the               Additionally, if the ICIF that are covered
                                                 longer the entity that sells electric
                                                                                                         blanket waiver. AWEA argues that                      by a blanket waiver become integrated
                                                 energy from its Generating Facility). The
                                                                                                         service over such transmission facilities             into a transmission system such that
                                                 Commission sought comment on the
                                                                                                         will be subject to applicable open access             they can no longer be considered ICIF,
                                                 circumstances under which and the
                                                                                                         regulations but that ICIFs are distinct               the blanket waiver would be deemed to
                                                 mechanism by which the Commission                                                                             have been revoked. To the extent that a
                                                 should revoke the proposed waiver.153                   facilities that exist for the limited
                                                                                                         purpose of connecting generation to the               dispute arises regarding whether a
                                                    95. The Commission also proposed
                                                                                                         grid.160                                              facility is eligible for the waiver, the
                                                 that, if an OATT waiver were revoked
                                                                                                            98. With respect to the revocation                 Commission will address such a dispute
                                                 because of such a change in
                                                                                                         process, AWEA recommends that the                     at that time.
                                                 circumstances, the waivers of OASIS                                                                              102. If the OATT waiver is
                                                 and Standards of Conduct would also be                  Commission provide an ICIF owner
                                                                                                                                                               automatically revoked because of a
                                                 revoked, without prejudice to the ICIF                  with reasonable advanced notice
                                                                                                                                                               change in circumstances, we affirm that
                                                 owner filing a request to continue its                  detailing the reasons for potential
                                                                                                                                                               the waivers of OASIS and Standards of
                                                 waivers of OASIS and Standards of                       revocation, and give the ICIF owner an
                                                                                                                                                               Conduct would also be revoked, without
                                                 Conduct pursuant to the waiver criteria                 opportunity to dispute and to cure the
                                                                                                                                                               prejudice to the ICIF owner filing a
                                                 then in effect.154 In the instance where                reasons for such a potential
                                                                                                                                                               request to continue its waivers of OASIS
                                                 the Commission revokes the ICIF waiver                  revocation.161 AWEA suggests that the
                                                                                                                                                               and Standards of Conduct pursuant to
                                                 by order, the Commission noted that it                  Commission first issue a show cause                   the waiver criteria then in effect.
                                                 may determine whether the OASIS and                     order to the waiver holder to address                    103. We decline to elaborate on the
                                                 Standards of Conduct waivers should be                  why the waiver should not be revoked                  specific circumstances that would lead
                                                 continued based on the criteria that are                and provide an opportunity for the                    to the revocation of the blanket waiver
                                                 in effect.155                                           waiver holder to make that                            other than ceasing to satisfy the
                                                                                                         demonstration.162                                     qualifications for such waiver, because
                                                 b. Comments                                                99. AWEA recommends that the                       it is not possible to anticipate every
                                                    96. NextEra, BHE, and AWEA agree                     Commission outline the process to                     circumstance that would result in a
                                                 that revocation of the blanket waiver                   reinstitute an ICIF owner’s waiver if,                revocation. Revocation of the blanket
                                                 should be considered on a case-by-case                  after revocation of a waiver, it is                   waiver in circumstances other than
                                                 basis and believe that the processes set                discovered that the waiver revocation                 ceasing to satisfy the qualifications for
                                                 forth in sections 210 and 211 of the FPA                was unnecessary, such as, for example,                such waiver will be determined by the
                                                 and section 2.20 of the Commission’s                    if the requirement to file an OATT                    Commission under applicable statutory
                                                 regulations are sufficient to evaluate                  proves to be unnecessary because of the               and regulatory provisions. Any instance
                                                 potential revocation of waivers granted                 failure of the requesting third party to              of revocation, however, would be the
                                                 to ICIF owners.156 If, for example, the                 take transmission service.163                         result of a Commission proceeding, so
                                                 Commission were to determine that an                       100. AWEA supports the Commission                  the ICIF owner would have notice of the
                                                 ICIF owner employed market power                        proposals that (1) if the OATT waiver is              revocation and full due process rights to
                                                 against the third party requesting                      revoked, the Commission may                           respond. Moreover, under sections 210
                                                 service over the ICIF, it would be                      determine whether the OASIS and                       and 211 the Commission may direct
                                                 reasonable for the Commission to                        Standards of Conduct waivers should                   service to be provided under an
                                                 consider the revocation of waiver or                    continue to be based on the criteria in               interconnection and transmission
                                                 other enforcement remedies.157                          effect; 164 and (2) if the OATT waiver is             service agreement without directing that
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                                                 Similarly, AWEA asserts that the only                                                                         the ICIF owner file an OATT. However,
                                                                                                           158 AWEA  at 9.
                                                   153 NOPR,                                               159 BHEat 7.
                                                                                                                                                               the Commission reserves the right to
                                                              FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 38.
                                                   154 Waivers of the Standards of Conduct may be          160 AWEA at 9.                                      revoke the blanket waiver and require
                                                 granted for good cause pursuant to 18 CFR 358.1(d).       161 AWEA at 9–10.                                   the filing of an OATT to ensure open
                                                   155 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 39.         162 AWEA at 10.                                     access in appropriate circumstances.
                                                   156 NextEra at 9–10; BHE at 7–8; and AWEA at 8.         163 AWEA at 10.
                                                   157 NextEra at 10.                                      164 AWEA at 10–11.                                    165 AWEA   at 10–11.



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                                                 17668             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 C. Interconnection and Transmission                        106. An application under section 211                 respect to ICIF that are eligible for the
                                                 Under Sections 210 and 211 of the                       requires that the third party seeking                    blanket waiver discussed above, it is
                                                 Federal Power Act                                       transmission service first make a good                   generally in the public interest under
                                                                                                         faith request for service, complying with                sections 210 and 211 to allow an ICIF
                                                 1. Sections 210 and 211
                                                                                                         18 CFR 2.20, specifying details as to                    owner to retain priority rights to the use
                                                    104. Sections 210 and 211 of the FPA                 how much capacity is requested and for                   of excess capacity on ICIF that it plans
                                                 describe the process for seeking                        what period, at least 60 days before                     to use to interconnect its own or its
                                                 Commission-ordered interconnection                      making an application to the                             affiliates’ future generation projects.176
                                                 and transmission services. Section 210                  Commission for an order requiring                        Thus, the Commission proposed to
                                                 of the FPA provides, in relevant part,                  transmission service.173 The                             make priority determinations for use of
                                                 ‘‘Upon application of any electric utility              Commission may grant an application                      ICIF, in the event of a third party
                                                 . . . the Commission may issue an order                 under section 211 if the application is                  request, in the process under sections
                                                 requiring (A) the physical connection of                in the public interest and otherwise                     210 and 211. The Commission sought
                                                 . . . the transmission facilities of any                meets the requirements under section                     comment on whether an ICIF owner’s or
                                                 electric utility, with the facilities of                212.                                                     affiliate’s planned future use of the ICIF
                                                 such applicant.’’ 166 An ‘‘electric utility’’              107. Section 212 further requires that,               is an appropriate consideration to factor
                                                 is defined as ‘‘a person or Federal or                  before issuing a final order under either                into a proceeding under sections 210
                                                 State agency . . . that sells electric                  section 210 or 211, the Commission                       and 211.
                                                 energy.’’ 167 Section 211 provides that                 must issue a proposed order setting a                       110. Any disputes as to the extent of
                                                 ‘‘any electric utility, Federal power                   reasonable time for the parties to agree                 excess capacity on ICIF or the ICIF
                                                 marketing agency, or any other person                   to terms and conditions for carrying out                 owner’s future plans to use such excess
                                                 generating electric energy for sale or                  the order, including allocation of costs.                capacity would be resolved, subject to
                                                 resale’’ may apply to the Commission                    If parties can agree to terms within that                the safe harbor presumption discussed
                                                 for an order requiring a ‘‘transmitting                 time, the Commission may issue a final                   below, during the proceedings under
                                                 utility’’ to provide transmission                       order approving those terms. If parties                  sections 210 and 211, using an excess
                                                 services, including enlargement of                      do not agree, the Commission will                        capacity analysis similar to that used in
                                                 facilities if necessary.168 The term                    weigh the positions of the parties and                   Aero and Milford, in which the ICIF
                                                 ‘‘transmitting utility’’ is defined as an               issue a final order establishing the terms               owner must demonstrate specific plans
                                                 entity that ‘‘owns, operates, or controls               of costs, compensation, and other terms                  and milestones for the future use of its
                                                 facilities used for the transmission of                 of interconnection and transmission and                  ICIF. Even if an ICIF owner were able to
                                                 electric energy . . . in interstate                     directing service.174                                    demonstrate in such a proceeding that
                                                 commerce . . . for the sale of electric                 a. Commission Proposal                                   no excess capacity exists, if supported
                                                 energy at wholesale.’’ 169 For a third                                                                           by the record in the case, the
                                                                                                            108. The Commission proposed in the                   Commission could order the eligible
                                                 party to obtain interconnection services
                                                                                                         NOPR that, if a third party seeks to use                 ICIF owner to expand its facilities to
                                                 and transmission services, an
                                                                                                         ICIF that qualify for the blanket waiver                 provide interconnection and
                                                 application must be made under both
                                                                                                         discussed above, an eligible entity                      transmission service under sections 210
                                                 sections 210 and 211.170 An applicant
                                                                                                         seeking interconnection and                              and 211.177 Section 212 requires that the
                                                 may consolidate the applications for the
                                                                                                         transmission service on ICIF would                       eligible ICIF owners would be fully
                                                 Commission’s consideration.171
                                                                                                         need to follow the rules and regulations                 compensated for any required
                                                    105. An application under section 210
                                                                                                         applicable to requests for service under                 expansion.178 This is similar to the
                                                 must show that the interconnection: (1)
                                                                                                         sections 210 and 211 (subject to the safe                rights and obligations under the pro
                                                 Is in the public interest; (2) would either             harbor presumption proposed in the
                                                 encourage conservation of energy or                                                                              forma OATT.179
                                                                                                         NOPR).175
                                                 capital, optimize efficient use of                         109. As discussed above, the                            176 NOPR,    FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 47.
                                                 facilities and resources, or improve                    Commission’s current practice with                         177 16  U.S.C. 824i(a)(1)(D) (‘‘The Commission may
                                                 reliability; and (3) meets the                          respect to allowing an ICIF owner to                     issue an order requiring . . . such increase in
                                                 requirements of section 212.172 The                     have priority use of excess transmission                 transmission capacity as may be necessary. . . .’’);
                                                 requirements of section 212 are                         capacity it has built is to allow the ICIF               16 U.S.C. 824j(a) (‘‘Any electric utility . . . may
                                                 discussed further below.                                owner to demonstrate specific plans and                  apply to the Commission for an order under this
                                                                                                                                                                  subsection requiring a transmitting utility to
                                                   166 16
                                                                                                         milestones for any planned future                        provide transmission services (including any
                                                           U.S.C. 824i(a)(1)(A).
                                                   167 16
                                                                                                         generation development by the ICIF                       enlargement of transmission capacity necessary to
                                                           U.S.C. 796(22).                                                                                        provide such services) to the applicant.’’).
                                                    168 16 U.S.C. 824j.
                                                                                                         owner or its affiliates. Consistent with
                                                                                                                                                                     178 Section 212(a) provides that an order under
                                                    169 16 U.S.C. 796(23).                               that practice, the Commission proposed
                                                                                                                                                                  section 211 shall require the transmitting utility
                                                    170 Tres Amigas LLC, 130 FERC ¶ 61,205, at P 43,     in the NOPR to find that, outside of the                 subject to the order to provide wholesale
                                                 reh’g denied, 132 FERC ¶ 61,232 (2010). In Laguna       safe harbor period and to the extent the                 transmission services at rates, charges, terms, and
                                                 Irrigation District, the Commission explained that      ICIF owner can demonstrate specific                      conditions which permit the recovery by such
                                                 ‘‘[n]othing in our [section 210] interconnection        plans and milestones for its and/or its                  utility of all the costs incurred in connection with
                                                 order requires transmission service. Rather,                                                                     the transmission services and necessary associated
                                                 transmission service will be obtained by Laguna         affiliates’ future use of the ICIF, with                 services, including, but not limited to, an
                                                 pursuant to other transmission tariffs or                                                                        appropriate share, if any, of legitimate, verifiable
                                                 agreements.’’ 95 FERC ¶ 61,305, at 62,038 (2001),          173 See 16 U.S.C. 824j(a) (‘‘No order may be issued   and economic costs, including taking into account
                                                 aff’d sub nom. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. FERC,      under this subsection unless the applicant has           any benefits to the transmission system of providing
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                                                 44 Fed. Appx. 170 (9th Cir. 2002) (unpublished);        made a request for transmission services to the          the transmission service, and the costs of any
                                                 see also City of Corona, California v. Southern         transmitting utility that would be the subject of        enlargement of transmission facilities.
                                                 California Edison Co., 104 FERC ¶ 61,085, at PP 7–      such order at least 60 days prior to its filing of an       179 Section 15.4 of the pro forma OATT states that
                                                 10 (2003) (Corona’s application under section 210       application for such order.’’); 18 CFR 2.20.             f the Transmission Provider determines that it
                                                 did not constitute a request for transmission under        174 16 U.S.C. 824k(c)(2); Aero Proposed Order,
                                                                                                                                                                  cannot accommodate a Completed Application for
                                                 section 211).                                           115 FERC ¶ 61,128 at PP 17–18 (providing parties         Firm Point-To-Point Transmission Service because
                                                    171 See Aero Proposed Order, 115 FERC ¶ 61,128.      28 days to negotiate and provide briefing on issues      of insufficient capability on its Transmission
                                                    172 16 U.S.C. 824i(c); Aero Proposed Order, 115      of disagreement).                                        System, the Transmission Provider will use due
                                                 FERC ¶ 61,128 at PP 15–16.                                 175 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 41.       diligence to expand or modify its Transmission



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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                   17669

                                                 b. Comments                                             Commission-jurisdictional lines.187                   achieve those plans can involve a
                                                    111. Most commenters support the                     APPA and TAPS also contend that the                   potential transmission or
                                                 NOPR proposal that third parties                        NOPR has not demonstrated that the                    interconnection customer in complex
                                                 seeking to use ICIF subject to the                      proposed procedures will cost less than               proceedings associated with a request
                                                 blanket waiver should do so pursuant to                 existing requirements, arguing that the               for service. Thus, we believe the reforms
                                                 sections 210 and 211. AWEA, BHE, EEI,                   lengthy and costly procedures of                      adopted herein will not meaningfully
                                                 NextEra, Recurrent, and Southern argue                  sections 210 and 211 could not possibly               change the expense potential customers
                                                 that this approach will protect the ICIF                be less expensive for ICIF owners on an               incur to obtain service.
                                                 owner from speculative requests for                     industry-wide basis.188                                  114. APPA and TAPS are correct that
                                                 transmission service.180 NextEra and                                                                          the Commission in Order No. 888 found
                                                                                                         c. Commission Determination
                                                 BHE further argue that the requirements                                                                       section 211 to provide insufficient relief
                                                 of sections 210 and 211 also protect the                   113. We find that with respect to ICIF             as a general method of enabling more
                                                 interests of third parties seeking to use               eligible for the blanket waiver discussed             competitive generation to obtain open
                                                 ICIF.181 NextEra and Southern also                      above, it is appropriate for entities                 access transmission service. As a result,
                                                 support the NOPR’s proposal to                          seeking interconnection and                           Order No. 888 required that public
                                                 evaluate, in the course of a proceeding                 transmission service on ICIF to follow                utilities file an OATT to provide readily
                                                 under sections 210 and 211, whether an                  the rules and regulations applicable to               available, comparable service at known
                                                 ICIF owner’s ‘‘specific plans and                       requests for service under sections 210               rates, terms, and conditions. In this
                                                 milestones’’ justify priority rights to use             and 211 (subject to the safe harbor                   Final Rule, the Commission finds that
                                                 excess capacity on the ICIF, to the                     discussed below).189 Given the risk of                the filing of an OATT and compliance
                                                 extent the safe harbor is not                           investment in generation and ICIF, it is              with certain regulations are not
                                                 applicable.182 Finally, NextEra and                     appropriate to provide an ICIF owner                  necessary to prevent unjust and
                                                 AWEA contend that the framework                         with priority rights over the use of the              unreasonable rates or unduly
                                                 under sections 210 and 211 provides the                 excess capacity on ICIF that it plans to              discriminatory behavior with respect to
                                                 flexibility necessary for ICIF owners and               use to interconnect its own or its                    ICIF. ICIF are sole-use, limited and
                                                 third parties to reach mutually agreeable               affiliates’ future generation projects to             discrete, radial in nature, and not part
                                                 arrangements tailored to their respective               the extent the ICIF owner can                         of an integrated transmission network,
                                                 needs.183                                               demonstrate specific plans and                        and third-party requests to use ICIF are
                                                    112. APPA and TAPS argue that the                    milestones for its and/or its affiliates’             infrequent. Case-by-case determinations
                                                 NOPR, as proposed, would erect an                       future use of the ICIF. In addition, we               under sections 210 and 211 are not
                                                 impassable barrier to accessing ICIF.                   find that given the relatively small                  appropriate for the large number of
                                                 APPA, TAPS, and NRECA argue that a                      percentage of ICIF owners that have                   transmission service requests on the
                                                 proceeding under sections 210 and 211                   actually had to file an OATT,190                      integrated grid, but are appropriate for
                                                 is time-consuming, burdensome, and                      requiring the entity requesting service               the few expected requests for service on
                                                 expensive.184 They state that Order No.                 over ICIF to pursue such service under                ICIF, each of which would likely have
                                                 888 expressly found those statutory                     sections 210 and 211 will not overly                  different circumstances. We find that,
                                                 processes to be too cumbersome and                      burden potential customers of service                 for this set of circumstances, the
                                                 time-consuming to provide non-                          on ICIF. The process under sections 210               framework of sections 210 and 211
                                                 discriminatory access and placed                        and 211 assures third-party entities                  provide a sufficient means for third-
                                                 customers ‘‘at a severe disadvantage                    requesting service on ICIF and eligible               party access to ICIF.
                                                 compared to the transmission                            ICIF owners alike that they will have
                                                                                                         specified procedural rights as set forth              2. Voluntary Arrangements
                                                 owner.’’ 185 They contend that by
                                                 limiting requesters to access only                      in sections 210, 211, and 212 of the FPA              a. Comments
                                                 through sections 210 and 211, even if                   and appropriately balances ICIF owners’                  115. First Wind and Invenergy ask the
                                                 the request is received many years after                and third parties’ rights to service on               Commission to confirm that ICIF owners
                                                 the ICIF is energized and there is ample                ICIF. Further, this framework provides                may continue to enter into shared use
                                                 unused capacity, the NOPR creates a                     the contractual flexibility that some                 agreements with affiliates without
                                                 potent and permanent obstacle to open                   commenters suggest is not available                   requiring the affiliated party to utilize
                                                 access that enhances the ICIF owner’s                   under our existing policy so that                     sections 210, 211 and 212 to obtain
                                                 vertical market power without any                       contractual arrangements (e.g.,                       access.191 Similarly, Linden requests
                                                 justification.186 NRECA argues that                     transmission service agreements,                      that the Commission clarify that the
                                                 prospective customers should not have                   interconnection agreements, and/or                    Commission’s proposed process does
                                                 to initiate such a proceeding with the                  shared facilities agreements) can be                  not preclude an ICIF owner and a non-
                                                 Commission in order to demonstrate                      tailored to the special situations for ICIF           affiliated entity seeking service to
                                                 entitlement to service on these                         in determining the appropriate terms                  mutually agree upon an appropriate
                                                                                                         and conditions of service, as many of                 arrangement outside of the context of a
                                                 System to provide the requested Firm Transmission       the pro forma OATT provisions are not                 proceeding under sections 210 or 211, if
                                                 Service, consistent with its planning obligations in    applicable to service over ICIF. Finally,             the parties file any resulting mutually
                                                 Attachment K, provided the Transmission Customer        we recognize that our existing policy to
                                                 agrees to compensate the Transmission Provider for                                                            agreed upon arrangement pursuant to
                                                 such costs pursuant to the terms of Section 27.
                                                                                                         allow an ICIF owner to retain priority                section 205 of the FPA.192 Linden
                                                   180 Recurrent at 4; Southern at 7; NextEra at 11–     rights if it has plans to use the ICIF                contends that the new proposed section
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                                                 14; AWEA at 12–13; BHE at 8; and EEI at 16.             capacity and is making progress to                    35.28(d)(2)(ii) suggests that the parties
                                                   181 NextEra at 11–14 and BHE at 8.
                                                   182 NextEra at 11–14.                                   187 NRECA
                                                                                                                                                               must use the process before the
                                                                                                                       at 5.
                                                   183 NextEra at 11–14 and AWEA at 12–13.                 188 APPA
                                                                                                                                                               Commission that is outlined in sections
                                                                                                                     and TAPS at 20–21.
                                                   184 APPA and TAPS at 11–12.                             189 Such third-party requests for service could     210, 211, and 212 of the FPA and the
                                                   185 APPA and TAPS at 12 (citing to Order No.          include requests for firm, nonfirm, conditional, or
                                                 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,036 at 31,646).           interim service. See, e.g., 18 CFR 2.20(b)(9).          191 First   Wind at 15 and Invenergy at 14–15.
                                                   186 APPA and TAPS at 24–25.                             190 See supra P 38.                                   192 Linden    at 4–5.



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                                                 17670             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 Commission’s corresponding                              process under sections 210 and 211 if an               a reasonable time before an application
                                                 regulations. Linden asserts that even                   agreement cannot be reached.                           under sections 210 and 211 is made.
                                                 where sections 210 and 211 apply,                       Furthermore, we likewise clarify that                  NextEra argues for a similar
                                                 section 212(c)(1) of the FPA requires                   this flexibility applies both to affiliates            requirement, stating that the third party
                                                 that the Commission ‘‘set a reasonable                  and non-affiliates of the ICIF owner,                  should make a request to the
                                                 time for parties . . . to agree to terms                such that ICIF owners may enter into                   transmission provider within 60 days
                                                 and conditions under which such order                   shared use agreements with affiliates or               following the completion of a feasibility
                                                 is to be carried out’’ and that the                     non-affiliates, without requiring a                    study by the ICIF owner in order for a
                                                 Commission generally directs the                        proceeding under sections 210 and 211                  subsequent petition under sections 210
                                                 parties to negotiate appropriate                        to obtain access. Finally, we clarify that             or 211 of the FPA to be considered in
                                                 agreements.193 Accordingly, Linden                      a shared-use agreement or bilateral                    good faith.199 AWEA explains that, even
                                                 recommends that the Commission                          agreement with either an affiliate or                  if the proposed reforms were put into
                                                 should consider revising section                        non-affiliate will not in itself jeopardize            place, failing to require such a submittal
                                                 35.28(d)(2)(ii) to explicitly allow for the             the applicability of the blanket waiver                could lead to gaming opportunities by
                                                 possibility that parties may arrive at                  or the continuation of the safe harbor                 unaffiliated generators who may wish to
                                                 mutually agreeable arrangements                         period, discussed below. We find that                  establish a queue position on an ICIF,
                                                 without undergoing a proceeding under                   this will allow flexibility and promote                while avoiding upfront costs associated
                                                 sections 210 and 211 at the                             mutually agreeable arrangements for                    with actually injecting power into a
                                                 Commission.194 Linden further states                    sharing facilities. In any case, ICIF                  transmission provider’s network grid.200
                                                 that parties to the relevant arrangements               owners that are public utilities would                 AWEA argues that it is reasonable to
                                                 should be allowed flexibility to                        still be subject to the statutory                      make such a requirement because it is
                                                 negotiate appropriate terms and                         requirement of sections 205 and 206                    critical for system reliability that all
                                                 conditions without restriction as to the                forbidding unduly discriminatory                       three of the relevant parties are involved
                                                 form or nature of the agreement for                     practices.                                             in any interconnection of new
                                                 greater regulatory efficiency, and                         118. We agree that our use of the term              generation to the grid.201
                                                 recommends that the Commission add                      ‘‘shall’’ in new section 35.28(d)(2)(ii)                  120. MISO and the MISO TOs suggest
                                                 an additional section 35.28(iii)                        may have inadvertently given the                       that the Commission should require the
                                                 explicitly acknowledging that parties                   impression that voluntary agreements                   new interconnection customer who
                                                 may mutually agree on rates, terms and                  without resort to sections 210 and 211                 requests to interconnect to the existing
                                                 conditions, subject to Commission                       were not allowed. We did not intend                    ICIF to enter into an agreement with the
                                                 review and acceptance.195                               that, and therefore change the word                    existing interconnection customer
                                                    116. E.ON asks the Commission to                     ‘‘shall’’ to ‘‘may’’ in section                        before allowing the new interconnection
                                                 clarify that the blanket waiver should                  35.28(d)(2)(ii). Indeed, the flexibility to            customer to enter the binding portion of
                                                 not be jeopardized if a planned phase of                enter into voluntary agreements is                     the governing interconnection
                                                 a generation project is owned by a non-                 inherent in the process under sections                 procedures.202 They argue this is
                                                 affiliate.196 Similarly, NRG and E.ON                   210 and 211. As Linden points out,                     reasonable because adding generating
                                                 ask for clarification that voluntarily                  section 212 recognizes that parties                    facilities to existing ICIF will complicate
                                                 negotiating a bilateral agreement with a                should have a reasonable time to agree                 the existing interconnection process and
                                                 third party that is seeking access to the               to terms and conditions,198 and section                require coordination with the relevant
                                                 ICIF during the safe harbor period,                     211 requires that a third party must                   RTO or the use of existing RTO
                                                 discussed below, would not jeopardize                   have submitted a good faith request for                interconnection procedures to ensure
                                                 the continuation of the safe harbor                     service at least 60 days before it may                 that new interconnections to ICIFs will
                                                 period.197                                              submit a section 211 application before                not adversely impact the reliable
                                                                                                         the Commission. Nothing in sections                    operation of the transmission system.203
                                                 b. Commission Determination                                                                                       121. While ITC does not oppose the
                                                                                                         210 or 211 precludes entities from
                                                    117. We clarify that the availability of             arriving at mutual agreements prior to or              reforms proposed in the NOPR, ITC is
                                                 the process under sections 210 and 211                  instead of seeking to establish a process              concerned that the Commission’s
                                                 does not preclude the opportunity for an                under sections 210 and 211.                            proposal to rely exclusively on sections
                                                 ICIF owner and an entity seeking                        Accordingly, we confirm that an ICIF                   210 and 211 of the FPA to govern third-
                                                 service, including an affiliate, to                     owner and an entity seeking service may                party interconnections on ICIF fails to
                                                 mutually agree, outside of the process                  mutually agree to an arrangement for                   provide sufficient clarity on the precise
                                                 under sections 210 and 211, to an                       interconnection and transmission                       contractual relationship that will exist
                                                 arrangement for service over the ICIF. In               service over the ICIF, without initiating              between the ICIF owner, a third party
                                                 fact, this flexibility benefits both the                a process under sections 210 and 211.                  proposing to interconnect with ICIF, the
                                                 ICIF owner and an entity seeking                                                                               transmission provider, and the impacted
                                                 service, as it allows the parties the                   3. Interaction With the Transmission                   transmission owner (provided these are
                                                 opportunity to craft an agreement                       System                                                 separate entities). ITC recommends that
                                                 appropriate for the circumstances and                   a. Comments                                            the Commission provide additional
                                                 potentially expedite access to ICIF. In                                                                        guidance in the Final Rule on the
                                                 that case, availability of the process                    119. AWEA states that a third party                  process for establishing contractual
                                                 under sections 210 and 211 provides                     requesting service on an ICIF should be                relationships between these four types
                                                                                                         required to submit an appropriate
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                                                 protection to entities seeking service by                                                                      of parties, the nature of these
                                                 allowing them to seek service under the                 interconnection or transmission service                contractual relationships, and how
                                                                                                         request to the transmission provider
                                                   193 Linden at 5.                                      with whom the ICIF are interconnected                    199 NextEra at 14–15.
                                                   194 Linden at 5–6.                                    within 30 days of the good faith request                 200 AWEA  at 16–17.
                                                   195 Linden at 6–7.                                    to the owner of the ICIF and/or within                   201 AWEA at 17.
                                                   196 E.ON at 13.                                                                                                202 MISO at 7 and MISO TOs at 5.
                                                   197 NRG at 3–4 and E.ON at 13.                          198 See   16 U.S.C. 824k(c)(1).                        203 MISO at 5–6 and MISO TOs at 4–5.




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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                   17671

                                                 successful applications will fit into the               interconnection to the ICIF, and the                   existing policy, under which third-party
                                                 relevant transmission provider study                    transmission provider should have the                  requesters are obligated to obtain service
                                                 processes necessary to ensure that such                 flexibility to develop appropriate                     on the transmission facilities beyond the
                                                 connections occur safely and reliably.                  arrangements for both interconnection                  ICIF pursuant to the relevant existing
                                                 Specifically, ITC recommends that the                   and transmission service that meet all                 OATT and interconnection procedures,
                                                 Commission include in the Final Rule                    parties’ needs so long as the new                      will maintain the reliability of the
                                                 requirements that: (1) Interconnection                  interconnection customer is able to                    network transmission system by
                                                 requests approved under sections 210                    interconnect its generating facility and               ensuring that the appropriate studies are
                                                 and 211 must proceed under the LGIP                     acquire transmission service on terms                  conducted. At the same time, the
                                                 of the transmission provider to which                   and conditions that are similar to other               Commission’s existing policy provides
                                                 the ICIF owner is interconnected; and                   customers. Therefore, Southern                         the flexibility for the entity seeking
                                                 (2) the third party must enter into a                   contends, the Commission should not                    interconnection to the ICIF, the ICIF
                                                 separate LGIA with the impacted                         be prescriptive with respect to the                    owner, and the public utility
                                                 transmission owner and facilities                       mechanism to be used for                               transmission provider to develop
                                                 agreement with the ICIF owner.204                       interconnection or transmission service                arrangements for the interconnection to
                                                 Given that the transmission owner owns                  under this rule as long as all affected                the ICIF and any associated
                                                 and operates facilities to which the                    parties agree to jointly study and                     transmission delivery service over the
                                                 shared ICIF are interconnected, the third               provide interconnection and                            ICIF.
                                                 party should be required to enter into an               transmission service for the new                          126. In response to AWEA’s assertion
                                                 LGIA with the impacted transmission                     generator requesting interconnection,                  that failing to require a third party
                                                 owner. This will clearly establish the                  with the new generator’s commitment to                 seeking service on ICIF to submit an
                                                 rights and obligations of all parties and,              bear the expense of such work.                         interconnection or transmission service
                                                 more importantly, ensure that the                       Moreover, Southern notes that the                      request to the transmission provider
                                                 appropriate reliability studies are                     Commission would retain oversight over                 with whom the ICIF are interconnected
                                                 conducted prior to allowing an                          the third-party requests for service over              could lead to gaming opportunities by
                                                 interconnection.205 The MISO TOs agree                  the ICIF because it would have an                      unaffiliated generators, we find that the
                                                 with ITC that the Commission should                     opportunity to review such                             process under sections 210 and 211 will
                                                 modify its NOPR proposal to require                     arrangements under FPA sections 210,                   limit speculative requests for
                                                 greater coordination with the                           211 and 212 and amendments to                          transmission service from the ICIF
                                                 transmission provider and transmission                  existing interconnection agreements                    owner and deter attempts to game the
                                                 owner because this will lessen the                      under section 205.208                                  interconnection process. We are not
                                                 likelihood of operational and reliability                                                                      persuaded that additional protection is
                                                                                                         b. Commission Determination                            needed at this time. The framework
                                                 problems while lessening the OATT,
                                                 OASIS, and Standards of Conduct                            125. Commenters appear to be                        under sections 210 and 211 assures that
                                                 burdens on ICIF owners that the                         conflating the scope of this Final Rule—               ICIF owners have specified procedural
                                                 Commission seeks to alleviate.206                       access to ICIF—with requirements for                   rights as set forth in sections 210 and
                                                    122. Similarly, EPSA recommends                      access to the network/integrated grid.                 211 of the FPA.
                                                 that the Commission should encourage                    As such, we decline to prescribe                          127. We conclude that the existing
                                                 parties to utilize appropriate existing                 additional requirements for access to the              policy, that third-party requesters are
                                                 LGIA and LGIP provisions regarding                      network/integrated transmission system                 obligated to obtain service on the
                                                 terms, conditions and procedures in the                 by entities seeking to interconnect with               transmission facilities at or beyond the
                                                 Final Rule because the provisions of the                ICIF or a process for how requests to                  Point of Change of Ownership as well as
                                                 LGIA and LGIP (e.g., section 9.9.2 of the               interconnect with ICIF must fit into the               those facilities beyond the Point of
                                                 LGIA) work well for the interconnection                 transmission provider’s study processes.               Interconnection pursuant to the relevant
                                                 process and that augmenting the process                 We reaffirm the existing policy that                   OATT and interconnection procedures,
                                                 under sections 210, 211 and 212 with                    third-party requesters are obligated to                strikes the right balance between
                                                 these procedures will offer clarity to                  obtain service on the transmission                     ensuring reliability, providing
                                                 industry stakeholders.                                  facilities at or beyond the Point of                   flexibility, and protecting the rights of
                                                    123. EEI requests that the Commission                Change of Ownership as well as those                   the ICIF owner. Accordingly, we decline
                                                 not be prescriptive with respect to a                   facilities beyond the Point of                         to further prescribe how a third-party
                                                 mechanism for interconnection or                        Interconnection with ICIF pursuant to                  seeking service over ICIF pursuant to
                                                 transmission under this rule, and states                the relevant existing OATT and                         sections 210 and 211 also gains access
                                                 that under the framework under                          interconnection procedures.209 The                     to the networked transmission
                                                 sections 210 and 211, the ICIF owner,                                                                          provider’s transmission system.
                                                 the eligible entity seeking                               208 Southern   at 7–8.                               4. Scope of Regulations To Be Modified
                                                                                                           209 In addition, an application under section 211
                                                 interconnection to the ICIF and the
                                                 transmission provider will have                         requires that the third party seeking transmission     a. Commission Proposal
                                                                                                         first make a good faith request for service,
                                                 flexibility on how to develop the terms                 complying with 18 CFR 2.20, specifying details as         128. In the NOPR, the Commission
                                                 and conditions of the interconnection to                to how much capacity is requested and for what         proposed to add subsection 35.28(d)(2)
                                                 the ICIF and any associated                             period, at least 60 days before making an              to the Commission’s regulations for the
                                                                                                         application to the Commission for an order             purpose of setting forth the terms of the
                                                 transmission delivery service over the                  requiring transmission service. The Commission
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                                                 ICIF.207                                                may grant an application under section 211 if the      blanket OATT waiver, and did not
                                                    124. Southern asserts that the ICIF                  application is in the public interest and otherwise    propose to revise other regulations.210
                                                 owner, the party seeking                                meets the requirements under section 212. As part
                                                                                                         of the evaluation of whether the third party seeking   b. Comments
                                                   204 ITC
                                                                                                         transmission service made a good faith request for        129. E.ON argues that section 2.20 of
                                                           at 7–8.                                       service, the Commission may look to see what
                                                   205 ITC at 11.
                                                                                                         measures, if any, the third party has taken to         the Commission’s regulations, which
                                                   206 MISO TOs at 5.
                                                                                                         acquire service on the network transmission system
                                                   207 EEI at 16–17.                                     beyond the ICIF.                                        210 NOPR,   FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 35.



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                                                 17672             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 implements the section 211 process                      5. Reliability Standards                              date the line is energized. However, a
                                                 with respect to making and responding                   a. Comments                                           few commenters oppose the safe harbor,
                                                 to ‘‘good faith’’ requests for transmission                                                                   and a few others argue it should be
                                                 services, should be amended as to its                      131. ITC requests that the                         strengthened.
                                                 applicability to ICIF because an ICIF                   Commission clarify how the proposed                      135. APPA and TAPS argue that the
                                                                                                         interconnection process interacts with                NOPR’s proposed safe harbor cuts back
                                                 owner cannot fulfill all of the
                                                                                                         the requirements of NERC Reliability                  on the relief otherwise available under
                                                 requirements of a traditional
                                                                                                         Standard FAC–001–1 (Facility                          sections 210, 211, and 212, and all but
                                                 transmission provider in that regulation.
                                                                                                         Connection Requirements).214 This                     ensures absolute foreclosure of
                                                 For example, section 2.20 requires the                  standard applies to all transmission                  competitors from access to ICIF.216 They
                                                 transmitting utility to respond to the                  owners and those generator owners that                explain that in order to rebut the
                                                 requester with a date by which a                        have an executed agreement to evaluate                presumptions, a requester would have
                                                 response will be sent to the requester                  the reliability impact of interconnecting             the burden of proof to show that the
                                                 and a statement of any fees associated                  a third party facility to the generator               ICIF owner lacks definitive plans to use
                                                 with responding to its request (e.g.,                   owner’s existing facility that is used to             its capacity, and that the public interest
                                                 initial studies), and if the transmitting               interconnect to the interconnected                    under sections 210 and 211 is better
                                                 utility determines it cannot provide the                transmission systems.                                 served by granting access to the third
                                                 requested service with existing capacity,                                                                     party than by allowing the ICIF owner
                                                                                                         b. Commission Determination
                                                 then it must provide studies and data                                                                         to reserve its ICIF capacity for its own
                                                 regarding constraints and offer an                         132. We clarify that nothing in this               future use. They contend that the
                                                 executable agreement wherein the                        Final Rule changes the requirement to                 proposed presumption is effectively
                                                 requester agrees to reimburse the                       comply with all Commission-approved                   irrebuttable because the Commission’s
                                                 transmitting utility for all costs of                   mandatory Reliability Standards,                      determinations as to whether the ICIF
                                                 performing any studies.211 E.ON argues                  including FAC–001–1.                                  owner and its affiliates have definitive
                                                 that the Commission should clarify that                 D. Safe Harbor                                        plans have been based on confidential
                                                 the section 2.20 process requires the                                                                         demonstrations available only to the
                                                 third-party requester to arrange and pay                1. Whether and To What Extent There                   ICIF owner and its affiliates. They note
                                                                                                         Should be a Safe Harbor Period                        that the bar on any ‘‘expansion’’ during
                                                 for all required studies with the ICIF’s
                                                 transmission provider, and that the ICIF                a. Commission Proposal                                the safe harbor period may also
                                                                                                                                                               foreclose all interconnections, even if
                                                 owner has no obligation to arrange and                     133. To reduce risks to ICIF owners                the definitive plans presumption were
                                                 pay for all such studies. E.ON argues                   eligible for the blanket waiver discussed             somehow surmounted, because while
                                                 that this would encompass impacts on                    above during the critical early years of              the NOPR does not define the term
                                                 the ICIF, interconnecting transmission                  their projects, the Commission proposed               ‘‘expansion,’’ modifications to the ICIF
                                                 owner’s interconnection facilities and                  a safe harbor period of five years during             owner’s facilities will be necessary in
                                                 transmission facilities, the transmission               which there would be a rebuttable                     any interconnection of a competitor’s
                                                 provider’s grid and any other affected                  presumption that: (1) The eligible ICIF               generator.
                                                 entities’ facilities.212                                owner has definitive plans to use its                    136. NRECA argues that the
                                                                                                         capacity without having to make a                     Commission should not implement its
                                                 c. Commission Determination                             demonstration through a specific plans                proposed safe harbor creating a
                                                    130. We see no reason to revise                      and milestones showing; and (2) the                   rebuttable presumption against
                                                 section 2.20 of our regulations. We do                  eligible ICIF owner should not be                     transmission access for five years in
                                                                                                         required to expand its facilities. A third-           cases where the customer requesting
                                                 not expect the ICIF owner to study the
                                                                                                         party requester for service on ICIF                   service on the ICIF needs it to serve load
                                                 networked transmission system, but
                                                                                                         during the safe harbor period could                   efficiently.217 NRECA states that load
                                                 only to study the capacity available on                 attempt to rebut these presumptions, but              has little or minimal impact on the
                                                 its ICIF. Further, we believe that section              it would have the burden of proof to                  available capacity of ICIF, and, in many
                                                 2.20 is clear that the requesting party                 show that the owner and/or operator                   cases may actually increase the
                                                 pays for any studies associated with a                  does not have definitive plans to use its             capability of ICIF with counterflow.
                                                 request for service over ICIF.213 Given                 capacity and the public interest under                NRECA states that the burden of proof
                                                 the nature of the study to determine                    sections 210 and 211 is better served by              should be on the ICIF owner to
                                                 available capacity on the ICIF (typically               granting access to the third party than               demonstrate that it has specific plans to
                                                 by comparing the thermal rating of the                  by allowing the eligible ICIF owner to                use the transmission capacity in such a
                                                 facilities to the existing commitments                  reserve its ICIF capacity for its own                 way that would prevent it from
                                                 on the line) and that the ICIF owner                    future use.                                           providing access to a load-serving
                                                 should have the information necessary                                                                         transmission customer, adding that the
                                                                                                         b. Comments
                                                 to perform such studies, this is likely to                                                                    Commission cannot reasonably require a
                                                 be a fairly straightforward process that                   134. Many commenters 215 support                   prospective customer to prove a
                                                 is best performed by the ICIF owner.                    the proposed safe harbor period, during               negative—that the owner has no such
                                                 Accordingly, the transparency and                       which a developer of a generator tie line             plans—when all of the relevant
                                                 timing requirements of section 2.20                     would be presumed to have priority                    information is in the hands of the
                                                                                                         rights to the capacity on the generator
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                                                 should not prove overly burdensome for                                                                        owner.218 NRECA also argues that the
                                                 ICIF owners and do not require revision.                tie lines it funded for five years from the           Commission has not provided any
                                                                                                                                                               justification for granting a five-year
                                                                                                           214 ITC at 11–12.
                                                                                                           215 AWEA
                                                                                                                                                               presumption against requiring an ICIF
                                                   211 E.ON                                                            at 5; BHE at 3; BP Wind at 4; E.ON at
                                                              at 13–14.
                                                                                                         10; EEI at 4; EPSA at 6; ELCON at 2–3; First Wind
                                                   212 E.ON at 14.                                                                                               216 APPA
                                                                                                         at 2; Invenergy at 2; NextEra at 6; NRG at 3;                   and TAPS at 14–15.
                                                   213 See 18 CFR 2.20(c)(1) and 18 CFR                                                                          217 NRECA at 7.
                                                                                                         Recurrent at 3; Sempra at 2; SEIA at 3; Southern at
                                                 2.20(c)(4)(iii).                                        6; and Terra-Gen at 4.                                  218 NRECA at 8.




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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                     17673

                                                 owner to expand its facilities to                          presumption that the eligible ICIF                      ICIF to serve load by counterflowing
                                                 accommodate a service request when                         owner has definitive plans to use its                   power relative to the generation
                                                 sections 210 and 211 of the FPA provide                    capacity without having to make a                       associated with the ICIF. However, a
                                                 for potential increases in transmission                    demonstration through a specific plans                  load-serving entity may make arguments
                                                 capacity as necessary.219                                  and milestones showing. We believe                      to support such a scenario in a
                                                    137. On the other hand, AWEA and                        this Final Rule will relieve regulatory                 proceeding under sections 210 and 211.
                                                 E.ON support the safe harbor concept                       burdens and unnecessary risks from
                                                 but urge the Commission to consider                        generation developers to encourage the                  2. Starting Point for the Safe Harbor
                                                 removing the rebuttable presumption                        development of new generation and                       Period
                                                 standard. E.ON expresses concern that                      efficient interconnection facilities and                a. Commission Proposal
                                                 the safe harbor the Commission                             promote competition while ensuring                         141. In the NOPR, the Commission
                                                 proposes would not relieve the                             access to transmission on a not unduly                  proposed that the safe harbor period
                                                 interconnection customer of the                            discriminatory basis. Under this Final                  begin on the ICIF energization date.
                                                 regulatory compliance burden, because                      Rule, the ICIF owner gains a degree of                  Because the energization date is not
                                                 a third party could still initiate the                     protection through the reduced                          always publicly available, the
                                                 process under sections 210 and 211                         likelihood that a third-party requester                 Commission proposed that any eligible
                                                 during the safe harbor period and thus                     could rebut the presumption that an                     ICIF owner seeking to take advantage of
                                                 force the ICIF owner to demonstrate                        ICIF owner has plans to use all of its                  the safe harbor must file an
                                                 specific plans and milestones in order to                  capacity. However, by making the                        informational filing with the
                                                 sustain the rebuttable presumption.220                     presumption rebuttable rather than                      Commission (requiring no Commission
                                                 Further, while the NOPR proposed to                        absolute, a third-party requester with                  action) documenting: (1) The ICIF
                                                 rebuttably presume that an ICIF owner                      strong evidence has the opportunity to                  energization date; (2) details sufficient
                                                 should not be required to expand the                       gain access to the ICIF, even during the                to identify the ICIF at issue, such as
                                                 ICIF during the five-year safe harbor                      safe harbor.                                            location and Point of
                                                 period, E.ON argues that it is unclear                        139. The proposal in the NOPR that
                                                                                                                                                                    Interconnection; 224 and (3)
                                                 how a rebuttable presumption would                         the safe harbor period would also
                                                                                                            contain a rebuttable presumption that                   identification of the ICIF owner. For
                                                 apply in that context and what might be
                                                                                                            the ICIF owner should not have to                       generators that are already operating as
                                                 rebutted. E.ON argues that what is clear
                                                                                                            expand its facilities was intended to                   of the effective date of the Final Rule,
                                                 is that the ICIF owner needs to be
                                                                                                            provide generation developers an initial                the Commission proposed to allow them
                                                 unencumbered during the safe harbor
                                                                                                            opportunity to establish their generation               to seek safe harbor status by filing at the
                                                 period, so that it may focus on
                                                                                                            projects while limiting the burden and                  Commission to document the
                                                 developing and bringing online
                                                                                                            distraction of studying requests to                     information listed above, and that the
                                                 successive phases of new generation.221
                                                                                                            expand its ICIF and potentially                         safe harbor would expire five years after
                                                 More generally, AWEA contends that if
                                                                                                            expanding those facilities to                           the initial energization of their ICIF.225
                                                 the generation developer dedicates the
                                                 extra capital and builds ICIF that                         accommodate third party use. However,                   b. Comments
                                                 accommodate more capacity than                             upon consideration of the comments,
                                                                                                                                                                       142. E.ON, AWEA, First Wind, and
                                                 needed for initial generation, it is                       we believe such a rebuttable
                                                                                                                                                                    NRG argue that ICIF energization is not
                                                 because the generation developer plans                     presumption could prevent third-party
                                                                                                                                                                    the proper starting date for the safe
                                                 to develop more generation in future                       access without providing a substantial
                                                                                                                                                                    harbor period and that the safe harbor
                                                 phases. Accordingly, AWEA believes                         ease of burden for the ICIF owner.223 We
                                                                                                                                                                    period should instead begin when the
                                                 that removing the rebuttable                               conclude that eliminating this
                                                                                                                                                                    first generating facility using the ICIF
                                                 presumption is appropriate because it                      presumption strikes an appropriate
                                                                                                                                                                    achieves commercial operation, the
                                                 will clarify that the generation                           balance by providing certainty to an
                                                                                                            ICIF owner over its planned capacity                    commercial operation date.226 E.ON
                                                 developer and owner of the ICIF have                                                                               argues that the point in the
                                                 sole use of the excess capacity, without                   without hindering expansion of the
                                                                                                            facility in question when a potential                   interconnection process where access to
                                                 the need to defend the right to that                                                                               the grid begins is the appropriate
                                                 capacity.222                                               customer requesting that expansion is
                                                                                                            willing to carry the burden associated                  starting point for the safe harbor
                                                 c. Commission Determination                                with that possible expansion.                           period.227 E.ON states that, prior to this,
                                                                                                               140. With regard to NRECA’s                          the interconnecting transmission
                                                    138. We will adopt the safe harbor
                                                                                                            argument that load-serving entities’ use                owner’s interconnection facilities and
                                                 period, but we will modify it to remove
                                                                                                            of ICIF has minimal or positive impact                  network upgrades may not be complete
                                                 the rebuttable presumption that the ICIF
                                                                                                            on available ICIF capacity, we find that                and available for use and that all
                                                 owner should not be required to expand
                                                                                                            such arguments are based on an                          necessary interconnecting transmission
                                                 its facilities. During the safe harbor
                                                                                                            unlikely scenario that assumes away the                 owner’s network upgrades may not be
                                                 period, there will be a rebuttable
                                                                                                            intended function of the                                scheduled for completion for years after
                                                    219 NRECA at 8 (citing 16 U.S.C. 824i(a)(1)             interconnection facilities at issue in this             the ICIF are energized.228 E.ON adds
                                                 (‘‘Upon application . . . the Commission may issue         Final Rule. By definition, the facilities
                                                                                                                                                                      224 See  supra n. 19.
                                                 an order requiring . . . such increase in                  at issue are not part of the integrated
                                                 transmission capacity as may be necessary to carry                                                                   225 NOPR,   FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 56.
                                                 out the purposes of any order under subparagraph
                                                                                                            transmission system, so it is a slim                      226 The Commercial Operation Date is defined in
                                                                                                            possibility that a load-serving entity
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                                                 (A) or (B)’’); 16 U.S.C. 824j(a) (‘‘Any electric utility                                                           the LGIP and LGIA as the date on which the
                                                 . . . may apply to the Commission for an order             would be in a position to make use of                   Generating Facility commences generating
                                                 under this subsection requiring a transmitting                                                                     electricity for sale, excluding electricity generated
                                                 utility to provide transmission services (including          223 We would expect that, in any order under          during on-site test operations and commissioning of
                                                 any enlargement of transmission capacity necessary         sections 210 and 211, we would require the              the Generating Facility, as agreed to by the Parties
                                                 to provide such services) to the applicant.’’)).           potential customer requesting expansion to pay all      pursuant to Appendix E to the Standard Large
                                                    220 E.ON at 10.                                                                                                 Generator Interconnection Agreement.
                                                                                                            costs to study the request to expand and to take full
                                                    221 E.ON at 11–12.                                                                                                227 E.ON at 8.
                                                                                                            responsibility for the costs to expand and operate
                                                    222 AWEA at 13.                                         the ICIF.                                                 228 E.ON at 9.




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                                                 17674             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 that, if the safe harbor begins on the ICIF              numerous public utilities to make                     of the ICIF owner seeking to take
                                                 energization date, it may only encourage                 filings that will never be needed until               advantage of the safe harbor.238 For ICIF
                                                 energization to be delayed as long as                    and unless an entity seeks service over               that are already in commercial operation
                                                 possible in order to have as long a safe                 the ICIF.235 It argues that no policy                 as of the effective date of the Final Rule,
                                                 harbor period as is needed to support                    would be served by requiring public                   the ICIF owner may seek safe harbor
                                                 future phase’s priority use of the                       utilities to preserve rights through an               status by filing at the Commission to
                                                 ICIF.229                                                 otherwise unnecessary informational                   provide the information listed above,
                                                    143. AWEA and First Wind explain                      filing.236                                            and the safe harbor would expire five
                                                 that for many wind projects the ICIF                        145. MISO supports the Commission’s                years after the commercial operation
                                                 may be energized well before                             proposal to require interconnection                   date of its ICIF. ICIF owners making
                                                 commercial operation of the wind                         customers to submit their ICIF                        such an informational filing should file
                                                 project begins in order to provide                       energization date to the Commission.                  under the following docket, Docket No.
                                                 backfeed power to the construction                       Currently, MISO interconnection                       AD15–9–000, so that any interested
                                                 site.230 Accordingly, AWEA contends                      customers submit their test dates, which              third party will be able to easily identify
                                                 that the ‘‘energization date’’ would                     are very close to the energization date,              the relevant filing and determine when
                                                 significantly limit the safe harbor period               to MISO’s resource integration group as               a safe harbor is applicable. We consider
                                                 for phased development projects.231                      part of the Generator Interconnection                 the commercial operation date of ICIF to
                                                 First Wind and NRG argues that the                       Agreement milestones.237                              be the date those facilities are first used
                                                 commercial operation date not only                       c. Commission Determination                           to transmit energy for sale, excluding
                                                 provides a more appropriate starting                                                                           use for on-site testing and
                                                 date, but it also is a date that is routinely               146. We will modify the proposal and               commissioning of the generating
                                                 documented for other purposes (e.g.,                     will use the commercial operation date                facility.
                                                 under Appendix E of the LGIA, the                        instead of the energization date. We find
                                                                                                          commenters’ argument convincing that                  3. Length of the Safe Harbor Period
                                                 customer is required to provide written
                                                 documentation of the commercial                          the commercial operation date is the                  a. Commission Proposal
                                                 operation date, and power purchase                       preferable starting point for the safe
                                                                                                                                                                   147. In the NOPR, the Commission
                                                 agreements will have the commercial                      harbor period. The ICIF may be
                                                                                                                                                                proposed a safe harbor period of five
                                                 operation date.232 NRG also argues that                  energized to provide needed backfeed
                                                                                                                                                                years during which there would be a
                                                 the commercial operation date is                         power for construction equipment well
                                                                                                                                                                rebuttable presumption that: (1) The
                                                 universally understandable.233                           before the first generator is ready to
                                                                                                                                                                eligible ICIF owner has definitive plans
                                                    144. NRG and Linden argue that the                    produce test power, thus shortening the
                                                                                                                                                                to use its capacity without having to
                                                 Commission should decline to adopt the                   safe harbor period and undermining the
                                                                                                                                                                make a demonstration through a specific
                                                 requirement that owners of existing and                  goal to give the generation project                   plans and milestones showing; and (2)
                                                 new ICIFs submit an informational                        sufficient time to develop. Using the                 the eligible ICIF owner should not be
                                                 filing to get the benefit of the safe harbor             energization date would likely                        required to expand its facilities.239
                                                 provision. NRG argues that the                           disadvantage certain developers who
                                                 Commission is already generally aware                    must energize their ICIF early in the                 b. Comments
                                                 of the commercial operation date for                     construction process because of their                    148. Several commenters argue for a
                                                 interconnection facilities through                       particular circumstances, while other                 seven-year safe harbor period.240 EEI
                                                 market-based rate, exempt wholesale                      developers are not required to do so.                 argues that a presumption of five years
                                                 generator, and interconnection                           Although commenters argue that the                    from the date the line is energized is
                                                 agreement filings. NRG further argues                    commercial operation date is frequently               only minimally sufficient and providing
                                                 that the commercial operation date is an                 documented in other contexts, we are                  an additional two years of safe harbor
                                                 established and verifiable date, and                     not aware of a publicly available source              protection would allow the eligible ICIF
                                                 interconnection facility owners are often                that would consistently provide the                   owner to focus on building generation
                                                 required to provide notice of the                        commercial operation date for ICIF.                   and achieving commercial operation
                                                 commercial operation date to various                     Commenters’ suggestion that potential                 during the safe harbor period.241
                                                 parties under different project                          customers request information from the                NextEra argues that a safe harbor of five
                                                 agreements. Additionally, third-parties                  ICIF owner or seek relief from the                    years effectively presumes that the
                                                 that seek to interconnect can contact the                Commission creates an unnecessary                     second phase will be completed without
                                                 ICIF owner directly and ask for the same                 barrier to potential customers and is                 any delays and that the developer will
                                                 information detailed in the                              inconsistent with the transparency we                 not pursue development in additional
                                                 informational filing, and ICIF owners                    require for other elements of                         phases. NextEra argues that a seven-year
                                                 can be required to provide the                           transmission and interconnection                      safe harbor would more fully achieve
                                                 commercial operation date upon                           service. Accordingly, we will require,                the Commission’s stated goals.242 EPSA
                                                 request. NRG argues that if there is any                 consistent with the NOPR proposal, that               and NRG agree that a seven-year period
                                                 dispute regarding the commercial                         any eligible ICIF owner seeking to take               would better support ICIF project
                                                 operation date, the third party can go to                advantage of the safe harbor must file an             development, and argue that a seven-
                                                 the Commission and seek clarification                    informational filing with the                         year time period is supported by section
                                                 of the commercial operation date.234                     Commission (requiring no Commission                   3.3.1 of the pro forma LGIP under which
                                                 Linden argues that the informational                     action) stating: (1) The ICIF commercial              the expected in-service date of a new
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                                                 filing proposal would simply require                     operation date, as we define it below; (2)
                                                                                                          details sufficient to identify the ICIF at               238 We do not intend to issue a public notice,

                                                                                                          issue, such as location and Point of                  accept comments, or issue an order on the
                                                   229 E.ON  at 9.                                                                                              informational filings.
                                                   230 First Wind at 16.                                  Interconnection; and (3) identification                  239 NOPR, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 54.
                                                   231 AWEA at 15–16.                                                                                              240 EEI at 14; NextEra at 17; EPSA at 6–7; NRG
                                                   232 First Wind at 16 and NRG at 4.                       235 Lindenat 9–10.                                  at 3–4; and SEIA at 4.
                                                   233 NRG at 4.                                            236 Lindenat 9–10.                                     241 EEI at 14.
                                                   234 NRG at 5.                                            237 MISO at 6.                                         242 NextEra at 17.




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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                               17675

                                                 generating facility or increase in                      safe harbor effectively grants to the ICIF            within or adjacent to the public utility
                                                 capacity of an existing facility should                 owner and its affiliates a monopoly over              transmission provider’s footprint (ICIF-
                                                 not be more than seven years from the                   use of its ICIF for six years at a                    Owning Affiliates).250
                                                 date the interconnection request is                     minimum. They argue that such a result
                                                                                                                                                               2. Comments
                                                 received by the transmission                            cannot be harmonized with the
                                                 provider.243 SEIA states that a seven-                  Commission’s obligations to remedy                       154. Several commenters argue that
                                                 year safe harbor period would ensure                    undue discrimination in transmission                  ICIF-Owning Affiliates should be
                                                 adequate time for financing and                         service and its reliance on competitive               eligible for the blanket waiver.251
                                                 construction of additional generation                   markets to ensure just and reasonable                 Commenters assert that excluding ICIF-
                                                 capacity. SEIA asserts that analysis of                 wholesale prices.                                     Owning Affiliates from the proposed
                                                 the dozen largest solar projects expected                                                                     waivers would bestow an unfair
                                                 to be online by 2016 reveals the median                 c. Commission Determination                           advantage on their competitors without
                                                 time from development to commercial                        151. We adopt in this Final Rule the               providing any regulatory benefits.252
                                                 operation is nearly six years. A seven-                 five-year safe harbor period. It                      Southern emphasizes that ICIF-Owning
                                                 year safe harbor will ensure that most,                 represents a balancing of interests. On               Affiliates function separately from the
                                                 if not all, future phases of a solar power              the one hand, we want to relieve                      public utility transmission provider and
                                                 plant can be constructed within the safe                regulatory burdens and unnecessary                    are independent generators.253 BHE
                                                 harbor timeframe.244                                    risks from generation developers to                   argues that the same reasons that
                                                    149. Some commenters argue for a                     encourage the development of new                      warrant the Commission replacing its
                                                 ten-year safe harbor period. BHE also                   generation and promote competition.                   current case-by-case approach to
                                                 agrees that the proposed five-year                      On the other hand, we want to ensure                  granting waivers apply irrespective of
                                                 duration is impractically short given the               not unduly discriminatory access to                   corporate structure.254
                                                 commercial and permitting realities                     transmission which also promotes                         155. BP Wind, Sempra, and First
                                                 generation developers face and, argues                  competition. We find that using the                   Wind take issue with the Commission’s
                                                 the safe harbor should be for ten years                 commercial operation date as the                      stated concern in the NOPR that the
                                                 from the date that the ICIF is                          starting point for the safe harbor period             generator’s vertically-integrated utility
                                                 energized.245 AWEA argues that the                      eliminates some of the concerns                       affiliate, if granted the blanket waiver,
                                                 proposed five-year period should be                     regarding sufficient time for safe harbor             may take steps to structure its
                                                 extended to ten years in order to reduce                protection. As such, we decline to                    development projects to limit or deny
                                                 the risks encountered by generation                     increase the safe harbor period from five             access to transmission facilities. BP
                                                 developers developing phased                            years to either seven or ten years.                   Wind emphasizes that there are various
                                                 generation projects. AWEA explains that                    152. We disagree with APPA and                     reasons why a company would place
                                                 often times a wind generation project                   TAPS that the safe harbor protection is               ownership of generation and associated
                                                 may be planned in three or four phases,                 effectively a minimum of six years                    generation interconnection facilities
                                                 which could not reasonably be expected                  instead of five. That is, the rebuttable              into a separate legal entity that are not
                                                 to reach completion in a five-year                      presumption that the ICIF owner has                   in any way for the purpose of limiting
                                                 period. According to AWEA, a ten-year                   definitive plans to use its capacity,                 access to generator interconnection
                                                 safe harbor period would provide                        without having to make a demonstration                facilities.255 First Wind argues that, as a
                                                 developers the appropriate amount of                    through a specific plans and milestones               practical matter, a transmission owner
                                                 time and reasonable incentive needed to                 showing, ends five years after the                    will not attempt to push facilities that
                                                 develop the ICIF necessary for the                      commercial operation date. The fact that              are not properly defined as ICIF into the
                                                 development of new, cost-effective wind                 it takes time to get service under                    ICIF classification in order to remove
                                                 energy resources.246                                    sections 210 and 211 does not change                  them from availability under their
                                                    150. As discussed above, APPA,                       the fact that, at the end of the five year            OATTs or to secure priority rights,
                                                 TAPS, and NRECA argue that the                          safe harbor period, if there were to be               because it would violate the OATT and
                                                 Commission should not implement a                       an application under sections 210 and                 shift costs to the generation affiliate that
                                                 safe harbor period of any duration.247                  211, the ICIF owner would need to show                would otherwise be recovered from
                                                 Additionally, APPA and TAPS argue                       it has plans to use any remaining                     OATT customers.256 Further, Sempra
                                                 that the monopoly on ICIF will extend                   capacity on the ICIF and is making                    argues that the Commission has for
                                                 for longer than the five years of the safe              progress to completing those plans. In                years granted OATT waivers to ICIF-
                                                 harbor period.248 They argue that in                    any event, we note that any request for               owning generators interconnected to
                                                 order to avoid the safe harbor barrier, a               interconnection or transmission service               their affiliated utility systems because
                                                 requester must not file its application                 takes time to prepare and process,                    the facilities in question are sole-use,
                                                 under sections 210 and 211 until after                  whether it is addressed to an ICIF owner              limited and discrete, radial in nature,
                                                 the five-year period. They point out that               pursuant to sections 210 and 211 or a
                                                                                                                                                                  250 For generators owned by a public utility
                                                 it will take some time for the                          public utility under its OATT.
                                                                                                                                                               transmission provider within its footprint,
                                                 Commission to issue a final order                                                                             transmission service on the generator’s
                                                 requiring interconnection and                           E. Affiliate Concerns
                                                                                                                                                               interconnection facilities has generally been
                                                 transmission service, and additional                    1. Commission Proposal                                governed by the public utility transmission
                                                 studies or modifications may be                                                                               provider’s OATT. See Puget Sound Energy, Inc., 133
                                                                                                            153. In the NOPR,249 the Commission                FERC ¶ 61,160 (2010), reh’g denied 139 FERC
                                                 required even after a final order.
                                                                                                         sought comments on whether to extend                  ¶ 61,241 (2012).
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                                                 Therefore, they contend, the proposed                                                                            251 Southern at 4–5; EEI at 11–13; BHE at 8–11;
                                                                                                         the proposed reforms to generators
                                                                                                                                                               Sempra at 6–9; BP Wind 7–10; First Wind at 10;
                                                   243 EPSA  at 6–7 and NRG at 3–4.
                                                                                                         whose ownership or operation of                       AWEA at 16; and NextEra 18–20.
                                                   244 SEIA at 4.                                        transmission facilities is limited to ICIF,              252 EEI at 9; BHE at 8–10; and Southern at 4–5.
                                                   245 BHE at 12–13.                                     but who are affiliated with a public                     253 Southern at 4–5.
                                                   246 AWEA at 15.                                       utility transmission provider and are                    254 BHE at 8–10.
                                                   247 See supra PP 135–136.                                                                                      255 BP Wind at 8–9.
                                                   248 APPA and TAPS at 15–16.                             249 NOPR,   FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 at P 59.      256 First Wind at 10.




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                                                 17676             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 and not part of an integrated                           ownership/operation of transmission                   affiliate of a merchant transmission
                                                 transmission network.257                                facilities is limited to ICIF, should not             provider.269
                                                    156. Several commenters argue that                   be required to be added to the public                    160. Southern and BHE also argue
                                                 there are sufficient protections already                utility’s OATT because this could shift               that the Commission should extend the
                                                 in place to deter such behavior. Sempra                 the costs of the ICIF to native load                  safe harbor protection to ICIF-owning
                                                 notes that the Commission-                              customers of the transmission provider                Affiliates because such generators are
                                                 jurisdictional interconnection process                  and create other complexities for the                 similarly situated to and operate the
                                                 and the Commission’s Standards of                       transmission provider (e.g., compliance               same as other wholesale generators.
                                                 Conduct provide additional protections                  with Standards of Conduct).264                        Southern believes that all wholesale
                                                 to affiliated and unaffiliated generators                  158. BP Wind points out that                       generators and ICIF owners would
                                                 alike, and that further protection is                   excluding ICIF-owning Affiliates from                 benefit from the proposed safe harbor
                                                 provided when the interconnection                       the blanket waiver could disadvantage                 period.270 BHE requests that the
                                                 process is administered by an RTO or                    jointly owned projects, as unaffiliated               Commission also extend eligibility for
                                                 ISO.258 Sempra also states that if the                  generator owners would effectively lose               the safe harbor presumption to
                                                 Commission is made aware that a                                                                               incumbent utility generators.271 BHE
                                                                                                         the value associated with their blanket
                                                 vertically-integrated utility has                                                                             asserts that wholesale generator ICIF
                                                                                                         waiver if they share ownership in a
                                                 structured its generation and                                                                                 owners share the same commercial risks
                                                                                                         common set of ICIF with a generator
                                                 interconnection facilities development                                                                        of having their specific generation
                                                                                                         that is affiliated with a public utility
                                                 in such a way that inappropriately                                                                            expansion plans pre-empted by a
                                                                                                         transmission provider.265 Similarly, if
                                                 limits access to those facilities, the                                                                        competing unaffiliated generation
                                                                                                         the Commission declines to extend the
                                                 Commission could, among other things,                                                                         developer and burden of pursuing a
                                                                                                         blanket waiver to ICIF-owning
                                                 revoke the blanket waiver and safe                                                                            declaratory order from the Commission
                                                                                                         Affiliates, NextEra questions: (1) How
                                                 harbor treatment for those facilities.259                                                                     in order to reserve capacity for their
                                                                                                         ICIF-owning Affiliates could request the
                                                 Further, BHE asserts that affiliate                                                                           future plans.272 According to BHE, any
                                                 restrictions and enforcement tools all                  waiver on a case-by-case basis; (2)
                                                                                                         whether, without a waiver, each ICIF-                 concerns with extending the safe harbor
                                                 function to achieve non-discriminatory                                                                        presumption beyond non-affiliates are
                                                 access over ICIF for third parties and                  owning Affiliate is required to file its
                                                                                                         own OATT, resulting in holding                        reasonably mitigated without limiting
                                                 that the procedures under sections 210                                                                        the presumption to non-affiliated ICIF
                                                 and 211 of the FPA provide an extra                     companies with numerous OATTs on
                                                                                                         file, even for facilities located in the              owners. BHE explains that under
                                                 level of protection.260 Southern agrees                                                                       Commission rules, all generators
                                                 that the Commission’s concerns with                     affiliated public utility transmission
                                                                                                         provider’s footprint; and (3) whether the             seeking transmission interconnection
                                                 respect to anti-competitive behavior by                                                                       and/or transmission service are to be
                                                 a transmission provider should be                       ICIF-owning Affiliates have to transfer
                                                                                                         ownership or control of their facilities to           treated comparably. BHE further notes
                                                 addressed by the Commission’s open                                                                            that employees of a public utility with
                                                 access requirements, the Standards of                   the affiliated public utility transmission
                                                                                                         provider.266 In the event the                         captive customers and its affiliates with
                                                 Conduct, and the code of conduct.261                                                                          market-based rate authority are to
                                                 BHE contends that the Commission                        Commission does extend the blanket
                                                                                                         waiver to ICIF-owning Affiliates, BHE                 operate separately to the maximum
                                                 should extend eligibility for the                                                                             extent practical.273 BHE also contends
                                                 proposed blanket waiver not only to                     asks the Commission to confirm that, in
                                                                                                         instances where a third party is granted              that it would be unduly discriminatory
                                                 affiliates of the transmission provider,
                                                                                                         a request for service under sections 210              to deny incumbent utility generator and
                                                 but also to the wholesale generation
                                                                                                         and 211 over an incumbent utility                     ICIF-owning Affiliates identical access
                                                 function of a vertically-integrated
                                                                                                         generator’s ICIF, that incumbent utility              to the safe harbor presumption, given
                                                 utility, irrespective of whether the ICIF
                                                                                                         generator can fulfill its access                      that existing policy is equally
                                                 is physically located within or adjacent
                                                                                                         responsibility by transferring                        burdensome, and creates the same
                                                 to the affiliated public utility
                                                                                                         operational control and responsibility                regulatory uncertainty with respect to
                                                 transmission provider’s footprint.262
                                                                                                         for the relevant ICIF to its transmission             priority rights for all ICIF owners.274
                                                    157. BP Wind and AWEA argue that
                                                 the Commission should at least extend                   provider to ensure non-discriminatory                    161. BHE argues that, at a minimum,
                                                 eligibility of the blanket waiver to ICIF-              access over the ICIF.267 Additionally,                eligibility for the proposed safe harbor
                                                 owning Affiliates where they are                        BHE asks the Commission to clarify its                presumption should be extended to
                                                 geographically separate from the public                 expectations, in this scenario, as to                 ICIF-owning Affiliates.275 BHE also
                                                 utility transmission provider’s                         whether the ICIF should be treated by                 argues that the safe harbor presumption
                                                 footprint.263 Southern, BP Wind, and                    the transmission provider as                          should be applied to ICIF-owning
                                                                                                         Transmission Provider’s                               Affiliates irrespective of whether the
                                                 NextEra question how ICIF-owning
                                                                                                         Interconnection Facilities and managed                ICIF is physically located within or
                                                 Affiliates will be treated if they do not
                                                                                                         under Article 9.9.2 of the Commission’s               adjacent to the affiliated public utility
                                                 receive the blanket waiver. Southern
                                                                                                         pro forma LGIA.268                                    transmission provider’s footprint.276
                                                 argues that a wholesale generator
                                                 affiliate that is not a part of a vertically-                                                                    162. In contrast, some commenters
                                                                                                            159. Linden states that in the event
                                                 integrated utility’s OATT, and whose                                                                          argue that the Commission should not
                                                                                                         that the Commission limits the
                                                                                                                                                               extend the proposed reforms to entities
                                                                                                         applicability of the blanket waiver to
                                                                                                                                                               that are affiliated with a public utility
                                                   257 Sempra at 8 (citing the TDM Rehearing
                                                                                                         non-affiliates, it requests that the
                                                 Request at n. 20, pointing to the then-significant
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                                                                                                         Commission clarify that any such                        269 Linden at 8–9.
                                                 number of OATT waivers granted to such affiliated
                                                 entities as of 2003).                                   limitation would not apply to an                        270 Southern at 6.
                                                   258 Sempra at 8.                                                                                              271 BHE at 13.
                                                   259 Sempra at 8–9.                                      264 Southern at 5.                                    272 BHE at 14.
                                                   260 BHE at 10.                                          265 BPWind at 8–9.                                    273 BHE at 15.
                                                   261 Southern at 5.                                      266 NextEra at 18–20.                                 274 BHE at 16.
                                                   262 BHE at 2, 10–11.                                    267 BHE at 17–18.                                     275 BHE at 3–4.
                                                   263 BP Wind at 7–8 and AWEA at 16.                      268 BHE at 17–18.                                     276 BHE at 3–4.




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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                 17677

                                                 transmission provider.277 APPA and                      transmission planning and expansion                   and transparency requirements of the
                                                 TAPS contend that the NOPR’s                            obligations, is necessary to prevent the              Standards of Conduct under Part 358 of
                                                 treatment of affiliates is inconsistent                 transmission provider from evading its                the Commission’s regulations impose
                                                 and contrary to the Commission’s                        affirmative obligation to work within its             specific requirements governing the
                                                 market-based rate policies which have                   transmission planning region to create a              relationship between the ICIF-Owning
                                                 been crafted over decades to protect                    regional transmission plan. They assert               Affiliates and the transmission
                                                 customers from the use of control over                  that, at an absolute minimum, ICIF                    provider.283 While a waiver of the
                                                 transmission facilities to erect barriers               owners affiliated with transmission                   Standards of Conduct for the ICIF-
                                                 to competition in favor of the owner’s                  providers should be excluded from the                 Owning Affiliate would relieve it of the
                                                 corporate family.278 They state that,                   blanket waiver and safe harbor as to any
                                                                                                                                                               obligation to comply with the Standards
                                                 while the NOPR does not consider the                    ICIF within the transmission provider’s
                                                                                                                                                               of Conduct that require separation of
                                                 ICIF owner’s affiliates in defining                     footprint or an adjacent system.282
                                                 eligibility for the blanket waiver or safe                                                                    transmission and marketing functions,
                                                                                                         3. Commission Determination                           that waiver has no effect on the
                                                 harbor, potentially even if the ICIF
                                                 owner’s affiliate is a transmission                        165. We conclude that the blanket                  transmission provider’s obligation to
                                                 provider, the Commission proposes to                    waiver and safe harbor should apply to                comply with the Standards of Conduct
                                                 continue its policy of allowing the ICIF                a public utility transmission provider’s              consistent with Part 358 of the
                                                 owner to point to its affiliate’s planned               affiliates whose ownership/operation of               Commission’s regulations.284 The
                                                 usage to demonstrate definitive plans to                transmission facilities is limited to ICIF,           Standards of Conduct also require,
                                                 use any remaining ICIF capacity after                   regardless of geographic location. An                 among other things, a transmission
                                                 the safe harbor period.279 APPA and                     ICIF-Owning Affiliate, as we use the                  provider to treat all transmission
                                                 TAPS argue that by ignoring affiliates in               term here, is a corporate entity that is              customers, affiliated and non-affiliated,
                                                 determining eligibility for waiver or safe              separate from, and functions                          on a not unduly discriminatory basis,
                                                 harbor while allowing ICIF owners to                    independently from, an affiliated public              and prohibits the transmission provider
                                                 use those same affiliates to fend off                   utility transmission provider that owns,              from making or granting any undue
                                                 third-party access, the NOPR would                      controls, or operates non-ICIF                        preference or advantage to any person
                                                 incent utilities to organize their                      transmission facilities. As such, the                 with respect to the transmission or sale
                                                 corporate structures to maximize their                  ICIF-Owning Affiliate is comparable to
                                                                                                                                                               of electric energy.285
                                                 opportunities to block third-party                      other independent generation
                                                 competitive generation.                                 companies that own ICIF within the                       167. We disagree with APPA and
                                                    163. APPA and TAPS also contend                      public utility transmission provider’s                TAPS’ claim that granting the waiver to
                                                 that transmission providers are already                 footprint. Like other independent                     ICIF-Owning Affiliates would be
                                                 ‘‘in the business of providing                          generation companies, an ICIF-Owning                  inconsistent and contrary to the
                                                 transmission service’’ and are subject to               Affiliate faces the risk and potential                Commission’s market-based rate
                                                 Standards of Conduct, and thus face no                  burden of having to file an OATT if it                policies by failing to consider the ICIF-
                                                 significant additional burden from the                  receives a third-party request for                    Owning Affiliates in defining eligibility
                                                 requirements the Commission proposes                    service. The undue discrimination                     for market-based rates. The Commission
                                                 to waive. NRECA adds that such entities                 provisions of section 205 and section                 considers the ICIF-Owning Affiliates
                                                 should not be granted privileges that are               206 and the Commission’s existing                     when granting market-based rate
                                                 intended for generators that are                        Standards of Conduct rules should                     authority. The market-based rate
                                                 completely independent of transmission                  prevent undue discrimination and                      requirement under section 35.37(d)
                                                 providers. They argue that if extended                  ensure that the transmission provider’s               requires a seller that owns, operates, or
                                                 to affiliates of transmission providers,                open access and transmission planning
                                                                                                                                                               controls transmission facilities, or
                                                 the proposed reforms would incent                       obligations are not circumvented.
                                                                                                                                                               whose affiliates own, operate, or control
                                                 transmission providers to structure                     However, we decline to extend the
                                                                                                         blanket waiver to ICIF that are                       transmission facilities, to have on file
                                                 generation and ICIF development to
                                                                                                         controlled or operated by the generation              with the Commission an OATT as
                                                 avoid open access and transmission
                                                 planning obligations.280                                units of vertically-integrated public                 described in section 35.28. However, the
                                                    164. APPA and TAPS contend that                      utilities (Generation Functions), as                  Commission allows sellers to rely on
                                                 any ICIF policy changes should exclude                  requested by BHE.                                     Commission-granted OATT waivers to
                                                 affiliates of transmission providers from                  166. We disagree with APPA and                     satisfy the vertical market power part of
                                                 eligibility for the blanket waiver or safe              TAPS that extending the reforms
                                                 harbor status at least within the                       adopted herein to ICIF-Owning
                                                 transmission provider’s planning                        Affiliates would constitute a departure
                                                 region.281 They argue that requiring                    from the Commission’s requirements
                                                 transmission provider-affiliated ICIF                   that transmission service be not unduly
                                                 owners within the transmission                          discriminatory. Sections 205 and 206 of
                                                 provider’s planning region to utilize the               the FPA continue to govern the behavior
                                                 transmission provider’s existing OATT                   of the ICIF-Owning Affiliates and public
                                                 processes, rather than artificially                     utility transmission providers after the
                                                 walling-off such ICIF from access and                   reforms adopted herein become
                                                                                                         effective. Therefore, ICIF-Owning
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                                                   277 APPA   and TAPS at 16–17 and NRECA at 9–          Affiliates and public utility
                                                 10.                                                     transmission providers are prohibited                   283 18 CFR pt. 358.
                                                   278 APPA   and TAPS at 16–17.
                                                   279 APPA
                                                                                                         from engaging in unduly preferential or                 284 ICIF Generator Affiliates are typically making
                                                              and TAPS at 17 (citing to NOPR, FERC
                                                 Stats. & Regs. ¶ 32,701 proposed section                unduly discriminatory behavior. In                    sales for resale in interstate commerce and meet the
                                                 35.28(d)(2)(ii)(A)).                                    addition, the independent functioning                 Commission’s definition of marketing affiliates. See
                                                   280 APPA and TAPS at 18 and NRECA at 9–10.                                                                  18 CFR 358.3(a) and (c).
                                                   281 APPA and TAPS at 25–27.                             282 APPA   and TAPS at 26–27.                         285 18 CFR 358.4.




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                                                 17678             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 the requirement.286 As noted above,287                  the Commission’s requirements                          should confirm that this Prior Notice
                                                 the waiver in section 35.28(d)(2) is an                 prohibiting undue discrimination                       policy applies not only to transmission
                                                 additional way in which to satisfy the                  without the provisions waived through                  requests under section 211, but also to
                                                 vertical market power requirements for                  this Final Rule.                                       interconnection requests under section
                                                 transmission. Market-based rate                            169. We find that it is not appropriate             210 and to any requests for ICIF
                                                 authority is conditioned on compliance                  to grant the blanket waiver to                         access.291
                                                 with the Affiliate Restrictions in section              Generation Functions. The public utility               b. Commission Determination
                                                 35.39 of the Commission’s regulations.                  transmission provider has certain rights
                                                 Like the Standards of Conduct, the                      and obligations, one of which is to                       173. We decline to address the
                                                 Affiliate Restrictions include                          administer the transmission grid                       Commission’s filing requirements as
                                                 independent functioning requirements                    pursuant to its existing OATT. Where a                 they are beyond the scope of the
                                                 as well as information sharing                          Generation Function of the public                      proceeding.
                                                 prohibitions.288 Thus, with the statutory               utility transmission provider is an ICIF               3. Technical Aspects of Interconnection
                                                 prohibitions and implementing                           owner, we find it appropriate, in the
                                                 regulations, public utility transmission                event of a third-party request, for the                a. Comments
                                                 providers are not permitted to organize                 request to be processed pursuant to its                   174. BHE states that third-party access
                                                 their corporate structures in a way that                affiliated public utility transmission                 to an ICIF should only be allowed at a
                                                 would block third-party competitive                     provider’s OATT.                                       point past the high side (transmission
                                                 generation.                                                                                                    side) of a collector bus, and not on the
                                                    168. Moreover, we note that entities                 F. Miscellaneous                                       low side (generator side) of the collector
                                                 may file a complaint under section 206                  1. Treatment of Line Losses on ICIF                    bus. It argues that such access to the
                                                 with the Commission if they believe                                                                            generator side of the collector
                                                 discrimination is occurring. Also, in                   a. Comments                                            introduces technical system protection
                                                 determining whether a third party has                      170. NRG requests that the                          and control complexities that would be
                                                 rebutted the presumption under this                     Commission explicitly state that all                   impractical to accommodate, requiring
                                                 Final Rule that an ICIF owner has                       transmission line losses associated with               an inordinate amount of coordination
                                                 definitive plans to use excess capacity                 a third party gaining access to an                     between interconnecting generation
                                                 on the ICIF during the safe harbor                      incumbent owner’s interconnection                      projects and may even compromise the
                                                 period, the affiliate relationship                      facility be borne solely by the third                  reliability of the interconnecting
                                                 between the ICIF owner and a public                     party. NRG argues that as more capacity                facilities.292
                                                 utility transmission provider may be a                  is transmitted on these interconnection
                                                 factor in that determination. Finally, as                                                                      b. Commission Determination
                                                                                                         facilities and the excess capacity on
                                                 a backstop, we note that the                            these facilities diminishes, line losses                  175. We find BHE’s argument to be
                                                 Commission possesses ample statutory                    will continue to increase to the                       beyond the scope of the proceeding.
                                                 remedies to address violations of the                   detriment of the incumbent                             Disputes regarding technical
                                                 applicable regulations and statutes. As                 interconnection facility owner.289                     requirements of the reliable
                                                 noted by Sempra, if the Commission                                                                             interconnection of third-party
                                                 became aware that a public utility                      b. Commission Determination                            generators should be addressed in
                                                 transmission provider and an ICIF-                        171. We find the NRG’s argument to                   particular proceedings under sections
                                                 Owning Affiliate structured their                       be beyond the scope of the proceeding.                 210 and 211.
                                                 transmission, generation, and                           Treatment of line losses on ICIF should                4. Implementation
                                                 interconnection facilities development                  be negotiated between the parties using
                                                 in such a way that inappropriately                      the ICIF.                                                 176. For those entities that satisfy the
                                                 limits access to those facilities, the                                                                         eligibility requirements set forth in this
                                                 Commission could, among other things,                   2. Applicability of the Commission’s                   Final Rule, the blanket waiver will be
                                                 revoke the blanket waiver and safe                      ‘‘Prior Notice’’ Policy                                effective as of the effective date of this
                                                 harbor treatment for the ICIF-Owning                    a. Comments                                            Final Rule. For those entities that must
                                                 Affiliate. Accordingly, the                                                                                    file a statement of compliance with
                                                 Commission’s existing rules, in concert                    172. First Wind and Invenergy ask the               section 210 of the FPA in order to
                                                 with other tools available to hold                      Commission to confirm that its Prior                   achieve eligibility, the blanket waiver
                                                 entities accountable, are sufficient to                 Notice policy 290 also applies to requests             will be effective as of the latter of the
                                                 ensure comparable treatment of                          for ICIF access. In Prior Notice, the                  effective date of this Final Rule or the
                                                 affiliates and non-affiliates, and enforce              Commission, among other things, found                  date the statement of compliance is
                                                                                                         that transmission study contracts and                  filed. If an entity has a case-specific
                                                   286 Market-Based Rates for Wholesale Sales of         charges, while jurisdictional, do not                  request for waiver of OATT
                                                 Electric Energy, Capacity and Ancillary Services by     have to be filed unless they are the                   requirements pending as of the date that
                                                 Public Utilities, Order No. 697, 72 FR 39904 (July      subject of a complaint filed by the                    the entity becomes eligible for the
                                                 20, 2007), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,252 at P 408,       transmission requester under section
                                                 clarified, 121 FERC ¶ 61,260 (2007), clarified, 124                                                            blanket waiver, the blanket waiver will
                                                 FERC ¶ 61,055, order on reh’g, Order No. 697–A, 73
                                                                                                         206 of the Federal Power Act alleging                  apply as of that date, and the entity
                                                 FR 25832 (May 7, 2008), FERC Stats. & Regs.             that the rates charged for a transmission              should file to withdraw the waiver
                                                 ¶ 31,268, order on reh’g, Order No. 697–B, 73 FR        feasibility study are unjust,                          request to the extent it has been
                                                 79610 (Dec. 30, 2008), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,285     unreasonable or unduly discriminatory,                 rendered moot by the blanket waiver. As
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                                                 (2008), order on reh’g, Order No. 697–C, 74 FR
                                                 30924 (June 29, 2009), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,291
                                                                                                         or preferential. First Wind and                        discussed in section IV.B.7 above, an
                                                 (2009), order on reh’g, Order No. 697–D, 75 FR          Invenergy contend that the Commission                  entity that has already been issued a
                                                 14342 (Mar. 25, 2010), FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,305
                                                 (2010), aff’d sub nom. Mont. Consumer Counsel v.          289 NRG
                                                                                                                                                                waiver of the same requirements waived
                                                                                                                     at 6.
                                                 FERC, 659 F.3d 910 (9th Cir. 2011), cert. denied,         290 Prior  Notice and Filing Requirements Under
                                                                                                                                                                by the blanket waiver and is eligible for
                                                 133 S. Ct. 26 (2012).                                   Part II of the Federal Power Act 64 FERC ¶ 61,139,
                                                   287 See supra P 57.                                                                                           291 First   Wind at 12–14 and Invenergy at 12–13.
                                                                                                         clarified, 65 FERC ¶ 61,081, at 61,508 (1993) (Prior
                                                   288 See 18 CFR 35.39(c) and § 35.39(d).               Notice).                                                292 BHE     at 19.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                         17679

                                                 the blanket waiver will be deemed to be                   the collections of information display a               OATT, OASIS, and Standards of
                                                 operating under the blanket waiver                        valid OMB control number.                              Conduct filing requirements, to all ICIF
                                                 without further filings necessary with                      178. The Commission is submitting                    owners, including those that do not sell
                                                 respect to the issued waiver. However,                    the proposed modifications to its                      electric energy. Under the Final Rule, an
                                                 as discussed in section IV.B.8 above, the                 information collections to OMB for                     ICIF owner that does not sell electric
                                                 blanket waiver will have no automatic                     review and approval in accordance with                 energy is required to make an
                                                 impact on existing OATTs that govern                      section 3507(d) of the Paperwork                       informational filing stating that it
                                                 service requests over ICIF, although the                  Reduction Act of 1995.294 In the NOPR,                 commits to comply with and be bound
                                                 Commission will consider a request to                     the Commission solicited comments on                   by the obligations and procedures
                                                 withdraw an OATT on a case-by-case                        the Commission’s need for this                         applicable to electric utilities under
                                                 basis if no third parties are taking                      information, whether the information                   section 210 of the FPA in order to
                                                 service under it. With respect to the                     will have practical utility, the accuracy              receive the blanket waiver. We have
                                                 informational statement regarding the                     of the burden estimates, ways to                       increased the burden estimate in the
                                                 commercial operation date of the ICIF                     enhance the quality, utility, and clarity              table below to reflect this filing.
                                                 discussed in section IV.D.2 above, we                     of the information to be collected or
                                                                                                           retained, and any suggested methods for                   181. Second, the Commission revised
                                                 note that such statement need only be
                                                                                                           minimizing respondents’ burden,                        the beginning of the safe harbor period
                                                 filed if the ICIF owner seeks to take
                                                                                                           including the use of automated                         from the ICIF energization date to the
                                                 advantage of the five-year safe harbor
                                                                                                           information techniques. The                            ICIF commercial operation date. The
                                                 period.
                                                                                                           Commission included a table that listed                Commission recognizes that most ICIF
                                                 V. Information Collection Statement                       the estimated public reporting burdens                 owners will likely make a brief
                                                   177. The Office of Management and                       for the proposed reporting requirements,               notification filing documenting: (1) The
                                                 Budget (OMB) regulations require                          as well as a projection of the costs of                ICIF commercial operation date; (2)
                                                 approval of certain information                           compliance for the reporting                           details sufficient to identify the ICIF at
                                                 collection and data retention                             requirements.                                          issue, such as location and Point of
                                                 requirements imposed by agency                              179. The Commission did not receive                  Interconnection; and (3) identification
                                                 rules.293 Upon approval of a                              any comments specifically addressing                   of the ICIF owner. However, because the
                                                 collection(s) of information, OMB will                    the burden estimates provided in the                   filing is similar to that proposed in the
                                                 assign an OMB control number and an                       NOPR. However, the Commission has                      NOPR, we are not modifying the
                                                 expiration date. Respondents subject to                   made changes to its proposal that are                  estimated public reporting burdens for
                                                 the filing requirements of a rule will not                adopted in this Final Rule.                            this proposed reporting requirement in
                                                 be penalized for failing to respond to                      180. First, the regulations adopted in               the table below. The Commission
                                                 these collections of information unless                   the Final Rule give a blanket waiver of                believes that the revised burden
                                                                                                                                                                  estimates below are representatives of
                                                   293 5   CFR 1320.11(b) (2013).                            294 44   U.S.C. 3507(d) (2012).                      the average burden on respondents.
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                                                 17680                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                     RM14–11 (OPEN ACCESS AND PRIORITY RIGHTS ON INTERCONNECTION CUSTOMER’S INTERCONNECTION FACILITIES)
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Total
                                                                                                                                                           Annual                                      Average                 annual           Average
                                                                                                                                                                                      Total
                                                                                                                                Number of                 number of                                   burden and               burden           cost per
                                                                                                                                                                                   number of
                                                                                                                               respondents             responses per                                   cost per              hours and        respondent
                                                                                                                                                                                   responses
                                                                                                                                                         respondent                                  response 295           total annual          ($)
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                cost

                                                                                                                                      (1)                       (2)               (1) * (2) = (3)           (4)             (3) * (4) = (5)    (5) ÷ (1)
                                                 Individual Requests for Waiver (FERC–917) ......                                              16                        ¥1                 ¥16                  10                ¥160           ¥$947
                                                                                                                                                                                                               $947             ¥$15,146
                                                 OATT Filings (FERC–917) ...................................                                    1                        ¥1                   ¥1                100                ¥100         ¥$9,466
                                                                                                                                                                                                             $9,466              ¥$9,466
                                                 Petitions for Declaratory Order requesting pri-
                                                   ority rights (FERC–582) ...................................                                   1                       ¥1                   ¥1                 30                 ¥30         ¥$2,840
                                                                                                                                                                                                             $2,840              ¥$2,840
                                                 Safe Harbor Commercial Operation Date Filing
                                                   (average of first three years) 296 (FERC–917)                                               39                           1                  39                   1                   39            $95
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  $95               $3,692
                                                 ICIF Owner that Does Not Sell Electric Energy
                                                   Filing to Receive Blanket Waiver (average of
                                                   first three years) 297 (FERC–917) .....................                                     19                            1                 19                   1                   19            $95
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  $95               $1,799
                                                      Total ..............................................................     ....................    ........................                40    ....................          ¥232        ¥$13,063
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                ¥$21,961



                                                    Cost to Comply: The Commission has                                       section 210 of the FPA in order to                                        Total Annual Hours for Reduced
                                                 projected the cost of compliance with                                       receive the blanket waiver to be $3,786                                Collection per year (290 hours) @$94.66
                                                 the safe harbor commercial operation                                        in the initial year and $852 in                                        an hour = $27,452.
                                                 date filing to be $7,573 in the initial                                     subsequent years, as new ICIF owners                                      Title: FERC–582, Electric Fees and
                                                 year and $1,704 in subsequent years, as                                     make such filings. This is offset by the                               Annual Charges; FERC–917, Non-
                                                 new ICIF owners make safe harbor                                            reduction in burden associated with the                                Discriminatory Open Access
                                                 filings for their new projects. In                                          waiver of filing requirements of $27,452                               Transmission Tariff.
                                                 addition, the Commission has projected                                      per year. As an average for the first three                               Action: Revision of Currently
                                                 the cost of compliance for ICIF owners                                      years, this amounts to a net reduction in                              Approved Collection of Information.
                                                 that do not sell electric energy to make                                    burden of $21,961.                                                        OMB Control No. 1902–0132; 1902–
                                                 an informational filing stating that it                                                                                                            0233.
                                                 commits to comply with and be bound                                           Total Annual Hours for Collection in
                                                                                                                                                                                                       Respondents for this Rulemaking:
                                                 by the obligations and procedures                                           initial year (120 hours) @$94.66 an hour
                                                                                                                                                                                                    Businesses or other for profit and/or
                                                 applicable to electric utilities under                                      = $11,359.                                                             not-for-profit institutions.
                                                                                                                               Total Annual Hours for Collection in                                    Frequency of Information: As
                                                    295 The estimates for cost per response are derived
                                                                                                                             subsequent years (27 hours) @$94.66 an                                 indicated in the table.
                                                 using the following formula: Average Burden Hours
                                                 per Response * $94.66 per Hour = Average Cost per
                                                                                                                             hour = $2,556.                                                            Necessity of Information: The
                                                 Response. The hourly cost figure represents a                                                                                                      Commission is adopting these changes
                                                 combined hourly rate of an attorney ($131.00),                                 297 The average number of filings for the first                     to its regulations related to which
                                                 economist ($71.00), engineer ($65.34), and                                  three years is computed as follows. The                                entities must file the pro forma OATT,
                                                 administrative staff ($38.63), with a 50 percent                            Commission expects approximately 40 section 210
                                                 weighting on the attorney’s rate (i.e. [$131(1/2) +                         applicability filings in the first year, which
                                                                                                                                                                                                    establish and maintain an OASIS, and
                                                 $71.00(1/6) + $65.34(1/6) + $38.63(1/6)]/4 = $94.66.                        represents half the number of waiver filings over a                    abide by its Standards of Conduct in
                                                 The estimated hourly costs (salary) are based on                            historical five-year period. The Commission does                       order to eliminate unnecessary filings
                                                 Bureau of Labor and Statistics information                                  not know the precise number of existing ICIF                           and increase certainty for entities that
                                                 (available at http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/                               owners that do not sell electric energy. Of the 80
                                                 naics2_22.htm, and are adjusted to include benefits                         ICIF owner that have requested waiver in the past
                                                                                                                                                                                                    develop generation. The purpose of this
                                                 by assuming that salary accounts for 68.7 percent                           five years, the Commission reasons that some share                     Final Rule is to reduce regulatory
                                                 of total compensation). See http://www.bls.gov/                             of them do not sell electric energy, and we use 50                     burdens and promote development
                                                 news.release/ecec.nr0.htm.                                                  percent as an estimate. While there is no five year                    while continuing to ensure open access
                                                    296 The average number of filings for the first                          limitation that applies to entities that may make
                                                 three years is computed as follows. The                                     this filing, we reason that this issue, while not new,
                                                                                                                                                                                                    to transmission facilities. The safe
                                                 Commission expects approximately 80 safe harbor                             has become more relevant in recent years because                       harbor commercial operation date filing
                                                 filings in the first year, which represents the                             of an increase in generation owners retaining                          is necessary to ensure transparency as to
                                                 number of waiver filings over a historical five-year                        control of their ICIF; hence, we are not including                     the applicability of the safe harbor
                                                 period and thus the approximate number of existing                          in our estimate any estimate of the number of ICIF
                                                 entities which will be able to take advantage of the                        owners that do not sell electric energy that would
                                                                                                                                                                                                    period.
                                                 five- year safe harbor period as of the effective date                      have requested waiver prior to 2010. In the                               Internal Review: The Commission has
                                                 of the Final Rule in this proceeding. In the                                subsequent two years, the Commission expects                           reviewed the proposed changes and has
                                                 subsequent two years, the Commission expects                                approximately nine section 210 applicability filings                   determined that the changes are
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                                                 approximately 18 safe harbor filings per year, which                        per year, which represents half the historical
                                                 represents the historical number of OATT waiver                             number of OATT waiver filings (16), OATT filings
                                                                                                                                                                                                    necessary. These requirements conform
                                                 filings (16), OATT filings (1), and petitions for                           (1), and petitions for declaratory order (1) per year.                 to the Commission’s need for efficient
                                                 declaratory order (1) per year. Going forward, we                           Going forward, we would expect the entities                            information collection, communication,
                                                 would expect the entities complying with the Final                          complying with the Final Rule would avoid these                        and management within the energy
                                                 Rule would avoid these filings and that the relevant                        filings and that the relevant entities would instead
                                                 entities would instead avail themselves of the safe                         avail themselves of the blanket ICIF waiver. The
                                                                                                                                                                                                    industry. The Commission has assured
                                                 harbor period. The average of the three-year period                         average of the three-year period then is (40 + 9 +                     itself, by means of internal review, that
                                                 then is (80 + 18 + 18)/3 = 39.                                              9)/3 = 19.                                                             there is specific, objective support for


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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                            17681

                                                 the burden estimates associated with the                and thus avail itself of the safe harbor                free at 1–866–208–3676) or email at
                                                 information collection requirements.                    provision; and, (2) if the entity does not              ferconlinesupport@ferc.gov, or the
                                                   182. Interested persons may obtain                    sell electricity, commit to comply with                 Public Reference Room at (202) 502–
                                                 information on the reporting                            section 210 of the FPA.302 This is true                 8371, TTY (202) 502–8659. Email the
                                                 requirements by contacting the                          for those existing entities that have                   Public Reference Room at
                                                 following: Federal Energy Regulatory                    already received waiver of the OATT                     public.referenceroom@ferc.gov.
                                                 Commission, 888 First Street NE.,                       prior to the issuance of the Final Rule,
                                                                                                                                                                 VIII. Effective Date and Congressional
                                                 Washington, DC 20426 [Attention: Ellen                  as well as for new entities. This cost
                                                                                                                                                                 Notification
                                                 Brown, Office of the Executive Director],               will be offset for new entities by, on
                                                 email: DataClearance@ferc.gov, Phone:                   average, $1,525.303 As the Commission                     These regulations are effective June
                                                 (202) 502–8663, fax: (202) 273–0873.                    has previously explained, in                            30, 2015. The Commission has
                                                   183. Comments on the requirements                     determining whether a regulatory                        determined, with the concurrence of the
                                                 of this Final Rule can be sent to the                   flexibility analysis is required, the                   Administrator of the Office of
                                                 Office of Information and Regulatory                    Commission is required to examine only                  Information and Regulatory Affairs of
                                                 Affairs, Office of Management and                       direct compliance costs that a                          OMB, that this rule is not a ‘‘major rule’’
                                                 Budget, 725 17th Street NW.,                            rulemaking imposes on small                             as defined in section 351 of the Small
                                                 Washington, DC 20503 [Attention: Desk                   business.304 It is not required to                      Business Regulatory Enforcement Act of
                                                 Officer for the Federal Energy                          examine indirect economic                               1996. The Commission will submit this
                                                 Regulatory Commission]. For security                    consequences, nor is it required to                     Final Rule to both houses of Congress
                                                 reasons, comments to OMB should be                      consider costs that an entity incurs                    and the Government Accountability
                                                 submitted by email to: oira_                            voluntarily. The Commission does not                    Office.
                                                 submission@omb.eop.gov. Comments                        consider the estimated costs per small                  List of Subjects in 18 CFR Part 35
                                                 submitted to OMB should include                         entity to have a significant economic
                                                 Docket No. RM14–11–000 and OMB                          impact on a substantial number of small                   Electric power rates, Electric utilities,
                                                 Control No. 1902–0132 and/or 1902–                      entities. Accordingly, the Commission                   Reporting and recordkeeping
                                                 0233.                                                   certifies that the Final Rule will not                  requirements.
                                                                                                         have a significant economic impact on                     By the Commission.
                                                 VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
                                                                                                         a substantial number of small entities.                   Issued: March 19, 2015.
                                                    184. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of                                                                       Nathaniel J. Davis, Sr.,
                                                 1980 (RFA) 298 generally requires a                     VII. Document Availability
                                                                                                                                                                 Deputy Secretary.
                                                 description and analysis of final rules                    185. In addition to publishing the full
                                                 that will have a significant economic                   text of this document in the Federal                      In consideration of the foregoing, the
                                                 impact on a substantial number of small                 Register, the Commission provides all                   Commission amends Part 35, Chapter I,
                                                 entities. The Small Business                            interested persons an opportunity to                    Title 18, Code of Federal Regulations, as
                                                 Administration (SBA) revised its size                   view and/or print the contents of this                  follows:
                                                 standard (effective January 22, 2014) for               document via the Internet through
                                                                                                                                                                 PART 35—FILING OF RATE
                                                 electric utilities from a standard based                FERC’s Home Page (http://
                                                                                                                                                                 SCHEDULES AND TARIFFS
                                                 on megawatt hours to a standard based                   www.ferc.gov) and in FERC’s Public
                                                 on the number of employees including                    Reference Room during normal business                   ■ 1. The authority citation for part 35
                                                 affiliates.299 Under SBA’s new size                     hours (8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Eastern                   continues to read as follows:
                                                 standards, ICIF owners likely come                      time) at 888 First Street NE., Room 2A,
                                                                                                                                                                   Authority: 16 U.S.C. 791a–825r, 2601–
                                                 under the following category and                        Washington, DC 20426.                                   2645; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 42 U.S.C. 7101–7352.
                                                 associated size threshold: Electric bulk                   186. From FERC’s Home Page on the
                                                 power transmission and control, at 500                  Internet, this information is available on              ■ 2. Amend § 35.28 by revising
                                                 employees.300 The Final Rule states that                eLibrary. The full text of this document                paragraph (d) to read as follows:
                                                 approximately 80 entities will be                       is available on eLibrary in PDF and
                                                                                                                                                                 § 35.28 Non-discriminatory open access
                                                 affected by the changes imposed. Of                     Microsoft Word format for viewing,                      transmission tariff.
                                                 these, the Commission estimates that                    printing, and/or downloading. To access
                                                 approximately 93.1 percent 301 or 75 of                 this document in eLibrary, type the                     *     *      *     *    *
                                                                                                         docket number excluding the last three                    (d) Waivers. (1) A public utility
                                                 these are small entities. In the Final
                                                                                                         digits of this document in the docket                   subject to the requirements of this
                                                 Rule, the Commission estimates that, on
                                                                                                         number field.                                           section and 18 CFR parts 37 (Open
                                                 average, each of the small entities to
                                                                                                            187. User assistance is available for                Access Same-Time Information System)
                                                 whom the Final Rule applies will incur
                                                                                                         eLibrary and the FERC’s Web site during                 and 358 (Standards of Conduct for
                                                 one-time costs of $142 in order to: (1)
                                                                                                         normal business hours from FERC                         Transmission Providers) may file a
                                                 Document its commercial operation date
                                                                                                         Online Support at (202) 502–6652 (toll                  request for waiver of all or part of such
                                                   298 5 U.S.C. 601–612 (2014).
                                                                                                                                                                 requirements for good cause shown.
                                                   299 SBA  Final Rule on ‘‘Small Business Size            302 See supra n. 298. We estimate that all affected     (2) The requirements of this section,
                                                 Standards: Utilities,’’ 78 FR 77,343 (Dec. 23, 2013).   entities will make the safe harbor filing, but that     18 CFR parts 37 (Open Access Same-
                                                    300 13 CFR 121.201, Sector 22, Utilities.            only half do not sell electric energy and thus need     Time Information System) and 358
                                                    301 The Small Business Administration sets the       to make the commitment to comply with section           (Standards of Conduct for Transmission
                                                 threshold for what constitutes a small business.        210 of the FPA. Thus, $142 = (1) × ($94.66) +
                                                                                                                                                                 Providers) are waived for any public
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                                                 Public utilities may fall under one of several          (1/2) × ($94.66).
                                                 different categories, each with a size threshold          303 This reduced burden amount is calculated by       utility that is or becomes subject to such
                                                 based on the company’s number of employees,             taking the total estimated burden reduction per         requirements solely because it owns,
                                                 including affiliates, the parent company, and           year, $27,452, and dividing by 18, the estimated        controls, or operates Interconnection
                                                 subsidiaries. The possible categories for the           number of filings avoided because of the new            Customer’s Interconnection Facilities, in
                                                 applicable entities have a size threshold ranging       regulations.
                                                 from 250 employees to 1,000 employees. For the            304 Credit Reforms in Organized Wholesale             whole or in part, as that term is defined
                                                 analysis in this final rule, we are using the 500       Electric Markets, 133 FERC ¶ 61,060, at P 184           in the standard generator
                                                 employee threshold for each applicable entity type.     (2010).                                                 interconnection procedures and


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                                                 17682             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 agreements referenced in paragraph (f)                  proceeding pursuant to this paragraph                 BP Wind Energy North America Inc. (BP
                                                 of this section, or comparable                          (d)(2)(ii):                                             Wind)
                                                 jurisdictional interconnection facilities                  (A) The Commission will consider it                California Department of Water Resources
                                                 that are the subject of interconnection                 to be in the public interest to grant                   State Water Project (SWP)
                                                 agreements other than the standard                      priority rights to the owner and/or                   Cogen Technologies Linden Venture, L.P.
                                                 generator interconnection procedures                    operator of interconnection facilities                  (Linden)
                                                 and agreements referenced in paragraph                  specified in this paragraph (d)(2) to use             DTE Energy Company (DTE)
                                                 (f) of this section, if the entity that owns,           capacity thereon when such owner and/                 Edison Electric Institute (EEI)
                                                 operates, or controls such facilities                   or operator can demonstrate that it has               Electric Power Supply Association (EPSA)
                                                 either sells electric energy, or files a                specific plans with milestones to use                 Electricity Consumers Resource Council
                                                                                                         such capacity to interconnect its or its                (ELCON)
                                                 statement with the Commission that it
                                                                                                                                                               E.ON Climate & Renewables North America
                                                 commits to comply with and be bound                     affiliate’s future generation projects.
                                                                                                            (B) For the first five years after the               (E.ON)
                                                 by the obligations and procedures
                                                                                                                                                               First Wind Energy, LLC (First Wind)
                                                 applicable to electric utilities under                  commercial operation date of the
                                                                                                                                                               Invenergy Wind LLC, Invenergy Wind
                                                 section 210 of the Federal Power Act.                   interconnection facilities specified in
                                                                                                                                                                 Development LLC, and Invenergy Thermal
                                                    (i) The waivers referenced in this                   this paragraph (d)(2), the Commission                   Development LLC (Invenergy)
                                                 paragraph (d)(2) shall be deemed to be                  will apply the rebuttable presumption                 ITC Transmission, Michigan Electric
                                                 revoked as of the date the public utility               that the owner and/or operator of such                  Transmission Company, LLC, ITC
                                                 ceases to satisfy the qualifications of                 facilities has definitive plans to use the              Midwest, LLC, and ITC Great Plains, LLC
                                                 this paragraph (d)(2), and may be                       capacity thereon, and it is thus in the                 (ITC)
                                                 revoked by the Commission if the                        public interest to grant priority rights to           Midcontinent Independent System Operator,
                                                 Commission determines that it is in the                 the owner and/or operator of such                       Inc. (MISO)
                                                 public interest to do so. After revocation              facilities to use capacity thereon.                   MISO Transmission Owners (MISO TOs)
                                                 of its waivers, the public utility must                   Note: Appendix A will not be published in           National Rural Electric Cooperative
                                                 comply with the requirements that had                   the Code of Federal Regulations.                        Association (NRECA)
                                                 been waived within 60 days of                                                                                 NextEra Energy, Inc. (NextEra)
                                                 revocation.                                             Appendix A: List of Short Names of                    Northern California Power Agency (NCPA)
                                                    (ii) Any eligible entity that seeks                  Commenters on the Notice of Proposed                  The NRG Companies (NRG)
                                                 interconnection or transmission services                Rulemaking                                            Recurrent Energy (Recurrent)
                                                 with respect to the interconnection                                                                           Sempra U.S. Gas & Power, LLC (Sempra)
                                                 facilities for which a waiver is in effect              Commenter (Short Name or Acronym)                     Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA)
                                                                                                         American Public Power Association and                 Southern Company Services, Inc. (Southern)
                                                 pursuant to this paragraph (d)(2) may                     Transmission Access Policy Study Group
                                                 follow the procedures in sections 210,                                                                        Terra-Gen Dixie Valley, LLC (Terra-Gen)
                                                                                                           (APPA and TAPS)
                                                 211, and 212 of the Federal Power Act,                  American Wind Energy Association (AWEA)               [FR Doc. 2015–06953 Filed 3–31–15; 8:45 am]
                                                 18 CFR 2.20, and 18 CFR part 36. In any                 Berkshire Hathaway Energy Company (BHE)               BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
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Document Created: 2015-12-18 11:04:29
Document Modified: 2015-12-18 11:04:29
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis rule will become effective June 30, 2015.
ContactBecky Robinson (Technical Information), Office of Energy Policy and Innovation, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street NE., Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8868, [email protected] Brian Gish (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel--Energy Markets, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street NE., Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8998, [email protected]
FR Citation80 FR 17653 
CFR AssociatedElectric Power Rates; Electric Utilities and Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements

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