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BEFORE THE PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION OF MARYLAND ______________________ CASE NO. 8709 ______________________ IN THE MATTER OF THE INQUIRY INTO THE NATURAL GAS BROKERING OPERATIONS OF BNG, INC., A SUBSIDIARY OF BALTIMORE GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY _______________________________________________ REPLY COMMENTS OF BALTIMORE GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY _______________________________________________ November 22, 1995 BEFORE THE PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION OF MARYLAND IN THE MATTER OF THE INQUIRY * INTO THE NATURAL GAS BROKERING OPERATIONS OF BNG, INC., A * SUBSIDIARY OF BALTIMORE GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY * CASE NO. 8709 * * * * * * * * * * * * * REPLY COMMENTS OF BALTIMORE GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY In accordance with the procedural schedule in the Commission’s notice establishing this proceeding, Baltimore Gas and Electric Company (BGE or the Company) respectfully submits its reply comments. These comments reply to the initial comments filed on or about November 7, 1995 by the following parties: Office of People’s Counsel (OPC), Enron Capital & Trade Resources Corp. (Enron), Tenneco Gas Marketing Company (Tenneco), UtiliCorp United, Inc. d/b/a Broad Street Oil and Gas Co. and UtiliCorp Energy Solutions, Inc. (UtiliCorp), NORSTAR Energy Limited Partnership (NORSTAR), Eastern Energy Marketing, Inc. (Eastern), Bethlehem Steel Corporation (Beth Steel), and Columbia Gas of Maryland, Inc. (Columbia). In addition, these comments respond to the Motion to Stay Interim Gas Brokering Program filed by NORSTAR on November 15, 1995. (NORSTAR Stay Motion)1 I. REPLY COMMENTS A. NONE OF THE COMMENTERS ALLEGE MONOPOLY ABUSE, ANTICOMPETITIVE BEHAVIOR, OR UNDUE DISCRIMINATION WARRANTING THE IMPOSITION OF STAFF’S PROPOSED SEPARATION REQUIREMENTS What is noteworthy about the initial comments filed by certain competing gas marketers is what is absent, namely any allegation of monopoly abuse, anticompetitive behavior, or undue discrimination by BGE or BNG that warrants the extreme fix recommended by Staff -- the proposed separation requirements. Certain comments are loaded with speculation, conjecture, or references to activities allegedly occurring outside of Maryland. E.g., Eastern at p. 3; Tenneco (“a common allegation in other states . . . ”) at p. 2.2 On the other hand, comments by Enron (“Enron agrees with the Staff that there does not appear to be any evidence of discriminatory action by BGE favoring BNG or adversely affecting a competing marketer,” p. 2) and Beth Steel (“[t]hese comments are not intended to imply that BGE and BNG have engaged in practices which disadvantage customers or competitors,” p. 4 ) tell a very different story. BGE submits that comments such as these are far more representative of the manner in which BGE conducted its 1 Counsel for BGE did not receive NORSTAR’s Stay Motion until November 17, 1995. Much of the Stay Motion responds to matters raised in initial comments filed in this case by BGE and Eastern on or about November 7, 1995. However, rather than reply separately to the Stay Motion, and therefore have two opportunities to address in writing the matters raised by NORSTAR, BGE responds through these Reply Comments. 2 NORSTAR resorts to dredging up an unsubstantiated allegation presented at the November 9, 1994 Administrative Meeting by Gaslantic concerning metering equipment. NORSTAR at 9 (all references are to the public version of NORSTAR’s Comments). Despite that allegation, the Commission approved the Interim Brokering Service. Gaslantic is not a party to this proceeding and has not been involved in BGE’s Roundtable discussions. 2 brokering activity and opened up its gas distribution system to further competition. Also see Appendix B to BGE’s Initial Comments. A record based on speculation, conjecture, and unsupported accusation by certain competing marketers is not the type of record upon which the Commission could lawfully impose Staff’s proposed separation requirements. The customer would be the loser, because those separation requirements merely would aid BGE’s competitors and yield only inefficiencies. See BGE’s Initial Comments at pp. 33-36. The Commission should look above the inflammatory rhetoric by certain of BGE’s competitors and instead focus on the myriad of reasons why the Commission should not impose those proposed separation requirements or other standards of conduct or reporting requirements identified by certain competing marketers. B. THE COMMISSION DOES NOT HAVE JURISDICTION OVER THE BROKERING SERVICE NORSTAR repeatedly asserts that the brokering service is just a regulated utility function and that as a result, the PSC should force it to comply with a panoply of requirements in Article 78 (PSC Law). NORSTAR at pp. 2-3, 10-12. As support, NORSTAR cites the transcript from the Commission’s Administrative Meetings in October and November 1994 in which Staff asserted that the Commission had broad jurisdiction over the brokering service. NORSTAR states that it is “undisputed” that the brokering function is of a utility nature. NORSTAR at p. 2. Further, in its Stay Motion, NORSTAR attempts to portray BGE as vacillating and inconsistent on the issue of the Commission’s jurisdiction over the brokering service. Stay Motion at pp. 3-4. Wrong. 3 A year ago, BGE commented before the Commission on the jurisdictional issue as follows: The last point I’d like to make is what kind of activity is this. O&R, in particular, says that the brokering activity is something that is fully within the jurisdiction of this Commission to regulate, that there should be tariffs and all sorts of strictures that should apply to the brokering activity. If it is, then what this Commission should do today is order regulation not just of BGE on the brokering activity, but of every marketer in this room, because this type of brokering activity and marketing activity has been going on for 10 years in this area. There’s been a lot of competition, and I think that it’s difficult to concede that the Commission at this point in time would be particularly interested in expanding its jurisdiction to focus on not just BGE’s brokering activity but the brokering activities or marketing activities of all other marketers. And there are at least 20 in this area. Who knows how many more there will be? The short answer to a lot of the comments that O&R has raised in this area is that brokering is not an activity that is regulated, we believe, by this Commission, with all due respect. Therefore, the strictures in Article 78 with respect to tariffs and all of the other Section 26 and undue preference and discrimination don’t by its terms apply to the brokering activity. Having said that, we have agreed in this revised proposal, and we have been agreeing all along, that we will not be discriminating with respect to peak shaving access[,] with respect to our delivery service, with respect to curtailment, interruption policies . . . [b]ut as to the brokering activity and whether it should be under tariff and whether Section 26 by its terms applies to it, we believe the short answer is no, which is why, when we made the original filing at the end of September we took the position and continue to take the position that we don’t believe that any Commission authority -- Commission approval is needed for the brokering activity. But given the gross margin sharing, given other attributes of this service, we’re making an accommodation here. And that is what this is all about at this point in time. The PSC does have the authority and jurisdiction to deal with 4 how the regulated rates are going to be affected as a result of this brokering activity. No question about that. November 9, 1994 Tr. at pp. 35-36 (emphasis supplied); also see Tr. at pp. 49-50. Contrary to NORSTAR’s assertion regarding jurisdiction, UtiliCorp urges the Commission to be cognizant that “there exist significant questions concerning implied Commission jurisdiction over the affiliates of LDCs, jurisdiction that may not exist or, at a minimum, an implication that invites legal challenge. The Commission should focus its attention on the activities of the regulated LDC rather than the arguably unregulated corporate activities of the LDC’s affiliate.” UtiliCorp at pp. 2-3. As demonstrated in its Initial Comments, BGE continues to dispute that the Commission has jurisdiction over the brokering service. BGE Initial Comments at pp.1115. If the brokering service should be regulated by the Commission, then the marketing activities of NORSTAR and other competing marketers also should be regulated. NORSTAR’s numerous citations to the PSC Law in connection with the brokering service are irrelevant and its argument should be rejected. 5 C. IT IS UNNECESSARY FOR THE COMMISSION TO IMPOSE STAFF’S PROPOSED SEPARATION REQUIREMENTS As BGE demonstrated in its Initial Comments, and the chart attached thereto as Appendix A, the standards of conduct and other safeguards already in place with respect to BNG, together with the modifications offered by BGE in its Initial Comments, already include, in all material respects, all of the restrictions that FERC imposed on interstate pipeline gas marketing affiliates in Order Nos. 497 and 566 et seq.3 In terms of separation, what those rules required was (a) independent functioning of (b) certain operating employees (c) to the maximum extent practicable. BGE submits that this level of separation is already reflected in the standards in place, plus the modifications proposed in BGE’s Initial Comments. Significantly, some of the commenters in this docket ask only that BNG be subjected to FERC- or Order No. 497-type standards of conduct and separation. See, e.g., Tenneco at p. 3 (“urges the Commission to adopt marketing standards similar to FERC’s Order No. 497”). Others commend the FERC standards without appearing to recognize that they are not synonymous with Staff’s proposal. See, e.g., Eastern at p. 13 (its proposed standards are “modeled after the standards imposed by FERC in Order Nos. 497 and 566”); NORSTAR at pp. 7-8 (citing with approval Tenneco Gas v. F.E.R.C., in which the D.C. Circuit largely upheld the FERC standards of conduct)4. As BGE made clear in its Initial Comments, BNG is already subject to standards 3 FERC’s rules do not apply, as a matter of law, to BNG. However, FERC’s experience with its rules is instructive. See BGE Initial Comments at 15-16. 4 In addition, NORSTAR relies on Illinois Bell Telephone Co. v. F.C.C., 740 F.2d 465, 47172 (7th Cir. 1984) to support its contention that Staff’s proposed separation requirements should be adopted. NORSTAR at 7-8; November 9, 1994 Tr. at 65. However, the FCC decided to abandon such separation and adopt accounting regulations. Southwestern Bell Corp. v. F.C.C., 896 F.2d 1378, 1380 (D.C. Cir. 1990). The FCC gave up mandated structural separation in favor of nonstructural accounting regulations designed to allocate joint costs among the two lines of business. Id. 6 substantially equivalent to FERC’s Order No. 497. The Staff’s proposals, in contrast, go far beyond FERC’s standards. Some commenters, on the other hand, purport to advocate adherence to FERC Order No. 497-type standards of conduct and complete separation. See, e.g., Eastern at p. 13. This is a non sequitur and logically inconsistent. The FERC standards, which were developed over several years based on an extensive record, practical experience, and judicial review of their economic soundness, include a separation requirement. But it is not the invasive, total separation required under Staff’s proposal. Rather, FERC’s is a balanced separation “to the maximum extent practicable” that is flexible enough to respond to individual companies’ circumstances and limited to certain operating employees only, not shared or support services. See BGE Initial Comments at pp. 19, 23-24. The FERC rules constitute a complete package of the various controls that FERC concluded, with the court’s approval, were the right mix to preserve and protect competition, on the one hand, while not impairing efficiencies or discriminating against an affiliated gas marketer on the other. It would be illogical to graft onto this reasonable package a complete separation requirement. If such a requirement were in place, it is likely that some of the other restrictions on access to information and reporting requirements would be unnecessary. Yet that is what Eastern apparently attempts to do with its Attachment C (standards of conduct) and its Attachment D (reporting requirements), both of which it would have the Commission impose in addition to complete separation. BGE submits that there is no support in this record for following that course. Further scrutiny of Eastern’s Attachment C reveals that almost all of Eastern’s proposed standards of conduct are already in place with regard to BNG or would be if 7 BGE’s proposed modifications of the current standards are adopted. This is made clear in Appendix A to these Reply Comments in which BGE has revised the chart attached to its Initial Comments to display Eastern’s Attachment C and D proposed standards and reporting requirements in juxtaposition to the currently applicable ones. Eastern also relies on comments filed by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Staff of the Bureau of Economics of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in the FERC proceeding known as the Electric Mega-NOPR5 on the subject of how much separation to require between electric utilities’ various services in a future unbundled environment. Eastern at pp. 10-12. Those comments relate, of course, to the electric utility industry, not natural gas, and have no direct application to the question of a gas marketing affiliate or matters before the Commission in this proceeding. To the extent Eastern sees them as applicable by analogy, BGE submits that far more relevant are the same two agencies’ comments to FERC on the subject of how much separation to require between natural gas pipelines and their marketing affiliates. Those comments strongly supported a balanced, pragmatic degree of independent functioning, not total separation; they were quoted at length in the Court of Appeals’ decision affirming FERC’s Order No. 497 standard requiring separation to the maximum extent practicable. See Tenneco Gas v. F.E.R.C., 969 F.2d 1187, 1203-04 (D.C. Cir. 1992), quoted in BGE Initial Comments at p. 21, n.16. 5 Promoting Wholesale Competition Through Open Access Non-Discriminatory Transmission Services By Public Utilities, Recovery Of Stranded Costs By Public Utilities And Transmitting Utilities; Notice of Proposed Rulemaking And Supplemental Notice Of Proposed Rulemaking, FERC Docket Nos. RM95-8-000 And RM94-7-001, 70 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,357 (1995) (Electric Mega-NOPR). 8 In any event, the DOJ and FTC comments in the Electric Mega-NOPR cited by Eastern are heavily grounded in theoretical speculation about economic incentives, the harm to which they may lead, and the ineffectiveness of regulation (or regulators) to enforce nondiscriminatory standards of conduct in the absence of structural separation. BGE submits that these types of speculative concerns should not drive this Commission’s process, where the Commission has the benefit of real experience with BGE and BNG and the actual record of FERC enforcement of the Order No. 497 standards in the gas industry. As that experience shows, the standards are and can be effective because they are comprehensive, are accompanied by reporting requirements, and are adhered to by BGE/BNG. They depend not only on the will or investigative abilities of the Commission or Commission Staff, but also on the diligence, motivated by self-interest, of BNG’s competitors in bringing to light any possible abuses. In addition, both the regulatory and the public oversight are aided and enhanced by the deterrent effect on BGE of knowing that this public oversight exists. It is a healthy combination and one not adequately recognized in the DOJ and FTC comments in the electricity context. 9 D. COMPETING MARKETERS’ CLAIMS DO NOT SUPPORT THE RELIEF REQUESTED Certain marketers identify what they believe are instances of favoritism, undue preference, or improper identification or use of an affiliate status by BNG/BGE. These claims are groundless. Contrary to Eastern’s allegation, the structure used by BGE/BNG does not result in the same person “picking up the phone” to handle delivery service matters and BNG sales matters. Eastern at pp. 3-4. As identified in the chart set forth in Appendix A of BGE’s Initial Comments, different personnel purchase gas and capacity for BNG than operate the distribution system and implement the delivery service program. Eastern further goes on to imply that when BGE distributes a third party supplier’s gas, it favors BNG. Eastern at pp. 15-16. This is absolutely not true and Eastern has not shown any instances where this occurred. Further, Eastern makes various erroneous statements about BNG’s reliance on BGE’s credit worthiness. Eastern at p. 14. BNG has never relied on BGE’s credit worthiness in order to qualify as a supplier or shipper on interstate pipelines (or other LDC’s distribution systems) or to qualify as a supplier under BGE’s Rate Schedule DSG. Nevertheless, Eastern requests that in order to “level the playing field,” the Commission should require BNG to apply for credit in its own name and to independently qualify to be a shipper on BGE and on third party interstate pipelines and other systems. Id. In order to “level the playing field,” from BNG’s perspective, and give BNG the financial wherewithal to more actively participate in the gas brokering market, BGE filed on November 7, 1995 an application with the Commission for authorization to guarantee up to $20 million of obligations and debt of BNG, Inc. Corporate guarantees of gas marketing companies are prevalent in the gas industry. Many of the gas marketers and 10 brokers which compete with BNG for sales to delivery service customers currently operate with a corporate guaranty. In its Stay Motion, NORSTAR attempts to portray this filing as BGE’s “disregarding” the Commission’s regulatory processes. NORSTAR Stay Motion at pp. 2-3. Nothing is farther from the truth. BGE filed for the guarantee so as not to thwart the Commission’s processes. Contrary to NORSTAR’s assertion, the filing is not a signal that the outcome of Case No. 8709 is “immaterial” to BGE and that we will proceed as we wish. NORSTAR Stay Motion at p. 3. Rather, regardless of the outcome of Case No. 8709, BGE submits that it is appropriate for the guarantee to be approved by the Commission. Just imagine the hue and cry from competing marketers if BGE waited until, let’s say, December 15, 1995 -- after the legislative hearing in Case No. 8709 -- to file the guarantee request. Under these circumstances, for BGE not to have filed for the guarantee on November 7, 1995 would have been inappropriate and disrespectful of the Commission’s processes. Eastern submitted a brochure titled “BGE Gas Brokering - Bringing Customers Value from Wellhead to Your Business.” Eastern at Attachment A. It notes that the brokering promotional material uses “BNG . . . interchangeably with BGE” and complains that the overall focus is that BNG’s affiliate status with BGE will allow a customer to receive a service superior to that available from their gas sellers. Eastern at pp. 5-6. It then goes on to request that the recent joint sales call ruling by the Commission be expanded to prohibit any joint presentations, including advertising and literature. Eastern at p.15. NORSTAR’s Stay Motion attempts to fan the flames even 11 further by citing the brochure as indicating that BGE is operating in disregard of Commission regulatory jurisdiction. Stay Motion at pp. 4-6. 6 BGE submits that there is nothing improper about the material used to promote the brokering activity. BNG should not be prohibited from promoting or advertising its affiliate status with BGE. Gas marketers generally are not reluctant to promote their status as a member of a larger corporate entity, if indeed that is their status. The competitive attributes of BGE and BNG should not be so limited as to significantly restrict their ability to meaningfully participate in the marketplace. Attachment A to Eastern’s Comments was not used to inform and educate customers about their opportunities to use delivery service or to purchase gas from a third party supplier. Rather, Appendix B to these Reply Comments contains various letters and materials distributed by BGE since March 1995 in connection with the expansion of Delivery Service. These materials are impartial and fair in explaining the opportunities available to customers in connection with BGE’s expansion of Delivery Service.7 As to concerns about joint sales calls, e.g. Eastern at p. 6, BGE recommended that a change to the treatment of joint sales calls be adopted by the Commission. BGE Initial Comments at p. 39. The Company proposes that it be permitted to participate in 6 NORSTAR also refer in its comments to certain promotional material distributed by BNG in 1994 to indicate that BNG somehow improperly built upon its affiliate status with BGE. NORSTAR at p. 9. At the time that matter was brought to the Commission’s attention, BGE indicated that what was unique was the manner in which it would handle billing. November 9, 1994 Tr. at 31-32. 7 It is a portion of the material in Appendix B to these Reply Comments that was the subject of the colloquy between Commissioner Brogan and counsel for BGE cited in NORSTAR’s Stay Motion at 4, n.9. As noted in the transcript, the conversation related back to the following statement “First, that in terms of opening up this whole expansion and delivery service, that the literature that went out didn’t even mention BNG.” May 31, 1995 Administrative Meeting Tr. at 37. 12 joint sales calls with all marketers, including BNG, where the customer specifically requests that a representative from BGE be present. Under this proposal, a BGE representative would accompany any marketer to visit a customer. The purpose of the BGE presence would be to explain to the customer the options available to him from BGE. It would not be to recommend one supplier over another, nor to undermine the credibility of the third party marketer. In the view of the Company, joint sales calls under these proposed guidelines provide a significant service to customers. BGE Initial Comments at p. 41. The Commission should reject any attempt by Eastern or any other marketer to “stack the deck” even more against BNG and should instead adopt the Company’s proposal. UtiliCorp submitted a potpourri of suggested additional standards of conduct, safeguards, or other “wish list” type items that it would like to see in place. In general, these consist of: 1) matters that have already been addressed by BGE (nondiscriminatory treatment of transportation service requests - see Appendix A of BGE’s Initial Comments, p. 2, column (3), row (d); 2) matters that are more appropriately explored in the next phase of the Gas Roundtable or are unnecessary given activities performed by BGE at this time (standards for LDC EBBs, Commissionsponsored customer information brochures, and non-traditional means of securing customer service agreements); and 3) requests for information that are unnecessary or competitively sensitive (market penetration of BNG and on a blind basis for other marketers, as well as a “corporate functions” chart).8 UtiliCorp at pp. 2-3. E. BGE’S ACTIVITIES REGARDING ITS OTHER SUBSIDIARIES OR THE ANNOUNCED MERGER WITH PEPCO ARE IRRELEVANT 8 BGE in its Initial Comments agreed to work with Commission Staff to develop a clarifying document describing the Commission’s complaint procedures. BGE Initial Comments at 41-42. 13 Eastern asserts that BGE’s recently-announced energy services subsidiary and the proposed merger between BGE and PEPCO “further supports the Commission’s implementation” of Staff’s proposed separation requirements. Eastern at p. 12. Eastern presents absolutely no support or rationale for its contention. This case is solely about the reasonableness of BNG’s current activities and whether it is necessary or proper to modify or terminate the arrangement. Order No. 72229 at p. 2. Therefore, BGE submits that the two matters cited by Eastern are totally irrelevant to any Commission consideration of the BNG brokering activity. F. COSTS HAVE BEEN PROPERLY ALLOCATED AND THERE HAS BEEN NO INAPPROPRIATE CROSS-SUBSIDIZATION NORSTAR, Eastern, Beth Steel, and to a lesser extent Enron, raised a variety of challenges as to the manner in which costs were allocated by BGE and claimed that there has been inappropriate or unlawful cross-subsidization. Among other things, the competing marketers9 alleged there is a potential for price advantage, below cost pricing, impermissible competitive advantage, no benefits to ratepayers, lack of risk borne by BGE shareholders, and that customers have been deprived of a choice of gas sellers. NORSTAR at pp. 1, 3-7, 10-11; Eastern at pp. 6-7; Beth Steel at pp. 3,5.; and Enron at p. 2. We disagree and so does OPC. OPC at pp. 2-4. As explained in BGE’s Initial Comments, BGE ratepayers have benefited from the Interim Brokering Service and margin-sharing because shareholders, not customers, have borne all start-up expenses. To date, customers have not paid any brokering expenses because at the time the Interim Brokering Service went into effect, there were no brokering expenses reflected in BGE's gas base rates. See also OPC at p. 3. Given 9 This includes Beth Steel, which sells gas to customers behind BGE’s City Gate. 14 that historic brokering expenses will be included in base rates after the conclusion of the current rate case in late November 1995, shareholders will continue to absorb additional expenses as the brokering program expands. Stated differently, customers will enjoy additional margin-sharing revenue as brokering gross profit expands, while shareholders absorb all of the associated additional expenses. Both Staff and OPC had access to certain data that BGE considers competitively sensitive (such as portions of the Interim Period Information Report filed by BGE on September 15, 1995) and a right to audit the data which supports the revenues and expenses noted in the Commission’s November 16, 1994 ruling on the brokering activity. Neither Staff nor OPC have indicated that costs have been allocated improperly. BGE and BNG maintain separate books and accounts. In addition, this is a start up business and it is not surprising that margins would be less than expenses in such a short period of time. BGE Initial Comments at p. 32. Finally, NORSTAR makes reference to two court cases that presumably support its allegation of unlawful tying or some other antitrust-type violations. As to the first, its reliance on Cajun Electric Power Coop. v. F.E.R.C., 28 F.3d 173, 177 (D.C. Cir. 1994), is misplaced. NORSTAR at p. 7. Cajun dealt with an electric tariff filed by Entergy at FERC in which the D.C. Circuit determined that the agency, as a matter of procedure, erred by permitting a certain level of stranded investment costs to be recovered via its open access transmission tariff. Id. at 180. The court had problems with the type of hearing process used by FERC in view of disputed factual issues concerning the impact of the transmission tariff on market power. Id. at 175. The language cited by NORSTAR is dicta. Moreover, BGE does not have any stranded investment costs at issue in connection with its brokering activity. 15 Youngstown Thermal Limited Partnership v. Ohio Edison Co., PUCO Docket No. 93-1408-EL-CSS, 1995 Ohio PUC Lexis 746 (Aug. 31, 1995), cited by NORSTAR at p. 5, is inapposite. In that case, the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (Ohio PUC) found that an electric utility violated a specific Ohio statute that prohibits a utility from furnishing free service or service for less than actual costs for the purpose of destroying competition. There was no affiliate issue involved in that case at all, nor any issues of cost allocation or cross-subsidization. The Ohio PUC did not engage in any discussion of these or any other related policy issues; it simply made a narrow finding under a specific state statute based on the detailed evidentiary record before it. As NORSTAR itself is compelled to admit, it ”is aware of nothing that would warrant such a severe conclusion in this case.” NORSTAR at p. 5. G. THE BROKERING ACTIVITY AS PRESENTLY STRUCTURED IS CONSISTENT WITH THE COMMISSION’S FRAMEWORK Eastern and NORSTAR argue that the brokering activity runs afoul of various principles set forth in the Commission’s Framework. Eastern at pp. 8-9; NORSTAR, passim. If the Commission were to impose the separation requirements on BGE/BNG, that would be inconsistent with the Framework. BGE Initial Comments at pp. 36-37. It is ludicrous for any marketer on BGE’s system to suggest that we have not complied with the Framework. BGE has been the most vigorous LDC advocate of the Framework and its pro-competitive foundation, far more so than any other gas utility in Maryland. BGE, through the Brokering Service, has provided a competitive alternative to third party suppliers’ gas marketing services. BGE has appropriately allocated costs to the service and revenue responsibility has been determined in the current gas rate case. In addition, BGE has taken numerous steps to eliminate barriers to entry and has done so on a non-discriminatory basis. It seems that whatever we do is never enough. 16 Therefore, the Commission should give no weight to Eastern and NORSTAR’s contentions on this matter. H. WHAT MAY HAPPEN ON THE SEPARATION ISSUE IN OTHER STATES IS IRRELEVANT Eastern makes a vague reference to activities occurring in New York, New Jersey, and Wisconsin as to the separation of marketing affiliates. Eastern at p. 910 NORSTAR cites with approval certain developments in New York and New Jersey, NORSTAR at p. 7, but did not mention any developments in Wisconsin. In light of this apparent oversight, NORSTAR filed with this Commission on November 17, 1995, a Motion to Lodge a brief filed before the Wisconsin PSC by the Wisconsin PSC Staff on July 28, 1995 on, among other things, the structural separation issue. NORSTAR’s Motion to Lodge recites that the Wisconsin PSC voted on September 19, 1995 to adopt the Staff’s recommendations and that the Chairman of the Wisconsin PSC advocated structural separation at the most recent NARUC meeting. The Motion to Lodge attaches no Wisconsin PSC order or ruling. BGE addressed the New York and New Jersey situations in its Initial Comments at pp. 25-26, and will not repeat its argument here. As to Wisconsin, to the best of BGE’s knowledge, consideration of these issues before the Wisconsin PSC is ongoing and will not be completed until at least May 1996. See Foster Natural Gas Report, No. 2053 (Oct. 26, 1995) at pp. 17-19 (a copy of which is attached as Appendix C). The issue of whether to address the subject of utilities competing for deregulated business through cost allocation or by requiring the formation of separate marketing affiliates remains open and there apparently is no consensus on the issue among the PSC Staff. 10 Eastern cites Wisconsin as having “taken steps in that direction,” but cites no source for evidence of this activity in Wisconsin. 17 Id. at 17 and n.1. A ”code of conduct” is likely to be developed, and the PSC staff apparently expressed the view in August 1995 that some restrictions between LDCs and their marketing affiliates are probably necessary, at least temporarily; “[a]s competition emerges and is established, the PSC might then consider relaxing all or part of the restrictions (in favor of case-by-case application).” Id. at 17-18. If there is a different state of affairs in Wisconsin, one would have expected that NORSTAR would also have lodged the Wisconsin PSC September 19, 1995 Order or ruling on the structural separation issue. It did not so. Even if the Wisconsin standards were final, there would be little basis for the Commission to adopt them. As noted in BGE’s Initial Comments at p. 26, at most it may be appropriate for the Commission to take note of what is going on in other jurisdictions. The Commission should implement guidelines or safeguards in Maryland that are appropriate to Maryland and supported by the record of experience in Maryland. I. IF THE COMMISSION IMPOSED STAFF’S SEPARATION REQUIREMENTS SOLELY ON BGE, AND NOT ON OTHER GAS UTILITIES IN MARYLAND, IT WOULD BE UNFAIR, INEQUITABLE, UNDULY DISCRIMINATORY AND POTENTIALLY ANTICOMPETITIVE In its Initial Comments, BGE explained why it is appropriate that any separation requirements ultimately imposed by the Commission also be applied to the other large gas utilities in Maryland, namely Washington Gas Light and Columbia. BGE Initial Comments at pp. 37-39. At a minimum, it is appropriate that any standards of conduct or safeguards applicable to BGE/BNG should also be applied to those utilities, notwithstanding the corporate form used by those LDCs to market or sell gas on an unbundled basis. Not surprisingly, Columbia disagrees with this approach and argues, quite unconvincingly, that the difference between a subsidiary or affiliate structure is somehow meaningful. Columbia at 2-3. Enron agrees with BGE and states that “BGE 18 and BNG should not be penalized merely because they have more aggressively embraced competition.” Enron at p. 3 (emphasis supplied). J. THE COMMISSION SHOULD DENY NORSTAR’S REQUEST FOR A STAY NORSTAR seeks a stay of the Interim Gas Brokering Service effective immediately. NORSTAR alleges that without a stay, there will be irreparable harm to the regulatory process, to consumers, and generally to competition. It also alleges that no harm attends grant of a stay. NORSTAR is wrong. NORSTAR’s claims as to the Company’s filing of the guaranty, its jurisdictional arguments, and its use of BNG marketing materials have been addressed earlier in these Reply Comments. BGE has fully complied with the Commission’s regulatory process and conducted its activities in an appropriate manner. Thus NORSTAR’s Stay Motion has not demonstrated that irreparable harm will occur absent a stay. There would be indeed be harm if a stay was granted, but not the type of harm envisioned by NORSTAR. BGE submits that there would be harm to consumers if the brokering program was stayed. BNG is a competitive gas supplier and presents customers with an additional choice in the marketplace. Ongoing relationships with customers are important and the marketplace has benefited by the brokering activity of BNG. NORSTAR, then O&R Energy, filed a Motion for Stay in October 1994 before BNG even commenced its first gas sale. The Commission did not grant its stay then and it should not do so now. K. OPC’S PROPOSED CHANGES OPC presents two proposed changes in its comments. In conjunction with Commission approval of the proposed changes in BGE’s Initial Comments, the 19 Company agrees with OPC’s proposal. As set forth in BGE’s Initial Comments, the rules for the release of pipeline capacity by BGE to BNG need to be modified. The currently effective FERC capacity release rules should be used by BGE and BNG, not more restrictive standards. OPC at p. 3. OPC’s other modification relates to the treatment of profits and losses for onsystem transactions. It proposes to modify the treatment such that the amount of revenues received from the gas brokering operation would, after accounting for gas costs, be used to provide a credit to PGA customers on a dollar-for-dollar basis for the expenses relating to the BNG operations which are reflected in base rates. After that point, remaining revenues, or margins, would be shared between ratepayers and shareholders on the existing 70/30 percent basis. This proposed change is acceptable to BGE. 20 II. CONCLUSION The Commission should take action in this proceeding consistent with BGE’s Initial and Reply Comments. Respectfully submitted, _____________________________ Robert S. Fleishman Baltimore Gas & Electric Company 39 W. Lexington Street Baltimore, Maryland 21201 (410) 234-6701 (410) 234-7168 (fax) November 22, 1995 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I certify that I have served a copy of the foregoing document upon each person designated on the Commission’s Service List in Case No. 8709. Dated at Baltimore, Maryland, this 22nd day of November, 1995. _________________________________ Robert S. Fleishman filings/1122bro 21