

[Federal Register: May 16, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 94)]
[Rules and Regulations]               
[Page 28513-28515]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr16my06-24]                         



[[Page 28513]]


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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

18 CFR Part 101

[Docket No. RM04-12-001; Order No. 668-A]

 
Accounting and Financial Reporting for Public Utilities Including 
RTOs

Issued April 20, 2006.
AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, DOE.

ACTION: Final rule; Order denying rehearing.

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SUMMARY: The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Commission) is 
denying requests for rehearing of Order No. 668, Accounting and 
Financial Reporting for Public Utilities Including RTOs.
    The Commission is also publishing a technical correction to include 
page 302 of Form Nos. 1 and 3-Q which was missing from Order No. 668. 
Finally, the Commission is clarifying the proper way to net energy 
transactions when an entity participates in more than one RTO-
administered energy market and the proper basis for determining whether 
net hourly energy transactions are to be reported as a net sale or a 
net purchase.

DATES: Effective Date: Changes adopted in this order will become 
effective June 15, 2006.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: 

John Okrak (Technical Information), Office of Market Oversight and 
Investigations, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, 
NE., Washington, DC 20462. (202) 502-8280.
Eric Clark (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel, Federal 
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, NE., Washington DC 
20462. (202) 502-8586.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Before Commissioners: Joseph T. Kelliher, Chairman; Nora Mead Brownell, 
and Suedeen G. Kelly; Order Denying Rehearing

    1. On December 16, 2005, the Commission issued Order No. 668 
amending the accounting and financial reporting requirements for public 
utilities.\1\ On January 17, 2006, the Transmission Access Policy Study 
Group (TAPS) filed a request for rehearing.\2\ In this order, the 
Commission denies rehearing of Order No. 668, publishes a technical 
correction, and provides certain clarifications.
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    \1\ Accounting and Financial Reporting for Public Utilities 
Including RTOs, Order No. 668, 70 FR 77627 (Dec. 30, 2005), FERC 
Stats. & Regs. ] 31,199 (2005).
    \2\ On January 17, 2006, the American Public Power Association 
filed a letter stating that it was not filing for rehearing, but 
urged the Commission to turn its attention to cost oversight.
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Background

    2. The Commission initiated this rulemaking proceeding in order to 
update its Uniform System of Accounts (USofA) \3\ and financial 
reporting requirements to accommodate the restructuring changes that 
are occurring in the electric industry due to the availability of open-
access transmission service and increasing competition in wholesale 
bulk power markets.
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    \3\ 18 CFR part 101.
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    3. More specifically, the formation of independent system operators 
(ISOs) and regional transmission organizations (RTOs) created the need 
to update the Commission's accounting and financial reporting 
requirements to reflect the roles of ISOs and RTOs and to provide more 
transparent and uniform accounting for reporting of certain activities 
not previously addressed in the Commission's regulations. To remedy 
this, Order No. 668 updated the accounting requirements for public 
utilities and licensees, including ISOs and RTOs (hereafter, jointly 
referred to as RTOs). As relevant here, Order No. 668 included a new 
operating revenue sub-account, Account No. 456.1, Revenues from 
transmission of electricity of others, to record revenues the public 
utility receives for the transmission of electricity over its 
transmission facilities.\4\
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    \4\ Order No. 668, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,199 at P 69-71.
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    4. On January 17, 2006, TAPS filed a request for rehearing, calling 
for the Commission to require additional detail in Account No. 
456.1.\5\ According to TAPS, while new Account No. 456.1 provides 
additional transparency, the Commission's accounting regulations would 
provide even more transparency if they additionally required: Sub-
categorization of transmission revenues; reporting of peak loads in a 
manner that permits ready calculation of transmission rate divisors; 
separate identification of plant, depreciation and expenses associated 
with facilities that are accounted for as transmission but otherwise 
functionalized or directly assigned; expanded identification of 
transmission facilities that have been placed under the control of 
another entity and the gross plant investment of the facilities 
transferred; and reporting of revenue distributions received from 
regional transmission entities.
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    \5\ Request for Rehearing at 2; accord id. at 3-6.
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Discussion

    5. TAPS asserts that the newly created Account 456.1 does not 
permit transmission customers and the Commission to monitor 
transmission revenues and usage to determine whether existing rates are 
just and reasonable. We are not persuaded the level of additional 
detail TAPS seeks--which TAPS readily admits is ``needed for 
transmission ratemaking'' \6\--need be reported, however. Furthermore, 
the information that TAPS seeks is not financial accounting data that 
would be recorded in Account 456.1. Thus, while TAPS styles its request 
for rehearing as accounting-related by requesting that the Commission 
adopt certain proposed changes to Account 456.1, what TAPS is really 
requesting is more broadly an expansion of the Form Nos. 1 and 3-Q 
reporting requirements to essentially amount to a rate case. We are not 
persuaded to do so, and we will deny rehearing.
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    \6\ Id. at 2; accord id. at 3.
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    6. Account No. 456.1 is a revenue account, and much if not all of 
the added detail that TAPS seeks is not revenue data but other data not 
appropriately recorded in Account No. 456.1. Indeed, some of it is not 
even financial information, such as the requested listing of facilities 
placed under an RTO's control, and would not be recorded anywhere in 
the Uniform System of Accounts. The Commission considers the 
information requested by TAPS, which TAPS notes is needed for 
transmission ratemaking, unnecessary to accomplish the goal of this 
rulemaking proceeding, which is not to engage in transmission 
ratemaking, but instead simply to allow for oversight of the rates 
being charged by RTOs and their member transmission-owning public 
utilities, to compare expenditures across RTOs,\7\ and to provide 
sufficient transparency of financial trends and

[[Page 28514]]

emerging issues.\8\ In short, the requested additional detail is beyond 
the scope of this rulemaking proceeding.\9\
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    \7\ A fundamental basis for the existence of the Commission's 
accounting requirements, and by extension its reporting 
requirements, is uniformity. Uniformity of the information reported 
allows for meaningful comparisons to be made between accounting 
periods and between entities. In order to make such comparisons, 
reported information needs to be aggregated at a high enough level 
that commonality of the information being reported exists. We are 
concerned that the level of detail that TAPS seeks would undermine 
the objective of comparability due at least in part to the fact that 
terms contained in TAPS proposal do not necessarily have a common 
definition across entities. For example, ``relevant'' point-to-point 
loads.
    \8\ Order No. 668, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,199 at P 5 & 71; see 
Financial Reporting and Cost Accounting, Oversight and Recovery 
Practices for Regional Transmission Organizations and Independent 
System Operators, 69 FR 58112 (September 29, 2004), FERC Stats. & 
Regs. ] 35,546 (2004); Accounting and Financial Reporting for Public 
Utilities Including RTOs, 70 FR 36865 (June 27, 2005), FERC Stats. & 
Regs. ] 32,585 (2005).
    \9\ The Commission has in the past denied similar requests to 
expand the Uniform System of Accounts. See, e.g., Quarterly 
Financial Reporting and Revisions to the Annual Reports, Order No. 
646, 69 FR 9029 (February 26, 2004), FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,158 at 
P 103 (2004).
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    7. Order No. 668's requirements provide information sufficient for 
oversight without undue burden. Form Nos. 1, 1-F, and 3-Q collect 
general corporate information such as summary financial information, 
balance sheet and income statement supporting information, and electric 
plant, sales, operating expenses, and other statistical data.\10\ The 
information required allows for oversight and is not intended to be, as 
TAPS apparently would prefer, the equivalent of a rate case. The filing 
requirements for \11\ and discovery available in \12\ rate cases allow 
for parties to rate cases to obtain this additional information should 
they need it.
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    \10\ See, e.g., Electronic Filing of FERC Form 1, and 
Elimination of Certain Designated Schedules In FERC Form Nos. 1 and 
1-F, Order No. 626, 67 FR 36093 (May 23, 2002), FERC Stats. & Regs. 
] 31,130 (2002).
    \11\ 18 CFR 35.13.
    \12\ 18 CFR 385.406.
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    8. Further, some of the additional and more detailed information 
requested by TAPS is already available through other avenues. For 
example, TAPS requests that reporting include peak load as adjusted, 
i.e., with separate identification of any behind-the-meter loads that 
counted towards network service billing determinants and of the 
relevant point-to-point loads and reserved capacities, as well as the 
rate divisor where the principal rate through which the transmission 
owner's transmission investment is recovered using a different billing 
determinant.\13\ However, when the Commission revised its annual 
reports and created its quarterly reports, the Commission required that 
public utilities provide peak load information.\14\
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    \13\ Request for Rehearing at 2, 5-6.
    \14\ See Quarterly Financial Reporting and Revisions to the 
Annual Reports, Order No. 646, 69 FR 9029 (February 26, 2004), FERC 
Stats. & Regs. ] 31,158 (2004).
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    9. TAPS seeks revenue reporting broken down into various firmness 
and duration classes.\15\ The Commission requires a breakdown on the 
Transmission of Electricity for Others Schedule of Form Nos. 1 and 3-Q, 
which also requires respondents to explain all components of the amount 
of revenues received from other charges.\16\ This breakdown also 
addresses another TAPS concern, that is, disclosing revenues received 
from Financial Transmission Rights, Auction Revenue Rights and similar 
instruments.
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    \15\ Request for Rehearing at 5.
    \16\ The Transmission of Electricity for Others Schedule 
requires entities to enter a statistical classification code based 
on the original contractual terms and conditions of the service, 
such as, firm network service, long-term firm point-to-point 
transmission service, short-term point-to-point service, etc.
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    10. TAPS requests that Form No. 1 be expanded to identify which 
facilities have been placed under the operational control of another 
entity.\17\ Some RTOs already post information on their public websites 
detailing which facilities have been placed under their operational 
control.\18\ In other cases, while the Commission has allowed for this 
information to be removed from public access due to security 
concerns,\19\ the Commission has provided for access to this 
information where the requesting party has a ``legitimate business 
need.'' \20\
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    \17\ Id. at 6.
    \18\ See, e.g., http://www.midwestiso.org/publish/Folder/3e2d0_106c60936d4_7c7c0a48324a?rev=1
 (Midwest Independent Transmission 

System Operator, Inc. Web site, listing facilities placed under its 
control).
    \19\ Cal. Indep. Sys. Operator Corp., 102 FERC ] 61,061 at P 21 
(2003) (allowing the California Independent System Operator to 
restrict public access).
    \20\ Id. at P 22 (included among those with a ``legitimate 
business need'' are all market participants).
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    11. TAPS requests information detailing: the plant, depreciation, 
and other expenses associated with facilities that have been accounted 
for as transmission but are either functionalized to other functions or 
directly assigned; as well as revenue distributions received by a 
transmission owner from an RTO, broken down to distinguish operating 
fees or leases for transferred facilities, distribution of revenues 
from zonal transmission charges, pass-through of revenues for ancillary 
services and wholesale distribution services, reimbursement of start-up 
costs, distribution of revenues from third-party transactions, and 
distribution of Financial Transmission Rights or Auction Revenue Rights 
revenues.\21\ The Commission declines to mandate detailed reporting of 
this information; as noted above, this sort of detailed information 
goes beyond the scope of this rulemaking proceeding. In the case of 
functionalized and directly assigned facilities, this information will 
be available at the time of a rate filing. Regarding revenue 
distributions from RTOs, revenue received from an RTO would be reported 
in the Transmission of Electricity for Others Schedule of Form Nos. 1 
and 3-Q.
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    \21\ Request for Rehearing at 6.
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Technical Correction

    12. The Operation and Maintenance Chart of Accounts for Regional 
Market Expenses in Order No. 668 is replaced to correct title errors 
for accounts 575.2, 575.3, 575.4 and 575.5, and to correct 576.3, 576.4 
and 576.5, which were incorrectly designated as 567.3, 567.4 and 567.5. 
In Appendix B of Order No. 668, the Commission inadvertently neglected 
to include page 302 of Form Nos. 1 and 3-Q, which are referenced in 
paragraphs 12 and 15 of Order No. 668. The Commission is also amending 
the instructions on page 397 of Form Nos. 1, 1-F and 3-Q. The missing 
page 302 and the amended page 397 are attached to this order as 
Appendix A.

Clarification

    13. In Order No. 668, the Commission adopted a net basis for 
accounting for and reporting energy transactions occurring in RTO-
administered energy markets. Entities have inquired informally about 
(1) the proper way to net energy transactions when an entity 
participates in more than one RTO-administered energy market and (2) 
the proper basis for determining whether net hourly energy transactions 
are to be reported as a net sale or a net purchase. We take this 
opportunity to clarify the appropriate accounting for these 
transactions.
    14. Some RTOs operate two energy markets; a day-ahead market and a 
real-time or balancing market. Entities that participate in both 
markets have requested clarification whether transactions occurring in 
each market should be separately netted for a given hour (as explained 
below, yes) or whether the transactions in the two markets should be 
combined for a given hour for netting purposes (as explained below, 
no).
    15. Since RTO-administered energy markets are operated and settled 
separately, transactions occurring in each market should be separately 
netted for purposes of determining whether an entity is a net seller or 
purchaser in a given hour. For example, if an entity had net purchases 
of 12 megawatt hours in the day-ahead market in hour one of day one of 
the month and net sales of 10 megawatt hours in the real-time market in 
the same hour one of day one of the month, it would record a purchase 
of 12 megawatt hours in

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Account 555, Purchased Power, for the day-ahead market for that given 
hour and a sale of 10 megawatt hours in Account 447, Sales for Resale, 
for the real-time market for that given hour; the purchases and sales 
did not occur in the same market and so would not be netted.
    16. Additionally, in each monthly reporting period, the hourly sale 
and purchase net amounts are to be aggregated and separately reported 
in Account No. 447 or Account No. 555, respectively. For example, 
assume that an entity in the real-time market had net sales of 10 
megawatt hours during hour one of day one of the month and net 
purchases of 15 megawatt hours during hour six and of 5 megawatt hours 
during hour ten of day one of the month. Assuming there were no other 
transactions during the month, the entity would report for the month 
for the real-time market 10 megawatt hours of sales in Account 447 and 
20 megawatt hours of purchases in Account 555; the sales and purchases 
did not occur in the same hour and so would not be netted.
    17. Entities have also requested clarification whether net hourly 
energy transactions should be classified as a net purchase or sale 
based on a net megawatt hour basis or a net dollar basis. Net megawatt 
hours should be used as the primary basis for determining whether a net 
purchase or sale has occurred. For example, assume for a given market 
in a given hour that an entity purchases 10 megawatt hours at $500 and 
sells 12 megawatt hours at $480 in the real-time market. The 
transactions occurring during this hour would be accounted for and 
reported as a net sale in Account 447 of 2 megawatt hours at a loss of 
$20.
    18. However, in instances where the megawatt hours net to zero for 
a given market in a given hour, then the net hourly energy transactions 
should be classified as a net purchase or sale based on a net dollar 
basis. For example, assume for a given market in a given hour that an 
entity purchases 10 megawatt hours at $500 and sells 10 megawatt hours 
at $480. The transactions occurring during this hour would be accounted 
for and reported as a net purchase in Account 555 of zero megawatt 
hours at a cost of $20.
    19. Finally, we have revised the instructions of page 397, Amounts 
Included in ISO/RTO Settlement Statements, of the Form Nos. 1 and 3-Q 
to incorporate the above clarifying language on netting transactions. 
The revised page 397 Schedule is attached to this order as a part of 
Appendix A.
    The Commission orders:
    The request for rehearing filed in this proceeding by the 
Transmission Access Policy Study Group is hereby denied.

    By the Commission.
Nora E. Donovan,
Acting Secretary.

0
In consideration of the foregoing, the Commission amends part 101, 
Chapter I, Title 18, Code of Federal Regulations, as follows:

PART 101--UNIFORM SYSTEM OF ACCOUNTS PRESCRIBED FOR PUBLIC 
UTILITIES AND LICENSES SUBJECT TO THE PROVISIONS OF THE FEDERAL 
POWER ACT

0
1. The authority citation for part 101 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, 7651-7651o.


0
2. In part 101, Operation and Maintenance Expense Chart of Accounts, 
the list of accounts is removed and replaced with the following list of 
accounts:

Operation and Maintenance Expense Chart of Accounts

* * * * *

3. Regional Market Expenses

Operation

575.1 Operation Supervision
575.2 Day-ahead and real-time market administration.
575.3 Transmission rights market administration.
575.4 Capacity market administration.
575.5 Ancillary services market administration
575.6 Market monitoring and compliance
575.7 Market facilitation, monitoring and compliance services
575.8 Rents

Maintenance

576.1 Maintenance of structures and improvements
576.2 Maintenance of computer hardware
576.3 Maintenance of computer software
576.4 Maintenance of communication equipment
576.5 Maintenance of miscellaneous market operation plant
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 06-4044 Filed 5-15-06; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 6717-01-P
