Court Opinion

ID: 8405970
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-27 12:11:54.128903+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:47:06.123074
License: Public Domain

PRESENT: Powell, Kelsey, McCullough, Chafin, Russell, and Mann, JJ., and Mims, S.J.

APPALACHIAN VOICES
                                                                    OPINION BY
v. Record No. 220130                                         JUSTICE D. ARTHUR KELSEY
                                                                  OCTOBER 27, 2022
STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION, ET AL.

                     FROM THE STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION

       Appalachian Voices, a nonprofit environmental organization, appeals an order of the

State Corporation Commission (“SCC”) that approved a petition by Virginia Electric and Power

Company (“VEPCO”) to obtain a rate-adjustment clause pursuant to Code § 56-585.1(A)(5)(e).

VEPCO made the request to recover projected costs of purchasing allowances through the

Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (“RGGI”), a cap-and-trade market regulating CO2 emissions

by electric utilities. Appalachian Voices argues that the SCC failed to apply the proper legal

standard governing such requests. We disagree and affirm the Commission’s judgment.

                                                 I.

       In 2019, the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (“DEQ”) issued a series of

regulations establishing a “CO2 Budget Trading Program,” which were subsequently amended

and became effective in 2020. 9 VAC §§ 5-140-6010 to -6440. The General Assembly

authorized Virginia’s participation in RGGI and implementation of the CO2 Budget Trading

Program regulations with the 2020 enactment of the Clean Energy and Community Flood

Preparedness Act, Code §§ 10.1-1329 to -1331. The DEQ’s final regulations directed that

Virginia’s participation in RGGI would begin on January 1, 2021. See 9 VAC § 5-140-6020.

       Though highly complex in its details, the CO2 Budget Trading Program relies on a basic

economic thesis: CO2 emissions can be reduced over time by making those responsible for them

pay for the right to emit. Rather than directly ordering electric utilities to lower CO2 emissions
from their power plants, the regulations create an artificial market for the right to emit CO2. In

this market, electric utilities must purchase a fungible “allowance” for every short ton of CO2

emissions their power plants emit. The market then progressively reduces the supply of

allowances, see 9 VAC § 5-140-6190, which necessarily increases their price. The purchasing

utility then passes on those costs — estimated to be approximately $2.95 billion through 2045,

J.A. at 165, 178 — to Virginia ratepayers. The goal of this program is to reduce CO2 emissions

within a specified timeframe in a planned and predictable way.

       RGGI, Inc., a multi-state consortium, operates the CO2-allowance marketplace. The

governing body of RGGI, Inc. consists of two representatives from each of the participating

states. 1 After establishing a regional cap on CO2 emissions, RGGI, Inc. sells CO2 allowances at

quarterly auctions and authorizes participating bidders to trade or resell allowances in a

secondary market. See id. at 19-21. Each participating state starts off with a bank of allowances

in proportion to its share of the regional cap. See id. at 20; 9 VAC § 5-140-6210(A). In

Virginia, electric utilities with power plants having outputs of 25 megawatts or greater must

purchase allowances for every short ton of CO2 emissions the plants produce. 9 VAC §§ 5-140-

6040(A), -6050(C). Electric utilities may obtain the allowances at quarterly RGGI auctions or by

later trading with or buying from other participating utilities. J.A. at 19-20.

       In November 2020, pursuant to Code § 56-585.1(A)(5)(e), VEPCO filed a petition

seeking the SCC’s approval of a rate-adjustment clause (“RGGI Rider”) that would amend the

governing tariff for the rate year August 1, 2021, to July 31, 2022, to recover the utility’s

projected costs for purchasing CO2 emission allowances from January 1, 2021, to July 31, 2022.

       1
        The Commonwealth presently has two representatives on the RGGI Board of Directors:
Jehmal T. Hudson, a sitting SCC Commissioner, and Michael Rolband, the Director of DEQ.

                                                 2
VEPCO’s plan estimated that it would need to purchase approximately 19 million CO2

allowances per year or approximately 29 million CO2 allowances by July 31, 2022, at the cost of

approximately $168 million, to cover the estimated emissions from its Virginia-based power

plants. An additional “bank of allowances” would be purchased to protect electricity customers

from short-term volatility of the allowance prices. J.A. at 8. In November 2021, the SCC

approved VEPCO’s RGGI-Rider petition over the objection of Appalachian Voices.

                                                  II.

       On appeal, Appalachian Voices argues that the SCC failed to apply the law when it

approved VEPCO’s RGGI-Rider petition. Though this high-stakes contest takes place in a

factually complicated setting, the appellate argument ultimately turns on a single word:

necessary. A regulated utility may seek a rate-adjustment clause to recover, among other things,

               [p]rojected and actual costs that the Commission finds to be
               necessary . . . to comply with state or federal environmental laws
               or regulations . . . including the costs of all allowances purchased
               through a market-based trading program for carbon dioxide
               emissions. The Commission shall approve such a petition if it
               finds that such costs are necessary to comply with such
               environmental laws or regulations.

Code § 56-585.1(A)(5)(e) (emphases added).

       Appalachian Voices claims that the SCC never specifically found that VEPCO’s costs

were necessary to comply with the DEQ’s promulgated RGGI regulations. In response, the SCC

points to multiple places in its final order stating that the challenged costs satisfy all applicable

statutory requirements — necessity being one of them. 2 Maybe so, Appalachian Voices

       2
         The SCC’s order approving the RGGI Rider cites Code § 56-585.1(A)(5)(e) several
times, J.A. at 469-70, 474-75, and incorporates by reference its hearing examiner’s report, see id.
at 475, which also cites Code § 56-585.1(A)(5)(e) multiple times and quotes subsection (e)
twice. Those references run throughout the hearing examiner’s report, from the introduction to
the summary of the evidence, the analysis, and the conclusion.

                                                  3
responds, but the SCC made no factual findings to demonstrate the necessity for the rate-

adjustment clause sought by VEPCO. For this reason, Appalachian Voices contends that we

should remand the case to the SCC to make factual findings using the necessity standard that

Appalachian Voices believes the legislature intended.

       Under the view of Appalachian Voices, only the lowest possible allowance costs are

“necessary” costs. Put more simply, Appalachian Voices seems to ask, “Why is it necessary to

pay more than you have to?” The whole point of the new statutory language and regulations,

Appalachian Voices correctly observes, is to reduce CO2 emissions by making it gradually more

expensive to buy a shrinking supply of CO2 allowances. Because the SCC did not press VEPCO

to study and eventually execute a plan to throttle back its CO2 emissions from existing power

plants, Appalachian Voices concludes that the SCC did not apply the correct statutory standard

of necessity for recovering the costs of the RGGI allowances.

       While the argument has a persuasive tenor, there is no statutory or regulatory text

supporting it. Too much of the argument has been baked into a single word considered in the

abstract. It is true that Code § 56-585.1(A)(5)(e) requires the compliance costs to be “necessary”

in addition to being “reasonable[] or pruden[t]” under Code § 56-585.1(D). And, in ordinary

language, these subtly different benchmarks are related but not identical. Something can be

reasonable and prudent yet unnecessary. But it is hard to imagine something being necessary

and yet unreasonable and imprudent. This linguistic tangle is not new to the law. As Chief

Justice John Marshall famously said:

               The word “necessary” . . . has not a fixed character, peculiar to
               itself. It admits of all degrees of comparison; and is often
               connected with other words, which increase or diminish the
               impression the mind receives of the urgency it imports. A thing
               may be necessary, very necessary, absolutely or indispensably

                                                4
               necessary. To no mind would the same idea be conveyed by these
               several phrases.

McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, 414 (1819). Whatever the degree of

essentiality the adjective “necessary” has, it must be related to “some purpose or reason.”

Black’s Law Dictionary 1241 (11th ed. 2019). To understand the intended range of a modifier,

therefore, we must consider the thing or idea being modified.

       When applying these principles to statutory words with no “fixed character,” McCulloch,

17 U.S. at 414, we test which of the competing interpretations best fits within the larger

legislative context. In doing so, however, we do not ask “what the legislature intended to enact,

but what is the meaning of that which it did enact. We must determine the legislative intent by

what the statute says and not by what we think it should have said.” Carter v. Nelms, 204 Va.

338, 346 (1963); see also Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Theory of Legal Interpretation, 12 Harv.

L. Rev. 417, 419 (1899). The context we examine, therefore, does not involve speculations

about extra-textual notions of public policy. We look instead at clear textual clues to the

meaning of an otherwise unclear text — hence the maxim: “In legal codes, as in ordinary

conversation, ‘a word is known by the company it keeps.’” Tvardek v. Powhatan Vill.

Homeowners Ass’n, 291 Va. 269, 278 (2016) (quoting Sprietsma v. Mercury Marine, 537 U.S.

51, 63 (2002)).

       In this case, the necessity standard keeps very close company. Code § 56-585.1(A)(5)(e)

requires the SCC to determine whether the utility’s costs were “necessary to comply with such

environmental laws or regulations.” It is thus the necessity to comply with applicable laws or

regulations that matters. The most applicable law here is the DEQ regulation requiring VEPCO

to incur the costs of purchasing CO2 allowances. See 9 VAC § 5-140-6050(C). VEPCO did just

that. It estimated the actual number of allowances its emission-output formula predicted and

                                                5
projected the costs of purchasing those allowances at the RGGI quarterly auctions or the

secondary market, along with a contingency account of allowances if the estimate later proved to

be too low.3 The costs are recoverable, therefore, because they were necessary to comply with

VEPCO’s statutory duty to purchase allowances for every short ton of CO2 emitted from its

power plants. In an enactment clause in the Clean Energy and Community Flood Preparedness

Act, the General Assembly said as much: “[T]he costs of allowances purchased through a

market-based trading program . . . are deemed to constitute environmental compliance project

costs that may be recovered” by the utility pursuant to Code § 56-585.1(A)(5)(e). See 2020 Acts

chs. 1219, 1280, enactment cl. 2, at 2687, 3150-51 (emphasis added); see also J.A. at 417-19.

       This understanding of the necessity standard takes into account VEPCO’s statutory duty

to provide a stable and reliable power grid for all Virginians. That is not simply an aspirational

goal. It is an underlying condition of VEPCO’s status as a legal monopoly and a nonnegotiable

limitation on the permissible enforcement of the General Assembly’s environmental goals. 4

       3
         In its petition, VEPCO stated that it would “seek to maintain a bank of allowances”
(between 10% to 20% of the anticipated annual requirement), J.A. at 8, “to protect customers
from forecast uncertainty, price volatility, and noncompliance penalties,” id. at 333. At the
evidentiary hearing, VEPCO presented evidence regarding the difficulties associated with
predicting future CO2 emissions and gave examples of monthly emissions that deviated
significantly higher than the initial forecasts. See id. at 328. The SCC showed no concern over
VEPCO’s banking plan, no doubt given the harsh penalties that would arise if VEPCO guessed
too low on the forecasted CO2 emissions. At the end of the “control period,” the utility must
purchase three allowances for each short ton of CO2 emissions not covered by a prepurchased
allowance. See 9 VAC § 5-140-6260(D)(1). The banked allowances ameliorated the risk of
incurring this penalty.
       4
           See, e.g., 2020 Acts ch. 1193, enactment cl. 9, at 2526 (stating that “nothing in [the
Virginia Clean Economy Act] shall require the utilities or the State Corporation Commission to
take any action that, in the State Corporation Commission’s discretion and after consideration of
all in-state and regional transmission entity resources, threatens the reliability or security of
electric service to the utility’s customers”); Code § 56-585.5(B)(4) (authorizing a utility to
“petition the Commission for relief from the requirements of this subsection on the basis that the
requirement would threaten the reliability or security of electric service to customers”).

                                                6
VEPCO fulfills this duty in part by participating in the PJM Interconnection Market — a

“regional transmission entity,” Code §§ 56-577(A)(1), -579(A), that supports a host of legislative

goals including “ensuring that consumers’ needs for economic and reliable transmission are

met,” Code § 56-579(A)(2)(a)(2)(d), and maintaining “reliability over the long term to promote

efficient use of the grid,” 20 VAC § 5-320-40(2). In its review of this case, the SCC properly

factored in VEPCO’s commitment to continue operating its existing power units in support of the

electrical grid managed by the PJM Interconnection Market. See J.A. at 413, 416, 424. That

commitment preexisted Virginia’s entry into the RGGI and was required until at least June 2022.

Id. at 413, 424.

       Appalachian Voices says this line of reasoning misses the whole point of the RGGI

scheme because VEPCO would have needed far fewer allowances if it had simply reduced its

CO2 emissions by limiting output from emitting power plants. We need not examine the factual

basis for this assertion 5 because we disagree with its relevance in this context. The RGGI

scheme has as its aim specific reductions in CO2 emissions by specific target dates. See 9 VAC

§ 5-140-6190 (setting forth decreasing CO2 allowance budgets annually through 2030). The

required purchase of allowances fits within this market-based model. As the number of available

allowances steadily falls, their prices steadily rise. The goal is to make it uneconomical for

       5
         The SCC was skeptical of this assertion. “[W]hile the proposed Rider RGGI revenue
requirement is a function of allowance quantities and prices,” the SCC hearing examiner found,
“lower emissions would not necessarily support a lower revenue requirement.” J.A. at 422
(emphasis in original). The hearing examiner then pointed to VEPCO’s updated modeling at the
time of the hearing: “The results of the updated modeling run show higher costs attributable to
forecasted emissions in April 2021-July 2022 even though forecasted emissions decreased during
these months. This illustrates that, mathematically, additional costs from higher forecasted
RGGI prices can exceed allowance savings associated with lower forecasted emissions.” Id.
(footnote omitted).

                                                7
power plants to emit CO2 while at the same time redirecting the funds collected by RGGI

through the sale of allowances to support, among other things, the production of clean and

renewable energy. Consistent with this stratagem, the General Assembly authorizes the utility to

recover the “necessary” costs of complying with and participating in this “market-based trading

program for carbon dioxide emissions.” Code § 56-585.1(A)(5)(e).6 In this manner, RGGI’s

market-based model of indirect coercion supplements the SCC’s express authority to exercise

direct coercion on electric utilities to reduce CO2 emissions.

       Before issuing its ruling in the present case, another important SCC proceeding had taken

place. In April 2021, the SCC reviewed VEPCO’s initial plans to satisfy the recently enacted

Virginia Clean Economy Act (“VCEA”), see generally Code § 56-585.5. The VCEA requires

electric utilities to fully retire carbon-emitting power plants by dates certain, specifies

percentages of renewable energy that electric utilities should procure by dates certain, and

requires utilities to participate in a “renewable energy portfolio standard program,” or “RPS

Program,” that sets annual goals for the sale of renewable energy. See Code § 56-585.5(B)-(C).

       The SCC approved VEPCO’s initial RPS plan with the caveat that future VCEA annual

reports must include an integrated least-cost plan that protects the reliability of energy supplies

while reasonably addressing all relevant carbon-reduction legal requirements. See Ex Parte:

Establishing 2020 RPS Proceeding for Va. Elec. and Power Co., Case No. PUR-2020-00134,

2021 WL 1820791, at *4-5 (Va. S.C.C. Apr. 30, 2021). It will be in these future VCEA

       6
          The “necessary” costs approved by the SCC were projected costs because VEPCO’s
petition sought the RGGI Rider to cover the compliance costs incurred from the inception of the
RGGI program on January 1, 2021, until July 31, 2022. As the hearing examiner pointed out, the
estimated costs may not ultimately be realized and “can be trued-up when forecasted prices are
reconciled with actual prices in future Rider RGGI proceedings.” J.A. at 420.

                                                  8
proceedings, not the present RGGI-Rider case, that the SCC will begin to address specific

timetables for scaling back and ultimately retiring power plants that emit CO2. The SCC’s order

in the present case accurately explained the interplay between the indirect-RGGI and the direct-

VCEA legislative schemes:

               [T]he Commission recognizes that [VEPCO’s] RGGI compliance
               is not isolated from its RPS plans, which are also required by
               statute. Indeed, in [VEPCO’s] recent [VCEA] proceeding, the
               Commission expressly directed the Company to include in future
               [VCEA] filings a least-cost plan that meets applicable carbon
               regulations, including Virginia’s participation in RGGI. Similarly,
               we herein direct the Company to include in future Rider RGGI
               filings an analysis of how its RGGI compliance corresponds to its
               RPS plan filings.

J.A. at 474-75. This decisional sequencing is consistent with the statutory framework. An

integrated least-cost plan will be forged in the VCEA proceedings that approve VEPCO’s annual

RPS plans and thereafter will be applied by the SCC in its review of any subsequent RGGI-Rider

petitions. Asking the SCC in the present case to predetermine how it would rule on VEPCO’s

least-cost plans in future VCEA proceedings puts the cart before the horse.

                                               III.

       In sum, the SCC did not misunderstand or fail to apply the legal standard governing

RGGI-Rider petitions filed pursuant to Code § 56-585.1(A)(5)(e). The opportunity for

Appalachian Voices to advocate for its ideal, least-cost program for reducing CO2 emissions

from VEPCO’s power plants will occur when the SCC reviews VEPCO’s subsequent plans to

satisfy the RPS Program required by the VCEA.

                                                                                        Affirmed.

                                               9