Bonneville Power Administration FY2029 rate design public hearing
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Bonneville Power Administration FY2029 rate design public hearing
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Content
ACTION:
Notice of FY 2029 public rate design methodology proceeding.
SUMMARY:
BPA is proposing to adopt a new tiered rate design for setting its Priority Firm Power (PFp) rates for the period beginning
October 1, 2028. The primary feature of the Public Rate Design Methodology (PRDM) is the establishment of two tiers of rates:
one rate tier (Tier 1) will be based on generation output and costs attributed to BPA's current system resources and a second
rate tier (Tier 2) will be based on the generation and costs associated with newly acquired resources.
DATES:
Prehearing Conference: The prehearing conference in the PRDM-26 proceeding will be held on November 15, 2024, immediately following the conclusion
of the prehearing conferences for Bonneville's TC-26 tariff proceeding and BP-26 rate proceeding, which begin at 2:00 p.m.
The
ADDRESSES
section of this notice provides details on participating in the prehearing conference.
Intervention: Petitions to intervene in the PRDM-26 proceeding must be filed on Bonneville's secure website no later than 4:30 p.m. on November
19, 2024. Part III of this notice, “Public Participation in PRDM-26,” provides details on requesting access to the secure
website and filing a petition to intervene.
Participant Comments: Written comments by non-party participants must be received by January 30, 2025, to be considered in the Administrator's Record
of Decision (ROD). Part III of this notice, “Public Participation in PRDM-26,” provides details on submitting participant
comments.
ADDRESSES:
Prehearing Conference: The prehearing conference in the PRDM-26 proceeding will be held in the Bonneville Rates Hearing Room, 1201 NE Lloyd Boulevard,
Suite 200, Portland, Oregon 97232. Interested parties may attend in person or participate virtually via WebEx. The WebEx information
will be available on Bonneville's PRDM web page at https://www.bpa.gov/prdm2029 or from the Hearing Clerk at PRDM29clerk@gmail.com.
Intervention: Anyone intending to become a party to the PRDM-26 proceeding must file a petition to intervene on BPA's secure website. Petitions
to intervene may be filed beginning on the date of publication of this Notice and are due no later than 4:30 p.m. on November
19, 2024. Part III of this notice, “Public Participation in PRDM-26,” provides details on requesting access to the secure
website and filing a petition to intervene.
Participant Comments: Written comments by non-party participants may be submitted through Bonneville's website at www.bpa.gov/comment or by hard copy to: BPA Public Involvement, Bonneville Power Administration, P.O. Box 14428, Portland, Oregon 97293. Part
III of this notice, “Public Participation
in PRDM-26,” provides details on submitting participant comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ms. Amanda Gobrele, DKS-7, BPA Communications, Bonneville Power Administration, P.O. Box 14428, Portland, Oregon 97293; by
phone toll-free at 1-800-622-4519; or by email to amgoode@bpa.gov.
The Hearing Clerk for this proceeding can be reached via email at PRDM29clerk@gmail.com or via telephone at (503) 479-8506.
Please direct questions regarding BPA's secure website to the Hearing Coordinator via email at cwgriffen@bpa.gov or, if the question is time-sensitive, via telephone at (503) 230-5107.
Responsible Officials: Mr. Daniel H. Fisher, Power Rates Manager, is the official responsible for the development of the PRDM.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
Part I—Introduction and Procedural Matters
Part II—Scope of PRDM Proceeding
Part III—Public Participation in PRDM-26
Part IV—The Public Rate Design Methodology
Part I—Introduction and Procedural Matters
A. Background and Statutory Context
BPA is a power marketing administration within the Department of Energy (DOE). BPA markets the output of 31 federal dams and
one nuclear power plant located in the Pacific Northwest. Among other statutory duties, BPA is required to sell firm power
to meet the net requirements of utilities within the Pacific Northwest region. Section 5(b) of the Northwest Power Act (NWPA
or Act) establishes BPA's power supply obligation to these customers. Power supplied under section 5(b) is sold at rates established
by section 7.
Under section 7(b) of the NWPA, BPA is required to set power rates for the “general requirements” of its public body and cooperative
customers pursuant to certain statutory directives. The section 7(b) rate that BPA charges its public body and cooperative
customers is called the Priority Firm Power (PFp) rate. BPA establishes the PFp rate in a formal hearing conducted in accordance
with section 7(i) of the NWPA.
Historically, BPA designed the PFp rate in each section 7(i) rate proceeding. This approach meant the types of resource costs
and credits included in the PFp rate, and the method for assessing the resulting rate, could change within each section 7(i)
rate proceeding. In 2009, BPA adopted a standalone rate design for the PFp rate, known as the Tiered Rates Methodology (TRM).
The TRM is not a rate, but a rate design that established the methods and allocations for developing the PFp rate in future
section 7(i) proceedings. In effect, through the TRM, BPA agreed to establish the PFp rate in future section 7(i) proceedings
consistent with the TRM's terms. The TRM was established in a section 7(i) proceeding and was designed to operate in conjunction
with the terms of the then-applicable section 5(b) power contract (known colloquially as the Regional Dialogue Contract).
The Regional Dialogue Contract commenced on October 1, 2011, and expires on September 30, 2028. The TRM also expires on September
30, 2028.
The purpose of the PRDM-26 proceeding is to develop the rate design methodology for the period following the expiration of
the TRM (i.e., beginning October 1, 2028). This rate methodology is called the Public Rate Design Methodology (PRDM). Concurrent with the
PRDM-26 proceeding, BPA is also negotiating the section 5(b) contract for the supply of firm power for BPA's customers' requirements
for the period covering October 1, 2028-September 30, 2044. The new section 5(b) contract is colloquially referred to as the
“Provider of Choice” contract. The Provider of Choice contract and the PRDM are designed to work in tandem. Customers that
elect to purchase their section 5(b) power under a Provider of Choice contract will also agree to have their PFp power rate
set pursuant to the PRDM.
B. Procedural Context
Section 7(i) of the Northwest Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 839e(i), sets forth the rules and procedures for the establishment of BPA's
rates. The Public Rate Design Methodology (PRDM) is a rate methodology that will apply to customers that execute a Provider
of Choice contract. No rates are being established through the PRDM-26 proceeding. Instead, this proceeding will develop the
terms of the PRDM, which will become effective in the section 7(i) proceeding that establishes the PFp rate for the period
beginning October 1, 2028. Because the PRDM will affect future power rates, BPA is using the procedural rules of section 7(i)
to establish this methodology. The procedures applicable to this proceeding include, among other things: Publication of a
notice of the proposed rates in the
Federal Register
; one or more hearings conducted as expeditiously as practicable by a Hearing Officer; public opportunity to provide both
oral and written views related to the proposed rates; opportunity to offer refutation or rebuttal of submitted material; and
a decision by the Administrator based on the record. BPA's Rules of Procedure will govern the PRDM-26 proceeding. Those procedural
rules are posted on BPA's website at https://www.bpa.gov/energy-and-services/rate-and-tariff-proceedings/rules-of-procedure-revision-process.
C. Proposed Procedural Schedule
A proposed schedule for the PRDM-26 proceeding is provided below. The official schedule will be established by the Hearing
Officer and may be amended by the Hearing Officer as needed during the proceeding.
Prehearing Conference—November 15, 2024
BPA Initial Proposal—November 15, 2024
Petition to Intervene Deadline—November 19, 2024
Clarification of BPA's Initial Proposal—November 22, 2024
Notice of Objections Due—December 6, 2024
Motions to Strike Due—December 12, 2024
Data Request Deadline for BPA's Initial Proposal—December 12, 2024
Parties File Direct Cases (Prehearing Brief Optional)—January 15, 2025
Clarification of Parties' Direct Cases—January 22, 2025
Motions to Strike Due—January 29, 2025
Data Request Deadline for Parties' Direct Cases—January 29, 2025
Close of Participant Comments—January 30, 2025
Litigants File Rebuttal Cases—February 14, 2025
Clarification of Litigants' Rebuttal Cases—February 18, 2025
Motions to Strike Due—February 18, 2025
Data Request Deadline for Litigants' Rebuttal—February 19, 2025
Parties Give Notice of Intent to Cross Examine—February 21, 2025
Cross-Examination—February 26, 2025
Initial Briefs Filed—March 1, 2025
Parties Give Notice of Intent to Present Oral Argument—March 5, 2025
Oral Argument—March 12, 2025
Draft Record of Decision—April 9, 2025
Briefs on Exceptions—April 23, 2025
Deadline for Parties to Adopt the Position of Another Party—May 2, 2025
Final ROD and Studies—May 21, 2025
D. Ex Parte Communications
Section 1010.5 of BPA's Rules of Procedure prohibits ex parte communications. Ex parte communications include any oral or written communication (1) relevant to the merits of any issue in the proceeding; (2) that
is not on the record; and (3) with respect to which reasonable prior notice has not been given. The ex parte rule applies to communications with all BPA and DOE employees and contractors, the Hearing Officer, and the Hearing Clerk
during the proceeding. Except as provided, any communications with persons covered by the rule regarding the merits of any
issue in the proceeding by other executive branch agencies, Congress, existing or potential BPA customers, nonprofit or public
interest groups, or any other non-DOE parties are prohibited. The rule explicitly excludes and does not prohibit communications
(1) relating to matters of procedure; (2) otherwise authorized by law or the Rules of Procedure; (3) from or to the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission (Commission); (4) that all litigants agree may be made on an ex parte basis; (5) in the ordinary course of business, about information required to be exchanged under contracts, or in information
responding to a Freedom of Information Act request; (6) between the Hearing Officer and Hearing Clerk; (7) in meetings for
which prior notice has been given; or (8) as otherwise specified in section 1010.5(b) of BPA's Rules of Procedure. The ex parte rule is effective upon publication of this FRN and remains in effect until the Administrator's Final ROD is issued.
Part II—Scope of PRDM-26
A. Issues Within and Outside the Scope of PRDM-26
This section provides guidance to the Hearing Officer regarding the scope of the PRDM proceeding and identifies specific issues
that are outside the scope. In addition to the issues specifically listed below, any other issue that is not a matter relevant
to the PRDM is outside the scope of this proceeding.
BPA may revise the scope of the proceeding to include new issues that arise as a result of circumstances or events occurring
outside the proceeding that are substantially related to the rates under consideration in the proceeding. See Rules of Procedure, section 1010.4(b)(8)(iii), (iv). If BPA revises the scope of the proceeding to include new issues, BPA
will provide public notice on its website, present testimony or other information regarding such issues, and provide a reasonable
opportunity to intervene and respond to BPA's testimony or other information. Id.
1. Matters Within the Scope of the PRDM-26 Proceeding
The scope of PRDM-26 is limited to issues and evidence regarding the terms of the PRDM. As noted above, the PRDM describes
the cost allocation and rate design treatment of the PFp rate for the period beginning October 1, 2028, for customers that
elect to purchase section 5(b) power under a Provider of Choice contract. The terms of the PRDM are available on Bonneville's
PRDM web page https://www.bpa.gov/prdm2029.
2. Matters Not Within the Scope of the PRDM-26 Proceeding
The PRDM-26 proceeding is focused on the development of the PRDM. No rates are being established through this proceeding.
Parties that seek to raise arguments and or present evidence that address matters unrelated to the PRDM are outside the scope
of this proceeding. Pursuant to section 1010.4(b)(8) of the Rules of Procedure, the Administrator directs the Hearing Officer
to exclude from the record all argument, testimony, or other evidence that seeks in any way to address matters unrelated to
the terms of the PRDM. This exclusion incudes, but is not limited to, the following areas: (a) matters within the scope of
the BP-26 rate case, (b) BPA program and cost projections, (c) statutory issues unrelated to the PRDM, (d) matters that have
been, or will be addressed in, the Provider of Choice Policy, Policy Record of Decision, or related contract negotiation processes,
(e) matters related to the Residential Exchange Program, (f) matters related to any other rate set pursuant to section 7 of
the Northwest Power Act, and (g) matters related to the environmental impacts of the PRDM.
B. The National Environmental Policy Act
BPA is in the process of assessing the potential environmental effects of its proposed rate design methodology, consistent
with NEPA. The NEPA process is conducted separately from this proceeding. As discussed above, all evidence and argument addressing
potential environmental impacts of the PRDM are excluded from the proceeding record. Instead, comments on environmental effects
should be directed to the NEPA process.
Based on its most current assessment of the PRDM, BPA believes this proposal may be the type of action typically excluded
from further NEPA review pursuant to U.S. DOE NEPA regulations, which apply to BPA. More specifically, the proposal appears
to solely involve changes to BPA's rates and other cost recovery and management mechanisms to ensure that there are sufficient
revenues to meet BPA's financial obligations and other costs and expenses, while using existing generation sources operating
within normal limits. As such, it appears the PRDM falls within Categorical Exclusion B4.3, found at 10 CFR part 1021, subpart
D, app. B4.3, which provides for the categorical exclusion from further NEPA review of “[r]ate changes for electric power,
power transmission, and other products or services provided by a Power Marketing Administration that are based on a change
in revenue requirements if the operations of generation projects would remain within normal operating limits.”
Nonetheless, BPA is still assessing the proposal, and, depending upon the ongoing environmental review, BPA may instead issue
another appropriate NEPA document. Comments regarding the potential environmental effects of the proposal may be submitted
to Katey Grange, NEPA Compliance Officer, EC-4, Bonneville Power Administration, 905 NE 11th Avenue, Portland, Oregon 97232,
and to kcgrange@bpa.gov. Any such comments received by the comment deadline for Participant Comments identified in section III.A of this notice will
be considered by BPA's NEPA compliance staff in the NEPA process that is being conducted for this proposal.
Part III—Public Participation in PRDM-26
A. Interventions
Any entity or person intending to become a party in the PRDM proceeding must file a petition to intervene through BPA's secure
website (https://proceedings.bpa.gov/). Because Bonneville is introducing a new secure website interface, all prospective users must create a new user account
to submit an intervention. The secure website contains a link to the user guide, which provides step-by-step instructions
for creating user accounts, submitting filings, and uploading interventions. Please contact the Hearing Coordinator via email
at cwgriffen@bpa.gov or, if the question is time-sensitive, via telephone at (503) 230-5107, with any questions regarding the registration and submission process.
All petitions to intervene must be submitted through BPA's secure website by the deadline in the procedural schedule adopted
by the Hearing Officer. Late interventions are strongly
disfavored. Petitions to intervene must conform to the format and content requirements in sections 1010.6 and 1010.11 of BPA's
Rules of Procedure. Petitions must state the name and address of the entity or person requesting party status and the entity
or person's interest in the hearing.
The Hearing Officer will rule on all petitions to intervene. BPA customers and affiliated customer groups will be granted
intervention based on petitions filed in conformance with the Rules of Procedure. Other petitioners must explain their interests
in sufficient detail to permit the Hearing Officer to determine whether the petitioners have a relevant interest in the hearing.
BPA or any party may oppose a petition to intervene. The deadline for opposing a timely petition to intervene is two business
days after the deadline for filing the petition. Opposition to an untimely petition to intervene must be filed within two
business days after service of the petition.
B. Participant Comments
BPA distinguishes between “participants in” and “parties to” the PRDM proceeding. Separate from the formal hearing process,
BPA will accept written comments, views, opinions, and information from participants who have not intervened in the PRDM proceeding
and been granted “party” status by the Hearing Officer. Participants are not entitled to participate in the prehearing conference;
may not cross-examine parties' witnesses, seek discovery, or serve or be served with documents; and are not subject to the
same procedural requirements as parties. Entities who intervene in this proceeding may not submit participant comments. Members
or employees of organizations that have intervened in the proceeding may submit participant comments as private individuals
(that is, not speaking for their organizations) but may not use the comment procedures to address specific issues raised by
their intervener organizations.
Written comments by participants must be received by January 30, 2025, to be included in the record and considered by the
Administrator. Participants should submit comments through BPA's website at www.bpa.gov/comment or by hard copy to: BPA Public Involvement, Bonneville Power Administration, P.O. Box 14428, Portland, Oregon 97293. All comments
should contain the designation “PRDM-26” in the subject line.
C. Developing the Record
The hearing record will include, among other things, the transcripts of the hearing, written evidence and argument entered
into the record by BPA and the parties, written comments from participants, and other material accepted into the record by
the Hearing Officer. The Hearing Officer will review and certify the record to the Administrator for final decision.
Part IV—Public Rate Design Methodology
The PRDM establishes a predictable and durable means by which to tier and calculate BPA's Priority Firm (PFp) power rate.
Specific determinations of rate levels will be made in each general rate case in a manner consistent with the PRDM in the
respective section 7(i) proceedings applicable during the term of this PRDM. Tiered PFp rates consistent with the PRDM will
be implemented beginning in FY 2029 (October 1, 2028) when power deliveries under the Provider of Choice contracts commence.
The PRDM provides for a two-tiered PFp rate design that will be applicable to the general requirements portion of BPA's customer's
firm power service. The “general requirements” of BPA's customers are defined by section 7(b)(4) of the Act, and exclude service
to a customer's New Large Single Load, as defined by section 3(13)(A)-(B) of the Act. Section 7(b) establishes the power “rate
or rates” applicable to a customer's general requirements. That rate is called the PFp rate. The PRDM operates within the
section 7(b) rate statutory construct by developing multiple PFp rates for service to a customer's general requirements. The
PRDM uses a “tiered” rate design to establish two primary PFp rates. The first tier, Tier 1, recovers the costs of service
associated with BPA's existing power system up to a specified amount. The second tier, Tier 2, recovers the costs associated
with additional amounts of power needed to serve any remaining portion of the customers' general requirements (i.e., the portion not otherwise served by Tier 1). The PRDM specifies how the Tier 1 and Tier 2 rates will be developed and charged.
The PRDM addresses: (1) how the cost pools for the Tier 1 and Tier 2 PFp rates will be established and what costs, or category
of costs, will be included in those pools; (2) how the resource costs for the existing power system will be differentiated
from the cost of new resources; (3) how the costs described in the above categories will be allocated to the Tier 1 and Tier
2 cost pools; (4) how rates for Tier 1 and Tier 2 sales will be designed; (5) how rates for resource support services will
be designed; (6) how the PRDM interacts with other services and credits; and (7) how changes and disputes regarding the PRDM
are addressed. The full terms of the proposed PRDM is available on Bonneville's PRDM webpage at https://www.bpa.gov/prdm2029.
The cost allocation and rate design methods will be implemented in each BPA power rate case during the term of the Provider
of Choice contracts. Power rates will be calculated on at least a two-year cycle under the PRDM.
Signing Authority
This document of the Department of Energy was signed on October 31, 2024, by John L. Hairston, Administrator and Chief Executive
Officer of the Bonneville Power Administration, pursuant to delegated authority from the Secretary of Energy. This document
with the original signature and date is maintained by DOE. For administrative purposes only, and in compliance with requirements
of the Office of the Federal Register, the undersigned DOE
Federal Register
Liaison Officer has been authorized to sign and submit the document in electronic format for publication, as an official document
of the Department of Energy. This administrative process in no way alters the legal effect of this document upon publication
in the
Federal Register
.
Signed in Washington, DC, on November 7, 2024. Treena V. Garrett, Federal Register Liaison Officer, U.S. Department of Energy. [FR Doc. 2024-26243 Filed 11-12-24; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 6450-01-P
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