[E]ach electric utility annually provides, through market-based standard offer programs, or limited, targeted, market-transformation programs, incentives sufficient for retail electric providers and competitive energy service providers to acquire additional cost-effective energy efficiency for residential and commercial customers . . . .
Id. § 25.181(a)(3) (emphases added); see also Tex. Util. Code § 39.905(a)(3) (specifying same programs). And to encourage utilities’ full involvement in the energy-efficiency goals, the rule creates a mechanism that allows utilities to recoup the costs expended on the programs and, for those utilities that exceed the rule’s goals, mandates a bonus based on the net savings achieved. See 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 25.181(f), (h). The remaining terms of the rule, although important, deal with matters ancillary to the above, such as a cost-effectiveness standard, incentive payments to energy-efficiency providers, administration costs, penalties, and reporting, review and inspection requirements. See generally id. § 25.181(c)–(u). So at its core, rule 25.181 sets the minimum energy-efficiency goals that utilities must meet annually, requires that they meet these goals by providing incentives through two specifically identified types of programs, allows for the utilities to recover the costs of the programs, and mandates a bonus for those utilities exceeding their energy goals. Thus, under a plain-meaning review of rule 25.181, a program is implemented or carried out under the rule if it is a "market-based standard offer program or a limited, targeted, market-transformation program" that is provided or administered by a utility to achieve the energy efficiency goals of the rule.
Here, it is undisputed that all of the 2008 energy-efficiency programs, including the ones funded with the $10 million from the 2006 settlement agreement, were administered by CenterPoint, were market-based standard offer programs or targeted market-transformation programs that were provided to achieve, and did achieve according to PUC’s order, cost-effective energy efficiency for CenterPoint’s customers. In fact, CenterPoint’s administration of these programs resulted in a reduction in demand that significantly exceeded the rule’s minimum goals. Accordingly, these programs were "programs implemented under [rule 25.181]" and, as such, the savings from these programs should be included in the calculation of the performance bonus that CenterPoint is entitled to for exceeding its energy-efficiency goals.
The PUC advances several arguments to support its conclusion that the CenterPoint energy-efficiency programs funded with money from the settlement agreement are not "programs implemented under [rule 25.181], " but these arguments are inconsistent with the rule’s text and are thus unpersuasive.
1. Whether the programs funded by $10 million were necessary to meet goals
In the proceedings that led to the 2006 settlement agreement, the PUC determined that CenterPoint’s then-existing rates created more revenue—specifically $68 million more—than CenterPoint needed to earn a profit and recover its reasonable and necessary expenses, including those for energy-efficiency programs. Thus, CenterPoint could have funded its energy-efficiency programs sufficiently to meet its demand-reduction goals even in the absence of the $68 million in revenue. Therefore, the PUC argues, because the $10 million at issue in this case was part of that $68 million of excess revenue, the energy-efficiency programs funded by that amount were not necessary for CenterPoint to meet its goals. Stated another way, the PUC argues that the programs funded by the $10 million were in addition to what was required by rule or statute to meet energy-efficiency goals and, as such, they were not "implemented under [rule 25.181]." We disagree.
There is no textual support in the rule, or its enabling statute, for the conclusion that programs are implemented under the rule only to the extent that they meet the minimum energy efficiency goals. Likewise, there is nothing in the text of the rule to support the related argument that expansion of existing energy-efficiency programs beyond what is required to meet the rule’s minimum goals cannot be part of a "program implemented under [rule 25.181]." To the contrary, PURA’s stated purpose in directing the PUC to create a performance bonus is "to reward utilities administering programs under [section 39.905] that exceed the minimum goals established by [section 39.905]." See Tex. Util. Code § 39.905(b)(2). And the rule, which tracks the Legislature’s purpose, grants such a performance bonus to those utilities that exceed their minimum demand and energy reduction goals. See 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 25.181(h). Thus, the statutory and regulatory energy-efficiency scheme at issue here actually encourages the expansion of the energy-efficiency programs beyond the minimum energy-efficiency goals. Likewise encouraging is the rule’s EECRF provision, which provides a mechanism that allows a utility to recover the full costs of providing its portfolio of energy-efficiency programs. See id. § 25.181(f)(4), (6) (allowing EECRF adjustment to permit recovery of past under-recovered energy-efficiency program costs). Those costs are limited only by the requirement that they be reasonable, see id. § 25.181(f), and not in excess of the stated percentage caps, see id. § 25.181(f)(8). Thus in this case, because it had spent more money on energy-efficiency programs than was forecast in its rates, CenterPoint requested and the PUC order approved an EECRF rate rider designed to recover the energy-efficiency expenses that CenterPoint incurred in excess of the estimated expenditures covered by its existing base rates.
2. Whether the $10 million belonged to CenterPoint’s ratepayers, not CenterPoint
In another argument, the PUC characterizes the $10 million from the settlement agreement as a "gift" or "grant" from CenterPoint’s commercial and residential ratepayers to be dedicated to expanding energy-efficiency programs. As such, the PUC asserts, the programs funded by this amount were not provided by CenterPoint to comply with its statutory and regulatory energy-efficiency goals and, as a result, were not "implemented under [rule 25.181]." Again, we disagree.
First, we would disagree with the PUC’s characterization of the $10 million as a gift or grant. This amount was part of a negotiated agreement to settle a contested PUC rate case in which several different parties participated, and we will not second guess the purposes or motives behind such a settlement agreement. But regardless, in the absence of textual support for the contention that a utility must provide the funds from its rate-designated revenue, we fail to see how the source of funding for these programs affects whether the programs were carried out to comply with the Legislature’s energy-efficiency goals. Ultimately, all utilities’ costs, including those for energy-efficiency programs, are funded by ratepayers, see Tex. Util. Code § 36.051 (establishing rates), and we fail to see how the intermediate source of the funding informs our decision here. This is best illustrated by the fact that the effect of PUC’s approval of the settlement agreement was to set CenterPoint’s rates such that they recovered $23 million—not $13 million—designated for energy-efficiency programs. Further, these programs exist to achieve the overarching purpose of the statutory and regulatory scheme at issue here—i.e., energy-efficiency. Thus, the rule does not distinguish between intermediate funds and ratepayer funds, but only whether the funds were spent on the programs required by the rule, the programs were administered by CenterPoint, and the programs actually achieved energy-efficiency.
Relatedly, the PUC argues that the $10 million cannot be considered in the calculation of CenterPoint’s performance bonus because the programs funded by that amount did not "cost" CenterPoint anything. See 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 25.181(h)(2) (defining "net benefit, " which is element of performance bonus, as sum of total avoided costs minus the "sum of all program costs"). Stated another way, the PUC contends that because CenterPoint did not have to pay for the expansion of the programs out of its own funds, that part of those programs was not "implemented under [rule 25.181]". First, we would note that CenterPoint collected the $10 million in the same manner that it collected the other money spent on energy-efficiency programs—i.e., through its PUC-approved rates. Further, the rule’s description of the calculation simply references "program costs" without limitation. See id. § 25.181(h)(2). To that extent, the rule offers no textual support for the PUC’s argument here. And, as noted previously, the PUC’s focus on the source of funds in this context is a distinction without a difference given that CenterPoint’s ratepayers ultimately pay all the utility’s costs, one way or the other. For this same reason, although not raised by the PUC here, we would note that the rule’s reference to "the utility’s program costs" in the rule’s 20% cap, see id. § 25.181(h)(3) (emphasis added) (capping bonus at "20% of the utility’s program costs"), does not inform our decision here. In sum, there is nothing in the rule to preclude inclusion of the cost of these programs based simply on the intermediate source of funds for those costs.
3. Other programs
The PUC also argues that its treatment of the $10 million is appropriate here because it mirrors subsection (p)’s treatment of weatherization programs for low-income customers:
Targeted low income energy efficiency program. Unless funding is provided under PURA § 39.903, each unbundled transmission and distribution utility shall include in its energy efficiency plan a targeted low-income energy efficiency program as described by PURA § 39.903(f)(2). A utility in an area in which customer choice is not offered may include in its energy efficiency plan a targeted low-income energy efficiency program that utilizes the cost-effectiveness methodology provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection. Savings achieved by the program shall count toward the utility’s energy efficiency goal.
Id. § 25.181(p) (emphases added). Although it does not explain its basis for this argument and that basis is not immediately obvious from text of subsection (p), we infer that the PUC’s argument here stems from subsection (p)’s reference to, as emphasized above, the "funding" of energy-efficiency programs "provided under PURA § 39.903." See id. But subsection’s (p)’s reference here does not support the PUC’s interpretation of subsection (h) to allow an inquiry into the source of an energy-efficiency program’s funds to determine whether that program was "implemented under [rule 25.181]." See id.
Subsection (p) of PUC rule 25.181 requires utilities to provide weatherization programs for low-income customers unless PURA section 39.903 provides the funding for such a program. See id. It also specifies that any savings achieved by a weatherization program provided by the utility count towards the utility’s energy-efficiency goals. See id. The PURA provision referenced in subsection (p) authorizes funding from an account in the general revenue fund for programs benefitting certain low-income electric customers, including "targeted energy efficiency programs to be administered by the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs in coordination with existing weatherization programs." See Tex. Util. Code § 39.903(f)(2). So read together, if the Department of Housing and Community Affairs administers a weatherization program funded under PURA section 39.903(f)(2), the utility servicing those customers does not need to provide such a program. See id.; 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 25.181(p). If the Department does not administer such a weatherization program, however, the utility must provide the program and is credited for any subsequent energy savings. See 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 25.181(p). But contrary to the PUC’s implied assertion here, the focus of this scheme is not on the source of funding, but instead on which entity actually administers the weatherization program. See Tex. Util. Code § 39.903; 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 25.181(p). Thus, a utility administering a weatherization program under subsection (p)—i.e., where the Department is not doing so under PURA section 39.903—is credited for any savings resulting from that weatherization program not because of how the program is funded, but because the utility, not the Department, actually administered the program. Conversely, a utility, in whose service area the Department administers a weatherization program under PURA section 39.903, is not credited with any savings resulting from that program because the Department, not the utility, administers the program. To that extent, subsection (p)’s treatment of the weatherization programs, instead of supporting the PUC’s position in this case, is consistent with our holding here that "programs implemented under [rule 25.181]" are "market-based standard offer programs, targeted market-transformation programs, or utility self-delivered programs" administered by utilities to achieve a reduction in demand growth.
In a related argument, the PUC offers its rule regarding advanced metering systems as further support for its focus on the source of a program’s funding in rule 25.181. See 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 25.130 (2013) (Pub. Util. Comm’n, Advanced Metering).[9] The advanced-metering rule regulates utilities’ use of advanced meters and allows those utilities that choose to adopt advanced metering systems to assess a surcharge to recover costs incurred for deploying the systems. See id. Although use of advanced meters can result in decreased demand for electricity because, among other reasons, they allow users to directly monitor and control their energy consumption, utilities may not include these savings in their bonus calculation because the advanced-meter program is carried out—i.e., implemented—under rule 25.130, not 25.181. See id. § 25.181(h). The PUC somehow extrapolates from this result that because the excluded savings are from programs funded through a surcharge, it should consider the source of a program’s funding in determining whether the program is implemented under rule 25.181. But the savings from advanced metering programs are not included in a performance bonus because those programs are implemented under rule 25.130, not because they are funded differently than energy-efficiency programs. Further, the purpose behind advanced metering systems is not to promote energy efficiency, as is rule 25.181′s purpose, but "to increase the reliability of the regional electrical network, encourage dynamic pricing and demand response, make better use of generation assets and transmission and generation assets, and provide more choices for consumers." See Act of May 29, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., ch. 1095, § 8, 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws 3615, 3618.
In sum, we hold that under PUC rule 25.181′s plain language, CenterPoint’s 2008 energy-efficiency programs, including those funded with money from the 2006 settlement agreement, were programs "implemented under [rule 25.181]" because they were "market-based standard offer programs or limited, targeted, market-transformation programs" provided or administered by an electric utility to achieve the rule’s energy-efficiency goals. The PUC, by limiting CenterPoint’s performance bonus based on the specific source of funds expended on the energy-efficiency programs, " rather than based on the above, adopted an interpretation that is contrary to the rule’s plain language. Thus, the PUC’s actions here were arbitrary and capricious and require reversal. See Rodriguez, 997 S.W.2d at 254–55 ("If the Commission does not follow the clear, unambiguous language of its own regulation, we reverse its action as arbitrary and capricious."). Accordingly, we sustain CenterPoint’s first issue.
Carrying costs
In its second issue, CenterPoint asserts that because the PUC erred in reducing CenterPoint’s performance bonus as discussed above, it was likewise error for it to reduce CenterPoint’s carrying costs. See 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 25.181(f)(7) (providing that utility that is subject to a rate freeze, as CenterPoint was here, is entitled to defer recovery of its costs until after the rate freeze expires, and those deferred costs bear interest). The PUC, although disagreeing that it erred in partially denying CenterPoint’s performance bonus, agrees that a proper calculation of CenterPoint’s carrying costs depends on the correct amount of its performance bonus. Accordingly, because the PUC’s calculation of CenterPoint’s carrying costs was improperly based on its award of a partial performance bonus, CenterPoint is entitled to a recalculation of its carrying costs under rule 25.181(f)(7).
We sustain CenterPoint’s second issue.
Conclusion
Having sustained both of CenterPoint’s issues on appeal, we reverse the district court’s judgment. We likewise reverse the parts of the PUC’s order regarding CenterPoint’s 2008 performance bonus and carrying costs and remand this cause to the PUC for recalculation of those amounts consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and Remanded.
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