Court Opinion

ID: 9348070
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-19 22:08:18.656481+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:42:00.922174
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA

                                        2022-NCSC-75

                                          No. 477A20

                                      Filed 17 June 2022

     STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA ex rel. UTILITIES COMMISSION, ATTORNEY
     GENERAL JOSHUA H. STEIN, PUBLIC STAFF – NORTH CAROLINA
     UTILITIES COMMISSION

                    v.
     VIRGINIA ELECTRIC AND POWER COMPANY d/b/a DOMINION ENERGY
     NORTH CAROLINA

             Appeal as of right pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 62-90 and N.C.G.S. § 7A-29(b) from

     a final order of the North Carolina Utilities Commission entered on 24 February 2020

     in Docket No. E-22, Sub 562 and 566. Heard in the Supreme Court on 5 January

     2022.

             Public Staff – North Carolina Utilities Commission, by Chief Counsel Diane W.
             Downey and Staff Attorneys Lucy E. Edmondson, Nadia L. Luhr, Robert B.
             Josey, and Munashe Magarira, for North Carolina Utilities Commission, and
             Joshua H. Stein, Attorney General, by Margaret A. Force, Special Deputy
             Attorney General, appellees.

             McGuire Woods, LLP, by Mary Lynne Grigg, Mark E. Anderson, W. Dixon
             Snukals, Nicholas A. Dantonio, and Bradley R. Kutrow, for Virginia Electric
             and Power Company d/b/a Dominion Energy North Carolina, appellant.

             ERVIN, Justice.

¶1           This appeal arises from an order entered by the Commission addressing an

     application for a general increase in its North Carolina retail rates filed by Virginia
                   STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

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                                   Opinion of the Court

Electric and Power Company d/b/a Dominion Energy North Carolina. In its order,

the Commission authorized Dominion to calculate its North Carolina retail electric

rates by, among other things, amortizing certain costs associated with the storage,

disposal, and removal of coal ash waste to rates over a ten-year period while rejecting

Dominion’s request to be permitted to earn a return on the unamortized balance of

those costs.   In seeking relief from the Commission’s order before this Court,

Dominion argues that the Commission acted arbitrarily and capriciously by failing to

utilize the same amortization period that had been employed in two earlier decisions

involving Dominion and Duke Energy Corporation addressing the ratemaking

implications of coal ash-related costs and by failing to allow Dominion to earn a return

on the unamortized balance of those costs as had been permitted in the earlier

decisions. More specifically, Dominion argues that the Commission erred by “fail[ing]

to set forth any facts to support its break with its own precedent,” that “[a]ny

differences that exist between [Dominion] and Duke Energy warrant more favorable

ratemaking treatment for” Dominion in this case, and that the Commission’s failure

to follow the precedent that had been established in its earlier coal ash-related

decisions violated the equal protection provisions of the United States and North

Carolina Constitutions. After careful consideration of Dominion’s challenges to the

Commission’s order in light of the record and the applicable law, we affirm the

Commission’s order.
                         STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                         Opinion of the Court

                                  I.    Factual Background

     A. Substantive Facts

¶2          The application that Dominion filed with the Commission in this case sought

     an increase in the company’s North Carolina retail rates and charges, with the costs

     upon which Dominion’s application was predicated having included substantial

     amounts that Dominion had incurred in order to remediate conditions at the

     company’s coal ash storage facilities between 1 July 2016 and 30 June 2019,1 which

     included the costs of complying with both federal and state regulatory requirements

     that mandated the closure of existing coal ash basins and other storage areas. Among

     other regulations, certain Dominion facilities are subject to the “Hazardous and Solid

     Waste Management System—Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals from Electric

     Utilities” rule, 80 Fed. Reg. 21301, or “CCR Rule,” which was promulgated by the

     Environmental Protection Agency on 17 April 2015. According to the CCR rule,

     affected utilities are required to retrofit or close all of their existing coal ash ponds

     and to perform groundwater monitoring, engage in various sorts of corrective action,

     and take other steps, as necessary, to prevent the harmful substances found in coal

     combustion residuals from percolating into nearby groundwater. Eight of Dominion’s

            1Coal ash, or coal combustion residuals (CCR), is the by-product generated when coal
     is burned for the purpose of generating electricity. Historically, coal combustion residuals
     have been stored either in wet pond impoundments or in dry landfills.
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                                         Opinion of the Court

     coal-fired generating facilities and related coal ash storage facilities are subject to the

     CCR rule.

¶3         Another coal ash-related regulatory requirement that affects Dominion’s

     operations is Virginia Senate Bill 1355, which was adopted in 2019 and requires

     Dominion to remove coal combustion residuals from the storage ponds used at four of

     Dominion’s coal-fired electric generating facilities and to place them into lined,

     permitted landfills, with the excavated coal ash waste to be permanently housed

     either in fully-lined onsite landfills that have been constructed consistently with

     modern standards or in offsite landfills and with Dominion being required to recycle

     approximately 25% of excavated coal ash waste in the event that it is economically

     feasible to do so. In order to satisfy the requirements of the CCR Rule and other

     applicable state and federal laws, Dominion developed closure plans for each of the

     ponds and landfills to which these regulations applied.          As a result, Dominion

     incurred a North Carolina retail amount of $21.8 million for the purpose of managing

     its coal ash waste during the three year period from 1 July 2016 until 30 June 2019,

     including “(1) $19.2 million in expenditures made . . . to comply with federal and state

     environmental regulations associated with managing CCRs and converting or closing

     waste ash management facilities at seven of [Dominion]’s generation stations; and (2)

     $2.7 million in financing costs.”
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                                       Opinion of the Court

     B. Prior Commission Decisions Relating to Coal Ash Remediation

¶4         On 31 March 2016, Dominion applied to the Commission for a general rate

     increase for the purpose, in part, of reflecting coal ash-related costs that it had

     incurred through 30 June 2016 in its North Carolina retail rates and charges.

     Application of Va. Elec. & Power Co., d/b/a Dominion N.C. Power, for Adjustment of

     Rates and Charges Applicable to Elec. Util. Serv. in N.C., Docket No. E-22, Sub 532,

     2016 N.C. PUC LEXIS 1183, at *4-5 (N.C.U.C. Dec. 22, 2016). Subsequent to the

     filing of Dominion’s application, the Public Staff and Dominion entered into a

     stipulation that provided, with respect to Dominion’s coal ash-related costs, that:

                  (1)   Amortization periods — CCR expenditures incurred
                  through June 30, 2016, should be amortized over a five-
                  year period.    Notwithstanding this agreement, the
                  Stipulating Parties further agree that the appropriate
                  amortization period for future CCR expenditures shall be
                  determined on a case-by-case basis.

                  (2)    Deferral of future CCR expenditures — By virtue of
                  the Commission's approval in this proceeding of a
                  mechanism to provide for recovery of CCR expenditures
                  incurred through June 30, 2016, the Company has
                  authority pursuant to the August 6, 2004, Order in Docket
                  No. E-22, Sub 420, to defer additional CCR expenditures,
                  without prejudice to the right of any party to take issue
                  with the amount or the treatment of any deferral of ARO
                  costs in a rate case or other appropriate proceeding.

                  (3)    Continuing amortization and deferral of CCR
                  expenditures — The Company and the Public Staff reserve
                  their rights in the Company's next general rate case to
                  argue to the Commission (a) how the unamortized balance
                  of deferred CCR expenditures incurred by the Company
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                                    2022-NCSC-75

                                 Opinion of the Court

            prior to June 30, 2016, and the related amortization
            expense should be addressed; and (b) how reasonable and
            prudent CCR expenditures incurred by the Company after
            June 30, 2016, should be recovered in rates.

            (4)   Overall prudence of CCR Plan — The Public Staff's
            agreement in this proceeding to the deferral and
            amortization of CCR expenditures incurred through June
            30, 2016, shall not be construed as a recommendation that
            the Commission reach any conclusions regarding the
            prudence and reasonableness of the Company's overall
            CCR plan, or regarding any specific expenditures other
            than the ones to be recovered in this case.

Id. at *137-39. After the conclusion of an evidentiary hearing, the Commission

approved the portion of the parties’ stipulation relating to coal ash-related costs,

determining that Dominion was

            allowed to defer the costs of its remediation of coal
            combustion residuals through June 30, 2016, and shall be
            allowed to amortize those deferred costs over a period of
            five years. The Company submitted substantial evidence
            that its costs incurred to comply with federal and state law
            regarding disposal of CCRs were prudently and reasonably
            incurred. . . . However, the Commission’s approval of
            [Dominion]’s CCR cost deferral is based on the particular
            facts and circumstances presented in this docket and,
            therefore, is not precedent for the treatment of CCR costs
            in any future proceedings.

            In addition, the Commission finds and concludes that the
            treatment of CCR costs incurred by [Dominion] after June
            30, 2016, shall be reviewed in a future rate case, subject to
            the provisions of the Stipulation regarding future
            amortization periods, deferral of future CCR expenditures,
            continuing amortization and deferral of CCR expenditures,
            and any other arguments or positions presented by the
            Company, the Public Staff, or another party at that time.
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                                       Opinion of the Court

                  Further, the Commission's determination in this case shall
                  not be construed as determining the prudence and
                  reasonableness of the Company's overall CCR plan, or the
                  prudence and reasonableness of any specific CCR
                  expenditures other than the ones deferred and authorized
                  to be recovered in this case.

     Id. at *152-53. Based upon these findings, the Commission approved the stipulation

     between Dominion and the Public Staff “in its entirety,” so that Dominion was

     allowed to amortize the coal ash-related costs that it had incurred prior to 30 June

     2016 over a period of five years and to earn a return on the unamortized balance. Id.

     at *374.

¶5         On 1 June 2017, Duke Energy Progress filed an application for a general rate

     increase that included, among other things, a request to account for certain coal ash-

     related remediation costs in the calculation of its North Carolina retail rates and

     charges. State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n v. Stein, 375 N.C. 870, 880 (2020). Similarly, on

     25 August 2017, Duke Energy Carolinas filed an application with the Commission

     seeking a general rate increase that reflected certain costs relating to the closure of

     coal ash basins and other coal ash-related compliance costs in the calculation of its

     North Carolina retail rates and charges.       Id. at 880–81.   The Public Staff, the

     Attorney General, the Sierra Club, and several other parties intervened in these

     proceedings for the purpose of arguing that the Commission should not allow Duke

     to include some or all of these coal ash-related costs in the calculation of its North

     Carolina retail rates and charges, id. at 881, in light of Duke’s alleged
                       STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                         2022-NCSC-75

                                      Opinion of the Court

     mismanagement of its coal ash basins, with the Public Staff having urged the

     Commission to adopt an “equitable sharing” plan that would have resulted in a 50-50

     sharing of these costs between Duke’s shareholders and ratepayers. Application by

     Duke Energy Progress, LLC, for Adjustment of Rates and Charges Applicable to Elec.

     Util. Serv. in N.C.; Application by Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC, for Adjustment of

     Rates and Charges Applicable to Elec. Util. Serv. in N.C., 2021 N.C. PUC LEXIS 723,

     *1 (N.C.U.C. June 25, 2021).       After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the

     Commission entered orders allowing Duke Energy Progress and Duke Energy

     Carolinas to amortize the coal ash-related costs that they had accumulated between

     2015 and 2017 over a five-year period, and to earn a return on the unamortized

     balance of these costs. Id. at *1–2. On the other hand, the Commission imposed a

     $30 million mismanagement penalty on Duke Energy Progress and a $70 million

     mismanagement penalty on Duke Energy Carolinas as a result of the manner in

     which the companies had handled their coal combustion residuals. Id. at *2.

¶6         After the entry of these orders, the Attorney General, the Public Staff, and the

     Sierra Club sought relief from the Commission’s orders before this Court. Stein, 375

     N.C. 870. As is discussed in more detail below, this Court determined in Stein that

     the Commission had the authority to allow Duke Energy to amortize coal ash-related

     costs in its North Carolina retail rates and charges and to allow the recovery of a

     return on the unamortized balance of those costs pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d)
                        STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

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                                        Opinion of the Court

     given that the enactment of the CCR Rule and other state laws regulating coal ash

     storage and disposal had “forced [Duke Energy] to confront an ‘extraordinary and

     unprecedented’ issue involving the potential expenditure of billions of dollars in order

     to address a significant environmental problem.” Id. at 926. On the other hand, this

     Court also found that the Commission was “required to consider all material facts of

     record” in the course of exercising its authority to consider “other facts” pursuant to

     N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d), that the Commission had failed to consider certain facts

     “pertaining to alleged environmental violations,” and that both cases should be

     remanded to the Commission for the purpose of reconsidering the Public Staff’s

     “equitable sharing” proposal in light of a correct understanding of the applicable law.

     Id. at 931–33.

¶7         After this Court’s decision in Stein, Duke Energy entered into a settlement

     agreement with the Public Staff, the Attorney General, and the Sierra Club, 2021

     N.C. PUC LEXIS 723, *10, for the purpose of “resolv[ing] not only the 2017 rate cases

     on remand from the Court but also the 2019 rate cases and future CCR costs to be

     incurred through” 2030 for both Duke Energy Progress and Duke Energy Carolinas.

     Id. at *27. In this settlement, Duke agreed to a significant reduction in the amount

     of coal ash-related costs that were to be included in the calculation of the companies’

     rates, with “the net present value of the savings to [ratepayers] from forgone CCR

     cost recovery (including applicable financing costs) [having] amount[ed] to more than
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                                       Opinion of the Court

     $900 million,” id. at *29, including a $261,000,000 reduction in the amount of coal

     ash-related costs included in Duke Energy Progress’ North Carolina retail rates, a

     $224,000,000 reduction in the amount of coal ash-related costs included in Duke

     Energy Carolina’s North Carolina retail rates, “future reduced recovery of CCR costs

     through . . . 2030 of $162 million [for Duke Energy Progress] and $108 million [for

     Duke Energy Carolinas], and other additional customer-savings provisions.” Id. at

     *30. On 25 June 2021, the Commission entered an order approving the proposed coal

     ash cost-related settlement. Id. at *37.

     C. Procedural History of the Current Dominion Rate Case

¶8         On 27 February 2019, Dominion filed a Notice of Intent to File a General Rate

     Application with the Commission in Docket No. E-22, Sub 562. On 29 March 2019,

     Dominion filed an application with the Commission for the purpose of seeking a

     $26,958,000 increase in its North Carolina retail rates and charges. On 17 September

     2019, Dominion and the Public Staff entered into a stipulation resolving all of the

     matters at issue in this case with the exception of “issues associated with coal

     combustion residuals (CCR) costs.”         The Commission conducted an evidentiary

     hearing for the purpose of resolving the issues that remained in dispute between the

     parties.

¶9         In the course of a hearing held before the Commission for the purpose of

     receiving expert witness testimony on 23 September 2019, Jason E. Williams testified
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                                             2022-NCSC-75

                                           Opinion of the Court

       on behalf of Dominion that the Company had “historically managed CCR consistently

       with evolving industry standards and regulatory requirements”; that, by 1988, 80%

       of the coal ash generated at Dominion’s coal-fired generating facilities was stored in

       surface impoundments or landfills; and that the actions that the Company had taken

       “to comply with the federal and state requirements have been reasonable and

       prudent.” Jay Lucas, on the other hand, testified for the Public Staff for the purpose

       of describing its “equitable sharing recommendation,” pursuant to which Dominion

       shareholders would be required to cover 40% of the relevant coal ash costs while the

       remaining 60% would be included in calculating Dominion’s North Carolina retail

       rates.

¶ 10            According to Mr. Lucas, while the Public Staff’s equitable sharing plan was not

       predicated upon the use of a prudence standard, pursuant to which 100% of the

       company’s coal ash-related costs would have been disallowed, at least in his opinion,

       the agency’s proposal made sense in light of the magnitude and nature of Dominion’s

       coal ash remediation costs and the extent of Dominion’s culpability for the resulting

       environmental contamination given the company’s “fail[ure] to improve its CCR

       management practices despite the evolving knowledge of the risk of unlined CCR

       storage at the time,” which indicated that “wet storage of CCR in unlined surface

       impoundments was detrimental to the quality of surrounding groundwater and

       surface water.” Mr. Lucas described multiple known exceedances of the applicable
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                                         Opinion of the Court

       groundwater contaminant limits at several of Dominion’s coal ash sites, including an

       exceedance at the company’s Possum Point facility in the 1980s; elevated trace metal

       levels in the groundwater, surface water, and soil surrounding the Chisman Creek

       facility; and 548 instances of groundwater exceedances which resulted from

       Dominion’s failure to prevent the leaching of coal combustion residuals from its

       surface impoundments. In addition, Mr. Lucas described six different instances in

       which environmental groups, local government entities, and property owners had

       initiated legal proceedings against Dominion as the result of pollution stemming from

       the leaching of coal ash contaminants, including arsenic, into surface waters from wet

       impoundments. When asked why the Public Staff’s proposed “equitable sharing” plan

       in this case was more favorable to Dominion than the plan that the Public Staff had

       proposed in the 2017 Duke Energy rate cases, Mr. Lucas responded that Dominion

       had “not been found guilty of criminal negligence with respect to its management of

       waste coal ash facilities” and that there was “less evidence” of harmful environmental

       impacts than had been the case with respect to Duke Energy’s facilities.

¶ 11         In the same vein, Public Staff witness Michael C. Maness defended the Public

       Staff’s “equitable sharing” proposal on the grounds that:

                    [t]he total amount of the costs is large (approximately $377
                    million on a system level and approximately $22 million on
                    a North Carolina retail level), which amounts to
                    approximately $179 per North Carolina retail customer, or
                    $60 per year per North Carolina retail customer, before
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                                         Opinion of the Court

                    considering the impact of including the unamortized
                    amount in rate base.

                    [Dominion] will be incurring significant additional costs in
                    the future related to the CCR Excavation Act (Virginia
                    Senate Bill 1355).

                    The incurrence of these costs will not provide any benefits
                    to customers in terms of additional electric service or
                    improvements to service.

                    The incurrence of CCR costs has not been the result of
                    economic analysis that pointed toward an action that
                    would be economically advantageous to ratepayers.

                    . . . [T]he Commission has implemented equitable sharing
                    in several past circumstances involving incurred costs that
                    did not provide any future benefits to retail customers.

       According to Mr. Maness, the Public Staff’s proposal that ratepayers bear 60% of the

       costs and that shareholders bear 40% of the costs was appropriate in light of the

       manner in which Dominion had managed its coal combustion residuals and the

       nature and magnitude of the resulting costs and that the resulting “equitable

       sharing” could be achieved by precluding Dominion from earning a return on the

       unamortized balance of its coal ash-related costs and by amortizing the costs over an

       eighteen-year period, with it being likely that “the Public Staff would . . . recommend

       some level of sharing even in the absence of environmental culpability, due to the

       magnitude and/or nature of the costs.”

¶ 12         In rebuttal, Mr. Williams denied that Dominion had failed to properly manage

       its coal combustion residuals, asserting that “the Public Staff has acknowledged that
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                                         Opinion of the Court

       it is not capable of or willing to identify a specific action the Company could have

       taken in the past,” that “neither the Company nor the Public Staff could find any

       example prior to 2016 where the Public Staff had raised any concerns regarding

       groundwater or surface water issues,” and that the Public Staff should refrain from

       acting as an environmental regulator in the course of judging the prudence of the

       Company’s past actions. Based upon this logic, Mr. Williams concluded that the

       Public Staff’s proposal to disallow admittedly prudent and reasonable costs on the

       basis of “equitable sharing” was “shortsighted and could lead to an unpredictable and

       unhealthy regulatory environment for utilities and their customers.”

¶ 13          On 24 February 2020, the Commission entered an order in which it found as

       fact that:

                    Recovery of CCR Costs

                           49.    Since its last rate case, on a North Carolina
                    retail jurisdictional basis, from the period beginning July
                    1, 2016 and running through June 30, 2019 (the Deferral
                    Period), [Dominion] has incurred $21.8 million in costs
                    associated with the management of CCRs (the CCR Costs).
                    The $21.8 million includes: (1) $19.2 million in
                    expenditures made during the Deferral Period to comply
                    with federal and state environmental regulations
                    associated with managing CCRs and converting or closing
                    waste ash management facilities at seven of [Dominion]’s
                    generation stations; and (2) $2.7 million in financing costs
                    incurred during the Deferral Period.

                          50.    The record includes substantial evidence that,
                    particularly where CCRs were being managed in lined
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                                 Opinion of the Court

            landfills, the CCR Costs incurred during the Deferral
            Period were prudently incurred.

                  51.    Although the Public Staff offered evidence
            challenging the manner in which [Dominion] had managed
            CCRs and its various CCR waste management facilities
            over several decades, insofar as the specific CCR Costs
            incurred during the Deferral Period are concerned, while
            the record contains evidence that identifies instances of
            imprudence, the record contains insufficient evidence to
            permit the Commission to quantify the effects of imprudent
            actions on ratepayers.

                  52.    [Dominion] is entitled to recover the CCR
            Costs established in this general rate case, in the manner
            and subject to the conditions as set forth herein.

In addition, the Commission noted that the order that it had entered in connection

with the Company’s 2016 rate case did “not have precedential value with respect to

the CCR issues in this case” because the stipulation between Dominion and the Public

Staff that had been approved in that proceeding provided that:

            [t]he Public Staff’s agreement in this proceeding to the
            deferral and amortization of CCR expenditures incurred
            through June 30, 2016, shall not be construed as a
            recommendation that the Commission reach any
            conclusions regarding the prudence and reasonableness of
            the Company’s overall CCR plan, or regarding any specific
            expenditures other than the ones to be recovered in this
            case.

Moreover, the Commission noted that it had explicitly stated that its order in that

proceeding should “not be construed as determining the prudence and reasonableness

of [Dominion]’s overall CCR plan, or the prudence and reasonableness of any specific
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                                         Opinion of the Court

       CCR expenditures other than the ones deferred and authorized to be recovered in this

       case,” Application of Va. Elec. & Power Co., Ord. Approving Rate Increase and Cost

       Deferrals and Revising PJM Regul. Conditions, Docket No. E-22, Sub 532, at *3

       (N.C.U.C. Dec. 22, 2016), and that it would be “inappropriate to give the 2016

       [Dominion] Rate Case Order precedential effect” in view of the fact that the evidence

       that had been presented in that proceeding was “far less extensive” than the evidence

       that had been presented in this proceeding given that Dominion and the Public Staff

       had entered into a stipulation in the earlier proceeding, so that the “issues of

       prudence and reasonableness were not fully litigated and no significant evidentiary

       record was developed.”

¶ 14         According to the Commission, Dominion had made a prima facie showing that

       the coal ash-related costs that it had incurred between 1 July 2016 and 30 June 2019

       had been prudently incurred in light of the fact that the company had largely

       discontinued wet storage of coal ash and moved towards storing dry ash in lined

       landfills. On the other hand, the Commission noted that, even though the Public

       Staff had not “expressed [an] opinion on the prudence and reasonableness of the [coal

       ash c]osts,” one of its witnesses had “testified to a number of deficiencies in

       [Dominion]’s historical management of [coal ash] and the resulting environmental

       impacts,” such as late and deficient groundwater monitoring, the decision to ignore a

       recommendation to construct a dry waste disposal facility at one of the coal ash sites,
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                                         Opinion of the Court

       and groundwater data showing exceedances of certain elements and heavy metals

       such as barium, cadmium, copper, iron, manganese, nickel, phenols, potassium,

       sodium, and zinc at one of the coal ash sites. In addition, the Commission noted the

       existence of evidence that “call[ed] into question” the prudence of the manner in

       which Dominion had incurred certain coal ash-related costs, such as the fact that,

       prior to the adoption of the CCR Rule, Dominion had planned to permanently store

       some of its coal ash in unlined wet ponds and to cover the ponds with soil, a practice

       that was likely to cause hydraulic pressure in the ponds and facilitate the continued

       migration of coal ash-related pollutants into the surrounding groundwater.

¶ 15         In finding that Dominion’s coal ash costs had been prudently incurred, the

       Commission noted that, “while the evidence demonstrates a difference of opinion or

       dispute as to whether certain [of Dominion]’s actions, omissions or decisions were

       prudent,” neither party had “presented evidence to attempt to quantify which, if any,

       of the [coal ash c]osts might have been avoided if [Dominion] had used a different

       approach to managing [coal ash recovery] at some point during the last several

       decades” and stated that

                    it would be very difficult to go back and recreate the timing
                    and cost of such different approaches. For example, one
                    could argue that [Dominion] should have converted all of
                    its coal-fired plants to dry ash handling at least at some
                    time during the 1990s. However, to quantify the costs and
                    benefits of this strategy would require establishing, with
                    some level of certainty, the costs that [Dominion] would
                    have incurred for such conversions, and the savings in
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                                        Opinion of the Court

                   present [coal ash] remediation costs that would have
                   resulted from such conversions. In addition, [Dominion]
                   could have been entitled to recover those conversion costs,
                   plus a return on its increased rate base, from its ratepayers
                   over the past several decades. On the present record, the
                   Commission has no substantial evidence on which to make
                   such determinations. Thus, based on the foregoing, . . . the
                   Commission concludes that the [coal ash c]osts were
                   prudently incurred.

¶ 16         After reaching this conclusion, the Commission determined that it would be

       “just and reasonable” to deny Dominion a return on the unamortized balance of the

       coal ash costs that it had incurred between 1 July 2016 and 30 June 2019 and to

       permit the amortization of those costs over a ten-year period. In support of this

       result, the Commission concluded that:

                   Ratemaking Treatment of Recoverable CCR Costs

                         53.     Just and reasonable rates will be achieved by
                   excluding from rate base the CCR Costs and amortizing
                   recovery of the CCR Costs over a period of ten years.

                         54.    It is reasonable, based on the evidence in the
                   record in this proceeding, for [Dominion] to recover its
                   financing costs on the CCR Costs incurred during the
                   Deferral Period, up to the effective date of rates approved
                   pursuant to this Order, calculated at [Dominion]’s
                   previously authorized weighted average cost of capital.

                         55.    It is reasonable, based on the evidence in the
                   record in this proceeding for annual compounding to be
                   used in calculating the financing costs of deferred costs,
                   including the CCR Costs, during the Deferral Period.
                    STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                      2022-NCSC-75

                                    Opinion of the Court

As further support for this determination, the Commission reasoned that Dominion

should not be allowed to earn a return on the unamortized balance of coal ash costs

in light of:

               (1) the Commission’s obligation to set just and reasonable
               rates that are fair to both the utility and the ratepayer in
               accordance with N.C.G.S. § 62-133(a); (2) the Commission’s
               historical treatment of extraordinary, large costs, such as
               [Manufactured Gas Plant] environmental remediation
               costs and plant cancellation costs; and (3) the
               Commission’s obligation to consider all other material facts
               of record that will enable it to determine what are just and
               reasonable rates in accordance with N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d).

More specifically, the Commission noted that, when Public Service Company of North

Carolina, Inc., had sought recovery of substantial costs incurred for the purpose of

remediating hazardous by-products that were created at manufactured natural gas

plants, it had determined that, while the utility should be authorized to amortize its

prudently incurred remediation costs to rates over a period of years, the company

should not be allowed earn a return on the unamortized balance of those costs on the

grounds that such a result struck the “proper balance between ratepayer and

shareholder interests” and gave the utility “an incentive to minimize clean-up costs

and to pursue contributions from third parties where appropriate.” In addition, the

Commission cited to a 1983 order in a proceeding in which Dominion had sought to

include costs associated with the abandonment of certain proposed nuclear

generating facilities in the calculation of its North Carolina retail rates, Application
                         STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                           2022-NCSC-75

                                        Opinion of the Court

       of Va. Elec. and Power Co. for Auth. to Adjust and Increase Its Elec. Rates and

       Charges, No. E-22, Sub 273, 73 N.C.U.C. Orders & Decisions 343, 355 (Dec. 5, 1983),

       and in which the Commission had concluded that, while the relevant nuclear plant

       abandonment costs had been prudently incurred and should be amortized to rates,

       Dominion should not be allowed to earn a return on the unamortized balance of those

       costs on the theory that “[a] middle ground must be found on which the Company

       bears some of the risk of abandonment and the ratepayer is protected from

       unreasonably high rates.” Id.

¶ 17         Furthermore, the Commission concluded that it had a “well-established history

       of allocating prudently incurred costs, specifically in the context of extraordinary,

       large costs such as environmental clean-up and plant cancellation costs, between

       ratepayers and shareholders in order to strike a fair and reasonable balance” and

       that “fairness dictate[d] this same treatment” in the present proceeding. According

       to the Commission, “[a] number of material facts in evidence call[ed] into question

       the prudence” of Dominion’s coal ash-related costs, including the occurrence of

       groundwater violations and its refusal to build a dry waste storage facility at the

       Possum Point plant contrary to the standards for coal ash storage that the

       Environmental Protection Agency had adopted by that time. The Commission further

       noted that the total amount of coal ash-related costs that Dominion had incurred

       during the relevant period was “significant” and would affect the rates paid by end-
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                                           2022-NCSC-75

                                         Opinion of the Court

       user customers. Finally, the Commission concluded that allowing Dominion to earn

       a return on the unamortized balance of the relevant coal ash-related costs would

       “violate[ ] the matching principle and raise[ ] intergenerational equity concerns” by

       requiring current customers to pay for the remediation of waste associated with past

       power generation. As authorized by N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d), the Commission stated

       that it had “consider[ed] these material facts of record when striking the appropriate

       balance between shareholder and customer interests to set just and reasonable rates”

       and concluded that “[a] fair and reasonable balance is found which requires

       [Dominion]’s shareholders to bear some of the risk of clean-up costs associated with

       CCR liabilities and protects the ratepayers from unreasonably high rates.”

¶ 18         In determining that Dominion’s coal ash costs should be amortized to rates

       over a period of ten years, the Commission found that Dominion’s “proposed five-year

       amortization period does not achieve a fair balance in light of the evidence in the

       record, the magnitude and the nature of the costs involved and the rate impact to

       customers.” On the other hand, the Commission declined to accept the Public Staff’s

       proposed eighteen-year amortization period on the grounds that a ten-year

       amortization period struck a “more appropriate and fairer balance” and was

       consistent with the Commission’s “historical treatment of major plant cancellations”

       as evidenced by the fact that the Commission had “consistently used a write-off period

       of 10 or fewer years for all major plant cancellations.” Application of Va. Elec. and
                            STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                                   2022-NCSC-75

                                             Opinion of the Court

       Power Co. for Auth. to Adjust and Increase Its Elec. Rates and Charges, No. E-22, Sub

       273, 73 N.C.U.C. Orders & Decisions 343, 355.                As a result, the Commission

       authorized the amortization of the coal ash-related costs that Dominion had incurred

       between 1 July 2016 and 30 June 2019 to rates over a ten year period while

       disallowing Dominion’s request to be allowed to earn a return on the unamortized

       balance of those costs.2        Dominion noted an appeal to this Court from the

       Commission’s order.3

                                             II.     Analysis

       A. Standard of Review

¶ 19          According to N.C.G.S. § 62-94 (2021), the applicable standard of review utilized

       by this Court in reviewing Commission orders requires us to

                     decide all relevant questions of law, interpret
                     constitutional and statutory provisions, and determine the
                     meaning and applicability of the terms of any Commission
                     action. The court may affirm or reverse the decision of the
                     Commission, declare the same null and void, or remand the

              2  Before an appeal was noted to this Court from the Commission’s order, both
       Dominion and the Public Staff filed motions seeking reconsideration and clarification of the
       Commission’s decision. In upholding its decision to refrain from awarding Dominion a return
       on the unamortized balance of the deferred coal-ash-related costs, the Commission stated
       that it had “fully considered all of the facts in evidence, applied the various provisions of the
       Act to those facts in evidence and reached its decisions . . . in the interest of achieving just
       and reasonable rates.” Similarly, in upholding its decision to require the use of a ten-year
       amortization period, the Commission stated that it had “fully considered all of the facts in
       evidence and the applicable precedents in reaching its decision to set the amortization period
       for CCR Costs at ten years.”
               3 Although the Attorney General initially noted a cross-appeal from the Commission’s

       order, he subsequently sought and obtained the entry of an order dismissing this cross-
       appeal.
                           STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                              2022-NCSC-75

                                            Opinion of the Court

                     case for further proceedings; or it may reverse or modify
                     the decision if the substantial rights of the appellants have
                     been prejudiced because the Commission's findings,
                     inferences, conclusions or decisions are:

                     (1)    In violation of constitutional provisions, or

                     (2) In excess of statutory authority or jurisdiction of the
                     Commission, or

                     (3)    Made upon unlawful proceedings, or

                     (4)    Affected by other errors of law, or

                     (5)   Unsupported    by   competent,  material   and
                     substantial evidence in view of the entire record as
                     submitted, or

                     (6)    Arbitrary or capricious.

       N.C.G.S. § 62-94(b). A Commission decision is “arbitrary and capricious when, among

       other things, [it] indicate[s] a lack of fair and careful consideration or fail[s] to display

       a reasoned judgment.” State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n v. Thornburg, 314 N.C. 509, 515

       (1985).    In deciding whether to affirm, reverse, invalidate or remand the

       Commission’s decision for further proceedings, we are required to review “the whole

       record or such portions thereof as may be cited by any party” and take “due account”

       of “the rule of prejudicial error.” N.C.G.S. § 62-94(c).

¶ 20          According to well-established North Carolina law, “the rates fixed or any rule,

       regulation, finding, determination, or order made by the Commission” are considered

       “prima facie just and reasonable.” Id. at § 62-94(e). For that reason,
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                                     2022-NCSC-75

                                   Opinion of the Court

             [t]he burden is on the appellant to demonstrate an error of
             law in the proceedings. To be arbitrary and capricious, the
             Commission’s order would have to show a lack of fair and
             careful consideration of the evidence or fail to display a
             reasoned judgment.

State ex rel. Utilities Comm’n v. Piedmont Nat. Gas Co., 346 N.C. 558, 573 (1997)

(citations omitted). A reviewing court examines the Commission’s findings of fact for

the purpose of determining whether they are supported by “competent, material and

substantial evidence,” State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n v. Cooper, 367 N.C. 444, 448 (2014),

with the Commission being “responsible for determining the weight and credibility to

be afforded to the testimony of any witness, including any expert opinion testimony,”

and with the Commission’s “decision being entitled to great deference given that its

members possess an expertise in utility ratemaking.” State ex rel. Utilities Comm’n

v. Stein, 375 N.C. at 900.     “Assuming adequate findings of fact, supported by

competent, substantial evidence, the Commission’s determination, reached pursuant

to the mandate of N.C.G.S. § 62-133 and to the statutory procedural requirements,

may not be reversed even if [this Court] would have reached a different conclusion

upon the evidence.” Id. (cleaned up) (quoting State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n v. Morgan,

277 N.C. 255, 266–67 (1970)). The Commission’s conclusions of law are, however,

subject to de novo review for legal error on appeal. State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n v. N.C.

Waste Awareness & Reduction Network, 255 N.C. App. 613, 615 (2017), aff’d per

curiam, 371 N.C. 109 (2018).
                          STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                          Opinion of the Court

       B. Denial of a Return on the Unamortized Balance of CCR Costs

¶ 21         In its initial challenge to the Commission’s order, Dominion argues that the

       Commission erred by rejecting its request to be allowed to earn a return on the

       unamortized balance of its coal ash-related costs.        According to Dominion, the

       Commission “failed to set forth any facts to support its break with its own precedent”

       that was established in the 2016 Dominion rate case and 2017 Duke Energy rate

       cases, with this failure to follow its own past precedent compelling the conclusion that

       the Commission had acted arbitrarily and capriciously in violation of the Public

       Utilities Act and the relevant provisions of the state and federal constitutions.

¶ 22         According to Dominion, this Court held in Stein that the Commission had

       correctly determined that the Duke Energy utilities should be allowed to earn a

       return on the unamortized balance of their coal ash costs, with the findings that the

       Commission had made in that case having sufficed to establish that the enactment of

       the CCR Rule and certain North Carolina statutory provisions “forced the utilities to

       confront an ‘extraordinary and unprecedented’ issue involving the potential

       expenditure of billions of dollars in order to address a significant environmental

       problem” and that, in light of “the ‘magnitude, scope, duration and complexity’ of the

       anticipated costs” of coal ash cleanup, a return on the unamortized balance was fair

       and just. Stein, 375 N.C. at 926. Dominion claims that, since the facts at issue in

       this case are similar to those that were before the Commission in Stein, the
                          STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                         Opinion of the Court

       Commission acted arbitrarily and capriciously “by exercising its discretion differently

       and to the detriment of [Dominion] in this case after exercising it to the benefit of

       Duke Energy.”

¶ 23         After conceding that Commission decisions are “not automatically binding on

       future Commissions,” Dominion contends that the Commission “explicitly chose to

       give its ratemaking treatment of coal ash costs in the 2016 [Dominion] rate case

       decision precedential value” in deciding the 2017 Duke Energy rate case and that the

       Commission “provided no reasoned basis for departing from its 2016 [Dominion] Rate

       Case Order” when deciding this case, even though it “involved the same coal plants

       and same types of costs.” In Dominion’s view, even though the Commission heard

       the “same theories” regarding the imprudence with which coal combustion residuals

       had been handled in this case that it had heard in the 2016 Dominion rate case and

       2017 Duke Energy rate cases, it “reached a different result — denying a return on

       prudently incurred costs — without ever concluding that [Dominion] imprudently

       managed its coal ash.” As a result of the fact that the Commission found that the

       record did not support a finding of imprudence even though the evidence “raise[d]

       questions” about the prudence with which Dominion’s coal ash-related costs had been

       incurred and that, “given the passage of time and evolving regulatory standards,”

       Dominion was entitled to a presumption of prudency, the Commission “arbitrarily
                          STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                           2022-NCSC-75

                                         Opinion of the Court

       and unlawfully created a separate, lower standard” by finding that Dominion’s

       conduct was less than prudent but more than imprudent.

¶ 24         Furthermore, Dominion argues that the Commission had acted arbitrarily and

       capriciously by determining that Dominion’s coal ash-related costs did not constitute

       property that was “used and useful” after reaching the opposite conclusion in the 2016

       Dominion rate case, in which it had determined that “existing CCR repositories

       continue to be used and useful for storing CCRs, and will continue to be used and

       useful until [Dominion] moves the CCRs to a permanent repository.”          Dominion

       claims that the arbitrary and capricious nature of the Commission’s order is

       demonstrated by the fact that it allows a return on the company’s coal ash-related

       costs during the deferral period, which ran from 1 July 2016 through 30 June 2019,

       while refusing to allow a return on those same costs during the subsequent recovery

       period.

¶ 25         In Dominion’s view, “[t]he coal ash costs at issue in this case deserved, but did

       not receive, the same treatment” that they had received in the 2016 Dominion rate

       cases and the 2017 Duke Energy cases. Dominion claims that, even though “[a]ny

       differences that exist between [Dominion] and Duke Energy warrant more favorable

       ratemaking treatment for” Dominion given that Duke Energy had pled guilty to the

       commission of environmental crimes, including criminal negligence, while there had

       been no similar findings of mismanagement or unlawful activity on the part of
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                         Opinion of the Court

       Dominion, “[Dominion] finds itself in a far worse position than Duke Energy.”

       According to Dominion, the Commission “failed to articulate any grounds for treating

       [Dominion] differently than Duke Energy” and, in spite of the fact that the

       Commission is “not bound by the doctrines of res judicata or stare decisis, the

       Commission cannot ‘arbitrarily’ disregard its own precedent,” quoting N.C.G.S. § 62-

       94(c) and State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n v. Nantahala Power & Light Co., 326 N.C. 190,

       199 (1990) (holding that, although “the Commission is not covered by our

       Administrative Procedure Act,” it is “still an administrative agency of the state

       government, and general tenets of administrative law are applicable to its operation

       except where modified by statute”). In spite of this fact, Dominion contends that the

       Commission’s “discussion of the 2016 [Dominion] rate case is limited to explaining

       that a stipulation precludes it from being considered precedent here” even though

       that decision “was accepted as precedent in the Duke Energy rate cases,” with the

       Commission’s failure to explain the reasons for its decision to treat the two utilities

       differently constituting arbitrary and capricious decision-making.

¶ 26         Finally, Dominion asserts that the Commission’s failure to afford equal

       treatment to Duke and Dominion violates the equal protection clauses of the state

       and federal constitutions, with the company having directed our attention to Cheek

       v. City of Charlotte, 273 N.C. 293 (1968), in which this Court held that legislation

       prohibiting the provision of massages to a member of the opposite sex at massage
                          STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                             2022-NCSC-75

                                          Opinion of the Court

       parlors, but not at barber shops or health clubs, was arbitrary and constituted

       impermissibly discriminatory legislation, and Connecticut Light & Power Co. v. Fed.

       Energy Regul. Comm’n, 627 F.2d 467, 473 (D.C. Cir. 1980), in which the United States

       Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit noted that “treating regulated

       entities, whose apparent fact situation is stipulated to be the same, in a markedly

       different manner might give rise to an Equal Protection problem.” According to

       Dominion, the Commission’s “fail[ure] to articulate any factors or rational basis for

       subjecting [Dominion] to different treatment than identically situated North Carolina

       electric utilities” violated Dominion’s right to equal protection.

¶ 27         In seeking to persuade us to affirm the Commission’s order, the Public Staff

       argues that the Commission properly exercised its authority pursuant to N.C.G.S.

       § 62-133(d) by determining that Dominion should not be allowed to earn a return

       upon the unamortized balance of its coal ash-related costs. The Public Staff notes

       that the Commission’s ratemaking decisions are not subject to stare decisis or res

       judicata principles in light of the fact that such decisions are legislative, rather than

       judicial, in nature given that in, “fixing rates . . . the Commission [exercises] a

       function delegated to it by the legislative branch of government.” State ex rel. Utils.

       Com. v. Thornburg, 325 N.C. 463, 469 (1989) (holding that, since the Commission was

       exercising a legislative function, the manner in which it provided for the inclusion of

       nuclear cancellation costs in rates in prior cases was not entitled to res judicata
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                                             2022-NCSC-75

                                           Opinion of the Court

       effect); see also State ex rel. Utils. Com. v. Carolina Util. Customers Ass’n, 348 N.C.

       452, 472 (1998) (stating that “[a] final order of the [Commission] in a general rate

       case is not within the doctrine of stare decisis”).

¶ 28         According to the Public Staff, the Commission made sufficient findings of fact

       to “explain[ ] why a divergence from the usual ratemaking standards would be

       appropriate and why the approach that the Commission ha[d] adopted would be just

       and reasonable to both utilities and their customers” as required by this Court’s

       decision in Stein, 375 N.C. at 926. As an initial matter, the Public Staff points to the

       Commission’s discussion of three previous rate cases that involved including in rates

       the “extraordinary, large costs such as environmental clean-up and plant

       cancellation” costs and in which the Commission had apportioned the responsibility

       for those costs “between ratepayers and shareholders” by amortizing the costs to rates

       while denying the utility’s request to be allowed to earn a return on the unamortized

       balance. Secondly, the Public Staff directs our attention to the Commission’s finding

       that a “number of material facts in evidence call into question the prudence of

       [Dominion’s] actions and inaction and the risks accepted by [Dominion] management”

       at the utility’s coal ash disposal sites, arguing that this evidence provides further

       support for the Commission’s decision to require sharing of those costs between

       Dominion and its customers. See Stein, 375 N.C. at 931 (reversing the Commission’s

       order, in part, and holding that the Commission was required “to evaluate the extent
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                          Opinion of the Court

       to which the utilities committed environmental violations” in setting the utility’s

       rates pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d) “even if any such environmental violations did

       not result from imprudent management”).           Thirdly, the Public Staff notes the

       Commission’s reference to the “matching principle,” which “dictates that customers

       who use an asset should pay for the asset at the time it is used” instead of requiring

       “present and future customers [to] pay for costs incurred related to service provided

       in the past.” Fourthly, the Public Staff notes that utilities are generally required to

       collect asset retirement costs over the useful life of the asset, with the Commission

       having found that its order was “further supported by the failure of [Dominion] to

       properly account for the full decommissioning costs of its coal-fired power plants” and

       Dominion’s failure to include those costs in rates during the period when those

       facilities were actually being used to generate electricity.

¶ 29         The Public Staff denies that the Commission had erred by failing to make the

       same findings and conclusions in this case that it made in the 2016 Dominion rate

       case and the 2017 Duke Energy rate cases. In the Public Staff’s view, the Commission

       did, in fact, provide a “reasoned basis for departing from” its decision in the 2016

       Dominion order by pointing out that the 2016 order explicitly stated that it did “not

       have precedential value with respect to the [coal ash] issues” that were before the

       Commission in that case because the 2016 Dominion rate case involved a stipulation

       between Dominion and the Public Staff instead of having been fully litigated.
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                         Opinion of the Court

       Similarly, the Public Staff contends that the Commission did not err by reaching a

       different outcome in this case than it had in the 2017 Duke rate cases, at least, in

       part, because the 2017 Duke rate cases were on appeal when this case was heard and

       decided and because the Commission’s orders in those cases were ultimately reversed

       by this Court in Stein, resulting in a settlement between Duke and certain

       intervenors that was markedly less favorable to Duke than the Commission’s initial

       orders. Finally, the Public Staff argues that the Commission’s decision does not work

       any sort of equal protection violation given that such challenges to a utility

       ratemaking decision must be rejected as long as the Commission’s decision is

       rationally related to a legitimate government purpose, which this one clearly is.

¶ 30         The rates for utility service charged by North Carolina retail ratepayers must

       be “just and reasonable.” N.C.G.S. § 62-131. For that reason, the Commission is

       required to fix rates that are “fair both to the public utilities and to the consumer,”

       N.C.G.S. § 62-133(a), by

                    (1)    Ascertain[ing] the reasonable original cost or the
                    fair value under G.S. 62-133.1A of the public utility’s
                    property used and useful . . . in providing the service
                    rendered to the public within the State, less that portion of
                    the cost that has been consumed by previous use recovered
                    by depreciation expense.
                    ....

                    (2)   Estimat[ing] such public utility’s revenue under the
                    present and proposed rates.
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                          Opinion of the Court

                    (3)   Ascertain[ing] such public utility’s reasonable
                    operating expenses, including actual investment currently
                    consumed through reasonable actual depreciation.

                    (4)    Fix[ing] such rate of return on the cost of the
                    property ascertained pursuant to subdivision (1) of this
                    subsection as will enable the public utility by sound
                    management to produce a fair return for its shareholders,
                    considering changing economic conditions and other
                    factors, including, but not limited to, the inclusion of
                    construction work in progress in the utility's property
                    under sub-subdivision b. of subdivision (1) of this
                    subsection, as they then exist, to maintain its facilities and
                    services in accordance with the reasonable requirements of
                    its customers in the territory covered by its franchise, and
                    to compete in the market for capital funds on terms that
                    are reasonable and that are fair to its customers and to its
                    existing investors.

       N.C.G.S. § 62-133(b). In addition, the Commission is required, during the ratemaking

       process, to “consider all other material facts of record that will enable it to determine

       what are reasonable and just rates.” Id. § 62-133(d).

¶ 31         According to N.C.G.S. § 62-79(a), “all final orders and decisions of the

       Commission shall be sufficient in detail to enable the court on appeal to determine

       the controverted questions presented in the proceedings and shall include” “[f]indings

       and conclusions and the reasons or bases therefor upon all the material issues of fact,

       law, or discretion presented in the record.” According to well-established North

       Carolina law, “[t]he Commission . . . is not required to ‘comment upon every single

       fact or item of evidence presented by the parties.’ ” State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n v.

       Public Staff-N.C. Util. Comm’n, 323 N.C. 481, 496-97 (1988) (quoting State ex rel.
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                          Opinion of the Court

       Utils. Comm’n v. Eddleman, 320 N.C. 324, 351 (1987)). Instead, “[t]he Commission’s

       summary of the appellant’s argument and its rejection of the same is sufficient to

       enable the reviewing court to ascertain the controverted questions presented in the

       proceeding,” which is all that is required. State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n v. Conservation

       Council of N.C., 312 N.C. 59, 62 (1984). As a result, this Court has held that findings

       of fact that “demonstrate that the Commission considered the impact of changing

       economic conditions upon customers” and that “specify how this factor influenced the

       Commission’s decision to authorize a 10.2% [return on equity],” State ex rel. Utils.

       Comm’n v Cooper, 367 N.C. 741, 748 (2015), were sufficient to pass muster on

       appellate review.

¶ 32         The essence of the argument that Dominion has presented for our

       consideration in this case is that, since the facts contained in the record developed in

       this case were essentially identical to those contained in the records developed in the

       company’s 2016 rate case and in the 2017 Duke Energy rate cases, the Commission

       erred by failing to conclude that Dominion was entitled to earn a return on the

       unamortized balance of its coal ash-related costs consistently with the decisions that

       the Commission had made in those earlier proceedings. In Stein, we addressed the

       issue of whether the Commission possessed the discretion, pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 62-

       133(d), to allow utilities to earn a return on their coal ash cleanup and recovery costs,

       even if such costs were characterized as operating expenses rather than as property
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                         Opinion of the Court

       used and useful. 375 N.C. at 914. In holding that the Commission possessed the

       authority to act in this fashion, we noted that, even though the procedures for

       establishing just and reasonable rates as outlined in N.C.G.S. § 62-133(b) “provide a

       workable framework” for setting just and reasonable rates for utility service, the

       circumstances at issue in that case were “anything but ordinary, with the coal ash-

       related costs that [Duke Energy had] incurred between 1 January 2015 and 31

       December 2017 not being readily susceptible to traditional ratemaking analysis for a

       number of reasons.” Id. at 921.

¶ 33         After a thorough analysis of this Court’s prior decisions interpreting the nature

       and extent of the Commission’s authority pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d), we

       determined that our precedent “clearly indicated that N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d) is

       available to the Commission for the purpose of dealing with unusual situations and

       that the authority granted to the Commission pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d) is not

       limited by the more specifically stated ratemaking principles set out elsewhere in

       N.C.G.S. § 62-133(b).” Id. at 925. As a result, we held that

                    the Commission may employ N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d) in
                    situations involving (1) unusual, extraordinary, or complex
                    circumstances that are not adequately addressed in the
                    traditional ratemaking procedures set out in N.C.G.S. § 62-
                    133; (2) in which the Commission reasonably concludes
                    that these circumstances justify a departure from the
                    ordinary ratemaking standards set out in N.C.G.S. § 62-
                    133; (3) determines that a consideration of these “other
                    facts” is necessary to allow the Commission to fix rates that
                    are just and reasonable to both the utility and its
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                                             2022-NCSC-75

                                          Opinion of the Court

                     customers; and (4) makes sufficient findings of fact and
                     conclusions of law supported by substantial evidence in
                     light of the whole record explaining why a divergence from
                     the usual ratemaking standards would be appropriate and
                     why the approach that the Commission has adopted would
                     be just and reasonable to both utilities and their customers.

       Id. at 926.

¶ 34         In applying the four-part test enunciated in Stein to the facts at issue in that

       proceeding, we determined that the Commission had not erred “by allowing the

       amortization of deferred coal ash costs to rates” and by allowing Duke Energy “to

       earn a return on the unamortized balance” of those costs in that case given that “the

       enactment of CAMA forced [Duke Energy] to confront an ‘extraordinary and

       unprecedented’ issue involving the potential expenditure of billions of dollars in order

       to address a significant environmental problem” and that, “[i]n light of the

       ‘magnitude, scope, duration and complexity’ of the anticipated costs,” a return on the

       unamortized balance of the costs would reasonable. Id. at 926. On the other hand,

       we also held that, once the Commission had decided to invoke its authority pursuant

       to N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d) to consider “other facts,” it “was required to consider all

       material facts of record . . . including, in these cases, facts pertaining to alleged

       environmental violations such as non-compliance with NPDES permit conditions,

       unauthorized discharges, and groundwater contamination from the coal ash

       basins[.]” Id. at 931. In view of the fact that the Commission “appear[ed] to have

       determined that it lacked the authority to comment upon the nature and extent of
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                         Opinion of the Court

       any environmental violations that the utilities may or may not have committed” in

       setting rates pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d), we reversed the portion of the

       Commission’s order that rejected the Public Staff’s “equitable sharing” proposal and

       remanded this case to the Commission for further proceedings, including the making

       of appropriate findings of fact and conclusions of law relating to the validity of the

       Public Staff’s proposal. Id. at 932–33.

¶ 35         Over two decades ago, this Court upheld the Commission’s use of its

       discretionary authority pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d) to allow a utility to amortize

       nuclear plant cancellation costs while rejecting the utility’s request to earn a return

       on the unamortized balance of those costs in State ex rel. Utilities Comm’n v.

       Thornburg, 325 N.C. 463 (1989). In Thornburg, the utility sought a general rate

       increase that was predicated, in part, upon an attempt to reflect the costs associated

       with the abandonment of a proposed nuclear generating facility at the Shearon

       Harris nuclear plant in its retail rates. Id. at 465. In its opinion, the Court noted

       that, in a previous rate case regarding two other cancelled nuclear units at the

       Shearon Harris site, the Commission had allowed the utility to amortize the

       cancellation costs associated with the two other units “over a ten-year period” while

       determining that “no return [would be] allowed on or with respect to the unamortized

       balance” of the cancellation costs. Id. at 466. In the case that was actually before

       this Court, the Commission allowed the utility to amortize the relevant cancellation
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                          Opinion of the Court

       costs to rates over a period of ten years without allowing the utility to earn a return

       on the unamortized balance.      On appeal, the Attorney General argued that the

       Commission had acted beyond the scope of its statutory authority in allowing the

       utility to amortize any of the relevant nuclear plant cancellation costs to rates and

       that his ability to advance this argument was not precluded by the doctrine of res

       judicata arising from the Commission’s earlier decision. Id. at 467.

¶ 36         In holding that “the Commission’s treatment of cancellation costs in prior

       orders is not res judicata in this proceeding,” id. at 471, we noted that,

                    in addressing the issue of whether a Commission order can
                    be deemed res judicata this Court has held that “only
                    specific questions actually heard and finally determined by
                    the Commission in its judicial character are res judicata,
                    and then only as to the parties to the hearing.” Utilities
                    Commission v. Area Development, Inc., 257 N.C. 560, 570,
                    126 S.E.2d 325, 333 (1962) (emphasis added). Moreover,
                    this Court has stated that ratemaking activities of the
                    Commission are a legislative function. Utilities Comm. v.
                    Edmisten, Attorney General, 294 N.C. 598, 603, 242 S.E.2d
                    862, 866 (1978); Utilities Commission v. General Telephone
                    Company, 281 N.C. 318, 336, 189 S.E.2d 705, 717 (1972).
                    It follows that[,] since the exercise of the Commission’s
                    ratemaking power is a legislative rather than a judicial
                    function, such orders are not governed by the principles of
                    res judicata and are reviewable by this Court in later
                    appeals of closely related matters.

       Id. at 468. After determining that the Commission had the authority to treat costs

       associated with the cancellation of the third nuclear unit at the Shearon Harris

       facility differently than it had treated the first two, we further held that the
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                                               2022-NCSC-75

                                            Opinion of the Court

       Commission did “not err as a matter of law in authorizing [the utility] to continue to

       recover a portion of the cancellation costs of the abandoned Harris Plant as operating

       expenses through amortization” in light of its discretion “to consider all material facts

       in the record in determining rates” pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 62-133(d). Id. at 476.

¶ 37          Similarly, we held in State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n. v. Carolina Util. Customers

       Ass’n, that, while “prior decisions of this Court regarding general questions of law”

       relevant to the ratemaking process were entitled to stare decisis effect, “the final

       order of the Commission in a general rate case is not within the doctrine of stare

       decisis[.]” 348 N.C. 452, 472 (1998) (cleaned up) (quoting State ex rel. Util. Comm’n

       v. Carolina Power & Light Co., 250 N.C. 421, 430 (1959)). Thus, well-established

       principles of North Carolina law establish that prior Commission decisions, as

       compared to prior decisions of this Court, are not entitled to either res judicata or

       stare decisis effect. In light of that fact, we have no difficulty in holding that the

       Commission was not obligated to make the same decision with respect to the manner

       in which Dominion was entitled to reflect the costs associated with coal ash

       remediation in rates in this case that it made in the 2016 Dominion rate case or the

       2107 Duke rate cases.4

              4  As an aside, we note that the concept of stare decisis requires, in essence, that a
       court identify certain material differences between the case that is currently before the court
       and potentially-relevant precedent before declining to follow that precedent A requirement
       that the Commission explicitly distinguish prior precedent as a precondition for declining to
       follow it seems, aside from having no support of any nature in this Court’s precedent, to be
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                                               2022-NCSC-75

                                            Opinion of the Court

¶ 38          In addition, we are unable to conclude that the Commission acted arbitrarily

       and capriciously in approving different ratemaking treatments for the coal ash-

       related costs at issue in this case as compared to those at issue in the 2016 Dominion

       general rate case and 2017 Duke general rate cases. Instead of indicating the absence

       “of fair and careful consideration or [the] fail[ure] to display a reasoned judgment,”

       Thornburg, 314 N.C. at 515, the Commission’s order in this case demonstrated a

       thorough consideration of the record evidence, adequately explained the reasons for

       the decision that the Commission did make, and reflected a ratemaking treatment of

       the relevant costs that failed to track the proposals made by either the utility or the

       Public Staff.

¶ 39          As evidence of its even-handed consideration of the matters at issue in this

       case, we note that the Commission’s order contains a detailed summary of the

       circumstances surrounding Dominion’s incurrence of the coal ash-related costs and

       inconsistent with the basic principle of North Carolina ratemaking law that prior
       Commission decisions do not have stare decisis effect. The decisions upon which Dominion
       relies in arguing for the imposition of such a requirement in this case, such as Nat’l Weather
       Serv. Employees Org. v. FLRA, 966 F.3d 875 (D.C. Circ. 2020) (dispute over a termination
       provision in a collective bargaining agreement); New Eng. Power Generators Ass’n v. FERC,
       881 F.3d 202 (D.C. Circ. 2018) (appellate review of a complaint alleging that an independent
       transmission system operator’s tariff was unreasonably discriminatory); West Deptford
       Energy, LLC v. FERC, 766 F.3d 10 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (determination of which rate applied
       when more than one had been filed); Trump Plaza Assocs. v. NLRB, 679 F.3d 822 (D.C. Cir.
       2012) (employer challenge to the certification of a union election); BB&L, Inc. v. NLRB, 52
       F.3d 366 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (employer refusal to bargain with a union), all appear to have been
       made in the context of adjudication proceedings conducted pursuant to the federal
       Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 554 (2022), rather than any sort of proceeding that
       is functionally equivalent to a general rate case conducted pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 62-133.
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                                         Opinion of the Court

       an explanation of the reasons that it had questions concerning the extent to which

       Dominion had acted prudently, which included the nature and extent of the

       exceedances associated with groundwater contaminants related to Dominion’s coal

       ash storage facilities, instances of late and deficient groundwater monitoring, and

       Dominion’s decision to ignore a recommendation for the construction of a dry waste

       disposal facility at a particular site. In addition, the Commission highlighted the

       risks inherent in certain of the decisions that Dominion had made with respect to the

       relevant coal ash-related costs, including the fact that, prior to enactment of the CCR

       Rule, Dominion had deemed unlined ponds to be a permanent storage solution for

       coal ash and had planned to close its existing wet storage facilities in place, an

       approach that would have allowed the continued leaching of coal combustion

       residuals into the groundwater.

¶ 40         Acknowledging that the record did not provide “substantial evidence” to

       support the making of a full and informed decision concerning the prudence of the

       manner in which the relevant coal ash-related costs had been incurred, the

       Commission concluded that “none of the CCR Costs incurred by the Company

       between July 1, 2016 through June 30, 2019 [would] be disallowed on the basis of

       having been imprudently incurred” and authorized Dominion to amortize all of those

       costs to rates. On the other hand, the Commission rejected Dominion’s request to be

       allowed to earn a return on the unamortized balance of the relevant coal ash-related
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                                             2022-NCSC-75

                                          Opinion of the Court

       costs after considering multiple factors, such as the Commission’s “history of

       allocating prudently incurred costs, specifically in the context of extraordinary, large

       costs such as environmental clean-up and plant cancellation, between ratepayers and

       shareholders”; the evidence that called the prudence with which the relevant coal

       ash-related costs had been incurred into question; the “significant” costs that were at

       issue in this case, which would have resulted in material additions to the amount

       that each of Dominion’s North Carolina retail ratepayers would have had to pay had

       the company’s proposal been adopted; and a concern that approval of Dominion’s

       proposed treatment of the relevant costs would violate the “matching” principle and

       raise significant concerns for intergenerational equity.

¶ 41           As a result of the fact that the Commission’s findings of fact are “supported by

       competent, substantial evidence” and the fact that the basis for the Commission’s

       decision is adequately explained in its order and reflects an accurate understanding

       of North Carolina ratemaking law as set out in prior decisions from this Court, Stein,

       375 N.C. at 900, we have no legal basis for disturbing the Commission’s order in this

       case.    Although Dominion’s dissatisfaction with the Commission’s order is

       understandable, it has failed to show that the Commission’s decision lacks adequate

       record support, misapplies the applicable ratemaking statutes, or fails to embody a

       reasoned decision.    Instead, at the end of the day, Dominion’s challenge to the

       Commission’s order amounts to little more than a belief that the Commission should
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                                           2022-NCSC-75

                                        Opinion of the Court

       have weighed the evidence differently and reached a different result and that we

       should intervene to require that a different outcome be reached in spite of the fact

       that “[t]he Commission is responsible for determining the weight and credibility to

       be afforded to the testimony of any witness, including any expert opinion testimony”

       and the fact that the Commission’s decision is “entitled to great deference.” Stein,

       375 N.C. at 900.

¶ 42         In addition, we note that, even if Dominion’s argument that the Commission

       was required to follow its earlier decisions in the 2016 Dominion rate case and the

       2017 Duke rates cases or to explain its reasons for failing to do so had merit, which

       it does not, the record contains ample support for any decision that the Commission

       might have made to refrain from doing so.           As we have already noted, the

       Commission’s order in the 2016 Dominion rate case rested upon a settlement between

       the parties, with both the stipulation itself and the resulting Commission order

       having made it abundantly clear that any decision that the Commission might make

       in that proceeding would not be deemed to have precedential effect, Application of

       Va. Elec. & Power Co., d/b/a Dominion N.C. Power, for Adjustment of Rates and

       Charges Applicable to Elec. Util. Serv. in N.C., Docket No. E-22, Sub 532, 2016 N.C.

       PUC LEXIS 1183, at *137–39 (N.C.U.C. Dec. 22, 2016), in light of the Commission’s

       statement that Dominion and the Public Staff had “agree[d] that the appropriate

       amortization period for future CCR expenditures shall be determined on a case-by-
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                         Opinion of the Court

       case basis”; that there would be no “prejudice to the right of any party to take issue

       with the amount or the treatment of any deferral of ARO costs in a rate case or other

       appropriate proceeding”; that Dominion and the Public Staff “reserve[d] their rights

       in the Company’s next general rate case to argue . . . (a) how the unamortized balance

       of deferred CCR expenditures . . . should be addressed; and (b) how reasonable and

       prudent CCR expenditures incurred by the Company . . . should be recovered”; and

       that the Public Staff’s agreement to the stipulation should “not be construed as a

       recommendation that the Commission reach any conclusions regarding the prudence

       and reasonableness of the Company’s overall CCR plan.” Id. As a result, one of the

       decisions upon which Dominion relies in support of its “precedent-based” argument

       expressly disclaims any idea that precedent had actually been created.

¶ 43         Dominion’s reliance on the Commission’s orders in the 2017 Duke rate cases is

       equally misplaced.    Although the Commission did, to be sure, allow the Duke

       companies to amortize their coal ash-related costs to rates over a five-year period and

       to earn a return on the unamortized balance in their initial orders in these cases, the

       Commission also imposed substantial mismanagement penalties upon the Duke

       utilities that were not imposed upon Dominion in this case. In addition, the facts

       surrounding the manner in which Dominion and the Duke companies incurred their

       coal ash-related costs were, as is reflected in the relevant Commission orders,

       markedly different. Finally, the 2017 Duke rate orders were partially overturned on
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                                              2022-NCSC-75

                                           Opinion of the Court

       appeal and remanded for further consideration by the Commission, eventually

       resulting in a settlement that reduced the amount of coal ash-related costs included

       in the rates charged by the Duke companies to their North Carolina retail ratepayers

       by “more than $900 million.” Under this set of circumstances, it is hard for us to see

       how the Commission’s refusal to explain why it failed to follow decisions that were,

       at the time, pending on appeal could possibly constitute prejudicial error. N.C.G.S. §

       62-94(c) (requiring reviewing courts to take due account of “the rule of prejudicial

       error”).5 As a result, the 2017 Duke rate orders that the Commission unlawfully, at

       least in Dominion’s eyes, failed to follow did not involve the same ratemaking

       treatment for which Dominion contends, rested upon differing sets of facts, and did

       not actually control the manner in which Duke’s coal ash-related costs were reflected

       in the companies’ rates.

¶ 44          As a result, given that the Commission’s ratemaking decisions involve the

       exercise of legislative authority and the fact that “only specific questions actually

       heard and finally determined by the Commission in its judicial character are res

              5 In our view, moreover, the Commission adequately discussed its reasons for failing
       to follow the prior Duke Energy orders by noting that they were on appeal at that time and
       by mentioning those orders no less than eight times in discussing the manner in which coal
       ash-related costs should be reflected in Dominion’s rates. In view of the fact that the
       Commission explained the reasons that it rejected Dominion’s position and referenced the
       Duke Energy orders multiple times, we have difficulty seeing what additional clarity would
       have been provided to the Commission’s order by the inclusion of language explicitly stating
       why it had not followed the result reached in the Duke Energy orders that were later
       overturned on appeal.
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                         Opinion of the Court

       judicata, and then only as to the parties to the hearing,” Thornburg, 325 N.C. at 468,

       we hold that the Commission did not err by focusing its analysis upon the nature and

       extent of the coal ash-related costs that Dominion sought to have included in the

       calculation of its North Carolina retail rates and that the Commission was not

       obligated to adopt the same ratemaking treatment for the costs at issue in this case

       that it adopted in the 2016 Dominion rate order and the 2017 Duke rate orders. For

       the same reason, the Commission did not violate the equal protection clauses of the

       state and federal constitutions by reaching a different result in this case than it did

       in the decisions upon which Dominion relies. Finally, we hold that the Commission

       adequately explained the basis for the decision that it actually made with respect to

       the issue of whether Dominion should have been allowed to earn a return upon the

       unamortized balance of the relevant coal ash-related costs. As a result, we hold that

       Dominion’s challenge to the Commission’s failure to allow it to earn a return on the

       unamortized balance of its coal ash-related costs did not involve any error of law.

       C. Ten-Year Amortization Period

¶ 45         Secondly, Dominion argues that the Commission’s determination that the coal

       ash-related costs at issue in this case should be amortized over ten years was

       arbitrary and capricious given that the Commission had determined in the 2016

       Dominion rate case that a five-year period would be beneficial for both Dominion and

       ratepayers and that the Commission had failed to give an adequate explanation for
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                                             2022-NCSC-75

                                          Opinion of the Court

       its decision to use a ten-year, rather than a five-year, amortization period in this case.

       More specifically, Dominion argues that, “[w]hile it is true that the ten-year

       amortization period adopted by the Commission meets the outer bounds of the

       standard it adopted for cancelled nuclear plants,” “only a five-year amortization

       period would be consistent with the Commission’s treatment of coal ash costs and

       nuclear abandonment costs,” with the Commission having erred by failing to rely on

       more recent and applicable decisions “involving ‘identical’ coal ash costs” rather than

       earlier nuclear plant abandonment costs.

¶ 46         As we understand its brief, the logic upon which Dominion relies in asserting

       that the Commission erred by requiring the use of a ten-year, rather than a five-year,

       amortization period in this case is essentially identical to the logic upon which

       Dominion relied in arguing that the Commission erred by failing to permit it to earn

       a return on the unamortized balance of the relevant coal ash-related costs.            In

       essence, Dominion argues that, since the Commission found a five-year amortization

       period to be reasonable in both the 2016 Dominion rate case and the 2017 Duke

       Energy rate cases and since, “[i]n contrast to this line of precedent, the Commission

       now prescribes a ten-year amortization period” without “explain[ing] why [it]

       previously adopted [a] five-year amortization period, for the same costs,” the

       Commission’s decision with respect to the length of the applicable amortization period

       is arbitrary and capricious.
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                          Opinion of the Court

¶ 47         The same logic that persuades us that the Commission did not err by declining

       to allow Dominion to earn a return on the unamortized balance of the company’s coal

       ash-related costs persuades us that the Commission did not err by approving the use

       of a ten-year, rather than a five-year, period for the amortization of those costs. In

       addition to the fact that the record developed in this case differs from those developed

       in the other cases, the fact that the 2016 Dominion order expressly stated that it was

       not entitled to precedential effect, and the fact that the ratemaking treatment

       approved in the 2017 Duke rate cases was changed upon remand from our decision

       in Stein, we note that the Commission found that the use of a ten-year period struck

       a “more appropriate and fairer balance” than the use of either a longer or a shorter

       amortization period and the use of a ten-year amortization period was consistent with

       its “historical treatment of major plant cancellations.” Application of Va. Elec. and

       Power Co. for Auth. to Adjust and Increase Its Elec. Rates and Charges, No. E-22, Sub

       273, 73 N.C.U.C. Orders & Decisions 343, 355. Although the record would have also

       supported a decision to reach the result which Dominion believes to be appropriate,

       the Commission’s choice of a ten-year, rather than a five-year, amortization period

       appears to have a reasonable basis in both the record and the Commission’s findings.

       As a result, we hold that the Commission did not commit any error of law in approving

       the use of a ten-year, rather than a five-year, period for amortizing Dominion’s coal

       ash-related costs.
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                        Opinion of the Court

                                     III.    Conclusion

¶ 48         After a careful review of the entire record, we conclude that the Commission’s

       order is supported by competent, substantial evidence and that the Commission

       adequately explained the basis for the portions of its decision that Dominion has

       challenged on appeal. As a result, the Commission’s decision is affirmed.

             AFFIRMED.
             Justice BARRINGER dissenting.

¶ 49         The issue I address today is whether the Utilities Commission needed to

       explain why it departed from its reasoning in two cases that were decided less than

       two years prior, had materially similar facts, and were brought to the Commission’s

       attention. While I agree with much of the majority’s discussion of this case, I cannot

       accept its holding that the Commission did not even need to acknowledge the two

       Duke Energy (Duke) cases relied upon by Dominion Energy (Dominion) when

       Dominion requested a rate increase. Under general tenets of administrative law, an

       agency’s failure to explain a departure from recent, applicable past decisions when

       they were brought to its attention is arbitrary and capricious. North Carolina

       administrative law should be no different. Otherwise, an agency can treat two

       similarly situated entities differently without having to directly explain why. Such

       arbitrary and capricious decision-making will only serve to undermine trust in our

       government. The matter should be remanded to address the issue discussed herein.

       Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.

                                      I.      Relevant Facts

¶ 50         On 29 March 2019, Dominion Energy applied to the Commission for a general

       rate increase. Application of Va. Elec. & Power Co., d/b/a Dominion Energy N.C. for

       Adjustment of Rates and Charges Applicable to Elec. Serv. in N.C., Docket No. E-22,
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                                                2022-NCSC-75

                                        Barringer, J., dissenting

       Sub 562 & Sub 566, slip op. at 3 (N.C.U.C. Feb. 24, 2020).1 As part of the rate increase,

       Dominion sought to recover CCR compliance expenses incurred from 1 July 2016 to

       30 June 2019 through a five-year amortization period as well as a return on the

       unamortized balance. Id. at 86. Dominion requested this recovery method as the

       Commission had allowed it in three prior decisions, one involving Dominion in 2016

       and two involving Duke in 2018. The Commission, however, denied Dominion’s

       request, instead allowing it a ten-year amortization period and no return on the

       unamortized balance. Id. at 15. As the Public Staff concedes, at no point in the order

       did the Commission explain what distinguished Dominion’s case from the two Duke

       cases, even though both had materially similar facts.

                                          II.     Analysis

¶ 51         Dominion Energy contends that the Commission’s failure to provide any

       explanation directly addressing why it did not allow Dominion the same recovery as

       Duke was arbitrary and capricious. In response, the Public Staff argues that while

       “the Commission did not expressly distinguish those orders . . . the Commission’s

       extensive explanation” for why it did not allow Dominion Energy a five-year

       amortization period and a return on coal costs “provided an adequate explanation for

       why it broke with the different policy that it had adopted in the 2018 Duke orders.”

             1 Currently available at: https://starw1.ncuc.gov/NCUC/ViewFile.aspx?Id=7c1dc9e1-
       1bdb-4840-8692-6b329c980225.
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                                            2022-NCSC-75

                                        Barringer, J., dissenting

       Additionally, the Public Staff contends that even if the Commission erred by failing

       to expressly distinguish the Duke cases, remand would serve no purpose since this

       Court reversed the Duke orders in State ex rel. Utilities Commission v. Stein, 375 N.C.

       870 (2020).

¶ 52         The Commission does not have “unbridled discretion in exercising its

       judgment.” State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n v. Thornburg, 314 N.C. 509, 516 (1985).

       Instead, this Court may reverse a decision of the Commission if it is arbitrary or

       capricious. N.C.G.S. § 62-94(b)(6) (2021). “To be arbitrary and capricious, the

       Commission’s order would have to show a lack of fair and careful consideration of the

       evidence or fail to display a reasoned judgment.” State ex rel. Utils. Comm’n v.

       Piedmont Nat. Gas Co., 346 N.C. 558, 573 (1997).

¶ 53         After careful review, I cannot find a case where this Court has addressed

       whether or not the Commission must explicitly explain why it departed from a

       recently decided case with materially similar facts that was brought to its attention.

       However, this Court has previously recognized that “[w]hile the Commission is not

       covered by our Administrative Procedure Act[,] . . . the Commission is still an

       administrative agency of the state government, and general tenets of administrative

       law are applicable to its operation except where modified by statute.” State ex rel.

       Utils. Comm’n v. Nantahala Power & Light Co., 326 N.C. 190, 199–200 (1990).

       Looking to the general tenets of administrative law, “[i]t is textbook administrative
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                                               2022-NCSC-75

                                          Barringer, J., dissenting

       law that an agency must provide[ ] a reasoned explanation for departing from

       precedent or treating similar situations differently.” New England Power Generators

       Ass’n, Inc. v. Fed. Energy Regul. Comm’n, 881 F.3d 202, 210 (D.C. Cir. 2018) (second

       alteration in original) (quoting W. Deptford Energy LLC v. FERC, 766 F.3d 10, 20

       (D.C. Cir. 2014)); Trump Plaza Assocs. v. NLRB, 679 F.3d 822, 827 (D.C. Cir. 2012)

       (noting that an agency “cannot ‘ignore its own relevant precedent but must explain

       why it is not controlling[,]’ B B & L, Inc. v. NLRB, 52 F.3d 366, 369 (D.C. Cir. 1995)”);

       see also 2 Am. Jur. 2d Admin. Law § 360 (2022).2 Accordingly, though an

       administrative agency “need not address every precedent brought to its attention, it

       must provide an explanation where its decisions appear to be ‘on point.’ ” Nat’l

       Weather Serv. Emps. Org. v. Fed. Lab. Rels. Auth., 966 F.3d 875, 883–84 (D.C. Cir.

       2020) (quoting Brusco Tug & Barge Co. v. NLRB, 247 F.3d 273, 277 (D.C. Cir. 2001)).

¶ 54          Here, the Commission never explained why, in this case, it allowed a different

       recovery for Dominion’s CCR costs than the recovery it allowed for Duke’s CCR costs

              2 While these decisions are not from this Court, they interpret the words “arbitrary”
       and “capricious” in the context of administrative law, specifically the federal Administrative
       Procedure Act (APA). Like N.C.G.S. § 62-94(b)(6), the APA instructs federal courts to reverse
       agency actions that are arbitrary and capricious. Compare 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A), with N.C.G.S.
       § 62-94(b)(6) (2021). While the cases are not binding, given the similar statutory language
       and context, their interpretation is persuasive. See, e.g., Reynolds Am. Inc. v. Third Motion
       Equities Master Fund Ltd, 379 N.C. 524, 2021-NCSC-162, ¶ 7 (“[G]iven the well-developed
       body of law arising from the numerous appraisal cases decided in Delaware, we borrow freely
       from these cases to the extent we find their reasoning to be persuasive and applicable to the
       facts here.”).
                     STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                         2022-NCSC-75

                                    Barringer, J., dissenting

two years prior.3 In the Duke cases, the Commission allowed Duke to recover its CCR

costs through a five-year amortization period and receive a return on the unamortized

costs. In contrast, in this case, the Commission only allowed Dominion to recover its

CCR costs through a ten-year amortization period and not receive a return on the

unamortized costs. The Commission’s order in this case contained several reasons

explaining why it allowed a ten-year amortization period with no return on the

unamortized costs. However, none of those reasons relate to the Duke cases or explain

why the Commission departed from the Duke cases.4

       3  In contrast, the Commission explicitly explained why it allowed a different recovery
in this case than in the 2016 Dominion case. Application of Va. Elec. & Power Co., d/b/a
Dominion Energy N.C. for Adjustment of Rates and Charges Applicable to Elec. Serv. in N.C.,
Docket No. E-22, Sub 562 & Sub 566, slip op. at 122–23 (N.C.U.C. Feb. 24, 2020). Specifically,
the Commission noted that the 2016 case did “not have precedential value” and that the
evidence presented in the 2016 case was “far less extensive” than the evidence in this case.
Id.
        4 The order only mentions the Duke cases in two sections. First, in its findings of fact,

the Commission found that “Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC (DEC), and Duke Energy Progress,
LLC (DEP)” have an “authorized rate of return on common equity” of “9.90%.” Id. at 8–9. The
Commission then included a citation for the two 2018 Duke cases. Id. at 9 n.3. As part of the
citation, the Commission included the subsequent history of the Duke cases in accordance
with Bluebook rule 10.7.1(a). See The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation R. 10.7.1(a),
at 110 (Columbia L. Rev. Ass’n et al. eds., 21st ed. 2020). In other words, within the citation
to the DEC case, the Commission properly included the clause “appeal docketed, No. 401A18
(N.C. Nov. 7, 2018),” and within the citation to the DEP case the Commission properly
included the clause “appeal docketed, No. 401A18 (N.C. Nov. 7, 2018)” which were required
by Bluebook Rule 10.7.1(a) because the cases were on appeal at that time. Application of Va.
Elec. & Power Co., slip op. at 9. These citation clauses are the only mention of the Duke cases
being on appeal in the entire order. Therefore, it cannot seriously be maintained that these
two clauses, in a citation, in a footnote, constitute adequate discussion of the Commission’s
reasons for failing to follow the prior Duke Energy orders. The cases were cited for the
authorized rate of return on common equity allowed Duke Energy, not to explain why the
Commission did not follow their treatment of CCR costs. At best, the mention of the appeals
in the citations represents admirable attention to the Bluebook by the Commission.
                           STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                              2022-NCSC-75

                                         Barringer, J., dissenting

¶ 55          Since ratemaking is a legislative function and traditional principles of stare

       decisis do not apply, it was permissible for the Commission to allow a different

       recovery method in this case than in the Duke cases. However, when departing from

       the Duke cases, under general tenets of administrative law, the Commission needed

       to provide some explanation directly addressing why it departed when the Duke cases

       were similar, recently decided, and brought to the Commission’s attention.5 The

       Commission’s failure to provide that explanation rendered its order arbitrary and

       capricious.

¶ 56          Further, contrary to the Public Staff’s contention, reversing this case for the

       Commission to correct its erroneous reasoning would not be “futile.” According to the

               Second, the Commission provided “a summary of the evidence that is in the record,”
       which included the opposing arguments of the Public Staff and Dominion’s witnesses
       concerning how the Commission should apply the Duke cases. Id. at 85–86, 99, 105–06, 114–
       15, 117. In its analysis, the Commission also referenced some exhibits that appeared in the
       Duke cases, id. at 124 & n.22, 127–29, and recognized that Dominion claimed it was entitled
       to a return on CCR costs because of the Duke cases, id. at 133. However, the order never
       actually addressed which of the arguments concerning the Duke cases the Commission found
       persuasive or explained why the Commission chose not to follow the Duke cases. Id. at 121–
       44. Thus, on appeal, this Court can only speculate as to why the Commission declined to
       follow the Duke cases.
               5 Notably, in each of the 2018 Duke cases, the Commission explicitly discussed the

       2016 Dominion case when explaining why it allowed the Duke utilities to recover their CCR
       costs through a five-year amortization period with a return on the unamortized costs. See In
       re Joint Application by Duke Energy Progress, LLC, and Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC, for
       Accounting Order to Defer Environmental Compliance Costs, Docket No. E-2, Sub 1103, 2018
       N.C. PUC LEXIS 105, at *499–501 (N.C.U.C. Feb. 23, 2018); In the Matter of Joint
       Application by Duke Energy Progress, LLC, and Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC, for Accounting
       Order to Defer Environmental Compliance Costs, Docket No. E-7, SUB 1110, 2018 WL
       3209374, at *264 (N.C.U.C. June 22, 2018).
                           STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                             2022-NCSC-75

                                         Barringer, J., dissenting

       Public Staff, since Stein reversed the two Duke cases, “there is now no need for the

       Commission to distinguish the ratemaking treatment that it afforded Duke that was

       later reversed and superseded.” However, this argument only highlights the problem

       with the Commission’s decision in this case. Without an explanation from the

       Commission, this Court has no basis for knowing why the Commission chose not to

       follow the Duke cases. Thus, this Court can only speculate as to what effect Stein

       would have on the Commission’s reasoning in this case.

¶ 57         More importantly, at the time the Commission decided this case, Stein had not

       yet been decided by this Court. Thus, the Commission must have chosen to depart

       from the Duke cases for some reason other than Stein. Accordingly, the partial

       reversal of the Duke cases in Stein and their ultimate settlement does not provide

       this Court with any further insight as to why the Commission chose not to follow

       them or permit us to conclude that its decision to depart from the Duke cases was not

       arbitrary and capricious.

¶ 58         Ultimately, the lack of an explanation by the Commission is the fatal flaw in

       this case. While nonarbitrary explanations for why the Commission treated one

       utility differently than another utility certainly could exist,6 so could arbitrary ones.

             6 For instance, the majority notes that the Duke utilities were assessed substantial
       mismanagement penalties in the 2018 cases while Dominion incurred no such penalty in this
       case. Again, however, this Court has no way to determine whether the mismanagement
       penalty was a factor in the Commission’s decision to depart from the Duke cases. After all,
       the substantial mismanagement penalty referenced by the majority escaped the attention of
                            STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                                2022-NCSC-75

                                           Barringer, J., dissenting

       For instance, the Commission might arbitrarily treat out-of-state-based utilities

       differently than locally based ones due to a bias towards local businesses. Unless the

       Commission had to directly explain why it treated two similarly situated utilities

       differently, it could hide biased, arbitrary decision-making through the release of

       reasonable but unrelated explanations in each case. The risk that some businesses

       will be treated differently than others, without a guarantee that they will receive an

       explanation as to why they are treated differently, will only undermine trust in our

       government and prevent us from reviewing the Commission’s decisions to ensure they

       are not arbitrary and capricious. See, e.g., State ex rel. Utilities Comm’n v. Stein, 375

       N.C. 870 (2020) (Newby, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part); In re Harris

       Teeter, LLC, 378 N.C. 108, 2021-NCSC-80 (Berger, J., dissenting); id. (Barringer, J.,

       dissenting). General tenets of administrative law would not permit such a situation,

       but apparently, the majority is willing to adopt a different standard, a standard that

       will now govern all utilities who wish to conduct business in North Carolina.

                                         III.    Conclusion

¶ 59          An agency’s decision is arbitrary and capricious if it does not explain why it

       decided to depart from two cases decided less than two years prior that featured

       materially similar facts and were brought to its attention. The majority’s decision to

       the Public Staff who, on appeal, did not suggest it as a possible reason for distinguishing the
       Duke cases from the present case.
                   STATE EX REL. UTILS. COMM’N V. VIRGINIA ELEC.

                                     2022-NCSC-75

                                Barringer, J., dissenting

the contrary now permits the Commission to treat two similarly situated entities

differently without ever having to directly address the reason for the disparate

treatment. The majority’s decision on this point contradicts general tenets of

administrative law. Because this case should be remanded to the Commission to

address the issue discussed herein, I respectfully dissent.

        Chief Justice NEWBY and Justice BERGER join in this dissenting opinion.