95-25829. Energy Planning and Management Program  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 203 (Friday, October 20, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 54151-54180]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-25829]
    
    
    
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    Rules and Regulations
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    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 203 / Friday, October 20, 1995 / 
    Rules and Regulations
    
    [[Page 54151]]
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
    
    Western Area Power Administration
    
    10 CFR Part 905
    
    
    Energy Planning and Management Program
    
    AGENCY: Western Area Power Administration, DOE.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Western Area Power Administration is publishing this final 
    rule to adopt an Energy Planning and Management Program. The Program is 
    being developed in part to implement section 114 of the Energy Policy 
    Act of 1992. The Program requires the preparation of integrated 
    resource plans by Western's customers and establishes a framework for 
    extension of existing firm power resource commitments.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: These regulations will become effective November 20, 
    1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For additional information, please 
    contact: Robert C. Fullerton, Western Area Power Administration, P.O. 
    Box 3402, A3100, Golden, CO 80401-0098, (303) 275-1610.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Table of Contents
    
    I. Background
    II. Discussion of comments
        A. Energy Planning and Management Program-Overview
        1. General
        B. Integrated Resource Planning
        1. Specificity of Regulations
        2. IRP Content
        3. IRP Review and Approval
        4. Member-Based Associations
        5. Economic Feasibility and Administrative Burden
        6. IRP Cooperatives
        7. Technical Assistance
        8. Submittal Timing
        9. Irrigator Issues
        10. Future Program Review
        11. Penalty
        C. Power Marketing Initiative
        1. Applicability
        2. Contract Term
        3. Extension Percentage
        4. Resource Pool Creation
        5. Resource Pool Uses
        6. Resource Adjustment
        7. Notice
        8. Native American Issues
        9. Resource Acquisition by Western
        10. Implementation
        11. Other Marketing Issues
        D. Other Issues
        1. Support of Renewables
        2. Project Use
    III. Summary of Changes from the Proposed Program
    IV. Supplemental Explanation of the Rule
    V. Regulatory Review
    VI. Review under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
    VII. Review under the Paperwork Reduction Act
    VIII. Review under the National Environmental Policy Act
    IX. Review under Executive Order 12612
    X. Review under Executive Order 12778
    
    I. Background
    
        On April 19, 1991, the Western Area Power Administration (Western) 
    proposed an Energy Planning and Management Program (Program) (56 FR 
    16093). The goal of the Program was to require planning and efficient 
    electric energy use by Western's long-term firm power customers and to 
    extend Western's firm power resource commitments. On May 1, 1991, 
    Western announced its intention to prepare an environmental impact 
    statement (EIS) on the Program due to potentially significant 
    environmental and economic issues that may be of interest to the public 
    (56 FR 19995). Combined public information/environmental scoping 
    meetings on the Program were held in seven States in June of 1991. 
    Based on the feedback received from these meetings, Western developed 
    alternatives to be analyzed in the EIS. Alternatives workshops were 
    held in eight cities during March and April 1992. Based on further 
    public input received during these workshops, as well as comments 
    previously received, Western announced a tentative preferred 
    alternative for the EIS in a Program newsletter in June of 1992.
        On October 24, 1992, the President signed the Energy Policy Act of 
    1992 (EPAct), Public Law 102-486, into law. Section 114 of that 
    legislation requires the preparation of integrated resource plans (IRP) 
    by Western's customers and amends Title II of the Hoover Power Plant 
    Act of 1984. Western has adjusted its Program to reflect fully the 
    provisions of this law.
        On March 31, 1994, a notice of public availability of the draft EIS 
    was published in the Federal Register (59 FR 15198). The Environmental 
    Protection Agency also published a notice of availability of the draft 
    EIS on April 1, 1994, officially starting a 45-day public comment 
    period. Eight hearings were held throughout Western's service 
    territory, with more than 130 members of the public in attendance. 
    About 200 written comments were received on the draft EIS.
        The Program goal is to promote the efficient use of electric energy 
    by Western's customers and to extend Western's long-term firm power 
    resource commitments in support of customer IRPs. A major purpose of 
    this action is to assure the customers which purchase Federal power 
    greater stability in planning for future resources than would exist in 
    the absence of the Program. The Program has two major components: (1) 
    An integrated resource planning provision conforming to the 
    requirements of EPAct and (2) a Power Marketing Initiative (PMI). The 
    IRP provision, formerly known as the Energy Management Program, would 
    require most long-term firm power customers to (1) develop and 
    implement an IRP, (2) submit an updated IRP every 5 years, and (3) 
    submit an annual progress report. A different requirement for small 
    customers with an annual load or usage of 25 GWh or less is 
    established, as allowed in the EPAct. This IRP provision and small 
    customer provision will amend Western's Final Amended Guidelines and 
    Acceptance Criteria (G&AC) for Customer Conservation and Renewable 
    Energy (C&RE) Programs of August 21, 1985 (50 FR 33892). Western will 
    continue to provide a wide range of technical assistance to customers. 
    As provided by EPAct, 42 U.S.C. (7276b(e)), a penalty provision for 
    noncompliance with the IRP provision will consist of a 10-percent 
    surcharge for the first 12 months of noncompliance, 20 percent for the 
    next 12 months of noncompliance, and 30 percent thereafter for as long 
    as noncompliance persists. In lieu of a surcharge after the first 12 
    months of noncompliance, Western may impose a 10-percent resource 
    reduction penalty if 
    
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    such an approach is more effective in assuring compliance or is more 
    cost-effective for Western. The penalties in this Program will be 
    incorporated into the contracts that extend resources and will be 
    effective upon contract execution. Penalties in existing contracts will 
    continue to be in effect until changed.
        The PMI establishes a framework for extending a major portion of 
    the power currently under contract with existing customers. Western 
    will extend its existing long-term firm resource commitments, subject 
    to the outcome of project-specific environmental analysis as 
    appropriate. Initially, the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program-Eastern 
    Division and the Loveland Area Projects are covered by the PMI. The 
    term of the extension would be 20 years from the date that existing 
    contracts expire. The level of the commitment to existing customers 
    would be a project-specific percentage of the marketable resource 
    determined to be available when future resource extensions begin, as 
    described in section 905.33 of the regulations, with two withdrawals at 
    5-year intervals after the new contracts become effective. Unextended 
    resources would be available for allocation to new customers and other 
    purposes as determined by Western. In addition, marketable resources 
    placed under contract could be adjusted on 5 years' notice, and then 
    only in response to changes in hydrology and river operations.
    
    II. Discussion of Comments
    
        On August 9, 1994, a notice of the proposed Program and request for 
    public comments was published in the Federal Register (59 FR 40543). 
    Seven combined public information/comment forums were held throughout 
    Western's service territory in September 1994. The original comment 
    period of 60 days was extended in response to a public request. 59 FR 
    53976 (October 27, 1994). The comment period closed 90 days after 
    publication of the notice of the proposed Program.
        Western has received numerous comments as a result of publication 
    of the proposed Program in the Federal Register on August 9, 1994. The 
    following section responds to those comments. Each issue is presented 
    in a format featuring background, public comments and discussion. 
    Responses to all comments on Native American issues are in section C.8. 
    Comments pertaining to the environmental impact statement are addressed 
    in Appendix G of the final EIS.
    
    A. Energy Planning and Management Program--Overview
    
    1. General
    a. Background
        Western initially proposed the Program in April of 1991, and has 
    devoted over 4 years to public process and Program development. The 
    publication of the proposed program on August 9, 1994, included 
    comprehensive responses to public comments received as of that date. 
    This response to comments section includes only those comments received 
    since that date.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Comments were received in favor of finishing the public process 
    quickly. Public comment was received in support of the spirit of 
    compromise that is reflected in the Power Marketing Initiative. Western 
    was asked to keep the hydroelectric resource reliable and cost-based. 
    Others commended Western for the time and attention it has devoted to 
    produce an improved Program proposal. The proposed rule was viewed as a 
    substantial improvement over the alternatives presented in the draft 
    EIS. This Federal Register notice represents the final step in the 
    development of the Program. The Power Marketing Initiative and the 
    Integrated Resource Planning Provision will become effective 30 days 
    after publication of this rule in the Federal Register. Western is 
    appreciative of the widespread participation in the public process by 
    customers, Indian tribes, environmental groups and other interested 
    parties. This extensive participation has resulted in an improved 
    Program that is responsive to the comments of the public.
        Western was asked to publish the final Program as a rule within the 
    Code of Federal Regulations. Western agrees with this comment. The 
    Program regulations will appear in Title 10, which deals with energy-
    related subjects. Explanatory text and the detailed description of the 
    future application of the PMI have been moved to the preamble.
        Another comment suggested that Western adopt the section of the 
    Federal Register publication entitled ``Response to Comments on the 
    Energy Planning and Management Program,'' specifically found at 59 FR 
    40552-40562, as interpretative guidelines to accompany the IRP rules. 
    Western concurs that the responses to comments contained in the August 
    9, 1994, Federal Register notice are useful in providing insight and 
    guidance to assist the public in understanding Western's rationale for 
    the proposed Program. The responses to comments in this notice of final 
    rulemaking play a similar role. Although Western's responses to 
    comments will not be published in the Code of Federal Regulations, they 
    serve the purpose of interpretative guidelines and are available to 
    clarify the intent of Western in promulgating the final Program.
        Western received a request for an additional 120 day extension of 
    the comment period. Western initially provided for a 60 day comment 
    period, and later extended the comment period by 30 days in response to 
    a public request. The total comment period of 90 days presented ample 
    opportunity for the public to understand and comment on the proposed 
    Program.
    
    B. Integrated Resource Planning
    
    1. Specificity of Regulations
    a. Background
        Section 114 of the EPAct provides the framework for the IRP 
    requirement. It sets forth IRP criteria as well as administrative 
    principles and requirements. As set forth by section 114, Western shall 
    approve an IRP if, in developing the plan, the customer has addressed 
    the criteria provided.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        A number of customers commented that the distinction between 
    customers and purchasers should be dropped because the terms are 
    defined differently but used synonymously, so the term ``purchaser'' 
    has been deleted from the rule to avoid confusion.
        A commenter asked for clarification of the relationship between the 
    IRPs required under section 114 of EPAct and the requirement to 
    consider integrated resource planning under Section 111. Section 
    111(a)(7) of EPAct is an amendment to the Public Utility Regulatory 
    Policies Act. If a Western long-term firm power customer falls under 
    this regulatory authority, only one IRP will be required as long as the 
    IRP submitted to the State regulatory authority and to Western also 
    meets the approval criteria addressed in the IRP regulations and 
    section 114 of EPAct.
        A few customers requested a refinement of IRP regulations to make 
    them ``more suitable for non-generating and end-use customers.'' Most 
    end-use customers will qualify for small customer status, which 
    requires that they submit a plan that (1) considers all reasonable 
    opportunities to meet future energy service requirements using demand-
    side management (DSM) techniques, new renewable resources, 
    
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    and other programs that are cost- effective, and (2) minimizes adverse 
    environmental effects to the extent practicable. For those that do not 
    qualify, Western will review IRPs based on the customer size, type, 
    resource needs, geographic area, and competitive situation. There is no 
    need to tailor these regulations further as the capabilities of non-
    generating end-use customers are adequately recognized under the 
    ``reasonableness'' review standard in 905.13.
        Western was requested to delete the word ``new'' from the 
    definition of IRP, based on the viewpoint that integrated resource 
    planning is a planning process that can be applied to all resources. 
    Western has not removed the word ``new'' from the definition of IRP 
    because Congress included this adjective in section 114 of EPAct. 
    However, analysis of all resource options would allow the customer to 
    incorporate cost-effectiveness of current resources into utility 
    decision-making which in turn provides for sound long-term decisions 
    based on least-cost resource planning. To remain competitive in a 
    dynamic utility industry, Western's customers may find value in 
    evaluating continuously all costs, including those from both existing 
    and potential future resources.
    2. IRP Content
    a. Background
        Section 114 of EPAct defines the elements and content that must be 
    addressed in an IRP. Although these requirements must be addressed, 
    Western understands the importance of balancing needs for flexibility 
    and equity among a diverse customer base. Western's primary interest is 
    in providing an adequate framework for customer use of the IRP process 
    as a tool for meeting resource needs.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Many commenters requested that Western remove the ``Other 
    Criteria'' because it is overly broad. Western included element 8, 
    ``Met such other criteria as the Administrator shall require,'' in the 
    proposed rules primarily to track the language and format of EPAct, and 
    to give the flexibility to add other requirements as might later become 
    necessary. In order to give customers reassurance that Western will not 
    arbitrarily change or add requirements without the proper public review 
    and comment process, this element has been dropped.
        A stakeholder suggested that each IRP or small customer plan 
    submitted to Western should describe the formal and informal service 
    relationships the customer has with trade allies that can provide DSM 
    sales and service delivery to the utility and its customers if the IRP 
    or small customer action plan includes DSM resources. If a customer 
    chooses, partnerships can be formed with trade allies that can provide 
    DSM sales and services in support of IRP implementation plans. However, 
    it is not the intent of EPAct nor appropriate for Western to require 
    IRP or small customer plan submittals to describe the service 
    relationships that Western's customers have with trade allies. A trade 
    ally has the opportunity to participate in a customer's IRP process and 
    DSM pursuits through the customer's public process, and pursue a 
    voluntary partnership with Western's customers.
        Western was asked to define practicable. EPAct states that IRPs 
    must identify and accurately compare all practicable energy efficiency 
    and energy supply resource options available to the customer. Using the 
    reasonableness test set forth in section 905.13(a), practicable in this 
    case means those energy efficiency and energy supply resource options 
    which are appropriate for the customer's size, type, resource needs, 
    geographic area, and competitive situation. Practicable resource 
    options are both economically and technically feasible. Western will 
    not dictate resource choices.
        One customer noted that there is no option in the action plan to 
    report that there is nothing further that a customer can do than it is 
    already doing, and that this language needs to be added. Language has 
    been added in section 905.11 so that there is an option for customers 
    to report in an action plan that they are not experiencing or 
    anticipating load growth. Even when customers are not experiencing load 
    growth, action plans may describe how otherwise ``lost opportunities'' 
    have been pursued, such as encouraging energy efficiency in new housing 
    to avoid the expense of retrofitting in the future.
        Comment was received on the criteria for determining that customers 
    have complied with the requirements for minimizing adverse 
    environmental impacts associated with resource choices. The criteria 
    for assessing whether customers have complied with the requirements for 
    minimizing adverse environmental impacts of new resource acquisitions 
    are stated in EPAct and supplemented by this rule. In addition, Western 
    cannot exempt any organization from complying with existing 
    environmental laws and regulations due to customer size. Western will 
    not determine for its customers the level of environmental compliance 
    appropriate for each action.
        A number of customers and stakeholders submitted comments regarding 
    environmental externalities. Western will not require customers to 
    include a quantitative analysis of environmental externalities in their 
    IRPs for the following reasons: (1) EPAct, which did not use the term 
    ``externalities,'' created a different ``minimization to the extent 
    practicable'' review standard for IRPs; (2) the externality issue 
    continues to be subject to public debate and scientific analysis, with 
    no consensus being reached; (3) there is no consensus on the numbers 
    that should be used to value certain emissions and pollutants; (4) 
    quantification of externalities is a policy question that appears to 
    fall under state jurisdiction at the present time. Establishment of a 
    Western standard would not appropriately reflect comity between the 
    states within Western's service territory and the Federal government. 
    Complicating the issue is the fact, as described in more detail in the 
    EIS, that the Western states have widely varying policies on 
    quantification of externalities; (5) it would be impossible to 
    reconcile a common externality standard with the heterogeneous 
    approaches of the states; and (6) if Western were to require 
    quantification of externalities, Western's customers could find 
    themselves at a inappropriate competitive disadvantage as compared to 
    noncustomer utilities not bound by such a stringent standard under 
    state laws and regulations.
        Customers asked what Western considers public involvement for a 
    rural electric cooperative. Additionally, customers and stakeholders 
    stated that Western should allow flexibility in interpreting the public 
    process requirements; outside entities should have the opportunity to 
    review and comment on submitted IRPs once Western receives them; and 
    Western should require that customer utilities meet minimum standards 
    for public participation, including the creation of public advisory 
    groups. Given the diversity of customers Western serves, Western 
    intentionally defined the term ``public participation'' in general 
    terms so as to allow customers the flexibility they need to comply with 
    this requirement. Full public participation will be interpreted to mean 
    that ample opportunity was provided for the public to participate in or 
    influence the preparation and development of an IRP, as required by 
    905.11. The summary of the public participation process in the IRP 
    should describe how the customer 
    
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    (1) gathered information from the public, (2) identified public 
    concerns, (3) shared information with the public, and (4) responded to 
    public comments. Additionally, Western feels that public participation 
    at the local/regional level is adequate and that it is not necessary to 
    provide another opportunity for public comment once the IRP has been 
    filed with Western.
        One customer commented that the load forecasting examples in the 
    rule ``make no sense'' for Federal load. No load forecasting examples 
    are given in the Rule except as referred to for a methodology (i.e., 
    time series method, end-use method, econometric method). These are the 
    three methods most used for load forecasting, but they are not required 
    by Western. The customer should determine the method(s) best suited for 
    its own needs, though that method should use an accepted methodology 
    such as one or more of the three listed above. Customers should develop 
    forecasts upon which to base their IRPs. EPAct requires that, with the 
    exceptions addressed in section 905.11(b)(3), least-cost options must 
    be adopted by customers under the IRP.
        Many customers commented on quantification and resource tests. The 
    following questions were asked: Is Western prescribing that a levelized 
    cost method be used? If renewable resources are not cost-effective, how 
    can they be included in the least-cost plan? If they are cost-
    effective, why should they be given priority if they will be in the 
    least-cost plan? Additionally, customers stated that they preferred 
    that Western not prescribe a method. There is concern about how 
    utilities will deal with the least-cost provisions or whether they can 
    still use supply- and demand-side projects in the IRP process and still 
    do their planning in order to minimize rates and remain competitive. 
    Comment was also received that Western needs to address the additional 
    exemptions to least-cost based decision-making related to state law 
    requirements; and that Western's IRP requirement should impose no 
    standard stricter than the standard used by the state public utility 
    regulatory agency in which a given customer does business. Western is 
    not prescribing that a levelized cost method be used. Instead, the 
    final rule requires that evaluation of demand and supply resource cost 
    effectiveness for larger customers be done on a comparable basis. 
    Examples of types of methods Western expects from a larger customer are 
    given, but no specific method is required. The least-cost provisions, 
    as part of the IRP, are meant to allow utilities to be more 
    competitive. Analyses of a variety of situations--including possible 
    exceptions to least-cost based decisions--will promote competitiveness 
    as well as rate minimization. Renewables do not have to be given 
    priority, but must be fully evaluated alongside demand- and other 
    supply-side resources. EPAct states that to the extent practicable, 
    energy efficiency and renewables may be given priority in any least-
    cost option. Language has been added, under section 905.11, stating 
    that exceptions to least-cost-based decisions may be made where Federal 
    or State requirements mandate other than a least-cost based decision. 
    EPAct allows the choices in this area to be made at the reasonable 
    discretion of the customer as long as supply- and demand-side resources 
    are compared using a consistent economic analysis. As long as the 
    customer meets the criteria as defined in EPAct and these regulations, 
    Western will not impose any standard stricter than the standard used by 
    the state public utility regulatory agency in which a given customer 
    does business.
        Western received comment that the rule needs to better define 
    economic tests and more clearly describe the economic evaluations made. 
    Comment was received that Western should require customers to use the 
    total resource test to screen demand-side measures and the societal 
    test to evaluate demand-side programs; and that customers should be 
    required to use minimization of revenue requirements as the standard to 
    choose least-cost options. Western will not mandate the use of a 
    particular test to screen resource options or as a standard in the 
    resource selection process. While examples of analyses are set forth 
    elsewhere in this Federal Register notice, EPAct does not require the 
    use of any particular tests. There is no compelling reason to force 
    customers to take the same approach when a number of different tests 
    are currently used in IRP preparation by utilities and utility 
    commission review throughout the United States. Western will review the 
    approach chosen by its customers for reasonableness, taking into 
    account each customer's size, type, resource needs, geographic area, 
    and competitive situation.
        A few customers commented that they are opposed to quantification 
    of savings. Western is not requiring unreasonable efforts by customers 
    to quantify savings. Section 905.11 describes the need for customers to 
    establish methods of validating predicted performance.
    3. IRP Review and Approval
    a. Background
        Western has proposed that the required elements of an IRP or a 
    small customer plan must be addressed in a reasonable manner by a 
    customer before Western approves the IRP or small customer plan.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Customers commented that the flexibility to amend IRPs at any time 
    should be incorporated into the regulations. Western was asked to 
    clarify the difference between good faith efforts and mitigating 
    circumstances. Comment was received regarding an apparent conflict 
    between the time tables for requesting small customer status and the 
    general time line when activities need to be accomplished. One customer 
    stated that the size of the Western allocation should be a factor in 
    IRP review. Western will apply a reasonableness test in its review and 
    approval of customer IRPs and small customer plans which asks the 
    following two questions:
        1. Is the customer's application of the IRP or small customer 
    criteria consistent with the intent of EPAct and these regulations?
        2. Is such application appropriate for the customer's size, type, 
    resource needs, geographic area, and competitive situation?
    
    Western will use the reasonableness test, as applied to the criteria in 
    Subpart B, as a basis for plan review and approval. Western will not 
    use the size of the Western allocation as a factor in review, as EPAct 
    does not allow for such an approach.
        In using this reasonableness test as the basis for approval of 
    plans, other language has been incorporated into the regulations which 
    clarifies the review and approval process. Specifically, language has 
    been added which: allows amendments and revisions to IRPs to be 
    submitted at any time (under section 905.12(c)(5)); delineates ``good 
    faith effort'' and deletes the term ``mitigating circumstances'' (under 
    section 905.17(b)); and amends the originally proposed time table for 
    IRPs and small customer plans (under section 905.12(c)), so that 
    requests for IRP cooperative and small customer status must be made to 
    Western within 30 days (not 60) of the effective date of the Program, 
    allowing the time tables to match and allowing for a more expedient 
    process. Additionally, there is no longer a requirement for customers 
    to submit a notification of intent to prepare an individual or MBA IRP. 
    
    
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        One customer asked how customers should act when preparing their 
    IRPs which are dependent on time-limited offers of power from third 
    parties. When preparing plans dependent upon time-limited resource 
    offers, a customer should develop the plan based upon the best 
    information available. The customer determines its own resource needs, 
    so it should accept the time-limited offer if that is in its best 
    interests, and then let Western know through its annual progress report 
    or an amended action plan. Western will not disapprove such a decision 
    if it is in the best interests of the customer, was evaluated alongside 
    supply- and demand-side resources, and was a ``least-cost option'' (or 
    is an adequate cost-effective exception as addressed in section 
    905.11).
    4. Member-Based Associations
    a. Background
        There is considerable variety in the contractual arrangements among 
    Western's member-based association (MBA) customers. Some MBAs are the 
    sole supplemental power supplier for the members and have load growth 
    responsibility, others act as a representative for the members and have 
    no generation or transmission capabilities, and others act as agents 
    for or subcontract with but do not assume power supply responsibility 
    for their principals or subcontractors.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Concerns were raised over the role of the MBA and its members. 
    Comment was received that the submittal requirements need to be defined 
    for an MBA and its members. One customer stated that Western needs to 
    broaden the definition of MBA to cover both parent-type entities and 
    their user members and entities which act as agents for, or subcontract 
    with but do not assume power supply responsibility for, their 
    principals or subcontractors. The definition of MBA has been broadened 
    to include both parent-type entities and their user members and 
    entities which act as agents for or subcontract with but do not assume 
    power supply responsibility for their principals or subcontractors so 
    that the wide variety of Western customers which are MBAs under the 
    revised definition can submit IRPs on behalf of one, some, or all of 
    their customers. In adding this definition, the submittal requirements 
    have been further delineated.
        Two additional questions were asked: (1) To what extent must 
    members of an MBA be identified in the IRP and action plans? (2) What 
    is the responsibility of an MBA with members outside of its marketing 
    area for an IRP? While Western agrees that members should support the 
    IRP process with data and during the decision making process, it is the 
    responsibility of each MBA to work with its affected membership on 
    these issues. Each member receiving the benefit of long-term firm power 
    from Western will be required to sign the IRP or a resolution accepting 
    the IRP prior to submittal to Western. Additionally, for IRPs developed 
    and submitted on behalf of the MBA's members, the IRPs must clearly 
    show how each of the seven approval criteria is addressed for each 
    member. MBA members outside of Western's service territory need not be 
    included in the MBA's IRP, but the benefits of joint planning may be 
    diminished by such an approach.
    5. Economic Feasibility and Administrative Burden
    a. Background
        A number of Western's customers are small or medium-sized 
    utilities. Western is not proposing to define how much time and money a 
    customer should invest in IRP and small customer plan development and 
    implementation. Rather, Western's review will be focused on the end-
    product IRP or small customer plan.
        EPAct requires that customers develop and submit annual progress 
    reports to Western, which Western will in turn use in developing its 
    own annual report.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Many customers asked what criteria will be used to determine that a 
    small customer has ``limited economic, managerial, and resource 
    capability'' to conduct an IRP. Three criteria will be used in 
    determining small customer status: (1) Does the customer have total 
    annual energy sales or usage of 25 GWh or less averaged over the 
    previous 5 year period? (2) Is the customer not a member of a joint 
    action agency or a generation and transmission cooperative with power 
    supply responsibilities? (3) Does the customer have limited economic, 
    managerial and resource capability to conduct integrated resource 
    planning? Prior experience with customers under the 25 GWh threshold 
    that are not members of a joint action agency or a generation and 
    transmission cooperative with power supply responsibility has shown 
    that many of these customers possess limited economic, managerial and 
    resource capability to conduct integrated resource planning. If the 
    customer meets all of these criteria, it will then be granted small 
    customer status if requested.
        Other customers also suggested that small customers be able to 
    normalize or average over a period of time their energy use or sales in 
    order to qualify for the 25 GWh threshold for small customer status 
    which might otherwise not be met due to extreme circumstances such as 
    weather. In order to account for weather-related or other circumstances 
    which might put the small customer over the 25 GWh threshold, customers 
    will be responsible for documenting average annual energy sales and 
    usage for the 5 years prior to the initial request. Subsequent annual 
    letters documenting energy sales and use will be averaged thereafter on 
    a rolling basis to determine the under 25 GWh threshold. If the 
    customer exceeds 25 GWh average sales and usage after already receiving 
    small customer status, an IRP will be required.
        Comments on annual progress reports included statements that the 
    reports should not be required, to statements that they only be 
    required every 2 or 3 years. Customers also commented that the 
    requirements for the annual progress reports are excessive, especially 
    the obligation to perform post mortem analysis to quantify the energy 
    capacity and dollars saved under an IRP. EPAct requires that annual 
    progress reports be submitted by customers to Western. The requirement 
    can be satisfied by customers as long as the annual progress reports 
    contain information describing the customer's progress towards the 
    goals established in the plan submitted, including a report of the 
    measured or estimated energy savings and renewable resource benefits 
    achieved. Western is required by law to report to Congress annually 
    ``an estimate of the energy savings and renewable resource benefits 
    achieved as a result'' of customer IRP. Western cannot develop a 
    credible estimate without customer input. In the absence of credible 
    data, the accomplishments of Western's customers cannot be fairly 
    described.
        In lieu of a separate annual progress report, all information may 
    be combined with any other report that the customer submits to Western, 
    at the customer's discretion, as long as that report is submitted 
    within 30 days of the IRP approval anniversary date.
    6. IRP Cooperatives
    a. Background
        Customers may form IRP cooperatives under EPAct and request 
    Western's approval to submit IRPs for those cooperatives. Approved 
    cooperatives 
    
    [[Page 54156]]
    shall have 18 months from the date of approval to submit their IRPs.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Comments on IRP cooperatives concerned limitations to forming an 
    IRP cooperative, and clarification of the formation of an IRP 
    cooperative as being a matter solely between those potential members 
    and Western. Comment was also received that IRP cooperative status 
    should be based only on the determination that an appropriate resource 
    planning decision block exists; and the ``power supply chain'' example 
    be removed so that it is not read as an exhaustive sample. An IRP 
    cooperative allows customers with common interests, such as where a 
    resource decision block exists, to form an IRP cooperative for the 
    purpose of jointly developing and implementing an IRP. Individual 
    member responsibilities and participation levels, as with MBA IRPs, 
    must be identified in the IRP. A resource planning decision block 
    includes a situation such as if all entities covered by an IRP are 
    contained within a power supply chain, or regional entities covered by 
    an IRP will plan for joint supply-side, demand-side, and/or renewable 
    resources above and beyond the Western resource. It is permissible for 
    a customer to prepare an IRP jointly with an investor-owned utility. 
    These are examples and are not all-encompassing definitions.
        Section IV of this supplementary information section gives examples 
    of entities that would be favorably considered for IRP cooperative 
    status.
    7. Technical Assistance
    a. Background
        Western has provided technical assistance to customers, which 
    includes workshops, equipment loan programs, technical studies and 
    analyses, peer-match evaluations, and other support, since 1980. EPAct 
    authorizes Western to continue to provide technical assistance to help 
    customers with integrated resource planning.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        One customer commented that Western should charge for technical 
    assistance based on its use. At present, Western feels that technical 
    assistance, offered through its energy services program, is more 
    effective if offered to all customers without a use-based charge. 
    Western realizes the greatest need for technical assistance often falls 
    on the smallest customers which may not be able to pay for direct 
    technical assistance. Western will make every effort to cost-share 
    technical assistance activities to leverage costs so that many parties 
    benefit.
        Some customers requested that Western develop sample IRP formats 
    for customers. Because of the great diversity of its customers, Western 
    will not develop sample IRP formats. A customer can, however, obtain 
    technical assistance from the appropriate Area Office to help it 
    prepare an IRP. Additionally, a customer's Area Office may already have 
    a collection of sample IRPs.
    8. Submittal Timing
    a. Background
        Customers must submit their plans to the Area Manager of the area 
    in which they are located within 12 months of the effective date of 
    this rule for individual IRPs, within 12 months of the approval of a 
    request for small customer status for small customer plans, and within 
    18 months of the approval of a request for IRP cooperative status for 
    IRPs from IRP cooperatives. Additionally, EPAct requires updated IRPs 
    and small customer plans to be submitted to Western for review every 5 
    years.
    b. Comment and Discussion
        A comment was received that suggested that Western stagger IRP 
    submittals over 120 days, with small customer submittals processed 
    first. Western will not take additional steps to stagger the approval 
    of IRPs because the submittal time frame already is staged, and EPAct 
    offers Western limited ability to depart from defined submittal time 
    frames. Western expects that although many customers will submit IRPs 
    and small customer plans when due, others will submit them before the 
    plans are due. In addition, IRP cooperatives may submit IRPs 6 months 
    after individual IRPs and small customer plans are due.
    9. Irrigator Issues
    a. Background
        The IRP provisions apply to all customers, including irrigators, 
    with the exception of those qualifying for small customer status. 
    Irrigation districts and other irrigation entities may qualify for 
    small customer status. Western shall consider water planning, water 
    efficiency improvements, and water conservation in evaluating an IRP or 
    small customer plan. Customers that provide water utility services and 
    customers that service irrigation load as part of their overall load 
    may include water conservation activities in the IRP.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        It was suggested that the irrigation provision language include 
    entities which are not necessarily irrigation districts but which have 
    irrigation loads. Language has been added to section 905.13, which has 
    the effect of expanding the term ``irrigation district'' to include 
    electrical districts, power and water conservation districts, and other 
    comparable entities. Therefore, entities with similar functions are 
    eligible for this provision.
        It was also suggested that water efficiency should equate to 
    electrical savings for all customers that manage water utilities, not 
    just irrigators. Western agrees that customers with water utility 
    responsibility face the same issues as irrigators. In recognition of 
    the need for equity, new language has been added to section 905.13 to 
    cover customers that provide both energy and water utility services and 
    customers that serve irrigation load as part of their overall load. 
    Western requests that all types of customers covered by this section 
    convert their water savings to energy values to the extent practical.
    10. Future Program Review
    a. Background
        EPAct requires that within 1 year after January 1, 1999, and at 
    appropriate intervals thereafter, Western shall initiate a public 
    process to review the Integrated Resource Planning provision 
    established by this rule.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        A customer commented that 1999 is too late to revise the Program, 
    given the increasingly competitive nature of the utility industry. 1999 
    is the date set forth by EPAct for review and revision, as appropriate, 
    of these regulations, and the point at which, using a public process to 
    review the program, Western has some ability to revise the criteria set 
    forth in EPAct to reflect any changes in technology, needs, or other 
    developments. However, IRPs may be amended or revised at any time, and 
    updated IRPs are required every 5 years. This flexibility allows 
    Western's customers to remain competitive.
    11. Penalty
    a. Background
        As required by EPAct, penalties for noncompliance with these 
    regulations shall be imposed for failure to submit or resubmit an IRP 
    or small customer plan in accordance with these regulations and/or when 
    Western finds that the customer's activities are not consistent with 
    the applicable IRP or small customer plan unless a good faith effort 
    has been made to comply with the approved IRP or small customer plan. 
    
    [[Page 54157]]
    
    b. Comments and Discussion
        The public commented that Western should not impose the same 
    penalties for being late or not submitting an annual report as for not 
    submitting an IRP; that the time frame between receiving a notice of 
    noncompliance and the imposition of the penalty needs to be lengthened; 
    and that the phrase ``it is found that there are no mitigating 
    circumstances which justify those reactions'' should be removed. The 
    noncompliance section of this rule, section 905.17, has been revised 
    substantially in response to public comments. In recognition of the 
    severity of the proposal, Western has dropped the provision for 
    imposing penalties for failure to submit or for late submittal of 
    annual progress reports. Section 905.17 also has been revised to 
    provide that any penalties will be imposed beginning with the first 
    full billing period following the notice of noncompliance, allowing 
    customers 30 days to provide evidence of a good faith effort to comply. 
    A customer must still show evidence of a good faith effort to comply 
    which justifies its deficiency, but the term ``mitigating 
    circumstances'' has been deleted.
        Customers also commented that customers should be able to choose 
    their own penalties (surcharge or allocation) and that penalties should 
    apply directly to the MBA member and not to or through the MBA. Comment 
    was also received that if a member of an MBA is not in compliance, 
    notice should be sent to both the member and the MBA. Customers will 
    not be allowed to choose the type of penalty that will be imposed for 
    noncompliance. Western will determine which penalty is most appropriate 
    for the situation in accordance with the criteria in section 905.17(d). 
    Language has been added to clarify the imposition of penalties on MBAs 
    and IRP cooperatives and their members. Members of MBAs and IRP 
    cooperatives which are found to be in noncompliance will be directly 
    penalized if they have a firm power contract with Western. For those 
    members which do not, the penalty will be imposed upon the member's MBA 
    or parent-type entity on a pro rata basis in proportion to that 
    member's share of the total MBA's power received from Western. 
    Assessment of penalties against MBAs is necessary in this situation to 
    ensure that MBA members comply with the IRP requirements in this rule. 
    The MBA or parent-type entity will be notified of a penalty assessment 
    on a member.
        A comment was received that stated that the administrative appeal 
    process should allow a customer to appeal a decision about an IRP to 
    the Department of Energy's Deputy Secretary to ensure customers and 
    Western have an opportunity to seek an impartial ruling. A customer may 
    request reconsideration of an initial noncompliance determination by 
    filing a written appeal with the appropriate Area Manager. If the 
    customer disagrees with the Area Manager's decision, an appeal may be 
    filed with the Administrator. The Administrator's decision will be the 
    final agency decision for purposes of judicial review. Western will use 
    mutually agreeable alternative dispute resolution procedures, upon the 
    customer's request, to attempt resolution of any appeal. No penalty 
    will be imposed during the appeal, but if the dispute resolution is 
    unsuccessful for the customer, Western will impose the penalty 
    retroactively from the date the penalty would have been assessed 
    without an appeal.
        One customer commented that resource withdrawal penalties should 
    not be imposed retroactively, as the impact on the annual ratchet 
    clause in supplemental power supply contracts is overly burdensome. 
    Western agrees that certain supplemental power supply contracts have 
    ratchets that could magnify the burden of a retroactive resource 
    penalty caused by an administrative appeal. However, Western will not 
    amend the regulations to address this unlikely event. This situation 
    would not arise under the final regulations until 12 months after the 
    initial 10 percent surcharge had been imposed. The customer can avoid 
    the impact of a ratchet by submitting an acceptable and timely IRP to 
    Western.
        Finally, a customer asked why, if IRPs are not required of nonfirm 
    purchasers of Western energy, the penalty extends to nonfirm 
    interruptible/diversity contracts with customers. A penalty will be 
    assessed on the total charges for all power obtained by a customer from 
    Western and will not be limited to firm power charges. If a customer 
    has more than one long-term firm power contract with Western, the 
    penalty will be imposed under each contract. Under EPAct, 42 U.S.C. 
    7276b(e), these penalties apply to ``all power'' purchased from Western 
    by a customer which is in non-compliance; the penalty is not limited to 
    firm power.
    
    C. POWER MARKETING INITIATIVE
    
    1. Applicability
    a. Background
        In the proposed Program, the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program-
    Eastern Division and the Loveland Area Projects were proposed for 
    initial coverage under the Power Marketing Initiative. Western proposed 
    to defer making any decision about applying the PMI to the Central 
    Valley Project, which is the subject of a project-specific marketing 
    plan and associated EIS for the post-2004 time period. Western further 
    proposed to evaluate application of the PMI to the Salt Lake City Area/
    Integrated Projects after its power marketing EIS is completed and the 
    associated marketing criteria and contract changes are implemented. 
    Finally, Western also proposed to evaluate application of the PMI to 
    the Parker-Davis Project and the Boulder Canyon Project no sooner than 
    10 years before existing contracts expire.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        A comment was received concerning Western's statement that its 
    customers have no equity position in Western's facilities, and that no 
    right exists to power in the absence of a contract. The comment further 
    states that this is not precisely true for the Boulder Canyon Project, 
    where there is a statutory allocation of power and upratings funded by 
    certain customers. The first of two other comments received on this 
    subject suggests that Hoover should be excluded from PMI applicability 
    in the final rule due to the statutory nature of the Hoover allocation. 
    The second states that the customers do not understand Western's 
    intentions on application of the Power Marketing Initiative to Hoover 
    and that Western needs to conduct workshops and hearings before 
    implementation takes place. Western has not proposed to apply the Power 
    Marketing Initiative to the Boulder Canyon Project at the present time. 
    The Boulder Canyon Project long-term firm sales contracts do not expire 
    until 2014. Western cannot make sound decisions today about how this 
    power might be marketed starting 20 years into the future. Western will 
    evaluate the applicability of the PMI to the Boulder Canyon Project no 
    sooner than the year 2004. No decision to apply the PMI will take place 
    until an appropriate public process takes place. At that time, 
    statutory interpretation issues can be addressed.
        Comments were received suggesting that the Central Valley Project 
    should recognize the Sacramento Municipal Utility District's right to 
    31 percent of CVP power through the year 2014 and that the first 
    preference customers under the 1962 Flood Control Act should be exempt 
    from any loss of allocation under the Power Marketing Initiative. 
    Western does not intend to abrogate the statutory right of CVP first 
    preference customers pursuant to the Flood Control 
    
    [[Page 54158]]
    Act of 1962. Nor does the Power Marketing Initiative impact the 
    contractual right of the Sacramento Municipal Utility District to 
    receive a defined share of CVP resources between 2004 and 2014. Section 
    905.30(b) of the final rule accommodates these concerns by stating that 
    the PMI will apply ``if consistent with other contractual and legal 
    rights.'' This broad statement of applicability protects the interests 
    of the commenters.
        Western received several comments that favored applying the PMI to 
    the CVP. The comments had a common theme that the stability and 
    certainty of the CVP resource is critically important and that Western 
    should apply the PMI to the CVP now, and not wait until the 2004 
    marketing plan to make a decision on resource levels or contract term. 
    Western was also asked if the application of the PMI to the CVP would 
    take place with or without a public process. These comments also state 
    that applying the PMI to the CVP will assure consistency across all of 
    Western, and allow the 2004 process and the customers to focus on other 
    issues. The commenters believe that a definite level of commitment and 
    contract term, known now, is worth trading for larger percentage 
    allocations and longer contract terms in a more uncertain future and 
    that applying the PMI to the CVP will streamline the CVP EIS process, 
    and integrate the planning process between the two programs. Western is 
    impressed by the comments favoring an immediate but limited application 
    of the PMI to the Central Valley Project, subject to the findings of 
    the project-specific EIS currently underway. However, Western wants to 
    protect the integrity of the ongoing project-specific marketing 
    process. Application of the PMI to the CVP is best addressed in the 
    separate public process.
        One comment expressed appreciation for the decision not to propose 
    application of the PMI to CVP and the SLCA/IP at this time, as large 
    adjustments of marketable resources will be needed to meet 
    environmental concerns for these projects. This comment expressed 
    concern that the Program will create a precedent for these two 
    projects. Western sees no reason to change its initial proposal to 
    evaluate applicability of the PMI after the Salt Lake City Area/
    Integrated Projects Electric Power Marketing EIS is completed and the 
    associated marketing criteria and contract changes are implemented. 
    These steps are scheduled for completion in the near future. Western 
    expects to start the evaluation process soon thereafter.
        A comment was received questioning the decision to apply the Power 
    Marketing Initiative to the LAP given that existing contracts do not 
    expire for another 10 years. Other comment received supports 
    application of the PMI to the Loveland Area Projects after the 1999 
    resource adjustments are complete. Western did not change its proposal 
    regarding application of the Power Marketing Initiative to the Loveland 
    Area Projects. No resource extension offer will take place until the 
    analysis of potential LAP resource adjustments in 1999 has been 
    completed. The analysis and implementation of any 1999 resource 
    adjustments will take place no later than 1996. Given the time period 
    that it takes to develop alternative resources to replace unextended 
    LAP power, application of the PMI to LAP now is prudent. The resource 
    certainty that results will assist Western's customers in developing 
    effective integrated resource plans.
    2. Contract Term
    a. Background
        In the proposed Program, an 18-year contract term was proposed, 
    with the contract term to start from the date existing contracts 
    expire.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Western received many comments supporting extending the contract 
    term from 18 to 20 or 25 years. The reasons customers overwhelmingly 
    supported extending the contract term follow: a longer term would help 
    short and long range planning; a longer term would add resource and 
    rate stability; a longer term would benefit the environment by 
    customers being more willing to make financial commitments to 
    environmentally sound project enhancements; a 20 year term would be 
    consistent with the IRP submittal cycle of 5 years; a longer term would 
    be comparable to the amortization of long term investments in base load 
    power plants and renewable resources; a longer term would correspond to 
    existing all requirements contracts; an eighteen year term may 
    jeopardize Western's obligations under an existing exchange 
    arrangement; an eighteen year term would require existing customers 
    that contracted for Federal power when it was not economical to give up 
    too much of their existing benefits without equitable treatment; a 
    longer term conforms to the Tennessee Valley Authority practices; and a 
    longer term would allow customers to make commitments to demand side 
    management programs and capital-intensive renewables. Western is 
    persuaded by the comments supportive of a longer contract term. Section 
    905.31 of this final rule establishes a 20-year extension of resources.
        In developing a proposal for the length of the resource extensions, 
    Western has considerable discretion. One of the limits on that 
    discretion is the prohibition, as set forth in the Reclamation Project 
    Act of 1939, on power sales contracts with terms in excess of 40 years. 
    Western may legally consider commitments of power up to, but not 
    beyond, this 40-year maximum.
        Western adopts a resource extension period of 20 years for several 
    reasons. This time period is long enough to maintain a sufficient 
    customer planning horizon. Long-term project financing, whether for 
    supply-side, demand-side, or renewables, would be feasible with such an 
    extension. Western agrees that financing of renewable resources is 
    particularly sensitive to Federal hydropower resource uncertainty. 
    Twenty years will maintain the resource and rate stability necessary 
    for effective integrated resource planning. At the same time, 20 years 
    is not so long that Western cannot reasonably guarantee the 
    availability of the extended resource. The proposal of a graduated 
    resource pool available to new customers gives Western the flexibility 
    to allocate power equitably over the term of the contract.
        Western's goal is to provide a sufficient incentive for new 
    customer preparation of IRPs and to offer a contract term compatible 
    with the time horizon for other resources evaluated in IRPs. Another 
    goal is to reduce the amount of Western, customer, and public time and 
    resources spent on marketing plan development. An extension of resource 
    commitments for 20 years beyond the expiration date of contracts with 
    existing customers would mean that new contracts would be in place 
    until at least 2020. In other words, initial extensions would be about 
    25 years from the date that extension commitments are offered to 
    customers of the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division; 
    this time period approaches the average useful life of thermal 
    generation.
        Western agrees that a 20-year contract term is more comparable to 
    those existing between the Tennessee Valley Authority and its 
    customers. Western also agrees with the comments suggesting that a 20 
    to 25 year contract term is consistent with industry standards for firm 
    sales. Recently issued RFPs have also entertained resource acquisition 
    options on a long-term basis. Western also concurs with the comment 
    
    [[Page 54159]]
    that a 20-year contract term fits better with the 5 year IRP 
    preparation and approval cycle.
        The selection of a 20-year extension contract term helps to answer 
    the comment that the proposed Program asked existing customers to give 
    up too much. The additional 2 years helps to provide an appropriate 
    balance between existing customers, who in many cases chose to enter 
    into hydropower contracts with the United States before the economic 
    benefits of such a choice were clear, and other needs reflected in the 
    Program.
        Western believes that adoption of a relatively short contract term 
    could impact the resource stability required to meet Western's 
    obligations under the exchange arrangement with the Salt River Project. 
    In particular, the pattern of power allocations over time could change 
    the use of Colorado River Storage Project transmission, which could in 
    turn impact the exchange arrangement. Twenty year contracts support the 
    resource stability that in turn impacts usage of Western's transmission 
    system.
        A comment was received that stated eighteen year contracts are 3 
    years too long. According to this comment, most of the power contracts 
    that Western has signed have been for 15-year terms, and a 15-year 
    extension strikes the right balance between the customer's need for 
    certainty and the Federal government's desire for flexibility so the 
    changing needs of the West can be addressed. Western agrees that many 
    of its historic contract terms have been 15 years in length. Currently 
    effective contracts for the sale of power from the Pick-Sloan Missouri 
    Basin Program--Eastern Division, the Loveland Area Projects and the 
    Salt Lake City Area/Integrated Projects are all 15 years in length. 
    However, a significant number of contracts have been in excess of this 
    time period. Power sales contracts for the Parker-Davis Projects are 20 
    years in length, while the currently effective Boulder Canyon Project 
    contracts are 30 years. Contracts for the sale of Central Valley 
    Project power have variable terms, with the longest contracts 
    approaching 40 years in length. The historic precedent for contract 
    length is not confined to 15-year commitments, and is consistent with 
    the 20-year term adopted in the final Program regulations.
        A comment received suggested rollover 18-year extensions every 5 
    years upon submittal of an updated IRP. A rolling extension of 
    contracts on a long-term basis at the customer's option, upon submittal 
    of future IRPs to Western, would cause hydropower resources to be 
    extended too far into the future for Western to respond to changing 
    circumstances over time.
        Western has provided for resource adjustment capability as part of 
    the PMI. Initial extensions would be based on the resource available at 
    the time existing contracts expire. This allows Western to respond to 
    changes in operations at Corps of Engineers (Corps) and Bureau of 
    Reclamation (Reclamation) hydroelectric plants before the term of 
    contract starts for extended resources. In addition, Western can make 
    further adjustments in its marketable resources in response to changes 
    in hydrology and operations upon 5 years' notice. Because of this 
    capability, no need exists to extend resources for a minimal time 
    period to protect fish and wildlife resources. The impact of the PMI 
    can be summarized as an extension of existing commitments, with the 
    recognition that adjustments to the marketable resource as a result of 
    operational accommodations for fish and other wildlife resources can be 
    accomplished within the extension framework.
        Western realizes that the draft EIS predicted relatively greater 
    environmental benefits for contract terms in excess of 20 years. 
    Western's proposal balances environmental benefits associated with 
    resource certainty against the need for flexibility to respond to 
    changing circumstances over time.
        Some of Western's customers suggest that since they have paid for 
    projects in the past, they should have first call on resources in the 
    future. Western agrees that the resource choices made by customers in 
    the past have led to the construction or purchase of certain 
    supplemental generating resources, as well as investment in 
    transmission resources or negotiation of transmission service 
    contracts. Western does not want to disrupt regional power supply and 
    transmission arrangements at considerable economic and environmental 
    cost to the area. At the same time, Western's existing customers have 
    no equity position in Western's facilities, and they have no right to 
    receive power from Western in the absence of a contract. Western 
    believes the public interest is served by having the flexibility to 
    meet a fair share of the needs of new customers from the publicly owned 
    and financed hydroelectric facilities in the West.
        Western agrees with a comment received that states the Program does 
    not provide its customers with absolute resource certainty. Instead, 
    the Program attempts to provide as much certainty as possible to 
    facilitate the development of integrated resource plans, while 
    retaining the flexibility to respond to changing conditions and 
    evolving needs.
        A comment received stated Western should consider a longer contract 
    term, such as the 35-year term associated with FERC relicenses. This 
    comment recognized how virtually all access to hydropower is controlled 
    by Federal policy, either through FERC or the power marketing 
    administrations, but the costs for that power differ. FERC licensees 
    pay only for capital costs and O&M, while CVP customers must subsidize 
    other project purposes such as those under the Central Valley Project 
    Improvement Act. Differences in commitment lengths between FERC 
    licensees and CVP power sales contracts only compound the inequity in a 
    competitive and price-sensitive market. These comparability factors 
    should be an additional basis for extending contracts for the longest 
    possible term.
        In response to these comments, Western notes that the holder of a 
    FERC license typically plans, funds, and constructs the hydropower 
    resource itself. A long-term license is appropriate in such a case, 
    given the length of the construction debt service and the 
    responsibilities of the licensee. With Western's resources, the 
    planning, construction, financing, operation, and maintenance of the 
    hydroelectric generation and high-voltage transmission is usually the 
    responsibility of the United States. Since the two situations are not 
    strictly comparable, Western feels that a proposal of a 20-year term of 
    contract is appropriate.
        Western agrees with the comment that the utility industry is 
    increasingly dynamic, and that utilities must be flexible and forward-
    looking in order to be successful. The IRP requirement in this Program 
    will provide Western's customers with the tools necessary to succeed in 
    a changing utility climate.
        Many comments were received from the public indicating that an 
    extension of resources would assist IRP and not hinder future resource 
    planning.
        Western does not agree with the comment that long-term contracts 
    will be a disincentive to improving energy efficiency. Short-term 
    contracts cause customers to focus on the uncertainty surrounding the 
    Western resource, rather than looking to implementation of cost-
    effective energy efficiency and DSM to meet future needs. Western only 
    provides a portion of the resource needs of its customers, about 30 
    percent on average Western-wide. The cost of supplemental resources, 
    whether supply-side or demand-side, is usually significantly higher 
    than the cost of 
    
    [[Page 54160]]
    Western's resources. Supplemental resource prices provide a significant 
    incentive to implementation of cost-effective energy efficiency 
    improvements.
        Some customers indicated that their willingness to fund 
    environmental improvements would be impacted by short-term contracts. 
    Western agrees that short-term contracts could be a disincentive to the 
    implementation of environmentally beneficial project improvements in 
    support of the Clinton Administration's climate control action plan.
        Several comments were received stating that Western power preserves 
    the competitive balance in the utility industry. Western's hydropower 
    commitments provide a yardstick that enhances competition in the 
    utility industry within Western's marketing area. Twenty-year contracts 
    help preserve the competitive balance in the regional utility industry.
    3. Extension Percentage
    a. Background
        Western proposed to extend a major percentage of the power 
    currently under contract with long-term firm power customers. The exact 
    percentage to be extended would be determined on a project-specific 
    basis, based on the amount of power needed to meet a fair share of the 
    needs of potential new customers within the marketing area.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Western received numerous comments that support a contract rate of 
    delivery extension of 97 or 98 percent. One comment did not support a 
    resource pool. Some comments were specific and suggested that current 
    allocations should be the basis for application of the extension 
    percentage or that the percentage withdrawal should be based on 
    customer allocations existing in the year 2000 for Pick-Sloan Missouri 
    Basin Program--Eastern Division customers and that withdrawals after 
    that time should be based on the resource available to the customer at 
    the time. One comment received stated that a 100 percent extension was 
    preferred and another comment suggested that existing customers should 
    receive maximum allocations.
        The amount of unextended resource was determined on a project-
    specific basis by assessing the amount of power that must be reserved 
    in order to meet a fair share of the needs of potential new customers. 
    In deriving the size of the initial resource pool for each project, 
    Western reviewed letters of interest from potential new allottees, 
    potential new customer load information and analysis of any hydropower 
    benefits currently being received by a potential new customer. Due to 
    significant expressions of interest by Native Americans, Western has 
    increased the size of the initial resource pool for those projects 
    initially subject to the PMI. Subsequent resource pool increments have 
    been reduced to compensate for the increase in the initial pool. 
    Section 905.32 provides that for the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin 
    Program--Eastern Division and the Loveland Area Projects, Western will 
    reserve 4 percent of the marketable resource determined to be available 
    at the beginning of future resource extensions. Subsequent increments 
    of the resource pool have been reduced to no more than 1 percent.
        The final rule recognizes that power reserved for new customers but 
    not allocated and resources offered but not placed under contract may 
    become available. Section 905.32 (e) provides that this power will be 
    offered on a pro rata basis to existing customers that contributed to 
    the resource pool through application of the extension formula. No firm 
    power is expected to go unmarketed at any time.
        The Program provides for the creation of two additional resource 
    pool increments in the future for all of Western's projects covered by 
    the PMI. At two intervals of 5 years after the effective date of the 
    extension to existing customers, Western will create a project-specific 
    resource pool increment of up to an additional 1 percent of the 
    resource under contract at the time. The actual size of the additional 
    resource pool increment will reflect the actual fair share needs of new 
    customers and other purposes as determined by Western.
        Western believes that the final Program provides an appropriate 
    balance that recognizes the importance of certainty in customer 
    planning efforts. An extension of Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--
    Eastern Division and Loveland Area Project resources at a 96 percent 
    level is substantial enough so existing customers will not have to 
    build new generation or enter into large purchases of thermal 
    generation. A lesser level of extension could cause customer pursuit of 
    other resources, with potential associated economic and environmental 
    impacts. The resource planning of auxiliary suppliers would be 
    disrupted by the nonextension of a significant percentage of Federal 
    power.
        One comment stated that the percentage reduction should be applied 
    to the allocation existing at the time, not the resource existing at 
    the time of the contract extension. The current allocations to the 
    customers will not be adopted as the basis for application of the 
    resource percentage, as this approach could limit Western's short-term 
    capability to adjust its marketable resources in response to changed 
    operations and hydrology. Western believes a more flexible approach 
    would be to apply the percentage to the marketable resource that is 
    determined to be available at the beginning of future resource 
    extensions. In this way, changes in operations or hydrology between 
    today and the time existing contracts expire can be readily 
    accommodated.
        One of two comments received concerning the resource pool stated 
    that given the great sacrifice of an initial 3 percent resource pool, 
    the 1.5 percent additional increments should be based on the resource 
    available at the time, while the other comment said there was no need 
    for two additional resource pool increments. Another comment stated 
    that they support a 2 percent resource pool. In the case of creation of 
    resource pool increments subsequent to the initial pool, Western agrees 
    with the comments that the percentage should be applied to the resource 
    available at the time. The proposed Program, which suggested 
    application of all percentages to the resource available at the time 
    existing contracts expire, had some disadvantages. Application of the 
    percentage to the resource available when existing contracts expire 
    could create administrative confusion if the actual resource under 
    contract was different. If the resource available several years into an 
    extension contract was less than the marketable hydropower at the 
    beginning of extension contracts, application of a percentage to the 
    earlier, larger amount would create a higher effective percentage as 
    applied to the existing resource. Western agrees with the comments 
    recommending a change in the proposed approach. The final rule reflects 
    this more simplified method.
        One commenter points out that Western has not shown any reason for 
    increasing the Pick-Sloan resource pool above 3 percent. The initial 
    Pick-Sloan resource pool has been increased to 4 percent in the final 
    rule, to assure that a fair share of the needs of Native Americans can 
    be met. The rationale for creating two future resource pool increments 
    of up to 1 percent each is to meet future needs that Western cannot 
    currently identify. This flexibility is necessary to support a 20 year 
    contract term. 
    
    [[Page 54161]]
    
        Western understands the comment expressing concern about tying 
    future allocations to a percentage of an amount to be determined, 
    especially when Western may not know what it has to market from the 
    Missouri River Basin generation until after the year 2000. Although 
    Western appreciates the suggestion that a percentage of today's 
    contractual amount be extended with an option to adjust the extended 
    resource, others have expressed the concern that such an approach would 
    create unwarranted power availability expectations on the part of firm 
    power customers. Western believes that either adoption of this comment 
    or retention of the approach of the proposed Program will lead to the 
    same resource commitment. Western chooses to retain the approach of the 
    proposed regulations.
        One customer commented that a 97 percent initial extension level 
    asks existing Pick-Sloan customers to give up too much, especially when 
    coupled with the additional resource pool increments, exposure to 
    adjustments due to changes in hydrology and operations, and withdrawals 
    for project use. In contrast, another comment was received that the 
    resource pool percentages should be increased to a 6 percent initial 
    level, followed by two additional increments at 5 percent each. For the 
    reasons stated earlier, Western believes the final rule strikes an 
    appropriate balance among the relevant considerations.
        Western recognizes that existing customers made an historic choice 
    to pursue Federal hydropower and that some customers elected to 
    purchase this resource before the economic advantages were clear. 
    However, Western does not believe that the historic enjoyment of the 
    benefits of Federal hydropower means that a customer has a perpetual 
    right that cannot be diminished. Western's policy of promoting 
    widespread use and the potential allocation of power to new preference 
    customers must be balanced against the fact that existing customers 
    have developed contractual relationships with supplemental suppliers, 
    transmission arrangements with Western or third parties, and in some 
    instances have constructed transmission facilities to receive Federal 
    power. Western believes that this final rule provides for a proper 
    balance among these policy considerations.
        Comments concerning the marketable resources or the loss thereof 
    for the Salt Lake City Area/Integrated Projects and the Central Valley 
    Project were received that suggest that an additional 2 percent 
    resource pool seems inappropriate for the Salt Lake City Area/
    Integrated Projects; that the resource pool for the Central Valley 
    Project may be premature and too restrictive; that extensions for CVP 
    resources should be in the 90-95 percent range and CVP unbundled 
    services should be offered pro rata in 2004 in line with these 
    percentages; that there is support for limiting the CVP resource pool 
    to no more than 6 percent of the available resource which would 
    minimize any disruption of customer planning efforts and avoids 
    confusion between allocation issues and resource availability, yet 
    allows Western to distribute the benefits of Federal power to new 
    customer; that a 3-5 percent initial CVP resource pool is reasonable 
    given the changes that are taking place within the industry; and that 
    the initial CVP pool should not be larger than 2 percent given the two 
    additional increments.
        In the final rule, Western has not defined the size of the initial 
    resource pool for the Central Valley Project and the Salt Lake City 
    Area/Integrated Projects. The actual size of resource pools for these 
    projects will be determined at a later date through project-specific 
    public processes. Comments relating to these resource pools should be 
    advanced at that time.
        Western received a comment that stated that the Master Operating 
    Manual process and the adverse impact of Corps of Engineers operations 
    on wetlands, fish and wildlife and endangered species will likely 
    affect electricity production on the Missouri River. Similar changes 
    are possible on the Platte, Arkansas and Rio Grande rivers. Western's 
    proposal will create an expectation that 94 percent of existing 
    allocations will be reserved for existing customers. This will make it 
    difficult to modify dam operations in the future. Evidence from the 
    comments received on the draft EIS suggest that 6 percent is not enough 
    to meet the needs of new customers and to respond to changing 
    environmental concerns.
        Western does not agree that the resource pools for the Eastern 
    Division of Pick-Sloan and the Loveland Area Projects should be 
    increased in size to enhance the ability to modify dam operations. 
    Ample opportunity exists under the Program to adjust marketable 
    resources in response to changes in reservoir operations. In the short-
    term, Western can accommodate such changes by applying the extension 
    percentages to the marketable resource determined to be available at 
    the beginning of future resource extensions. Operational decisions by 
    the generating agencies in the shorter term will be reflected in the 
    initial commitment to customers, as the extension percentage will be 
    applied to the resource available at the time current contracts expire. 
    Over the longer term, Western can adjust its commitments on 5 years' 
    notice due to changes in operations and hydrology. Western is not 
    creating a customer expectation that a percentage of existing 
    allocations will be reserved for existing customers. Considerable 
    flexibility exists in the final regulations to address the concerns 
    raised in this comment.
        No evidence has been produced to show that 6 percent is not enough 
    to meet the needs of new customers. Environmental concerns will be 
    addressed through the extension approach and withdrawal opportunities 
    explained above, and not through use of the resource pools. Six percent 
    should be more than is needed to meet a fair share of the needs of 
    potential new customers. Western sees no reason to create a resource 
    pool larger than that needed to meet a fair share of the needs of 
    potential new customers.
    4. Resource Pool Creation
    a. Background
        In the August 1994 Federal Register notice, Western proposed the 
    creation of project-specific resources pools through a reservation of 
    power not extended to existing customers. Existing customers with an 
    allocation of one MW or less were not subject to the reservation. New 
    customers receiving an allocation from an initial resource pool were 
    not subject to withdrawal to form subsequent resource pool increments. 
    The possibility of extending resources on a graduated scale, weighted 
    towards some customer characteristic, was suggested early in the public 
    process.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Western received many comments on the issue of equity in the 
    proposed creation of the resource pool. The majority of the comments on 
    the issue objected to special treatment for customers with an 
    allocation of one MW or less. Specific comments are that Western has 
    provided no justification for exempting entities with a contract rate 
    of delivery of one MW or less from resource pool creation, that the 
    administrative burden of withdrawing power from entities with small 
    allocations is not great; that it is inequitable to have an exemption 
    from contributing to resource pools for customers with allocations of 
    one MW or less; and that all resource reductions should be shared pro 
    rata, with no exceptions for certain customers.
        Western's rationale for exempting small entities from a 
    contribution to the 
    
    [[Page 54162]]
    resource pool was threefold. First, Western felt that the benefits 
    associated with small allocations of hydropower would be diluted if all 
    customers contributed to the resource pool. Second, the administrative 
    issues of applying resource extension percentages to small allocations 
    influenced Western's proposal. Third, there were not many entities with 
    allocations of one MW or less, so the impact of the proposal on other 
    customers was not large.
        Upon further consideration, Western withdraws the proposal to 
    exempt entities with allocations of one MW or less from contributing to 
    the resource pool. For some small customers, an allocation of one MW 
    represents a high percentage of their total load. Exempting an entity 
    because of the size of their allocation is inequitable if that customer 
    has a high percentage of its needs met by Western. The administrative 
    issues underlying the original proposal are manageable. In fact, 
    creating separate classes of customers leads to its own set of 
    administrative issues. The fact that a small amount of power is 
    involved is not dispositive, as the issue is more one of equity and 
    fairness than one which hinges on the amount of power involved.
        Western agrees that the proposed Program was not consistent in its 
    treatment of customers with small allocations. For example, Western did 
    not propose to insulate customers with small allocations from 
    withdrawals for project use or from withdrawals of marketable resources 
    due to changes in operations and hydrology. The final rule eliminates 
    this inconsistency by treating all customers alike.
        Several comments suggested that the one MW limit on withdrawals 
    should apply even if the entity is a member of a member-based 
    association or an IRP cooperative. With the elimination of the one MW 
    exception, these comments are no longer relevant and need not be 
    addressed.
        Other comments were that withdrawals should apply to all customers 
    with no exception for new customers; that allocations to new customers 
    should be allowed to increase rather than automatically be reduced in 
    their infancy through use of the extension formula; and that power 
    reserved for project use should be used for new customers instead of 
    taking it away from existing customers. This is another issue that 
    received a number of equity-based comments--Western's proposal to 
    exempt new customers receiving allocations out of the initial resource 
    pool from withdrawals to create future resource pool increments. The 
    rationale for this proposal was to avoid the dilution of recently-
    received hydropower benefits.
        After considering these comments, Western has decided to abandon 
    this aspect of its Program proposal. There is no strong policy reason 
    to depart from equitable treatment for all customers. A new customer 
    contribution to future resource pool increments would not be a large 
    amount of power, so the benefits of the Western allocation out of the 
    initial resource pool would not be diluted significantly. The 
    administrative complications that arise from creating more than one 
    class of firm power customer for withdrawal purposes are avoided by 
    treating all customers the same.
        Customers also commented that Western should only create a resource 
    pool if there are set time periods, restrictions as to amount, and 
    defined customer demands; more consideration must be given to how 
    resource pool power will be priced and marketed; and subsequent 
    increments of the resource pool are inconsistent with Western's stated 
    goal of resource stability. Western concurs with the comment that a 
    resource pool should only be created if there are set time periods and 
    restrictions as to amount. However, it is difficult to define precisely 
    the demands of new customers prior to creation of the resource pool. 
    That can only be done after a call for applications is published in the 
    Federal Register, and applications are actually received. Western 
    cannot precisely define the needs of new customers at this time. 
    Instead, Western has promoted the widespread use of its hydropower 
    resources through establishment of a resource pool based upon a fair 
    share of estimated needs. If the pool size is too large, the 
    unallocated power or power not placed under contract is returned to the 
    customers who contributed power towards the initial resource pool on a 
    pro rata basis.
        Western intends to charge new customers the same rate for power as 
    that charged to existing customers. Western will not purchase resources 
    for new but not yet identified customers, as the appropriate level of 
    Western's marketable resources should be determined through a project-
    specific analysis of hydrology, project use load, losses and reserves. 
    Committing resources beyond this level would increase the risk of 
    purchasing firming resources.
        Comment was received that the proposed Program does not recognize 
    that some customers get a high percentage of power from Western while 
    others do not. On the whole, little support was received for the 
    concept of extending resources on a graduated-scale basis. The issue 
    here is whether extensions should be offered on a pro rata basis to all 
    existing customers or if extensions should take place on some other 
    basis, such as the percentage of the total customer load that is served 
    by Western. Given the lack of significant public support for the 
    graduated scale concept and the associated administrative complexities, 
    Western has adopted a pro rata policy under which existing customers 
    will receive the same treatment in the application of the extension.
        Comment was received that the wide variation in percentage of 
    customer load served from the Central Valley Project should be 
    addressed through the PMI. While Western will not depart from the 
    general policy of a pro rata extension of resources, Western's 
    Sacramento Area Office reserves the right to achieve more parity among 
    allocations to existing CVP customers. Allocations to existing 
    customers may be made out of the CVP resource pool to assure that each 
    customer has some minimum percentage of its needs met by Western. This 
    will be considered during the public process on the CVP power marketing 
    plan.
        According to some commenters, the creation of subsequent increments 
    of the resource pools are inconsistent with Western's stated goal of 
    resource stability. To a limited extent, this comment is correct. The 
    final Program strikes a balance between the need for resource stability 
    and the need for flexibility to meet changing circumstances.
        One customer commented that Western should use energy efficiency 
    improvements rather than withdrawals from existing customers to create 
    the initial resource pool, while another stated that savings 
    opportunities recognized in Western's use of IRP principles can be used 
    to develop resource pools, reducing the need to withdraw from existing 
    customers. To the extent that cost-effective energy efficiency 
    improvements can be captured, Western will take steps to make such 
    improvements a reality. Potential for such improvements could be 
    identified through the use of principles of integrated resource 
    planning. Flexibility has been retained in the Program to allocate 
    power available due to implementation of such efficiencies. If adopted 
    on a project-specific basis, Western could use efficiency improvements 
    to offset the need to form a resource pool through withdrawal of power 
    from existing customers. 
    
    [[Page 54163]]
    
        Some of Western's projects have reserved power for future project 
    use loads, but have not marketed this resource as firm power on a 
    withdrawable basis. As an example, this marketing approach is used by 
    the SLCA/IP. If proposed and adopted on a project-specific basis, 
    Western could use project use power, marketed on a withdrawable basis, 
    to offset the need to form a resource pool through withdrawal of power 
    from existing customers.
    5. Resource Pool Uses
    a. Background
        In the proposed Program, Western advanced a concept to allocate 
    power out of project-specific resource pools to new preference 
    customers within the marketing area, and to meet other purposes as 
    determined by Western. The specific terms and conditions associated 
    with allocations out of each resource pool would be determined during 
    future, project-specific public processes.
        Western said it expected to make allocations to Native Americans 
    for use on the reservation, and would consider making allocations to 
    national parks, public mass transit agencies, in support of renewable 
    resources and fish and wildlife habitat.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Comment was received that new customers don't need resources and 
    that they just want cheaper resources at the expense of those who made 
    wise long-term decisions many years ago. Western does not necessarily 
    agree that new customers don't need resources. Load growth could create 
    such a need, as could expiration of a purchase power contract or the 
    retirement of generation. One of Western's goals in the PMI is to 
    achieve widespread use of Western's resources. Reservation of a modest 
    percentage of resources to create a resource pool is consistent with a 
    policy of encouraging widespread use of Federal hydroelectric power.
        One customer commented that the resource pool should be first used 
    to make adjustments in response to changes in operations/hydrology. 
    Western does not agree. In response to public comments in favor of 
    equity among all customers, Western has adopted in this final rule a 
    policy of treating new customers and existing customers alike. Making 
    the resource pool subject first to adjustments would discriminate 
    against new customers when allocations are made from the pool before 
    adjustments take place. Given the adoption of a separate resource 
    adjustment mechanism in these regulations, there is no need to make the 
    resource pool subject to resource adjustment.
        It was suggested that all resources be marketed, and that resource 
    pools should have a maximum ceiling, but should only be allocated to 
    meet new loads that actually develop. Western agrees that all available 
    resources should be marketed. The intent underlying the PMI is to 
    market as much firm resource as would have been marketed in the absence 
    of the PMI. Allocations out of each resource pool will be completed 
    before the term of the extension contract begins. Power reserved in a 
    resource pool but not allocated and resources offered but not placed 
    under contract will be offered to existing customers that contributed 
    to the resource pool, in accordance with the final rule. The comment 
    which asks that resource pools have a maximum ceiling has been adopted 
    in the final rule.
        Comment was received that under the current proposal an existing 
    customer will not be eligible to receive power out of a resource pool; 
    an existing customer receiving power from only one Federal project 
    would be precluded from applying for power from another project's 
    resource pool; and that this is a clear departure from Reclamation Law. 
    In the past, Western has allowed preference entities to receive power 
    from more than one project when marketing areas overlap. Given the 
    significant new customer load that exists in portions of Western's 
    service territory, Western is not willing to continue this policy on a 
    Western-wide basis. On this issue, Western will retain the flexibility 
    set forth in the proposed Program. An existing customer will not be 
    eligible to receive power from a resource pool unless Western provides 
    otherwise on a project-specific basis. Comments on the eligibility of 
    existing customers to receive resource pool power will be accepted as 
    part of the project-specific public process.
        Comment was received favoring use of the Central Valley Project 
    resource pool to achieve a fairer distribution of power. Western 
    reserves the right to use the CVP resource pool in this manner, subject 
    to public input received during a project-specific public process.
        Several comments advocated allocations of resource pool power to 
    customers with renewable resources in their mix and customers that have 
    documented efficiency improvements through IRP. Other comments suggest 
    that new customers represent emerging markets for Western, or that 
    allocations to the Federal government have national benefits. Since the 
    specific criteria associated with allocations to new customers will be 
    determined during future, project-specific public processes, these 
    comments are more appropriately raised and addressed at that time.
        Customers commented that sales from the pool should be on the same 
    terms and conditions as with other contractors. Western also received 
    comment that a definition of ``fair share'' is needed. Western agrees 
    that sales from the pool should be on the same terms and conditions as 
    with other contractors. No definition of ``fair share'' will be adopted 
    as part of these regulations due to the difficulty of developing a 
    meaningful definition on a Western-wide basis. A specific determination 
    of ``fair share'' will be developed during the project-specific 
    allocation processes, which will take place during a time period closer 
    to the expiration date of existing contracts.
    6. Resource Adjustment
    a. Background
        In the August 9 Federal Register notice, Western proposed to adjust 
    its long-term firm resources only in response to changes in hydrology 
    and river operations. Existing customers would receive at least 5 
    years' notice before adjustments are made.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Comment was received that Western should change its marketable 
    resource in response to changes in operations after the extension term 
    begins only if such a change adversely impacts Western's ability to 
    meet its contractual obligations. Under the PMI resource adjustment 
    provision, section 905.34, however, Western retains the flexibility 
    needed to react to either changes that are adverse or beneficial to 
    Western's marketable resource. Western will not limit the exercise of 
    this adjustment provision to circumstances that adversely impact our 
    ability to meet contractual obligations.
        A customer commented that any changes to marketable resources--not 
    just significant changes--should be subject to a public process, and 
    that adjustments in resources should be triggered only by changes in 
    river hydrology or mandated operating adjustments such as new 
    legislation and that if other factors affect determination of the 
    allocated resource, Western should conduct public proceedings. Western 
    agrees that any changes in our long-term marketable resource should be 
    subject to a public process. Western also agrees to limit the exercise 
    of this 
    
    [[Page 54164]]
    resource adjustment provision to changes in hydrology and operations.
        It was suggested that adjustments to contract rates of delivery be 
    limited to no more than 5 percent. Some customers also commented that 
    they support the 5 year window to make changes in resources based upon 
    changes in operations/hydrology. A 5 percent limitation on contract 
    rate of delivery adjustments would enhance the stability of Western's 
    hydropower commitment, but would not give Western the flexibility it 
    needs to react to changing circumstances such as generating agency 
    adjustments to operations.
        Western has experienced adjustments in operations that have 
    impacted long-term firm power in excess of 5 percent in the past. 
    Western needs the ability to react to these situations, even though 
    they may be infrequent in nature.
        Finally, comment was received concerning the withdrawal 
    opportunities not likely being large enough to manage future 
    environmental problems, encourage renewables, or meet the needs of new 
    customers. Comment was also received that the added flexibility that 
    Western has proposed on resource withdrawals is good. The more open-
    ended approach in the final rule should satisfy the concern that the 
    withdrawal opportunities are not likely to be large enough to manage 
    future environmental problems. Other provisions of the Program, or 
    separate Western initiatives, will encourage renewables and meet the 
    needs of new customers.
    7. Notice
    a. Background
        Western has proposed the creation of an incremental resource pool 
    that makes power available for potential new customers over time, 
    without the disruptive influence of creating a large pool all at once, 
    before the need exists. At two intervals of 5 years after the effective 
    date of the extension to existing customers, Western proposed to create 
    a project-specific resource pool increment of up to an additional 1.5 
    percent of the marketable resource. No provision for the timing of any 
    advance notice was proposed.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Comments were received that Western needs to better define the 
    conditions and the notice provisions for future withdrawals of power, 
    and that advance notice of incremental resource pool reductions should 
    range from 2 to 5 years. Western agrees that customers need to have 
    advance notice of the amount of future withdrawals of power. Five 
    years' notice appears to be too long given the relatively low ceiling 
    of 1 percent of the marketable resource available at the time, and the 
    5 year intervals between the initial resource pool and the two 
    subsequent pool increments. Instead, Western has added a notice 
    provision that gives customers at least a 2 year notice on withdrawals 
    to create subsequent resource pool increments. The conditions for 
    future withdrawals of power will be defined on a project-specific 
    basis.
        Comment was received that Western needs to clarify how it will 
    notify customers about the availability of power due to penalty 
    imposition. Other comment suggested that such power should be marketed 
    in the same Area Office region first, and that Western needs to 
    reconcile the reinstatement of power proposal with the notice to be 
    given to those purchasing the penalty power. Western plans to provide 
    notice to all long-term firm power customers within the project's 
    marketing area. Of these customers, only those not currently being 
    penalized for non-compliance with the IRP/small customer plan provision 
    of these regulations may be offered an opportunity to place the penalty 
    power under contract. The comment regarding the need to reconcile the 
    reinstatement of power with the withdrawal notice timing is valid. The 
    regulations have been changed to avoid any conflict.
    8. Native American Issues
    a. Background
        In the proposed Program, Western expressed an expectation that 
    resource pool power would be made available to Indians for use on the 
    reservation. No utility status was required as a prerequisite to 
    receipt of an allocation.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Western has taken several steps toward assisting Native Americans 
    in meeting their needs for cost-based hydroelectric power. In the past, 
    the benefits of hydropower have been realized by Indians through 
    allocations to cooperatives that serve tribal load. In the future, 
    Western expects to make allocations directly to the tribes.
        A number of comments were received on Native American utility 
    status, ranging from strong objections to eliminating the utility 
    responsibility requirement to strong support for eliminating it. 
    Interested parties commented that the definition of preference 
    customers should remain fixed, or otherwise the maximum will be taken 
    from existing customers in later resource pool increments. Western has 
    always considered tribes to be preference entities, but has not 
    historically allocated power to Native Americans in the absence of 
    utility status, eligible irrigation load or special legislation enacted 
    by Congress. Western's change in policy, through removal of the utility 
    status requirement, is in keeping with the spirit of DOE's Indian 
    policy, and recognizes the special and unique relationship between the 
    United States and tribal governments.
        This limited and narrow policy change does not subvert the 
    preference clause set forth in section 9(c) of the Reclamation Project 
    Act of 1939. An overview of the range of preference customers Western 
    currently serves helps put this issue in perspective. Western has 
    marketed power historically both to preference utilities, such as 
    municipal utilities and cooperatives, and non-utilities, such as 
    irrigation districts, Federal installations, universities and prisons. 
    Utility status is required for cities to be eligible to receive Western 
    power under the preference clause. Salt Lake City et al. v. Western 
    Area Power Administration, et al. 926 F.2d 974 (10th Cir. 1991). This 
    precedent is not disturbed or overturned by these regulations. Western 
    has discretion to determine the eligibility of Indian tribes and other 
    entities entitled to preference in the allocation of Federal power. 
    This policy change is limited in scope, in accordance with the policy 
    underpinning described above, and is not a precedent for future erosion 
    of the preference clause.
        Comments were received favoring a 3 percent resource pool going to 
    Native Americans if there is no disruption to the preference customer 
    currently serving those loads. Comment was also received that new 
    customers should be accommodated from new/expanded resources instead of 
    taking power from existing customers that already have rates higher 
    than the regional average; and expressing the view that it is not in 
    the public's best interest to extend preference beyond the requirement 
    of utility status.
        No disruption to the preference customers currently serving tribal 
    loads need occur. Proposals for providing allocations directly to the 
    tribes will be developed on a project-by-project basis during the 
    allocation of power from project-specific resource pools. Many of the 
    more detailed comments Western has received on the issue of delivery of 
    power to Native Americans cannot be answered at this time. However, 
    some basic approaches have been set forth in this rule in section 
    905.35 and in 
    
    [[Page 54165]]
    section IV of this supplementary information section. Western will 
    consider arrangements for the delivery of the benefits of cost-based 
    Federal power to non-utility Native American tribes, such as through 
    credits on power bills.
        Customers commented that preference and cost-based pricing must be 
    observed and there should be no disruption to preference entities 
    currently serving Native Americans. Customers and stakeholders 
    commented that most Indian tribes already get 50 percent of their needs 
    through coops; the arrangements should not result in financial hardship 
    or additional responsibilities for the cooperative; the distribution 
    cooperative should be kept as part of the transaction--possibly through 
    the use of bill credits; the existing service territories of 
    cooperatives must be protected; rural electric cooperation has been 
    pledged to assure that delivery of power allocated to the tribes takes 
    place and that a monthly billing credit approach is evolving in the 
    Eastern Division of Pick-Sloan; and Western's allocations to tribal 
    members should be based on usage within the servicing cooperative's 
    territory. Western was also asked to put provisions in firm power 
    contracts with cooperatives requiring distribution of power to the 
    tribes at fair and reasonable costs.
        Entities providing delivery services, such as rural electric 
    cooperatives, should be fairly compensated for services provided. No 
    additional responsibility will be required without appropriate 
    financial compensation. Preference and cost-based pricing will be 
    observed. Due to the decision to allocate power directly to tribes, 
    without regard to utility status, there should not be any threat to the 
    existing service territories of cooperatives because of these 
    regulations. Western understands that some tribes are considering 
    utility formation, but this action would not be required to receive a 
    firm power allocation from Western.
        It is true that many Indian tribes currently served by rural 
    electric cooperatives already receive a portion of their needs from 
    Western through the cooperative's blended rate. The amount varies from 
    tribe to tribe. The magnitude of the benefit already received, among 
    other factors, could influence Western's development of proposed 
    criteria for future allocations of power from project-specific resource 
    pools.
        There was a question as to how tribes being served by investor-
    owned utilities will be handled. Western has not decided how tribes 
    being served by investor-owned utilities might be handled. While 
    Western's rural electric cooperative customers have been cooperative in 
    working with Western and the tribes on workable delivery arrangements, 
    investor-owned utilities serving reservation load have not been 
    similarly involved to this point. A potential exists for the investor-
    owned utility community to resist comparable delivery arrangements 
    based upon retail wheeling concerns. This issue will be addressed 
    during Program implementation.
        Diverse comments were received on the Pick-Sloan marketing area, 
    with some comments favoring expansion; other comments favoring 
    reduction; with most arguing for maintenance of the current Pick-Sloan 
    marketing area. Western does not believe that equity or the public 
    interest is served by adjusting the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program-
    Eastern Division marketing area in the Power Marketing Initiative. 
    Existing customers outside of the Missouri River Basin, principally in 
    Minnesota and Iowa, have developed contractual arrangements with 
    supplemental suppliers, have transmission arrangements with Western or 
    third parties, or in some cases constructed transmission facilities to 
    receive Federal power. Changing the marketing area to exclude these 
    customers would create unnecessary disruption in regional power supply 
    arrangements and lead to resource uncertainty that could hinder quality 
    integrated resource planning. For these same reasons, Western will not 
    require a larger withdrawal from customers located outside the Missouri 
    River basin.
        A comment was received that the Blackfeet Nation should be included 
    in the marketing area for the Eastern Division of Pick-Sloan. The 
    marketing area of the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program-Eastern 
    Division need not be expanded to include the reservation of the 
    Blackfeet Nation. As the reservation is east of the Continental Divide 
    in Montana, it is currently within the marketing area.
        It was suggested that there is a potential for cooperation between 
    a tribe and a rural electric cooperative on integrated resource 
    planning. Western agrees that there is potential for cooperation 
    between a tribe and a rural electric cooperative on an integrated 
    resource plan. In addition to the benefits of joint planning and 
    avoiding duplication, the tribe and the cooperative could apply for IRP 
    cooperative status and receive an additional 6 months to submit an 
    initial IRP.
        The intent of the Program is for the benefits of hydropower 
    allocations to go directly to individual tribal consumers. This is 
    consistent with treatment of other Western customers. Tribal councils 
    will be involved in the process of accomplishing this goal.
        There were many comments concerning power allocations. Questions 
    received were: (1) Will the tribes be able to act with complete 
    independence in determining who receives the benefits? (2) What types 
    of loads are appropriate targets for Western power? (3) Who will hold 
    the allocation? (4) How will transmission compensation be handled? (5) 
    How will the closed/open reservation issue be addressed? (6) Who must 
    approve the agreement? (7) Who will be responsible for paying Western? 
    Comments stated that a tribe should be required to demonstrate the 
    existence of an agreement with a viable utility capable of delivering 
    power and that the allocation should be made to the tribe and the 
    utility that will transfer the resource; Western must be willing to 
    reduce allocations to cooperatives that would otherwise benefit from 
    allocations to tribes; the benefit of the allocation should be 
    reflected on the power bills of the tribes; and allocations for tribes 
    should be based on ``usage by tribal members within the preference 
    customer's service territory.'' Western sees no need to reduce 
    allocations to cooperatives that would otherwise benefit from 
    allocations to tribes. In the Eastern Division of Pick-Sloan, most of 
    the discussion with tribes and customers regarding delivery of power 
    has focused on the use of a bill crediting mechanism that could avoid 
    this issue of undue benefits.
        Concerns have been raised over Western providing power to tribes 
    ``for free.'' Western will not provide power to tribes free of charge. 
    Native Americans will pay the same rate for power as any other 
    customer.
        Additional comments state that a resource pool of 25 percent is 
    needed to meet the needs of tribes in the Missouri Basin today and into 
    the future; the benefits of hydropower allocations must go directly to 
    individual tribal consumers; tribes should get all new Pick-Sloan power 
    resources due to changes in operations; the tribal councils should 
    determine how the benefits of hydroelectric power are distributed to 
    tribal members; Western should support a congressional super-preference 
    for the tribes; and Western should serve all Native American existing 
    load and meet all load growth with Federal power. Resale of Western's 
    allocations should be allowed pending a need for the power. In 
    response, Western maintains that the tribes should 
    
    [[Page 54166]]
    receive their fair share of the marketable resources available. A power 
    reservation for Native Americans of 25 percent of the current 
    commitments from the Eastern Division of the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin 
    Program is far greater than that needed to meet a fair share of the 
    power needs of the requesting tribes. A 25 percent resource pool would 
    equal 500 MW of firm power, a resource far in excess of the loads of 
    all potential new preference customers in the region. As documented in 
    the EIS, there are increased environmental impacts associated with 
    progressively larger resource pool sizes. Western believes that an 
    extension of less than 90 percent of the resource to existing customers 
    may lead to unnecessary power supply dislocations and potential 
    development of new, but largely unneeded, supply-side resources, 
    lessening the efficiency of the integrated system and defeating the 
    purpose of the Program. Western sees no reason to allocate power to an 
    entity in amounts greater than its loads, as this would deny a valuable 
    renewable resource to existing customers. It is contrary to Western's 
    policy and undermines Federal law to allow a customer to resell 
    hydropower to third parties. Neither equity nor environmental quality 
    is served by withdrawing power from existing customers to meet the load 
    growth of new customers. Western intends to allocate power to Native 
    Americans for use on the reservation out of project-specific resource 
    pools, but will determine the size of the allocation based upon the 
    need to meet an appropriate share of the load for eligible new 
    customers.
        Comment was received that the resource pool be enlarged to 4.5 
    percent to assure the pool is not so small that it limits a tribe's 
    ``fair share'' or that the expectations of existing customers are not 
    fixed too high. Over the last several months, Western has developed an 
    estimate of the loads that exist on reservations within the marketing 
    area of the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program-Eastern Division. 
    Information on the hydropower benefits currently being received by 
    reservations has also been compiled. Based upon this information, and 
    information from customers relating to Native American loads, a 3 
    percent initial resource pool was proposed. Comment was received that 
    the proposed 3 percent initial reservation of Pick-Sloan Eastern 
    Division power was not enough to meet a fair share of the needs of 
    tribes, and should be increased to 4.5 percent. To assure that a fair 
    share of the load of Native Americans is met, Western has increased the 
    size of the initial resource pool to 4 percent.
        Comments were received regarding the size of the resource pool. At 
    present, Western supplies about 26 percent on average of the total load 
    of firm power customers in the Eastern Division of Pick-Sloan. The size 
    of the initial pool is large enough to meet a considerably higher 
    percentage of tribal load than many existing customers enjoy.
        Comments on the ``fair share'' concept were that Western has not 
    addressed the tribal arguments in support of a greater than ``fair 
    share'' allocation; Western's estimate that 45 MW of Pick-Sloan power 
    is enough to meet a fair share of the needs of the tribes is flawed 
    because it assumes a ``fair share'' would not exceed 70 percent and the 
    load analysis was based on 1990 census data when the delivery of power 
    would actually begin in the year 2000; and the term ``fair share'' 
    should be discontinued because it is ambiguous and promotes 
    misunderstanding and mistrust. Western regrets that tribes oppose the 
    use of the term ``fair share'' due to its ambiguity. Western will not 
    define ``fair share'' in this final rule, as this determination can be 
    made better during the future project-specific allocation process for 
    new customers within the Eastern Division marketing area.
        During the comment period, it was suggested that tribes should 
    receive all ``new'' power resources resulting from operational changes 
    or upgrades. In contrast, another comment asked Western to accommodate 
    new customer needs exclusively from new resources and not from a 
    resource pool. According to this commenter, if needy groups need 
    assistance, it should be in the form of subsidies borne by all 
    taxpayers and not through actions that will increase power costs for 
    rural America.
        Equity is not served by dedicating future increases in resources, 
    whether due to operational changes favorable to power production or 
    upratings at existing powerplants, to one class of customers. The Power 
    Marketing Initiative provides tribes with significant new benefits. Nor 
    will Western limit new customer access to power to new power resources 
    only. The creation of a resource pool serves the policy of promoting 
    widespread use of hydropower. Limiting new customer allocations to 
    potential new power resources would create additional uncertainty for 
    new customers, as there is no assurance of the availability of such 
    resources during any defined time period.
        To date, Western has received full cooperation from Eastern 
    Division cooperatives on the issue of delivery of hydropower benefits 
    to reservations. Even if unanticipated obstacles to the delivery of 
    hydropower benefits arise, Western retains the right to provide the 
    economic benefits of its resources to Native Americans directly. Given 
    this flexibility, Western sees no reason to include language that makes 
    delivery of power/power benefits to tribes a condition of firm power 
    sales contracts for cooperatives. Western, Native Americans and 
    Western's Eastern Division customers will continue to work together to 
    assure that the tribes receive the benefit of their allocation. Western 
    has responded positively to requests for assistance in negotiations.
        One comment suggested that Western evaluate tribal irrigation 
    potential and integrate that irrigation into the Pick-Sloan similar to 
    the Standing Rock Sioux and the Three Affiliated Tribes under the Water 
    Resources Development Act of 1992. Another comment asked that more 
    tribes receive compensation like that received by the Fort Berthoud, 
    Standing Rock Sioux and Three Affiliated tribes. Special legislation 
    would be required to accomplish these suggestions. Western will 
    consider allocation of power to eligible irrigation districts in a 
    future, project-specific resource pool allocation process.
        Western has no authority to adjudicate Indian water rights and 
    negotiate such rights with the states. This activity is outside the 
    scope of Western's mission, and should be addressed through direct 
    discussions with the responsible agencies.
        Western will not adopt the comment that only short-term commitments 
    of firm power should be made pending resolution of Missouri River Basin 
    tribal issues. Significant resource uncertainty would continue for 
    existing customers in the Eastern Division if this comment were 
    adopted, as contracts currently in place expire in the year 2000. 
    Instead, Western will continue to work with tribes in the upper Midwest 
    in parallel with Program implementation.
        Several comments were received advocating flexibility in the 
    allocation of Western power to Indian tribes. Instead of limiting 
    allocations to use on the reservation, these commenters asked that 
    tribal members living adjacent to the reservation and within the 
    servicing cooperative's service territory also be allowed to receive 
    the benefits of cost-based Eastern Division power. Another comment 
    asked how Western intended to address the closed/open reservation 
    issue. In order to retain the flexibility to address these situations, 
    this Federal Register notice states that Western 
    
    [[Page 54167]]
    expects to make allocations to Native American tribes for use on the 
    reservation and potentially off the reservation under certain 
    circumstances as determined by Western. Western wants to reserve the 
    flexibility to tailor the allocation of power from project-specific 
    resource pools to meet regional circumstances.
        Western was requested to advise whether the Mni Wiconi special 
    allocation of 6 MW is part of the proposed 3 percent resource pool. The 
    Mni Wiconi special allocation of 6 MW is statutory, and is not part of 
    the Eastern Division proposed 3 percent initial resource pool.
        An objection was raised regarding the distribution of power within 
    the Department of Defense where the total military electrical load is 
    being reduced, with comment being received that a higher Federal 
    purpose would be served by reallocating the power to the tribes. 
    Western does not have the contractual right to withdraw power from the 
    Department of Defense to meet Native American needs. Under an existing 
    contract that is effective through the year 2000, Western has agreed to 
    allow the Department of Defense to shift its allocation among Air Force 
    bases under circumstances such as a base closure. Western cannot 
    allocate this power to tribes, as it is already contractually 
    committed.
        One comment stated that the tribes lost over 160,000 acres of land 
    without just compensation when Oahe was constructed, and that the 
    tribes have never received the power benefits from Pick-Sloan despite 
    the loss of land. Just compensation for the taking of lands to 
    construct the Pick-Sloan Program is not an issue that is appropriately 
    addressed through an allocation of power by Western. When the taking of 
    lands took place, compensation was given to tribes. If the compensation 
    was inadequate, redress is available through the courts, through 
    special legislation, or through the agencies that took the property.
        It was suggested that a special tribal nation allocation be 
    established from power revenues to provide just compensation. Western 
    has no authority to use power revenues deposited in the Treasury to 
    create a special tribal allocation to provide just compensation. Only 
    Congress can direct the use of revenues in such a manner.
        Western declines to create a special class of power exclusively for 
    tribes. In the absence of direction from Congress to the contrary, 
    Western believes it is inequitable to create administratively a 
    special, preferential classification for Indians. Instead, Western 
    intends to meet the needs of tribes through allocations from project-
    specific resource pools.
        Nor will Western create a special IRP provision for Indians. Under 
    section 114 of the Energy Policy Act of 1992, Western does not have the 
    discretion to develop special provisions for tribes. However, Western 
    intends to provide integrated resource planning technical assistance to 
    Native American tribes upon tribal request. We are committed to 
    assisting the tribes to successfully develop and implement IRPs.
        Comment was received that the tribe must recapture capital 
    ownership rights in RUS plant equipment based on the Consumer Price 
    Index, and that Indians should be provided technical and financial 
    assistance in developing a utility on a par with the rural electric 
    cooperatives and investor-owned utilities. No authority exists for 
    Western to adopt the comment that a tribe must recapture capital 
    ownership rights in RUS plant equipment based on the Consumer Price 
    Index. Nor does Western have any role with respect to disconnection of 
    service policies. Western will remain neutral on the issue of tribal 
    utility formation. Technical and financial assistance to a tribe or any 
    other group in support of utility formation will not be provided, as 
    this cost is the responsibility of the entity seeking utility status 
    and should not be a project cost borne by all project ratepayers.
        Western was asked whether it is implementing retail wheeling. 
    Western is not imposing retail wheeling on its Eastern Division rural 
    electric cooperative customers under the Power Marketing Initiative. 
    The cooperatives have been supportive of the delivery of the benefits 
    of power allocations to tribes, and are supportive of a bill crediting 
    approach to accomplish Western's goals in a manner that avoids the need 
    for a separate transmission service arrangement.
        Comment was received asking why Western was expanding its resource 
    allocations to tribes when the overall SLCA/IP resource was declining. 
    No decision has been made on the size of the resource pool for 
    potential new customers within the SLCA/IP marketing area. The size of 
    this project- specific pool will be determined at a later date. Western 
    is working with the Ute Mountain Utes to determine if project use power 
    might be made available for certain irrigation pumping loads before 
    existing firm power contracts expire in the year 2004.
        Comments were received by customers and stakeholders that the 
    efforts of Western to work with the tribes on implementing the Program 
    is appreciated; that the United States should abandon the policy of 
    decimating Indian water rights through court adjudication and 
    negotiation with the states; the relationship between Western and 
    Indian tribes is expected to be one of government to government; and 
    Western must follow DOE's commitment to the trust responsibility 
    reflected in DOE's Indian Policy and ``redo'' the Program to reflect 
    tribes' unique relationships with the Federal government. Western 
    supports the Department of Energy's American Indian policy which 
    stresses the need for a government-to-government, trust-based 
    relationship. The key theme throughout the Department's policy is 
    consultation with tribal governments so that tribal rights and concerns 
    are considered prior to action being taken. Western has met with Indian 
    tribes and tribal representatives throughout the Program public 
    process, and is currently meeting with tribes located in the Missouri 
    River Basin on a monthly basis. To mitigate the economic conditions on 
    reservations within Western's marketing area, Western has responded 
    favorably to the comment that tribal utility status should not be 
    required before a power sales contract can be offered, and has also 
    adopted tribal comment by agreeing to enter into contracts with the 
    tribe directly. These policy decisions show how Western has been 
    responsive to the needs of tribal nations, and that the consultation 
    has been meaningful and substantive.
    9. Resource Acquisition by Western
    a. Background
        In the proposed Program, Western committed to the use of IRP 
    principles in its resource acquisition and transmission planning 
    principles. This commitment has been pursued through a separate public 
    process, commencing with a Federal Register notice published on 
    December 6, 1994, 59 FR 62724.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        The following are comments received which were addressed in the 
    separate public process on the use of IRP principles by Western, or are 
    more appropriately addressed in the project-specific implementation of 
    the IRP principles: (1) Western should not develop non-hydro resources, 
    as this would have a negative impact on our IRP. (2) Western's resource 
    acquisitions should be limited to meeting contract rates of delivery. 
    (3) Western should identify current and future transmission development 
    in its IRP, as this information is critical to our IRP. (4) 
    
    [[Page 54168]]
    How will Western acquire DSM? Western should not conserve its 
    hydroelectric power, but should market all of the available resource. 
    (5) Western should emphasize the purchase of energy efficiency and 
    renewable energy from Western customers over other resources. (6) 
    Western should purchase efficiency and renewables, because cost-based 
    rates discourage the installation of energy efficiency measures. (7) We 
    support IRP by Western. It would be appropriate for the Bureau of 
    Reclamation to use IRP principles in its pump replacements, generator 
    rewinds or other project enhancements and system improvements. (8) Any 
    reduction in Western's costs will enhance our competitive position. (9) 
    We do not support the concept of Western reducing customer demand 
    through Western's adoption of IRP principles. (10) We are unclear 
    whether Western could free up power resources by funding energy 
    efficiency and demand-side management projects. (11) We are unsure if 
    Western's commitment to IRP principles will apply to investments 
    Western is considering in the very short term. (12) We are concerned 
    about the timing of the adoption of IRP principles by Western--it 
    should apply to Navajo transmission and Glen Canyon replacement power 
    and to resources that have not yet been acquired as of January 1, 1995. 
    (13) Western should use IRP principles immediately, without waiting for 
    completion of the public process.
        Several relevant comments will be addressed briefly here.
        One customer commented that Western's use of IRP principles could 
    impact customer resource planning, and that Western should implement 
    its commitment before requiring its customers to complete their IRPs. 
    Additionally, Western should be sensitive to the timing of customer 
    IRPs and Western's use of IRP principles, especially if Western's 
    actions impact the amount or the price of the Federal resource. Western 
    agrees that its use of IRP principles could impact customer planning. 
    Every attempt was made to conclude the parallel public process quickly, 
    to provide customers with more certainty as they prepare their 
    individual integrated resource plans. The implementation of Western's 
    commitment to use principles of integrated resource planning is 
    described in a Federal Register notice published on June 9, 1995 (60 FR 
    30533).
        A customer commented that it supports future contracts that allow 
    customers the flexibility to acquire firming resources, and urges 
    Western to enter into contracts to purchase customer-owned renewable 
    resources. Additionally, customers should be given the opportunity to 
    refuse Western purchase of firming energy, and should be given a 
    priority to purchase surpluses. Western concurs that customers be given 
    the opportunity to refuse Western purchase of firming energy. For all 
    projects receiving resource extensions under the PMI, Western will 
    develop contractual language which would allow the customer to assume 
    the responsibility of acquiring resources to firm up Western's 
    hydroelectric commitments if the customer so chooses.
        Another customer commented that adoption of IRP principles by 
    Western should not mean abandonment of lowest possible cost consistent 
    with sound business principles; and that Western's role is one of a 
    marketer of power from Federal generation, and not acquiring non-
    Federal power through the use of power revenues. Adoption of IRP 
    principles does not mean abandonment of lowest possible costs 
    consistent with sound business principles. To the contrary, use of IRP 
    principles will be a tool that will assist Western in keeping costs 
    low.
    10. Implementation
    a. Background
        Western proposed to offer extension contracts to existing Pick-
    Sloan Missouri Basin Program-Eastern Division and Loveland Area Project 
    customers upon submittal of their IRPs to Western. Western also 
    proposed to extend to existing customers a pro rata percentage of 
    marketable resources available at the time current contracts expire.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Comments were received stating that actual contract rate of 
    delivery values need to be in the contracts extending resources because 
    a percentage of a resource available at the end of the term of existing 
    contracts does not offer customers the certainty needed to prepare a 
    quality integrated resource plan; that it would be extremely beneficial 
    to know the marketable capacity and the resources to be committed as 
    soon as possible--when the Corps of Engineers operating procedures are 
    known, the marketable capacity should be determined; that contract rate 
    of delivery values must be specified in the contract; and that there 
    should be minimum resource values set forth in the post-2000 contracts. 
    While Western understands the concern that actual contract rate of 
    delivery values need to be in contracts extending resources, or that 
    some minimum resource values be established, there remains a need to 
    retain the flexibility to respond to changing circumstances in the 
    short term. The development and completion of the Missouri River Master 
    Operating Manual EIS is one of those changing circumstances. Western 
    will work with customers to determine the resources and marketable 
    capacity to be committed as soon as possible after the Corps operating 
    procedures are known. If no better information is available, for 
    initial IRP planning purposes, Western will provide existing customers 
    with estimated resource commitments (based upon application of the 
    percentages set forth in this final rule to the resources currently 
    under contract).
        Customers commented that contracts should be offered upon 
    publication of the final rule, as the added certainty would promote 
    quality integrated resource planning; that customers are already 
    required to prepare and implement IRPs under the Energy Policy Act and 
    there is no need for a further incentive to encourage IRP; that 
    contracts should be offered upon issuance of the EIS Record of Decision 
    subject to the submission of the customer's initial IRP; that customers 
    will find it difficult to develop IRPs without knowing Western's exact 
    commitment; and that it may be necessary to delay the signing of 
    Eastern Division contracts if appropriate delivery arrangements to 
    Native Americans cannot be worked out. Western agrees with the comments 
    that individual customer contract offers for those projects initially 
    covered under the Power Marketing Initiative should be made before 
    individual customers are required by Western to submit an IRP. By 
    adopting this approach, the new penalty provisions under the extension 
    contracts will be effective and available if an IRP or small customer 
    plan is unsatisfactory. In 905.37 of this final rule, Western has 
    adopted the approach that Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program-Eastern 
    Division extension contracts may be offered 30 days after publication 
    of this Federal Register notice. This approach provides more certainty 
    to customers by advancing the date of the contract offer, but retains a 
    powerful incentive for quality and timely integrated resource planning 
    by making the penalties mandated by EPAct immediately applicable 
    pursuant to the terms of the extension contract. Contracts for 
    extensions of resources for the Loveland Area Projects will not be 
    offered until the analysis of potential resource adjustments in 1999 
    has been 
    
    [[Page 54169]]
    completed and any adjustments are implemented. Existing power sales 
    contracts require that this analysis be completed by 1996.
        It was also suggested that the Salt Lake City Area/Integrated 
    Projects marketing plan, Glen Canyon EIS and replacement power study 
    should be expedited, with contract extensions accomplished concurrent 
    with the Record of Decision on the SLCA/IP marketing plan EIS. Western 
    agrees that customer resource certainty is promoted by expediting the 
    Salt Lake City Area/Integrated Projects marketing plan, the Glen Canyon 
    EIS and the replacement power study. Western is making every effort to 
    complete the processes we are managing, and is working with the Bureau 
    of Reclamation to help complete the Glen Canyon EIS as well. Western 
    will evaluate application of the PMI to the SLCA/IP after its electric 
    power marketing EIS is completed and the associated marketing criteria 
    and contract changes are implemented.
    11. Other Marketing Issues
    a. Background
        Historically, Western has marketed firm power at a level defined in 
    project- specific marketing criteria. During periods of drought, 
    Western has purchased firming power to meet the obligations defined in 
    the marketing criteria. When water conditions are good, surplus energy 
    (and occasionally surplus capacity) may be available for sale on a 
    short-term basis. Typically, these surpluses are sold to regional 
    utilities. These regional utilities may or may not be long-term firm 
    power customers; these sales are often made to both preference entities 
    and investor owned utilities.
        Historically, Western's project-specific marketing approach has 
    been based upon public comment and policy decisions made during the 
    development of specific marketing criteria. Some resources are marketed 
    on a resource pattern basis, while others are based on the load pattern 
    of the customer.
        Western proposed to extend a major percentage of the power 
    currently committed to existing customers beyond the expiration date of 
    existing contracts. Western is not proposing to acquire new resources 
    to meet customer load growth.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        A number of commenters supported the current definition of Pick-
    Sloan Missouri Basin Program-Eastern Division marketable resources and 
    the marketing criteria. Any change should take place under a separate 
    public process after consultation with customers. Several commenters 
    suggested that existing preference entities should have a right of 
    first refusal to all non-firm power at the price of production and 
    transmission and that non-firm energy should be sold to customers that 
    demonstrate feasibility of purchase in their IRP, and when that 
    customer can firm the hydroelectric energy. They also suggested that 
    resources made available as a result of penalty impositions should be 
    marketed to customers of the same Area Office.
        There were numerous comments on how to establish the marketable 
    capacity. Some suggested that a separate approach may help maximize the 
    capacity Western has available to market. Several of Western's 
    customers are power suppliers that have energy flexibility with their 
    own resources. If that flexibility can be utilized by Western to 
    minimize their risk in high or low water years, the Western capacity 
    could be based on something other than a lower decile water year such 
    as a higher percentage of average hydrology. This would be a departure 
    from the load pattern type resource. In bad water years, the deliveries 
    would be lower, and the deliveries would be higher in good water years. 
    This would minimize the purchase and sale of firming energy. Marketable 
    capacity might be based on average water conditions if the customers 
    could handle some of the swings.
        Changes to Western's project-specific marketing policies are not 
    appropriate in a Western-wide initiative such as the Energy Planning 
    and Management Program. Adjustments in Western's current marketing 
    approach for a specific project can be appropriately addressed in a 
    separate project-specific proceeding at a later date. The extension 
    formula provides for a pro rata commitment to existing customers, based 
    upon the resource available at the end of the term of existing 
    contracts. Changes in marketing approaches are best addressed at that 
    time on a project-specific basis and not during the Western-wide 
    development of the PMI. Marketing issues that might be appropriate for 
    discussion at that time include policies for sale of non-firm energy, 
    departure from a load pattern resource and adjusting the firm power 
    risk level to a different percentage.
        Several comments were received on the proposal to restrict 
    transfers of Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division 
    allocations held by the State of South Dakota and the Department of 
    Defense. Under existing contracts, these two customers have enjoyed the 
    flexibility to transfer Western's hydropower and concentrate 
    allocations in specific locations with the goal of maximizing the 
    benefits of Federal hydropower. This contractual right exposes 
    supplemental power suppliers to load variations, undermining the 
    resource stability which promotes quality integrated resource planning. 
    By proposing some restrictions in the final rule on this flexibility in 
    the contracts extending resources, Western intends to create a more 
    stable resource commitment to customers that would benefit regional 
    planning, and make future firm power customer contracts more consistent 
    and equitable.
        Contrary to the comments of the Air Force, the final rule does not 
    require that an entire allocation be lost upon base closure after 2000. 
    Movements of allocations are allowed when the contract rate of delivery 
    exceeds the load at a particular site; this would be the case when a 
    base closes.
        The final rule does not impose unfair or unusual constraints on 
    government customers. If anything, the regulations treat Federal and 
    state government the same as other Eastern Division customers by 
    removing an advantage other customers do not enjoy. While this 
    provision may impact power costs for the Air Force and the state of 
    South Dakota, broader regional advantages are also realized from the 
    increase in power supply stability.
        The seasonal proportional share concept does not violate least-cost 
    principles. This same approach has been used in allocations to new 
    customers in many historic project-specific marketing plans.
        Several commenters recommended that Western maximize the stability 
    of the planning environment, and do everything possible to control 
    costs and identify the costs of other agencies that adversely impact 
    the cost of power. They also suggested that Western recognize the 
    potential structural changes in the electric utility industry by 
    beginning a meaningful dialogue on unbundling of services and must 
    avoid new subsidies or perpetuating old ones. A further suggestion was 
    that Western should further unbundle services to expand Western's 
    customer base and those receiving project benefits.
        Western is committed to enhancing resource stability through 
    control of costs. Many positive steps have been taken to reduce 
    Western's expenses, and more are planned for the future. Western 
    intends to be responsive to customer needs and utility industry 
    changes. This responsiveness includes a willingness to enter into a 
    meaningful dialogue on unbundling of services. Most recently, a 
    dialogue on this subject has taken place among Western and 
    
    [[Page 54170]]
    Central Valley Project customers. Western agrees with the comment that 
    new subsidies must be avoided and old subsidies must be eliminated. 
    Western will take advantage of consultation opportunities with 
    customers to maximize communication.
        One commenter was concerned that in the responses to comments that 
    were part of the proposed rule, Western makes the statement that it has 
    no general legal obligation to acquire additional resources to meet the 
    load growth of its customers. They felt that this statement is 
    unnecessary and constrains the considerable authority given to Western 
    by the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals.
        Western does not intend the publication of the proposed Program or 
    this final rule to limit Western's legal authorities recognized by the 
    Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in Salt Lake City et al v. Western Area 
    Power Administration, et al., 926 F.2nd 974 (10th Cir. 1991). However, 
    Western does not have the legal authority to acquire resources to meet 
    customer load growth.
        Several commenters supported efficiency improvements to existing 
    project facilities, and asked that customers have a right of first 
    refusal to participate. Any increases in capacity/energy should be made 
    available to the financing customer, or as a substitute for other 
    firming resources. Western should commence a process along the lines of 
    NCPA's 1992 proposal to the House Interior Committee.
        On the issue of customer financing of improvements to project 
    facilities, Western has decided to retain its flexibility to address 
    unique opportunities in a tailored manner as opposed to establishing a 
    Western-wide policy. In the past, Western has made increases in 
    capacity/energy available to the financing customer. Western continues 
    to believe this concept makes sense, and will likely apply it in the 
    future under most circumstances.
        Commenters applauded Western's decision to continue to provide 
    transmission access for renewables and endorsed Western marketing a 
    variety of products out of the Central Valley Project. Western 
    appreciates this supportive feedback.
        One commenter remarked that access to Western hydropower should be 
    based on customer adoption of a mix of conventional, renewable, and 
    demand-side resources. This commenter believes that contract renewals 
    should be a reward for DSM implementation. Western declines to allocate 
    power based on customer adoption of a mix of conventional, renewable 
    and demand-side resources. Nor will contract renewals be a reward for 
    DSM implementation. Resource extensions should be the foundation for 
    customer IRP, and not a carrot to induce the selection of some 
    preconceived resource ideal. Integrated resource planning should lead 
    to the selection of resources based on their individual merits as 
    determined through the IRP process. Western addressed at length the 
    issue of incentives in the responses to comments that were part of the 
    Federal Register notice of August 9, 1994. That discussion is still 
    valid and is incorporated as a response to these comments.
        Allocations from project-specific resource pools will be completed 
    before contracts with existing customers expire. Power that is reserved 
    for new customers but not allocated and resources offered but not 
    placed under contract will be offered to existing customers that 
    contributed to the resource pool. Western expects that all firm power 
    will be marketed. Withdrawal mechanisms will exist for purposes 
    described in the final regulations.
    
    D. Other Issues
    
    1. Support of Renewables
    a. Background
        In the proposed rule, Western stated that consideration would be 
    given to the allocation of power from project-specific resource pools 
    to firm up renewable resources.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        Western received several comments that strongly support the concept 
    of making power available to preference entities to firm up renewable 
    resources. Those comments stated that firming renewables would expand 
    that marketplace for renewables and facilitate the further development 
    and commercialization of this technology; that the initial pools for 
    the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division and the 
    Loveland Area Projects be increased to 6 percent of the available 
    resource, with half of the increased pool being dedicated to help firm 
    up renewables; and that the increased experience and economies of scale 
    would make renewables more attractive and cost-effective and renewable 
    investments would help utilities diversify against future fuel price 
    and environmental risks. However, one commenter stated that funding 
    renewable or nontraditional power supply may be a worthy social 
    objective, but this is not Western's role and incentives to encourage 
    non-traditional resources should be developed at the community level 
    through the customer IRP process.
        Western has a strong desire to support the development of 
    renewables. Western has in the past and plans in the future to assure 
    the continued progress of renewable resources as an important national 
    resource. The following examples demonstrate Western's commitment.
        In the Eastern Division of the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program, 
    the Mid-Continent Area Power Pool (MAPP) has in place a means to 
    accredit capacity for renewable resources based on historical 
    performance. Accreditation relieves the renewable resource owner from 
    the cost of purchasing power reserves due to the intermittent nature of 
    power production by this type of resource. If a Western customer is not 
    a MAPP member, Western may act as an agent for the customer to gain 
    MAPP accreditation of capacity for the renewable resource.
        Recently, Western has committed to undertake a market assessment of 
    the potential for solar power in the southwestern United States as part 
    of the Solar Enterprise Zone (SEZ) initiative. Western has offered its 
    marketing, transmission and power system operations expertise to the 
    SEZ.
        Western has been active in promoting renewable energy in 
    partnership with Native American Indians. Western, in coordination with 
    the Navajo Nation, the Department of Energy and Sandia National 
    Laboratory, has supplied forty photovoltaic units to the Navajo Tribal 
    Utility Authority for installation at remote homes on the Navajo 
    reservation. As extensions of distribution lines to these remote 
    locations would be prohibitively expensive, installation of 
    photovoltaic technology is a commercially viable alternative. Western 
    has contributed to an assessment of the wood fuel supply on the White 
    Mountain Apache tribe reservation to determine the quantity of this 
    fuel available for power cogeneration. To promote Indian health, 
    Western is contributing to the Navajo Rootfuel Promotion project, which 
    will evaluate the feasibility of growing and harvesting rootfuels to 
    replace coal as a fuel in Indian homes. Another example of a 
    partnership between Western and Native Americans is an assessment of 
    the feasibility of producing biogas fuel from solid wastes to meet the 
    needs of remote Navajo villages and cluster homes.
        In addition to sponsoring many workshops and publishing numerous 
    publications on IRP, Western has created the Resource Planning Guide, a 
    technical assistance tool that will help customers to prepare 
    integrated resource 
    
    [[Page 54171]]
    plans as required by section 114 of the Energy Policy Act of 1992. The 
    RPG is a personal computer-based piece of software that will allow 
    customers to evaluate renewable resources as a future resource.
        Western's Sacramento Area Office has provided technical assistance 
    for a feasibility analysis of using wind-generated energy at Lawrence 
    Livermore National Laboratory. If the analysis is favorable, Western 
    will work with the laboratory to develop the use of wind energy. 
    Western has also made its transmission system available to wheel power 
    from wind generation to load.
        Most recently, Western has taken steps to implement its commitment 
    to use principles of integrated resource planning for its resource 
    acquisition and transmission planning activities. Demand-side and 
    renewable resource options will be considered side-by-side with thermal 
    generation purchase opportunities. The implementation of the commitment 
    to use principles of integrated resource planning is described in a 
    Federal Register notice published on June 9, 1995 (60 FR 30533). 
    Although strongly supportive of renewable resources, Western believes 
    that the concept of setting aside a portion of Western's purchase power 
    appropriations exclusively to acquire renewables is best addressed 
    through project-specific implementation of IRP principles.
        While Western wants the ability to support renewable resources 
    through allocations from project-specific resource pools, it is 
    premature to designate a portion of the pool exclusively for the 
    support of renewable resources. Western's resource pool reservations 
    are for use beginning in the year 2000 for the Eastern Division of 
    Pick-Sloan. Western does not want to commit a block of power today for 
    the benefit of renewable technologies, when the targeting of resource 
    pool power can take place more effectively nearer the date that 
    existing contracts expire and regional needs are better known. Devotion 
    of a block of power today to a single use, such as fostering 
    renewables, could work to the disadvantage of other pool uses, such as 
    allocation of power to American Indians. Western reserves the right to 
    allocate resource pool power in support of renewables, but will not now 
    exercise that right.
    2. Project Use
    a. Background
        Project use power is that power reserved to meet project needs 
    pursuant to law, such as pumping irrigation water. Power in excess of 
    that needed for project use is available to Western for allocation. 
    Western made no proposal to change the definition of project use power 
    in the proposed Program.
    b. Comments and Discussion
        One comment stated that Western should maintain the current 
    definition of project use and that an allocation of Pick-Sloan power to 
    the Garrison Diversion Conservancy District is important to them under 
    present operations and absolutely essential for future requirements. 
    Given the Garrison Diversion Unit reformulation legislation passed by 
    Congress in 1986, the commenter thought consideration should be given 
    to a specific power allocation on reserve in their name for operation 
    of facilities authorized in the 1986 legislation. Any change in the 
    suballocation of costs should take into account the interests of the 
    irrigation districts. This commenter also stated that all long-term 
    contracts should have provisions for withdrawal to meet the pumping 
    power needs of the Garrison Diversion Unit, as farmers need reasonably 
    priced electricity for use on the farm.
        Project use power is not allocated but is reserved pursuant to the 
    authorizing legislation for each project. Since Western does not 
    allocate project use power for water pumping, this type of power is not 
    a part of the PMI. Western's firm power contracts for the Eastern 
    Division presently contain withdrawal provisions to meet project use 
    load as it develops. Future contracts will contain similar withdrawal 
    language for project use.
        Since these regulations do not address any changes in the 
    definition or scope of project use power for pumping purposes, the 
    suballocation of costs is similarly not a part of the PMI.
    
    III. Summary of Changes From the Proposed Program
    
        Western has made several revisions to the proposed Program in 
    response to public comments on the Federal Register notice of August 9, 
    1994. All references to Program ``procedures'' have been deleted, and 
    replaced with ``final rule'' or ``regulations'' to better reflect 
    section 114 of the EPAct and the fact that the final rule will be 
    published in the Code of Federal Regulations. The final rule clearly 
    separates the Program's provisions from the explanatory text which has 
    been shifted to the supplemental explanation section. To eliminate 
    confusion, the definition and use of the word ``purchaser'' was 
    eliminated and replaced with ``customer.''
        In the IRP subpart (subpart B), Western broadened language relating 
    to member-based associations in recognition of our wide variety of 
    customers. Determination of the small customer threshold of 25 
    gigawatthours (GWh) was changed to a 5 year average, instead of the 
    proposed annual measurement. A customer's competitive situation was 
    added as a factor in the determination of the reasonableness of an IRP. 
    Provisions relating to irrigation districts were extended to other 
    customers that serve water pumps and comparable equipment as part of 
    their load. The section dealing with the use of IRP principles by 
    Western was deleted, in recognition of the completion of a separate 
    public process (60 FR 30533 (June 9, 1995)) on this subject. Finally, 
    clarifying changes were made in a variety of areas, including 
    penalties, IRP action plans and progress reports, public participation 
    and small customer plans.
        With regard to the Power Marketing Initiative (PMI) provision 
    (subpart C), the term of contract has been extended from 18 to 20 
    years. For any project initially covered by the PMI, offers of 
    extension contracts will take place upon no sooner than the effective 
    date of the final rule. For the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--
    Eastern Division and the Loveland Area Projects, the initial resource 
    pool was increased to 4 percent, while the two subsequent pool 
    increments were reduced to 1 percent each. Application of the 
    percentage extension for subsequent resource pool increments was 
    changed to the resource that is under contract at the time. The 
    proposal to exempt customers with contract rates of delivery of one MW 
    or less from contributions to the resource pool was deleted, as was the 
    proposed new customer exemption from withdrawals to form later resource 
    pool increments. Delivery of the benefits of cost-based Federal power 
    to Indian tribes is now directly allowed. Various clarifying changes 
    were also made in the PMI.
    
    IV. Supplemental Explanation of the Rule
    
        This section includes an explanation of certain IRP provisions, and 
    it also sets forth Western's policy regarding the future application of 
    the Power Marketing Initiative. Section 905.11(b)(3) addresses the 
    concept of cost-effectiveness. Cost-effectiveness is basic to a 
    resource evaluation and therefore must be pursued. Western recognizes 
    the criteria for determination of least-cost options in each IRP will 
    
    [[Page 54172]]
    vary among Western's customers because of differences in their size, 
    type, resource needs, geographic area and competitive situation. For 
    Western's smaller customers, Western may approve an IRP that is a 
    generalized analysis which describes the cost comparison processes 
    utilized and economic assumptions used. These may be limited to, for 
    example, the total resource cost test for demand-side resources and may 
    involve use of simplified methods and procedures to analyze important 
    variations in supply-side characteristics such as service lives, 
    construction periods, and price inflation influences. However, Western 
    would expect its larger customers to prepare a more in-depth evaluation 
    of demand and supply resource cost effectiveness, on a comparable 
    basis. This may include evaluation of demand-side resources under some 
    combination of the total resource cost, participant, rate impact 
    measure, utility, or societal tests; life-cycle screening and screening 
    curve analyses for the supply-side resources; production costing 
    analysis; rate impact analysis; risk analysis; and impacts to the power 
    supply chain as applicable.
        Full public participation is the subject of section 905.11(b)(5). 
    Western will not require a customer to take any action inconsistent 
    with existing sunshine laws and other open meeting requirements. Given 
    the wide diversity of customers that Western serves and the variety of 
    resource planning circumstances that they face, Western will not 
    mandate that customers hold a specific number of public meetings.
        Section 905.12 describes how customers may be allowed to form an 
    IRP cooperative. Western believes the benefits of joint integrated 
    resource planning can be significant and encourages customer 
    consideration of this approach when an appropriate resource planning 
    ``decision block'' exists. Examples of such a ``decision block'' are 
    when all the entities covered by an IRP are contained within a power 
    supply chain or regional entities plan for joint supply-side, demand-
    side, and/or renewable resources above and beyond the Western resource, 
    so long as individual member responsibilities and participation levels 
    are identified.
        Examples of entities likely to receive Western's approval include 
    (1) existing first-level MBAs which were formed to meet the load growth 
    of their members through supply-side resources, such as G&T 
    cooperatives; (2) existing second-level MBAs, such as organizations 
    with G&T cooperative members, which may be granted IRP cooperative 
    status due to the magnitude and effort involved in development of such 
    comprehensive IRPs; and (3) new associations where potential members 
    have not previously evaluated supply-side and demand-side resources on 
    a joint basis.
        The criteria that will be used in evaluating IRPs are set forth in 
    section 905.11(b). Customers will make their own choices regarding 
    resource type, quantity, and timing in accordance with their IRP. 
    Western will not dictate resource choices.
        Section 905.13(d) contains special irrigation district and water 
    planning provisions. Irrigation and water utility customers may use 
    information available from an extension service or a university to 
    judge the merits of a demand-side resource opportunity; there is no 
    requirement to hire a consultant to independently verify this kind of 
    information. The customer's knowledge and experience should be central 
    in the integrated resource planning resource evaluation and selection 
    process.
        Small customer plan requirements are set forth in section 905.14. 
    Western does not expect small customers to expend a significant amount 
    of time and money to acquire expertise and data to prepare these plans. 
    Western will be available to assist customers in developing an 
    appropriate strategy for preparing the plans.
        Section 905.30 deals with the applicability of the Power Marketing 
    Initiative. It limits the initial application of the PMI to the Pick-
    Sloan Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division and the Loveland Area 
    Projects. Western's Program establishes an overall framework for the 
    marketing of power, while recognizing that future determinations must 
    be made on a project-specific basis. Many project-specific 
    determinations are necessary before any final decisions can be made on 
    marketing power. Such important issues as the resource available for 
    marketing in the future, the size of a resource pool, any adjustments 
    to the size of this pool, and allocation criteria for new customers 
    must be decided on a project-specific basis, with public input and 
    appropriate environmental documentation.
        Application of the PMI to the Central Valley Project, Washoe 
    Project and Salt Lake City Area/Integrated Projects shall not take 
    place in the absence of a future, project-specific evaluation and 
    decision.
        For Central Valley Project and Washoe Project resources, all power 
    contracts between Western and its long-term firm power customers expire 
    in 2004, as do the Western-Pacific Gas & Electric Company contracts. 
    Western is presently preparing an environmental impact statement (EIS) 
    for the Sacramento Area Office (SAO) 2004 marketing plan. Western will 
    not make any decision at this time about application of the PMI to SAO 
    resources for the post-2004 time period. The provisions of the PMI will 
    be within the range of alternatives in the SAO marketing plan EIS for 
    purposes of impact assessment. As a result of further analysis in the 
    2004 power marketing plan process, Western may at a later date propose 
    through the public process adoption of the PMI for SAO resources in the 
    post-2004 time period. If the PMI provision is implemented, Western 
    estimates that an initial extension level percentage would be similar 
    to those of the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division and 
    the Loveland Area Projects. The additional resource pool increments 
    described in section 905.32 would also be applicable.
        Application of the PMI to the Salt Lake City Area/Integrated 
    Projects (SLCA/IP) resources will be evaluated after its electric power 
    marketing EIS is completed and the associated marketing criteria and 
    contract changes are implemented. Western's ongoing project-specific 
    EIS for the SLCA/IP analyzes power marketing between now and the year 
    2004. If the PMI provision is implemented, Western estimates that an 
    initial extension level percentage would be similar to those of the 
    Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division and the Loveland 
    Area Projects. The additional resource pool increments described in 
    section 905.32 would also be applicable.
        The resource pool size for SAO and SLCA/IP resources will be 
    determined during a project-specific public process to reflect the 
    actual fair share needs of eligible new customers and other purposes, 
    as determined by Western.
        Western will evaluate application of this PMI to other Western firm 
    power contracts that expire after January 1, 2005--principally the 
    Parker-Davis and Boulder Canyon Projects. This evaluation will be 
    published after a separate public process and will take place no more 
    than 10 years before termination of these contracts.
        Any adjustment shall only take place after an appropriate public 
    process. Withdrawals to serve project use and other purposes provided 
    for by contract shall continue to take place based on existing 
    contract/marketing criteria principles.
        Section 905.32 addresses both resource extensions and resource pool 
    size. Western's policy on these subjects is as follows. For the 
    projects initially covered under this PMI, the project-specific 
    resource pools (including both the initial pool and future increments) 
    
    [[Page 54173]]
    could be as large as 6 percent over the term of the contracts. These 
    percentages are based on Western's judgment of the hydropower needed to 
    meet a fair share of the projected power needs of potential new 
    customers in the applicable marketing area at the time existing 
    contracts expire.
        Western will establish incremental resource pools that make power 
    available for potential new customers over time, without the disruptive 
    influence of creating a large pool all at once, before the need exists. 
    Another purpose of incremental resource pools is to provide Western 
    with the flexibility to meet new needs that is necessary when long-term 
    contracts are offered to customers. The following table illustrates the 
    timing and size of the resource pool creation, as applied to the Pick-
    Sloan Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division and the Loveland Area 
    Projects.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  Year                     P-SMBP-ED              LAP       
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    2001............................  4%................                    
    2004............................  ..................  4%.               
    2006............................  Up to 1%..........                    
    2009............................  ..................  Up to 1%.         
    2011............................  Up to 1%..........                    
    2014............................  ..................  Up to 1%.         
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        For the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division, both 
    the State of South Dakota (State) and the Department of Defense 
    (Defense) have been allowed to transfer Western power from one location 
    to another. After existing contracts expire, Western will require that 
    power commitments to specific State and Defense sites not be changed 
    unless the contract rate of delivery exceeds the total load at that 
    site. If the contract rate of delivery exceeds the total load at a 
    State or Defense site, only the excess power at that site may be 
    transferred to other State or Defense sites. Transfers are subject to 
    negotiation of transmission service contracts for the delivery of 
    transferred power. To be consistent with requirements for other firm 
    power deliveries, Western will require the delivery of a proportional 
    share of firm Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division power 
    at each State or Defense site in both the summer and winter seasons. If 
    a Defense installation or facility is closed after the year 2000, the 
    allocation may be affected by the report required in section 2929 of 
    the 1993 National Defense Authorization Act, Pub. L. No. 103-160. 
    Section 2929 requires the Secretary of Energy, in consultation with the 
    Secretary of Defense, to submit a report to Congress that must contain 
    recommendations regarding the disposition of hydroelectric power 
    allocations to military installations closed or approved for closure 
    outside of the marketing area of the Central Valley Project.
        In section 905.33, the PMI extension formula is described. If no 
    better information is available for initial IRP planning purposes, 
    Western will provide existing customers with estimated resource 
    commitments (based on application of the percentages set forth in these 
    procedures to the resources currently under contract). Actual resource 
    commitment numbers will be developed and included in contracts as soon 
    as practicable.
        New customer eligibility is addressed in section 905.35. Western's 
    policy on allocation of power to new customers in the future is as 
    follows. In order to increase widespread distribution of hydropower 
    resources, Western will allocate a fair share of power to eligible new 
    preference entities who do not have a contract with Western or are not 
    a member of a parent entity that has a contract with Western.
        The specific terms and conditions associated with allocations to 
    new customers will be determined during future, project-specific public 
    processes. All new applicants for power will be considered and be given 
    an opportunity to receive an allocation in accordance with Reclamation 
    law. For example, Western expects to make allocations to Native 
    American tribes (as that term is defined in the Indian Self 
    Determination Act of 1975, 25 U.S.C. 450b) for use on the reservation 
    and potentially off the reservation under certain circumstances as 
    determined by Western. Utility status will not be a prerequisite for an 
    allocation to Native American tribes. Western will also consider making 
    allocations to national parks and public mass transit agencies. Western 
    will consider making power available to preference entities in support 
    of fish and wildlife (such as power to pump water to increase or 
    improve wildlife habitat) and to firm up renewable resources.
        Proposals for providing allocations directly to Native American 
    tribes will be developed on a project-by-project basis, during the 
    allocation of project-specific resource pools.
        Western will consider arrangements for the delivery of the benefits 
    of cost-based Federal power to Native American tribes without utility 
    status.
        All potential new customers, both utilities and nonutilities, will 
    be required to apply for power in a project-specific marketing plan by 
    a date to be determined in the project-specific process. All potential 
    new customers, except Native American tribes, must be ready, willing, 
    and able to receive and distribute or use power from Western. Ready, 
    willing, and able means that (1) the potential customer has the 
    facilities needed for the receipt of power or has made the necessary 
    arrangements for transmission and/or distribution service, (2) the 
    potential customer's power supply contracts with third parties permit 
    the delivery of Western's power, and (3) metering, scheduling, and 
    billing arrangements are in place. Limits on the power received by any 
    customer, as well as minimum load requirements, may be adopted. If 
    required in project-specific marketing criteria, a potential new 
    customer is responsible for transmission arrangements beyond Western's 
    system/points of delivery necessary to receive power from Western.
        An existing customer will not be eligible to receive power from a 
    resource pool unless Western provides otherwise on a project-specific 
    basis. A new customer receiving power from a project-specific resource 
    pool will not be eligible to receive additional power from a 
    subsequently available resource pool increment unless Western provides 
    otherwise on a project-specific basis.
        Existing power marketing criteria, which will remain in effect 
    unless amended by the PMI, may be amended in the future if necessary. 
    Section 905.36 addresses the relationship between existing marketing 
    criteria and the PMI. Any necessary amendments to existing power 
    marketing criteria could be pursued at the time Western determines the 
    amount of resource available after existing contracts expire. For the 
    Central Valley Project, Western plans to develop future marketing 
    criteria during the 2004 Marketing Plan process.
        The process of implementing the PMI is addressed in section 905.37. 
    Modified contractual language will be required to place resource 
    extensions under contract. For all projects receiving resource 
    extensions under the PMI Western will develop alternative contractual 
    language which would allow the customer to assume the responsibility of 
    acquiring resources to firm up Western's hydroelectric commitments to a 
    customer if the customer so chooses. The timing of any offers of power 
    to existing Salt Lake City Area/Integrated Projects customers for the 
    time period after 2004 may be affected by the replacement power process 
    relating to loss of capacity due to changes in operations at Glen 
    Canyon Dam. For the SLCA/IP, existing contracts provide for potential 
    resource adjustments in 1999. No contracts will 
    
    [[Page 54174]]
    be offered to existing customers for post-2004 SLCA/IP resources until 
    the analysis of potential resources in 1999 has been completed and any 
    adjustments are implemented. Existing power sales contracts require 
    that this analysis be completed by 1996.
        Western is committed to providing IRP technical assistance to 
    customers. In section 905.40, Western will establish a program to 
    assist customers with technical questions or concerns relating to the 
    development and implementation of an IRP or small customer plan. 
    Technical assistance, which may include publications, workshops, 
    conferences, individual assistance, equipment loans, technology and 
    resource assessment studies, marketing studies, and other mechanisms to 
    transfer information on energy efficiency and renewable energy options 
    and programs to customers, will be provided under Western's energy 
    services functions. Customers will be kept informed of the technical 
    assistance available to them in support of their development and 
    implementation of IRPs through Western's energy services publications 
    and other communications efforts.
    
    V. Regulatory Review
    
        Western has an exemption from centralized regulatory review under 
    Executive Order 12866; accordingly, no clearance of this notice by the 
    Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is required.
    
    VI. Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., requires 
    federal agencies to perform a regulatory flexibility analysis if a 
    proposed regulation is likely to have a significant economic impact on 
    a substantial number of small entities. In the notice proposing the 
    Program, Western's Administrator certified that this Program, if 
    promulgated, would not have a significant adverse economic impact on a 
    substantial number of small entities. Western did not receive any 
    comments that addressed the certification.
    
    VII. Review Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980, 44 U.S.C. 
    3501-3520, Western has received approval from OMB for the collection of 
    customer information in this rule, under control number 1910-1200.
    
    VIII. Review Under the National Environmental Policy Act
    
        Western has completed an environmental impact statement on the 
    Program, pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969. The 
    Record of Decision was published in the Federal Register on October 12, 
    1995 (60 FR 53181).
    
    IX. Review Under Executive Order 12612
    
        Executive Order 12612 requires review of regulations or rules for 
    any substantial direct effects on States, on the relationship between 
    National Government and the States, or on the distribution of power and 
    responsibilities among various levels of Government. This rule carries 
    out the requirements of EPAct in a manner that reflects comity between 
    the States and the United States Government. Western has assessed this 
    rule in light of the criteria in Sections 2 through 5 of Executive 
    Order 12612. Western has determined that the rule is consistent with 
    those criteria, and that the rule will not impose significant costs or 
    burdens on States or affect the States' ability to discharge 
    traditional State functions.
    
    X. Review Under Executive Order 12778
    
        Section 2 of Executive Order 12778 instructs each agency to adhere 
    to certain requirements in promulgating new regulations. These 
    requirements, set forth in section 2(a) and (b)(2), include eliminating 
    drafting errors and needless ambiguity, drafting the regulations to 
    minimize litigation, providing clear and certain legal standards for 
    affected legal conduct, and promoting simplification and burden 
    reduction. Agencies are also instructed to make every reasonable effort 
    to ensure that regulations define key terms and are clear on such 
    matters as exhaustion of administrative remedies and preemption. The 
    Department certifies that today's regulatory action meets the 
    requirements of section 2(a) and (b)(2) of Executive Order 12778.
    
    XI. List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 905
    
        Electric Power, Electric Utilities, Energy, Energy Conservation, 
    Hydroelectric Power and Utilities.
    
        Issued in Golden, Colorado, September 21, 1995.
    J.M. Shafer,
    Administrator.
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, Title 10 of the Code of 
    Federal Regulations is amended by adding a new part 905 to read as set 
    forth below.
    
    PART 905--ENERGY PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
    
    Subpart A--General Provisions
    
    905.1 Purpose.
    905.2 Definitions.
    
    Subpart B--Integrated Resource Planning
    
    905.10 Applicability.
    905.11 Integrated resource plan contents.
    905.12 Submittal procedures.
    905.13 Approval criteria.
    905.14 Small customer plan.
    905.15 Processing of IRPs and small customer plans.
    905.16 Annual IRP progress reports.
    905.17 Noncompliance.
    905.18 Administrative appeal process.
    905.19 Periodic review by Western.
    905.20 Freedom of information Act.
    905.21 Program review.
    
    Subpart C--Power Marketing Initiative
    
    905.30 Purpose and applicability.
    905.31 Term.
    905.32 Resource extensions and resource pool size.
    905.33 Extension formula.
    905.34 Adjustment provisions.
    905.35 New customer eligibility.
    905.36 Marketing criteria.
    905.37 Process.
    
    Subpart D--Energy Services
    
    905.40 Technical assistance.
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. Secs. 7152 and 7191; 32 Stat. 388, as 
    amended; and 42 U.S.C. Secs. 7275-7276c.
    
    PART 905--ENERGY PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
    
    Subpart A--General Provisions
    
    
    Sec. 905.1  Purpose.
    
        The purposes of the Energy Planning and Management Program 
    (Program) are to implement section 114 of the Energy Policy Act of 1992 
    (EPAct) and to extend the Western Area Power Administration's (Western) 
    long-term firm power resource commitments in support of customer 
    integrated resource planning.
    
    
    Sec. 905.2  Definitions.
    
        Administrator means the Administrator of Western.
        Applicable integrated resource plan or applicable IRP, when used 
    with reference to a customer, means the integrated resource plan (IRP) 
    approved by Western under these regulations for that customer.
        Customer means any entity that purchases firm capacity, with or 
    without energy, from Western under a long-term firm power contract. The 
    term includes a member-based association (MBA) and its distribution or 
    user members that receive direct benefit from Western's power.
    
    [[Page 54175]]
    
        Integrated resource planning means a planning process for new 
    energy resources that evaluates the full range of alternatives, 
    including new generating capacity, power purchases, energy conservation 
    and efficiency, cogeneration and district heating and cooling 
    applications, and renewable energy resources, in order to provide 
    adequate and reliable service to a customer's electric consumers at the 
    customer's or member's lowest system cost. The process shall take into 
    account necessary features for system operation, such as diversity, 
    reliability, dispatchability, and other factors of risk; shall take 
    into account the ability to verify energy savings achieved through 
    energy efficiency and the projected durability of such savings measured 
    over time; and shall treat demand and supply resources on a consistent 
    and integrated basis.
        Least-cost option means an option for providing reliable electric 
    services to electric consumers which will, to the extent practicable, 
    minimize life-cycle system costs, including adverse environmental 
    effects, of providing such service. To the extent practicable, energy 
    efficiency and renewable resources may be given priority in any least-
    cost option.
        Long-term firm power contract means any contract with Western for 
    the sale of firm capacity, with or without energy, which is to be 
    delivered over a period of more than 1 year. This term includes 
    contracts for the long-term sale of power from the Boulder Canyon 
    Project.
        Member-Based Association or MBA means:
        (1) an entity composed of utilities or user members; or
        (2) an entity which acts as an agent for, or subcontracts with, but 
    does not assume power supply responsibility for its principals or 
    subcontractors, who are its members.
        Small customer means a customer with total annual sales or usage of 
    25 GWh or less, as averaged over the previous 5 years, which is not a 
    member of a joint action agency or a generation and transmission (G&T) 
    cooperative with power supply responsibility, and that Western finds 
    has limited economic, managerial, and resource capability to conduct 
    integrated resource planning.
        Western means the Western Area Power Administration.
    
    Subpart B--Integrated Resource Planning
    
    
    Sec. 905.10  Applicability.
    
        (a) Each customer of Western must address its power resource needs 
    in an IRP prepared and submitted to Western as provided herein, except 
    for:
        (1) Those meeting the criteria for a small customer as detailed in 
    Sec. 905.14 this part; and
        (2) State-regulated, investor-owned utilities.
        (b) Nothing in these regulations shall require a customer to take 
    any action inconsistent with a requirement imposed by the Rural 
    Utilities Service or a state utility commission which receives IRP 
    filings from that customer.
    
    
    Sec. 905.11  Integrated resource plan contents.
    
        (a) An integrated resource plan should support customer-developed 
    goals and schedules. The plan should evaluate the full range of 
    practicable alternatives for energy resources, and include:
        (1) an assessment of resources on an equitable basis, where supply-
    side, demand-side, and renewable resources are compared on a fair and 
    accurate basis to determine an appropriate low-cost resource portfolio, 
    and
        (2) an integration of all options in a comprehensive manner.
        (b) IRPs must consider electrical energy resource needs and may 
    consider, at the customer's option, water, natural gas, and other 
    energy resources. Each IRP submitted to Western must satisfy the 
    following requirements of section 114 of EPAct:
        (1) Identification and Comparison of All Practicable Energy 
    Efficiency and Energy Supply Resource Options. This is an assessment 
    and comparison of existing and future supply- and demand-side resource 
    options available to a customer based upon its size, type, resource 
    needs, geographic area, and competitive situation. Identification of 
    resource options evaluated by the specific customer, or members in the 
    case of IRP cooperatives or MBAs, must be provided. The options 
    evaluated should relate to the resource situation unique to each 
    Western customer as determined by profile data (such as service area, 
    geographical characteristics, customer mix, historical loads, projected 
    growth, existing system data, rates, and financial information) and 
    load forecasts.
        (i) Supply-side options include, but are not limited to, purchased 
    power contracts, conventional or renewable generation options.
        (ii) Demand-side options alter the customer's use pattern in a 
    manner that provides for an improved combination of energy services at 
    least cost to the customer and the ultimate consumer.
        (iii) Considerations that may be used to develop the potential 
    options include cost, market potential, consumer preferences, 
    environmental impacts, demand or energy impacts, implementation issues, 
    revenue impacts, and commercial availability.
        (iv) The IRP discussion comparing resource options must include:
        (A) the method or rationale used to select the options to be 
    compared,
        (B) the options evaluated,
        (C) the assumptions and costs related to the options, and
        (D) the evaluation methods, including any quantitative and 
    qualitative methods used to compare the resource options.
        (2) An IRP must include an action plan covering a minimum period of 
    5 years describing specific actions the customer will take to implement 
    its IRP. This plan must outline both short-term (2 years) and long-term 
    (5 years) actions proposed for implementation during the period covered 
    by the plan. The action plan must summarize the load profile data and 
    address the results of the resource evaluation. Where a customer is 
    implementing integrated resource planning in response to State, 
    Federal, and other initiatives, Western will accept action plans of 
    other than 2 and 5 years if they substantially comply with EPAct. For 
    those customers not experiencing or anticipating load growth, the 
    action plan requirement for the IRP may be satisfied by a discussion of 
    current actions and procedures in place to reevaluate periodically the 
    possible future need for new resources. The action plan must include 
    the following four items:
        (i) Actions the customer expects to take in accomplishing the goals 
    identified in the IRP;
        (ii) Milestones to be used to evaluate accomplishment of those 
    actions during implementation;
        (iii) Quantified estimated energy and capacity benefits for each 
    action planned; and
        (iv) Estimated or proposed costs for implementing each action.
        (3) An IRP must designate least-cost options to be utilized by the 
    customer. This requires a comparative evaluation of supply- and demand-
    side resources using a consistent economic evaluation method. This 
    evaluation should identify the most cost-effective energy services to 
    the consumer, taking into account reliability, economics, price, 
    adverse environmental effects, risk, and all other factors influencing 
    the quality of energy services. The analysis should consider impacts on 
    suppliers, distribution entities, and end-use consumers, as applicable. 
    The resource selection process and criteria must be explicit and 
    identify the rationale for selection. An IRP may strike a reasonable 
    balance 
    
    [[Page 54176]]
    among the applicable evaluation factors, as opposed to a plan which 
    seeks to optimize any single criterion. Exceptions to least-cost-based 
    decisions may be made if the customer explains the basis for the 
    decision and can show in the IRP that decisions were based on a 
    reasonable analysis of resource options and environmental effects, were 
    based on response to public input, or were required by Federal or State 
    mandates.
        (4) To the extent practicable, the customer shall minimize adverse 
    environmental effects of new resource acquisitions and document these 
    efforts in the IRP. Customers are neither precluded from nor required 
    to include a quantitative analysis of environmental externalities as a 
    part of their integrated resource planning process. Customers are 
    required to include a qualitative analysis of environmental effects.
        (5) In the preparation and development of an IRP (or any revision 
    or amendment of an IRP), ample opportunity for full public 
    participation shall be provided. The IRP shall describe how the 
    customer: gathered information from the public, identified public 
    concerns, shared information with the public, and responded to public 
    comments.
        (i) Member-based associations and their members must demonstrate 
    public participation in the preparation and development, revision, or 
    amendment of the IRP. No specific number of meetings is required.
        (ii) As part of the public participation process, the governing 
    body of an MBA and each MBA member (such as a board of directors or 
    city council) must approve the IRP, confirming that all requirements 
    have been met. MBA and member approvals must be indicated by signature 
    of a responsible official in the IRP submitted to Western or by 
    documentation of passage of an approval resolution by the appropriate 
    governing body included or referred to in the IRP submitted to Western.
        (iii) For Western customers that do not purchase for resale, such 
    as Federal and State government agencies, the public participation 
    requirement is satisfied if there is review and concurrence by a top 
    management official with resource acquisition responsibility, and the 
    concurrence is noted in the IRP submitted to Western.
        (6) An IRP must include load forecasting. Load forecasting should 
    include data which reflects the size, type, resource conditions, and 
    demographic nature of the customer using an accepted load forecasting 
    methodology, including but not limited to the time series, end-use, and 
    econometric methods.
        (7) Customers must provide methods of validating predicted 
    performance in order to determine whether objectives in the IRP are 
    being met. These validation methods must include identification of the 
    baseline from which a customer will measure the benefits of its IRP 
    implementation. Baseline data that is unavailable should be identified. 
    A reasonable balance must be struck between the cost of data collection 
    and the benefits resulting from obtaining exact information.
    
    
    Sec. 905.12  Submittal procedures.
    
        (a) An IRP submitted to Western for approval must have sufficient 
    detail for Western to confirm it meets the requirements of these 
    regulations. Only one IRP is required per customer, regardless of the 
    number of long-term firm power contracts between the customer and 
    Western.
        (b) Customers may submit IRPs to Western under one of the following 
    options:
        (1) Customers may submit IRPs individually.
        (2) MBAs may submit individual IRPs for each of their members or 
    submit one IRP on behalf of all or some of their members, that 
    specifies the responsibilities and participation levels of individual 
    members and the MBA. Such IRP or IRPs shall constitute the MBA's IRP 
    where the MBA subcontracts or acts as an agent but does not assume 
    power supply responsibility. Any member of an MBA may submit an 
    individual IRP to Western in lieu of inclusion in an MBA IRP.
        (3) Integrated resource planning cooperatives approved by Western 
    pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section must submit an IRP for its 
    members.
        (4) Customers that Western determines to be small customers 
    pursuant to section 905.14 may submit a small customer plan in lieu of 
    an IRP.
        (c) Schedules.
        (1) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, 
    customers must submit their initial IRP to the appropriate Area Manager 
    no later than 1 year after the effective date of this rule, or after 
    becoming a customer, whichever is later. Approved IRP cooperatives 
    shall be allowed 18 months from Western's approval of the IRP 
    cooperative request to submit an initial IRP.
        (2) Every customer must provide written notification to Western if 
    it intends to seek approval for IRP cooperative or small customer 
    status. This notification must be provided by the customer to the 
    Western Area Manager of the Area in which the customer is located by 
    December 19, 1995, or within 30 days from the time it becomes a 
    customer, whichever is later.
        (3) If an IRP submittal is found to be insufficient after Western 
    review, a notice of deficiencies will be provided to the entity that 
    submitted the IRP. Western, working together with the customer, will 
    determine the time allowable for resubmitting the IRP. However, the 
    time allowed for resubmittal will not be greater than 9 months after 
    the date of the disapproval, unless otherwise provided by contract 
    language in effect as of the effective date of these regulations.
        (4) Updated IRPs must be submitted to the appropriate Area Manager 
    every 5 years after Western's approval of the initial IRP.
        (5) Amendments and revisions to IRPs may be submitted at any time.
        (d) Western shall respond to IRP cooperative status requests within 
    30 days of receipt. If a request for IRP cooperative status is 
    disapproved, the requesting customers must submit their initial IRPs no 
    later than 1 year after the date of the letter of disapproval. Any 
    subsequent requests by customers for IRP cooperative status will be 
    responded to by Western within 30 days of receipt of the request. 
    Western's approval of IRP cooperative status will not be based on any 
    potential member's contractual status with Western.
    
    
    Sec. 905.13  Approval criteria.
    
        (a) IRP or small customer plan approval will be based upon:
        (1) whether the IRP or small customer plan satisfactorily addresses 
    the criteria in these regulations; and
        (2) the reasonableness of the IRP or small customer plan given the 
    size, type, resource needs, geographic area, and competitive situation 
    of the customer.
        (b) Western will review resource choices in accordance with section 
    114 of EPAct and these regulations. Western will disapprove IRPs if 
    resource choices do not meet the reasonableness test set forth in 
    (a)(2) of this section and the provisions of section 114 of EPAct.
        (c) Where a customer or group of customers implements integrated 
    resource planning under a program responding to other Federal, State, 
    or other initiatives, Western shall accept and approve such a plan as 
    long as the IRP substantially complies with the requirements of these 
    regulations.
        (d) In evaluating an IRP or small customer plan, Western shall 
    consider water planning, efficiency improvements, and conservation in 
    the 
    
    [[Page 54177]]
    same manner it considers energy planning and efficiencies. Customers 
    that provide water utility services and customers that service 
    irrigation load as part of their overall load may include water 
    conservation activities in the IRP. To the extent practical, customers 
    should convert their water savings to energy values.
    
    
    Sec. 905.14  Small customer plan.
    
        (a) Small customers may submit a request to prepare a small 
    customer plan in lieu of an IRP. Requests for small customer status 
    must include data on total annual energy sales and usage for the 5 
    years prior to the request. This data will be averaged to determine 
    overall annual energy sales and usage so that uncontrollable events, 
    such as extreme weather, do not distort levelized energy sales and 
    usage. Documentation of limited economic, managerial and resource 
    capability must also be included in a request.
        (b) Western shall respond to small customer status requests within 
    30 days of receipt of the request. If a request for small customer 
    status is disapproved, the requesting customer must submit its initial 
    IRP no later than 1 year after the date of the letter of disapproval. 
    Any subsequent requests by customers for small customer status will be 
    responded to by Western within 30 days of receipt of the request.
        (c) Small Customer Plan Contents.
        Small customer plans shall:
        (1) consider all reasonable opportunities to meet future energy 
    service requirements using demand-side management techniques, new 
    renewable resources, and other programs that will provide retail 
    consumers with electricity at the lowest possible cost;
        (2) minimize, to the extent practicable, adverse environmental 
    effects; and
        (3) present in summary form the following information:
        (i) customer name, address, phone number, and contact person;
        (ii) type of customer;
        (iii) current energy and demand profiles and data on total annual 
    energy sales and usage for the previous 5 years;
        (iv) future energy services projections;
        (v) the manner in which paragraphs (c) (1) and (2) of this section 
    were considered; and
        (vi) actions to be implemented over the next 5 years.
        (d) The first small customer plan must be submitted to the 
    appropriate Western Area Manager within 1 year after Western's approval 
    of the request for small customer status. Small customers must submit 
    in writing a small customer plan every 5 years.
        (e) Maintenance of Small Customer Status.
        (1) Every year on the anniversary of submittal of the plan, small 
    customers must submit a letter to Western verifying that their annual 
    energy sales or usage is 25 GWh or less averaged over the previous 5 
    years, and identifying their achievements against their targeted action 
    plans. The letter will be used for overall program evaluation and 
    comparison with the customer's plan, and for verification of continued 
    small customer status.
        (2) A customer ceases to be a small customer if it:
        (i) exceeds total annual energy sales or usage of 25 GWh, as 
    averaged over the previous 5 years,
        (ii) becomes a member of a joint action agency or G&T cooperative 
    with power supply responsibility, or
        (iii) no longer has a limited economic, managerial, and resource 
    capability. Western will work with a customer who loses small customer 
    status to develop an appropriate schedule, no longer than 1 year, for 
    submittal of an IRP.
        (3) Membership in or contracting with an MBA that does not have 
    power supply responsibility shall not affect a customer's status as a 
    small customer. A small customer plan or annual letter may be submitted 
    by or through an MBA that does not have power supply responsibility.
    
    
    Sec. 905.15  Processing of IRPs and small customer plans.
    
        Western shall review all IRP and small customer plan submittals and 
    notify the submitting entity of the plan's acceptability within 120 
    days after receipt.
    
    
    Sec. 905.16  Annual IRP progress reports.
    
        IRP progress reports must be submitted each year within 30 days of 
    the anniversary date of the approval of the currently applicable IRP in 
    such form and containing such information as to describe the customer's 
    accomplishments achieved pursuant to the action plan, including 
    projected goals, implementation schedules, and resource expenditures, 
    and energy and capacity benefits and renewable energy developments 
    achieved as compared to those anticipated. Measured values are 
    preferred, but reasonable estimates are acceptable if measurement is 
    infeasible or not cost-effective. In lieu of a separate progress 
    report, all information from the progress report may be combined with 
    any other report that the customer submits to Western, at the 
    customer's discretion, if that report is submitted within 30 days of 
    the approval anniversary date of the currently applicable IRP.
    
    
    Sec. 905.17  Noncompliance.
    
        (a) The penalty set forth in this section shall be imposed for 
    failure to submit or resubmit an IRP or small customer plan in 
    accordance with these regulations. The penalty also will be imposed 
    when Western finds that the customer's activities are not consistent 
    with the applicable IRP or small customer plan unless Western finds 
    that a good faith effort has been made to comply with the approved IRP 
    or small customer plan.
        (b) If it appears that a customer's activities may be inconsistent 
    with the applicable IRP or small customer plan, Western will so notify 
    the customer and offer the customer 30 days in which to provide 
    evidence of its good faith effort to comply. If the customer does not 
    correct the specified deficiency or submit such evidence, or if Western 
    finds, after receipt of information from the customer, that a good 
    faith effort has not been made, a penalty shall be imposed.
        (c) Western shall provide written notice of the imposition of a 
    penalty to the customer, and to the MBA or IRP cooperative where 
    applicable. The notice must specify the reasons for imposition of the 
    penalty.
        (d) Imposition of Penalty.
        (1) Beginning with the first full billing period following the 
    notice specified in paragraph (c) of this section a surcharge of 10 
    percent of the monthly power charges will be imposed until the 
    deficiency specified in the notice is cured, or until 12 months pass, 
    provided that no such penalty shall be immediately imposed if the 
    customer or its MBA or IRP cooperative has requested reconsideration by 
    filing a written appeal with the appropriate Area Manager, pursuant to 
    905.18.
        (2) The surcharge imposed shall increase to 20 percent for the 
    second 12 months and to 30 percent per year thereafter until the 
    deficiency is cured.
        (3) After the first 12 months of imposition of the surcharge and in 
    lieu of imposition of any further surcharge, Western may impose a 
    penalty which would reduce the resource delivered under a customer's 
    long-term firm power contract(s) by 10 percent. The resource reduction 
    may be imposed either
        (i) when it appears to Western to be more effective to assure 
    customer compliance, or
        (ii) when such reduction may be more cost-effective for Western.
        (4) The penalty provisions in existing contracts will continue to 
    be in effect 
    
    [[Page 54178]]
    and shall be administered and enforced in accordance with such contract 
    provisions.
        (e) The surcharge will be assessed on the total charges for all 
    power obtained by a customer from Western and will not be limited to 
    firm power charges. When a customer resolves the deficiencies, the 
    imposed surcharge or power withdrawal will cease, beginning with the 
    first full billing period after compliance is achieved.
        (f) In situations involving an IRP submitted by a member-based 
    association on behalf of its members where a single member does not 
    comply, a penalty or withdrawal shall be imposed upon the MBA on a pro 
    rata basis in proportion to that member's share of the total MBA's 
    power received from Western. In situations involving noncompliance by a 
    member of an IRP cooperative, any applicable penalty shall be imposed 
    directly upon that member if it has a firm power contract with Western. 
    If the IRP cooperative member does not have a firm power contract with 
    Western then a penalty or withdrawal shall be imposed upon the member's 
    MBA or parent-type entity on a pro rata basis in proportion to that 
    member's share of the total MBA's power received from Western.
    
    
    Sec. 905.18  Administrative appeal process.
    
        (a) If a customer disagrees with Western's determination of the 
    acceptability of its IRP submittal, its compliance with an approved 
    IRP, or any other compliance issue, the customer may request 
    reconsideration by filing a written appeal with the appropriate Area 
    Manager. Appeals may be submitted any time such disagreements occur and 
    should be specific as to the nature of the issue, the reasons for the 
    disagreement, and any other pertinent facts which the customer believes 
    should be brought to Western's attention. The Area Manager will respond 
    within 45 days of receipt of the appeal. If resolution is not achieved 
    at the Area Office level, a further appeal may then be made to the 
    Administrator who will respond within 30 days of receipt.
        (b) Upon request, Western will agree to use mutually agreeable 
    alternative dispute resolution procedures, to the extent allowed by 
    law, to resolve issues or disputes relating to compliance with IRP 
    requirements.
        (c) Western shall not impose a penalty while an appeal process is 
    pending. However, if the appeal is unsuccessful for the customer, 
    Western shall impose the penalty retroactively from the date the 
    penalty would have been assessed if an appeal had not been filed.
        (d) A written appeal or use of alternative dispute resolution 
    procedures does not suspend other reporting and compliance requirements 
    under these regulations.
    
    
    Sec. 905.19  Periodic review by Western.
    
        (a) Western will periodically review customer actions to determine 
    whether they are consistent with the approved IRP. Small customer plans 
    are not subject to this periodic review.
        (b) Beginning 3 years after the effective date of these 
    regulations, Western shall periodically review selected, representative 
    IRPs and the customer's implementation of the applicable IRP. These 
    reviews are in addition to, and separate and apart from, the review of 
    initial IRP submittals and updated IRPs made under Secs. 905.11 and 
    905.13 of these regulations.
        (c) Western will review a representative sample of IRPs from each 
    of its marketing areas. The representative samples will consist of IRPs 
    that reflect the diverse characteristics and circumstances of the 
    customers that purchase power from Western. At a minimum, Western will 
    review a sample of IRPs from the following:
        (1) IRPs indicating a need to acquire resources in the IRP study 
    period;
        (2) IRPs prepared by individual customers, IRP cooperatives, and 
    member-based associations; and
        (3) IRPs that do not show plans to implement DSM programs in the 
    IRP study period.
        (d) Periodic reviews may consist of any combination of review of 
    the customer's annual IRP progress reports, telephone interviews, or 
    on-site visits. Western will document these periodic reviews and shall 
    report on the results of the reviews in Western's annual report.
    
    
    Sec. 905.20  Freedom of Information Act.
    
        IRPs and associated data submitted to Western will be made 
    available to the public unless Western has determined, pursuant to 10 
    CFR Part 1004, that particular information is exempt from public access 
    under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). Customers may request 
    confidential treatment of all or part of a submitted document under 
    FOIA's exemption for confidential business information. Materials so 
    designated and which Western determines to meet the exemption criteria 
    in the FOIA will be treated as confidential and will not be disclosed 
    to the public.
    
    
    Sec. 905.21  Program review.
    
        Before January 1, 2000, and at appropriate intervals thereafter, 
    Western shall initiate a public process to review these IRP regulations 
    in order to determine whether the criteria for approval of IRPs should 
    be revised to reflect changes in technology, needs, or other 
    developments.
    
    Subpart C--Power Marketing Initiative
    
    
    Sec. 905.30  Purpose and applicability.
    
        (a) The Power Marketing Initiative (PMI) provides a framework for 
    marketing Western's long-term firm hydroelectric resources. For covered 
    projects, Western will make a major portion of the resources currently 
    under contract available to existing long-term firm power customers for 
    a period of time beyond the expiration date of their current contracts.
        (b) The Western projects covered by this subpart are the Pick-Sloan 
    Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division and the Loveland Area Projects 
    (LAP). The PMI applies to covered projects to the extent it is 
    consistent with other contractual and legal rights, and subject to any 
    applicable project-specific environmental requirements.
    
    
    Sec. 905.31  Term.
    
        Western will extend resource commitments for 20 years from the date 
    existing contracts expire to existing customers with long-term firm 
    power contracts from projects identified in section 905.30(b).
    
    
    Sec. 905.32  Resource extensions and resource pool size.
    
        (a) Western will extend a project-specific percentage of the 
    marketable resource, determined to be available at the time future 
    resource extensions begin, to existing customers with long-term firm 
    power contracts. The remaining unextended power will be used to 
    establish project-specific resource pools. An initial level of 96 
    percent of the marketable resource will be extended for the Pick-Sloan 
    Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division and the Loveland Area 
    Projects.
        (b) At two 5-year intervals after the effective date of the 
    extension to existing customers, Western shall create a project-
    specific resource pool increment of up to an additional 1 percent of 
    the long-term marketable resource under contract at the time. The size 
    of the additional resource pool increment shall be determined by 
    Western based on consideration of the actual fair-share needs of 
    eligible new customers and other appropriate purposes. 
    
    [[Page 54179]]
    
        (c) The initial pool percentages shall be applied to the marketable 
    resource determined to be available at the time future resource 
    extensions begin. Subsequent percentages shall be applied to the 
    resource under contract at the time.
        (d) The additional resource pool increments shall be established by 
    pro rata withdrawals, on 2 years' notice, from then-existing customers. 
    Withdrawals could be mitigated or delayed if good water conditions 
    exist.
        (e) Once the extensions for existing customers and allocations to 
    new customers from the resource pool have been made, additional power 
    resources may become available for various reasons. Any additional 
    available resources will be used as follows:
        (1) If power is reserved for new customers but not allocated, or 
    resources are offered but not placed under contract, this power will be 
    offered on a pro rata basis to customers that contributed to the 
    resource pool through application of the extension formula in 
    Sec. 905.33.
        (2) If power resources become available as a result of the 
    enhancement of existing generation, project-use load efficiency 
    upgrades, the development of new resources, or resources turned back to 
    Western, Western may elect to use this power to reduce the need to 
    acquire firming resources, retain the power for operational 
    flexibility, sell these resources on a short-term basis, or allocate 
    the power.
        (3) If resources become available due to imposition of penalties 
    pursuant to Sec. 905.17, Western may make such resources available 
    within the marketing area to existing customers that are in compliance 
    with Subpart B, subject to withdrawal.
    
    
    Sec. 905.33  Extension formula.
    
        (a) The amount of power to be extended to an existing customer 
    shall be determined according to this formula:
        Customer Contract Rate of Delivery (CROD) today/total project CROD 
    under contract today x project-specific percentage x marketable 
    resource determined to be available at the time future resource 
    extensions begin = CROD extended.
        (b) Where contract rates of delivery vary by season, the formula 
    shall be used on a seasonal basis to determine the extended power 
    resource. A similar pro rata approach shall be used for energy 
    extensions.
        (c) Determination of the amount of resource available after 
    existing contracts expire, if significantly different from existing 
    resource commitments, shall take place only after an appropriate public 
    process.
        (d) The formula set forth in paragraph (a) of this section also 
    should be used to determine the amounts of firm power subject to 
    withdrawal at 5-year intervals after the effective date of the 
    extension to existing customers, except that the percentage used would 
    be up to 1 percent for each of the two withdrawal opportunities, and 
    the formula would use the customer CROD, project CROD and the resource 
    under contract at the time.
    
    
    Sec. 905.34  Adjustment provisions.
    
        Western reserves the right to adjust marketable resources committed 
    to all customers with long-term firm power contracts only as required 
    to respond to changes in hydrology and river operations, except as 
    otherwise expressly provided in these regulations. Under contracts that 
    extend resources under this PMI, existing customers shall be given at 
    least 5 years' notice before adjustments are made. New customers may 
    receive less notice. The earliest that any notice under this section 
    shall become effective is the date that existing contractual 
    commitments expire. Any adjustment shall only take place after an 
    appropriate public process. Withdrawals to serve project use and other 
    purposes provided for by contract shall continue to take place based on 
    existing contract/marketing criteria principles.
    
    
    Sec. 905.35  New customer eligibility.
    
        (a) Allocations to new customers from the project-specific resource 
    pools established under Sec. 905.32 shall be determined through 
    separate public processes in each project's marketing area. New 
    customers receiving an allocation must execute a long-term firm power 
    contract to receive the allocated power and are required to comply with 
    the IRP requirements in this part. Contracts with new customers shall 
    expire on the same date as firm power contracts with all other 
    customers of a project.
        (b) To be eligible for an allocation, a potential new customer must 
    be a preference entity, as defined in Reclamation law, within the 
    currently established marketing area for a project.
        (c) Entities that desire to purchase power from Western for resale 
    to consumers, including municipalities, cooperatives, public utility 
    districts and public power districts, must have utility status. Native 
    American tribes are not subject to this requirement. Utility status 
    means that the entity has responsibility to meet load growth, has a 
    distribution system, and is ready, willing, and able to purchase power 
    from Western on a wholesale basis for resale to retail consumers. To be 
    eligible to apply for power available from a project's initial resource 
    pool, those entities that desire to purchase Western power for resale 
    to consumers must have attained utility status by December 31, 1996, 
    for the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division, and by 
    September 30, 2000, for the Loveland Area Projects. To be eligible to 
    apply for power from subsequent resource pool increments, these 
    entities must have attained utility status no later than 3 years prior 
    to availability of the incremental addition to the resource pool. 
    Deadlines for attaining utility status for other projects will be 
    established at a later date.
    
    
    Sec. 905.36  Marketing criteria.
    
        Western shall retain applicable provisions of existing marketing 
    criteria for projects where resource commitments are extended beyond 
    the current expiration date of long-term firm power sales contracts. 
    Western must retain important marketing plan provisions such as classes 
    of service, marketing area, and points of delivery, to the extent that 
    these provisions are consistent with the PMI. The PMI, eligibility and 
    allocation criteria for potential new customers, retained or amended 
    provisions of existing marketing criteria, the project-specific 
    resource definition, and the size of a project-specific resource pool 
    shall constitute the future marketing plan for each project.
    
    
    Sec. 905.37  Process.
    
        Modified contractual language shall be required to place resource 
    extensions under contract. Resource extensions and allocations to new 
    customers from the initial resource pool will take effect when existing 
    contracts expire. These dates are December 31, 2000, for the Pick-Sloan 
    Missouri Basin Program--Eastern Division and September 30, 2004, for 
    the Loveland Area Projects. For the Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program--
    Eastern Division, Western will offer contracts to existing customers 
    for resource extensions no sooner than the effective date of the final 
    regulations. For the Loveland Area Projects, existing contracts provide 
    for potential adjustments to marketable resources in 1999. No contracts 
    will be offered to existing customers for post-2004 Loveland Area 
    Projects resources until the analysis of potential resource adjustments 
    in 1999 has been completed and any adjustments are implemented. 
    Existing power sales contracts require that this analysis be completed 
    by 1996. 
    
    [[Page 54180]]
    
    
    Subpart D--Energy Services
    
    
    Sec. 905.40  Technical assistance.
    
        Western shall establish a program that provides technical 
    assistance to customers to conduct integrated resource planning, 
    implement applicable IRPs and small customer plans, and otherwise 
    comply with the requirements of these regulations.
    
    [FR Doc. 95-25829 Filed 10-19-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6450-01-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
11/20/1995
Published:
10/20/1995
Department:
Western Area Power Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
95-25829
Dates:
These regulations will become effective November 20, 1995.
Pages:
54151-54180 (30 pages)
PDF File:
95-25829.pdf
CFR: (23)
10 CFR 905.1
10 CFR 905.2
10 CFR 905.10
10 CFR 905.11
10 CFR 905.12
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