99-20805. 2002 Proposed Wholesale Power Rate Adjustment, Public Hearing, and Opportunities for Public Review and Comment  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 156 (Friday, August 13, 1999)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 44318-44361]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-20805]
    
    
    
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    Part III
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Energy
    
    
    
    
    
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    Bonneville Power Administraiton
    
    
    
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    2002 Proposed Wholesale Power Rate Adjustment, Public Hearing, and 
    Opportunities for Public Review and Comment and Proposed Correction of 
    Errors in the Firm Power Products and Services Rate Schedule (FPS-96): 
    Clarifying the Applicability of the FPS-96 Contract Rate to Certain 
    Capacity With Energy Return Contracts, Public Hearing, and Opportunity 
    for Public Review and Comment: Notices
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 156 / Friday, August 13, 1999 / 
    Notices
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
    
    Bonneville Power Administration
    
    
    2002 Proposed Wholesale Power Rate Adjustment, Public Hearing, 
    and Opportunities for Public Review and Comment
    
    AGENCY: Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), Department of Energy 
    (DOE).
    
    ACTION: Notice of Proposed Wholesale Power Rates and Proposed 
    Resolution of Certain Transmission-Related Issues.
    
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    SUMMARY: BPA requests that all comments and documents intended to 
    become part of the Official Record in this process contain the file 
    number designation WP-02. The Pacific Northwest Electric Power Planning 
    and Conservation Act (Northwest Power Act), provides that BPA must 
    establish and periodically review and revise its rates so that they are 
    adequate to recover, in accordance with sound business principles, the 
    costs associated with the acquisition, conservation, and transmission 
    of electric power, and to recover the Federal investment in the Federal 
    Columbia River Power System (FCRPS) and other costs incurred by BPA.
        By this notice, BPA announces its proposed 2002 wholesale power 
    rates, a proposed methodology for treatment and allocation of inter-
    business line costs, and a cost allocation proposal for non-Federal 
    transmission for Federal and non-Federal power purchases for BPA's 
    current General Transfer Customers, to be effective on October 1, 2001. 
    The rate case proceedings also include BPA's proposal to revise the 
    Priority Firm Power (PF-96) rate schedule by applying a Targeted 
    Adjustment Charge for Uncommitted Loads, to be effective January 1, 
    2001.
    
    DATES: Written comments by participants must be received by November 5, 
    1999, to be considered in the Record of Decision (ROD).
    
    ADDRESSES: Written comments should be submitted to the Manager, 
    Corporate Communications--CK; Bonneville Power Administration; P.O. Box 
    12999; Portland, Oregon 97212.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Michael Hansen, Public Involvement 
    and Information Specialist, at the address listed above. Interested 
    persons may also call (503) 230-4328 or call toll-free 1-800-622-4519. 
    Information also may be obtained from:
    
    Mr. Allen L. Burns, Group Vice President, Power Business Line--PS-6, 
    P.O. Box 3621, Portland, OR 97208
    Mr. Stephen R. Oliver, Bulk Power Marketing--PSB-6, P.O. Box 3621, 
    Portland, OR 97208
    Mr. Richard J. Itami, Eastern Power Business Area--PSE, 707 W. Main, 
    Suite 500, Spokane, WA 99201
    Mr. John Elizalde, Western Power Business Area--PSW-6, P.O. Box 3621, 
    Portland, OR 97208
    
        Responsible Official: Ms. Diane Cherry, Manager for Power Products, 
    Pricing and Rates, is the official responsible for the development of 
    BPA's wholesale power rates.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Table of Contents
    
    I. Introduction and Procedural Background
    II. Purpose and Scope of Hearing
    III. Public Participation
    IV. Major Studies and Summary of Proposal
    V. 2002 Wholesale Power Rate Schedules
        A. Introduction
        B. Summary of 2002 Wholesale Power Rate Schedules, 2002 GRSPs, 
    and New 1996 GRSPs
    
    Part I--Introduction and Procedural Background
    
        Section 7(i) of the Northwest Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 839e(i), 
    requires that BPA's rates be established according to certain 
    procedures. These procedures include, among other things, publication 
    of notice of the proposed rates in the Federal Register; one or more 
    hearings conducted as expeditiously as practicable by a hearing 
    officer; public opportunity for both oral presentation and written 
    submission of views; data questions and argument related to the 
    proposed rates; and a decision by the Administrator based on the 
    record. This proceeding is governed by Section 1010.9 of BPA's 
    Procedures Governing Bonneville Power Administration Rate Hearings, 51 
    FR 7611 (1986) (Procedures). These Procedures implement the statutory 
    section 7(i) requirements. Section 1010.7 of the Procedures prohibits 
    ex parte communications.
        The Bonneville Project Act, 16 U.S.C. 832, the Flood Control Act of 
    1944, 16 U.S.C. 825s, the Federal Columbia River Transmission System 
    Act, 16 U.S.C. 838, and the Northwest Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 839, provide 
    guidance regarding BPA ratemaking. The Northwest Power Act requires BPA 
    to set rates that are sufficient to recover, in accordance with sound 
    business principles, the cost of acquiring, conserving, and 
    transmitting electric power, including amortization of the Federal 
    investment in the FCRPS over a reasonable period of years, and the 
    other costs and expenses incurred by the Administrator. In addition, 
    rates for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)-ordered 
    transmission service, including ancillary services, must satisfy 
    section 212(i) of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 824k(i). Such rates 
    must also satisfy the comparability standard for the open access tariff 
    reciprocity compliance requirements of FERC Order 888.\1\ The inter-
    business line and General Transfer Agreement (GTA) issues discussed 
    below will be used to develop ancillary service and transmission rates 
    in the subsequent transmission rate case.
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        \1\ Promoting Wholesale Competition Through Open Access Non-
    Discriminatory Transmission Services by Public Utilities; Recovery 
    of Stranded Costs by Public Utilities and Transmitting Utilities, 
    Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs para. 31,036 (1996).
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        BPA's initial proposed 2002 Wholesale Power Rate Schedules and 
    General Rate Schedule Provisions are published in Part V below. The 
    studies addressing the factors used to develop these rates are listed 
    in Part IV and will be available for examination on August 24, 1999, at 
    BPA's Public Information Center, BPA Headquarters Building, 1st Floor; 
    905 NE. 11th, Portland, Oregon, and will be provided to parties at the 
    prehearing conference to be held on August 24, 1999, from 9 a.m. to 12 
    p.m., Room 223, 911 NE. 11th, Portland, Oregon.
        To request any of the studies by telephone, call BPA's document 
    request line: (503) 230-4328 or call toll-free 1-800-622-4519. Please 
    request the document by its listed title. Also state whether you 
    require the accompanying documentation (these can be quite lengthy); 
    otherwise the study alone will be provided. The studies and 
    documentation will also be available on BPA's website at www.bpa.gov/
    power/ratecase.
        BPA will release its 2002 initial wholesale power rate proposal on 
    August 24, 1999, and expects to publish a final ROD on April 7, 2000. 
    BPA will be conducting a formal evidentiary rate hearing attended by 
    regional parties. Interested parties must file petitions to intervene 
    in order to take part in the formal hearing. A proposed schedule for 
    the formal hearing is stated below. A final schedule will be 
    established by the Hearing Officer at the prehearing conference.
    
    August 24, 1999: BPA files Direct Case/Prehearing Conference
    October 14, 1999: Parties file Direct Cases
    November 5, 1999: Close of Participant Comments
    December 8, 1999: Litigants file Rebuttal Testimony
    January 13, 2000: Cross-Examination
    February 10, 2000: Initial Briefs Filed
    
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    February 17, 2000: Oral Argument before the Administrator
    March 10, 2000: Draft ROD issued
    March 24, 2000: Briefs on Exceptions
    April 7, 2000: Final ROD--Final Studies
    
        BPA will also be conducting eight public field hearings in cities 
    throughout the region. Public field hearings are an opportunity for 
    persons who are not parties in the formal rate hearing to have their 
    views included in the official record. Written transcripts will be made 
    at all of the field hearings. The field hearings are scheduled to begin 
    at 6 p.m. Following are the tentative dates and locations for the field 
    hearings. Confirmation of these hearing dates will be made through 
    mailings and public advertising or by calling BPA Corporate 
    Communications at the telephone number listed above. Announcements will 
    also be posted on BPA's wholesale power rate case website at 
    www.bpa.gov/power/ratecase.
    
    September 30, 1999: Idaho Falls, Idaho
    October 4, 1999: Pasco, Washington
    October 5, 1999: Missoula, Montana
    October 6, 1999: Spokane, Washington
    October 7, 1999: Everett, Washington
    October 12, 1999: Olympia, Washington
    October 13, 1999: Eugene, Oregon
    October 14, 1999: Portland, Oregon
    
    Part II--Purpose and Scope of Hearing
    
    A. Overview of the Market
    
        The wholesale electricity market facing BPA today is different from 
    1996, when BPA last set rates, although BPA anticipated that the market 
    would become increasingly competitive. External influences such as the 
    national and state-by-state deregulation of the power markets, changes 
    in market price expectations, and continuing concerns about the 
    environment are factors that BPA must take into account when 
    establishing rates.
        In 1996, it appeared that BPA's rates could exceed market prices 
    and BPA was not sure it could sell all its power at rates that would 
    recover its costs. By 2002, however, BPA's rates are anticipated to be 
    lower than market prices through cost cutting and careful management, 
    as well as an expectation that market prices could increase. Thus, 
    customers have now indicated an interest in purchasing more power than 
    BPA can produce from the FCRPS.
        Despite customers' changed perceptions of the value of BPA power, 
    BPA's business requirements are fairly constant and are dictated by 
    legislation. BPA is required to sell power at a price that recovers all 
    costs. These costs are determined by a number of factors, including, 
    among other things, the cost of generating power; the costs of 
    protecting, mitigating, and enhancing fish and wildlife; the costs of 
    investing in public purposes; and the costs of repaying the Treasury 
    for the capital investment in the hydro system. BPA has addressed these 
    legislative requirements with policies that implement the statutory 
    directives.
        The major goal for many of BPA's policies, as stated in BPA's 
    Subscription Strategy, is to promote the spread of the benefits of the 
    FCRPS as broadly as possible, with special attention given to the 
    residential and rural customers of the region. Due to the changing 
    market, BPA must balance the competing demands for its low cost power. 
    Public agency customers, known as preference customers, continue to 
    have first priority to this low cost power. For this group, BPA 
    proposes to sell Subscription power below market, with no increase in 
    the average Priority Firm Power (PF) rate from BPA's 1996 rates. BPA's 
    initial rate proposal also implements the Subscription Strategy plan to 
    offer a combination of power and financial benefits to regional 
    investor-owned utilities (IOUs) for the benefit of their residential 
    and small farm customers. BPA's rate proposal also responds to the 
    viability concerns of BPA's direct service industrial customers (DSIs) 
    by offering power below market prices.
        In addition to supplying low cost power to its customer groups, BPA 
    policies also spread the benefits of the FCRPS to other stakeholders. 
    BPA uses its funds to support its share of a wide range of activities 
    designed to address fish and wildlife concerns by keeping open all the 
    options for future fish alternatives. Finally, BPA protects the 
    interests of the U.S. Treasury and Federal taxpayers by maintaining a 
    high probability of making Treasury payments on time and in full.
        BPA's major Subscription goal is supported by the other three goals 
    of the Subscription Strategy. The second Strategy goal is to avoid rate 
    increases through a creative and businesslike response to markets and 
    additional aggressive cost reductions. By avoiding rate increases, BPA 
    believes that it contributes to a stable customer base comprised of all 
    customer groups. A stable customer base leads in turn to a stable 
    revenue stream which enables BPA to cover its share of fish and 
    wildlife and conservation costs in this rate period and in future rate 
    periods. BPA has committed to pursue a number of financial strategies 
    through rates and contracts that will allow it to meet its goal of 
    avoiding rate increases, such as following the recommendations of a 
    regional public process known as the Cost Review (described below) to 
    reduce costs.
        The third goal of BPA's Subscription Strategy was to allow BPA to 
    fulfill its fish and wildlife obligations while assuring a high level 
    of Treasury payment. There are a wide range of options currently under 
    discussion for these fish and wildlife obligations. The options have 
    different costs associated with them, so BPA's financial tools include 
    methods to ensure that there will be sufficient money to meet the 
    costs, such as risk mitigation measures in the event that future 
    revenues are not as high as anticipated. BPA measures its ability to 
    meet its obligations by setting an 88 percent probability goal of 
    making its U.S. Treasury payment on time and in full. By setting a high 
    Treasury Payment Probability (TPP), BPA assures that all other 
    obligations are met before the Treasury payment is made.
        BPA's Subscription Strategy has a final goal of continuing to 
    support its important role of being a leader in the regional effort to 
    capture the value of conservation and renewable resources. BPA intends 
    to provide market incentives for these and other emerging technologies.
        BPA's Subscription goal of spreading the benefits of the FCRPS 
    through low cost power, as well as BPA's other goals, are reflected in 
    all of BPA's actions. The rate case provides only one part of 
    implementing BPA's goals--through rate levels and rate designs. Many 
    actions, such as contract negotiations and setting spending levels, 
    occur outside of the ratemaking process.
        BPA has conducted a number of public processes over the last five 
    years to gain public input into how to balance these major goals. Now 
    it is about to start another one, the ratemaking process. Following is 
    a list of the other important public processes that BPA has used to 
    involve its customers and stakeholders in the important decisions of 
    how BPA will continue to provide service to the citizens of the Pacific 
    Northwest.
    
    B. An Overview of the Public Processes
    
        This section describes four major public review processes that BPA 
    has undertaken in the last five years. Many important policy decisions 
    were made in these processes. The ratemaking process is one vehicle to 
    implement some of the decisions made in these other processes.
    1. Business Plan Public Review Process
        In 1995, BPA prepared a draft and final Business Plan, including a 
    draft and final Environmental Impact
    
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    Statement (EIS). In the Business Plan, BPA announced its response to a 
    changing market. For the first time, BPA's costs appeared to exceed 
    market prices, so BPA found itself in a more competitive environment. 
    It responded in 1996 with products and services that were competitively 
    priced and that included more flexible terms. BPA began to change how 
    it sold power, establishing posted prices for core requirements 
    products, while selling other unbundled products and energy services at 
    negotiated prices reflecting the true costs of providing services. The 
    goal of these early changes was to give customers lower prices, 
    stability, and flexible new choices, while giving BPA greater certainty 
    about its expected loads and revenues. Unbundling products allowed 
    customers to pay for only those products and services that they needed. 
    Decisions made during the 1995 Business Plan process will not be 
    revisited in this rate case.
        The rate design in the current proposal continues the basic goals 
    of the Business Plan, with some added features designed to allow BPA 
    the flexibility of passing to customers the incremental cost of 
    unanticipated expenses.
    2. Cost Review Public Review Process
        In September 1997, BPA and the Northwest Power Planning Council 
    initiated a process called the Cost Review of the Federal Columbia 
    River Power System (Cost Review). The primary objective of the Cost 
    Review was to ensure that BPA's long-term power and transmission costs 
    would be as low as possible, consistent with sound business practices, 
    so that BPA could maximize its ability to fully recover costs through 
    power rates that are at or below market prices.
        The Cost Review process began with the establishment of a panel of 
    five executives with considerable experience managing large 
    organizations during periods of downsizing and competitive transition. 
    The panel focused on costs to be recovered through power rates for the 
    initial Subscription period, fiscal years (FY) 2002 through 2006. Costs 
    associated with fish and wildlife recovery efforts were excluded from 
    the scope of the Cost Review, while the following costs were recognized 
    as subject to significant change in the rate development process:
         Short-term power purchases,
         Residential Exchange Program,
         General Transfer Agreements,
         Federal interest and depreciation, and
         Inter-business line expenses.
        A draft of the panel's recommendations was circulated throughout 
    the region, and public comments were received during a month-long 
    period that included public meetings and briefings with various 
    interest groups. Based on comments received during this public 
    consultation process, the draft recommendations were modified and 
    presented to the Administrator, the region's Governors, the Northwest 
    Congressional delegation, and the U.S. House and Senate Committees on 
    Appropriations in March 1998.
        Additionally, both the recommendations and implementation plans 
    were a subject of ``Issues '98,'' a public comment process conducted by 
    BPA in summer 1998. A key purpose of Issues '98 was to decide how the 
    Cost Review recommendations would be implemented.
        This rate proceeding will not revisit the methodology used to 
    develop the Cost Review recommendations, the policy merits or wisdom of 
    the specific recommendations, or BPA's implementation plans. For 
    informational purposes only, the history of the Cost Review and 
    implementation of the final recommendations will be summarized in the 
    Revenue Requirement Study, WP-02-E-BPA-02.
    3. Subscription Strategy Public Review Process
        As noted previously, one of BPA's goals is to encourage the widest 
    possible diversified use of electric energy while recovering costs. To 
    define this broad concept in greater detail for the post-2001 period, 
    BPA engaged in a multiyear process that culminated in BPA's 
    Subscription Strategy.
        In 1996, a regional effort began with the Comprehensive Review of 
    the Northwest Energy System. In December 1996, the Final Report of the 
    Comprehensive Review recommended that BPA capture and deliver the low-
    cost benefits of the Federal hydropower system to Northwest energy 
    customers through a Subscription-based power sales approach.
        A public process to develop a Subscription Strategy began in 1997. 
    This process brought together all the regional stakeholders in an 
    ongoing series of workgroups and meetings. BPA issued a final 
    Subscription Strategy and Record of Decision in December 1998.
        The Subscription Strategy provides a marketing policy framework for 
    the power rate case. It reflects agency decisions on equitable 
    distribution of the electric power generated by the FCRPS to BPA's 
    customers within the framework of existing law. Although it did not 
    establish any rates or rate designs, it suggested general rate design 
    approaches to be considered in the formal ratemaking process.
        The Subscription Strategy also provided a framework for the 
    bilateral negotiations with each customer that will reflect the 
    specific business relationships between BPA and that customer. Those 
    contracts will be negotiated outside this rate case.
        The Subscription Strategy recognized that the FCRPS is a regional 
    resource, limited in size, and valued by the citizens of the Northwest. 
    The Strategy seeks to balance potentially competing demands on the 
    system, as described in the key marketing goals above. It guides the 
    distribution of power among competing demands, while balancing the 
    goals of avoiding PF rate increases, meeting fish and wildlife 
    obligations, and funding public purposes.
        After going through an extensive public process, BPA stated in its 
    Subscription Strategy that it planned to offer 1,800 average megawatts 
    (aMW) worth of benefits for the residential and small farm consumers of 
    IOUs while meeting all public agency net firm load requirements. The 
    Strategy also stated that BPA expected to be able to meet all loads 
    that DSI customers asked BPA to serve. This rate case consists of the 
    rates to serve all BPA customers.
    4. Fish and Wildlife Obligations Public Review Process
        Another important public review process has occurred since BPA's 
    last ratemaking process in 1996. In late 1995, the Clinton 
    Administration and the Northwest Congressional delegation agreed to 
    stabilize BPA's fish and wildlife funding obligations over a six-year 
    period, FY 1996 through FY 2001. In September 1996, the Secretaries of 
    Energy, Commerce, Army and Interior signed a Memorandum of Agreement 
    (MOA) on behalf of five Federal agencies--BPA, the National Marine 
    Fisheries Service (NMFS), the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the U.S. 
    Fish and Wildlife Service (USF&W), and the Bureau of Reclamation. The 
    MOA represents a multiagency commitment to stable BPA funding for fish 
    and wildlife through FY 2001.
        The MOA divides BPA's financial obligations for fish and wildlife 
    into two major categories: (1) The financial impacts of the system 
    operations called for in the 1995 Biological Opinions on the operation 
    of the FCRPS issued by NMFS and the USF&W, as well as certain other 
    operational measures specified in the MOA; and (2) a commitment of an 
    average of $252 million per year for capital costs,
    
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    operation and maintenance of fish and wildlife facilities, and 
    implementation of the Northwest Power Planning Council's Fish and 
    Wildlife Program.
        In addition, the Administration committed to provide cost-sharing 
    assistance pursuant to section 4(h)(10)(C) of the Northwest Power Act, 
    16 U.S.C. Section 839b(4)(h)(10)(C), on a permanent basis for BPA's 
    direct fish and wildlife expenses, and also to provide section 
    4(h)(10)(C) credits for BPA's power purchase costs related to its fish 
    and wildlife programs through FY 2001. The Administration also 
    established a Fish Cost Contingency Fund (FCCF) consisting of U.S. 
    Treasury payment credits associated with section 4(h)(10)(C) that BPA 
    has not yet exercised. The FCCF balance of $325 million in U.S. 
    Treasury payment credits will be available to BPA in the case of low 
    water years and under certain other conditions to defray fish and other 
    water-related costs. Further, the Administration acknowledged that, to 
    the extent necessary, BPA would reduce its build-up of cash reserves in 
    FY 1996-2001. This action could make it more likely that BPA would have 
    to reschedule a portion of its annual U.S. Treasury payments in future 
    years.
        In June 1997, all eight Senators representing the Northwest sent a 
    letter to Vice President Gore requesting that the Administration work 
    with the Northwest Congressional delegation and the four Northwest 
    Governors through the Governors' Transition Review Board to develop a 
    proposal for extending the MOA beyond FY 2001 to enable BPA to proceed 
    with a Subscription process for post-FY 2001 power sales. As described 
    above, the Subscription concept was created in 1996, during the year-
    long Comprehensive Review of the Northwest Energy System. The 
    Comprehensive Review was sponsored by the four Northwest Governors and 
    studied how the region's electricity system should be structured in the 
    deregulated wholesale electricity market.
        In the absence of a consensus on a post-FY 2001 fish and wildlife 
    recovery strategy by mid-1998, concerned Federal agencies and regional 
    stakeholders agreed that a strategy and mechanism were needed to 
    establish post-FY 2001 fish and wildlife funding assumptions for 
    Subscription and ratemaking purposes. This strategy is directed at 
    ``keeping the options open'' for future decisions on long-term 
    configuration of the FCRPS, including the potential drawdown of 
    reservoirs behind the four Lower Snake River projects and John Day Dam 
    on the mainstem of the Columbia. Without such a strategy and mechanism, 
    BPA could not proceed with its Subscription process for post-FY 2001 
    power sales or its FY 2002-2006 power rates process because BPA could 
    not provide the necessary cost certainty to its potential post-FY 2001 
    power sales customers nor assure adequate funding for fish and wildlife 
    recovery efforts.
        The Fish and Wildlife Funding Principles (Principles) were 
    developed in consultation with constituents, customers, other Federal 
    agencies, the Northwest Congressional delegation, and Columbia Basin 
    Tribes in an extensive public involvement process. The parties focused 
    on guidelines for structuring BPA's approach to Subscription and FY 
    2002-2006 power rates to ensure that BPA could meet its financial 
    obligations, including those for fish and wildlife, given 
    hydroconditions, market prices, fish recovery costs, and other 
    uncertainties. The Principles specify that BPA will take into account 
    the full range of potential fish and wildlife costs, as reflected in 13 
    long-term alternatives for configuration of the FCRPS, with each 
    alternative assumed to be equally likely to occur.
        The Principles also state that BPA will set rates to achieve a high 
    probability that U.S. Treasury payments will be made in full and on 
    time over the five-year rate period, and that BPA will adopt rates and 
    contract strategies that are easy to implement and administer and that 
    will minimize rate impacts on Pacific Northwest power and transmission 
    customers. The contract strategies may include sales of Subscription 
    products on staggered contract terms, a Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause 
    (CRAC) in power sales contracts, and cost-based indexed pricing for 
    some Subscription products.
        The Principles also commit the Administration to extend the 
    availability of section 4(h)(10)(C) U.S. Treasury payment credits and 
    any remaining FCCF funds through FY 2006 under the same terms as those 
    established for FY 1996 through FY 2001, and to support BPA's efforts 
    to implement the Cost Review recommendations.
        The Principles have been reviewed by the Office of Management and 
    Budget and are consistent with the Administration's principles and 
    priorities. These Principles were published on September 16, 1998, in a 
    document entitled ``Fish and Wildlife Funding Principles for Bonneville 
    Power Administration Rates and Contracts.'' Vice President Gore 
    announced the establishment of the Principles on September 21, 1998.
        These Principles differ significantly from the MOA. BPA and the 
    other participants are not establishing a budget for the FY 2002 
    through FY 2006 period. In fact, final decisions and approvals on a 
    fish and wildlife recovery strategy and funding are not expected during 
    this rate proceeding. Because rates are being set before decisions and 
    approvals are made, the Principles take into account the broad range of 
    potential costs associated with the hydrosystem configuration 
    alternatives under consideration at the time the Principles were 
    adopted. The Principles are intended to ensure that BPA's rates and 
    power sales contracts yield a very high probability of meeting all 
    post-FY 2001 financial obligations, including BPA funding obligations 
    for the fish and wildlife recovery strategy that is eventually adopted.
        A number of fish and wildlife initiatives are currently being 
    developed, analyzed, and reviewed in the region. These include: (1) the 
    1999 decision on long-term configuration of the FCRPS called for in the 
    1995 NMFS Biological Opinion and the NMFS recovery plan for listed 
    salmon and steelhead; (2) the Columbia Basin Forum ``Four H'' process, 
    which focuses on development of a regional fish and wildlife plan 
    through a broad ecosystem approach that takes into consideration the 
    hydrosystem, habitat, hatcheries, and harvest; (3) the Multi-Species 
    Framework initiated by the Northwest Power Planning Council and NMFS, 
    in consultation with the region's Indian Tribes, to establish a 
    coherent array of scientifically based options for the Columbia Basin; 
    and (4) proposed revisions to the Northwest Power Planning Council's 
    Fish and Wildlife Program. BPA believes that the range of costs 
    associated with the 13 alternatives is sufficiently broad to cover any 
    eventual decision made on potential activities to be undertaken, or any 
    outcome reached through these other processes.
        In December 1998, BPA published its implementation plan for the 
    Principles. This document is entitled ``How BPA's Subscription Strategy 
    Implements the Fish and Wildlife Funding Principles.'' See Revenue 
    Requirement Study Documentation, WP-02-E-BPA-02A, Volume 1, Chapter 13.
    
    C. Scope of the 2002 Rate Case
    
        Many of the decisions that guide BPA's marketing policies have been 
    made or will be made in other public review processes. This section 
    provides guidance to the Hearing Officer as to those matters that are 
    within the scope
    
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    of the rate case, and those that are outside the scope.
    1. Spending Levels
        As described above, the Cost Review recommendations and BPA's 
    planned implementation of those recommendations have already received 
    extensive public review. Pursuant to section 1010.3(f) of BPA's 
    Procedures, the Administrator directs the Hearing Officer to exclude 
    from the record any material attempted to be submitted or arguments 
    attempted to be made in the hearing which seek to in any way visit the 
    appropriateness or reasonableness of BPA's decisions on spending 
    levels, as included in BPA's test period revenue requirement for FYs 
    2002 through 2006. If, and to the extent, any re-examination of 
    spending levels is necessary, that re-examination will occur outside of 
    the rate case. Excepted from this direction on account of their 
    variable nature, dependency on BPA's rate case models, or timing, are: 
    (1) forecasts of Residential Exchange benefits; (2) forecasts of short-
    term purchase power costs; (3) capital recovery matters such as 
    interest rate forecasts, scheduled amortization, depreciation, 
    replacements, and interest expense; (4) inter-business line expenses; 
    and (5) General Transfer Agreements.
    2. Subscription Strategy
        As noted above, the Subscription Strategy has already received 
    extensive public review and was accompanied by a Final ROD in December 
    1998. BPA's Subscription Strategy states that BPA will negotiate new 
    power sales contracts with the DSIs but make the actual level of 
    service under such contracts contingent on the availability of power 
    remaining after the close of the Subscription window. The Subscription 
    Strategy also notes that BPA was not prepared at the time of issuing 
    the Strategy to make any final decisions regarding augmentation in 
    order to serve DSI load. Since then BPA has decided to propose serving 
    approximately 1,440 aMW of DSI load. BPA does not intend to conduct a 
    separate public process to take comments on this proposal. Therefore, 
    parties to the rate case may raise and discuss any issues regarding 
    BPA's proposal to serve the DSIs, including any issues regarding the 
    potential effects of this proposal on BPA's rates.
        BPA's Subscription Strategy also provides that BPA will offer the 
    equivalent of 1,800 aMW of Federal power to regional IOUs for the FY 
    2002-2006 period as a proposed settlement of the Residential Exchange 
    Program. BPA has recently received a suggestion to increase the amount 
    of power provided to regional IOUs from 1,800 aMW to 1,900 aMW for the 
    FY 2002-2006 period. While the Subscription Strategy accurately 
    reflects BPA's settlement proposal, any decision by BPA to change the 
    amount of power offered to the IOUs will be made outside of this rate 
    case. Parties to the rate case, however, may raise and discuss any 
    issues regarding the potential effects of such an increase on BPA's 
    rates.
        BPA has developed the Conservation and Renewables (C&R) Discount 
    over the past year based on public comment. The range of public opinion 
    regarding the discount was discussed in the Subscription ROD. Working 
    from the ROD, BPA has included the following proposal as part of the 
    rate case. The C&R Discount will apply to all customers served under 
    requirements rates including the Priority Firm Power rate (PF), the 
    Industrial Firm Power rate (IP), the New Resource Firm Power rate (NR), 
    the Residential Load Firm Power rate (RL), and Slice. The total 
    eligibility for each customer will equal .5 mills per kilowatthour 
    (kWh) based on Subscription loads. Customers will be accountable for 
    demonstrating compliance with their expenditure target at the end of 
    the contract term. The discount will be applied automatically on each 
    customer's monthly bill. If a dividend is declared, based on better 
    than expected revenues, the first $15 million will be disbursed to 
    customers actively pursuing C&R Discount programs.
        Also based on the Subscription ROD, BPA is addressing the following 
    issues outside the rate case. Recommendations for measures that will be 
    eligible for the C&R Discount will be submitted to BPA by the Regional 
    Technical Forum. BPA will go through a separate public process to 
    review and adopt these recommendations before the new rates go into 
    effect. BPA will conduct a separate process in the fall of 1999 to 
    discuss simplified eligibility criteria for small utilities and other 
    administrative details.
        The Administrator directs the Hearing Officer to exclude from the 
    record any material attempted to be submitted or arguments attempted to 
    be made in the hearing which seek to in any way revisit decisions that 
    were made in BPA's Subscription Strategy, including the ROD for the 
    Strategy.
    3. Fish and Wildlife Funding Principles
        The Administrator directs the Hearing Officer to exclude from the 
    record any material attempted to be submitted or arguments attempted to 
    be made in the hearing which seek to in any way revisit the policy 
    merits or wisdom of the strategy to ``keep the options open'' or of the 
    Fish and Wildlife Funding Principles. The Principles were developed 
    through extensive public involvement and comment processes, and have 
    been adopted as policy at the highest levels of the Administration. The 
    rate proceeding will, however, address implementation of the Principles 
    in the Revenue Requirement Study (including repayment studies and risk 
    mitigation), the Risk Analysis Study, the Loads and Resources Study, 
    and the Wholesale Power Rate Development Study (including rate design, 
    cost allocation, and revenue forecast).
        Fish and wildlife issues that will be addressed in this rate 
    proceeding include: (1) how the terms of access to the FCCF are modeled 
    in the rate proposal and their impact on TPP and rates; (2) how section 
    4(h)(10)(C) credits are modeled in the rate proposal and their impact 
    on TPP and rates; (3) the calculation and treatment of operations and 
    maintenance and capital investment in repayment studies and the revenue 
    requirement; (4) the selection, design, terms and conditions, 
    assumptions, treatment, and impact of planned net revenues for risk, 
    CRAC, indexed power sales contracts, stepped rates, and targeted 
    adjustment charge; (5) the RiskMod, NORM, and Tool Kit model design, 
    operation, inputs and outputs, and use of results; (6) the level of TPP 
    that is targeted, from the range of potential TPP targets established 
    in the Principles; and (7) the design, terms and conditions, 
    assumptions, and treatment of the Dividend Distribution Clause (DDC), 
    including the threshold for triggering a dividend distribution, the 
    conditions under which a dividend is distributed, and the mechanism 
    used to distribute dividends to certain power customers.
        Included among the policy decisions, commitments, and assumptions 
    that are not at issue in this rate proceeding are: (1) The 
    Administration's decision to extend the existing terms of access to the 
    FCCF and to roll over the existing formula for calculating section 
    4(h)(10)(C) credits from the current rate period to FY 2006; (2) the 
    content, merits, or level of costs for the fish and wildlife recovery 
    strategies reflected in each of the 13 alternatives; (3) the decision 
    to include the full range of costs for all 13 alternatives for the 
    purposes of BPA's repayment study, revenue requirement, revenue 
    forecast, and risk management studies and strategies; (4) the TPP goal 
    of 88 percent over the 5-year rate period with a ``floor'' of 80 
    percent; (5) the policy
    
    [[Page 44323]]
    
    objective that rates and contracts be designed to position BPA to 
    achieve similarly high TPP post-FY 2006; (6) the incorporation of the 
    full range of costs using the same probabilistic method BPA uses for 
    other cost and revenue uncertainties in its ratemaking; (7) the 
    assumption that all 13 alternatives are equally likely to occur; (8) 
    the assumption that BPA's annual fish and wildlife operations and 
    maintenance costs have an equal probability of falling anywhere within 
    the range of $100 million and $179 million; (9) the adoption of a 
    flexible approach in order to respond to a variety of different fish 
    and wildlife cost scenarios, and in particular, the 35 to 45 percent 
    goal of total post-FY 2001 sales in contract-term lengths of three 
    years or less, in short-term surplus sales, and/or in cost-based 
    indexed sales; and (10) the goals of adopting rates and contract 
    strategies that are easy to implement and administer.
    4. Transmission Related Issues
        In setting rates for the period beginning October 1, 2001, BPA is 
    bifurcating its general rate proceeding into separate power and 
    transmission rate proceedings. BPA has voluntarily committed to 
    marketing its power and transmission services in a manner modeled after 
    the regulatory initiatives articulated by FERC in Order Nos. 888 and 
    889.\2\ In Order No. 888, FERC directed public utilities regulated 
    under the Federal Power Act to functionally unbundle transmission and 
    ancillary services from their wholesale power services, and to 
    establish separate rates for wholesale generation, transmission, and 
    ancillary services. Establishing BPA's power and transmission and 
    ancillary services rates in separate rate cases is consistent with 
    FERC's unbundling paradigm because it will separately resolve power and 
    transmission issues in the different rate cases.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \2\ Open Access Same-Time Information System (Formerly Real-Time 
    Information Networks) and Standards of Conduct (Order 889), FERC 
    Stats, & Regs para. 31,035 (1996).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The proposal for new and revised wholesale power rates, the 
    methodology for the treatment and allocation of inter-business line 
    costs, and the proposed cost allocation for non-Federal transmission 
    costs for the Federal and non-Federal power purchases of GTA customers 
    are discussed below. The Administrator will decide the inter-business 
    line and GTA issues as part of the wholesale power rate case and will 
    not revisit the decision on these issues in the subsequent transmission 
    rate case. In addition, the scope of the wholesale power rate case does 
    not include the merits of the business line separation or BPA's rates 
    for transmission and ancillary services that will be marketed by the 
    Transmission Business Line (TBL). All transmission and ancillary 
    service rates and rate design issues will be addressed in the 
    subsequent transmission rate case. A notice of BPA's transmission and 
    ancillary services rate proposals will be announced and published in 
    the Federal Register at a later date.
        In BPA's 2002 power rate case, BPA will decide the appropriate 
    treatment of costs that mutually affect both of its power and 
    transmission business lines, or that assess costs from one business 
    line to the other. The treatment of these ``inter-business line'' 
    issues will determine whether the costs are recovered through power, 
    transmission, or ancillary services rates. BPA plans to address in this 
    power rate case: functionalization of corporate overhead costs; 
    treatment of generation-integration and generation step-up transformer 
    costs; determination of the generation input costs or unit costs that 
    will become the basis for certain ancillary services rates; and 
    determination of the costs of generation services used by the TBL, 
    including Remedial Action Schemes and station service.
        The other transmission-related issues to be proposed in the power 
    rate case include all GTAs and GTA replacement costs for Federal power 
    deliveries and for non-Federal power deliveries, and PBL 
    responsibility, if any, for Delivery Segment costs. Resolution of the 
    GTA issues for Federal and non-Federal power deliveries will allow GTA 
    customers to make informed power purchase decisions and will affect the 
    level of the power revenue requirement.
        The Administrator directs the Hearing Officer to exclude from the 
    record any material attempted to be submitted or arguments attempted to 
    be made in the hearing which seek to in any way address those 
    transmission items which are not within the scope of this rate case as 
    noted above.
    5. Adjustment to PF-96 Rate: Targeted Adjustment Charge for Uncommitted 
    Loads
        This rate case also includes a proposal to establish a charge in 
    the PF-96 rate schedule for customer loads that were uncommitted during 
    the 1996 rate case but return to BPA as firm requirements load prior to 
    September 30, 2001. There are no other changes to the PF-96 rate 
    schedule proposed in this rate case.
        The Administrator directs the Hearing Officer to exclude from the 
    record any material attempted to be submitted or arguments attempted to 
    be made in the hearing on any issue regarding the proposed adjustment 
    of the PF-96 rate schedule other than the Targeted Adjustment Charge 
    for Uncommitted Loads.
    
    D. The National Environmental Policy Act
    
        BPA's initial rate proposal falls within the scope of the Final 
    Business Plan EIS, completed in June 1995. The analysis in the EIS 
    includes an evaluation of the environmental impacts of rate design 
    issues for BPA's power products and services. Comments on the Business 
    Plan EIS were received outside the formal rate hearing process, but 
    will be included in the rate case record and considered by the 
    Administrator in making a final decision establishing BPA's 2002 rates.
    
    Part III--Public Participation
    
    A. Distinguishing Between ``Participants'' and ``Parties''
    
        BPA distinguishes between ``participants in'' and ``parties to'' 
    the hearings. Apart from the formal hearing process, BPA will receive 
    comments, views, opinions, and information from ``participants,'' who 
    are defined in the BPA Procedures as persons who may submit comments 
    without being subject to the duties of, or having the privileges of, 
    parties. Participants' written and oral comments will be made part of 
    the official record and considered by the Administrator. Participants 
    are not entitled to participate in the prehearing conference; may not 
    cross-examine parties' witnesses, seek discovery, or serve or be served 
    with documents; and are not subject to the same procedural requirements 
    as parties.
        Written comments by participants will be included in the record if 
    they are received by November 5, 1999. This date follows the 
    anticipated submission of BPA's and all other parties' direct cases. 
    Written views, supporting information, questions, and arguments should 
    be submitted to BPA's Manager of Corporate Communications at the 
    address listed in the ADDRESSES Section of this Notice. In addition, 
    BPA will hold several field hearings in the Pacific Northwest region. 
    Participants may appear at the field hearings and present oral 
    testimony. The transcripts of these hearings will be a part of the 
    record upon which the Administrator makes her final rate decisions.
        Persons wishing to become a party to BPA's rate proceeding must 
    notify BPA
    
    [[Page 44324]]
    
    in writing. Petitioners may designate no more than two representatives 
    upon whom service of documents will be made. Petitions to intervene 
    shall state the name and address of the person requesting party status 
    and the person's interest in the hearing.
        Petitions to intervene as parties in the rate proceeding are due to 
    the Hearing Officer by 9 a.m. on August 24, 1999. The petitions should 
    be directed to: Christopher Jones, Hearing Clerk--LP, Bonneville Power 
    Administration, 905 NE. 11th Ave., P.O. Box 12999, Portland, Oregon 
    97212.
        Petitioners must explain their interests in sufficient detail to 
    permit the Hearing Officer to determine whether they have a relevant 
    interest in the hearing. Pursuant to Rule 1010.1(d) of BPA's 
    Procedures, BPA waives the requirement in Rule 1010.4(d) that an 
    opposition to an intervention petition be filed and served 24 hours 
    before the prehearing conference. Any opposition to an intervention 
    petition may instead be made at the prehearing conference. Any party, 
    including BPA, may oppose a petition for intervention. Persons who have 
    been denied party status in any past BPA rate proceeding shall continue 
    to be denied party status unless they establish a significant change of 
    circumstances. All timely applications will be ruled on by the Hearing 
    Officer. Late interventions are strongly disfavored. Opposition to an 
    untimely petition to intervene shall be filed and received by BPA 
    within two days after service of the petition.
    
    B. Developing the Record
    
        The record will include, among other things, the transcripts of all 
    hearings, any written material submitted by the parties, documents 
    developed by BPA staff, BPA's environmental analysis and comments 
    accepted on it, and other material accepted into the record by the 
    Hearing Officer. The Hearing Officer then will review the record, will 
    supplement it if necessary, and will certify the record to the 
    Administrator for decision.
        The Administrator will develop final proposed rates based on the 
    entire record, including the record certified by the Hearing Officer, 
    comments received from participants, other material and information 
    submitted to or developed by the Administrator, and any other comments 
    received during the rate development process. The basis for the final 
    proposed rates first will be expressed in the Administrator's Draft 
    ROD. Parties will have an opportunity to respond to the Draft ROD as 
    provided in BPA's Procedures. The Administrator will serve copies of 
    the Final ROD on all parties. At the conclusion of the rate proceeding, 
    BPA will file its rates with FERC for confirmation and approval.
        BPA must continue to meet with customers in the ordinary course of 
    business during the rate case. To comport with the rate case procedural 
    rule prohibiting ex parte communications, BPA will provide necessary 
    notice of meetings involving rate case issues for participation by all 
    rate case parties. Parties should be aware, however, that such meetings 
    may be held on very short notice and they should be prepared to devote 
    the necessary resources to participate fully in every aspect of the 
    rate proceeding. Consequently, parties should be prepared to attend 
    meetings every day during the course of the rate case.
    
    Part IV--Major Studies and Summary of Proposal
    
    A. Summary of Proposed 2002 Wholesale Power Rate Structure
    
    1. List of Proposed 2002 Wholesale Power Rates
        BPA is proposing five different rate schedules for its 2002 
    Wholesale Power Rates. All of these rate schedules are discussed in 
    more detail in Part V of this Notice.
    a. PF-02: Priority Firm Power Rate
        The PF rate schedule is comprised of three rates: the PF Preference 
    rate, the PF Exchange Program rate, and the PF Exchange Subscription 
    rate.
        The PF Preference rate applies to BPA's firm power sales to be used 
    within the Pacific Northwest by public bodies, cooperatives, and 
    Federal agencies. This power is guaranteed to be continuously 
    available. The rate applies to the following products:
    
    Full Service Product
    Actual Partial Service Product--Simple
    Actual Partial Service Product--Complex
    Block Product
    Block Product with Factoring
    Block Product with Shaping Capacity
    Slice Product
    
        The PF Exchange Program rate applies to sales of power to regional 
    utilities that participate in the Residential Exchange Program 
    established under section 5(c) of the Northwest Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 
    Section 839c(c).
        The PF Exchange Subscription rate applies to sales of power to 
    regional IOUs that participate in a settlement of the Residential 
    Exchange Program. This proposed settlement was established in BPA's 
    Subscription Strategy and includes a power sale component and a 
    financial component. The Strategy noted that power sales under the 
    settlement might be in the form of ``in lieu'' power sales under 
    section 5(c) of the Northwest Power Act or requirements sales under 
    section 5(b) of the Act. The PF Exchange Subscription rate applies to 
    ``in lieu'' sales under the settlement.
    b. RL-02: Residential Load Firm Power Rate
        The RL rate applies to sales of power to regional investor-owned 
    utilities that participate in a settlement of the Residential Exchange 
    Program. As noted above, the Subscription Strategy indicated that power 
    sales under the settlement might be in the form of ``in lieu'' power 
    sales under section 5(c) of the Northwest Power Act or requirement 
    sales under section 5(b) of the Act. The Residential Load rate applies 
    to requirements sales under the settlement.
    c. NR-02: New Resource Firm Power Rate
        The NR rate applies to net requirements power sales to IOUs for 
    resale to ultimate consumers for direct consumption, for construction, 
    test, and start-up, and for station service. NR-02 firm power is also 
    available to public utility customers for serving New Large Single 
    Loads. This rate covers seven products:
    
    New Large Single Loads
    Full Service Product
    Actual Partial Service Product--Simple
    Actual Partial Service Product--Complex
    Block Product
    Block Product with Factoring
    Block Product with Shaping Capacity
    d. IP-02: Industrial Firm Power Rate
        The IP rate applies to firm power sales to BPA's DSI customers. The 
    IP rate applies to the firm take-or-pay Block Product for DSI customers 
    that purchase under 2002 Industrial Firm Power Contracts. The IP-02 
    rate includes Targeted Adjustment Charges.
    e. NF-02: Nonfirm Energy Rate
        The NF rate applies to energy sold under an arrangement that does 
    not have the guaranteed continuous availability of firm power. The rate 
    provides for upward and downward pricing flexibility from an average 
    cost. Any time that BPA has nonfirm energy for sale, any combination of 
    the following rates may apply:
    
    Standard Rate
    Market Expansion Rate
    Incremental Rate
    Contract Rate
    Western Systems Power Pool Transactions
    
    [[Page 44325]]
    
    End-user Rate
    2. Rate Development Issues
    a. Inter-Business Line Calculations
        BPA is addressing certain inter-business line issues that must be 
    resolved in order to determine BPA's power revenue requirement and to 
    forecast associated revenues. In its power rate case, BPA is proposing: 
    a methodology for functionalizing corporate overhead costs; unit costs 
    for generation inputs for operating reserves and regulation ancillary 
    services; the generation input cost for the reactive ancillary service; 
    and the costs of station service and remedial action schemes needed by 
    the TBL. In addition, BPA is proposing an allocation of generation 
    integration and generation step-up transformer costs to the business 
    lines. BPA does not propose to recover any Delivery Segment costs 
    through wholesale power rates. BPA's proposal for treatment of Delivery 
    Segment costs will be resolved in the separate transmission rate case.
    b. Rate Mitigation Costs
        The average proposed PF Preference rate is about the same as in 
    1996. However, due to rate design changes, some utilities will 
    experience a rate increase and some will experience a rate decrease 
    based on their individual usage.
        BPA has proposed to mitigate rate impacts in a number of ways. 
    These include modifying the monthly demand charge, capping the Load 
    Variance Charge, and continuing the Low Density Discount. These items 
    are described below. In addition, BPA proposes to have $4 million 
    available each year to mitigate remaining impacts on certain customers.
    c. System Augmentation Costs
        Under the Subscription Strategy, BPA expects to be obligated to 
    serve more firm load than is forecasted to be produced by the Federal 
    Base System (FBS) under critical water conditions. Additional firm 
    power will be needed to augment the FBS. For ratemaking purposes, this 
    firm power will be defined as FBS replacements. The costs associated 
    with this FBS replacement power will be allocated to power rate pools 
    as specified by the rate directives in the Northwest Power Act.
        Power purchases for system augmentation are distinguished from 
    balancing power purchases by their longer duration. Balancing power 
    purchases are shorter-term purchases needed to serve daily and monthly 
    load obligations within the annual load/resource balance. System 
    augmentation purchases are for a year or longer, and are needed on an 
    annual basis to produce an annual load/resource balance.
        BPA's initial proposal contains a provision that requires 
    purchasers of the Slice product to pay their share of the net costs of 
    system augmentation purchases. The net costs are the actual costs of 
    the system augmentation purchases minus the revenue BPA derives from 
    selling the equivalent amount of power at posted rates. The initial 
    proposal also frees Slice purchasers from paying for shorter-term 
    balancing purchases. These elements of the Slice product were designed 
    at a time when the amount of purchases necessary to augment the system 
    was anticipated to be relatively small.
        The anticipated amount of power necessary to augment the system has 
    increased significantly since Slice was initially proposed. Because of 
    the increased augmentation purchases, the risks associated with having 
    Slice purchasers only obligated to share the net costs of system 
    augmentation may no longer be consistent with the underlying principle 
    of the Slice product that there would be ``no cost shifts.'' BPA 
    intends to examine this issue in the rate case to ensure that having 
    Slice purchasers share only the net costs of system augmentation does 
    not create a cost shift.
    d. Exchange Settlement Methodology
        The Subscription Strategy proposes a settlement of the Residential 
    Exchange Program with regional IOUs that includes both power and 
    monetary benefits. The total package is valued at 1800 aMW at the RL-02 
    or PF Exchange Subscription rate. BPA will supply at least 1000 aMW at 
    the RL-02 or PF Subscription rate. In addition, the remaining 800 aMW 
    will be provided either in the form of monetary benefits or as physical 
    power at BPA's discretion. For purposes of the rate case this 800 aMW 
    of benefits will be calculated as the difference between a market 
    forecasted price for power and the RL-02 or PF Exchange Subscription 
    rate.
        BPA does not know if the IOUs will accept the proposed settlement. 
    (The IOUs have the choice of accepting this RL settlement or 
    participating in the Residential Exchange Program.) Therefore, rates 
    that will apply to the settlement, the RL-02 and PF Exchange 
    Subscription rates, as well as a rate that will apply to the 
    traditional Residential Exchange Program, the PF Exchange Program rate, 
    must be established in the rate case.
    3. Changes in Rate Design
        BPA redesigned its rates in BPA's 1996 rate case to send price 
    signals that reflected the market estimated at that time. BPA is 
    generally continuing the same rate design for its 2002 rates, with some 
    changes described below to account for current market and hydro 
    conditions.
        The major change that BPA has made in designing its rates is to add 
    a ``Subscription Settlement'' step, which serves as the basis for 
    calculating the RL and PF Exchange Subscription rates and for 
    developing targeted adjustment charges for the IP and PF rates. More 
    detail on this change is described later in this Notice under Rates 
    Analysis Model.
    a. Load Variance Charge
        In this rate case BPA is eliminating the Load Shaping Charge and 
    replacing it with a Load Variance Charge. The Load Variance Charge 
    covers BPA's cost of standing ready to meet customers' load growth for 
    reasons other than annexation or retail access load gain or loss. In 
    addition, it provides Full and Partial Service purchasers the right to 
    deviate from their monthly forecasted BPA purchases due to weather, 
    economic business cycles, or plant energy consumption. The charge is 
    set at 0.80 mill per kWh and is charged against the customer's Total 
    Retail Load. Further details on these charges are found in the General 
    Rate Schedule Provisions (GRSPs) (Part V of this Notice).
    b. Stepped Up Multi-Year (SUMY) Block Charge
        An additional adjustment is proposed by BPA to recover the added 
    cost of serving a block purchase that increases over time. This is to 
    compensate BPA for the incremental cost of serving an additional amount 
    of load above first year loads.
    c. Monthly Demand and Energy Charges
        BPA is proposing to set monthly energy and demand charges for the 
    FY 2002-2006 rate period. BPA's Marginal Cost Analysis shows 
    substantial monthly differentiation in predicted energy rates for this 
    period. In setting monthly charges for energy and demand, BPA is moving 
    away from the six seasonal period energy charges and the annual demand 
    charge used in BPA's 1996 rate case.
    d. Demand Adjuster
        In addition to the change in the development of the demand charge, 
    BPA is making a change in the measurement of a customer's peak
    
    [[Page 44326]]
    
    demand. BPA will continue measuring Full Service customers' peak demand 
    coincidental to BPA's generation peak. However, Partial Service 
    customers' demand entitlement is measured on their system peak, and 
    adjusted through a Demand Adjuster to compensate for the different 
    demand billing basis compared to the demand billing basis of a Full 
    Service customer.
    e. Stepped Rates
        A major change in BPA's proposal is the posting of Stepped Rates. 
    The Rates Analysis Model (RAM) calculates an average five-year rate, 
    however, rates that customers pay will be differentiated between the 
    first three years and the last two years of the rate period. The rates 
    for the FY 2002 to 2004 period will be 0.6 mills per kWh below the 
    average five-year rate. The rates for the FY 2005 to 2006 period will 
    be 0.9 mills per kWh above the average five-year rate. The effective 
    differential is 1.5 mills per kWh.
    4. New Adjustments to Rates
        BPA is proposing a number of new adjustments and continuing some 
    existing adjustments. These adjustments are listed alphabetically and 
    are discussed in greater detail in Part V of this Notice.
    a. Conservation and Renewables (C&R) Discount
        BPA has included a C&R Discount in this rate case. In setting power 
    rates, BPA has included the cost of this discount by applying 0.5 mills 
    per kWh to loads served by posted rates and the Slice product. Within 
    the PBL billing process, customers will receive a C&R Discount to 
    encourage investment in qualifying new conservation and renewables. BPA 
    and its customers will reconcile the actual conservation and renewable 
    investments and C&R Discount eligibility. BPA is assumed to remain 
    revenue neutral in this program. While IP-02 rate customers are 
    eligible for the C&R Discount, the discount cannot be used to lower the 
    IP rate below the DSI Floor Rate.
    b. Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause (CRAC)
        BPA is including a CRAC in its rate proposal as one of the risk 
    mitigation tools intended to address the wide range of financial 
    uncertainty BPA is facing in the FYs 2002-2006 rate period. The CRAC 
    would cause posted power rates to be adjusted upward for one year if 
    actual accumulated net revenues (AANR) fall below a threshold level: -
    $350 million for FYs 2001 and 2002 and $200 million for FYs 2003, 2004, 
    and 2005. These levels of AANR are equivalent to reserve levels of $300 
    million for FYs 2001 and 2002, and $500 million for FYs 2003, 2004, and 
    2005. In the event that AANR falls below the threshold level for any of 
    the years from FYs 2001-2005, rates will be increased for a 12-month 
    period beginning with power deliveries in the following April. (In FY 
    2006, rates will only be increased for six months, through the end of 
    FY 2006.) The CRAC is intended to generate additional revenue of up to 
    $125 million, $135 million, $150 million, $150 million, and $87.5 
    million if the threshold levels are crossed for FYs 2001, 2002, 2003, 
    2004, or 2005, respectively. The CRAC is projected to have an average 
    of about a 12 percent chance of triggering.
    c. Cost-Based Indexed IP Rate
        BPA is proposing a variable rate for the direct service aluminum 
    companies in this rate filing. It will be a rate that is adjusted 
    higher or lower to reflect the aluminum price forecast. The rate is 
    designed to go no lower than 19 mills per kWh, with an upper ceiling of 
    28.5 mills per kWh. The variable rate will be designed to yield an 
    average rate of 23.5 mills for those DSI customers that will be offered 
    an Industrial Power Targeted Adjustment Charge (IP TAC) rate of 23.5 
    mills, and 25 mills for those DSI customers that will be offered an IP 
    TAC rate of 25 mills.
    d. Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate
        This rate is designed to provide a market based alternative rate to 
    all firm load requirements customers that wish to diversify their power 
    portfolios. Customers can choose to convert their applicable PF rate to 
    a market indexed or floating price adjusted for BPA's risk. The 
    customer and BPA will choose a mutually agreeable reference point for 
    the index, and the index price will be based on a current market 
    forecast of the index selected.
    e. Dividend Distribution Clause (DDC)
        Because of a wide range of financial uncertainties, there is the 
    potential that net revenues will accumulate in excess of what will be 
    needed to ensure recovery of costs over time. BPA is proposing to 
    distribute ``dividends'' if an accumulated net revenue threshold is 
    exceeded and if a five-year net revenue forecast and risk analysis show 
    that an 88 percent Treasury Payment Probability would still be met.
        The DDC proposes criteria and process requirements that the 
    Administrator will follow in determining the total amount of annual 
    dividends. BPA intends to conduct a separate public consultation 
    process before the beginning of the rate period to establish criteria 
    for apportioning the amount of annual dividends among BPA stakeholders.
    f. Excess Factoring Charges
        Part of the rate design in this rate case includes the 
    establishment of a Factoring Product and an Excess Factoring Charge. 
    Factoring for purposes of the Core Subscription Products is 
    specifically defined as the BPA service of shaping a given quantity of 
    megawatt-hours among hours during certain periods to follow load. 
    Factoring charges will be applied to Excess Load Factoring that exceeds 
    the benchmark limits. The Factoring Charge is limited to customers that 
    have dispatchable resources and that have purchased the Actual Partial 
    Product or the Block Product with the Factoring Product.
    g. Green Energy Premium
        The Green Energy Premium (GEP) will be available to customers 
    purchasing firm power. The GEP will be charged when a customer chooses 
    to designate any portion (up to 100 percent) of its Subscription 
    purchase as Environmentally Preferred Power.
        The GEP will range from zero to $40/megawatthour depending on the 
    specific products and associated costs selected by each customer.
    h. Industrial Power Targeted Adjustment Charge (IP TAC)
        BPA is proposing to apply a TAC to all IP sales to cover the 
    incremental costs that it incurs from purchasing power to serve loads 
    beyond the amount of firm inventory in the augmented FBS. It will apply 
    to sales at both 23.5 mills and 25 mills. The IP TAC will prevent the 
    transfer of these incremental costs to other customers. It is designed 
    to recover costs to keep BPA whole, and is not designed to discourage 
    purchases from BPA.
    i. Low Density Discount (LDD)
        BPA is continuing to offer the LDD to utilities with low system 
    densities, such as rural electric cooperatives with high distribution 
    costs resulting from sparsely populated service areas. The LDD 
    principles, eligibility criteria, and discount calculation table appear 
    in the GRSPs.
    j. PF Targeted Adjustment Charge (PF TAC)
        The purpose of the PF TAC is to allow BPA the flexibility of 
    passing to customers the incremental cost of unanticipated or 
    additional loads that are not embedded in the posted rates for
    
    [[Page 44327]]
    
    the FYs 2002-2006 rate period. The Subscription Strategy indicated that 
    BPA would have inventory available during the Subscription window for 
    customers. After the window closes, all ``late signers'' or public 
    utilities with new or annexed load, including retail access load gain 
    or returning load, will be subject to a PF TAC. The PF TAC also applies 
    to requests for requirements service for customer loads previously 
    served by a customer's own resources. If inventory is available to 
    serve the request, the PF TAC is the PF rate. If BPA must buy power to 
    serve the load, an adjustment charge reflecting the differences between 
    PF-02 and BPA's cost to buy power is added to the PF rate.
        BPA will provide limited exemptions from the PF TAC for those 
    customers requesting requirements load previously served by renewable 
    resources. In developing the posted rates, BPA is not forecasting that 
    it will receive revenues under the PF TAC.
    k. Slice True-Up Adjustment
        Under the Subscription Strategy, BPA decided to offer a Slice 
    product. Each year, BPA will calculate the difference between the Slice 
    Revenue Requirement's audited actual expenses and credits and the 
    expenses and credits that are forecast in this rate case. The true-up 
    will be a charge to the Slice customer's bill.
    l. Unauthorized Increase Charges for Power Sales
        This rate proposal includes separate penalty charges for 
    Unauthorized Increases in Energy and Unauthorized Increases in Demand. 
    These charges will be applied to deliveries that exceed contractual 
    entitlements for energy and demand, respectively. Further details on 
    these charges are found in the GRSPs (Part V of this Notice).
    m. Value of Reserves
        Section 7(c)(3) of the Northwest Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 839e(c)(3), 
    provides that the Administrator shall adjust rates to the direct 
    service industrial customers ``to take into account the value of power 
    system reserves made available to the Administrator through his rights 
    to interrupt or curtail service to such direct service industrial 
    customers.'' The DSIs may provide two types of reserves: Supplemental 
    Contingency Reserves and Stability Reserves. The Initial Rate proposal 
    assumes that Stability Reserves will be purchased by the TBL and 
    addressed in TBL's transmission rate case.
        The PBL is proposing a new approach to procuring Supplemental 
    Reserves in this rate case. The PBL will purchase the most cost-
    effective Supplemental Reserves or provide those reserves itself. No 
    Supplemental Reserves are explicitly forecasted to be provided by the 
    DSIs in this rate case. Any payment to the DSIs for Supplemental 
    Contingency Reserves will be negotiated within a specified range on an 
    individual customer basis rather than a credit applied to some or all 
    of BPA's DSI load. The range is stated in the IP rate schedule (see 
    Part V of this Notice).
    5. Development of IP Rate/7(c)(2) Adjustment
        The IP-02 rate applies to firm power sales to BPA's DSI customers, 
    including the firm take-or-pay Block Product for DSIs that purchase 
    power under 2002 Industrial Firm Power contracts. Rates for the DSIs 
    are set according to the rate directives contained in section 7(c) of 
    the Northwest Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 839e(c). Section 7(c)(1)(B) provides 
    that after July 1, 1985, the DSI rates will be set ``at a level which 
    the Administrator determines to be equitable in relation to the retail 
    rates charged by the public body and cooperative customers to their 
    industrial consumers in the region.'' 16 U.S.C. 839e(c)(1)(B). Pursuant 
    to section 7(c)(2), the DSI rates are to be based on BPA's ``applicable 
    wholesale rates'' to its preference customers and the ``typical 
    margins'' included by those customers in their retail industrial rates. 
    16 U.S.C. 839e(c)(2). Section 7(c)(3) provides that the DSI rates are 
    also to be adjusted to account for the value of power system reserves 
    provided through contractual rights that allow BPA to restrict portions 
    of the DSI load. 16 U.S.C. 839e(c)(3). This adjustment is typically 
    made through a value of reserves (VOR) credit. As described above, for 
    this rate case BPA is not proposing a uniform VOR credit to be applied 
    against DSI rates. Thus, the DSI rates shall be set equal to the 
    applicable wholesale rate, plus a typical margin, subject to the floor 
    rate test. As a final step in rate design, BPA develops monthly and 
    diurnally differentiated energy charges and monthly differentiated 
    demand charges based on allocated costs and scaled based on the results 
    of BPA's Marginal Cost Analysis.
        The typical Industrial Margin is 0.46 mills per kWh. As stated 
    above, a zero VOR credit is being forecast in this rate case. Thus, the 
    net margin of 0.46 mills per kWh is added to the seasonal and diurnal 
    PF energy charges.
        Section 7(c)(2) of the Northwest Power Act requires that the DSI 
    rates in the post-1985 period ``shall in no event be less than the 
    rates in effect for the contract year ending June 30, 1985.'' 16 U.S.C. 
    839e(c)(2). Accordingly, a floor rate test is performed to determine if 
    the IP rate has been set at a level below the floor rate. If so, an 
    adjustment is made that raises the DSI rate to recover revenues at the 
    floor rate and credits other customers with the increased revenue from 
    the DSIs. If the DSI rate has been set at a level above the floor rate, 
    no floor rate adjustment is necessary.
        The first step in calculating the floor rate is to apply the IP-83 
    Standard rate charges to test period (FY 2002--2006) DSI billing 
    determinants. The resulting revenue figure is then divided by total IP 
    test period loads to arrive at an average rate in mills per kWh. This 
    rate is reduced by an Exchange Cost Adjustment and a deferral that were 
    included in the IP-83 rate. Both adjustments are made on a mills per 
    kWh basis.
        BPA is conducting separate rate cases for power and transmission. 
    Therefore, BPA has removed all transmission costs from the IP-83 rate 
    to make a power-only floor rate comparison. These calculations result 
    in a DSI floor rate of 20.98 mills per kWh. Because the proposed IP 
    rate revenues are below the floor rate revenues, an adjustment was 
    necessary. Therefore, the IP rate becomes the floor rate.
    6. Changes in Methodology
    a. AURORA Model
        AURORA is a model used to estimate the variable cost of the 
    marginal resource in a competitively priced energy market. In 
    competitive market pricing, the marginal cost of production is 
    equivalent to the market clearing price, which is the basis for 
    determining BPA's bulk power revenues in the rate case.
        AURORA models wholesale energy transactions within a competitive 
    market pricing system. AURORA uses a demand forecast and supply cost 
    information to estimate marginal cost. To determine the marginal cost 
    in a given hour, AURORA models the dispatch of electric generating 
    resources in least cost order to meet the load (demand) forecast. The 
    price in the given hour is equal to the variable cost of the marginal 
    resource. Over time, AURORA adds new resources and retires old 
    resources based on the net present value of the resource.
    b. Risk Mitigation
        This rate proposal implements the TPP standard that all payments to 
    Treasury of the power function be
    
    [[Page 44328]]
    
    recovered through power rates on time and in full over the 5-year rate 
    period with 88 percent probability. Payments to Treasury are the lowest 
    priority in BPA's priority of payments. For this reason, TPP measures 
    the ability to recover costs in a timely fashion.
        BPA has identified and analyzed its power risks and is proposing to 
    implement several risk mitigation tools that, taken together, achieve 
    an 88 percent TPP: access to the Fish Cost Contingency fund; starting 
    FY 2002 financial reserves; a CRAC that adjusts posted rates upward as 
    frequently as each year of the five-year rate period if actual 
    accumulated net revenues attributable to the generation function fall 
    below an accumulated net revenue threshold; and Planned Net Revenues 
    for Risk, a component of the revenue requirement that is added to 
    planned expenses.
    c. Rates Analysis Model (RAM)
        The RAM has been modified to have two steps. The first is the Rate 
    Design Step, which uses the Northwest Power Act's rate directives to 
    calculate posted rates, including the NR-02 rate and the PF Exchange 
    Program rate. In this first step, BPA calculates rates by: (1) 
    allocating costs to rate pools as noted in the Cost of Service Analysis 
    (COSA); (2) adjusting these results to reflect revenue credits and 
    statutory rate directives; and (3) using the marginal cost of power 
    values to shape the annual costs into energy rates across months and 
    time-of-day. In the second step, the Subscription Step, BPA adjusts the 
    rates calculated from the first step to reflect the Subscription 
    Strategy and to produce Subscription power rates.
    7. Adjustment to PF-96: Targeted Adjustment Charge for Uncommitted 
    Loads
        The Targeted Adjustment Charge for Uncommitted Loads (TACUL) 
    applies to purchases from BPA to serve customer loads that were 
    uncommitted during the 1996 rate case due primarily to the 
    diversification of customer loads. Uncommitted loads returning to BPA 
    firm power requirements service from January 2001, through to the 
    beginning of the 2002 rate period, will be subject to TACUL. The TACUL 
    will prevent the erosion of reserves that could occur from additional 
    costs of power purchases that may be required to meet customer returned 
    load.
        BPA is currently facing an energy deficit during the time period 
    January 2001 to September 2001, and could face even greater deficits 
    should BPA receive additional requests by customers to serve returning 
    uncommitted load. These incremental loads will be charged the PF 
    Preference (PF-96) rate, plus the TACUL, which is an adjustment charge 
    reflecting the difference between the PF-96 rate and BPA's cost to 
    supply this power. BPA will calculate the cost for the TACUL at the 
    time a customer requests power or requests BPA to price power already 
    purchased under this schedule. The TACUL will be finalized prior to 
    signing of the final contract or before initial delivery. The TACUL 
    will expire with the PF-96 rate schedule.
    8. Payment of Non-Federal Transmission Costs for GTA Customers' Federal 
    and Non-Federal Power Purchases
        BPA's PBL and TBL are proposing to pay the non-Federal transmission 
    cost for customers' Federal and non-Federal power purchases, 
    respectively. PBL's and TBL's proposals are separate and distinct from 
    one another.
        PBL proposes to continue existing GTA service to current loads for 
    delivery of Federal power through the FY 2001-2006 rate period. 
    Continuation of GTA service for Federal power deliveries is consistent 
    with BPA's historical practice and helps promote the widespread use of 
    Federal power. The GTA costs associated with delivery of Federal power 
    will be borne by PBL and are estimated to be around $42 million per 
    year through the rate period.
        TBL proposes to pay up to $6.5 million annually for non-Federal 
    transmission to allow preference and DSI customers who have 
    historically been served by GTAs to avoid ``pancaked'' transmission 
    rates when serving their loads with non-Federal power. BPA proposes 
    that the forecasted non-Federal transmission cost (up to the cap of 
    $6.5 million) for GTA customers' non-Federal power purchases will be 
    included in cost of the Network segment, or its successor, when it 
    develops its transmission rate proposal. This rate treatment is 
    included in the power rate case to resolve all issues that affect GTA 
    customers and to enable GTA customers to make informed power purchase 
    decisions.
    
    B. Studies in Support of Initial Proposal
    
        The studies that have been prepared to support BPA's 2002 Initial 
    Wholesale Power Rate proposal are described in detail in this section.
    
    Loads and Resources Study and Documentation (Study about 100 pages, 
    documentation about 500 pages)
    Revenue Requirement Study and Documentation (Study about 250 pages, 
    documentation about 700 pages)
    Risk Analysis Study and Documentation (Study and documentation are 
    combined, approximately 130 pages)
    Marginal Cost Analysis Study and Documentation (Study about 50 pages, 
    documentation about 400 pages)
    Wholesale Power Rate Development Study and Documentation (Study about 
    175 pages, documentation about 700 pages)
    Section 7(b)(2) Rate Test Study and Documentation (Study about 50 
    pages, documentation about 350 pages)
    1. Loads and Resources Study
        The Loads and Resources Study represents the compilation of the 
    load and resource data necessary for developing BPA's wholesale power 
    rates. The Study has three major interrelated components: (a) BPA's 
    Federal system load forecast; (b) BPA's Federal system resource 
    forecast; and (c) the Federal system load and resource balances.
        The Federal system load forecast is composed of customer group 
    sales forecasts for public utilities and Federal agencies, DSIs, IOUs, 
    and other BPA contractual obligations.
        The Federal system resource forecast includes power generated by 
    both Federal and non-Federal hydroprojects, return energy associated 
    with BPA's existing capacity-for-energy exchanges, contracted 
    resources, and other BPA hydrorelated contracts. The Federal system 
    hydroresource estimates are derived from a hydroregulation study that 
    estimates generation under 50 water conditions using the operating 
    provisions of the Pacific Northwest Coordination Agreement. The 
    seasonal shape and magnitude of the Federal system hydro generation 
    depends on availability of all regional resources and coordination of 
    those resources to meet regional loads.
        The projections of Federal system resources are compared with 
    projected Federal system firm loads for each month of Operating Years 
    2002-2007 (August 2001-July 2007) under 1937 water conditions. The 
    resulting load and resource balances yield the firm energy surplus or 
    deficit of the Federal system resources. Similarly, firm capacity 
    surpluses and deficits are determined for the same period.
    2. Revenue Requirement Study
        The purpose of the Revenue Requirement Study is to establish the 
    level of revenues from wholesale power rates necessary to recover, in 
    accordance with sound business principles, the FCRPS costs associated 
    with the
    
    [[Page 44329]]
    
    production, acquisition, marketing, and conservation of electric power. 
    Power revenue requirements include recovery of the Federal investment 
    in hydrogeneration, fish and wildlife recovery, and conservation; 
    Federal agencies' operations and maintenance expenses allocated to 
    power; capitalized contract expenses associated with such non-Federal 
    power suppliers as Energy Northwest (formerly known as the Supply 
    System); other purchase power expenses, such as short-term power 
    purchases; power marketing expenses; cost of transmission services 
    necessary for the sale and delivery of FCRPS power; and all other 
    power-related costs incurred by the Administrator pursuant to law.
        Cost estimates reflect implementation of Cost Review 
    recommendations, the Principles, and certain components of the 
    Subscription Strategy. No change in repayment policy or practice is 
    proposed. The repayment study reflects actual implementation of the 
    Appropriations Refinancing Act and a number of updates to actual and 
    projected new repayment obligations. All new capital investments are 
    assumed to be financed with debt or appropriations. The study includes 
    a substantial level of planned net revenues to mitigate financial risk. 
    This risk mitigation tool, in combination with other risk mitigation 
    tools such as starting financial reserves, CRAC, and access to the 
    FCCF, is designed to achieve the 88 percent TPP standard. The adequacy 
    of projected revenues to recover test period revenue requirements and 
    to meet repayment period recovery of the Federal investments is tested 
    and demonstrated for the generation function.
    3. Risk Analysis Study
        The Risk Analysis Study evaluates both operational and non-
    operational risks. The portion addressing operational risks evaluates 
    impacts of economic and generation resource capability variations on 
    BPA's ability to meet its annual U.S. Treasury payment during the rate 
    test period. The portion addressing non-operational risks evaluates the 
    impacts of uncertainties in cost projections in the revenue 
    requirement. The results are used to support the amount of planned net 
    revenues for risk that are included in the revenue requirement. The 
    risk variations are tested through the use of several risk simulation 
    models including RiskMod, which quantifies net revenue risk; RevSim, a 
    revenue and expense estimation model; RiskSim, a data management model; 
    and the Non-Operating Risk Model (NORM), which quantifies the non-
    operating risks. The Risk Analysis, through the use of these models, 
    captures the range of ordinary risks that BPA could reasonably expect 
    to face during the rate test period. The models do not attempt to 
    capture and measure the effects of extraordinary and/or unquantifiable 
    risks such as State or Federal electricity deregulation legislation.
        The Risk Analysis Study, with input from the Marginal Cost Analysis 
    (MCA), is also used for estimating purchase power expense and secondary 
    revenues.
    4. Marginal Cost Analysis (MCA)
        The MCA estimates the hourly variable cost of the marginal resource 
    for transactions in wholesale energy market. The specific market used 
    in this analysis is at the Mid-Columbia trading hub in the State of 
    Washington.
        The MCA is used for two purposes in the BPA rate case. First, the 
    MCA is the basis for approximating the prices BPA may experience in the 
    bulk power market. The MCA estimates are therefore used to inform, but 
    not to directly set, the price used in BPA's bulk revenue forecast. 
    Second, the MCA represents BPA's marginal cost in acquiring new energy, 
    or the opportunity cost BPA may see in selling wholesale energy. The 
    MCA is therefore used in rate design to send market based price 
    signals.
        The MCA uses a production cost model, AURORA, to estimate a market 
    clearing price for wholesale energy. The fundamental theory behind this 
    model is based on a competitive wholesale energy pricing structure. The 
    model dispatches resources in a least cost order to meet a specified 
    demand. Short-term prices are set at the variable cost of the marginal 
    generator. Long-term capital investment decisions are based on economic 
    profitability in an unregulated environment.
    5. Wholesale Power Rate Development Study
        The Wholesale Power Rate Development Study (WPRDS) is the primary 
    source for details of the rates, reflecting the results of all the 
    other studies. It documents the Rates Analysis Model and designs rates 
    for BPA's wholesale power products and services. The WPRDS documents 
    the development of Slice costs; the development and forecast of inter-
    business line revenues and costs; the development of charges for 
    demand, load variance, unauthorized increase charges, and excess 
    factoring charges, and the development of the three and two year rates. 
    The end results of the WPRDS are the wholesale power rate schedules.
    6. Section 7(b)(2) Rate Test Study
        Section 7(b)(2) of the Northwest Power Act directs BPA to assure 
    that the wholesale power rates effective after July 1, 1985, to be 
    charged its public body, cooperative, and Federal agency customers (the 
    7(b)(2) Customers) for their general requirements for the rate test 
    period, plus the ensuing four years, are no higher than the costs of 
    power to those customers would be for the same time period if specified 
    assumptions are made. The effect of the rate test is to protect the 
    7(b)(2) Customers' wholesale firm power rates from certain costs 
    resulting from provisions of the Northwest Power Act. The rate test can 
    result in a reallocation of costs from the 7(b)(2) Customers to other 
    rate classes. The Section 7(b)(2) Rate Test Study describes the 
    application and results of the Section 7(b)(2) Implementation 
    Methodology.
        The Section 7(b)(2) rate test triggers in this proposal, causing 
    costs to be reallocated in the test period. The PF Preference rate 
    applied to the general requirements of the 7(b)(2) Customers has been 
    reduced by the 7(b)(2) amount while other rates, including the PF 
    Exchange Program rate applied to customers purchasing under the 
    Residential Exchange Program, have been increased by an allocation of 
    the 7(b)(2) amount.
    
    Part V--2002 Wholesale Power Rate Schedules
    
    A. Introduction
    
        BPA's 2002 Wholesale Power Rate Schedules cover five different 
    rates:
    
    PF-02: Priority Firm Power Rate
    RL-02: Residential Load Firm Power Rate
    NR-02: New Resource Firm Power Rate
    IP-02: Industrial Firm Power Rate
    NF-02: Nonfirm Energy Rate
    
        The following section (Part B below) contains BPA's proposed 2002 
    wholesale power rate schedules, BPA's proposed 2002 GRSPs for power 
    rates, and the new 1996 GRSP for the Targeted Adjustment Charge for 
    uncommitted loads.
        The proposed wholesale power rate schedules were prepared in 
    accordance with BPA's statutory authority to develop rates, including 
    the Bonneville Project Act of 1937, as amended, 16 U.S.C. 832 (1982); 
    the Flood Control Act of 1944, 16 U.S.C. 825s (1982); the Federal 
    Columbia River Transmission System Act (Transmission System Act), 16 
    U.S.C. 838 (1982); and the Northwest Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 839 (1982).
    
    [[Page 44330]]
    
        BPA's 2002 proposed wholesale power rate schedules and the GRSPs 
    associated with those rate schedules will supersede BPA's 1996 rate 
    schedules, except for the FPS-96 rate schedule. The FPS-96 rate 
    schedule continues in effect as modified in Docket No. FPS-96R. BPA 
    proposes that its wholesale power rate schedules, including the GRSPs 
    associated with these rate schedules, become effective upon interim 
    approval or upon final confirmation and approval by FERC. BPA currently 
    anticipates that it will request FERC approval of its revised rates 
    effective October 1, 2001.
    
    B. Summary of 2002 Wholesale Power Rate Schedules, 2002 GRSPs, and New 
    1996 GRSPs
    
    Schedule PF-02
    
    Section I. Availability
    
        This schedule is available for the contract purchase of Firm Power 
    or capacity to be used within the Pacific Northwest. Priority Firm 
    Power may be purchased by public bodies, cooperatives, and Federal 
    agencies for resale to ultimate consumers; for direct consumption; and 
    for Construction, Test and Start-Up, and Station Service. Rates in this 
    schedule are in effect beginning October 1, 2001, and are available for 
    purchase under requirements Firm Power sales contracts for a three or 
    five-year period. The Slice Product is only available for public bodies 
    and cooperatives. Utilities participating in the Residential Exchange 
    Program under section 5(c) of the Northwest Power Act may purchase 
    Priority Firm Power pursuant to the Residential Exchange Program. 
    Utilities participating in settlement of the Residential Exchange 
    Program may purchase Priority Firm Power pursuant to their Subscription 
    settlement agreement. Rates under contracts that contain charges that 
    escalate based on BPA's Priority Firm Power rates shall be based on the 
    five-year rates listed in this rate schedule in addition to applicable 
    transmission charges.
        Sales under the PF Exchange Subscription rate will be delivered in 
    equal hourly amounts over the rate period. The consumer bills of 
    participating IOUs should designate ``Benefits of the Federal Columbia 
    River Power System (FCRPS)'' to describe the amount of benefits each 
    consumer receives. Only the block product is available under this rate 
    schedule.
        This rate schedule supersedes the PF-96 rate schedule, which went 
    into effect October 1, 1996. Sales under the PF-02 rate schedule are 
    subject to BPA's 2002 General Rate Schedule Provisions (2002 GRSPs). 
    Products available under this rate schedule are defined in the 2002 
    GRSPs. For sales under this rate schedule, bills shall be rendered and 
    payments due pursuant to BPA's 2002 GRSPs and billing process.
    
    Section II. Rates Tables
    
        The rates in this section apply to PF products. The PF Exchange 
    Program rates and the PF Exchange Subscription rates are shown in 
    Section III.
    A. Demand Rate
    1. Monthly Demand Rate for FY 2002 Through FY 2006
    1.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to customers purchasing Firm Power for three or 
    five years. These rates are also used to implement the Pre-Subscription 
    Contracts.
    1.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   Rate  (kW-
                          Applicable months                           mo)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January......................................................      $2.14
    February.....................................................       2.06
    March........................................................       1.96
    April........................................................       1.37
    May..........................................................       1.32
    June.........................................................       1.69
    July.........................................................       2.12
    August.......................................................       2.44
    September....................................................       2.28
    October......................................................       1.90
    November.....................................................       2.31
    December.....................................................       2.40
    ------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Energy Rate
    1. Monthly Energy Rates for FY 2002 Through FY 2004
    1.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to customers purchasing power in the first three 
    years of the rate period.
    1.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         HLH rate   LLH Rate
                     Applicable months                   (mills/    (mills/
                                                           kWh)       kWh)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January...........................................      19.06      13.45
    February..........................................      17.95      12.84
    March.............................................      17.18      12.09
    April.............................................      11.64       8.55
    May...............................................      11.21       7.02
    June..............................................      14.51       8.61
    July..............................................      18.85      15.60
    August............................................      29.24      19.23
    September.........................................      20.09      19.40
    October...........................................      16.68      13.35
    November..........................................      20.56      17.77
    December..........................................      21.40      17.67
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Monthly Energy Rates for FY 2005 Through FY 2006
    2.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to purchases during the last two years of the 
    rate period for customers purchasing for all five years of the rate 
    period.
    2.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         HLH rate   LLH Rate
                     Applicable months                   (mills/    (mills/
                                                           kWh)       kWh)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January...........................................      20.56      14.95
    February..........................................      19.45      14.34
    March.............................................      18.68      13.59
    April.............................................      13.14      10.05
    May...............................................      12.71       8.52
    June..............................................      16.01      10.11
    July..............................................      20.35      17.10
    August............................................      30.74      20.73
    September.........................................      21.59      20.90
    October...........................................      18.18      14.85
    November..........................................      22.06      19.27
    December..........................................      22.90      19.17
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    3. Monthly Energy Rates for FY 2002 Through FY 2006
    3.1  Applicability
        These rates are used to implement the Pre-Subscription Contracts. 
    These rates are also available to customers purchasing for all five 
    years of the rate period under this rate table.
    3.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         HLH rate   LLH Rate
                     Applicable months                   (mills/    (mills/
                                                           kWh)       kWh)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January...........................................      19.66      14.05
    February..........................................      18.55      13.44
    March.............................................      17.78      12.69
    April.............................................      12.24       9.15
    May...............................................      11.81       7.62
    June..............................................      15.11       9.21
    July..............................................      19.45      16.20
    August............................................      29.84      19.83
    September.........................................      20.69      20.00
    October...........................................      17.28      13.95
    November..........................................      21.16      18.37
    December..........................................      22.00      18.27
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    C.  Load Variance Rate
        The Load Variance rate for FY 2002 through FY 2006 applies to all 
    customers purchasing power under this rate schedule unless specifically 
    excluded in Section IV below. The rate for Load Variance is 0.8 mills/
    kWh.
    D. Slice Rate
        The monthly rate for the Slice Product is $1,381,390 per 1 percent 
    of the Slice System.
    
    [[Page 44331]]
    
    Section III. PF Exchange Rate Tables
    
        The rates in this section apply to sales under the Residential 
    Exchange Program and the Subscription settlements of the Residential 
    Exchange Program.
    A. Demand Rate
    1. Monthly Demand Rate for FY 2002 Through FY 2006
    1.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to customers purchasing power for all five years 
    of the rate period under the Residential Exchange Program and to 
    customers purchasing power for all five years of the rate period under 
    Subscription settlements of the Residential Exchange Program.
    1.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   Rate  kW-
                          Applicable months                            mo
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January......................................................      $2.14
    February.....................................................       2.06
    March........................................................       1.96
    April........................................................       1.37
    May..........................................................       1.32
    June.........................................................       1.69
    July.........................................................       2.12
    August.......................................................       2.44
    September....................................................       2.28
    October......................................................       1.90
    November.....................................................       2.31
    December.....................................................       2.40
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Energy Rate
    1. PF Exchange Program Energy Rates for FY 2002 Through FY 2006
    1.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to customers purchasing power for all five years 
    of the rate period under the Residential Exchange Program.
    1.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                     Energy
                          Applicable months                           rate
                                                                   mills/kWh
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January......................................................      30.11
    February.....................................................      28.67
    March........................................................      27.52
    April........................................................      19.68
    May..........................................................      18.14
    June.........................................................      22.80
    July.........................................................      31.49
    August.......................................................      45.01
    September....................................................      35.08
    October......................................................      27.78
    November.....................................................      34.58
    December.....................................................      35.43
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. PF Exchange Subscription Energy Rates for FY 2002 Through FY 2006
    2.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to eligible customers purchasing power under 
    Subscription settlements of the Residential Exchange Program for all 
    five years of the rate period.
    2.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         HLH Rate   LLH rate
                     Applicable months                  mills/kWh  mills/kWh
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January...........................................      19.66      14.05
    February..........................................      18.55      13.44
    March.............................................      17.78      12.69
    April.............................................      12.24       9.15
    May...............................................      11.81       7.62
    June..............................................      15.11       9.21
    July..............................................      19.45      16.20
    August............................................      29.84      19.83
    September.........................................      20.69      20.00
    October...........................................      17.28      13.95
    November..........................................      21.16      18.37
    December..........................................      22.00      18.27
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    C. Load Variance Rate
        The Load Variance rate for FY 2002 through FY 2006 applies to all 
    customers purchasing power under this rate schedule unless specifically 
    excluded in Section IV.H below. The rate for Load Variance is 0.8 
    mills/kWh.
    
    Section IV
    
        The rates described above apply to the following:
    
    Section IV.A.  Full Service Product
    Section IV.B.  Actual Partial Service Product--Simple
    Section IV.C.  Actual Partial Service Product--Complex
    Section IV.D.  Block Product
    Section IV.E.  Block Product with Factoring
    Section IV.F.  Block Product with Shaping Capacity
    Section IV.G.  Slice Product
    Section IV.H.  Customers who purchase under the Residential Exchange 
    Program or Subscription settlements of the Residential Exchange Program
        1. Priority Firm Exchange Program Power
        2. Priority Firm Exchange Subscription Power
    A. Full Service Product
        Purchases of the core Subscription Full Service Product are subject 
    to the charges specified below.
    1. Priority Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Measured Demand on the Generation System Peak as 
    specified in the contract multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section 
    II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        The charge for Load Variance will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Total Retail Load for the billing period multiplied by 
    the Load Variance Rate from Section II.C.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Adjustments, charges, and special rate
                     provisions                       2002  GRSP  section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount........  II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge......................  II.B.
    Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate..................  II.D.
    Cost Contributions..........................  II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause.............  II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause................  II.H.
    Flexible PF Rate Option.....................  II.L.
    Green Energy Premium........................  II.M.
    Low Density Discount........................  II.P.
    Rate Melding................................  II.Q.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge..................  II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge................  II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Actual Partial Service Product--Simple
        Purchases of the core Subscription Actual Partial Service Product--
    Simple are subject to the charges specified below.
    1. Priority Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    (the Purchaser's Demand Entitlement multiplied by a Demand Adjuster) as 
    specified in the contract multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section 
    II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        The charge for Load Variance will be:
    
    
    [[Page 44332]]
    
    
    The Purchaser's Total Retail Load for the billing period multiplied by 
    the Load Variance Rate from Section II.C.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Adjustments, charges, and special rate
                     provisions                       2002  GRSP  section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount........  II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge......................  II.B.
    Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate..................  II.D.
    Cost Contributions..........................  II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause.............  II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause................  II.H.
    Flexible PF Rate Option.....................  II.L.
    Green Energy Premium........................  II.M.
    Low Density Discount........................  II.P.
    Rate Melding................................  II.Q.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge..................  II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge................  II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    C. Actual Partial Service Product--Complex
        Purchases of the core Subscription Actual Partial Service Product--
    Complex are subject to the charges specified below.
    1. Priority Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    (The Purchaser's Demand Entitlement multiplied by a Demand Adjuster) as 
    specified in the contract multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section 
    II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        The charge for Load Variance will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Total Retail Load for the billing period multiplied by 
    the Load Variance Rate from Section II.C.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Adjustments, charges, and special rate
                     provisions                       2002  GRSP  Section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount........  II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge......................  II.B.
    Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate..................  II.D.
    Cost Contributions..........................  II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause.............  II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause................  II.H.
    Excess Factoring Charge.....................  II.I.
    Flexible PF Rate Option.....................  II.L.
    Green Energy Premium........................  II.M.
    Low Density Discount........................  II.P.
    Rate Melding................................  II.Q.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge..................  II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge................  II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    D. Block Product
        Purchases of the core Subscription Block Product are subject to the 
    charges specified below.
    1. Priority Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Demand Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        Not applicable to Block purchases unless the customer is also 
    purchasing another product to which Load Variance is applicable as 
    specified by contract.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Adjustments, charges, and special rate
                     provisions                       2002  GRSP  section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount........  II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge......................  II.B.
    Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate..................  II.D.
    Cost Contributions..........................  II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause.............  II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause................  II.H.
    Flexible PF Rate Option.....................  II.L.
    Green Energy Premium........................  II.M.
    Low Density Discount........................  II.P.
    Rate Melding................................  II.Q.
    Stepped Up Multiyear Block (SUMY)...........  II.S.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge..................  II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge................  II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    E. Block Product With Factoring
        Purchases of the core Subscription Block Product with Factoring are 
    subject to the charges specified below.
    1. Priority Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    (The Purchaser's Demand Entitlement multiplied by a Demand Adjuster) as 
    specified in the contract multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section 
    II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        Not applicable to Block purchases unless the customer is also 
    purchasing another product to which Load Variance is applicable as 
    specified by contract.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Adjustments, charges, and special rate
                     provisions                       2002  GRSP  section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount........  II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge......................  II.B.
    Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate..................  II.D.
    Cost Contributions..........................  II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause.............  II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause................  II.H.
    Excess Factoring Charge.....................  II.I.
    Flexible PF Rate Option.....................  II.L.
    Green Energy Premium........................  II.M.
    Low Density Discount........................  II.P.
    Rate Melding................................  II.Q.
    Stepped Up Multiyear Block (SUMY)...........  II.S.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge..................  II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge................  II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    F. Block Product With Shaping Capacity
        Purchases of the core Subscription Block Product with Shaping 
    Capacity
    
    [[Page 44333]]
    
    are subject to the charges specified below.
    1. Priority Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Demand Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        Not applicable to Block purchases unless the customer is also 
    purchasing another product to which Load Variance is applicable as 
    specified by contract.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Adjustments, charges, and special rate
                     provisions                       2002 GRSP  section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount........  II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge......................  II.B.
    Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate..................  II.D.
    Cost Contributions..........................  II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause.............  II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause................  II.H.
    Flexible PF Rate Option.....................  II.L.
    Green Energy Premium........................  II.M.
    Low Density Discount........................  II.P.
    Rate Melding................................  II.Q.
    Stepped Up Multiyear Block (SUMY)...........  II.S.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge..................  II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge................  II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    G. Slice Product
        Purchases of the Subscription Slice Product are limited to Public 
    Body Customers and are subject to the charges specified below.
    1. Slice Product Charge
        The charge for the Slice Product will be:
    
    The elected Slice Percentage expressed as a decimal (.01 = 1%) 
    multiplied by 100 multiplied by the Slice Rate in Section II.D.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Adjustments, charges, and special rate
                     provisions                       2002  GRSP  section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount........  II.A.
    Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate..................  II.D.
    Cost Contributions..........................  II.E.
    Low Density Discount........................  II.P.
    Slice True-Up Adjustment....................  II.R.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge................  II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    H. Customers Who Purchase Under Residential Exchange Program or 
    Subscription Settlements of the Residential Exchange Program
        The PF Exchange rates include: (1) the PF Exchange Program rate; 
    and (2) the PF Exchange Subscription rate.
    1. Priority Firm Exchange Program Power
        This PF Exchange Program rate applies to the traditional 
    implementation of the Residential Exchange Program.
    a. Priority Firm Exchange Program Power Charges
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    (The Purchaser's Billing Demand, which is calculated by applying the 
    load factor, determined as specified in the Residential Exchange 
    Program agreement, to the Billing Energy for each billing period) 
    multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section III.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The monthly charge for energy will be:
    
    (The Purchaser's Billing Energy, which is the energy associated with 
    the utility's residential load for each billing period computed in 
    accordance with the provisions of the Purchaser's Residential Exchange 
    Program agreement) multiplied by the Energy Rate from Section III.B.1.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        The charge for Load Variance is embedded in the energy charge.
    b. Transmission Charges
        Customers purchasing under this rate schedule are charged for 
    transmission services under the NT rate schedule or its successor.
        Customers purchasing under this rate schedule are charged for Load 
    Regulation under the applicable charge established by the TBL or its 
    successor.
    c. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount.........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Low Density Discount.........................................      II.P.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Priority Firm Exchange Subscription Power
        This PF Exchange Subscription rate applies to sales under section 
    5(c) of the Northwest Power Act to investor-owned utilities (IOU) that 
    participate in a settlement of the Residential Exchange Program as 
    described in BPA's Subscription Strategy.
    a. Priority Firm Exchange Subscription Power Charges
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Contract Demand multiplied by the Demand Rate from 
    Section III.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Contract Energy multiplied by the HLH Energy 
    Rate from Section III.B.2.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Contract Energy multiplied by the LLH Energy 
    Rate from Section III.B.2.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        Not applicable.
    b. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount.........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate...................................      II.D.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Low Density Discount.........................................      II.P.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Section IV. Transmission
        All customers will need to obtain transmission for delivery of 
    products
    
    [[Page 44334]]
    
    listed under this rate schedule, except for the exchange product listed 
    under Section IV.H.1.
    
    Schedule RL-02
    
    Residential Load Firm Power Rate
    
    Section I. Availability
    
        This schedule is available for the contract purchase of Firm Power 
    to be used within the Pacific Northwest. The Residential Load (RL) Firm 
    Power Rate is available to investor-owned utilities (IOUs) under net 
    requirement contracts for resale to ultimate residential consumers for 
    direct consumption. Further, in order to purchase under this rate, the 
    IOU must agree to waive its right to request benefits under section 
    5(c) of the Northwest Power Act for the term of the contract. Each IOU 
    will be able to purchase a specified amount of Firm Power at the RL-02 
    rate. Additional sales of requirements power to IOUs will be made at 
    the NR-02 rate.
        The product will be delivered in equal hourly amounts over the rate 
    period. The consumer bills of participating IOUs should designate 
    ``Benefits of the Federal Columbia River Power System (FCRPS)'' to 
    describe the amount of benefits each consumer receives.
        Rates in this schedule are available for purchases under 
    requirements sales contracts for a five-year period. Only the block 
    product is available under this rate schedule. Sales under this 
    schedule are subject to BPA's 2002 General Rate Schedule Provisions 
    (2002 GRSPs) and billing process.
    
    Section II. Rates Tables
    
        The rates for the RL Firm Power product are identified below.
    A. Demand Rate
    1. Monthly Demand for FY 2002 through FY 2006
    1.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to eligible customers purchasing power for five 
    years.
    1.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   Rate (kW-
                          Applicable months                           mo)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January......................................................      $2.14
    February.....................................................       2.06
    March........................................................       1.96
    April........................................................       1.37
    May..........................................................       1.32
    June.........................................................       1.69
    July.........................................................       2.12
    August.......................................................       2.44
    September....................................................       2.28
    October......................................................       1.90
    November.....................................................       2.31
    December.....................................................       2.40
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Energy Rate
    1. Monthly Energy Rates for FY 2002 Through FY 2006
    1.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to eligible customers purchasing power for all 
    five years of the rate period.
    1.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        HLH  rate  LLH  rate
                     Applicable months                    (mills/   (mills/
                                                           kWh)       kWh)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January...........................................      19.66      14.05
    February..........................................      18.55      13.44
    March.............................................      17.78      12.69
    April.............................................      12.24       9.15
    May...............................................      11.81       7.62
    June..............................................      15.11       9.21
    July..............................................      19.45      16.20
    August............................................      29.84      19.83
    September.........................................      20.69      20.00
    October...........................................      17.28      13.95
    November..........................................      21.16      18.37
    December..........................................      22.00      18.27
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    C. Load Variance Rate
        Not applicable.
    
    Section III. Billing Factors and Adjustments
    
        Eligible customers purchasing power under a contract implementing 
    Subscription settlements of the Residential Exchange Program are 
    subject to the charges specified below.
    1. Residential Load Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Contract Demand multiplied by the Demand Rate from 
    Section II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Contract Energy multiplied by the HLH Energy 
    Rate from Section II.B; and
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Contract Energy multiplied by the LLH Energy 
    Rate from Section II.B.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount.........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Low Density Discount.........................................      II.P.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Section IV. Transmission
    
        All customers will need to obtain transmission for delivery of 
    products listed under this rate schedule unless BPA's Power Business 
    Line (PBL) and the customer negotiate otherwise at time of sale.
    
    Schedule NR-02
    
    New Resource Firm Power Rate
    
    Section I. Availability
    
        This schedule is available for the contract purchase of Firm Power 
    or capacity to be used within the Pacific Northwest. New Resource Firm 
    Power is available to investor-owned utilities (IOU) under net 
    requirements contracts for resale to ultimate consumers; for direct 
    consumption; and for Construction, Test and Start-Up, and Station 
    Service. New Resource Firm Power also is available to any public body, 
    cooperative, or Federal agency to the extent such power is needed to 
    serve any New Large Single Load (NLSL), as defined by the Northwest 
    Power Act. That portion of the utility's load placed on BPA that is 
    attributable to the NLSL will be billed under this rate schedule.
        Rates in this schedule are available for purchases under contracts 
    for which power deliveries begin on or after October 1, 2001 (2002 
    Contract), for a three or five-year period. Products available under 
    this rate schedule are defined in BPA's 2002 General Rate Schedule 
    Provisions (2002 GRSPs).
        This rate schedule supersedes the NR-96 rate schedule, which went 
    into effect October 1, 1996. Sales under the NR-02 rate schedule are 
    subject to BPA's 2002 GRSPs and billing process.
    
    Section II. Rates Tables
    
        The rates in this section apply to NR products.
    A. Demand Rate
    1. Monthly Demand Rate for FY 2002 Through FY 2006
    1.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to eligible customers purchasing power for three 
    or five years.
    
    [[Page 44335]]
    
    1.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   Rate (kW-
                          Applicable months                           mo)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January......................................................      $2.14
    February.....................................................       2.06
    March........................................................       1.96
    April........................................................       1.37
    May..........................................................       1.32
    June.........................................................       1.69
    July.........................................................       2.12
    August.......................................................       2.44
    September....................................................       2.28
    October......................................................       1.90
    November.....................................................       2.31
    December.....................................................       2.40
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Energy Rate
    1. Monthly Energy Rates for FY 2002 Through FY 2004
    1.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to eligible customers purchasing power in the 
    first three years of the rate period.
    1.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         HLH rate   LLH rate
                     Applicable months                   (mills/    (mills/
                                                           kWh)       kWh)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January...........................................      40.75      29.41
    February..........................................      38.50      28.19
    March.............................................      36.96      26.68
    April.............................................      25.76      19.52
    May...............................................      24.88      16.41
    June..............................................      31.56      19.64
    July..............................................      40.34      33.76
    August............................................      61.32      41.09
    September.........................................      42.83      41.44
    October...........................................      35.94      29.22
    November..........................................      43.78      38.15
    December..........................................      45.47      37.95
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Monthly Energy Rates for FY 2005 Through FY 2006
    2.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to purchases during the last two years of the 
    rate period for eligible customers purchasing for all five years of the 
    rate period.
    2.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         HLH rate   LLH rate
                     Applicable months                   (mills/    (mills/
                                                           kWh)       kWh)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January...........................................      42.25      30.91
    February..........................................      40.00      29.69
    March.............................................      38.46      28.18
    April.............................................      27.26      21.02
    May...............................................      26.38      17.91
    June..............................................      33.06      21.14
    July..............................................      41.84      35.26
    August............................................      62.82      42.59
    September.........................................      44.33      42.94
    October...........................................      37.44      30.72
    November..........................................      45.28      39.65
    December..........................................      46.97      39.45
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    3. Monthly Energy Rates for FY 2002 Through FY 2006
    3.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to eligible customers purchasing for all five 
    years of the rate period under this rate table.
    3.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         HLH rate   LLH rate
                     Applicable months                   (mills/    (mills/
                                                           kWh)       kWh)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January...........................................      41.35      30.01
    February..........................................      39.10      28.79
    March.............................................      37.56      27.28
    April.............................................      26.36      20.12
    May...............................................      25.48      17.01
    June..............................................      32.16      20.24
    July..............................................      40.94      34.36
    August............................................      61.92      41.69
    September.........................................      43.43      42.04
    October...........................................      36.54      29.82
    November..........................................      44.38      38.75
    December..........................................      46.07      38.55
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    C. Load Variance Rate
        The Load Variance rate for FY 2002 through FY 2006 is applicable to 
    all customers purchasing power under this rate schedule unless 
    specifically excluded in Section III below. The rate for Load Variance 
    is 0.8 mills/kWh.
    
    Section III. Billing Factors, and Adjustments for Each NR Product
    
        This rate schedule contains seven subsections, corresponding to the 
    products to which this rate schedule applies. The following seven 
    products are available to serve NLSLs, or other loads served at the NR-
    02 rate.
    
    Section III.A.  New Large Single Load
    Section III.B.  Full Service Product
    Section III.C.  Actual Partial Service Product--Simple
    Section III.D.  Actual Partial Service Product--Complex
    Section III.E.  Block Product
    Section III.F.  Block Product with Factoring
    Section III.G.  Block Product with Shaping Capacity
    A. New Large Single Load (NLSL) Service Product
        Purchases of New Resource Firm Power to serve a NLSL are subject to 
    the charges specified below.
    1. New Resource Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The NLSLs Demand Entitlement as specified in the contract multiplied by 
    the Demand Rate from Section II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2), 
    unless BPA and the Purchaser agree to bill based on a contract amount 
    of energy.
    
    (1) The NLSLs HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The NLSLs LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        The charge for Load Variance will be:
    
    The NLSLs Measured Energy for the billing period as specified in the 
    contract multiplied by the Load Variance Rate from Section II.C.
    
        If the customer is already paying the Load Variance Charge on the 
    NLSL load through this or another rate schedule, this charge does not 
    apply.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount.........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Flexible NR Rate Option......................................      II.K.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Low Density Discount.........................................      II.P.
    Rate Melding.................................................      II.Q.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge...................................      II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Full Service Product
        Purchases of the core Subscription Full Service Product are subject 
    to the charges specified below.
    1. New Resource Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Measured Demand on the Generation System Peak as 
    specified in the contract multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section 
    II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    
    [[Page 44336]]
    
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        The charge for Load Variance will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Total Retail Load for the billing period multiplied by 
    the Load Variance Rate from Section II.C.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount.........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Flexible NR Rate Option......................................      II.K.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Low Density Discount.........................................      II.P.
    Rate Melding.................................................      II.Q.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge...................................      II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    C. Actual Partial Service Product--Simple
        Purchases of the core Subscription Actual Partial Service Product--
    Simple are subject to the charges specified below.
    1. New Resource Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    (The Purchaser's Demand Entitlement multiplied by a Demand Adjuster) as 
    specified in the contract multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section 
    II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        The charge for Load Variance will be:
    
    The purchaser's Total Retail Load for the billing period multiplied by 
    the Load Variance from Section II.C.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount.........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Flexible NR Rate Option......................................      II.K.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Low Density Discount.........................................      II.P.
    Rate Melding.................................................      II.Q.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge...................................      II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    D. Actual Partial Service Product--Complex
        Purchases of the core Subscription Actual Partial Service Product--
    Complex are subject to the charges specified below.
    1. New Resource Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    (The Purchaser's Demand Entitlement multiplied by a Demand Adjuster) as 
    specified in the contract multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section 
    II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        The charge for Load Variance will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Total Retail Load for the billing period multiplied by 
    the Load Variance Rate from Section II.C.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount.........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Excess Factoring Charge......................................      II.I.
    Flexible NR Rate Option......................................      II.K.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Low Density Discount.........................................      II.P.
    Rate Melding.................................................      II.Q.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge...................................      II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    E. Block Product
        Purchases of the core Subscription Block Product are subject to the 
    charges specified below.
    1. New Resource Firm Power
    1.1.  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Demand Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section II.A.
    1.2.  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy shall be the sum of (1) and 
    (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        Not applicable to Block purchases unless the customer is also 
    purchasing another product to which Load Variance is applicable as 
    specified by contract.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount.........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Flexible NR Rate Option......................................      II.K.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Low Density Discount.........................................      II.P.
    Rate Melding.................................................      II.Q.
    Stepped Up Multiyear Block (SUMY)............................      II.S.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge...................................      II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    F. Block Product With Factoring
        Purchases of the core Subscription Block Product with Factoring are 
    subject to the charges specified below.
    
    [[Page 44337]]
    
    1. New Resource Firm Power
    1.1.  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    (the Purchaser's Demand Entitlement multiplied by a Demand Adjuster) as 
    specified in the contract multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section 
    II.A.
    1.2.  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        Not applicable to Block purchases unless the customer is also 
    purchasing another product to which Load Variance is applicable as 
    specified by contract.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount.........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Excess Factoring Charge......................................      II.I.
    Flexible NR Rate Option......................................      II.K.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Low Density Discount.........................................      II.P.
    Rate Melding.................................................      II.Q.
    Stepped Up Multiyear Block (SUMY)............................      II.S.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge...................................      II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    G. Block Product With Shaping Capacity
        Purchases of the core Subscription Block Product with Shaping 
    Capacity are subject to the charges specified below.
    1. New Resource Firm Power
    1.1.  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The Purchaser's Demand Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the Demand Rate from Section II.A.
    1.2.  Energy Charge
        The total monthly charge for energy shall be the sum of (1) and 
    (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's HLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the HLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    (2) The Purchaser's LLH Energy Entitlement as specified in the contract 
    multiplied by the LLH Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        Not applicable to Block purchases unless the customer is also 
    purchasing another product to which Load Variance is applicable as 
    specified by contract.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewables Discount.........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Flexible NR Rate Option......................................      II.K.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Low Density Discount.........................................      II.P.
    Rate Melding.................................................      II.Q.
    Stepped Up Multiyear Block (SUMY)............................      II.S.
    Targeted Adjustment Charge...................................      II.U.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Section IV. Transmission
    
        All customers will need to obtain transmission for delivery of 
    products listed under this rate schedule unless BPA's Power Business 
    Line (PBL) and the customer negotiate otherwise at time of sale. 
    Regulation and Frequency Response may have to be purchased for NLSLs.
    
    IP-02
    
    Industrial Firm Power Rate
    
    Section I. Availability
    
        This schedule is available, in conjunction with the IPTAC, to BPA's 
    direct service industrial (DSI) customers for Firm Power to be used in 
    their industrial operations. DSIs that purchase power under contracts 
    for which power deliveries begin on or after October 1, 2001 (2002 
    Contracts), are eligible to purchase under this rate schedule for up to 
    a five-year period.
        This rate schedule supersedes the IP-96 rate schedule, which went 
    into effect October 1, 1996. Sales under the IP-02 rate schedule are 
    subject to BPA's 2002 General Rate Schedule Provisions (2002 GRSPs) and 
    billing process.
    
    Section II. Rates Tables
    
        The rates for the IP Firm Power product are identified below.
    A. Demand Rate for All IP/IPTAC Products
    1. Flat Rate Demand for FY 2002 through 2006
    1.1  Applicability
        These rates apply to eligible customers purchasing power for all 
    five years of the rate period.
    1.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   Rate  (kW-
                          Applicable months                           mo)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January......................................................      $2.14
    February.....................................................       2.06
    March........................................................       1.96
    April........................................................       1.37
    May..........................................................       1.32
    June.........................................................       1.69
    July.........................................................       2.12
    August.......................................................       2.44
    September....................................................       2.28
    October......................................................       1.90
    November.....................................................       2.31
    December.....................................................       2.40
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Energy Rate
    1. Monthly Energy Rates for FY 2002 Through FY 2006
    1.1  Applicability
        These energy rates are to be combined with one of the two IP 
    Targeted Adjustment Charges specified in Section 2.2 or 3.2 below.
    1.2  Rate Table
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        HLH  rate  LLH  rate
                     Applicable months                    (mills/    (mills/
                                                           kWh)       kWh)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    January...........................................      21.49      15.87
    February..........................................      20.37      15.27
    March.............................................      19.61      14.52
    April.............................................      14.07      10.98
    May...............................................      13.63       9.44
    June..............................................      16.93      11.04
    July..............................................      21.28      18.03
    August............................................      31.66      21.65
    September.........................................      22.51      21.83
    October...........................................      19.10      15.78
    November..........................................      22.99      20.20
    December..........................................      23.82      20.10
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Monthly Energy Rates for FY 2002 Through FY 2006 for IPTAC (23.5 
    mills)
        2.1  These rates apply to the eligible customers purchasing power 
    under this rate schedule for all five years of the rate period.
        2.2  A charge of 2.02 mills shall be added to each IP energy rate 
    in the Rate Table in 1.2 above.
    
    [[Page 44338]]
    
    3. Monthly Energy Rates for FY 2002 Through FY 2006 for IPTAC (25.0 
    mills)
        3.1  These rates apply to the eligible customers purchasing power 
    under this rate schedule for all five years of the rate period.
        3.2  A charge of 3.52 mills shall be added to each IP energy rate 
    in the Rate Table in 1.2 above.
    
    C. Load Variance Rate
    
        The Load Variance rate for FY 2002 through FY 2006 applies to all 
    customers purchasing power under this rate schedule unless specifically 
    excluded in Section III below. The rate for Load Variance is 0.8 mills/
    kWh.
    
    Section III. Billing Factors and Adjustments for Each IP Product
    
        This rate schedule contains two subsections, corresponding to the 
    products to which this rate schedule applies. Only the firm take-or-pay 
    Block Product is available under these rate schedules.
    
    SECTION III.A.  DSI Customers Who Purchase Under 2002 Industrial Firm 
    Power (IP) Contracts
    SECTION III.B.  DSI Customers Who Purchase Under 2002 Industrial Firm 
    Power Targeted Adjustment Charge (IPTAC) Contracts
    A. DSI Customers Who Purchase Under 2002 Industrial Firm Power (IP) 
    Contracts
        Purchases of power under a 2002 IP contract are subject to the 
    charges specified below.
    1. Industrial Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The Purchaser's monthly Contract Demand multiplied by the Demand Rate 
    from Section II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        The Total monthly charge for energy will be the sum of (1) and (2):
    
    (1) The Purchaser's monthly HLH Contract Energy multiplied by the HLH 
    Energy Rate from Section II.B; and
    (2) The Purchaser's monthly LLH Contract Energy multiplied by the LLH 
    Energy Rate from Section II.B.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        Not applicable to Block purchases unless the customer is also 
    purchasing another product to which Load Variance is applicable as 
    specified by contract.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewable Discount..........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Rate Melding.................................................      II.Q.
    Supplemental Contingency Reserves Adjustment.................      II.T.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. DSI Customers Who Purchase Under 2002 Industrial Firm Power Targeted 
    Adjustment Charge (IPTAC) Contracts
        Purchases of power under a 2002 IPTAC contract are subject to the 
    charges specified below.
    1. Industrial Firm Power
    1.1  Demand Charge
        The charge for Demand will be:
    
    The Purchaser's monthly Contract Demand multiplied by the Demand Rate 
    from Section II.A.
    1.2  Energy Charge
        Energy charges will be calculated pursuant to the GRSPs IPTAC at 
    the time of contract negotiations.
    1.3  Load Variance Charge
        Not applicable to Block purchases unless the customer is also 
    purchasing another product to which Load Variance is applicable as 
    specified by contract.
    2. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
        Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions are described in 
    the 2002 GRSPs. Relevant sections are identified below:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conservation and Renewable Discount..........................      II.A.
    Conservation Surcharge.......................................      II.B.
    Cost-Based Indexed IP Rate...................................      II.C.
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause..............................      II.F.
    Dividend Distribution Clause.................................      II.H.
    Flexible IP Rate Option......................................      II.J.
    Green Energy Premium.........................................      II.M.
    Industrial Firm Power Targeted Adjustment Charge.............      II.O.
    Rate Melding.................................................      II.Q.
    Supplemental Contingency Reserves Adjustment.................      II.T.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Section IV. Transmission
    
        All customers will need to obtain transmission for delivery of 
    products listed under this rate schedule unless BPA's Power Business 
    Line (PBL) and the customer negotiate otherwise at time of sale.
    
    NF-02
    
    Nonfirm Power Rate
    
    Section I. Availability
    
        This schedule is available for the purchase of nonfirm energy to be 
    used both inside and outside the United States including sales under 
    the Western Systems Power Pool (WSPP) agreements and sales to 
    consumers. The offer of nonfirm energy under this schedule shall be 
    determined by BPA.
        This rate schedule supersedes the NF-96 schedule, which went into 
    effect on October 1, 1996. Sales under the NF-02 rate schedule are 
    subject to BPA's 2002 General Rate Schedule Provisions (2002 GRSPs). 
    For sales under this rate schedule, bills shall be rendered and 
    payments due pursuant to BPA's 2002 GRSPs and billing process.
    
    Section II. Rates, Billing Factors, and Adjustments
    
        The average cost of nonfirm energy is 24.98 mills/kWh. The NF-02 
    rate schedule provides for upward and downward pricing flexibility from 
    this average nonfirm energy cost.
    A. Rates for Nonfirm Energy
    1. Standard Rate
        The Standard rate is any offered rate not to exceed 29.98 mills/
    kWh.
    2. Market Expansion Rate
        The Market Expansion rate is any offered rate below the Standard 
    rate in effect. BPA may have one or more Market Expansion rates in 
    effect simultaneously.
    3. Incremental Rate
        The Incremental Rate is the Incremental Cost of energy plus 2.00 
    mills/kWh, where the Incremental Cost is defined as all identifiable 
    costs (expressed in mills/kWh) that BPA would have avoided had it not 
    produced or purchased the energy being sold under this rate.
    4. Contract Rate
        The Contract Rate is 24.98 mills/kWh.
    B. Billing Factor for Nonfirm Energy
        The billing factor for nonfirm energy purchased under this rate 
    schedule shall be the Measured Energy unless otherwise specified by 
    contract.
    
    [[Page 44339]]
    
    C. Adjustments for Nonfirm Energy
        All adjustments are described in the 2002 GRSPs. The applicable 
    sections are identified for each adjustment.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      2002
          Adjustments, charges, and special rate provisions           GRSP
                                                                    section
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cost Contributions...........................................      II.E.
    Unauthorized Increase Charge.................................      II.V.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Section III. Determination of the Applicable NF Rate
    
        Any time that BPA has nonfirm energy for sale, the Standard rate, 
    the Market Expansion rate, the Incremental rate, the Contract rate, or 
    any combination of these rates may be in effect.
    A. Standard Rate
        The Standard rate is available for all purchases of nonfirm energy.
    B. Market Expansion Rate
    1. Application of the Market Expansion Rate
        The Market Expansion rate applies when BPA determines that all 
    markets at the Standard rate have been satisfied and BPA offers 
    additional nonfirm energy.
    2. Market Expansion Rate Qualification Criteria
        In order to purchase nonfirm energy at the Market Expansion rate, a 
    purchaser must:
        a. Have a displaceable resource, displaceable purchase of 
    electricity; or
        b. Be an end-user load with a displaceable alternative fuel source. 
    In addition, a purchaser must demonstrate one of the following:
        a. Shutdown or reduction of the output of the displaceable resource 
    associated with that purchase, in an amount equal to the amount of 
    Market Expansion rate energy purchased; or
        b. Reduction of a displaceable purchase and the output of the 
    resource associated with that purchase, in an amount equal to the 
    amount of Market Expansion rate energy purchased; or
        c. Shutdown or reduction of the identified output of the 
    resource(s) indirectly in an amount equal to the amount of Market 
    Expansion rate energy purchased (for example, the purchase may be used 
    to run a pumped storage unit); or
        d. Decrease of an end-user alternate fuel source in an amount 
    equivalent to the amount of Market Expansion rate energy purchased.
    3. Eligibility Criteria for Market Expansion Rate
        a. When only one Market Expansion rate is offered:
        Purchasers satisfying the Market Expansion Rate Qualifying Criteria 
    specified in Section III.B.2 above, who purchased nonfirm energy 
    directly from BPA, are eligible to purchase power under the Market 
    Expansion rate offered if the decremental cost of the qualifying 
    resource, purchase, or qualifying alternative fuel source is lower than 
    the Standard rate in effect plus 2.00 mills/kWh.
        Purchasers qualifying under Section III.B.2 who purchase nonfirm 
    energy through a third party are eligible to purchase power under the 
    Market Expansion rate offered if the cost of the qualifying alternative 
    fuel source is lower than the Standard rate in effect plus 4.00 mills/
    kWh.
        b. When more than one Market Expansion rate is offered:
        Purchasers qualifying under Section III.B.2 who purchase nonfirm 
    energy directly from BPA are eligible to purchase power under the 
    Market Expansion rate if the decremental cost of the qualifying 
    resource, purchase, or qualifying alternative fuel source is lower than 
    the Standard rate in effect plus 2.00 mills/kWh. The rate applicable to 
    a purchaser will be the highest Market Expansion rate offered that is 
    below the purchaser's qualifying decremental cost minus 2.00 mills/kWh.
    C. Incremental Rate
        The Incremental rate applies to sales of energy:
        1. That is produced or purchased by BPA concurrently with the 
    nonfirm energy sale;
        2. That BPA may at its option not produce or purchase; and 3. that 
    has an Incremental Cost greater than the Standard rate (plus the 
    Intertie Charge, if applicable) minus 2 mills.
    D. Contract Rate
        The Contract rate applies to contracts (except power sales 
    contracts offered pursuant to Sections 5(b), 5(c), and 5(g) of the 
    Northwest Power Act) that refer to the Contract rate:
        1. For sale of nonfirm energy; or
        2. For determining the value of energy.
    E. Western Systems Power Pool Transactions (WSPP)
        BPA may make available nonfirm energy for transactions under the 
    WSPP agreement. WSPP sales shall be subject to the terms and conditions 
    specified in the WSPP agreement and will be consistent with regional 
    and public preference. The rate for transactions under the WSPP 
    agreement is any rate within the limits specified by the Standard, 
    Market Expansion, and Incremental rates but may not exceed the maximum 
    rate specified in the WSPP agreement. The rate for WSPP sales may 
    differ from the actual rate offered for non-WSPP transactions in any 
    hour. The rate for WSPP transactions is independent of any other rate 
    offered concurrently under this rate schedule outside the agreement.
    F. End-User Rate
        BPA may agree to a rate formula for nonfirm energy purchases by 
    end-users. Such rate or rate formula will be within the limits 
    specified for the Standard and Market Expansion rates but may differ 
    from the actual rates offered during any hour.
    
    Section IV. Delivery
    
    A. Rate of Delivery
        BPA shall determine the amount of nonfirm energy to be made 
    available for each hour. Such determination shall be made for each 
    applicable nonfirm energy rate.
    B. Guaranteed Delivery
    1. Availability
        BPA will determine the amount and duration of nonfirm energy to be 
    offered on a guaranteed basis. Such daily or hourly amounts may be as 
    small as zero or as much as all the nonfirm energy that BPA plans to 
    offer for sale on such days.
    2. Conditions
        Scheduled amounts of guaranteed nonfirm energy may not be changed 
    except:
        a. When BPA and the purchaser mutually agree to increase or 
    decrease the scheduled amounts; or
        b. When BPA must reduce nonfirm energy deliveries in order to serve 
    firm loads.
    
    Section V. Transmission
    
        All customers will need to obtain transmission for delivery of 
    products listed under this rate schedule unless BPA's Power Business 
    Line (PBL) and the customer negotiate otherwise at time of sale.
    
    BPA'S 2002 General Rate Schedule Provisions for Power Rates
    
    Index General Rate Schedule Provisions
    
    Section I: Adoption of Revised Rate Schedules and General Rate 
    Schedule Provisions
    
    A. Approval of Rates
    B. General Provisions
    
    [[Page 44340]]
    
    C. Late Payment Provisions
    D. Notices
    
    Section II: Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
    
    A. Conservation and Renewables Discount (C&R Discount)
    B. Conservation Surcharge (PF/NR only)
    C. Cost-Based Indexed IP Rate
    D. Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate
    E. Cost Contributions
    F. Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause (CRAC)
    G. Demand Adjuster
    H. Dividend Distribution Clause (DDC)
    I. Excess Factoring Charges
    J. Flexible IP Rate Option
    K. Flexible NR Rate Option
    L. Flexible PF Rate Option
    M. Green Energy Premium
    N. Guaranteed Delivery Charge (NF Only)
    O. Industrial Firm Power Targeted Adjustment Charge (IPTAC)
    P. Low Density Discount
    Q. Rate Melding
    R. Slice True-Up Adjustment
    S. Stepped Up Multiyear Block (SUMY)
    T. Supplemental Contingency Reserves Adjustment (SCRA)
    U. Targeted Adjustment Charge
    V. Unauthorized Increase Charge
    
    Section III: Definitions
    
    A. Power Products and Services Offered By the Power Business Line of 
    BPA
        1. Actual Partial Service Product--Simple/Complex
        2. Block Product
        3. Block Product with Factoring
        4. Block Product with Shaping Capacity
        5. Construction, Test and Start-Up, and Station Service
        6. Core Subscription Products
        7. Customer System Peak (CSP)
        8. Full Service Product
        9. Industrial Firm Power
        10. Load Variance
        11. New Resource Firm Power
        12. Nonfirm Energy
        13. Priority Firm Power
        14. Regulation and Frequency Response
        15. Residential Exchange Program Power
        16. Slice Product
    B. Definition of Rate Schedule Terms
        1. 2002 Contract
        2. Annual Billing Cycle
        3. Billing Demand
        4. Billing Energy
        5. California Independent System Operator (California ISO)
        6. California ISO Spinning Reserve Capacity
        7. California ISO Supplemental Energy
        8. California Power Exchange (California PX)
        9. Contract Demand
        10. Contract Energy
        11. Control Area
        12. Decremental Cost
        13. Delivering Party
        14. Demand Entitlement
        15. Discount Period
        16. Dow Jones Mid-C Indexes (DJ Mid-C Indexes)
        17. Electric Power
        18. Energy Entitlement
        19. Federal System
        20. Firm Power (PF-02, IP-02, NR-02, RL-02)
        21. Full Service Customer
        22. Generation System Peak
        23. Heavy Load Hours (HLH)
        24. Inventory Solution Costs
        25. Light Load Hour (LLH)
        26. Measured Demand
        27. Measured Energy
        28. Metered Demand
        29. Metered Energy
        30. Mid-Columbia Bus (Mid-C Bus)
        31. Monthly Federal System Peak Load
        32. NP15
        33. NW1 (California-Oregon Border)
        34. NW3 (Nevada-Oregon Border)
        35. Partial Service Customer
        36. Point of Delivery (POD)
        37. Point of Integration (POI)
        38. Point of Interconnection (POI)
        39. Points of Metering (POM)
        40. Pre-Subscription Contract
        41. Purchaser
        42. Receiving Party
        43. Retail Access
        44. Scheduled Demand
        45. Scheduled Energy
        46. Slice Administrative Costs
        47. Slice Revenue Requirement
        48. Subscription
        49. Subscription Contract
        50. System Obligations
        51. Total Plant Load
        52. Total Retail Load (TRL)
        53. Utility Distribution Company
    
    General Rate Schedule Provisions
    
    Section I. Adoption of Revised Rate Schedules and General Rate Schedule 
    Provisions
    
    A. Approval of Rates
        These 2002 Wholesale Power Rate Schedules and General Rate Schedule 
    Provisions (2002 GRSPs) shall become effective upon interim approval or 
    upon final confirmation and approval by the Federal Energy Regulatory 
    Commission (FERC). Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) has requested 
    that FERC make these rates and 2002 GRSPs effective on October 1, 2001, 
    for customers who are billed by BPA on a calendar month basis and on 
    the first day of the first billing month following that date for all 
    other customers. All rate schedules shall remain in effect until they 
    are replaced or expire on their own terms.
    B. General Provisions
        These 2002 Wholesale Power Rate Schedules and the 2002 GRSPs 
    associated with these schedules supersede BPA's 1996 rate schedules 
    (which became effective October 1, 1996) to the extent stated in the 
    Availability section of each rate schedule. These schedules and 2002 
    GRSPs shall be applicable to all BPA contracts, including contracts 
    executed both prior to, and subsequent to, enactment of the Pacific 
    Northwest Electric Power Planning and Conservation Act (Northwest Power 
    Act). All sales under these rate schedules are subject to the following 
    acts as amended: The Bonneville Project Act, the Regional Preference 
    Act (P.L. 88-552), the Federal Columbia River Transmission System 
    (FCRTS) Act (P.L. 93-454), the Northwest Power Act (P.L. 96-501), and 
    the Energy Policy Act of 1992 (P.L. 102-486).
        These 2002 rate schedules do not supersede any previously 
    established rate schedule which is required, by agreement, to remain in 
    effect.
        If a provision in an executed agreement is in conflict with a 
    provision contained herein, the former shall prevail.
    C. Late Payment Provisions
        Bills not paid in full on or before close of business on the due 
    date shall be subject to an interest charge of one-twentieth percent 
    (0.05 percent) applied each day to the unpaid amount. This interest 
    charge shall be assessed on a daily basis until such time as the unpaid 
    amount is paid in full.
        Remittances will be accepted without assessment of the charges 
    referred to in the preceding paragraph provided payment was received on 
    or before the due date. The due date is the 20th day after the issue 
    date of the bill unless the 20th day is a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal 
    holiday, in which case the due date is the next business day. Whenever 
    a power bill or a portion thereof remains unpaid subsequent to the due 
    date, and after giving 30 days' advance notice in writing, BPA may 
    cancel the contract for service to the Purchaser. However, such 
    cancellation shall not affect the Purchaser's liability for any 
    previously accrued charges under such contract.
    D. Notices
        For the purpose of determining elapsed time from receipt of a 
    notice applicable to rate schedule and GRSP administration, a notice 
    shall be deemed to have been received at 0000 hours on the first 
    calendar day following actual receipt of the notice.
    
    Section II. Adjustments, Charges, and Special Rate Provisions
    
    A. Conservation and Renewables Discount (C&R Discount)
    1. Description of the Discount
        To encourage and support the development of conservation projects 
    and renewable resources in the Pacific Northwest, BPA is offering a 
    Conservation and Renewables Discount (C&R Discount) to customers 
    purchasing
    
    [[Page 44341]]
    
    under the Priority Firm (PF-02), New Resources (NR-02), and Residential 
    Load (RL-02) rate schedules. Customers purchasing under the Industrial 
    Firm Power Rate (IP-02) will be eligible to the extent that the C&R 
    Discount does not reduce their effective rate below the DSI floor rate. 
    Regional public agency customers with Pre-Subscription contracts with 
    collared pricing provisions may be eligible for the C&R Discount 
    subject to contract provisions. The amount of the Discount will be a 
    fixed monthly amount based on the customer's forecasted purchases from 
    BPA under its Subscription contract. Following the end of the Discount 
    Period (which is the end of the rate period or the customer's contract 
    term, whichever comes first), BPA will evaluate the customer's 
    investments in eligible conservation and renewable resource projects 
    during the Discount Period. Any customer that has not spent at least as 
    much money on eligible activities as the cumulative discount received 
    from BPA must reimburse the difference to BPA.
    2. Calculation and Application of the Discount
    a. Overview of the Discount
        The C&R Discount will be included as a fixed dollar credit in the 
    monthly power bill of each participating customer. The credit will 
    equal the customer's forecasted average monthly Subscription contract 
    (in megawatts) multiplied by the unit discount. (Because the average 
    contract is used, the discount does not vary by month).
    b. Determination of the ``Unit Discount''
        The unit discount will equal 0.5 mills per kilowatthour (kWh).
    c. Determination of Individual Customer Discounts
        For a participating customer buying power from BPA under a 
    Subscription contract for the entire five-year rate period, BPA will 
    determine the monthly dollar discount by multiplying the customer's 
    forecasted average monthly power consumption over the rate period by 
    the unit discount.
    d. Annual Review of Individual Customer Discounts
        At least 30 days prior to the start of each fiscal year, customers 
    will submit adjustments to the section c monthly discounts based on 
    changes to the customers load as specified in their BPA contract.
    e. Application of the Discount
        The C&R Discount will be applied after BPA has determined all other 
    charges and credits on the participating customer's power bill.
        BPA will provide the discount even in those months when the 
    discount amount is larger than the customer's total power bill amount.
    3. Qualifying Expenditures
        Participating customers shall record all qualifying expenditures to 
    ensure full credit for their conservation and renewable resource 
    activities. Qualifying expenditures are those that meet technical 
    standards developed by the Regional Technical Forum as approved by BPA.
        Although BPA will provide the credit on a monthly basis, the 
    customer has no obligation to adhere to any particular expenditure 
    pattern. To retain the full discount provided by BPA, the participating 
    customer must make qualifying expenditures during the Discount Period 
    in an amount equal to, or exceeding, the cumulative C&R Discount 
    received from BPA during the Discount Period.
    4. Reporting
    a. Interim Conservation and Renewable Reports
        Participating customers shall submit to BPA annual Interim 
    Conservation and Renewable Reports at the end of each fiscal year of 
    the rate period (i.e., 10/01/01 to 9/30/02; 10/01/02, to 9/30/03; 
    etc.). The Interim Report shall show the customer's cumulative 
    discounts received to date and their cumulative qualifying 
    expenditures. If the report shows that the customer's qualifying 
    expenditures are less than or equal to its discount receipts by 5 
    percent or more, the customer must indicate in its report how it plans 
    to adjust its expenditures to ensure that it will retain the full 
    discount after the Discount Period.
    b. Final Reconciliation Reports
        At the end of the Discount Period the participating customer shall 
    prepare a Final Reconciliation Report. This report shall be submitted 
    and received by BPA one month after the end of the Discount Period 
    (November 1, 2006, for participating customers' purchasing power from 
    BPA for the full five-year rate period).
        This report shall identify:
        i. The cumulative C&R Discount that the customer has received from 
    BPA during the Discount Period, and
        ii. The total qualifying expenditures that the customer has made 
    during the Discount Period segregated into the following four 
    categories:
        I. Incremental Conservation
        II. Renewable Resources
        III. Low Income Weatherization
        IV. Support Activities (i.e., administrative, advertising, R&D, and 
    evaluation
    c. Certification of Incremental Spending
        Each Interim Report and the Final Reconciliation Report shall 
    include language certifying the participating customer's actual 
    incremental spending, such as:
        ``[Customer] certifies that the expenditures documented in this 
    report are incremental increases in this organization's budget for the 
    current operating year beyond what we planned to spend absent the 
    discount.''
    d. Exemption Language for State and Municipal Initiatives
        If States, municipalities, or other governmental bodies in the BPA 
    service territory require, by law or regulation, that a utility, which 
    is a participating customer in the C&R Discount, to acquire or invest 
    in new conservation and/or a new renewable resource project, then such 
    acquisitions and investments will be deemed as incremental budget 
    increases for the purposes of section 4.c. above.
    5. Reimbursement
    a. Customers Whose Expenditures Exceed the Threshold
        No reimbursements are required of any participating customer whose 
    total expenditures over the Discount Period equal or exceed the total 
    cumulative C&R Discount received from BPA.
    b. Customers Whose Expenditures Fall Below the Threshold
        If a participating customer's Final Reconciliation Report shows 
    that the cumulative discount received from BPA exceeds the customer's 
    total qualifying expenditures, the customer may take an additional 
    month (for a total of two months after the end of the Discount Period) 
    to make the necessary qualifying expenditures and prepare a Revised 
    Final Reconciliation Report. The final report is due to BPA within two 
    months of the end of the Discount Period (December 1, 2006, for the 
    five-year customers). If the customer's qualifying expenditures still 
    do not equal or exceed its cumulative discount, the customer must 
    reimburse the difference to BPA. Such reimbursement shall be made 
    within the same two-month grace period and shall be made using the same 
    payment method as the customer uses for paying its wholesale bill.
        BPA will not assess interest on any reimbursement paid within the 
    two-month window. However, any payment received after the due date 
    (December 1, 2006, the five-year customers) shall be
    
    [[Page 44342]]
    
    subject to a late payment charge as described in their Subscription 
    contract.
    6. Revenue Dividends
    a. Implementation
        If BPA declares that there is a dividend during this rate period, 
    the first $15 million will be allocated to conservation and renewable 
    resource development. BPA will distribute the C&R portion of any 
    declared dividend in the same manner outlined in this section with the 
    following modifications:
        1. In order to receive their portion of the C&R dividend, customers 
    must be actively participating in the basic C&R Discount effort; and
        2. Participating customers must spend two dollars on eligible 
    activities to receive one dollar of their dividend share (i.e., any C&R 
    dividend will be leveraged on a 2 for 1 basis).
        3. The unit discount for participating customers receiving the 
    dividend will set at $0.75 per MWh during the months the dividend is in 
    effect.
    B. Conservation Surcharge (PF/NR Only)
        The Conservation Surcharge, where implemented shall be applied in 
    accordance with relevant provisions of the Northwest Power Act, BPA's 
    current conservation surcharge policy, and the customer's power sales 
    contract with BPA. The PF and NR rate schedules are subject to the 
    Conservation Surcharge.
    C. Cost-Based Indexed IP Rate
        The Cost-Based Indexed IP Rate option shall be offered at BPA's 
    discretion to a DSI Purchaser who makes a contractual commitment to 
    purchase power for all five years of the rate period from BPA that is 
    subject to the IP Targeted Adjustment Charge (IPTAC). The charges and 
    billing factors under this option shall be specified by BPA at the time 
    the Administrator offers to make power available to a Purchaser under 
    this option. The actual charges and billing factors will be mutually 
    agreed to by BPA and the Purchaser. The following criteria will be used 
    in establishing any flexible rate:
        1. Equivalent Net Present Value Revenues: Forecasted revenues from 
    a Purchaser under this rate option must be equivalent to or greater 
    than, on a net present value basis, the revenues BPA would have 
    received had the IPTAC specified in the IP-02 rate schedule been 
    applied to the same sales.
        2. Risk Adjustments: Risk, both credit risk associated with 
    individual customers and price risk associated with power and commodity 
    prices, will be factors in establishing any flexible rate option. 
    Creditworthiness will be determined by BPA consistent with prevailing 
    business standards, and applied consistently to each customer. Such 
    credit risks will be dealt with through a ``margin deposit'' expense 
    charge built into the rates, or other methods acceptable to BPA.
        3. Industry Index: The Cost-Based Indexed IP Rate will be adjusted 
    on a regular basis consistent with a negotiated cash or financial 
    index. Adjusting the price of the Cost-Based Indexed IP Rate with the 
    fluctuations in a world aluminum price index would be one use of an 
    industry index.
        4. Lower Rate Limit and Upper Rate Limit: A lower and upper rate 
    limit will bound the Cost-Based Index and establish the minimum and 
    maximum prices to be charged during the contract period.
    D. Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate
        The Cost-Based Indexed PF Rate will be offered to all firm load 
    requirements customers who wish to convert their applicable PF rate 
    under their contracts to a market-indexed or floating price adjusted 
    for BPA's risk. The following are features of this rate:
        1. BPA and the customer will choose during contract negotiations a 
    mutually agreed reference point and sponsor for the index used. For 
    example, the California-Oregon border (location) and the Dow Jones cash 
    or the New York Mercantile Exchange futures (sponsor), or some other 
    combination to arrive at an agreed upon index.
        2. BPA will base the index pricing on a current market forecast of 
    the market index referenced. The expected Net Present Value (NPV) 
    revenue of the forecast index prices will be adjusted by a HLH and a 
    LLH Market Index Monthly Adjustment (MIMA) to equal the expected NPV of 
    the applicable PF rates. The MIMA reflects BPA's PF equivalent expected 
    revenues at the time the contract is signed, including an insurance 
    premium to ensure revenue sufficiency.
        3. Customers must select this rate for the term of their 
    Subscription contract that the 2002-2006 rate period covers. Customers 
    who choose a contract length of less than five years and wish to renew 
    will be subject to rates established under a new rate case.
        4. Billing will be based on the index's average of the last 15 days 
    of closing or posted daily prices at the reference point. The MIMA will 
    be calculated as follows:
    
    Index = average of last 15 days of closing or posted daily prices at 
    the reference point.
    PF = monthly PF HLH or LLH energy rate
    Cost of Insurance = The premium on a physical and financial 
    instrument used to mitigate the risk.
    MIMA = Index-PF+Cost of Insurance
    E. Cost Contributions
        BPA has made the following resource cost determinations:
        1. The forecasted average cost of resources available to BPA under 
    average water conditions is 19.12 mills/kWh.
        2. The approximate cost contribution of different resource 
    categories to each rate schedule is as shown in Table A:
    
                                                         Table A
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                Resource cost contribution
                                                                     -----------------------------------------------
                              Rate schedule                            Federal base
                                                                          system*        Exchange*    New resources*
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    PF..............................................................          100               0               0
    IP..............................................................           52.86           43.66            3.48
    NR..............................................................           52.86           43.66            3.48 
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    * In percent.
    
    F. Cost Recovery Adjustment Clause (CRAC)
        The CRAC is an upward adjustment to posted power rates for 
    Subscription sales on a temporary basis if Actual Accumulated Net 
    Revenues (AANR) in the generation function fall below a threshold 
    level.
        The CRAC applies to power customers under these firm power rate 
    schedules: Priority Firm Power [Preference (PF excluding Slice), 
    Exchange Program, and Exchange
    
    [[Page 44343]]
    
    Subscription], IP-02, including under the IPTAC and Cost-Based Index 
    Rate, RL-02 including the financial portion of any Residential Exchange 
    Settlement under this rate schedule, NR-02, and Subscription purchase 
    under FPS. The CRAC does not apply to Pre-Subscription rates or Slice 
    purchases.
    1. Formula for the Calculation of the Revenue Amount and CRAC 
    Percentage
        If the AANR in any fiscal year 2001 through 2004 falls below the 
    CRAC Threshold for that same fiscal year, the CRAC triggers, and rates 
    will be increased for a 12-month period beginning the following April. 
    The Revenue Amount will be determined by the following formula:
    
    Revenue Amount is the lower of:
    CRAC Threshold--AANR; or
    The annual Maximum Planned Recovery Amount, shown in Table B below.
    
        Where Revenue Amount is the amount of additional revenue that an 
    increase in rates under CRAC is intended to generate during the period 
    that the rate increase is effective.
        Where CRAC Threshold is the ``trigger point'' for invoking a rate 
    increase under the CRAC. The threshold is pre-specified for the end of 
    fiscal years 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005 in Table B.
        Where AANR is generation function net revenues, as accumulated 
    since 1998, at the end of each of the fiscal years 2001 through 2005. 
    Net revenues for any given fiscal year are accrued revenues less 
    accrued expenses, in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting 
    Practices. Only generation function revenues and expenses, which is to 
    say accrued revenues and accrued expenses that are associated with the 
    production, acquisition, marketing, and conservation of electric power, 
    will be included in determinations under the CRAC. Accrued revenues and 
    expenses of the transmission function are excluded. The determination 
    of AANR will be confirmed by BPA's independent auditing firm.
        Where Maximum Planned Recovery Amount is the maximum amount planned 
    to be recovered through the CRAC beginning in April following the end 
    of a fiscal year in which the AANR falls below the CRAC Threshold.
        If the AANR in fiscal year 2005 falls below the CRAC Threshold, the 
    CRAC triggers, and rates will be increased for a six-month period 
    beginning the following April. The Revenue Amount will be determined by 
    the following formula:
    
    Revenue Amount is the lower of:
    (CRAC Threshold-AANR) divided by 2; or $87.5 million ($175 million 
    divided by 2)
    
                                     Table B
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Maximum planned
                                             CRAC threshold  recovery amount
                  Fiscal year                   (AANR, $        (beginning
                                                millions)       following
                                                                  April)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    2001...................................            -350            125
    2002...................................            -350            135
    2003...................................            -200            150
    2004...................................            -200            150
    2005...................................            -200             87.5
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Once the Revenue Amount is determined, that amount will be 
    converted to the CRAC Percentage. The CRAC Percentage is the percentage 
    increase in each of the firm power rate schedules listed above. This 
    percentage will be applied for a period of time to generate the 
    additional (CRAC) revenue. The CRAC Percentage will be determined by 
    the following formula:
    
    CRAC Percentage =
    Revenue Amount
    Divided by
    CRAC Revenue Basis,
    
        Where CRAC Revenue Basis is the total generation revenue for the 
    loads subject to CRAC, plus any Slice loads, for the fiscal year in 
    which the CRAC implementation begins, based on the then most current 
    revenue forecast.
        Each non-Slice product's total charge for energy, demand and load 
    variance will be increased by this CRAC Percentage amount.
    2. CRAC Adjustment Timing
        In January of each year of the rate period, the Administrator will 
    determine whether the AANR at the end of the preceding fiscal year fell 
    below the CRAC Threshold. If the AANR is below the CRAC Threshold, the 
    Administrator will propose, in January, to increase applicable rates 
    effective in the following April. The adjustment is applied to power 
    deliveries beginning April 1. Any such increase beginning in fiscal 
    years 2002-2005 remains in effect through March of the following year. 
    An increase beginning in the final fiscal year of the rate period 
    (2006) will remain in effect through September 2006.
    3. CRAC Notification Process
        BPA shall follow the following notification procedures:
    a. Financial Performance Status Reports
        By no later than August 31 of each year, BPA shall post on its 
    electronic information access site (World Wide Web) a forecast of AANR 
    attributable to the generation function for the fiscal year ending 
    September 30. By no later than December 1 of each year, BPA shall also 
    post on its World Wide Web site the unaudited AANR.
    b. Notice of CRAC Trigger
        BPA shall notify all customers and rate case parties on or about 
    January 15 in each of the fiscal years 2002-2006, if the AANR fell 
    below the CRAC Threshold for that fiscal year and rates will be 
    adjusted under the CRAC. (If the December unaudited AANR report for the 
    generation function indicated that the CRAC Threshold might be reached, 
    and the audited actuals show that it has not triggered, customers and 
    rate case parties will be so notified.) Notification will include the 
    audited AANR for the prior fiscal year, the calculation of the Revenue 
    Amount, and the estimated CRAC Percentage. The notice shall also 
    describe the data and assumptions relied upon by BPA. Such data, 
    assumptions and documentation, if non-proprietary and/or non-
    privileged, shall be made available for review at BPA upon request. The 
    notice shall also contain the tentative schedule for the remainder of 
    the CRAC implementation process.
        On or about February 1 of any of the fiscal years 2002-2006 in 
    which the AANR falls below the CRAC Threshold,
    
    [[Page 44344]]
    
    BPA staff shall conduct a public forum to explain the AANR result, the 
    calculation of the Revenue Amount and the CRAC Percentage, and 
    demonstrate that the CRAC has been implemented in accordance with the 
    GRSPs. The forum will provide an opportunity for public comment.
        On or about March 1 of any of the fiscal years 2002-2006 in which 
    the AANR falls below the CRAC Threshold, the BPA Administrator shall 
    notify all customers to whom the CRAC applies of the final calculation 
    of the adjustment and the resulting rate increase (as a percentage) 
    applicable to each rate schedule.
    G. Demand Adjuster
        The Demand Adjuster is applied to a customer's demand billing 
    factor. It is a number less than or equal to one calculated by dividing 
    the customer's Total Retail Load on the Generation System Peak by the 
    customer's Total Retail Load on their system peak. The minimum Demand 
    Adjuster is 0.6 (six tenths). The Demand Adjuster is used with the 
    demand billing factor for the Actual Partial Service Products, and with 
    the demand billing factor for the Block with Factoring.
    H. Dividend Distribution Clause (DDC)
        The DDC is a clause establishing criteria and public process 
    requirements that the Administrator will use to decide whether 
    dividends should be distributed and the amount that should be 
    distributed. The DDC enables BPA to distribute dividends to customers 
    and other stakeholders. The DDC also establishes the mechanism to be 
    used to make a distribution to certain firm power customers.
        The DDC applies to power customers under these firm power rate 
    schedules: Priority Firm Power [Preference (PF excluding Slice), 
    Exchange Program, and Exchange Subscription], IP-02 including under the 
    IPTAC and Cost-Based Index Rate, RL-02 including the financial portion 
    of any Residential Exchange Settlement under this rate schedule, NR-02, 
    and Subscription purchases under FPS. The DDC does not apply to Pre-
    Subscription rates or Slice purchases, unless those customers 
    participate in the C&R Discount and a distribution is made to eligible 
    participants of that program.
        The DDC does not apportion, or establish criteria for apportioning, 
    dividends to customers under the above firm power rate schedules other 
    than to qualifying power customers participating in the C&R Discount, 
    or to other customers and stakeholders.
        ``Stakeholders'' are groups that have a fundamental policy or 
    financial interest in BPA's generation function. These groups include, 
    but are not limited to, customers subject to the posted firm power rate 
    schedules cited above. A full identification of stakeholders will be 
    provided for comment in the public consultation process.
    1. Formula for the Calculation of the Dividend Distribution Amount
        The DDC process will be implemented if audited actual accumulated 
    net revenues for the end of any of the fiscal years 2001-2005 are above 
    the DDC Threshold value.
        Actual Accumulated Net Revenues (AANR) are generation function net 
    revenues, as accumulated since 1998, at the end of each of the fiscal 
    years 2001 through 2005. Net revenues are accrued revenues less accrued 
    expenses, in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Practices. 
    Only generation function revenues and expenses, which is to say accrued 
    revenues and accrued expenses that are associated with the production, 
    acquisition, marketing, and conservation of electric power, are 
    included in determinations under the DDC; accrued revenues and expenses 
    of the transmission function are excluded. The determination of AANR 
    will be confirmed by BPA's independent outside auditing firm.
        DDC Threshold is the minimum level of AANR that must be realized 
    before a dividend distribution is considered. The DDC Threshold is $500 
    million for the end of fiscal years 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005.
        DDC Amount is the aggregate amount that is available to be 
    distributed to customers and stakeholders. The DDC Amount may be equal 
    to zero and will be determined by the following formula:
    
    DDC Amount is the lower of:
    AANR-DDC Threshold; or
    Cash in excess of that needed to meet the Treasury Payment Probability
    (TPP) Standard, based on the Five-Year Forecast
    
        Where the TPP Standard is an 88 percent probability that all 
    planned payments to the U.S. Treasury will be paid on time and in full 
    over the Five-Year Forecast period (or equivalent financial criterion 
    in the event that BPA replaces its TPP Standard); and
        Where the Five-Year Forecast is the forecast of accrued revenues 
    and expenses, and the risk analysis and assessment of TPP or any 
    replacement financial criterion, for the current year and subsequent 
    four years that the Administrator prepares and subjects to public 
    review and comment if the DDC Threshold has been met.
        The portion of the DDC Amount allocated to power customers (the 
    Power Customers DDC Amount) will be determined according to a plan to 
    be adopted in a public process BPA will conduct (see Section 3 below). 
    The Power Customer DDC Amount will be converted to a percentage (the 
    Power Customer DDC Percentage), which will be applied to all power 
    customer rates subject to the DDC to arrive at the amount to be rebated 
    on power bills for each of the included power customers.
        The Power Customer DDC Percentage will be determined by the 
    following formula:
    
    Power Customer DDC Percentage equals: Power Customer DDC Amount, 
    Divided by the DDC Revenue Basis
    
        Where DDC Revenue Basis is the total generation revenue for the 
    loads subject to the DDC for the fiscal year in which the DDC 
    implementation begins, based on the then most current revenue forecast.
        Each covered power customer will receive a rebate equal to the 
    Power Customer DDC Percentage applied to their total charge for energy, 
    demand and load variance. For any customer or stakeholder entitled to a 
    dividend who is not a power customer, the Administrator will convert 
    the DDC Percentage to a dollar figure.
    2. Determination and Timing of a Dividend Distribution
        On or about January 15 of each year of the rate period (FY 2002-
    2006), the Administrator will determine whether the AANR exceeds the 
    DDC Threshold. If the AANR exceeds the DDC Threshold: (1) Customers and 
    rate case parties will be so notified; and (2) the Administrator will 
    prepare a Five-Year Forecast. On or about March 1, the Administrator 
    will propose to distribute or not distribute dividends. The 
    Administrator will issue a final decision on the proposal on or about 
    April 15.
        Dividends distributed to customers are included in energy 
    deliveries beginning May 1, and, for any fiscal year 2002-2005, remain 
    in affect for 12 months; i.e., through April 30 of the following year. 
    In the last year of the rate period (FY 2006), the rebate would expire 
    on September 30, 2006.
    3. Determining How the Distribution is Allocated
        The first $15 million of the DDC Amount, if the DDC Amount exceeds 
    $15 million, or the entire DDC Amount if it equals $15 million or less, 
    will be allocated to qualifying customers participating in the 
    Conservation and Renewables Discount Program (C&R
    
    [[Page 44345]]
    
    Discount). The C&R Discount is a rate mechanism designed to encourage 
    incremental conservation and renewable resource development by BPA's 
    power purchasers under PF, IP, RL, and NR rate schedules. See 
    Conservation and Renewables Discount GRSP, Section II.A.
        BPA intends to conduct a separate public consultation process by 
    October 1, 2001, to develop the criteria for allocating any remaining 
    DDC Amount (exceeding the $15 million for the C&R Discount) among 
    customers and stakeholders.
    4. Dividend Distribution Notification Process
        BPA shall follow the following notification procedures:
    a. Financial Performance Status Reports
        By no later than August 31 of each year, BPA shall post on its 
    electronic information access site (World Wide Web) a forecast of AANR 
    attributable to the generation function for the fiscal year ending 
    September 30. By December 1 of each year, BPA shall post on its World 
    Wide Web site the unaudited AANR.
    b. Notice of DDC Trigger
        On or about January 15 in each of the fiscal years 2002-2006, BPA 
    will notify all power customers and rate case parties if the AANR 
    exceeds the DDC Threshold. (If the December unaudited AANR report for 
    the generation function indicated that the DDC Threshold might be 
    exceeded, and the audited actuals show that it was not exceeded, 
    customers will also be notified). Notification will include the AANR 
    for the prior fiscal year, the DDC Amount, the calculation of the DDC 
    Amount, and the estimated resulting Power Customer DDC Percentage for 
    each applicable rate schedule. The notice shall also describe the data 
    and assumptions relied upon by BPA. Such data, assumptions, and 
    documentation, if non-proprietary and/or non-privileged, shall be made 
    available for review at BPA upon request. The notice shall also contain 
    the tentative schedule for the remainder of the DDC implementation 
    process.
        (1) On or about March 1 of any of the fiscal years 2002-2006 in 
    which the AANR exceeds the DDC Threshold, the Administrator will post 
    the Five-Year Forecast on BPA's World Wide Web site and will propose to 
    distribute or not distribute dividends. During March, BPA will conduct 
    a public review and comment process on the proposal.
        (2) On or about April 15 of any of the fiscal years 2002-2006 in 
    which the AANR exceeds the DDC Threshold, BPA shall notify customers to 
    which the DDC applies of the decision on the proposal, the final 
    calculation of the DDC Amount, the allocation of the DDC Amount, and, 
    if applicable, the resulting level of the Power Customer DDC Percentage 
    to be applied to each applicable firm power rate schedule.
    I. Excess Factoring Charges
    1. Excess Within-Day Factoring Charge
        The within-day factoring test compares the hour-by-hour shape of 
    the customer's load to the customer's hour-by-hour energy take from BPA 
    within a day. This test identifies whether or not the hour-by-hour 
    shape of the customer's take from BPA has used more within-day 
    factoring service, measured in kilowatthours, than the underlying load 
    would have used.
        Excess Within-Day Factoring Charge, for any hour(s) in the month, 
    applies to that amount of hourly energy in excess of the authorized 
    maximum energy amounts defined by the customer's within-day load shape.
        The total amount of Excess Within-Day Factoring Charge during the 
    HLH's of the month shall be billed the greater of:
        a. Five (5) mills/kWh;
        b. Among all HLH periods of the billing month, the maximum within-
    day difference between the highest hourly HLH California ISO 
    Supplemental Energy price (NP15) and the lowest hourly HLH California 
    ISO Supplemental Energy price (NP15).
        The total amount of Excess Within-Day Factoring Charge during the 
    LLH's of the month shall be billed the greater of:
        a. Five (5) mills/kWh;
        b. Among all LLH periods of the billing month, the maximum within-
    day difference between the highest hourly LLH California ISO 
    Supplemental Energy price (NP15) and the lowest hourly LLH California 
    ISO Supplemental Energy price (NP15).
        In the event that the index for ISO Supplemental Energy expires, 
    that index will be replaced for the purpose of deriving Excess Within-
    Day Factoring Charges by another hourly energy index, such as the 
    California PX (NW1 or NW 3), at a hub at which Northwest parties can 
    trade.
    2. Excess Within-Month Factoring Charges
        The within-month factoring test compares the day-by-day shape of 
    the customer's load to the customer's day-to-day energy take from BPA 
    within a month. This test identifies whether the day-to-day shape of 
    the customer's take from BPA used more within-month factoring service 
    than the underlying load would have used. The within-day factoring test 
    (see above) is not equipped to identify a factoring service issue if, 
    for example, the customer resource deliveries were zero for a 
    particular day. The within-month factoring test is equipped to address 
    that type of instance. The within-month factoring test establishes an 
    upper and lower boundary for each diurnal period of the day. Excess 
    within-month factoring for each diurnal period is the greater of: (1) 
    the sum of the amounts greater than the upper boundary; or (2) the sum 
    of the amounts less than the lower boundary.
        Excess Within-Month Factoring Charge applies to that amount of 
    energy take that either exceeds or falls short of a range defined by: 
    (1) a flat load placement on BPA; and (2) a load placement that follows 
    the customer's actual load shape.
        The Excess Within-Month Factoring quantities are reduced by any 
    Unauthorized Increase Energy amounts in the like diurnal period, and 
    only the residual is charged the Excess Within-Month Factoring Charge.
        The Excess Within-Month Factoring during the HLH's of the month 
    shall be billed the greater of:
        a. Five (5) mills/kWh.
        b. The highest peak DJ Mid-C Index price for firm power during the 
    month LESS the lowest peak DJ Mid-C Firm Index price for firm power 
    during the month.
        c. The highest average HLH California ISO Supplemental Energy price 
    (NP15) (average of hours 7 through 22, excluding Sundays) during the 
    month LESS the lowest average HLH California ISO Supplemental Energy 
    price (NP15) for the same period.
        The Excess Within-Month Factoring during the LLH's of the month 
    shall be billed the greater of:
        a. Five (5) mills/kWh.
        b. The highest offpeak DJ Mid-C Index price for firm power during 
    the month LESS the lowest offpeak DJ Mid-C Index price for firm power;
        c. The highest average LLH California ISO Supplemental Energy price 
    (NP15) (average of hours 1 through 6, and 23, and 24 Monday through 
    Saturday; average of hours 1 through 24 Sunday) during the month LESS 
    the lowest average LLH California ISO Supplemental Energy price (NP15) 
    for the same month in the same time period.
        In the event that the index for ISO Supplemental Energy or DJ Mid-C 
    Index expires, that index will be replaced for the purpose of deriving 
    Excess Within-
    
    [[Page 44346]]
    
    Month Factoring Charges by another hourly or diurnal energy index, such 
    as the California PX (NW1 or NW3), at a hub at which Northwest parties 
    can trade.
    J. Flexible IP Rate Option
        The Flexible IP rate option will be offered at BPA's discretion to 
    purchasers who make a contractual commitment to purchase under this 
    option for all five years of the rate period. The charges and billing 
    factors under this option will be specified by BPA at the time the 
    Administrator offers to make power available to a Purchaser under this 
    option. The actual charges and billing factors will be mutually agreed 
    to by BPA and the Purchaser subject to satisfying the following 
    condition:
        Equivalent Net Present Value Revenues: Forecasted revenues from a 
    Purchaser under the Flexible IP rate option must be equivalent, on a 
    net present value basis, to the revenues BPA would have received had 
    the appropriate charges specified in the IP rate schedule Section II 
    been applied to the same sales.
        The Flexible IP rate contract may establish a limit on the amount 
    of power purchased at the Flexible IP rate. In this case, purchases 
    beyond the contractual limit will be billed at the Demand and Energy 
    charges specified in the IP rate schedule Section II unless such power 
    would be charged as an Unauthorized Increase.
        Risk Adjustments: Credit risk associated with individual customers 
    will be a factor in establishing any flexible rate option. 
    Creditworthiness will be determined by BPA consistent with prevailing 
    business standards, and applied consistently to each customer. Such 
    credit risks will be dealt with through a ``margin deposit,'' expense 
    charge, built into the rates, or other methods acceptable to BPA.
    K. Flexible NR Rate Option
        The Flexible NR rate option will be offered at BPA's discretion to 
    purchasers who make a contractual commitment to purchase under this 
    option. The charges and billing factors under this option shall be 
    specified by BPA at the time the Administrator offers to make power 
    available to a Purchaser under this option. The customers purchasing 
    under the Flexible NR rate option purchase the same set of power 
    products and services that they would otherwise purchase under the rate 
    schedule. The actual charges and billing factors will be mutually 
    agreed to by BPA and the Purchaser subject to satisfying the following 
    condition:
        Equivalent Net Present Value Revenues: Forecasted revenues from a 
    Purchaser under the Flexible NR rate option must be equivalent, on a 
    net present value basis, to the revenues BPA would have received had 
    the appropriate charges specified in the NR rate schedule Section II 
    been applied to the same sales.
        The Flexible NR rate contract may establish a limit on the amount 
    of power purchased at the Flexible NR rate. In this case, purchases 
    beyond the contractual limit will be billed at the Demand and Energy 
    (and Load Variance and SUMY, if appropriate) charges specified in the 
    PF rate schedule Section II, unless such power would be charged as an 
    Unauthorized Increase.
        The Flexible NR rate option is only available for development of an 
    energy rate that is stepped up in FY 2005 and 2006.
    L. Flexible PF Rate Option
        The Flexible PF rate option will be offered at BPA's discretion to 
    purchasers who make a contractual commitment to purchase under this 
    option. The charges and billing factors under this option shall be 
    specified by BPA at the time the Administrator offers to make power 
    available to a Purchaser under this option. The customers purchasing 
    under the Flexible PF rate option purchase the same set of power 
    products and services that they would otherwise purchase under the rate 
    schedule. The actual charges and billing factors will be mutually 
    agreed to by BPA and the Purchaser subject to satisfying the following 
    condition:
        Equivalent Net Present Value Revenues: Forecasted revenues from a 
    Purchaser under the Flexible PF rate option must be equivalent, on a 
    net present value basis, to the revenues BPA would have received had 
    the appropriate charges specified in the PF rate schedule Section II 
    been applied to the same sales.
        The Flexible PF rate contract may establish a limit on the amount 
    of power purchased at the Flexible PF rate. In this case, purchases 
    beyond the contractual limit will be billed at the Demand and Energy 
    (and Load Variance, and SUMY if appropriate) charges specified in the 
    PF rate schedule Section II, unless such power would be charged as an 
    Unauthorized Increase.
        The Flexible PF rate option is only available for development of an 
    energy rate that is stepped up in FY 2005 and 2006.
    M. Green Energy Premium
    1. Overview of the Premium
        The Green Energy Premium (GEP) is a premium ranging from zero to 
    $40/megawatthour (MWh) that a customer elects to pay BPA to ensure that 
    BPA is producing some system power from Environmentally Preferred Power 
    (EPP) resources. The GEP is the difference between the customer's 
    applicable average annual energy charge under the PF-02, RL-02, NR-02, 
    and IP-02 rates and the total cost of the EPP resource selected by the 
    customer. The GEP is applied to the number of EPP MWhs that the 
    customer has elected to purchase. BPA guarantees the customer paying 
    the premium that BPA will produce an amount of EPP equal to the amount 
    of energy subject to this adjustment. The GEP will be charged in a line 
    item on the monthly power bill of each participating.
        The costs to be considered in determining the applicable GEP 
    include, but are not limited to:
         Costs of existing EPP resources, over and above the cost 
    of BPA system resources.
         Costs of new EPP resources, over and above the cost of BPA 
    system resources.
         Costs of BPA system resources.
         Endorsement fees for specific EPP resources.
         Market purchases of EPP resources.
         Transmission and other services required to integrate EPP 
    resources into the BPA system.
    2. Calculation and Application of the Premium
    a. Determination of the Premium
        For a customer buying power from BPA under a requirements firm 
    power sales contract, the amount of EPP and the premium will be 
    determined as part of the product selection process and will be 
    completed as part of the power sales contract negotiation during the 
    Subscription window. The charge will not exceed $40 per MWh and may be 
    as low as zero. The premium will be zero if the unit cost of the GEP 
    resource(s) dedicated to the customer is equal to, or less than, the 
    energy charge of the applicable rate. The premium will be equal to the 
    average unit cost of the GEP resource(s) minus the applicable average 
    PF-02, RL-02, NR-02, and IP-02 energy charge.
    b. Determination of Individual Customer GEP
        (1) During the Subscription window, customers will be provided 
    notice of the availability of specific GEP products and associated 
    premiums. The total GEP
    
    [[Page 44347]]
    
    for the customer will be based on the customer's elections of product 
    amounts and content.
        (2) The average annual energy charge will be calculated as the 
    average per kilowatthour (kWh) charge for an annual flat undelivered 
    product using the energy charges applicable to the customer. Where 
    customers are purchasing under more than one rate schedule, the average 
    energy charge will be calculated using expected loads and applicable 
    rate schedules.
        (3) The individual customer GEP for billing will be the total cost 
    of the product selected by the customer minus the average annual energy 
    charge.
    c. Application of the GEP
        The GEP will be applied after BPA has determined all other charges 
    and credits except the Conservation and Renewables Discount line item, 
    on the participating customer's power bill.
    d. Billing for the Premium
        The customer's bill will include a line item showing the kWh amount 
    of EPP purchased times the GEP for the products elected and the total 
    cost. The calculation will appear as:
    
    (EPP amount) kWh * GEP mills/kWh = $XXXXX
    N. Guaranteed Delivery Charge (NF only)
        A surcharge of 2.00 mills/kWh of Billing Energy is applied whenever 
    BPA guarantees delivery of nonfirm energy to a Purchaser under the NF 
    Standard rate or Market Expansion rate.
    O. Industrial Firm Power Targeted Adjustment Charge (IPTAC)
    1. Availability
        The Industrial Firm Power Targeted Adjustment Charge (IPTAC) 
    pertains to the IP rate schedule. The IPTAC will be applied to Firm 
    Power requirements service of DSIs who take service from a combination 
    of Federal inventory and power purchased from the market during the 
    2002 rate period.
        The maximum total requirements service the IPTAC will be developed 
    for, and applied to, is 1,440 aMW (flat, annual block). The total 
    inventory used to provide this requirement service will be composed of 
    990 aMW from Federal inventory and 450 aMW of market purchases.
        There will be two rates for the IPTAC product. 1210 aMW will be 
    sold at $23.50 per MWh, and 230 aMW sold at $25 per MWh.
    P. Low Density Discount
    1. Application and Definitions
        For eligible Purchasers as defined in section 2 below, a discount 
    shall be applied each billing month to BPA's charges for the following 
    components of Priority Firm Power, New Resources Firm Power and 
    Residential Load Firm Power service: (1) Demand; (2) HLH purchases; (3) 
    LLH purchases; and (4) Load Variance. The Low Density Discount (LDD) 
    shall not be applied to Unauthorized Increase Charges, Excess Factoring 
    Charges, transmission charges or any other charges. The discount shall 
    be revised annually based on data supplied by June 30 of each Calendar 
    Year (CY) for the previous CY and shall become effective on the 
    upcoming October 1.
    a. The Kilowatthour/Investment Ratio
        The kWh/Investment (K/I) ratio is calculated annually based on the 
    data supplied by June 30 for the previous CY. The K/I ratio is 
    calculated by dividing the Purchaser's Total Retail Load during the CY 
    by the value of the Purchaser's depreciated electric plant (excluding 
    generation plant) at the end of the CY.
    b. The Consumers/Mile of Line Ratio
        The Consumers/Mile of Line (C/M) ratio is determined annually using 
    the data supplied by June 30 for the previous CY. The C/M ratio is 
    calculated by dividing the maximum number of consumers on the 
    distribution system, in any one month during the CY, by the end of CY 
    number of pole miles of distribution.
        Consumer means every billed consumer regardless of usage. 
    Separately billed services for water heating and security lights are 
    not counted as an additional billed consumer.
        The number of pole miles of distribution line means the end of CY 
    pole miles. Distribution lines are defined as lines that deliver 
    electric energy from a substation or metering point, at a voltage of 
    34.5 kilovolt or less, to the point of attachment to the consumer's 
    wiring and include primary, secondary, and service facilities. (Service 
    drops are considered service facilities.)
        These calculations shall be based on CY data provided from the 
    Purchaser's annual financial and operating reports. The Purchaser shall 
    certify that the data submitted is correct and that no loads gained as 
    provided in section 6, Retail Access Exclusion, are receiving LDD 
    benefits.
        In calculating these ratios, BPA shall compile the data submitted 
    by the Purchaser based on the Purchaser's entire electric utility 
    system in the Pacific Northwest (PNW). For Purchasers with service 
    territories that include any areas outside the PNW, BPA shall compile 
    data submitted by the Purchaser separately on the Purchaser's system in 
    the PNW and on the Purchaser's entire electric utility inside and 
    outside the PNW. BPA will apply the eligibility criteria and discount 
    percentages to the Purchaser's system within the PNW and, where 
    applicable, also to its entire system inside and outside the PNW. The 
    Purchaser's eligibility for the LDD will be determined by the lesser 
    amount of discount applicable to its PNW system or to its combined 
    system inside and outside the PNW. BPA, in its sole discretion, may 
    waive the requirement to submit separate data for the Purchaser with a 
    small amount of its system outside the PNW. Results of the calculations 
    shall not be rounded.
        A Purchaser who has not provided BPA with the requisite pieces of 
    data needed to calculate the K/I and C/M ratios by June 30 of each 
    year, for the prior CY, shall be declared ineligible for the LDD, 
    effective the upcoming October 1.
        If a Purchaser's data was submitted on time and a revision is 
    necessary to the data, the revised data must be resubmitted no later 
    than 12 months after the original submission date to be considered for 
    an adjustment.
    2. Eligibility Criteria
        To qualify for a discount, the Purchaser must meet all five of the 
    following eligibility criteria:
        a. The Purchaser must serve as an electric utility offering power 
    for resale;
        b. The Purchaser must agree to pass the benefits of the discount 
    through to the Purchaser's eligible consumers within the region served 
    by BPA;
        c. The Purchaser's average retail rate for the reporting year must 
    exceed the Purchaser's average cost of BPA power purchases under the 
    applicable rate for the qualifying period by at least 10 percent. For 
    CY 2001, the Purchaser's average cost of BPA power purchases under the 
    applicable rate shall be under the applicable 1996 rate for the first 
    nine months and under the applicable 2002 rate for the last three 
    months. For CY 2002 and beyond, the Purchaser's average cost of BPA 
    power purchases under the applicable rate shall be under the applicable 
    rate for all 12 months;
        d. The Purchaser's K/I ratio must be less than 100; and
        e. The Purchaser's C/M ratio must be less than 12.
    
    [[Page 44348]]
    
    3. Discounts
        The Purchaser shall be awarded the following discount beginning 
    October 1, 2001, in accordance with section 4 below. The discount will 
    be the sum of the two potential discounts for which the Purchaser 
    qualifies, based on the following Table C. The discount shall not 
    exceed 7 percent.
    
                     Table C.--LDD Percentage Discount Table
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                       Applicable range    Applicable range
           Percentage discount        for KWh/investment  for consumers/mile
                                          (K/I) ratio         (C/M) ratio
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    0.0.............................  35.0  X  12.0  X
    0.5.............................  31.5  X  10.8  X
                                         < 35.0="">< 12.0="" 1.0.............................="" 28.0=""> X  9.6  X
                                         < 31.5="">< 10.83="" 1.5.............................="" 24.5=""> X  8.4  X
                                         < 28.0="">< 9.6="" 2.0.............................="" 21.0=""> X  7.2  X
                                         < 24.5="">< 8.4="" 2.5.............................="" 17.5=""> X  6.0  X
                                         < 21.0="">< 7.2="" 3.0.............................="" 14.0=""> X  4.8  X
                                         < 17.5="">< 6.0="" 3.5.............................="" 10.5=""> X  3.6  X
                                         < 14.0="">< 4.8="" 4.0.............................="" 7.0=""> X   2.4  X
                                         < 10.5="">< 3.6="" 4.5.............................="" 3.5=""> X   1.2  X
                                          < 7.0="">< 2.4="" 5.0.............................="" x=""> 3.5   X < 1.2="" ------------------------------------------------------------------------="" 4.="" ldd="" phase-out="" adjustment="" if="" the="" purchaser="" satisfies="" the="" eligibility="" criteria="" (2.="" a.="" through="" e.),="" and="" the="" calculated="" discount="" differs="" from="" the="" existing="" discount="" by="" more="" than="" one-half="" of="" 1="" percent,="" the="" applicable="" discount="" will="" be:="" a.="" the="" existing="" discount="" plus="" \1/2\="" percent="" if="" the="" calculated="" discount="" exceeds="" the="" existing="" discount;="" or="" b.="" the="" existing="" discount="" minus="" \1/2\="" percent="" if="" the="" calculated="" discount="" is="" less="" than="" the="" existing="" discount.="" the="" foregoing="" formula="" will="" be="" applied="" each="" october="" 1="" until="" the="" then-current="" calculated="" discount="" is="" fully="" phased="" out.="" the="" purchaser="" is="" not="" eligible="" to="" receive="" any="" discount,="" effective="" each="" october,="" if="" the="" purchaser="" fails="" to="" meet="" the="" eligibility="" criteria="" in="" section="" 2.="" a.="" through="" e.="" 5.="" benefits="" legislation="" exclusion="" if="" the="" federal="" government="" or="" a="" state,="" or="" local="" government="" adopt(s)="" a="" law,="" regulation="" or="" other="" provision="" that="" establishes="" benefits="" for="" low="" density="" and/or="" rural="" electric="" systems="" that="" are="" similar="" to="" benefits="" provided="" by="" bpa's="" ldd,="" then="" the="" purchaser's="" service="" territory="" within="" that="" jurisdiction="" shall="" no="" longer="" be="" eligible="" to="" receive="" the="" ldd.="" the="" effective="" date="" for="" discontinuation="" of="" the="" ldd="" and="" the="" phase-out="" adjustment="" shall="" be="" the="" implementation="" date="" of="" the="" jurisdiction's="" benefits="" provision="" legislation.="" bpa="" will="" evaluate="" new="" provisions="" and="" determine,="" in="" bpa's="" judgment,="" whether="" they="" provide="" benefits="" similar="" to="" the="" ldd.="" if="" bpa="" concludes="" that="" the="" benefits="" are="" similar,="" bpa="" will="" conduct="" a="" public="" comment="" process="" before="" issuing="" a="" final="" decision.="" 6.="" retail="" access="" exclusion="" load="" that="" is="" gained="" by="" a="" purchaser="" as="" a="" direct="" result="" of="" retail="" access="" rights="" established="" by="" federal,="" state,="" or="" local="" legislation,="" and="" that="" would="" not="" otherwise="" have="" been="" gained="" absent="" such="" legislation,="" is="" not="" eligible="" to="" receive="" the="" benefits="" provided="" by="" the="" ldd.="" the="" purchaser="" shall="" not="" pass="" the="" benefits="" of="" the="" ldd="" to="" its="" gained="" load="" consumers.="" q.="" rate="" melding="" bpa's="" rate="" proposal="" allows="" the="" customers="" more="" than="" one="" rate="" choice.="" separately="" tracking="" and="" administering="" the="" customer's="" rate="" choices="" and="" maintaining="" the="" distinction="" would="" increase="" bpa's="" overall="" cost="" of="" providing="" rate="" choices.="" for="" administrative="" simplicity="" upon="" mutual="" agreement="" between="" bpa="" and="" the="" customer,="" bpa="" may="" offer="" to="" meld="" the="" customer's="" rate="" choices="" into="" a="" single="" composite="" set="" of="" rates="" that="" reflects="" the="" specific="" choices="" made="" by="" the="" customer.="" bpa="" will="" ensure="" that="" this="" melded="" set="" of="" rates="" will="" result="" in="" a="" bill="" that="" is="" nearly="" mathematically="" equivalent="" to="" applying="" the="" customer's="" individual="" choices="" throughout="" the="" rate="" period.="" bpa="" will="" provide="" the="" affected="" customer="" the="" calculations="" it="" used="" to="" establish="" the="" melded="" rates="" and="" provide="" 30="" days="" for="" the="" customer="" to="" review="" and="" accept="" the="" melding="" calculation="" before="" it="" implements="" the="" melded="" rates.="" melded="" rates="" established="" by="" bpa="" will="" continue="" until="" one="" of="" the="" customer's="" rate="" choices="" expires,="" or="" a="" rate="" adjustment="" occurs="" that="" is="" provided="" for="" under="" the="" chosen="" rate="" schedules="" (e.g.,="" cost="" recovery="" adjustment="" clause),="" or="" a="" significant="" change="" in="" the="" loads="" applicable="" to="" the="" rates="" occurs.="" r.="" slice="" true-up="" adjustment="" by="" march="" 31="" of="" each="" year,="" bpa="" will="" calculate="" the="" final="" true-up="" for="" the="" previous="" fiscal="" year="" based="" on="" the="" difference="" between="" the="" slice="" revenue="" requirement's="" audited="" actual="" expenses="" (and="" credits)="" and="" those="" expenses="" (and="" credits)="" forecasted="" in="" the="" 2002="" rate="" case="" (except="" for="" the="" inventory="" solution="" which="" is="" billed="" based="" on="" the="" estimate="" from="" the="" 2002="" rate="" case).="" this="" true-up="" will="" be="" the="" true-up="" adjustment="" charge="" and="" will="" be="" applied="" to="" the="" customer's="" may="" bill.="" in="" addition,="" an="" interim="" true-up="" adjustment="" procedure="" to="" allow="" for="" an="" intermediate="" true-up="" prior="" to="" march="" 31,="" will="" be="" developed="" in="" the="" power="" sales="" contracts="" with="" the="" customers.="" s.="" stepped="" up="" multiyear="" block="" (sumy)="" the="" sumy="" block="" charge="" applies="" to="" block="" purchases="" if="" the="" annual="" amounts="" increase="" (i.e.,="" step="" up)="" over="" multiple="" years="" of="" a="" purchase="" commitment="" term="" due="" to="" increases="" in="" customer="" net="" requirement="" which="" are="" not="" subject="" to="" a="" targeted="" adjustment="" charge="" (tac).="" the="" cost="" for="" the="" sumy="" block="" service="" is="" the="" difference="" between="" pf-02="" rates="" and="" the="" aurora="" on-and="" off-peak="" market="" price="" forecast="" in="" the="" final="" rate="" proposal.="" the="" starting="" basis="" for="" computing="" the="" sumy="" block="" quantities="" will="" be="" the="" purchaser's="" subscribed="" block="" amount="" for="" the="" period="" october="" 2001="" through="" september="" 2002.="" costs="" will="" be="" computed="" for="" 24="" monthly="" blocks="" (12="" hlh="" and="" 12="" llh)="" for="" each="" year="" of="" the="" rate="" period.="" each="" year's="" monthly="" amount="" above="" the="" base="" year's="" monthly="" amount="" is="" the="" stepped="" up="" quantity.="" total="" cost="" is="" the="" sum="" of="" each="" month's="" hlh="" and="" llh="" stepped="" up="" quantities="" times="" each="" month's="" hlh="" and="" llh="" costs.="" the="" sumy="" charge="" is="" the="" total="" cost="" of="" the="" sumy="" block="" service="" divided="" by="" the="" total="" block="" energy="" purchase="" including="" stepped="" up="" amounts.="" the="" charge="" is="" in="" addition="" to="" the="" pf="" and="" nr="" energy="" and="" demand="" rates="" that="" the="" customer="" will="" pay="" for="" these="" power="" purchases.="" billing="" code="" 6450-01-p="" [[page="" 44349]]="" [graphic]="" [tiff="" omitted]="" tn13au99.551="" [[page="" 44350]]="" [graphic]="" [tiff="" omitted]="" tn13au99.552="" [[page="" 44351]]="" [graphic]="" [tiff="" omitted]="" tn13au99.553="" [[page="" 44352]]="" [graphic]="" [tiff="" omitted]="" tn13au99.554="" billing="" code="" 6450-01-c="" [[page="" 44353]]="" formula="" for="" calculating="" a="" charge="" for="" sumy="" block="" service="" step="" 1:="" determine="" hlh="" mwh="" of="" sumy="" block.="" october="" 2002="" hlh="" block="" minus="" october="" 2001="" hlh="" block="HLH" mwh="" of="" sumy="" block="" for="" october="" 2002="" step="" 2:="" determine="" llh="" mwh="" of="" sumy="" block.="" october="" 2002="" llh="" block="" minus="" october="" 2001="" llh="" block="LLH" mwh="" of="" sumy="" block="" for="" october="" 2002="" step="" 3:="" determine="" cost="" of="" hlh="" sumy="" block="" service.="" hlh="" mwh="" of="" sumy="" block="" *="" (aurora="" october="" 2002="" on-peak="" market="" price="" minus="" october="" 2002="" pf="" hlh="" energy="" and="" demand="" rate)="Total" cost="" of="" october="" 2002="" hlh="" sumy="" block="" service.="" step="" 4:="" determine="" cost="" of="" llh="" sumy="" block="" service.="" llh="" mwh="" of="" sumy="" block="" *="" (aurora="" october="" 2002="" off-peak="" market="" price="" minus="" october="" 2002="" pf="" llh="" energy="" rate)="Total" cost="" of="" october="" 2002="" llh="" sumy="" block="" service.="" step="" 5:="" determine="" cost="" for="" all="" months="" of="" the="" rate="" period="" by="" repeating="" steps="" 1-4="" for="" each="" month="" of="" the="" remaining="" purchase="" period="" always="" calculating="" the="" mwh="" difference="" from="" the="" first="" year="" and="" corresponding="" month.="" calculate="" the="" price="" difference="" using="" that="" year's="" and="" month's="" market="" price="" and="" pf="" rate.="" step="" 6:="" custom="" charge:="" divide="" the="" net="" present="" value="" (npv)="" of="" the="" stream="" of="" costs="" derived="" from="" steps="" 1-5="" by="" the="" npv="" of="" the="" total="" block="" purchase="" including="" sumy="" block="" in="" mwh="" for="" the="" five-year="" period.="" the="" npv="" uses="" a="" 6.8="" percent="" discount="" rate="" and="" is="" present="" valued="" to="" october="" 2001.="" step="" 7:="" billing="" determinant:="" custom="" charge="" is="" applied="" to="" each="" mwh="" of="" block="" purchase="" including="" the="" sumy="" block="" amounts.="" t.="" supplemental="" contingency="" reserves="" adjustment="" (scra)="" the="" energy="" charges="" stated="" in="" the="" ip-02="" rate="" schedule="" will="" be="" adjusted="" to="" reflect="" the="" negotiated="" scra="" adjustment.="" pbl="" will="" negotiate="" with="" any="" dsi="" interested="" in="" providing="" supplemental="" contingency="" reserves="" (supplemental="" reserves).="" supplemental="" reserves="" refers="" to="" generating="" capacity,="" and="" associated="" energy,="" fully="" available="" within="" 10="" minutes="" notice="" of="" a="" system="" disturbance.="" pbl="" has="" established="" a="" flexible="" rate="" with="" a="" cap="" that="" will="" permit="" bpa="" to="" negotiate="" a="" price="" according="" to="" the="" quality="" of="" reserves="" provided.="" the="" maximum="" amount="" pbl="" may="" pay="" for="" supplemental="" reserves="" from="" a="" dsi="" is="" capped="" at="" $5.92/kw-mo.="" the="" suitability="" and="" quality="" of="" the="" supplemental="" reserves="" will="" be="" measured="" by="" whether="" they="" have="" certain="" characteristics,="" some="" of="" which="" are="" required="" and="" others="" optional.="" any="" supplemental="" reserves="" purchased="" by="" pbl="" must="" be="" consistent="" with="" nerc,="" wscc,="" and="" nwpp="" criteria:="" 1.="" the="" interruptible="" load="" must="" be="" offline="" within="" five="" minutes="" after="" a="" call="" by="" bpa;="" 2.="" in="" the="" event="" of="" a="" system="" disturbance,="" the="" interruptible="" load="" must="" be="" accessible="" prior="" to="" a="" request="" for="" reserves="" from="" other="" nwpp="" parties;="" 3.="" the="" interruptible="" load="" must="" be="" available="" to="" be="" offline="" for="" up="" to="" 60="" minutes.="" in="" addition="" to="" these="" required="" characteristics,="" the="" issues="" identified="" below="" will="" help="" define="" when="" pbl="" may="" pay="" the="" maximum="" value="" for="" supplemental="" reserves:="" 1.="" the="" extent="" to="" which="" pbl="" has="" the="" discretion="" when="" and="" how="" to="" use="" all="" operating="" reserves="" and="" to="" determine="" what="" resources="" to="" call="" on="" in="" the="" event="" of="" a="" system="" disturbance;="" 2.="" whether="" there="" are="" limitations="" on="" the="" number="" of="" times="" or="" total="" minutes="" the="" reserves="" may="" be="" utilized.="" u.="" targeted="" adjustment="" charge="" 1.="" availability="" the="" targeted="" adjustment="" charge="" (tac)="" pertains="" to="" the="" pf="" rate="" schedule,="" except="" for="" pf="" exchange="" program="" and="" pf="" exchange="" subscription="" rates.="" the="" tac="" applies="" to="" firm="" power="" requirements="" service="" to="" regional="" firm="" load="" that="" results="" in="" an="" unanticipated="" increase="" in="" bpa's="" projected="" loads="" within="" the="" rate="" period.="" the="" tac="" will="" be="" applied="" to="" the="" applicable="" rate="" for="" requirements="" service="" requested="" after="" the="" subscription="" window="" closes.="" tac="" will="" also="" apply="" to="" subsequent="" requests="" made="" by="" a="" customer="" under="" a="" subscription="" contract="" for="" requirements="" service="" for="" such="" customer's="" load(s)="" that="" had="" been="" previously="" served="" by="" that="" customer's="" 5(b)(1)(a)="" or="" 5(b)(1)(b)="" resources.="" if="" a="" public="" agency="" customer="" that="" requests="" requirements="" service="" from="" bpa="" is="" annexing="" or="" otherwise="" taking="" on="" the="" obligation="" of="" load="" from="" another="" public="" agency="" customer="" and="" the="" request="" to="" annex="" or="" take="" on="" load="" obligation="" and="" the="" reduction="" in="" obligation="" are="" equal="" amounts="" such="" that="" bpa's="" total="" load="" obligation="" does="" not="" increase,="" bpa="" may="" exempt="" the="" newly="" acquired="" load="" from="" the="" tac="" and="" apply="" pf-02.="" the="" tac="" will="" apply="" if="" the="" annexed="" requirements="" service="" has="" been="" previously="" served="" by="" that="" customer's="" 5(b)(1)(a)="" or="" 5(b)(1)(b)="" resources.="" where="" a="" public="" agency="" customer="" annexes="" residential="" and="" small="" farm="" load="" previously="" served="" by="" an="" iou="" and="" such="" load="" was="" receiving="" bpa="" power="" or="" financial="" benefits="" through="" subscription,="" the="" public="" agency="" customer="" will="" receive="" through="" assignment="" the="" right="" to="" the="" ious="" power="" and/or="" financial="" benefits="" applicable="" to="" the="" annexed="" load.="" bpa="" will="" deliver="" the="" same="" amount="" of="" firm="" power="" that="" was="" assigned="" by="" the="" iou="" to="" the="" annexing="" public="" agency="" customer="" at="" the="" pf-02="" rate.="" power="" provided="" by="" bpa="" to="" the="" public="" agency="" customer="" to="" meet="" the="" remaining="" annexed="" load="" not="" covered="" by="" the="" power="" assigned="" from="" the="" iou="" will="" be="" subject="" to="" the="" tac.="" the="" tac="" will="" apply="" for="" the="" duration="" of="" the="" customer's="" contract="" or="" until="" 2006,="" whichever="" occurs="" first.="" for="" five-year="" contracts="" that="" guarantee="" rates="" for="" a="" multitude="" of="" periods="" (for="" example,="" contracts="" that="" have="" both="" three-year="" and="" five-year="" components)="" the="" tac="" applies="" until="" the="" end="" of="" the="" five-year="" rate="" period.="" if="" a="" new="" public="" requests="" service,="" the="" tac,="" if="" any,="" must="" apply="" until="" 2006.="" if="" a="" pf="" preference="" customer="" is="" serving="" a="" portion="" of="" its="" load="" with="" a="" certifiable="" renewable="" resource="" eligible="" for="" the="" c&r="" discount,="" or="" contract="" purchases="" of="" certified="" renewable="" resource="" power="" eligible="" for="" the="" c&r="" discount="" for="" a="" period="" less="" than="" the="" term="" of="" the="" customer's="" bpa="" requirements="" firm="" power="" contract,="" then="" the="" customer="" may="" request,="" during="" the="" 2002="" to="" 2006="" rate="" period,="" requirements="" firm="" power="" service="" for="" such="" load="" at="" the="" end="" of="" the="" specified="" contract="" period="" at="" pf="" preference="" (pf-="" 02)="" without="" being="" subject="" to="" the="" tac.="" this="" limited="" exception="" applies="" to="" the="" first="" 200="" amw="" in="" any="" contract="" year,="" or="" to="" amounts="" that="" bpa="" specifies="" in="" accordance="" with="" its="" policy="" on="" the="" determination="" of="" net="" requirements.="" 2.="" energy="" charge="" the="" tac="" is="" a="" monthly="" mills/kwh="" adjustment="" to="" the="" hlh="" and="" llh="" energy="" rates="" specified="" in="" the="" 2002="" rate="" schedule,="" and="" is="" applied="" to="" that="" portion="" of="" the="" purchaser's="" load="" that="" is="" subject="" to="" the="" tac.="" the="" tac="" rate="" adjustment="" will="" be="" established="" based="" on="" the="" following="" formula:="" tac="[(Incr" $="" *="" incr="" amt)--(rate="" $="" *="" incr="" amt)]/tac="" amt="" where:="" tac="" amt="The" amount="" of="" load="" subject="" to="" the="" tac,="" determined="" monthly.="" rate="" $="The" monthly="" pf="" energy="" rate="" shown="" in="" the="" applicable="" rate="" schedule.="" inventory="" amt="Amount" of="" energy="" in="" inventory="" available="" to="" serve="" this="" load="" based="" on="" average="" annual="" federal="" system="" firm="" resource="" capability,="" [[page="" 44354]]="" estimated="" using="" critical="" water="" excluding="" balancing="" purchases="" and="" purchases="" for="" system="" augmentation,="" from="" the="" 2002="" rate="" case="" with="" updates="" if="" bpa="" determines="" that="" is="" necessary.="" incr="" $="Monthly" cost="" to="" bpa,="" including="" a="" handling="" fee,="" of="" incremental="" power="" purchases="" expressed="" in="" mills/kwh.="" these="" costs="" also="" may="" include,="" where="" applicable,="" wheeling,="" ancillary,="" and="" other="" charges="" bpa="" may="" incur="" in="" purchasing="" power="" from="" other="" entities="" such="" as,="" but="" not="" limited="" to,="" the="" california="" iso="" or="" the="" california="" px.="" incr="" amt="Amount" of="" incremental="" power="" required,="" determined="" monthly="" and="" defined="" as="" the="" tac="" amt="" minus="" the="" inventory="" amt.="" (if="" there="" is="" no="" available="" inventory="" amt,="" the="" incr="" amt="" will="" equal="" the="" tac="" amt).="" incr="" $="" is="" greater="" than="" rate="" $="" (if="" incr="" $="" is="" less="" than="" rate="" $,="" the="" tac="" is="" 0="" mills/kwh).="" tac="" is="" the="" monthly="" rate="" adjustment="" in="" mills/kwh.="" bpa="" will="" calculate="" the="" cost="" (incr="" $)="" per="" month="" in="" mills/kwh="" of="" the="" additional="" power="" per="" month="" (incr="" amt)="" for="" a="" specific="" customer="" request.="" bpa="" will="" establish="" the="" cost="" of="" the="" additional="" power="" by="" the="" following="" methods:=""> BPA will establish the price based on BPA's monthly cost 
    to purchase the incremental load by purchases of resources at market.
    V. Unauthorized Increase Charge
    1. Charge for Unauthorized Increase in Demand
        The amount of Measured Demand during a billing hour that exceeds 
    the amount of demand the purchaser is contractually entitled to take 
    during that hour shall be billed at the greater of:
        a. Three (3) times the applicable monthly demand charge;
        b. The sum of hourly California ISO Spinning Reserve Capacity 
    prices for all HLHs in the month, at path NW1 (COB); or
        c. The sum of hourly California ISO Spinning Reserve Capacity 
    prices for all HLHs in the month, at path NW3 (NOB).
        In the event that the hourly California ISO Spinning Reserve 
    Capacity market expires, the Unauthorized Increase Charge for demand 
    shall be the greater of:
        a. Three (3) times the applicable monthly demand charge;
        b. The sum of hourly or diurnal prices for all HLHs in the month, 
    at a hub at which Northwest parties can trade, established between 
    October 1, 2001, and September 30, 2006.
    2. Charge for Unauthorized Increase in Energy
        The amount of Measured Energy during a diurnal period of a billing 
    month, day, or hour that exceeds the amount of energy the purchaser is 
    contractually entitled to take during that period shall be billed the 
    greater of:
        a. One hundred (100) mills/kWh; or
        b. For the month in question, the greater of:
        (1) the highest diurnal DJ Mid-C Index price for firm power; or
        (2) the highest hourly ISO California Supplemental Energy price 
    (NP15).
        In the event that either the ISO California Supplemental Energy 
    price index or the DJ Mid-C Index expires, the index will be replaced 
    for purposes of the Unauthorized Increase Charge for energy by:
        (1) The highest price experienced for the month at the California 
    PX, NW1 (COB);
        (2) The highest price experienced for the month at the California 
    PX, NW3 (NOB); or
        (3) The highest price experienced for the month from any applicable 
    new hourly or diurnal energy index at a hub at which Northwest parties 
    can trade, established between October 1, 2001, and September 30, 2006.
    
    Section III. Definitions
    
    A. Power Products and Services Offered By the Power Business Line of 
    BPA
    1. Actual Partial Service Product--Simple/Complex
        The Actual Partial Service Products are core Subscription products 
    that are available to purchasers who have a right to purchase from BPA 
    for their requirements. These products are intended for customers who 
    have contractual or generating resources with firm capabilities and 
    therefore require a product other than Full Service. The Simple and 
    Complex versions of this product category differ in that the Complex 
    version is subject to the Factoring Benchmark tests in the billing 
    process and to potential Excess Factoring Charges. The Simple version 
    encompasses several possible approaches to customer resource 
    declaration, all of which obviate the need for the Factoring Benchmark 
    tests.
    2. Block Product
        The Block Product is a core Subscription product that is available 
    to purchasers who have a right to purchase from BPA for their 
    requirements. This product is available in HLH and LLH quantities per 
    month, with the hourly amount flat for all hours in such periods.
    3. Block Product with Factoring
        The Block Product with Factoring is a combination of the Block 
    Product with the core Subscription staple-on product for Factoring 
    Service. Factoring provides the service of distributing Block energy to 
    follow Purchaser hourly load needs to the extent of such Block energy.
    4. Block Product With Shaping Capacity
        The Block Product with Shaping Capacity is a combination of the 
    Block HLH energy product and the core Subscription staple-on product 
    for Shaping capacity. Shaping capacity allows the customer to 
    preschedule Block energy with some limited shape among HLHs within a 
    contractually specified bandwidth.
    5. Construction, Test and Start-Up, and Station Service
        Power for the purpose of Construction, Test and Start-Up, and 
    Station Service for a generating resource or transmission facility 
    shall be made available to eligible purchasers under the Priority Firm 
    Power (PF-02), New Resources Firm Power (NR-02), and Firm Power 
    Products and Services (FPS-96), rate schedules. Such power is not 
    available for the PF Exchange Program rate, the PF Exchange 
    Subscription rate, and the Residential Load rate.
        Construction, Test and Start-Up, and Station Service power must be 
    used in the manner specified below:
        a. Power sold for construction is to be used in the construction of 
    the project.
        b. Power sold for test and start-up may be used prior to commercial 
    operation, both to bring the project online and to ensure that the 
    project is working properly.
        c. Power sold for station service may be purchased at any time 
    following commercial operation of the project. Once the project has 
    been energized for commercial operation, the Purchaser may use station 
    service power for start-up, shutdown, normal operations, and operations 
    during a shutdown period.
        d. Power sold for Construction, Test and Start-Up, and Station 
    Service is not available for replacement of lost generation for forced 
    or planned outages or resource underperformance.
    6. Core Subscription Products
        BPA's Core Subscription Products are described in the BPA Product 
    Catalog. Core Subscription Products are available at the posted rates 
    for customers who have a right to purchase them.
        The core products are:
         Actual Partial Service Product--Simple/Complex
         Block Product
         Block Product with Factoring
         Block Product with Shaping Capacity
    
    [[Page 44355]]
    
         Full Service Product
    7. Customer System Peak (CSP)
        Customer System Peak (CSP) is the largest measured HLH Total Retail 
    Load (TRL) amount in kilowatts for the billing period.
    8. Full Service Product
        Full Service is a core Subscription product that is available to 
    purchasers who have a right to purchase from BPA for their 
    requirements. This product is available to customers who either have no 
    resources or whose resources meet the criteria for small, non-
    dispatchable resources.
    9. Industrial Firm Power
        Industrial Firm Power is electric power that BPA will make 
    continuously available to a direct-service industrial (DSI) purchaser 
    subject to the terms of the Purchaser's power sales contract with BPA. 
    Deliveries may be reduced or interrupted as permitted by the terms of 
    the Purchaser's power sales contract with BPA. Adjustments as provided 
    in the Purchaser's power sales contract shall be made for power 
    restricted to provide reserves.
    10. Load Variance
        For core Subscription products, Load Variance is defined as the 
    variability in monthly energy consumption within the BPA customer's 
    system. Through the Load Variance charge under the Full and Actual 
    Partial Service Products, the customer's billing factors will follow 
    actual consumption. Load Variance is not applicable to Block Product 
    purchases. For purposes of pricing and rate tests under Pre-
    Subscription contracts, the Load Variance charge is deemed to 
    correspond to the PF-96 Load Shaping charge.
    11. New Resource Firm Power
        New Resource Firm Power is electric power (capacity, energy, or 
    capacity and energy) that BPA will make continuously available:
        a. For any New Large Single Load (NLSL); and
        b. For Firm Power purchased by IOUs pursuant to power sales 
    contracts with BPA.
        New Resource Firm Power is to be used to meet the Purchaser's firm 
    power load within the PNW. Deliveries of New Resource Firm Power may be 
    reduced or interrupted as permitted by the terms of the Purchaser's 
    power sales contract with BPA.
        New Resource Firm Power is guaranteed to be continuously available 
    to the Purchaser during the period covered by its contractual 
    commitment, except for reasons of certain uncontrollable forces and 
    force majeure events. New Resource Firm Power is power where BPA agrees 
    to provide operating reserves in accordance with the standards 
    established by the NERC, WSCC, and the NWPP.
    12. Nonfirm Energy
        Nonfirm Energy is energy that is supplied or made available by BPA 
    to a Purchaser under an arrangement that does not have the guaranteed 
    continuous availability feature of Firm Power. Nonfirm energy is sold 
    primarily under the Nonfirm Energy rate schedule, NF-02. Nonfirm energy 
    also may be supplied under the NF-02 rate schedule to the Western 
    Systems Power Pool (WSPP) subject to terms and conditions agreed upon 
    by the members participating in the WSPP and in accordance with BPA 
    policy for such arrangements. Nonfirm Energy that has been purchased 
    under a guarantee provision in the Nonfirm Energy rate schedule shall 
    be provided to the Purchaser in accordance with the provisions of that 
    schedule and the power sales contract if applicable. BPA may make 
    Nonfirm Energy available to purchasers both inside and outside the 
    United States.
    13. Priority Firm Power
        Priority Firm Power is electric power (capacity, energy, or 
    capacity and energy) that BPA will make continuously available for 
    direct consumption or resale by public bodies, cooperatives, and 
    Federal agencies. Utilities participating in the Residential Exchange 
    under section 5(c) of the Northwest Power Act may purchase Priority 
    Firm Power pursuant to their Residential Exchange contracts with BPA. 
    Priority Firm Power is not available to serve NLSLs. Deliveries of 
    Priority Firm Power may be reduced or interrupted as permitted by the 
    terms of the Purchaser's power sales contract with BPA.
        Priority Firm Power is guaranteed to be continuously available to 
    the Purchaser during the period covered by its contractual commitment, 
    except for reasons of certain uncontrollable forces and force majeure 
    events. Priority Firm Power is power where BPA agrees to provide 
    operating reserves in accordance with the standards established by the 
    NERC, WSCC, and NWPP.
    14. Regulation and Frequency Response
        Regulation and frequency response is the generating capacity of a 
    power system that is immediately responsive to AGC control signals 
    without human intervention. Regulation and frequency response is 
    required to provide AGC response to load and generation fluctuations in 
    an effective manner and to maintain desired compliance with NERC AGC 
    Control Performance
    15. Residential Exchange Program Power
        Residential Exchange Program Power is power BPA sells to a 
    Purchaser pursuant to the Residential Exchange Program. Under section 
    5(c) of the Northwest Power Act, BPA ``purchases'' power from PNW 
    utilities at a utility's Average System Cost (ASC). BPA then offers, in 
    exchange, to ``sell'' an equivalent amount of electric power to that 
    customer at BPA's PF rate applicable to exchanging utilities. The 
    amount of power purchased and sold is equal to the utility's eligible 
    residential and small farm load. Benefits must be passed directly to 
    the utility's residential and small farm customers.
    16. Slice Product
        The Slice product is a power sale based upon an eligible customer's 
    annual net firm requirements load and is shaped to BPA's generation 
    from the Federal system resources over the year. Slice purchasers are 
    entitled to a fixed percentage of the energy generated by the FCRPS. 
    The Slice purchaser's percentage entitlements are set by contract. The 
    Slice product includes both service to net requirements firm load as 
    well as an advance sale of surplus power.
    B. Definition of Rate Schedule Terms
    1. 2002 Contract
        A 2002 contract is a contract for service in the FY 2002 through 
    2006 rate period that is signed after January 1, 1999.
    2. Annual Billing Cycle
        The Annual Billing Cycle is the 12 months beginning with the 
    customer's first monthly power bill for deliveries in the first billing 
    month starting on or after October 1.
    3. Billing Demand
        The Purchaser's Billing Demand is the amount of capacity to which 
    the demand charge specified in the rate schedule is applied. When the 
    rate schedule includes charges for several products, there may be a 
    Billing Demand quantity for each product. The calculation of Billing 
    Demand is described in the customer's contract.
    4. Billing Energy
        The Purchaser's Billing Energy is the amount of energy to which the 
    energy
    
    [[Page 44356]]
    
    charge specified in the rate schedule is applied. When the rate 
    schedule includes charges for several products, there may be a Billing 
    Energy quantity for each product. Billing Energy is divided into HLH 
    and LLH for this rate period.
    5. California Independent System Operator (California ISO)
        The FERC regulated control area operator of the ISO transmission 
    grid. Its responsibilities include providing non-discriminatory access 
    to the transmission grid, managing congestion, maintaining the 
    reliability and security of the grid, and providing billing and 
    settlement services. The ISO has no affiliation with any market 
    participant.
    6. California ISO Spinning Reserve Capacity
        The portion of unloaded synchronized generating capacity, 
    controlled by the California ISO, which is capable of being loaded in 
    10 minutes, and which is capable of running for at least two hours.
    7. California ISO Supplemental Energy
        Energy from generating units and other resources which have 
    uncommitted capacity following finalization of the hour-ahead schedules 
    and for which scheduling coordinators have submitted bids to the 
    California ISO at least 30 minutes before the commencement of the 
    settlement period.
    8. California Power Exchange (California PX)
        An independent agency responsible for conducting an auction for the 
    generators seeking to sell energy and for loads which are not otherwise 
    being served by bilateral contracts. The California PX is responsible 
    for scheduling generation in its scheduling (e.g., day-ahead) markets, 
    for determining hourly market clearing prices for its market, and for 
    settlement and billing for suppliers and Utility Distribution Company's 
    (UDC) using its market.
    9. Contract Demand
        The Contract Demand is the maximum number of kilowatts that the 
    Purchaser agrees to purchase and BPA agrees to make available, subject 
    to any limitations included in the applicable contract between BPA and 
    the Purchaser.
    10. Contract Energy
        Contract Energy is the maximum number of kilowatthours that the 
    Purchaser agrees to purchase and BPA agrees to make available, subject 
    to any limitations included in the applicable contract between BPA and 
    the Purchaser.
    11. Control Area
        A Control Area is the electrical (not necessarily geographical) 
    area within which a controlling utility operating under all NERC 
    standards has the responsibility to adjust its generation on an 
    instantaneous basis to match internal load and power flow across 
    interchange boundaries to other Control Areas.
    12. Decremental Cost
        Unless otherwise specified in a contractual arrangement, 
    Decremental Cost as applied to Nonfirm Energy transactions is defined 
    as:
        a. All identifiable costs (expressed in mills/kWh) associated with 
    the use of a displaceable thermal resource or end-use load with 
    alternate fuel source to serve a purchaser's load that the purchaser is 
    able to avoid by purchasing power from BPA, rather than generating the 
    power itself or using an alternate fuel source; or
        b. All identifiable costs (expressed in mills/kWh) to serve the 
    load of a displaceable purchase of energy that the purchaser is able to 
    avoid by choosing not to make the alternate energy purchase.
        All identifiable costs as used in the above definition may be 
    reduced to reflect costs of purchasing BPA energy such as transmission 
    costs, losses, or loopflow constraints that are agreed to by BPA and 
    the Purchaser.
    13. Delivering Party
        The entity supplying the capacity and/or energy to be transmitted 
    at Point(s) of Interconnection.
    14. Demand Entitlement
        For purchases made under contracts for core Subscription products, 
    Demand Entitlement is the largest HLH amount of power in kilowatts that 
    the purchaser is entitled to receive from BPA during the billing period 
    as specified in the contract.
    15. Discount Period
        The end of the rate period or the customer's contract term, 
    whichever comes first.
    16. Dow Jones Mid-C Indexes (DJ Mid-C Indexes)
        Peak and offpeak price indexes for sale of firm and nonfirm power 
    traded at the Mid-Columbia Bus.
    17. Electric Power
        Electric Power is electric peaking capacity (kilowatts) and/or 
    electric energy (kilowatthours).
    18. Energy Entitlement
        For purchases made under contracts for core Subscription products, 
    HLH and LLH Energy Entitlement is the sum in kilowatthours of amounts 
    for HLH and LLH energy respectively, that the purchaser is entitled to 
    receive from BPA as specified in the contract.
    19. Federal System
        The Federal System is the generating facilities of the FCRPS, 
    including the Federal generating facilities for which BPA is designated 
    as marketing agent; the Federal facilities under the jurisdiction of 
    BPA; and any other facilities:
        a. From which BPA receives all or a portion of the generating 
    capability (other than station service) for use in meeting BPA's loads 
    to the extent BPA has the right to receive such capability. ``BPA's 
    loads'' do not include any of the loads of any BPA customer that are 
    served by a non-Federal generating resource purchased or owned directly 
    by such customer which may be scheduled by BPA;
        b. Which BPA may use under contract or license; or
        c. To the extent of the rights acquired by BPA pursuant to the 1961 
    U.S.-Canada Treaty relating to the cooperative development of water 
    resources of the Columbia River Basin.
    20. Firm Power (PF-02, IP-02, NR-02, RL-02)
        Firm Power is electric power (capacity and energy) that BPA will 
    make continuously available under contracts executed pursuant to 
    Section 5 of the Northwest Power Act.
    21. Full Service Customer
        A Full Service customer is one who is purchasing power from BPA 
    through the Full Service Product.
    22. Generation System Peak
        The Generation System Peak is the hour of the largest HLH output of 
    the Federal System that occurs during the customer's billing period.
    23. Heavy Load Hours (HLH)
        Heavy Load Hours (HLH) are all those hours in the peak period hour 
    ending 7 a.m. to the hour ending 10 p.m., Monday through Saturday, 
    Pacific Prevailing Time (Pacific Standard Time or Pacific Daylight 
    Time, as applicable). There are no exceptions to this definition; that 
    is, it does not matter
    
    [[Page 44357]]
    
    whether the day is a normal working day or a holiday.
    24. Inventory Solution Costs
        Costs associated with BPA's potential actions to supplement the 
    capability of the Federal System Resources, as a result of BPA's 
    Subscription process. It is currently not known whether an Inventory 
    Solution will be necessary, or what form the Inventory Solution will 
    take.
    25. Light Load Hours (LLH)
        Light Load Hours (LLH) are all those hours in the offpeak period 
    hour ending 11 p.m. to the hour ending 6 a.m., Monday through Saturday 
    and all hours Sunday, Pacific Prevailing Time (Pacific Standard Time or 
    Pacific Daylight Time, as applicable).
    26. Measured Demand
        The Purchaser's Measured Demand is that portion of its Metered or 
    Scheduled Demand provided by BPA to the Purchaser. If more than one 
    class of power is delivered to any point of delivery, the portion of 
    the measured quantities assigned to any class of power shall be as 
    specified by contract. Any delivery of Federal power not assigned to 
    classes of power delivered under other agreements shall be included in 
    the Measured Demand for PF, NR, or IP power as applicable. The portion 
    of the total Measured Demand so assigned shall constitute the Measured 
    Demand for each such class of power. Any residual quantity, after 
    determination of the Purchaser's contractual entitlement at a 
    particular rate, is considered ``unauthorized.'' Unauthorized increases 
    are billed in accordance with the provisions of these GRSPs.
        In determining Measured Demand for any Purchaser who experiences an 
    outage as defined pursuant to the Purchaser's agreement with BPA, BPA 
    shall adjust any abnormal Integrated Demand due to, or resulting from:
        a. Emergencies or breakdowns on, or maintenance of, the Federal 
    System Facilities; and
        b. Emergencies on the Purchaser's facilities to the extent BPA 
    determines that such facilities have been adequately maintained and 
    prudently operated. BPA will follow its billing process in establishing 
    the Billing Demand should an outage cause an unusual Billing Demand 
    quantity. BPA will not give outage credits for demand.
    27. Measured Energy
        The Purchaser's Measured Energy is that portion of its Metered or 
    Scheduled Energy that is provided by BPA to the Purchaser during a 
    particular diurnal period (HLH or LLH) in a billing period. If more 
    than one class of power is delivered to any point of delivery, the 
    portion of the measured quantities assigned to any class of power shall 
    be as specified by contract. Any delivery of Federal power not assigned 
    to classes of power delivered under other agreements shall be included 
    in the Measured Energy for PF, NR, or IP power as applicable. The 
    portion of the total Measured Energy so assigned shall constitute the 
    Measured Energy for each such class of power. Any residual quantity, 
    after determination of the Purchaser's contractual entitlement at a 
    particular rate, is considered ``unauthorized.'' Unauthorized increases 
    are billed in accordance with the provisions of these GRSPs.
    28. Metered Demand
        The Metered Demand in kilowatts shall be the largest of the 60-
    minute clock-hour Integrated Demands at which electric energy is 
    delivered to a purchaser:
        a. At each point of delivery for which the Metered Demand is the 
    basis for determination of the Measured Demand;
        b. During each time period specified in the applicable rate 
    schedule; and
        c. During any billing period.
        Such largest Integrated Demand shall be determined from 
    measurements made in accordance with the provisions of the applicable 
    contract and these GRSPs. This amount shall be adjusted as provided 
    herein and in the applicable agreement between BPA and the Purchaser.
    29. Metered Energy
        The Metered Energy for a purchaser shall be the number of 
    kilowatthours that are recorded on the appropriate metering equipment, 
    adjusted as specified in the applicable agreement and delivered to a 
    Purchaser:
        a. At all points of delivery for which metered energy is the basis 
    for determination of the Measured Energy; and
        b. during any billing period.
    30. Mid-Columbia Bus (Mid-C Bus)
        The switchyards associated with five non-Federal hydroelectric 
    projects, including Rocky Reach, Priest Rapids, Wanapum, Douglas, and 
    McKenzie. The following Federal switchyards which are operated by BPA 
    and interconnected with the non-Federal switchyards are also included: 
    Valhalla, Columbia, Midway, Sickler, and Vantage.
    31. Monthly Federal System Peak Load
        Monthly Federal System Peak Load is the peak load on the Federal 
    System during a customer's billing month, determined by the largest 
    hourly integrated demand produced from system generating plants in 
    BPA's control area and scheduled imports for BPA's account from other 
    control areas.
    32. NP15
        The portion of the California ISO's control area north of 
    transmission path 15.
    33. NW1 (California-Oregon Border)
        California PX and California ISO designation for delivery at COB 
    (Captain Jack/Malin).
    34. NW3 (Nevada-Oregon Border)
        California PX and California ISO designation for delivery at NOB.
    35. Partial Service Customer
        A Partial Service customer is any customer that is not a Full 
    Service customer.
    36. Point of Delivery (POD)
        A Point of Delivery is the contractual interconnection point where 
    power is delivered to the customer. Typically, a point of delivery is 
    located at a substation site, but it could be located at the change of 
    ownership point on a transmission line.
    37. Point of Integration (POI)
        A Point of Integration is the contractual interconnection point 
    where power is received from the customer. Typically a point of 
    integration is located at a resource site, but it could be located at 
    some other interconnection point to receive system power from the 
    customer.
    38. Point of Interconnection (POI)
        A Point of Interconnection is a point where the facilities of two 
    entities are interconnected.
    39. Points of Metering (POM)
        The Points of Metering (POM) shall be those points specified in the 
    contract at which TRL and Metered Amounts are measured.
    40. Pre-Subscription Contract
        A contract for service in the FY 2002 through 2006 rate period that 
    was signed prior to January 1, 1999, is a Pre-Subscription Contract.
    41. Purchaser
        Pursuant to the terms of an agreement and applicable rate 
    schedule(s), a Purchaser contracts to pay BPA for providing a product 
    or service.
    
    [[Page 44358]]
    
    42. Receiving Party
        The entity receiving the capacity and/or energy transmitted by BPA 
    to a Point(s) of Delivery.
    43. Retail Access
        Retail Access is nondiscriminatory retail distribution access 
    mandated either by Federal or State law which grants retail electric 
    power consumers the right to choose their electricity supplier.
    44. Scheduled Demand
        For purposes of applying the rates herein to applicable purchases 
    by the Purchaser, the Scheduled Demand in kilowatts is the largest of 
    the hourly demands at which electric energy is scheduled by BPA for 
    delivery to a purchaser:
        a. To each system for which Scheduled Demand is the basis for 
    determination of the Measured Demand;
        b. During each time period specified in the applicable rate 
    schedule; and
        c. During any billing period.
        Scheduled Demand is deemed delivered for the purpose of determining 
    Billing Demand.
    45. Scheduled Energy
        For purposes of applying the rates herein to applicable purchases 
    by the Purchaser, Scheduled Energy in kilowatthours shall be the sum of 
    the hourly demands at which electric energy is scheduled by BPA for 
    delivery to a purchaser:
        a. For each system for which Scheduled Energy is the basis for 
    determination of the Measured Energy; and
        b. During any billing period.
        Scheduled Energy is deemed delivered for the purpose of determining 
    Billing Energy.
    46. Slice Administrative Costs
        All overhead costs incurred by BPA that are attributable to the 
    implementation of the Slice product.
    47. Slice Revenue Requirement
        The Slice Revenue Requirement is comprised of all the line items in 
    BPA's PBL revenue requirement as identified in all of the PBL's rate 
    cases that are effective during the term of the Slice Purchaser's 
    contract except for the following items: (1) transmission costs (other 
    than those associated with the fulfillment of System Obligations); (2) 
    power purchase costs (with the exception of those net costs incurred as 
    part of the ``Inventory Solution''); and (3) planned net revenues for 
    risk.
        See Table E for Slice Product Costing Table.
    48. Subscription
        Subscription refers to the Power Subscription Strategy issued by 
    BPA on December 21, 1998, which is BPA's policy power sales beginning 
    FY 2002.
    49. Subscription Contract
        See 2002 Contract.
    50. System Obligations
    
    BILLING CODE 6450-01-P
    
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    BILLING CODE 6450-01-C
    
    [[Page 44361]]
    
        System Obligations include, but are not limited to, the 
    transmission costs associated with the return of the Canadian 
    Entitlement, and transactions related to the Pacific Northwest 
    Coordination Agreement, Mid-Columbia Hourly Coordination, and the 
    Canadian Non-Treaty Storage Agreement.
    51. Total Plant Load
        Total Plant Load means a DSI customer's total electrical energy 
    load at facilities eligible for BPA service during any given time 
    period whether the customer has chosen to serve its load with BPA power 
    or non-Federal power.
    52. Total Retail Load (TRL)
        Total Retail Load is all electric power consumption including 
    distribution system losses, within a utility's distribution system as 
    measured at metering points, adjusted for unmetered loads or 
    generation. No distinction is made between load that is served with BPA 
    power and load that is served with power from other sources. For DSIs, 
    Total Retail Load is called Total Plant Load.
    53. Utility Distribution Company
        A company that owns and maintains the distribution facilities used 
    to serve end-use customers.
    
    BPA's New 1996 General Rate Schedule Provisions for Power Rates
    
    A. Targeted Adjustment Charge for Uncommitted Loads
    1. Availability
        The Targeted Adjustment Charge for Uncommitted Loads (TACUL) 
    pertains to the PF rate schedule. The TACUL applies after December 7, 
    2000, to purchases to serve customer loads that were uncommitted during 
    the 1996 rate case which are returned to BPA firm power requirements 
    service during a period prior to FY 2002. Customers subject to the 
    TACUL are those that reduced their purchases from BPA by adding firm 
    resources to serve load under: (1) 1981 power sales contracts that 
    expire on or before July 31, 2001, as may be amended; (2) Amendatory 
    Agreement No. 7 (AA7) to the 1981 power sales contracts, or new 
    ``1996'' power sales contracts where the customer provides BPA notice 
    after December 7, 1998, consistent with the terms of the customer's 
    power sales contract, for requirements service for the period prior to 
    FY 2002. This charge will be in effect through September 30, 2001.
        This rate schedule amends the PF-96 rate schedule, which went into 
    effect October 1, 1996.
    2. Energy Charge
        The TACUL is a monthly mills/kWh adjustment to the HLH and LLH 
    energy rates specified in the 1996 rate schedule, and is applied to 
    that portion of the customer's load that is subject to the TACUL. The 
    TACUL rate adjustment will be established based on the following 
    formula:
    
    TACUL = [(Incr $ * Incr Amt)-(Rate $ * Incr Amt)]/TACUL Amt
    
    Where:
    
    TACUL Amt = The amount of load subject to the TACUL, determined 
    monthly.
    Rate $ = The monthly PF energy rate shown in the applicable rate 
    schedule.
    Inventory Amt = Amount of energy available to serve this load based on 
    an annual energy Federal system firm resource capability as defined in 
    the Loads and Resources Study, and updated if BPA determines that is 
    necessary.
    Incr $ = Monthly cost to BPA, plus a handling fee, of incremental power 
    for HLH and LLH expressed in mills/kWh (see below). These costs also 
    may include where applicable, wheeling, ancillary, and other charges 
    BPA may incur in purchasing power from other entities such as, but not 
    limited to, the California ISO or the California PX.
    Incr Amt = Amount of incremental power required, determined monthly and 
    defined as the TACUL Amt minus the Inventory Amt. (If there is no 
    available Inventory Amt, the Incr Amt will equal the TACUL Amt).
    
        Incr $ is greater than Rate $ (If Incr $ is less than Rate $, the 
    TACUL is 0 mills/kWh).
        TACUL is the monthly rate adjustment in mills/kWh. BPA will 
    calculate the cost (Incr $) per month in mills/kWh of the additional 
    power per month (Incr Amt) for a specific Customer request. BPA will 
    establish the cost of the additional power by the following methods:
        a. BPA will establish the price based on BPA's monthly cost to 
    purchase the incremental load by purchases of resources at market, or 
    the monthly cost of BPA recallable power contracts, averaged, whichever 
    is less.
        b. A price plus handling fee calculated based on the following 
    index.
        BPA will calculate the price per month for HLH and LLH, based on an 
    index calculated according to the following:
    
    Price of HLH = \1/3\ HLH (DJ Mid C) + \1/3\ HLH (California PX) + \1/3\ 
    (NYMEX Mid C)
    Price of LLH = \1/2\ LLH (DJ Mid C) + \1/2\ LLH (PX)
    
    Where the California PX basis is adjusted to DJ Mid C
    
    Where:
    
    DJ Mid C = Dow Jones Firm On-peak (HLH) and Firm Off-peak (LLH) Mid-
    Columbia Electricity Price Index
    California PX = California Power Exchange Day-Ahead Zonal Prices 
    (Constrained)--the average of NW1 (Captain Jack/Malin--COB) and NW3 
    (NOB) for HLH and LLH
    NYMEX Mid C = the New York Mercantile Exchange Futures Electricity 
    Closing Price at Mid-C for the applicable month
    
    California PX prices will be adjusted for basis difference between COB/
    NOB and the Mid-C using the IS/PTP Rates contained in BPA's 1996 
    Transmission Rate Schedules.
    
        Issued in Portland, Oregon, on July 30, 1999.
    Jack Robertson,
    Deputy Administrator.
    [FR Doc. 99-20805 Filed 8-12-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6450-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
08/13/1999
Department:
Bonneville Power Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Proposed Wholesale Power Rates and Proposed Resolution of Certain Transmission-Related Issues.
Document Number:
99-20805
Dates:
Written comments by participants must be received by November 5, 1999, to be considered in the Record of Decision (ROD).
Pages:
44318-44361 (44 pages)
PDF File:
99-20805.pdf