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Cooperative Federalism and Energy Law Carolyn Elefant Law Office of Carolyn Elefant Washington DC www.carolynelefant.com [email protected] 202-297-6100

Cooperative federalism and energy law

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An overview of areas where state and federal law overlap or clash in energy regulatory sphere and solutions to date

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Page 1: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Cooperative Federalism and

Energy Law

Carolyn ElefantLaw Office of Carolyn Elefant

Washington DCwww.carolynelefant.com

[email protected]

Page 2: Cooperative federalism and energy law

What accounts for the persistent conflict between federal and state interests in the energy industry?

Page 3: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Statutory Imperatives

·FERC regulates wholesale rates ·States regulate retail rates and siting

Page 4: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Geographic Imperatives

Offshore wind is located on federal OCS, but transmission runs through state submerged lands

Page 5: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Inevitable Tension

National interest (FERC energy siting) has local impacts

Page 6: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Trends and Solutions

Page 7: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Siting:  LNG

Federal/state conflict resolved with EPAct 2005 which FERC's "exclusive authority" (15 USC § 717b)

States retain authority under CZMA, CWA

Page 8: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Siting:  LNG

"while the EPAct of 2005 might have streamlined the federal [LNG siting] review process in some respects and changed the rules under which the review takes place, it has notdramatically changed the balance of power between the federal government and states."

--J. Dweck, Siting LNG Facilities, 27 Energy Law Journal (2006) at 475

Page 9: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Siting:  Conditional Licenses

FERC grants license or certificate, but commencement of construction made contingent upon applicant obtaining necessary state authorizations

Lawfulness subject

States have to veto

Page 10: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Siting:  MOUs for Offshore Wind & MHK

MOU between DOI and and 10 states to create Atlantic Offshore Wind Consortium for "efficient, expeditious and responsible" development of offshore wind on OCS April 2009, online at http://tinyurl.com/27p36mt

MOUs between FERC and select states to coordinate MHK (online at http://www.ferc.gov/industries/hydropower/indus-act/hydrokinetics.asp)

Page 11: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Siting:  Coastal & State Marine Spatial Planning

Regional planning approach for ocean siting, with review by National Oceans Council (NOC)

Obama Executive CMSP Plan will leverage existing state efforts

Plan online at http://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/oceans/cmsp

Page 12: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Siting:  Interstate compacts

NGA and FPA allow states to create "interstate compacts" to site electric transmission or gas pipelines subject to Congressional approval of compact (15 USC § 717j, Section 216, FPA)

Proposed HB1817  Pennsylvania House of Representatives would create MidAtlantic Council to site pipelines instead of FERC (online at http://www.pahousegop.com/NewsItemPrint.aspx?NewsID=9510)

Page 13: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Renewables Policy:  State RPS

Issue: States need to meet RPS, but need transmission to import renewables•FERC NOPR:  RTOs and transmission utilities must take account of state renewables policy goals during transmission planning RM 10-23, June 17, 2010 (online at www.ferc.gov/whats-new/comm-meet/2010/061710/E-9.pdf)

Page 14: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Renewables Policy:  Feed-In TariffIssue; States want to set feed-in rates to encourage renewables, but FERC has exclusive jurisdiction over wholesale ratemaking

•FERC Solution:  States can use PURPA authority to set feed-in rates (FERC Docket 10-64, 66, (July 15, 2010) online at http://www.troutmansandersenergyreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/CPUC.pdf

•Rejected proposal: Allow states to set feed-in rates and obtain blanket FERC approval for program (see NREL Paper, S. Hempling, C. Elefant, K. Corey (online at http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy10osti/47408.pdf)

Page 15: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Renewables Policy: National versus state benefits

·Energy Bill - national RPS (would create national market for RECs, necessitate transmission)

·Inslee feed-in proposals - nationally structured feed-in tariffs

State push back:  RPS programs that favor state projects

(Canadian wind developer sues Massachusetts for solar carve out and preferential contracts, claiming commerce clause violations (partial settlement online at: http://tinyurl.com/2urv9vs

Page 16: Cooperative federalism and energy law

Where to find me on social

media:

http://www.linkedin.com/in/carolynelefant

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Washington-DC/The-Law-Offices-of-Carolyn-Elefant/108962382030

http://twitter.com/carolynelefant

[email protected]