The Legal Implications Of California’s Proposed Western Grid Expansion

RowofWindTurbines2A grid based largely on renewable energy will be tough to manage, given the intermittency of solar and wind power.  That’s why it’s in California’s interest to expand its grid to cover the greater western United States.  With a western market, California can sell cheap surplus renewables to other states and import their renewables when we don’t have enough.

To that end, California’s grid operator, the California Independent System Operator (CAISO) has proposed expanding to acquire PacifiCorp, a grid operator with transmission assets in five additional western states.

As I’ve discussed before, this expansion is not without controversy.  PacifiCorp states are worried about losing sovereignty to a California-heavy expanded grid operator, while environmentalists are worried that the expansion will throw a lifeline to some coal-fired power plants in the PacifiCorp territory.

California officials are also worried that grid expansion could open up avenues for legal challenges and loss of sovereignty over the state’s domestic climate policies, particularly on renewable energy procurement.  Specifically, would expansion increase the federal government’s ability to preempt state authority over domestic policies and energy contracts through the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)?  And would expansion open up California to legal challenges that claim that state policies in an expanded grid violate the commerce clause in the U.S. Constitution?

To evaluate these concerns, CAISO commissioned a legal analysis by UCLA Law’s Ann Carlson and University of Colorado Law’s William Boyd, in consultation with me and my Berkeley Law colleague Dan Farber.  That analysis was released publicly yesterday afternoon, and you can read it here [PDF].

Here is what we found, in a nutshell:

The straightforward answers to each of these questions are that the inclusion of PacifiCorp assets in CAISO:

1) would not alter FERC’s jurisdiction and would not displace any existing state authority over environmental matters. CAISO is already subject to FERC jurisdiction and the inclusion of PacifiCorp in CAISO does not change this. FERC does not have jurisdiction over California’s energy and environmental policies and this would not change because of the inclusion of PacifiCorp in CAISO;

2) would not alter the constitutionality of California’s environmental and clean energy laws under the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution because the policies are already subject to Commerce Clause scrutiny.

To be clear, this memo doesn’t address other potentially thorny issues, such as how the governance structures will be arranged in this future entity and how specific issues like the coal-fired power plant fleet might be treated. But it does provide assurance that expansion will not call into question California’s sovereignty over its clean energy policies, in terms of its constitutionality and ability to operate under federal jurisdiction.

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