Court Opinion

ID: 6498394
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-07 15:03:08.218581+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:51:05.192276
License: Public Domain

Supreme Court of Florida
                             ____________

                            No. SC20-1601
                             ____________

                   DUKE ENERGY FLORIDA, LLC,
                           Appellant,

                                  vs.

                    GARY F. CLARK, etc., et al.,
                            Appellees.

                             July 7, 2022

LAWSON, J.

     Duke Energy Florida, LLC (DEF), appeals a final order of the

Florida Public Service Commission (Commission) denying DEF’s

request to recover approximately $16 million from its customers for

costs DEF incurred to meet its customers’ demand for electricity

when a 420-megawatt (MW) steam-powered generating unit went

offline at its Bartow plant in 2017 and was placed back in service at

a derated capacity of 380 MW. We have jurisdiction, see art. V,

§ 3(b)(2), Fla. Const.; § 350.128(1), Fla. Stat. (2020), and for the
reasons explained below reverse the Commission’s order and

remand for entry of an order awarding the costs.

                           I. Background

                   A. Summary of Dispute Below

     To prevail below and recover the $16 million in costs, DEF had

to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that its actions and

decisions leading up to and in restoring the steam unit to service

were “prudent.” See § 366.06(1), Fla. Stat. (2021) (requiring that

costs be “prudently invested by the public utility company”); see

also Sierra Club v. Brown, 243 So. 3d 903, 908 (Fla. 2018) (“It is

from [section 366.06(1)] that the Commission derives its prudence

standard, which it applies to ensure that the recovered costs result

from prudent investments.”). The “standard for determining

prudence is . . . ‘what a reasonable utility manager would have

done, in light of the conditions and circumstances that were known,

or should [have] been known, at the time the decision was made.’ ”

S. All. for Clean Energy v. Graham, 113 So. 3d 742, 750 (Fla. 2013)

(quoting In re Nuclear Cost Recovery Clause, Docket No. 110009-EI,

Order No. PSC-11-0547-FOF-EI, 2011 WL 5904236, at 26 (Fla. Pub.

Serv. Comm’n, 2011)).
                                 -2-
     The Commission referred critical factual issues to the Division

of Administrative Hearings for a closed hearing before an

administrative law judge (ALJ) after concluding that trying these

issues would reveal confidential information that could not be

disclosed and discussed in the Commission’s open hearing. After

the closed hearing, the ALJ entered a recommended order denying

cost recovery, which the Commission adopted in the final order on

appeal.

     i. The plant and its operational history

     The Bartow plant consists of four natural-gas-fueled

combustion turbines (CT) and a much larger steam turbine. Each

of the four CTs compress ambient air, mix it with natural gas, and

ignite the mixture to produce a hot gas. The heated air-fuel mixture

expands through the CT blades, causing each CT to rotate its shaft.

The spinning shaft of each CT independently drives its own

generator that produces electricity. Then, hot waste gas that

exhausts from each CT is used to create steam that similarly

rotates the larger steam turbine, thereby powering the larger fifth

electrical generator.

                                -3-
     When constructing the plant, DEF purchased an “after-

market” steam turbine that Mitsubishi had originally designed for

another plant, where it was intended to run on steam created from

the exhaust of three CTs with a steam supply capable of generating

420 MW, which Mitsubishi had also listed as the nameplate

capacity of the steam turbine at the time of manufacture.

     When the plant was placed online in 2009, however, DEF

operated the steam unit using steam produced from the waste heat

from all four CTs, producing electricity from the attached generator

well above the steam turbine’s nameplate capacity. Because the

steam-powered generator produced electricity using waste heat,

operating this portion of the plant in this manner would have been

cost-effective.

     However, during a routine inspection in March 2012, DEF

discovered unusual wear or damage to the steam turbine’s blades,

which required DEF to replace them. The parties refer to this initial

period of operation, from June 2009 to March 2012, as Period 1.

Although the steam turbine was not routinely operated above 420

MW after Period 1, the replacement blades suffered similar damage

and had to be replaced again in 2014, twice in 2016, and again in
                                -4-
2017 during the forced outage at issue in this case. The parties

mark the operational time between each blade replacement as a

separate period: Period 2 starts in April 2012 and ends in August

2014; Period 3 starts in December 2014 and ends in April 2016;

Period 4 starts in May 2016 and ends in October 2016; and, finally,

Period 5 starts in December 2016 and ends in February 2017.

     In 2017, at the end of Period 5, DEF decided against

reinstalling any of the previous blade types—as they all experienced

damage—and installed a pressure plate which derated the steam

unit from 420 MW to 380 MW. This caused DEF to incur the

replacement power costs that it now seeks to recover. The pressure

plate remained in the steam turbine until Mitsubishi installed

redesigned turbine blades in December 2019. The blades installed

in 2019 have apparently been performing normally, without

unusual wear or damage.

     ii. Factual issues tried before the ALJ

     The evidence presented to the ALJ primarily focused on

whether the steam turbine’s 420 MW nameplate capacity

constituted an operational limit of the unit, such that DEF acted

imprudently in Period 1 (from June 2009 to March 2012) by
                                -5-
regularly operating the steam turbine above its nameplate capacity

without first consulting with Mitsubishi.

     DEF offered testimony from its Vice President of Generation,

Jeffrey Swartz, who testified that the nameplate capacity is an

estimate of ultimate generator output and not an operational

limitation on the steam turbine. He explained that the operational

parameters for the steam turbine were supplied by Mitsubishi and

were expressed in permissible pressure and temperature

combinations, or limitations, which DEF did not exceed. 1 Mr.

Swartz further testified that Mitsubishi should have designed all

components of the steam turbine to operate without undue wear or

damage so long as the unit was being operated within the heat and

pressure parameters Mitsubishi provided to DEF when the steam

unit was being placed into service. If this were true, it would have

been prudent for DEF to operate its Bartow plant to regularly

      1. DEF’s expert explained that the utility measures the heat
and pressure of the steam entering the turbine, with these factors
determining the mass flow of steam entering the turbine. Increased
heat and pressure mean an increased steam flow into the turbine
and a higher energy output to the generator, resulting in a higher
electrical output from the generator.
                                -6-
produce extra low-cost electricity from the generator despite the

steam turbine’s 420-MW nameplate capacity.2

     By contrast, the Office of Public Counsel (OPC) offered

testimony from a retained expert, Richard Polich, who testified that

420 MW represented the design limit of the steam turbine such that

DEF acted imprudently by operating the steam turbine using

enough heat and pressure to produce electricity above that limit

without first consulting with Mitsubishi, which would likely have

conducted tests to determine whether the steam turbine could

safely operate regularly above its 420-MW operational limit. Indeed,

the DEF-Mitsubishi contract identified 420 MW as the steam

turbine’s maximum electrical output. 3

     OPC’s expert also testified that DEF damaged the blades by

consistently operating the steam turbine beyond its nameplate

     2. Consistent with DEF’s theory, its expert explained that
Mitsubishi accomplished the “derating” by reducing the heat and
pressure operating parameters from those originally provided in the
contract documents. Mitsubishi’s lowering of the heat and pressure
parameters resulted in a lower electrical output from the attached
generator.

     3. The 420.07 MW “MPS Net Steam Turbine Maximum
Electrical Output” is listed under the heading “Liquidated Damage
Performance Guarantees.”
                                 -7-
capacity in Period 1. 4 Mr. Polich did acknowledge, however, that it

was possible that the Period 1 blade damage could have occurred

when the turbine was operating below its nameplate capacity; that

DEF acted prudently during Periods 2 through 5 by operating the

steam turbine in consultation with Mitsubishi and within its

nameplate capacity; and that blade damage occurred even when

DEF was prudently operating the turbine during Periods 2 through

5.

     As to the issue of whether 420 MW was an operational limit of

the steam turbine, the ALJ found:

           The greater weight of the evidence establishes that
     the Mitsubishi steam turbine was designed to operate at
     420 MW of output and that 420 MW was an operational
     limitation of the turbine.

     Because it was undisputed that Mitsubishi prudently operated

the steam turbine at or below its 420-MW nameplate capacity after

the 2012 outage at the end of Period 1, DEF alternatively argued

that it could only be denied cost recovery if its imprudent operation

     4. Reports from Mitsubishi, offered into evidence by OPC, can
also be read to support similar conclusions: that 420 MW
represented an operational limit on the steam turbine and that
DEF’s operation above this limit in Period 1 caused excessive
vibration that damaged the steam turbine’s blades.
                                 -8-
in Period 1 caused the 2017 forced outage and derating at the end

of Period 5.5 As to this second critical factual issue, there was no

evidence that DEF’s pre-2012 operation of the unit contributed to

early blade wear or damage in any period after Period 1. To the

contrary, extensive testing revealed no evidence of damage to any

turbine component except the blades, which were replaced.

Moreover, even OPC’s witness, Mr. Polich, repeatedly confirmed

during cross-examination that he did not contend “that the damage

that occurred in the spring of 2017 . . . was caused by DEF’s

operation of the unit above 420 megawatts [prior to 2012].” 6

Rather, Mr. Polich contended that DEF should be responsible for

the 2017 forced outage and derating based upon his expert opinion

that the original blades would have never been damaged and,

therefore, would have still been in operation in 2017 but for DEF’s

     5. DEF also argued that its subsequent operation of the steam
turbine to produce less than 420 MW of power, with similar blade
damage, demonstrated that it was not its operation of the unit in
Period 1 that caused the damage but that the problem was with the
blades themselves.
     6. Mr. Polich also confirmed that his review did not reveal any
indication of damage to the turbine during Period 1 that could
cause damage to the blades during Periods 2 through 5.
                                -9-
decision to regularly operate the turbine to produce more than 420

MW of power prior to 2012. Accordingly, he reasoned that the 2017

forced outage would not have occurred but for the blade failure in

2012 such that DEF should be denied cost recovery for its pre-2012

imprudent operation of the steam turbine irrespective of the fact

that DEF operated the plant prudently after 2012. The ALJ rejected

this argument as “speculative,” and instead declared as a matter of

law that

     [i]f the imprudent operation in Period 1 did not cause the
     Period 5 outage, then the imprudent operation cannot be
     a basis for disallowance of the replacement power costs
     at issue.

     However, the ALJ made no designated factual finding

regarding causation and instead discussed the evidence in a series

of numbered “legal conclusions” that predominantly discussed the

facts of the case and evidence presented. In this discussion, the

ALJ concluded that DEF had “failed to satisfy its burden of showing

its actions in operating the steam turbine in Period 1 did not cause

or contribute significantly to the vibrations that repeatedly damaged

the . . . blades”; that the operation of the steam turbine in excess of

420 MW likely “cause[d] or contribute[d] significantly” to “vibrations

                                 - 10 -
that repeatedly damaged the . . . blades” after 2012; and that the

derating “was a consequence of DEF’s failure to prudently operate

the steam turbine [between 2009 and 2012].” Although these

statements read like factual findings, they were not so designated

and were apparently intended as analytical support for the ALJ’s

conclusion that DEF did not meet its burden of proof.

     iii. Additional Proceedings Before the Commission

     As required by Florida’s Administrative Procedure Act, chapter

120, Florida Statutes (2021), the Commission allowed DEF “15 days

in which to submit written exceptions to the recommended order.”

§ 120.57(1)(k), Fla. Stat. (2021). Section 120.57(1)(k) also required

the Commission’s final order to “include an explicit ruling on each

exception,” with a caveat that an agency “need not rule on an

exception that does not clearly identify the disputed portion of the

recommended order by page number or paragraph, that does not

identify the legal basis for the exception, or that does not include

appropriate and specific citations to the record.” Id.

     DEF did timely file exceptions to the recommended order and

in its filing accurately summarized section 120.57(1)(l), Florida

Statutes, which authorizes an agency to reject or modify challenged
                                - 11 -
findings of fact if after review of the entire record it determines that

“the findings of fact were not based upon competent substantial

evidence or that the proceedings on which the findings were based

did not comply with essential requirements of law.” Id. However,

DEF did not take exception to the ALJ’s numbered paragraphs

containing factual findings, instead explaining:

     While DEF takes exception to multiple findings of fact,
     due to the standard of review discussed above, DEF will
     not relitigate those points here nor ask this Commission
     to reweigh evidence.

     DEF did challenge the twelve numbered paragraphs

denominated as “conclusions of law,” explaining that they should be

rejected “both because they are inconsistent with the

[Commission’s] overriding policy considerations regarding public

utilities in Florida and because the ALJ has improperly interpreted

the facts when making those conclusions of law.”

     iv. The Commission’s Final Order

     The Commission rejected DEF’s exceptions in a final order

that summarized its standard of review under section 120.57,

Florida Statutes. The statute provides that an agency may only

reject or modify an ALJ’s findings of fact if, after review of the entire

                                 - 12 -
record, the agency determines and states with particularity that the

findings of fact were not based on competent substantial evidence

or that the proceedings on which the findings were based did not

comply with the essential requirement of the law. See

§ 120.57(1)(l), Fla. Stat. With respect to conclusions of law, the

Commission’s order correctly states that an agency may only reject

or modify a conclusion of law if it makes a finding that its

conclusion is more reasonable than the one rejected or modified

and then states with particularity its reasons for so concluding. Id.

     Applying this standard to DEF’s exceptions, the Commission

correctly summarized that DEF had not “raised exceptions to any of

the 102 factual findings made by the ALJ in his Recommended

Order,” and that “failure to file exceptions to findings of fact

constitutes a waiver of the right to object to those facts on appeal.”

The Commission ruled that by waiving any challenge to the ALJ’s

factual finding that the Bartow plant steam turbine 420-MW

nameplate rating constituted an operating limit for the steam

turbine, DEF “waived” the ability to contest the conclusion of law

that depended upon this finding. The Commission also noted that

even if DEF had taken exception to the ALJ’s central factual finding,
                                 - 13 -
it was clear that “the ALJ considered and rejected witness Swartz’s

arguments that DEF did not act imprudently by operating the

steam turbine for extended periods of time at more than 420 MW.”

     Ultimately, the Commission adopted the ALJ’s recommended

order, concluding that DEF had “failed to show that the ALJ’s

conclusions are not reasonable or that the facts from which his

conclusions are drawn are not based on competent substantial

evidence of record.” The Commission was also careful to point out

that the case was “highly fact specific and for that reason will have

limited precedential value,” explaining that “[t]here is literally no

other plant in DEF’s system that has four combustion turbines

connected to one steam turbine nor any other plant in [its] system

that uses an after-market steam turbine designed for a 3x1

configuration in a 4x1 configuration.” The Commission further

explained that nothing in the ALJ’s recommended order or in its

decision “in any way establishes, indicates, implies or imputes any

going-forward protocol for the operation of steam turbines in DEF’s

fleet . . . [or] . . . translate[s] into a general policy decision by the

Commission that under any set of circumstances it is imprudent to

run a unit above its nameplate capacity.”
                                   - 14 -
                          B. This Appeal

     DEF timely appealed the Commission’s final order, arguing

that we should reverse and remand for entry of a final order

determining that DEF is entitled to cost recovery because the

Commission and ALJ erred in finding imprudence by DEF that

caused the Bartow plant’s February 2017 outage. We agree and

reverse.

                            II. Analysis

     The ALJ’s order, adopted by the Commission, concluded that

DEF had proven “by a preponderance of the evidence that its

actions during Periods 2 through 5 were prudent.” The ALJ did find

that DEF acted imprudently during Period 1, but also concluded as

a matter of law that DEF could not be denied cost recovery based

on its Period 1 imprudent actions unless its Period 1 actions caused

the Period 5 damage. The Commission adopted this legal

conclusion.

     Given this posture, we find that the resolution of this appeal

only requires analysis of DEF’s challenge to the Commission’s

adoption of the ALJ’s factual discussion regarding causation. The

Commission rejected DEF’s challenge to the ALJ’s causation
                               - 15 -
discussion, reasoning that the factual findings imbedded in and

forming the basis for the ALJ’s ultimate causation determination

were supported by competent, substantial evidence. We disagree.

     The ALJ concluded that DEF’s operation of the steam turbine

in excess of 420 MW during Period 1 likely “cause[d] or

contribute[d] significantly” to “vibrations that repeatedly damaged

the . . . blades” after 2012; that “the preponderance of the evidence

pointed to DEF’s operation of the steam turbine in Period 1 as the

most plausible culprit” by “repeatedly damag[ing] the . . . blades”

such that the derating “was a consequence of DEF’s failure to

prudently operate the steam turbine” between 2009 and 2012.

Although neither this Court nor the Commission is legally permitted

to reweigh evidence, see, e.g., Graham, 113 So. 3d at 752; Heifetz v.

Dep’t of Bus. Regul., 475 So. 2d 1277, 1281 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985),

these conclusions, to which DEF filed exceptions, are factually

contrary to the evidence. See Comm’n on Ethics v. Barker, 677 So.

2d 254, 257 (Fla. 1996) (“[c]onsider[ing] the exceptions as a whole”

to determine whether an issue was “sufficiently preserved . . . for

appellate review”). Not only was there no evidence that operation of

the steam turbine in Period 1 created, caused, or contributed to
                                - 16 -
“vibrations” in the turbine after Period 1, DEF’s evidence shows that

extensive testing revealed no damage to any turbine component

during Period 1 except the blades, which were replaced. Even

OPC’s expert witness confirmed that his review did not reveal any

indication of damage to the turbine during Period 1 that could

cause damage to the blades during Periods 2 through 5.

     Given that the evidence can only support a finding that DEF’s

Period 1 operation did not cause the Period 5 outage and derating,

the Period 1 imprudence finding cannot serve as the basis for

denying cost recovery, as held by the ALJ and the Commission.

Because DEF did prove that the costs were incurred

notwithstanding its prudent operation of the plant after Period 1,

the cost recovery should have been allowed. See Graham, 113 So.

3d at 750; § 366.06(1).

                          III. Conclusion

     Based on the forgoing, we reverse the Commission’s order and

remand for entry of an order granting the cost recovery.

     It is so ordered.

MUÑIZ, C.J., and CANADY, POLSTON, LABARGA, COURIEL, and
GROSSHANS, JJ., concur.

                               - 17 -
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION
AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED.

An Appeal from the Florida Public Service Commission

Dianne M. Triplett and Matthew R. Bernier of Duke Energy Florida,
LLC, Tallahassee, Florida; and Daniel E. Nordby of Shutts & Bowen
LLP, Tallahassee, Florida, and Alyssa L. Cory of Shutts & Bowen
LLP, Tampa, Florida,

     for Appellant

Keith C. Hetrick, General Counsel, Samantha M. Cibula, Attorney
Supervisor, and Kathryn G.W. Cowdery, Senior Attorney, Florida
Public Service Commission, Tallahassee, Florida,

     for Appellee Florida Public Service Commission

Richard Gentry, Public Counsel, Anastacia Pirrello, Associate Public
Counsel, Charles J. Rehwinkel, Deputy Public Counsel, and Mary
A. Wessling, Associate Public Counsel, Office of Public Counsel for
Citizens of the State of Florida, Tallahassee, Florida; and Jon C.
Moyle Jr. and Karen Putnal of Moyle Law Firm, P.A., for the Florida
Industrial Power Users Group, Tallahassee, Florida,

     for Appellee Office of Public Counsel and Florida Industrial
     Power Users Group

                               - 18 -