99-17251. Regulations under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act Governing the Movement of Natural Gas on Facilities on the Outer Continental Shelf; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 133 (Tuesday, July 13, 1999)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 37718-37727]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-17251]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
    
    Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
    
    18 CFR Subchapter O, Parts 330 and 385
    
    [Docket No. RM99-5-000]
    
    
    Regulations under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act Governing 
    the Movement of Natural Gas on Facilities on the Outer Continental 
    Shelf; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
    
    June 30, 1999.
    AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commission is proposing to exercise its authority under 
    the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) to ensure that natural 
    gas is transported on an open and nondiscriminatory basis through 
    pipeline facilities located on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS). To 
    achieve this, the Commission is considering requiring OCS gas 
    transportation service providers to make available information 
    regarding their affiliations and the conditions under which service is 
    rendered. Making this information available will assist the Commission 
    and interested persons in determining whether OCS gas transportation 
    services conform with the open access and nondiscrimination mandates of 
    the OCSLA. This will enable shippers who believe they are subject to 
    anticompetitive practices to bring their concerns to the Commission. 
    The Commission believes this proposed regulatory regime is a key step 
    to developing a uniformly-applied, light-handed regulatory standard 
    equally applicable to all OCS gas service providers.
    
    DATES: Comments on the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking are due August 27, 
    1999. Comments should be filed with the Office of the Secretary and 
    should refer to Docket No. RM99-5-000.
    
    ADDRESSES: File comments with the Office of the Secretary, Federal 
    Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, NE, Washington, DC 
    20426.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    
    Marc Poole, Office of Pipeline Regulation, 888 First Street, NE, 
    Washington, DC 20426, (202) 208-0482.
    Gordon Wagner, Office of the General Counsel, 888 First Street, NE, 
    Washington, DC 20426, (202) 219-0122.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In addition to publishing the full text of 
    this document in the Federal Register, the Commission also provides all 
    interested persons an opportunity to inspect or copy the contents of 
    this document during normal business hours in the Public Reference Room 
    at 888 First Street, NE, Room 2A, Washington, DC 20426.
        The Commission Issuance Posting System (CIPS) provides access to 
    the texts of formal documents issued by the Commission from November 
    14, 1994, to the present. CIPS can be accessed via Internet through 
    FERC's Home Page (http://www.ferc.fed.us) using the CIPS Link or the 
    Energy Information Online icon. Documents will be available on CIPS in 
    ASCII and WordPerfect 6.1 or 8.0. User assistance is available at 202-
    208-2474 or by e-mail to cipsmaster@ferc.fed.us.
        This document is also available through the Commission's Records 
    and Information Management System (RIMS), an electronic storage and 
    retrieval system of documents submitted to and issued by the Commission 
    after November 16, 1981. Documents from November 1995 to the present 
    can be viewed and printed. RIMS is available in the Public Reference 
    Room or remotely via Internet through FERC's Home page using the RIMS 
    link or the Energy Information Online icon. User assistance is 
    available at 202-208-2222, or by e-mail to rimsmaster@ferc.fed.us.
        Finally, the complete text on diskette in WordPerfect format may be 
    purchased from the Commission's copy contractor, RVJ International, 
    Inc. RVJ International, Inc. is located in the Public Reference Room at 
    888 First Street, NE, Washington, DC 20426.
    
    [[Page 37719]]
    
    Table of Contents
    
    I. Introduction
    II. Background
        A. The Increasing Importance of OCS Gas Supplies
        B. Federal Regulatory Responsibilities
        C. The Commission's OCS Regulatory Activity
        D. The Proposed Regulations
    III. Discussion
        A. Purpose
        B. Scope of Proposed Regulations
        1. Reporting Requirements
        2. Circumstances Under Which the Proposed Regulations Will Not 
    Apply
        a. Feeder Lines
        b. Pipelines Dedicated to Service for a Single Shipper
        c. Other Self-Owned Pipelines
        3. Enforcement of the Proposed Regulations
    IV. Environmental Analysis
    V. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
    VI. Information Collection Requirements
    VII. Comment Procedure
    
    I. Introduction
    
        The Commission is proposing to exercise its authority under the 
    Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) 1 to ensure that 
    natural gas is transported on an open and nondiscriminatory basis 
    through pipeline facilities located on the Outer Continental Shelf 
    (OCS).2 To achieve this, the Commission is considering 
    requiring OCS gas transportation service providers to make available 
    information regarding their affiliations and the conditions under which 
    service is rendered. Making this information available will assist the 
    Commission and interested persons in determining whether OCS gas 
    transportation services conform with the open access and 
    nondiscrimination mandates of the OCSLA. This will enable shippers who 
    believe they are subject to anticompetitive practices to bring their 
    concerns to the Commission. The Commission believes this proposed 
    regulatory regime is a key step to developing a uniformly-applied, 
    light-handed regulatory standard equally applicable to all OCS gas 
    service providers.
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        \1\ 43 U.S.C. 1301-1356 (1988).
        \2\ The OCS is defined as ``all submerged lands lying seaward 
    and outside of the area of lands beneath navigable waters . . . and 
    of which the subsoil and seabed appertain to the United States and 
    are subject to its jurisdiction and control.'' 43 U.S.C. 1331(a). 
    See also 43 U.S.C. 1301(a)(1), defining ``lands beneath navigable 
    waters'' as ``all lands within the boundaries of each of the 
    respective States.'' Thus, the federal OCS does not include offshore 
    areas that are within state boundaries.
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    II. Background
    
    A. The Increasing Importance of OCS Gas Supplies
    
        The OCS is the nation's most promising source of stable energy 
    supplies, both currently and for the foreseeable future. Already, the 
    OCS, mainly the Gulf of Mexico, is one of the nation's most important 
    natural gas supply areas. The Gulf area currently accounts for 
    approximately 26.2 percent of U.S. annual natural gas marketed 
    production 3 and is becoming increasingly important to the 
    energy security of the United States. Gas production from the Gulf of 
    Mexico in 1997 was 5.24 trillion cubic feet (Tcf).4 The 
    relative importance of the Gulf's gas production to the U.S. grew very 
    rapidly from only 1-2 percent of production in the mid-1950s. Estimates 
    of the Gulf resources are large and the current production levels of 5 
    Tcf can be maintained or increased for years. As of 1997, proven 
    natural gas reserves in the Gulf of Mexico totaled 27.9 Tcf 
    5 with estimated resources up to 155 Tcf. The Department of 
    Energy forecasts that offshore production will rise to 6.81 Tcf in 2010 
    and 7.83 Tcf in 2020. The rapid development of new offshore production 
    and transmission technologies over the past several years has spawned a 
    dynamic expansion of exploration, development, production, 
    construction, and transmission activities throughout the Gulf area. In 
    1997, 84 percent of new field discoveries were in the federal OCS Gulf 
    of Mexico, along with 56 percent of new reservoir discoveries in old 
    fields.6
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        \3\ Annual Energy Review 1997, Energy Information 
    Administration.
        \4\ Annual Energy Review 1997, Energy Information 
    Administration, at 12.
        \5\ U.S. Crude Oil, Natural Gas, and Natural Gas Liquids 
    Reserves 1997 Annual, Energy Information Administration, at 28.
        \6\ Id., at 30.
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        Clearly, the increasing OCS gas resource development is driving 
    pipeline development. Since 1990, the gas industry has installed 
    approximately 4,000 miles of new pipe in the Gulf. Stated otherwise, 
    over 30 percent of the active offshore pipelines have been constructed 
    over the past nine years. Already, 1,512 miles of new pipe have been 
    planned and recent estimates predict that another 7,400 miles of pipe 
    will be needed in the region over the next 15 years.
    
    B. Federal Regulatory Responsibilities
    
        Under the federal scheme, the responsibility for the various 
    aspects of OCS pipeline regulation resides in several agencies. The 
    Minerals Management Service (MMS) of the U.S. Department of the 
    Interior has the responsibility to award permits to pipelines that 
    transport gas and other products across the OCS. The approval process 
    covers design, fabrication, and installation plans, as well as the 
    granting of rights-of-way for the pipeline and accessory structures. 
    Although section 5(e) of the OCSLA grants ``right-of-way'' 
    responsibility to the MMS, it also requires consultation with the 
    Secretary of Transportation to assure environmental protection and 
    safety. Section 5(e) of the OCSLA further states that pipelines with 
    approved permits must be operated in accordance with competitive 
    principles.
        Section 5(e) of the OCSLA also requires that gas (and oil) be 
    transported without discrimination, pursuant to standards established 
    by the Commission. Specifically, section 5(e) requires pipelines to 
    ``transport or purchase without discrimination'' OCS gas ``in such 
    proportionate amounts'' as the Commission (in consultation with the 
    Secretary of Energy) determines to be reasonable. Section 5(f)(1) of 
    the OCSLA states that a pipeline transporting gas on or across the OCS 
    shall adhere to certain competitive principles, which include the 
    requirement that ``[t]he pipeline must provide open and 
    nondiscriminatory access to both owner and nonowner shippers.'' 
    Sections 5(e) and (f) are to be read together, with the more recently 
    adopted section 5(f) as a ``reaffirmation and strengthening of 
    subsection 5(e).'' 7
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        \7\ See the Joint Explanatory Statement of the Committee of 
    Conference, discussing 1978 amendments to the OCSLA. H.R. Conf. Rep. 
    1474, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 37, reprinted in 1978 U.S. Code Cong. & 
    Admin. News 1674, 1687.
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        To assure offshore pipelines adhere to competitive principles, 
    section 5(f)(3) of the OCSLA requires the Commission (and the Secretary 
    of Energy) to consult with the Attorney General on specific conditions 
    to be included in any permit, license, easement, right-of-way or grant 
    of authority on the OCS.8
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        \8\ Section 5(f)(3) adds that in preparing requested views, the 
    Attorney General shall consult with the Federal Trade Commission.
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    C. The Commission's OCS Regulatory Activity
    
        The Commission currently exercises authority over offshore gas 
    service providers under the NGA, the OCSLA, and the Natural Gas Policy 
    Act (NGPA).9 This Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
    
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    (NOPR) requests comments on whether these multiple, overlapping 
    regulatory regimes complement one another or may be a cause of 
    inefficient competitive inequities. The Commission expects that a 
    single set of limited reporting requirements, uniformly applied to all 
    OCS gas service providers covered under this proposal, will eliminate 
    any distortions in the offshore marketplace due to competitors' 
    compliance with different regulatory regimes. We also expect the 
    simplicity and certainty afforded by a single set of reporting 
    requirements to encourage continued investment in the development of 
    OCS resources.
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        \9\ Offshore, the NGPA is of relatively little significance, 
    since the only facilities to which it alone applies are intrastate 
    facilities in state waters. Intrastate facilities that extend 
    seaward beyond the reach of state waters are subject to the OCSLA; 
    interstate facilities located in state waters are subject to the 
    NGA.
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        When the NGA was passed in 1938, offshore production was 
    negligible, and as a result, that statute and the regulatory regime 
    developed to enforce it made no effort to distinguish between the 
    different characteristics of gas operations onshore and 
    offshore.10 As gas companies began to extend their onshore 
    lines into shallow waters, the Commission was able to effectively apply 
    its NGA regulatory scheme to these facilities near shore. However, as 
    production areas were developed farther from shore, and as pipelines 
    were constructed to access these increasingly remote locations, the 
    validity of the Commission's means for identifying the primary function 
    of offshore facilities was called into question.11
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        \10\ Less than one half of one percent of the offshore 
    facilities today were in place prior to 1960.
        \11\ EP Operating Co. v. FERC, 876 F. 2d 48 (5th Cir. 1989).
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        To determine whether a specific facility was engaged in interstate 
    transmission, and thus subject to the NGA, or was performing primarily 
    production or gathering, and thus exempt from the NGA pursuant to 
    section 1(b), the Commission applied a test based on several physical 
    characteristics.12 Because this test grew out of the 
    physical characteristics of gas operations onshore, the Commission 
    modified its application to suit the different nature of gas operations 
    offshore.13
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        \12\ The ``primary function'' test was articulated in Farmland 
    Industries, Inc. (Farmland), 23 FERC para. 61,063 (1983), which took 
    into consideration the following factors as relevant: (1) The length 
    and diameter of the pipeline, (2) the extension of the facility 
    beyond the central point in the field, (3) the pipelines' geographic 
    configuration, (4) the location of compressors and processing 
    plants, (5) the location of wells along all or part of the facility, 
    and (6) the operating pressure of the line. The primary function 
    test has been found by the Commission to be applicable to both 
    onshore and offshore facilities, as modified as applied to offshore 
    facilities in Amerada Hess Corporation, 52 FERC para. 61,268 (1990). 
    The criteria set out in Farmland were not intended to be all 
    inclusive. The Commission has also considered nonphysical criteria 
    such as the intended purpose, location, and operation of the 
    facility, the general business activity of the owner of the 
    facility, and whether the jurisdictional determination is consistent 
    with the objectives of the NGA and the Natural Gas Policy Act of 
    1978.
        \13\ Amerada Hess Corporation, 52 FERC para. 61,268 (1990). The 
    Commission's application of its primary function test to gas 
    operations offshore was challenged in Sea Robin Pipeline Company v. 
    FERC (Sea Robin), 127 F.3d 365 (5th Cir. 1997), reh'g denied, 
    (February 2, 1998); the court vacated and remanded a Commission 
    decision involving the exercise of its NGA jurisdiction over an OCS 
    pipeline system. In an order on remand in Docket No. CP95-168-002, 
    the Commission clarifies the application of its modified primary 
    function test for offshore facilities. This NOPR is not intended to 
    address issues specific to Sea Robin.
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        The OCSLA was passed in 1953 to promote and provide federal 
    oversight of the exploration, development, and production of OCS 
    minerals. Section 5(f) of the statute specifies that competitive 
    principles are to govern OCS pipeline operations. The Commission 
    determined that adherence to NGA open access provisions would satisfy 
    OCSLA nondiscrimination requirements.14
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        \14\ See Interpretation of, and Regulations Under, Section 5 of 
    the OCSLA Governing Transportation of Natural Gas by Interstate 
    Natural Gas Pipelines on the OCS, Order No. 509, 53 Fed. Reg. 50,925 
    (December 19, 1988), FERC Stats. & Regs. para. 30,842 (1988), order 
    on reh'g, Order No. 509-A, 54 FR 8,301 (February 28, 1989), FERC 
    Stats. & Regs. para. 30,848 (1989).
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        The increasing importance and level of OCS activity in recent years 
    has generated a concomitant increase in the importance of the 
    Commission's responsibility under the OCSLA to ensure a competitive 
    market for gas pipeline services on the OCS. Over the past several 
    years, the Commission has been concerned with and attentive to its 
    regulatory authority over activities on the OCS.
        In separate Notices of Inquiry in 1995 15 and 
    1998,16 the Commission sought comments on the most suitable 
    means to regulate OCS activities. Both Notices of Inquiry asked whether 
    the Commission might act under the OCSLA to regulate offshore pipeline 
    facilities--either in conjunction with or absent the exercise of any 
    concurrent NGA jurisdiction--without impeding or distorting offshore 
    development or production. In developing the regulations proposed in 
    this docket, we have taken into account those portions of the comments 
    that address our OCSLA authority.17
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        \15\ The 1995 Notice of Inquiry led to a 1996 Policy Statement 
    that established a presumption that facilities located in deep water 
    of 200 meters or more were engaged in production or gathering. Gas 
    Pipeline Facilities and Services on the Outer Continental Shelf--
    Issues Related to the Commission's Jurisdiction Under the Natural 
    Gas Act and the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, 74 FERC 61,222 
    (1996), reh'g dismissed, 75 FERC para. 61,291 (1996).
        \16\ Alternative Methods for Regulating Natural Gas Pipeline 
    Facilities and Services on the Outer Continental Shelf, 83 FERC 
    para. 61,235 (1998).
        \17\ The Notices of Inquiry also sought responses regarding the 
    scope of the Commission's NGA authority offshore, and the 1998 
    Notice of Inquiry was informed by the 1997 decision in Sea Robin.
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        In 1988, the Commission acted under the OCSLA to require adherence 
    to the section 5 principles of open and nondiscriminatory 
    transportation by issuing an NGA section 7 blanket transportation 
    certificate to every offshore NGA-jurisdictional pipeline.18 
    Pursuant to Subpart G of the Commission's regulations, blanket 
    certificate holders transport gas on an open access basis subject to a 
    rate schedule on file with the Commission. The Commission stated its 
    belief ``that the condition of nondiscriminatory access (open access) 
    placed on the [blanket] transportation program established in Order 
    Nos. 436 and 500 will satisfy in substantial measure, the 
    nondiscriminatory access requirements in section 5 of the OCSLA.'' 
    19 At that time, although affirming ``that all pipelines on 
    the OCS have a duty to provide open and nondiscriminatory access to 
    transportation services,'' 20 the Commission did not require 
    NGA-exempt OCS pipelines to act to meet this mandate, stating:
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        \18\ See Interpretation of, and Regulations Under, Section 5 of 
    the OCSLA Governing Transportation of Natural Gas by Interstate 
    Natural Gas Pipelines on the OCS, Order No. 509, 53 FR 50,925 
    (December 19, 1988), FERC Stats. & Regs. para. 30,842 (1988), order 
    on reh'g, Order No. 509-A, 54 FR 8,301 (February 28, 1989), FERC 
    Stats. & Regs. para. 30,848 (1989).
        \19\ Order No. 491 at 61,031; see also Order No. 509 at 31,274.
        \20\ Order No. 509 at 31,289.
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        If problems do arise with respect to either the movement of OCS gas 
    (1) through state waters, or (2) through gathering or producer-owned 
    facilities on the OCS, the Commission possesses ample ancillary 
    authority under the OCSLA to ensure that the statutory requirements of 
    the OCSLA are not thwarted.21
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        \21\ Id. at 31,280. On rehearing, in response to concerns that 
    this placed offshore gathering facilities not regulated under the 
    NGA beyond the reach of the OCSLA provisions, the Commission stated 
    that if it ``receives complaints regarding gathering facilities it 
    will, on a case-specific basis, use its ancillary authority, its 
    authority under sections 4 and 5 of the NGA, and its authority under 
    section 5 of the OCSLA, as appropriate under the circumstances 
    presented.'' Order No. 509-A, at 31,333.
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        Until recently, we have not encountered circumstances prompting us 
    to act under the OCSLA to remedy anticompetitive behavior. However, 
    lately we have been presented with allegations of offshore 
    discrimination for which the NGA regulatory regime appears either 
    inapplicable 22 or
    
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    inadequate.23 Such allegations, and a review of offshore 
    regulation in general, persuades us that the best way to ensure 
    adherence to the nondiscriminatory provisions of the OCSLA is to adopt 
    an even-handed approach whereby OCS gas service providers covered under 
    the proposed rule will be held to a single, uniform reporting standard.
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        \22\ For example, in Murphy Exploration & Production Company, 81 
    FERC para. 61,148 (1997), the Commission was faced with a case of 
    alleged rate discrimination on an offshore gathering line. In 
    response, the Commission stated that because NGA jurisdiction does 
    not extend to facilities used for gathering and production, it would 
    act to remedy discrimination on the NGA-exempt line, if necessary, 
    under its authority under the OCSLA. Commission action on this order 
    is pending. A similar approach was employed in Bonito Pipe Line 
    Company, 61 FERC para. 61,050 (1992), wherein the Commission found 
    OCS oil facilities were exempt from the Commission's authority under 
    the Interstate Commerce Act but were subject to the OCSLA. After 
    determining that a refusal to provide new service contravened the 
    OCSLA section 5 open access requirement, the Commission acted 
    pursuant to the OCSLA to order an existing OCS oil line to provide 
    the requested service. This decision was affirmed in Shell Oil 
    Company v. FERC, 47 F.3d 1186, 1200 (D.C. Cir. 1995), in which the 
    court ``accept[ed] the Commission's determination that it had 
    authority to order an interconnection with an existing pipeline with 
    excess capacity where the interconnection is necessary to the 
    Commission's enforcement of the open access requirements of the 
    OCSLA.''
        \23\ For example, Sea Robin's February 26, 1999 proposal in 
    Docket No. RP99-238-000 to revise its tariff in order to charge 
    certain discounted rates was protested, not as being inconsistent 
    with the NGA, but on the grounds that such discounting could lead to 
    different rates for similarly situated shippers in contravention of 
    the OCSLA nondiscrimination provisions. See Burlington Resources Oil 
    & Gas' March 10, 1999 Protest.
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        Making information available pursuant to the regulations proposed 
    herein will allow the Commission and interested persons to monitor the 
    activities of OCS gas service providers and identify potential 
    violations of the OCSLA and, we anticipate, of the NGA as well. Whereas 
    all OCS gas service providers are subject to the OCSLA, only a subset 
    thereof are also subject to the NGA.24 The competitive 
    inequities that this can cause could be mitigated if OCS operators 
    would be subject to identical, light-handed regulations under the 
    proposed inform-and-enforce regime. We expect disclosure to serve as a 
    means to enable market discipline to displace part of the Commission's 
    role in overseeing OCS operations.
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        \24\ As indicated in note 9, we expect there are very few 
    facilities subject exclusively to the OCSLA and the NGPA.
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    D. The Proposed Regulations
    
        The Commission has completed a review of its policy governing 
    offshore natural gas facilities and services, informed by the comments 
    submitted in response to the 1998 Notice of Inquiry. We conclude that 
    the key issue for shippers using OCS facilities is the assurance of 
    open access and nondiscriminatory conditions of service, including 
    nondiscriminatory rates. Accordingly, to ensure that these competitive 
    characteristics will exist on all facilities used to move gas on or 
    across the federal OCS, the Commission believes it is necessary to 
    institute a single set of regulatory requirements under the OCSLA that 
    are equally applicable to NGA-jurisdictional and NGA-exempt offshore 
    gas service providers. Thus, all OCS gas service providers will be 
    subject to the same OCSLA regulatory regime and, unless exempt under 
    proposed section 330.3(a), make available the information specified in 
    proposed sections 330.2(a) and (b).
        The Commission anticipates that the proposed reporting requirements 
    will result in lighter-handed oversight than under the NGA while 
    offering even-handed treatment for all market participants. The 
    approach the Commission proposes balances the OCS gas service 
    providers' interest in light-handed regulation with OCS shippers' 
    interest in ensuring they are not subject to discriminatory practices. 
    This should encourage competitive options for offshore producers and 
    onshore purchasers of natural gas.
    
    III. Discussion
    
    A. Purpose
    
        Sections 5(e) and (f) of the OCSLA state that offshore gas 
    pipelines must transport or purchase OCS gas without discrimination and 
    provide open and nondiscriminatory access to both owner and nonowner 
    shippers. The Commission is proposing to require OCS gas service 
    providers to make certain information available to assist the 
    Commission and interested persons in monitoring compliance with these 
    OCSLA mandates.
        Currently, offshore pipeline companies subject to the Commission's 
    NGA jurisdiction must, among other requirements, make information 
    available to assist the Commission and interested persons in assessing 
    whether the pipeline companies are providing open and nondiscriminatory 
    access.\25\ However, there are no similar reporting requirements 
    applicable to offshore pipelines that are not regulated under the NGA. 
    The proposed OCSLA reporting requirements will apply to both NGA-
    jurisdictional and NGA-exempt OCS pipelines. Because the proposed OCSLA 
    reporting requirements are less rigorous than those in place under the 
    NGA, to the extent an OCS gas service provider is subject to the NGA, 
    it should be able to fulfill the proposed OCSLA reporting requirements, 
    in large part or in full, by referencing information already on file 
    with the Commission pursuant to present NGA regulations.
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        \25\ In addition to information made available in support of an 
    NGA certificate application, NGA-regulated pipelines are required to 
    file periodic publicly available reports, for example, the Major 
    Natural Gas Pipeline Annual Report, Form No. 2, 18 CFR 260.1; Non-
    Major Pipeline Annual Report, Form No. 2a, 18 CFR 260.2; Quarterly 
    Statement on Monthly Data, Form No. 11, 18 CFR 260.3; Index of 
    Customers Report, 18 CFR 284.106(c) and 18 CFR 284.223(b); or the 
    Discount Rate Report, 18 CFR 284.7(c)(6).
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        The proposed regulations are intended to enable a shipper--or the 
    Commission or any other interested person--to compare the terms and 
    rates under which offshore gas service providers offer service to 
    shippers. If a shipper believes it has been subject to discrimination 
    or has been unjustifiably denied access by a gas service provider, it 
    may seek redress through a number of means, including use of the 
    Commission's Enforcement Hotline,\26\ alternative dispute resolution 
    (ADR) processes,\27\ or by filing a complaint.\28\
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        \26\ 18 CFR Part 1b.
        \27\ 18 CFR 385.604-06.
        \28\ 18 CFR 385.206. The Commission's procedures for responding 
    to allegations of improper action or inaction were revised and 
    expanded in the recently issued Complaint Procedures, Final Rule, 64 
    FR 17,087 (April 8, 1999), FERC Stat. & Regs. para. 31,071 (1999), 
    86 FERC para. 61,324 (1999), reh'g pending.
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        The Commission is requesting comments on the proposed regulations, 
    including the practicality of the proposed reporting requirements as a 
    means to prevent, monitor, and remedy anticompetitive practices by OCS 
    gas service providers. In addition, the Commission requests comments on 
    the extent to which NGA and NGPA obligations may be met by relying on 
    OCS competitors' adherence to the proposed OCSLA reporting 
    requirements.
    
    B. Scope of Proposed Regulations
    
    1. Reporting Requirements
        The reporting requirements are contained in proposed sections 
    330.2(a) and (b). Proposed section 330.2(a) states that an OCS gas 
    service provider must identify itself, the facilities it operates, and 
    its affiliates. Proposed section 330.2(b) states that a gas service 
    provider must submit copies of all current customer contracts or, 
    alternatively, the OCS gas service provider must instead submit a 
    statement of its conditions of service with a detailed description of 
    rates charged and if rates are not uniform, the gas service provider 
    must list each of its
    
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    customers, the services provided, and the rates applicable thereto.
        One area of the Commission's concern is the potential for 
    discrimination between the affiliates and non-affiliates of a gas 
    service provider. Identifying service provider and shipper affiliations 
    \29\ should permit interested persons to judge whether a gas service 
    provider is treating an affiliate more favorably than a non-affiliate 
    and to weigh whether such treatment amounts to discrimination or a 
    denial of access.
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        \29\ For purposes of applying the proposed regulations, the 
    Commission herein adopts the definitions of ``affiliate'' and 
    ``control'' as defined in sections 161.2(a) and (b) respectively of 
    the Commission's regulations.
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        The reporting requirements of proposed sections 330.2(a) and (b) 
    are met by filing the specified information with the Commission. 
    However, such information is of use only as long as it remains 
    accurate, since interested persons cannot meaningfully compare and 
    consider conditions of service unless they reflect current conditions. 
    Thus, proposed section 330.3(d) states that an OCS gas service provider 
    that files information pursuant to proposed sections 330.2(a) and (b) 
    must refile in the event that there are changes to the information 
    initially filed. To ensure information on file remains up to date, 
    proposed section 330.3(d) directs an OCS gas service provider to submit 
    a description of changes in its affiliates, customers, rates, or terms 
    and conditions of service within 15 days of the date the change occurs. 
    An OCS gas service provider that has fulfilled the proposed reporting 
    requirements need not subsequently submit any further information for 
    as long as its status remains unchanged.
        As to the initial filing, we direct all affected OCS gas service 
    providers to submit the information described in proposed sections 
    330.2(a) and (b) within 60 days of the issuance date of the final rule 
    in this proceeding.
        The proposed regulations would amend Rule 2011 of the Commission's 
    Rules of Practice and Procedure to allow all filings made pursuant to 
    the proposed sections 330.2(a) and (b) to be via electronic media.
    2. Circumstances Under Which the Proposed Regulations Will Not Apply
        As discussed below, the proposed regulations will exempt certain 
    types of facilities, based on their location, and certain gas service 
    providers, based on the nature of the service performed. The Commission 
    is considering whether it would be more appropriate to omit this latter 
    exemption and apply the proposed reporting requirements to OCS gas 
    service providers universally, without regard to the type of service 
    offered or shippers served. Our aim is to strike a balance between, on 
    the one hand, instituting a reporting regime broad enough to ensure 
    that shippers are able to identify potential discrimination and, on the 
    other hand, narrowing the applicability of this reporting regime to 
    exclude circumstances where the prospects of finding discrimination are 
    remote. However, given the limited use to date of the OCSLA to define, 
    prevent, and remedy discrimination, and given that where there is no 
    information available on conditions of service there is no way to 
    discover potential discrimination, we are concerned that instituting 
    exemptions for certain gas service providers might compromise the 
    efficient development and transportation of offshore gas supplies. 
    Therefore, the Commission is requesting comments on whether it would be 
    prudent to issue a final rule without the exclusions contained in 
    sections (b) and (c) below.
        a. Feeder Lines. Section 5(f)(2) of the OCSLA states that the 
    Commission may exempt ``any pipeline or class of pipelines which feeds 
    into a facility where oil and gas are first collected or a facility 
    where oil and gas are first separated, dehydrated, or otherwise 
    processed'' from the requirements of open and nondiscriminatory access. 
    The Commission is exercising its authority to do so, as provided in 
    proposed section 330.3(a)(2).
        b. Pipelines Dedicated to Service for a Single Shipper. Where an 
    OCS gas service provider carries gas exclusively for a single shipper, 
    either itself or another party, there is no possibility for multiple 
    shippers to be subject to different, potentially discriminatory 
    conditions of service. In such circumstances, we see no reason to 
    require the gas service provider to make information concerning its 
    terms and rates available for public inspection; indeed, where the gas 
    service provider is carrying gas only for itself, there may be no rates 
    or terms and conditions of service as such. Thus, proposed section 
    330.3(a)(1) states that the reporting requirements regarding affiliates 
    and terms and conditions of service would not apply in such 
    circumstances. Such circumstances would be present where a single OCS 
    gas producer owns and operates a pipeline to carry its own gas from a 
    producing field to shore or to an interconnection with another offshore 
    pipeline. As long as the OCS producer serves only itself or a single 
    other party, we see no cause to be concerned about anticompetitive 
    practices.
        If a gas service provider offers new service to a second shipper, 
    this gives rise to the prospect of similarly situated shippers on the 
    same pipeline being subject to different and potentially discriminatory 
    conditions of service. Pursuant to proposed section 330.3(c), the 
    reporting requirements would then apply.
        A request for new service from a second shipper may also give rise 
    to the possibility for similarly situated shippers to be served under 
    different and potentially discriminatory terms or rates. If the gas 
    service provider accepts the request to serve a second shipper, then as 
    noted above, this offer to serve triggers the obligation to comply with 
    the reporting requirements under proposed section 330.3(c).
        If the gas service provider denies service on the grounds that it 
    is physically unable to transport the requested volumes, and the party 
    denied service complains, the Commission will first address and assess 
    the rationale for denying service, without triggering the reporting 
    requirements. If the Commission deems the denial justifiable--e.g., if 
    the receipt of additional volumes could cause gas from producing wells 
    to be shut in contrary to the OCSLA section 5(e) admonishment 
    concerning conservation or the prevention of waste, or if the content 
    of the proposed gas stream would be incompatible with the 
    characteristics of gas volumes currently flowing--then, as described in 
    proposed section 330.3(a)(1), the reporting requirements would not 
    apply, and the gas service provider may continue to serve its single 
    customer. However, if the gas service provider's claim that it is 
    physically unable to serve another customer is found to be unwarranted 
    and rejected by the Commission, or if the gas service provider denies 
    access on some other basis, then the prospective shipper may pursue its 
    claim respecting the denial of service, and the gas service provider's 
    response must include the information specified in the proposed 
    reporting requirements.
        c. Other Self-Owned Pipelines. In general, we do not believe 
    allegations of anticompetitive conduct will arise unless a gas service 
    provider is carrying gas for more than one shipper, hence the preceding 
    reporting exemption for single-shipper pipelines. We also believe there 
    are certain circumstances where a pipeline carrying gas for multiple 
    parties has no incentive to discriminate. Where a pipeline is used 
    exclusively to transport gas to shore or to an interconnection with 
    another gas service provider's facilities, and the same parties jointly 
    own all interests in
    
    [[Page 37723]]
    
    the pipeline and the gas carried by that pipeline, we see no need to 
    require disclosure of the conditions of service on that pipeline. The 
    Commission views this as the equivalent of the above example of an OCS 
    producer that owns and operates a pipeline to carry its own gas 
    production. Presumably, each of the several parties holding ownership 
    interests in the gas produced, and the pipeline over which that gas is 
    carried, is fully informed regarding the conditions of service on its 
    own pipeline. Therefore, in such situations, the proposed reporting 
    requirements will not apply.
        This exemption will cease if one of the existing shippers alleges 
    denial of access or discrimination. Further, this exemption will end if 
    the OCS gas service provider operating the pipeline offers service to 
    any person that does not hold an ownership interest in both the 
    pipeline and the gas produced from the field served by the pipeline. 
    Finally, this exemption will end if the gas service provider rejects a 
    service request submitted by a person that has no ownership interest, 
    unless the Commission determines the requested service was denied due 
    to a physical inability to accept the proposed additional volumes. If 
    the Commission finds that physical access is possible or if the reason 
    for refusing service is based on other grounds, then the OCS gas 
    service provider would have to comply with the proposed reporting 
    requirements.
    3. Enforcement of the Proposed Regulations
        The proposed reporting requirements will provide the Commission and 
    interested persons with information on OCS gas service providers' 
    affiliates and conditions of service as a means to examine and identify 
    discriminatory practices. Although we expect to monitor compliance with 
    the proposed reporting requirements, we do not expect to scrutinize 
    each submission with the aim of identifying and challenging every 
    aspect of a gas service provider's operations that could conceivably 
    lead to an OCSLA-barred act. Instead, we anticipate the proposed 
    regulations will result in a shipper-initiated, complaint-driven 
    enforcement process.
        This approach differs from NGA regulation, under which natural gas 
    companies must obtain Commission authorization prior to initiating, 
    altering, or abandoning facilities or services. In contrast, under the 
    proposed OCSLA regulation, gas service providers will not be required 
    to obtain Commission approval prior to acting. In this sense, 
    regulation under the OCSLA will be lighter-handed; compliance will 
    consist of describing affiliations and operations. While the proposed 
    OCSLA regulations will impose a new reporting requirement on certain 
    OCS gas service providers that do not currently file any information 
    with the Commission, the proposed regulations impose no new constraints 
    on these gas service providers' actions. Information made available 
    pursuant to the proposed reporting requirements should aid our efforts 
    to enforce the current OCSLA nondiscrimination provisions.
        Actions that shippers or others believe constitute discrimination 
    under the OCSLA should be described in a complaint to the 
    Commission.30 Where a denial of access is alleged, the gas 
    service provider will respond with an explanation of whether and why 
    service was denied. The Commission will review the response and may 
    instruct the gas service provider to submit the information specified 
    in proposed sections 330.2(a) and (b) if it has not previously done so. 
    Where the gas service provider's response contains information 
    previously unavailable to the complaining shipper, the shipper may cite 
    this as cause to request that it be allowed to supplement its initial 
    filing.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \30\ The recent Complaint Procedures Final Rule provides for 
    different processing paths that the Commission may use to resolve 
    issues raised in complaints. ``These complaint resolution paths are 
    (1) alternative dispute resolution, (2) decision on the pleadings by 
    the Commission, and (3) hearing before an ALJ.'' Order No. 602, 64 
    FR 17,087 (April 8, 1999), FERC Stat. & Regs. para. 31,071 at 30,764 
    (1999), 86 FERC para. 61,324 (1999), reh'g pending.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    IV. Environmental Analysis
    
        Commission regulations describe the circumstances where preparation 
    of an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement 
    will be required.31 The Commission has categorically 
    excluded certain actions from this requirement as not having a 
    significant effect on the human environment.32 No 
    environmental consideration is necessary for the promulgation of a rule 
    that is clarifying, corrective, or procedural, or that does not 
    substantially change the effect of legislation or regulations being 
    amended.33
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \31\ Regulations Implementing National Environmental Policy Act, 
    52 FR 47,897 (Dec. 17, 1987), codified at 18 CFR Part 380.
        \32\ 18 CFR 380.4(a)(2)(ii).
        \33\ 18 CFR 380.4.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        This proposed rule is procedural in nature. It directs certain 
    offshore gas service providers to make certain information publicly 
    available. Thus, no environmental assessment or environmental impact 
    statement is necessary for the requirements proposed in the rule.
    
    V. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA) 34 
    generally requires a description and analysis of final rules that will 
    have significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities. The Commission is not required to make such analyses if a 
    rule would not have such an effect.35
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \34\ 5 U.S.C. 601-612 (1988).
        \35\ 5 USC 605(b) (1988).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission does not believe that this rule would have a 
    significant economic impact on small entities. Most entities that will 
    be required under the proposed rule to file for the first time do not 
    fall within the RFA's definition of small entity.36 Further, 
    many of the entities that will be required to meet the new reporting 
    requirements are currently regulated under the NGA and as such have 
    already submitted information to the Commission that largely fulfills 
    the proposed new requirements. To the extent information submitted 
    pursuant to NGA regulations duplicates that required under the proposed 
    OCSLA regulations, NGA-regulated gas companies may satisfy the proposed 
    OCSLA reporting requirements by referencing that already-filed 
    information. Hence, this new rule should have little impact on these 
    companies. Further, NGA-regulated gas companies with offshore 
    facilities are generally too large to fall within the RFA definition of 
    a small entity. Similarly, we anticipate that the non-NGA gas service 
    providers that file for the first time will, for the most part, fall 
    outside of the RFA definition of a small entity. With respect to small 
    entities, the effort involved to comply with the proposed reporting 
    requirements should be minimal. Therefore, the Commission certifies 
    that this rule will not have a significant economic impact on a 
    substantial number of small entities. Accordingly, no regulatory 
    flexibility analysis is required.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \36\ 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (1988), citing to section 3 of the Small 
    Business Act, 15 USC 632 (1988). Section 3 of the Small Business Act 
    defines a ``small business concern'' as a business which is 
    independently owned and operated and which is not dominant in its 
    field of operations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    VI. Information Collection Requirements
    
        The following collection of information contained in this proposed 
    rule (proposed new Subchapter O) is being submitted to the Office of 
    Management and Budget (OMB) for
    
    [[Page 37724]]
    
    review under Section 3507(d) of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1995.37 The Commission proposes to identify the information 
    required as FERC-545 for OCSLA-jurisdictional gas service providers. 
    Currently, NGA-jurisdictional companies file with the Commission most 
    or all the information that will be required by this NOPR under 
    Subchapters E, G, and I. Thus, the reporting burden imposed on NGA-
    jurisdictional companies will be minimal or merely ministerial, as they 
    can comply with the proposed rules in large part or in full by 
    submitting a statement describing the extent to which the information 
    required by this OCSLA NOPR is already on file pursuant to existing NGA 
    regulations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \37\ 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) (1988).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The proposed regulations impose new reporting requirements on OCS 
    gas service providers that offer service to multiple non-owner 
    shippers, requiring them to make an initial submission of specific 
    information--information which should be readily available in the 
    ordinary course of business--and then make timely filings if there are 
    any changes in the initially submitted information. To the extent the 
    status of a gas service provider's affiliations, customers, and 
    conditions of service remain the same, there is no need to file again. 
    To the extent that a gas service provider is currently subject to the 
    NGA's reporting requirements, the proposed OCSLA reporting requirements 
    should call for little or no additional information. The proposed 
    regulations would not apply to service provided by means of facilities 
    located upstream of a point where gas is first collected, separated, 
    dehydrated, or otherwise processed.
        Considering the complex nature of the offshore operating 
    environment, we cannot state with assurance the exact number of 
    entities that will be subject to the proposed regulations. 
    Consequently, we request parties submitting comments to clarify whether 
    and to what extent the proposed requirements might apply to offshore 
    operations. In addition, we seek comments on the Commission's need for 
    this information, whether the information will have practical utility, 
    the accuracy of the provided burden estimates, ways to enhance the 
    quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be collected, and 
    any suggested methods for minimizing respondents' burden, including the 
    use of automated information techniques. The burden estimates for 
    complying with this proposed rule are as follows:
        Public Reporting Burden: Estimated Annual Burden.
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Number of        Number of        Hours per       Total annual
                   Data collection                  respondents       responses         response          hours
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    FERC-545....................................              70                2                8            1,120
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Total Annual Hours for Collection
    
    (Reporting + Record Keeping, (if appropriate)) = 1,120
    
        For NGA-jurisdictional gas companies, the current annual reporting 
    burden for FERC-545 is 58,201 hours. Over the next year, the total 
    annual burden under the proposed OCSLA reporting requirements is 
    estimated to be 1,120 hours. Based on the Commission's experience with 
    processing filings by NGA-regulated pipelines for the fiscal year 1996-
    1997, it is estimated that about 140 filings per year will be made with 
    an average burden of 8 hours per response. The burden under the 
    proposed OCSLA regulations would minimally increase current burden 
    levels for pipelines already subject to the NGA.
        During the first year after the proposed rules become effective, 
    most of the burden will consist of an initial, one-time compliance 
    filing. In subsequent years, most of the burden will consist of minor 
    filings updating the initial filing.
        Information Collection Costs: The Commission seeks comments on the 
    costs to comply with these requirements. It has projected the average 
    annualized cost per respondent to be the following:
    
    
    Annualized Capital/Startup Costs...........................  0.
    Annualized Costs (Operations and Maintenance)..............  $56,000 ($50 per hour).
                                                                ----------------------------------------------------
        Total Annualized Costs.................................  $56,000.
     
    
        The OMB regulations require OMB to approve certain information 
    collection requirements imposed by agency rule.38 
    Accordingly, pursuant to OMB regulations, the Commission is providing 
    notice of its proposed information collection to OMB.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \38\ 5 CFR 1320.11.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Title: FERC-545, Gas Pipeline Rates: Rate Change (Non-Formal).
        Action: Proposed Data Collection.
        OMB Control No.: 1902-0154. The respondent shall not be penalized 
    for failure to respond to this collection of information unless the 
    collection of information displays a valid OMB control number.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit, including small 
    businesses.
        Frequency of Responses: Initial, one-time filing; updated if status 
    changes.
        Necessity of the Information: The proposed rule implements the 
    Commission's authority under the OCSLA to assure open and 
    nondiscriminatory access for gas moving on or across the OCS by 
    collecting certain information concerning OCS gas service providers' 
    affiliations and conditions of service. Without this information, 
    neither the Commission nor a prospective or existing shipper will be 
    able to determine whether the existing or proposed conditions of 
    service discriminate or deny access. Implementation of these data 
    requirements will help the Commission carry out its responsibilities 
    under the OCSLA and coincide with the current competitive regulatory 
    environment which the Commission fostered under Order No. 636.
        Internal Review: The Commission has assured itself, by means of its 
    internal review, that there is specific, objective support for the 
    burden estimates associated with the proposed reporting requirements. 
    The Commission's staff will use the data in the OCS gas service 
    providers' filings to determine whether their operations are consistent 
    with the nondiscriminatory, open access provisions of the OCSLA. These 
    requirements conform to the Commission's plan for efficient information 
    collection, communication, and management within the natural gas 
    industry.
    
    [[Page 37725]]
    
        Interested persons may obtain information on the reporting 
    requirements by contacting the following: Federal Energy Regulatory 
    Commission, 888 First Street, NE, Washington, DC 20426, [Attention: 
    Michael Miller, Office of the Chief Information Officer, Phone: (202) 
    208-1415, fax: (202) 208-2425, e-mail: michael.p.miller@ferc.fed.us].
        For submitting comments concerning the collection of information 
    and the associated burden estimate, please send your comments to the 
    contact listed above and to the Office of Management and Budget, Office 
    of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Washington, DC 20503. 
    [Attention: Desk Officer for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 
    phone: (202) 395-3087, fax: (202) 395-7285].
    
    VII. Comment Procedure
    
        The Commission invites interested persons to submit written 
    comments on the matters and issues proposed in this notice to be 
    adopted, including any related matters or alternative proposals that 
    commenters may wish to discuss.
        The original and 14 copies of such comments must be recieved by the 
    Commission before 5 p.m., August 27, 1999. Comments should be submitted 
    to the Office of the Secretary, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 
    888 First Street, NE, Washington, DC 20426, and should refer to Docket 
    No. RM99-5-000.
        In addition to filing paper copies, the Commission encourages the 
    filing of comments either on computer diskette or via Internet E-Mail. 
    Comments may be filed in the following formats: WordPerfect 8.0 or 
    below, MS Word Office 97 or lower version, or ASCII format.
        For diskette filing, include the following information on the 
    diskette label: Docket No. RM99-5-000; the name of the filing entity; 
    the software and version used to create the file, and the name and 
    telephone number of the contact person. Attach the comment to the E-
    Mail in one of the formats specified above. The Commission will send an 
    automatic acknowledgment to the sender's E-Mail address upon receipt. 
    Questions on electronic filing should be directed to Brooks Carter at 
    202-501-8145, E-Mail address brooks.carter@ferc.fed.us.
        Commenters should take note that, until the Commission amends its 
    rules and regulations, the paper copy of the filing remains the 
    official copy of the document submitted. Therefore, any discrepancies 
    between the paper filing and the electronic filing or the diskette will 
    be resolved by reference to the paper filing.
        All written comments will be placed in the Commission's public 
    files and will be available for inspection in the Commission's Public 
    Reference Room at 888 First Street, NE, Washington, DC 20426, during 
    regular business hours. Additionally, comments may be viewed, printed, 
    or downloaded remotely via the Internet through FERC's Homepage using 
    the RIMS or CIPS links. RIMS contains all comments but only those 
    comments submitted in electronic format are available on CIPS. User 
    assistance is available at 202-208-2222, or by E-Mail to 
    rimsmaster@ferc.fed.us.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    18 CFR Part 330
    
        Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    18 CFR Part 385
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Electric utilities, 
    Penalties, Pipelines, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
        By direction of the Commission.
    
        Commissioners Bailey and Hebert dissented with separate 
    statements attached.
    David P. Boergers,
    Secretary.
        In consideration of the foregoing, the Commission proposes to amend 
    Chapter 1, Title 18, of the Code of Federal Regulations, as set forth 
    below.
        1. A new Subchapter O, including part 330 is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    SUBCHAPTER O--REGULATIONS UNDER THE OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF LANDS ACT 
    (OCSLA)
    
    PART 330--CONDITIONS OF SERVICE REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
    
    Sec.
    330.1  Definitions.
    330.2  Reporting requirements.
    330.3  Applicability of reporting requirements.
    
        Authority: 43 U.S.C. 1334.
    
    
    Sec. 330.1  Definitions.
    
        (a) Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) has the same meaning as found in 
    section 2(a) of the OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1331(a)); and
        (b) Gas Service Provider means any entity that operates a facility 
    located on the OCS that is used to move natural gas on or across the 
    OCS.
        (c) Affiliate has the same meaning as found in 18 CFR 161.2(a).
        (d) Control has the same meaning as found in 18 CFR 161.2(b).
    
    
    Sec. 330.2  Reporting requirements.
    
        (a) Gas Service Providers must file with the Commission a 
    declaration of affiliation consisting of:
        (1) The date of the filing;
        (2) The name and address of the Gas Service Provider;
        (3) The name and address of a contact person;
        (4) The title, name, and address of the Gas Service Provider's 
    officers if a corporation or general partners if a partnership;
        (5) A description and map of the facilities operated by the Gas 
    Service Provider, denoting the facilities' location, length, and size; 
    and
        (6) For all entities affiliated with the Gas Service Provider: the 
    names and state of incorporation of all corporations, partnerships, 
    business trusts, and similar organizations that directly or indirectly 
    hold control over the Gas Service Provider, and, the names and state of 
    incorporation of all corporations, partnerships, business trusts, and 
    similar organizations directly or indirectly controlled by the Gas 
    Service Provider (where the Gas Service Provider holds control jointly 
    with other interest holders, so state and name the other interest 
    holders).
        (b) Gas Service Providers must file with the Commission its 
    conditions of service consisting of:
        (1) Copies of all current Gas Service Provider and customer 
    contracts for gas shipments or, alternatively;
        (2) A statement of the Gas Service Provider's rules, regulations, 
    and conditions of service that includes:
        (i) The rate between each pair of receipt and delivery points 
    available under the Gas Service Provider's contracts, if point-to-point 
    rates are charged;
        (ii) The rate per unit per mile, if mileage-based rates are 
    charged;
        (iii) Any other rate employed by the Gas Service Provider, with a 
    detailed description of how such rate is derived, identifying customers 
    and the rate charged to each customer;
        (iv) Any adjustments made by the Gas Service Provider to the rates 
    charged based on gas volumes shipped, the terms and conditions of 
    service, or other criteria, identifying customers and the rate 
    adjustment applicable to each customer.
    
    
    Sec. 330.3  Applicability of Reporting Requirements.
    
        (a) The Sec. 330.2 (a) and (b) reporting requirements do not apply 
    with respect to:
        (1) A Gas Service Provider that serves exclusively a single entity 
    (either itself or one other party), until such time as
    
    [[Page 37726]]
    
    the Gas Service Provider offers to serve a second shipper, or the 
    Commission determines that the Gas Service Provider's denial of a 
    request for service is unjustified, and the shipper denied service 
    contests the denial;
        (2) A Gas Service Provider that serves exclusively shippers with 
    ownership interests in both the pipeline operated by the Gas Service 
    Provider and the gas produced from the field connected to the pipeline, 
    until such time as the Gas Service Provider offers to serve a non-owner 
    shipper, or the Commission determines that the Gas Service Provider's 
    denial of a request for service is unjustified, and the shipper denied 
    service contests the denial; and
        (3) Services rendered over facilities that feed into a facility 
    where natural gas is first collected, separated, dehydrated, or 
    otherwise processed.
        (b) A Gas Service Provider that makes no filing pursuant to 
    Sec. 330.3(a)(1) must comply with the specified reporting requirements 
    within 15 days of offering to serve a new shipper or when required by 
    the Commission.
        (c) A Gas Service Provider subject to these reporting requirements 
    that alters its affiliates, customers, rates, or terms and conditions 
    of service must file with the Commission a description of the change 
    within 15 days of the effective date of such alteration.
    
    PART 385--RULES OF PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
    
        2. The authority citation for part 385 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 551-557; 15 U.S.C. 717-717z, 3301-3432; 16 
    U.S.C. 791a-825r, 2601-2645; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 42 U.S.C. 7101-7352; 49 
    U.S.C. 60502; 49 App. U.S.C. 1-85.
    
        3. In Sec. 385.2011, new paragraph (b)(6) is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 385.2011  Procedures for filing on electronic media (Rule 2011).
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (6) Material submitted electronically pursuant to Sec. 330.2 of 
    this chapter.
    
        Note: The following appendix to the preamble will not appear in 
    the Code of Federal Regulations.
    
    Appendix to the Preamble
    
        Bailey, Commissioner, dissenting.
        I respectfully dissent from the issuance of this rulemaking 
    proposal. As noted in my dissent in the Sea Robin remand proceeding 
    (also decided today), my views reflect the evolution of my thinking 
    about OCS issues over the last several years.
        The jurisdictional status of existing OCS pipelines reflects 
    conflicting applications of the primary function test. This 
    situation was aggravated by the implementation of the 1996 OCS 
    Policy Statement, when it became apparent that lines declared to be 
    gathering only a few years earlier would be found jurisdictional if 
    decided under the new policy.
        Attempts to define gathering versus transmission on the OCS 
    continue to be driven by concerns for the need to retain FERC/NGA 
    rate jurisdiction as a backstop in case a complaint arises. But, as 
    I have stated on other occasions, I do not think we have that right 
    if the function of a line can be viewed as gathering under a common 
    sense analysis. Without a statutory definition of gathering, I find 
    the analysis set forth in EP Operating Company v. FERC, 876 F. 2d 46 
    (Fifth Cir. 1989) to be controlling. In the end, I remain convinced 
    that the movement of gas across the OCS is most often a collection 
    process.
        I appreciate that these proposed OCSLA regulations are a first 
    step in preparing for what is an expected increase in the number of 
    lines found to be gathering under the reformulated primary function 
    test outlined in today's Sea Robin remand order. And I respect the 
    effort to create what is meant to be a light-handed regulatory 
    approach. I believe, however, that the proposal is not necessary, 
    and I am concerned that it raises new OCS issues without resolving 
    the already difficult ones presented to us.
        I would prefer to accept that, under the EP Operating analysis, 
    much of the activity on the OCS is gathering. I would likewise 
    prefer to continue the current practice of relying on the 
    antidiscrimination provisions of the OCSLA if, and when, complaints 
    are filed by shippers on OCS gathering lines. I do not find any 
    compelling evidence that we need to expand our OCSLA regulatory 
    regime by promulgating these rules. The Commission has acknowledged 
    quite clearly its jurisdiction pursuant to this statute and 
    specifically emphasized in the 1996 Policy Statement that it would 
    respond promptly to complaints filed thereunder. We receive very few 
    such complaints.
        In sum, I see no reason to endorse a proposal that will create, 
    at least initially, a dual scheme of regulation for certain 
    pipelines on the OCS. And I am uncomfortable embarking on a course 
    that may invite new legal challenges to our regulation of the 
    offshore, without resolving the confusion underlying our attempts to 
    apply the existing primary function test.
    Vicky A. Bailey,
    Commissioner.
        Hebert, Commissioner, dissenting.
        In this proposed rulemaking the Commission is developing a 
    series of regulations to enhance its ability to ensure that the 
    competitive principles governing pipeline operation on the Outer 
    Continental Shelf (OCS) are met. As I understand it, the Commission 
    in response to the precepts of Section 5(e) of the Outer Continental 
    Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) 1 which requires that pipelines 
    must provide open and nondiscriminatory access to both owner and 
    nonowner shippers, has proposed these regulations to ensure that the 
    Commission has the authority to address any allegations of 
    discriminatory treatment on the OCS or concerns about open access.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ 43 U.S.C. 1334(f) (1988).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        While I fully support the competitive principles on the OCS, and 
    I recognize the importance of these principles, I am not comfortable 
    with how the majority has chosen in this document to address OCSLA 
    regulation. Specifically, the NOPR intends to require OCS gas 
    transportation service providers to file with the Commission 
    information regarding the conditions under which they render service 
    on the OCS and indicating their affiliates. While the provision of 
    this information will obviously not be burdensome to service 
    providers currently subject to NGA jurisdiction, the NOPR's 
    requirement also goes to a population that is currently not subject 
    to NGA jurisdiction.
        The indications from this NOPR are that once filed, the 
    information used to support Commission OCSLA jurisdiction will be 
    used only as part of a light-handed, complaint driven regulatory 
    process. Under normal circumstances I would find a proposal to 
    replace NGA jurisdiction with light-handed complaint driven 
    regulation as appropriate, but in this situation, the pairing of 
    lighter regulation for NGA companies with regulation for currently 
    non-jurisdictional companies is unacceptable. Yes, the regulatory 
    scheme would be light-handed but when compared to no regulation, it 
    can only be seen as heavy-handed. (REGULATORY GAP).
        My uncomfortableness with extending Commission jurisdiction in 
    this proposal is not a failure to uphold the competitive principles 
    of the OCS. Instead, I believe that the OCSLA provides the 
    Commission with the necessary authority to act to address issues of 
    discrimination and open access through its own provisions, even 
    though that authority has heretofore lain dormant. As opposed to 
    subjecting the Commission's jurisdiction under the OCSLA to the 
    vagaries of future and inevitable court challenges which a NOPR of 
    this design would involve, the Commission should act with confidence 
    on any complaints that are brought before it under the OCSLA. The 
    Commission has recently refined and expedited its complaint process 
    which is a workable vehicle for bringing these issues to the 
    Commission in a timely manner. Additionally, as has been noted by 
    Commissioner Bailey on this matter, if the OCSLA did ultimately fail 
    to remedy a showing of discriminatory rates, a legislative solution 
    could be pursued. I also take guidance from the Circuit Court's 
    statement that the ``need for regulation cannot alone create 
    authority to regulate.'' 2
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        \2\ 127 F.3d at 371.
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        While I can understand the interest some may have in ensuring 
    full comprehension of the extent of the Commission's powers under 
    the OCSLA, I think the more appropriate course of action would be to 
    be receptive and responsive to filed complaints, with the confidence 
    of assured jurisdiction, as opposed to the exploration through a 
    proposed rulemaking of the very same property.
        My belief that the Commission can remedy violations of the 
    competitive principles of the
    
    [[Page 37727]]
    
    OCS as well as my concern that the extension of jurisdiction, light-
    handed as it may be, to currently non-jurisdictional OCS companies 
    prevents me from providing the instant NOPR with my support. 
    Accordingly, I dissent from the issuance of this proposed 
    rulemaking.
    
            Respectfully,
    Curt Hebert, Jr.,
    Commissioner.
    [FR Doc. 99-17251 Filed 7-12-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6717-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
07/13/1999
Department:
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
Document Number:
99-17251
Dates:
Comments on the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking are due August 27, 1999. Comments should be filed with the Office of the Secretary and should refer to Docket No. RM99-5-000.
Pages:
37718-37727 (10 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. RM99-5-000
PDF File:
99-17251.pdf
CFR: (5)
18 CFR 330.3(a)(1)
18 CFR 330.1
18 CFR 330.2
18 CFR 330.3
18 CFR 385.2011