Fifth Circuit Allows Texas Commission to Limit PURPA Sales

Sep 12, 2014

Reading Time : 3 min

Under a PUCT rule implementing FERC’s PURPA regulations, the Legally Enforceable Obligation pricing option is available only to QFs that can provide “firm power.”  The PUCT rule defines “firm power” as “power or power-producing capacity . . . that is available pursuant to a legally enforceable obligation for scheduled availability over a specified term.”  QFs unable to meet this requirement can charge the utility only the current or “as-available” price.

In a 2007 complaint filed with the PUCT, Exelon argued that it had formed a Legally Enforceable Obligation with Southwestern Public Service Company (“Southwestern”), and that Southwestern therefore owed Exelon payment under rates that ranged from $0.035/kWh to $0.090/kWh—rates that significantly exceeded the applicable as-available rates. Southwestern argued that no Legally Enforceable Obligation was formed because Exelon’s wind generation could not provide “firm power.” Exelon alleged that its power was in fact firm.  In its 2009 order, the PUCT ultimately sided with Southwestern, finding that the Exelon wind entities did not comply with the conditions for creating a Legally Enforceable Obligation and, therefore, that the appropriate rate was the as-available rate.

Subsequently, Exelon filed a Petition for Declaratory Order with FERC, asking FERC to determine whether all QFs are entitled to the Legally Enforceable Obligation pricing option under FERC’s regulations. In November 2009, FERC issued an order finding that the PUCT decision was inconsistent with FERC’s regulations implementing PURPA and that QFs may form Legally Enforceable Obligations even with non-firm power. FERC noted that its regulations make no distinction between firm and non-firm power in the QF context. Upon receiving this favorable order from FERC, Exelon filed suit in federal district court seeking declaratory and injunctive relief against the PUCT. The district court granted Exelon’s motion for summary judgment, finding that the PUCT could not impose the firm power condition on the creation of a Legally Enforceable Obligation.

The Fifth Circuit reversed.  First, the Fifth Circuit vacated the portions of the district court judgment regarding the PUCT’s 2009 order and directed the district court to dismiss those claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The court reasoned that, under PURPA, state courts have exclusive jurisdiction over “as-applied” challenges, which are claims asserting that a state agency’s implementation of PURPA is unlawful as it applies to an individual petitioner. The Fifth Circuit held that Exelon’s claims regarding the PUCT’s 2009 order fell within this category and thus determined that the federal district court lacked jurisdiction.

Exelon had also challenged the underlying PUCT regulation itself, arguing that the regulation failed to implement FERC’s regulation, as determined by FERC in its November 2009 Declaratory Order. In a divided opinion, the majority held that Exelon failed to show that the PUCT was implementing FERC’s PURPA regulations improperly. Because FERC’s regulation did not explicitly mandate that all QFs must be able to form Legally Enforceable Obligations, the Fifth Circuit held that Texas was within its discretion to set reasonable parameters on its implementation of FERC’s regulations, such as limiting Legally Enforceable Obligations to firm power QFs.  The court held that FERC’s Declaratory Order advising that all QFs should be able to form Legally Enforceable Obligations was merely an “informal guidance letter,” which only had persuasive value at best. The majority also relied on canons of statutory construction, reasoning that Exelon’s reading of FERC’s regulations would render certain sections superfluous.  Specifically, the court concluded that if all QFs, regardless of whether they provided firm or non-firm power, were eligible to form Legally Enforceable Obligations, the as-available pricing mechanisms in FERC’s regulations would be duplicative.

In a partial dissent, Judge Edward Prado argued that the plain language of the PUC rule conflicts with the FERC regulations implementing PURPA and, even if the language were not in conflict, the court should defer to FERC’s interpretation of its own regulation.


1 QFs are cogenerators that meet certain operating and efficiency standards or small, renewable power production facilities.

2 The Supreme Court has explained that the law avoids thorny 10th Amendment issues because technically states can implement PURPA simply by adjudicating disputes arising under the statute.  See FERC v. Mississippi, 456 U.S. 742, 760 (1982).

Share This Insight

Previous Entries

Speaking Energy

October 27, 2025

On October 23, 2025, the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) directed the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to conduct a rulemaking to assert jurisdiction over load interconnections to the bulk electric transmission system and establish standardized procedures for the interconnection of large loads.1 The Directive included an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking (ANOPR) that sets forth the legal justification for asserting jurisdiction over transmission-level load interconnections and fourteen principles that should inform FERC’s rulemaking process. The Secretary has directed FERC to take “final action” on the Directive no later than April 30, 2026.

...

Read More

Speaking Energy

October 24, 2025

On October 21, 2025, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) issued a final order (DOE/FECM Order No. 5264-A1) granting Venture Global CP2 LNG, LLC long-term authorization to export up to 1,446 billion cubic feet per year of domestically produced liquefied natural gas (LNG) from its Louisiana facility to countries without a free trade agreement with the United States (Non-FTA Countries). The final order follows a March 2025 Conditional Order,2 which issued while DOE was still completing its review of the agency’s 2024 LNG Export Study.3 The final order confirms that the project’s export volume and term authorization (through December 31, 2050) are unchanged, but provides for a three-year “make-up period” to allow export of any approved volume not shipped during the original term.

...

Read More

Speaking Energy

October 9, 2025

On October 1, 2025, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC or the Commission) issued Order No. 914 amending certain Commission regulations to incorporate a conditional sunset date in compliance with the Trump administration’s April 2025 Executive Order, “Zero-Based Regulatory Budgeting to Unleash American Energy” (the EO).

...

Read More

Speaking Energy

October 8, 2025

Akin is pleased to serve as a gold sponsor for Infocast’s Energy Independence Summit in Houston, October 21-23. Energy partner Charlie Ofner will moderate the Macroeconomics of Domestic Energy Independence panel, projects & energy transition partner Shariff Barakat will lead Opportunities in US Manufacturing: How Big, How Fast, How FEOC?, and counsel Taha Qureshi will guide the discussion on Cornerstones for Energy Independence: Investing in Grid Security & Cybersecurity.

...

Read More

Speaking Energy

October 6, 2025

As of October 6, 2025, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) continues to operate despite the lapse in appropriations that resulted in a government shutdown on October 1, 2025. While FERC receives appropriations from Congress, it primarily is self-funded through fees and charges obtained from the industries it regulates, offsetting its total costs. Hence, during prior government shutdowns in 2018 and 2013, the agency was able to continue operations. However, FERC published a plan for operating in the event of a lapse in appropriations on September 30, 2025, available here

...

Read More

Speaking Energy

September 8, 2025

On September 4, 2025, the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee convened a hearing to consider the nominations of Laura Swett and David LaCerte to serve as commissioners at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC or Commission). Swett is a former FERC Staff that served as legal and policy advisor to former FERC Chairman Kevin McIntyre and Commission Bernard McNamee. LaCerte is an attorney in private practice that previously held positions at the Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board and the Louisiana Department of Veterans Affairs.

...

Read More

Speaking Energy

September 9, 2025

On August 29, 2025, Christopher Wright, the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) submitted a proposal to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) under section 403 of the Department of Energy Organization Act (DOE Organization Act), asking that FERC terminate its long-running proceeding in Docket No. PL18-1, which addresses proposed updates to its policy statement on the Certification of New Interstate Natural Gas Facilities. The docket resulted in a draft policy statement that has never been finalized, nor relied upon by FERC in a published order, but would require FERC to consider environmental impacts and potential mitigation prior to making a public interest determination under the Natural Gas Act (NGA). The Secretary asks FERC to rescind the draft policy statement in its entirety to remove any uncertainty in gas infrastructure development. Rescission would require FERC to initiate a new docket and develop a new record should it want to reinitiate similar policy changes in the future.

...

Read More

Speaking Energy

August 15, 2025

On August 8, 2025, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) issued an enforcement order in Skye MS, LLC (Skye) and levied a $45,000 civil penalty on an intrastate pipeline operator in Mississippi, resolving an investigation into the operator’s violations of section 311 (Section 311) of the Natural Gas Policy Act (NGPA). FERC faulted the operator for providing a Section 311 transportation service without timely filing a Statement of Operating Conditions (SOC) and obtaining FERC’s approval for the transportation rates. Section 311 permits intrastate pipelines to transport interstate gas “on behalf of” interstate pipelines without becoming subject to FERC’s more extensive Natural Gas Act (NGA) jurisdiction, but requires the intrastate pipeline to have an SOC stating the rates and terms and conditions of service on file with FERC within 30 days of providing the interstate service. Under the NGPA, Section 311 rates must be “fair and equitable” and approved by FERC. In Skye, FERC stated that the operator began providing Section 311 service on certain pipeline segments in Mississippi in May 2023, following their acquisition from another Section 311 operator, but did not file an SOC with FERC until April 2025. The order ties the penalty to the approximately two-year delay between commencement of the Section 311 service and the SOC filing date. The pipeline operator was also ordered to provide an annual compliance report and to abide by additional verification requirements related to the filing of its FERC Form No. 549D, the Quarterly Transportation & Storage Report for Intrastate Natural Gas and Hinshaw Pipelines.

...

Read More

© 2025 Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP. All rights reserved. Attorney advertising. This document is distributed for informational use only; it does not constitute legal advice and should not be used as such. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Akin is the practicing name of Akin Gump LLP, a New York limited liability partnership authorized and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority under number 267321. A list of the partners is available for inspection at Eighth Floor, Ten Bishops Square, London E1 6EG. For more information about Akin Gump LLP, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP and other associated entities under which the Akin Gump network operates worldwide, please see our Legal Notices page.