Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm'n v. Elec. Power Supply Ass'n
Supreme Court of the United States1/25/2016
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Full Opinion
(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2015 1
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION v.
ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSOCIATION ET AL.
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT*
No. 14â840. Argued October 14, 2015âDecided January 25, 2016
The Federal Power Act (FPA) authorizes the Federal Energy Regulato-
ry Commission (FERC) to regulate âthe sale of electric energy at
wholesale in interstate commerce,â including both wholesale electrici-
ty rates and any rule or practice âaffectingâ such rates. 16 U. S. C.
§§824(b), 824d(a), 824e(a). But it places beyond FERCâs power, leav-
ing to the States alone, the regulation of âany other saleââi.e., any
retail saleâof electricity. §824(b).
In an increasingly competitive interstate electricity market, FERC
has undertaken to ensure âjust and reasonableâ wholesale rates,
§824d(a), by encouraging the creation of nonprofit entities to manage
regions of the nationwide electricity grid. These wholesale market
operators administer their portions of the grid to ensure that the
network conducts electricity reliably, and each holds competitive auc-
tions to set wholesale prices. These auctions balance supply and de-
mand continuously by matching bids to provide electricity from gen-
erators with orders from utilities and other âload-serving entitiesâ
(LSEs) that buy power at wholesale for resale to users. All bids to
supply electricity are stacked from lowest to highest, and accepted in
that order until all requests for power have been met. Every electric-
ity supplier is paid the price of the highest-accepted bid, known as
the locational marginal price (LMP).
In periods of high electricity demand, prices can reach extremely
ââââââ
* Together with No. 14â841, EnerNOC, Inc., et al. v. Electric
Power Supply Association et al., also on certiorari to the same
court.
2 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Syllabus
high levels as the least efficient generators have their supply bids ac-
cepted in the wholesale market auctions. Not only do rates rise dra-
matically during these peak periods, but the increased flow of elec-
tricity threatens to overload the grid and cause substantial service
problems. Faced with these challenges, wholesale market operators
devised wholesale demand response programs, which pay consumers
for commitments to reduce their use of power during these peak peri-
ods. Just like bids to supply electricity, offers from aggregators of
multiple users of electricity or large individual consumers to reduce
consumption can be bid into the wholesale market auctions. When it
costs less to pay consumers to refrain from using power than it does
to pay producers to supply more of it, demand response can lower
these wholesale prices and increase grid reliability. Wholesale opera-
tors began integrating these programs into their markets some 15
years ago and FERC authorized their use. Congress subsequently
encouraged further development of demand response.
Spurred on by Congress, FERC issued Order No. 719, which,
among other things, requires wholesale market operators to receive
demand response bids from aggregators of electricity consumers, ex-
cept when the state regulatory authority overseeing those usersâ re-
tail purchases bars demand response participation. 18 CFR
§35.28(g)(1). Concerned that the order had not gone far enough,
FERC then issued the rule under review here, Order No. 745.
§35.28(g)(1)(v) (Rule). It requires market operators to pay the same
price to demand response providers for conserving energy as to gen-
erators for producing it, so long as a ânet benefits test,â which en-
sures that accepted bids actually save consumers money, is met. The
Rule rejected an alternative compensation scheme that would have
subtracted from LMP the savings consumers receive from not buying
electricity in the retail market, a formula known as LMP-G. The
Rule also rejected claims that FERC lacked statutory authority to
regulate the compensation operators pay for demand response bids.
The Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit vacated
the Rule, holding that FERC lacked authority to issue the order be-
cause it directly regulates the retail electricity market, and holding
in the alternative that the Ruleâs compensation scheme is arbitrary
and capricious under the Administrative Procedure Act.
Held:
1. The FPA provides FERC with the authority to regulate whole-
sale market operatorsâ compensation of demand response bids. The
Courtâs analysis proceeds in three parts. First, the practices at issue
directly affect wholesale rates. Second, FERC has not regulated re-
tail sales. Taken together, these conclusions establish that the Rule
complies with the FPAâs plain terms. Third, the contrary view would
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 3
Syllabus
conflict with the FPAâs core purposes. Pp. 14â29.
(a) The practices at issue directly affect wholesale rates. The
FPA has delegated to FERC the authorityâand, indeed, the dutyâto
ensure that rules or practices âaffectingâ wholesale rates are just and
reasonable. §§824d(a), 824e(a). To prevent the statute from assum-
ing near-infinite breadth, see e.g., New York State Conference of Blue
Cross & Blue Shield Plans v. Travelers Ins. Co., 514 U. S. 645, 655,
this Court adopts the D. C. Circuitâs common-sense construction lim-
iting FERCâs âaffectingâ jurisdiction to rules or practices that âdirect-
ly affect the [wholesale] rate,â California Independent System Opera-
tor Corp. v. FERC, 372 F. 3d 395, 403 (emphasis added). That
standard is easily met here. Wholesale demand response is all about
reducing wholesale rates; so too the rules and practices that deter-
mine how those programs operate. That is particularly true here, as
the formula for compensating demand response necessarily lowers
wholesale electricity prices by displacing higher-priced generation
bids. Pp. 14â17.
(b) The Rule also does not regulate retail electricity sales in vio-
lation of §824(b). A FERC regulation does not run afoul of §824(b)âs
proscription just because it affects the quantity or terms of retail
sales. Transactions occurring on the wholesale market have natural
consequences at the retail level, and so too, of necessity, will FERCâs
regulation of those wholesale matters. That is of no legal conse-
quence. See, e.g., Mississippi Power & Light Co. v. Mississippi ex rel.
Moore, 487 U. S. 354, 365, 370â373. When FERC regulates what
takes place on the wholesale market, as part of carrying out its
charge to improve how that market runs, then no matter the effect on
retail rates, §824(b) imposes no bar. Here, every aspect of FERCâs
regulatory plan happens exclusively on the wholesale market and
governs exclusively that marketâs rules. The Commissionâs justifica-
tions for regulating demand response are likewise only about improv-
ing the wholesale market. Cf. Oneok, Inc. v. Learjet, Inc., 575 U. S.
___, ___. Pp. 17â25.
(c) In addition, EPSAâs position would subvert the FPA. EPSAâs
arguments suggest that the entire practice of wholesale demand re-
sponse falls outside what FERC can regulate, and EPSA concedes
that States also lack that authority. But under the FPA, wholesale
demand response programs could not go forward if no entity had ju-
risdiction to regulate them. That outcome would flout the FPAâs core
purposes of protecting âagainst excessive pricesâ and ensuring effec-
tive transmission of electric power. Pennsylvania Water & Power Co.
v. FPC, 343 U. S. 414, 418; see Gulf States Util. Co. v. FPC, 411 U. S.
747, 758. The FPA should not be read, against its clear terms, to halt
a practice that so evidently enables FERC to fulfill its statutory du-
4 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Syllabus
ties of holding down prices and enhancing reliability in the wholesale
energy market. Pp. 25â29.
2. FERCâs decision to compensate demand response providers at
LMPâthe same price paid to generatorsâinstead of at LMP-G, is not
arbitrary and capricious. Under the narrow scope of review in Motor
Vehicle Mfrs. Assn. of United States, Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Automo-
bile Ins. Co., 463 U. S. 29, 43, this Courtâs important but limited role
is to ensure that FERC engaged in reasoned decisionmakingâthat it
weighed competing views, selected a compensation formula with ade-
quate support in the record, and intelligibly explained the reasons for
making that decision. Here, FERC provided a detailed explanation of
its choice of LMP and responded at length to contrary views. FERCâs
serious and careful discussion of the issue satisfies the arbitrary and
capricious standard. Pp. 29â33.
753 F. 3d 216, reversed and remanded.
KAGAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ROBERTS,
C. J., and KENNEDY, GINSBURG, BREYER, and SOTOMAYOR, JJ., joined.
SCALIA, J. filed a dissenting opinion, in which THOMAS, J., joined.
ALITO, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the cases.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 1
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, WashÂ
ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 14â840 and 14â841
_________________
FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION,
PETITIONER
14â840 v.
ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSOCIATION, ET AL.
ENERNOC, INC., ET AL., PETITIONERS
14â841 v.
ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSOCIATION, ET AL.
ON WRITS OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
[January 25, 2016]
JUSTICE KAGAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Federal Power Act (FPA or Act), 41 Stat. 1063, as
amended, 16 U. S. C. §791a et seq., authorizes the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC or Commission) to
regulate âthe sale of electric energy at wholesale in interÂ
state commerce,â including both wholesale electricity rates
and any rule or practice âaffectingâ such rates. §§824(b),
824e(a). But the law places beyond FERCâs power, and
leaves to the States alone, the regulation of âany other
saleââmost notably, any retail saleâof electricity.
§824(b). That statutory division generates a steady flow of
jurisdictional disputes becauseâin point of fact if not of
lawâthe wholesale and retail markets in electricity are
inextricably linked.
These cases concern a practice called âdemand reÂ
2 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
sponse,â in which operators of wholesale markets pay
electricity consumers for commitments not to use power at
certain times. That practice arose because wholesale
market operators can sometimesâsay, on a muggy August
dayâoffer electricity both more cheaply and more reliably
by paying users to dial down their consumption than by
paying power plants to ramp up their production. In the
regulation challenged here, FERC required those market
operators, in specified circumstances, to compensate the
two services equivalentlyâthat is, to pay the same price to
demand response providers for conserving energy as to
generators for making more of it.
Two issues are presented here. First, and fundamenÂ
tally, does the FPA permit FERC to regulate these demand
response transactions at all, or does any such rule impinge
on the Statesâ authority? Second, even if FERC has the
requisite statutory power, did the Commission fail to
justify adequately why demand response providers and
electricity producers should receive the same compensaÂ
tion? The court below ruled against FERC on both scores.
We disagree.
I
A
Federal regulation of electricity owes its beginnings to
one of this Courtâs decisions. In the early 20th century,
state and local agencies oversaw nearly all generation,
transmission, and distribution of electricity. But this
Court held in Public Util. Commân of R. I. v. Attleboro
Steam & Elec. Co., 273 U. S. 83, 89â90 (1927), that the
Commerce Clause bars the States from regulating certain
interstate electricity transactions, including wholesale
sales (i.e., sales for resale) across state lines. That ruling
created what became known as the âAttleboro gapââa
regulatory void which, the Court pointedly noted, only
Congress could fill. See id., at 90.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 3
Opinion of the Court
Congress responded to that invitation by passing the
FPA in 1935. The Act charged FERCâs predecessor agency
with undertaking âeffective federal regulation of the exÂ
panding business of transmitting and selling electric
power in interstate commerce.â New York v. FERC, 535
U. S. 1, 6 (2002) (quoting Gulf States Util. Co. v. FPC, 411
U. S. 747, 758 (1973)). Under the statute, the Commission
has authority to regulate âthe transmission of electric
energy in interstate commerceâ and âthe sale of electric
energy at wholesale in interstate commerce.â 16 U. S. C.
§824(b)(1).
In particular, the FPA obligates FERC to oversee all
prices for those interstate transactions and all rules and
practices affecting such prices. The statute provides that
â[a]ll rates and charges made, demanded, or received by
any public utility for or in connection withâ interstate
transmissions or wholesale salesâas well as âall rules
and regulations affecting or pertaining to such rates or
chargesââmust be âjust and reasonable.â §824d(a). And if
âany rate [or] charge,â or âany rule, regulation, practice, or
contract affecting such rate [or] charge[,]â falls short of
that standard, the Commission must rectify the problem:
It then shall determine what is âjust and reasonableâ and
impose âthe same by order.â §824e(a).
Alongside those grants of power, however, the Act also
limits FERCâs regulatory reach, and thereby maintains a
zone of exclusive state jurisdiction. As pertinent here,
§824(b)(1)âthe same provision that gives FERC authorÂ
ity over wholesale salesâstates that âthis subchapter,â
including its delegation to FERC, âshall not apply to
any other sale of electric energy.â Accordingly, the ComÂ
mission may not regulate either within-state wholesale
sales or, more pertinent here, retail sales of electricity (i.e.,
sales directly to users). See New York, 535 U. S., at
17, 23. State utility commissions continue to oversee those
transactions.
4 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
Since the FPAâs passage, electricity has increasingly
become a competitive interstate business, and FERCâs role
has evolved accordingly. Decades ago, state or local utiliÂ
ties controlled their own power plants, transmission lines,
and delivery systems, operating as vertically integrated
monopolies in confined geographic areas. That is no longer
so. Independent power plants now abound, and almost
all electricity flows not through âthe local power networks
of the past,â but instead through an interconnected âgridâ
of near-nationwide scope. See id., at 7 (âelectricity that
enters the grid immediately becomes a part of a vast pool
of energy that is constantly moving in interstate comÂ
merce,â linking producers and users across the country).
In this new world, FERC often forgoes the cost-based rate-
setting traditionally used to prevent monopolistic pricing.
The Commission instead undertakes to ensure âjust and
reasonableâ wholesale rates by enhancing competitionâ
attempting, as we recently explained, âto break down
regulatory and economic barriers that hinder a free marÂ
ket in wholesale electricity.â Morgan Stanley Capital
Group Inc. v. Public Util. Dist. No. 1 of Snohomish Cty.,
554 U. S. 527, 536 (2008).
As part of that effort, FERC encouraged the creation of
nonprofit entities to manage wholesale markets on a
regional basis. Seven such wholesale market operators
now serve areas with roughly two-thirds of the countryâs
electricity âloadâ (an industry term for the amount of
electricity used). See FERC, Energy Primer: A Handbook
of Energy Market Basics 58â59 (Nov. 2015) (Energy
Primer). Each administers a portion of the grid, providing
generators with access to transmission lines and ensuring
that the network conducts electricity reliably. See ibid.
And still more important for present purposes, each operaÂ
tor conducts a competitive auction to set wholesale prices
for electricity.
These wholesale auctions serve to balance supply and
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 5
Opinion of the Court
demand on a continuous basis, producing prices for elecÂ
tricity that reflect its value at given locations and times
throughout each day. Such a real-time mechanism is
needed because, unlike most products, electricity cannot
be stored effectively. Suppliers must generateâevery day,
hour, and minuteâthe exact amount of power necessary
to meet demand from the utilities and other âload-serving
entitiesâ (LSEs) that buy power at wholesale for resale to
users. To ensure that happens, wholesale market operaÂ
tors obtain (1) orders from LSEs indicating how much
electricity they need at various times and (2) bids from
generators specifying how much electricity they can proÂ
duce at those times and how much they will charge for it.
Operators accept the generatorsâ bids in order of cost (least
expensive first) until they satisfy the LSEsâ total demand.
The price of the last unit of electricity purchased is then
paid to every supplier whose bid was accepted, regardless
of its actual offer; and the total cost is split among the
LSEs in proportion to how much energy they have orÂ
dered. So, for example, suppose that at 9 a.m. on August
15 four plants serving Washington, D. C. can each produce
some amount of electricity for, respectively, $10/unit,
$20/unit, $30/unit, and $40/unit. And suppose that LSEsâ
demand at that time and place is met after the operator
accepts the three cheapest bids. The first three generators
would then all receive $30/unit. That amount is (think
back to Econ 101) the marginal costâi.e., the added cost of
meeting another unit of demandâwhich is the price an
efficient market would produce. See 1 A. Kahn, The EcoÂ
nomics of Regulation: Principles and Institutions 65â67
(1988). FERC calls that cost (in jargon that will soon
become oddly familiar) the locational marginal price, or
LMP.1
ââââââ
1 To be more precise, LMP generally includes, in addition to the price
of the highest-accepted bid, certain costs of moving power through the
6 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
As in any market, when wholesale buyersâ demand for
electricity increases, the price they must pay rises correÂ
spondingly; and in those times of peak load, the gridâs
reliability may also falter. Suppose that by 2 p.m. on
August 15, it is 98 degrees in D. C. In every home, store,
or office, people are turning the air conditioning up. To
keep providing power to their customers, utilities and
other LSEs must ask their market operator for more
electricity. To meet that spike in demand, the operator
will have to accept more expensive bids from suppliers.
The operator, that is, will have to agree to the $40 bid that
it spurned beforeâand maybe, beyond that, to bids of $50
or $60 or $70. In such periods, operators often must call
on extremely inefficient generators whose high costs of
production cause them to sit idle most of the time. See
Energy Primer 41â42. As that happens, LMPâthe price
paid by all LSEs to all suppliersâclimbs ever higher. And
meanwhile, the increased flow of electricity through the
grid threatens to overload transmission lines. See id., at
44. As every consumer knows, it is just when the weather
is hottest and the need for air conditioning most acute that
blackouts, brownouts, and other service problems tend to
occur.
Making matters worse, the wholesale electricity market
lacks the self-correcting mechanism of other markets.
Usually, when the price of a product rises, buyers natu-
rally adjust by reducing how much they purchase. But conÂ
sumers of electricityâand therefore the utilities and other
LSEs buying power for them at wholesaleâdo not respond
to price signals in that way. To use the economic term,
demand for electricity is inelastic. That is in part because
electricity is a necessity with few ready substitutes: When
the temperature reaches 98 degrees, many people see no
ââââââ
grid. But those costs are not relevant here, and we therefore disregard
them.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 7
Opinion of the Court
option but to switch on the AC. And still more: Many
State regulators insulate consumers from short-term
fluctuations in wholesale prices by insisting that LSEs set
stable retail rates. See id., at 41, 43â44. That, one might
say, short-circuits the normal rules of economic behavior.
Even in peak periods, as costs surge in the wholesale
market, consumers feel no pinch, and so keep running the
AC as before. That means, in turn, that LSEs must keep
buying power to send to those usersâno matter that
wholesale prices spiral out of control and increased usage
risks overtaxing the grid.
But what if there were an alternative to that scenario?
Consider what would happen if wholesale market operaÂ
tors could induce consumers to refrain from using (and so
LSEs from buying) electricity during peak periods. WhenÂ
ever doing that costs less than adding more power, an
operator could bring electricity supply and demand into
balance at a lower price. And simultaneously, the operaÂ
tor could ease pressure on the grid, thus protecting
against system failures. That is the idea behind the pracÂ
tice at issue here: Wholesale demand response, as it is
called, pays consumers for commitments to curtail their
use of power, so as to curb wholesale rates and prevent
grid breakdowns. See id., at 44â46.2
These demand response programs work through the
operatorsâ regular auctions. Aggregators of multiple users
of electricity, as well as large-scale individual users like
factories or big-box stores, submit bids to decrease electricÂ
ity consumption by a set amount at a set time for a set
price. The wholesale market operators treat those offers
just like bids from generators to increase supply. The
ââââââ
2 Differently designed demand response programs can operate in
retail markets. Some States, for example, either encourage or require
utilities to offer âcritical-peak rebatesâ to customers for curtailing
electricity use at times of high load. See Energy Primer 45.
8 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
operators, that is, rank order all the bidsâboth to produce
and to refrain from consuming electricityâfrom least to
most expensive, and then accept the lowest bids until
supply and demand come into equipoise. And, once again,
the LSEs pick up the cost of all those payments. So, to
return to our prior example, if a store submitted an offer
not to use a unit of electricity at 2 p.m. on August 15 for
$35, the operator would accept that bid before calling on
the generator that offered to produce a unit of power for
$40. That would result in a lower LMPâagain, wholesale
market priceâthan if the market operator could not avail
itself of demand response pledges. See ISO/RTO Council,
Harnessing the Power of Demand: How ISOs and RTOs
Are Integrating Demand Response Into Wholesale ElecÂ
tricity Markets 40â43 (2007) (estimating that, in one
market, a demand response program reducing electricity
usage by 3% in peak hours would lead to price declines of
6% to 12%). And it would decrease the risk of blackouts
and other service problems.
Wholesale market operators began using demand reÂ
sponse some 15 years ago, soon after they assumed the
role of overseeing wholesale electricity sales. Recognizing
the value of demand response for both system reliability
and efficient pricing, they urged FERC to allow them to
implement such programs. See, e.g., PJM Interconnection,
L. L. C., Order Accepting Tariff Sheets as Modified, 95
FERC ¶61,306 (2001); California Independent System
Operator Corp., Order Conditionally Accepting for Filing
Tariff Revisions, 91 FERC ¶61,256 (2000). And as deÂ
mand response went into effect, market participants of
many kinds came to view itâin the words of respondent
Electric Power Supply Association (EPSA)âas an âimÂ
portant element[ ] of robust, competitive wholesale elecÂ
tricity markets.â App. 94, EPSA, Comments on Proposed
Rule on Demand Response Compensation in Organized
Wholesale Energy Markets (May 12, 2010).
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 9
Opinion of the Court
Congress added to the chorus of voices praising wholeÂ
sale demand response. In the Energy Policy Act of 2005,
119 Stat. 594 (EPAct), it declared as âthe policy of the
United Statesâ that such demand response âshall be enÂ
couraged.â §1252(f), 119 Stat. 966, 16 U. S. C. §2642 note.
In particular, Congress directed, the deployment of âtechÂ
nology and devices that enable electricity customers to
participate in . . . demand response systems shall be faciliÂ
tated, and unnecessary barriers to demand response parÂ
ticipation in energy . . . markets shall be eliminated.â
Ibid.3
B
Spurred on by Congress, the Commission determined to
take a more active role in promoting wholesale demand
response programs. In 2008, FERC issued Order No. 719,
which (among other things) requires wholesale market
operators to receive demand response bids from aggregaÂ
tors of electricity consumers, except when the state reguÂ
latory authority overseeing those usersâ retail purchases
bars such demand response participation. See 73 Fed.
Reg. 64119, ¶154 (codified 18 CFR §35.28(g)(1) (2015)).
That original order allowed operators to compensate deÂ
mand response providers differently from generators if
they so chose. No party sought judicial review.
ââââââ
3 The dissent misreads this subsection of the EPAct in suggesting
that it encourages Statesâ use of retail demand response, rather than
the wholesale programs at issue here. See post, at 8â9 (opinion of
SCALIA, J.); n. 2, supra. The prior subsection, §1252(e), as the dissent
notes, promotes demand response in the Statesâbut then the EPAct
switches gears. Subsection (f) expressly addresses the programs of
âregional electricity entit[ies]ââthat is, wholesale market operators.
Indeed, the provision lists all the markets those operators run: not just
the electricity market involved here, but also the âcapacity and ancilÂ
lary service markets.â Those are established components of the wholeÂ
sale system with no counterparts at the state level. See Energy Primer
59.
10 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
Concerned that Order No. 719 had not gone far enough,
FERC issued the rule under review here in 2011, with one
commissioner dissenting. See Demand Response Competi-
tion in Organized Wholesale Energy Markets, Order No.
745, 76 Fed. Reg. 16658 (Rule) (codified 18 CFR
§35.28(g)(1)(v)). The Rule attempts to ensure âjust and
reasonableâ wholesale rates by requiring market operators
to appropriately compensate demand response providers
and thus bring about âmeaningful demand-side participaÂ
tionâ in the wholesale markets. 76 Fed. Reg. 16658, ¶1,
16660, ¶10; 16 U. S. C. §824d(a). The Ruleâs most signifiÂ
cant provision directs operators, under two specified conÂ
ditions, to pay LMP for any accepted demand response bid,
just as they do for successful supply bids. See 76 Fed. Reg.
16666â16669, ¶¶45â67. In other words, the Rule requires
that demand response providers in those circumstances
receive as much for conserving electricity as generators do
for producing it.
The two specified conditions ensure that a bid to use
less electricity provides the same value to the wholesale
market as a bid to make more. First, a demand response
bidder must have âthe capability to provide the serviceâ
offered; it must, that is, actually be able to reduce electricÂ
ity use and thereby obviate the operatorâs need to secure
additional power. Id., at 16666, ¶¶48â49. Second, paying
LMP for a demand response bid âmust be cost-effective,â
as measured by a standard called âthe net benefits test.â
Ibid., ¶48. That test makes certain that accepting a lower-
priced demand response bid over a higher-priced supply
bid will actually save LSEs (i.e., wholesale purchasers)
money. In some situations it will not, even though acceptÂ
ing a lower-priced bid (by definition) reduces LMP. That
is because (to oversimplify a bit) LSEs share the cost of
paying successful bidders, and reduced electricity use
makes some LSEs drop out of the market, placing a proÂ
portionally greater burden on those that are left. Each
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 11
Opinion of the Court
remaining LSE may thus wind up paying more even
though the total bill is lower; or said otherwise, the costs
associated with an LSEâs increased share of compensating
bids may exceed the savings that the LSE obtains from a
lower wholesale price.4 The net benefits test screens out
such counterproductive demand response bids, exempting
them from the Ruleâs compensation requirement. See id.,
at 16659, 16666â16667, ¶¶3, 50â53. What remains are
only those offers whose acceptance will result in actual
savings to wholesale purchasers (along with more reliable
service to end users). See id., at 16671, ¶¶78â80.
The Rule rejected an alternative scheme for compensatÂ
ing demand response bids. Several commenters had urged
that, in paying a demand response provider, an operator
should subtract from the ordinary wholesale price the
savings that the provider nets by not buying electricity on
the retail market. Otherwise, the commenters claimed,
demand response providers would receive a kind of
âdouble-paymentâ relative to generators. See id., at 16663,
¶24. That proposal, which the dissenting commissioner
largely accepted, became known as LMP minus G, or more
simply LMP-G, where âGâ stands for the retail price of
electricity. See id., at 16668, ¶60, 16680 (Moeller, dissentÂ
ing). But FERC explained that, under the conditions it
had specified, the value of an accepted demand response
bid to the wholesale market is identical to that of an acÂ
cepted supply bid because each succeeds in cost-effectively
âbalanc[ing] supply and demand.â Id., at 16667, ¶55.
And, the Commission reasoned, that comparable value is
ââââââ
4 The explanation is a stylized version of the actual phenomenon. In
reality, LSEs rarely drop out of the market entirely because of demand
response; instead, they will merely order less electricity. But the effect
is the same as in the text, because the total cost of accepted bids is
spread among LSEs in proportion to the units of electricity they purÂ
chase; and as those units decline, each remaining one bears a greater
share of the bill.
12 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
what ought to matter given FERCâs goal of strengthening
competition in the wholesale market: Rates should reflect
not the costs that each market participant incurs, but
instead the services it provides. See id., at 16668, ¶62.
Moreover, the Rule stated, compensating demand reÂ
sponse bids at their actual valueâi.e., LMPâwill help
overcome various technological barriers, including a lack
of needed infrastructure, that impede aggregators and
large-scale users of electricity from fully participating in
demand response programs. See id., at 16667â16668,
¶¶57â58.
The Rule also responded to comments challenging
FERCâs statutory authority to regulate the compensation
operators pay for demand response bids. Pointing to the
Commissionâs analysis in Order No. 719, the Rule exÂ
plained that the FPA gives FERC jurisdiction over such
bids because they âdirectly affect[ ] wholesale rates.â Id.,
at 16676, ¶112 (citing 74 id., at 37783, ¶47, and 18
U. S. C. §824d). Nonetheless, the Rule noted, FERC would
continue Order No. 719âs policy of allowing any state
regulatory body to prohibit consumers in its retail market
from taking part in wholesale demand response programs.
See 76 Fed. Reg. 16676, ¶114; 73 id., at 64119, ¶154.
Accordingly, the Rule does not require any âaction[ ] that
would violate State laws or regulations.â 76 id., at 16676,
¶114.
C
A divided panel of the Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit vacated the Rule as âultra vires agency
action.â 753 F. 3d 216, 225 (2014). The court held that
FERC lacked authority to issue the Rule even though
âdemand response compensation affects the wholesale
market.â Id., at 221. The Commissionâs âjurisdiction to
regulate practices âaffectingâ rates,â the court stated, âdoes
not erase the specific limit[ ]â that the FPA imposes on
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 13
Opinion of the Court
FERCâs regulation of retail sales. Id., at 222. And the
Rule, the court concluded, exceeds that limit: In âluring
. . . retail customersâ into the wholesale market, and causÂ
ing them to decrease âlevels of retail electricity consumpÂ
tion,â the Rule engages in âdirect regulation of the retail
market.â Id., at 223â224.
The Court of Appeals held, alternatively, that the Rule
is arbitrary and capricious under the Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U. S. C. §706(2)(A), because FERC failed
to âadequately explain[ ]â why paying LMP to demand
response providers âresults in just compensation.â 753
F. 3d, at 225. According to the court, FERC did not
âproperly considerâ the view that such a payment would
give those providers a windfall by leaving them with âthe
full LMP plus . . . the savings associated withâ reduced
consumption. Ibid. (quoting Demand Response Competi-
tion in Organized Wholesale Energy Markets: Order on
Rehearing and Clarification, Order No. 745âA (Rehearing
Order), 137 FERC ¶61,215, p. 62,316 (2011) (Moeller,
dissenting)). The court dismissed out of hand the idea
that âcomparable contributions [could] be the reason for
equal compensation.â 753 F. 3d, at 225.
Judge Edwards dissented. He explained that the rules
governing wholesale demand response have a âdirect effect
. . . on wholesale electricity rates squarely within FERCâs
jurisdiction.â Id., at 227. And in setting those rules, he
argued, FERC did not engage in âdirect regulation of the
retail marketâ; rather, â[a]uthority over retail rates . . .
remains vested solely in the States.â Id., at 234 (internal
quotation marks omitted). Finally, Judge Edwards rejected
the majorityâs view that the Rule is arbitrary and capriÂ
cious. He noted the substantial deference due to the
Commission in cases involving ratemaking, and concluded
that FERC provided a âthoroughâ and âreasonableâ explaÂ
nation for choosing LMP as the appropriate compensation
formula. Id., at 236â238.
14 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
We granted certiorari, 575 U. S. ___ (2015), to decide
whether the Commission has statutory authority to reguÂ
late wholesale market operatorsâ compensation of demand
response bids and, if so, whether the Rule challenged here
is arbitrary and capricious. We now hold that the ComÂ
mission has such power and that the Rule is adequately
reasoned. We accordingly reverse.
II
Our analysis of FERCâs regulatory authority proceeds in
three parts. First, the practices at issue in the Ruleâ
market operatorsâ payments for demand response com-
mitmentsâdirectly affect wholesale rates. Second, in
addressing those practices, the Commission has not reguÂ
lated retail sales. Taken together, those conclusions esÂ
tablish that the Rule complies with the FPAâs plain terms.
And third, the contrary view would conflict with the Actâs
core purposes by preventing all use of a tool that no one
(not even EPSA) disputes will curb prices and enhance
reliability in the wholesale electricity market.5
A
The FPA delegates responsibility to FERC to regulate
the interstate wholesale market for electricityâboth
wholesale rates and the panoply of rules and practices
affecting them. As noted earlier, the Act establishes
a scheme for federal regulation of âthe sale of electric
energy at wholesale in interstate commerce.â 16 U. S. C.
§824(b)(1); see supra, at 3. Under the statute, â[a]ll rates
and charges made, demanded, or received by any public
utility for or in connection withâ interstate wholesale sales
âshall be just and reasonableâ; so too shall âall rules and
ââââââ
5 Because we think FERCâs authority clear, we need not address the
Governmentâs alternative contention that FERCâs interpretation of the
statute is entitled to deference under Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural
Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U. S. 837 (1984).
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 15
Opinion of the Court
regulations affecting or pertaining to such rates or
charges.â §824d(a). And if FERC sees a violation of that
standard, it must take remedial action. More specifically,
whenever the Commission âshall find that any rate [or]
chargeââor âany rule, regulation, practice, or contract
affecting such rate [or] chargeââis âunjust [or] unreasonÂ
able,â then the Commission âshall determine the just and
reasonable rate, charge[,] rule, regulation, practice or
contractâ and impose âthe same by order.â §824e(a). That
means FERC has the authorityâand, indeed, the dutyâto
ensure that rules or practices âaffectingâ wholesale rates
are just and reasonable.
Taken for all it is worth, that statutory grant could
extend FERCâs power to some surprising places. As the
court below noted, markets in all electricityâs inputsâ
steel, fuel, and labor most prominent among themâmight
affect generatorsâ supply of power. See 753 F. 3d, at 221;
id., at 235 (Edwards, J., dissenting). And for that matter,
markets in just about everythingâthe whole economy, as
it wereâmight influence LSEsâ demand. So if indirect or
tangential impacts on wholesale electricity rates sufficed,
FERC could regulate now in one industry, now in another,
changing a vast array of rules and practices to implement
its vision of reasonableness and justice. We cannot imagÂ
ine that was what Congress had in mind.
For that reason, an earlier D. C. Circuit decision adopted,
and we now approve, a common-sense construction of
the FPAâs language, limiting FERCâs âaffectingâ jurisdicÂ
tion to rules or practices that âdirectly affect the [wholeÂ
sale] rate.â California Independent System Operator Corp.
v. FERC, 372 F. 3d 395, 403 (2004) (emphasis added); see
753 F. 3d, at 235 (Edwards, J., dissenting). As we have
explained in addressing similar terms like ârelating toâ or
âin connection with,â a non-hyperliteral reading is needed
to prevent the statute from assuming near-infinite
breadth. See New York State Conference of Blue Cross &
16 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
Blue Shield Plans v. Travelers Ins. Co., 514 U. S. 645, 655
(1995) (âIf ârelate toâ were taken to extend to the furthest
stretch of its indeterminacy, then for all practical purposes
[the statute] would never run its courseâ); Maracich v.
Spears, 570 U. S. ___, ___ (2013) (slip op., at 9) (âThe
phrase âin connection withâ is essentially indeterminat[e]
because connections, like relations, stop nowhereâ (interÂ
nal quotation marks omitted)). The Commission itself
incorporated the D. C. Circuitâs standard in addressing its
authority to issue the Rule. See 76 Fed. Reg. 16676, ¶112
(stating that FERC has jurisdiction because wholesale
demand response âdirectly affects wholesale ratesâ). We
think it right to do the same.
Still, the rules governing wholesale demand response
programs meet that standard with room to spare. In
general (and as earlier described), wholesale market operÂ
ators employ demand response bids in competitive aucÂ
tions that balance wholesale supply and demand and
thereby set wholesale prices. See supra, at 7â8. The
operators accept such bids if and only if they bring down
the wholesale rate by displacing higher-priced generation.
And when that occurs (most often in peak periods), the
easing of pressure on the grid, and the avoidance of service
problems, further contributes to lower charges. See Brief
for Grid Engineers et al. as Amici Curiae 26â27. WholeÂ
sale demand response, in short, is all about reducing
wholesale rates; so too, then, the rules and practices that
determine how those programs operate.
And that is particularly true of the formula that operaÂ
tors use to compensate demand response providers. As in
other areas of life, greater pay leads to greater participaÂ
tion. If rewarded at LMP, rather than at some lesser
amount, more demand response providers will enter more
bids capable of displacing generation, thus necessarily
lowering wholesale electricity prices. Further, the ComÂ
mission found, heightened demand response participation
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 17
Opinion of the Court
will put âdownward pressureâ on generatorsâ own bids,
encouraging power plants to offer their product at reduced
prices lest they come away empty-handed from the bidding
process. 76 Fed. Reg. 16660, ¶10. That, too, ratchets
down the rates wholesale purchasers pay. Compensation
for demand response thus directly affects wholesale prices.
Indeed, it is hard to think of a practice that does so more.
B
The above conclusion does not end our inquiry into the
Commissionâs statutory authority; to uphold the Rule, we
also must determine that it does not regulate retail elecÂ
tricity sales. That is because, as earlier described, §824(b)
âlimit[s] FERCâs sale jurisdiction to that at wholesale,â
reserving regulatory authority over retail sales (as well as
intrastate wholesale sales) to the States. New York, 535
U. S., at 17 (emphasis deleted); see 16 U. S. C. §824(b);
supra, at 3.6 FERC cannot take an action transgressing
that limit no matter how direct, or dramatic, its impact on
wholesale rates. Suppose, to take a far-fetched example,
that the Commission issued a regulation compelling every
consumer to buy a certain amount of electricity on the
retail market. Such a rule would necessarily determine
ââââââ
6 EPSA additionally cites §824(a) as constraining the Commissionâs
authority, see Brief for Respondent EPSA et al. 25, 31, 43 (Brief for
Respondents), but that provision adds nothing to the analysis. Section
824(a), the FPAâs âdeclaration of policy,â states that federal regulation
of electricity is to âextend only to those matters which are not subject to
regulation by the States.â We have often explained that this declaraÂ
tion serves only to frame the Actâs basic structure and purpose. See,
e.g., New York, 535 U. S., at 22 (Section 824(a) âbroadly expresse[s] [the
Actâs] purposeâ (quoting FPC v. Southern Cal. Edison Co., 376 U. S.
205, 215 (1964)); id., at 215 (Section 824(a) is âmerely a âpolicy declaraÂ
tion . . . of great generalityâ â (quoting Connecticut Light & Power Co. v.
FPC, 324 U. S. 515, 527 (1945))). That means, as applied to the issue
here, that §824(a) merely points toward the division of regulatory
authority that §824(b) carries out. The operative provision is what
counts.
18 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
the load purchased on the wholesale market too, and thus
would alter wholesale prices. But even given that inelucÂ
table consequence, the regulation would exceed FERCâs
authority, as defined in §824(b), because it specifies terms
of sale at retailâwhich is a job for the States alone.7
Yet a FERC regulation does not run afoul of §824(b)âs
proscription just because it affectsâeven substantiallyâ
the quantity or terms of retail sales. It is a fact of eco-
nomic life that the wholesale and retail markets in electricÂ
ity, as in every other known product, are not hermetically
sealed from each other. To the contrary, transactions that
occur on the wholesale market have natural consequences
at the retail level. And so too, of necessity, will FERCâs
regulation of those wholesale matters. Cf. Oneok, Inc. v.
Learjet, Inc., 575 U. S. ___, ___ (2015) (slip op., at 13)
(noting that in the similarly structured world of natural
gas regulation, a âPlatonic idealâ of strict separation beÂ
ââââââ
7 The dissent disputes this framing of the issue, but its criticism
(made by neither EPSA nor its amici) is irrelevant to deciding this case.
According to the dissent, the FPA prohibits FERC from regulating not
only retail sales of electricity (as we agree) but also any other sales of
electricity aside from wholesale sales. See post, at 2â4. But the dissent
turns out not to argue that the Rule regulates some kind of non-retail,
non-wholesale sale of electric energy (whatever that might be). Rather,
the dissent claims that the Rule regulates retail sales, see post, at 4â
6âexactly the point that we address, and reject, in the following pages.
And in any event, the dissentâs framing of the issue is wrong if and to
the extent it posits some undefined category of other electricity sales
falling within neither FERCâs nor the Statesâ regulatory authority.
Sales of electric energy come in two varieties: wholesale and retail. The
very case the dissent relies on recognizes that fact by referring to âother
sales, that is, to direct sales for consumptive use.â Panhandle Eastern
Pipe Line Co. v. Public Serv. Commân of Ind., 332 U. S. 507, 516 (1947).
FERC regulates interstate wholesale sales of electricity; the States
regulate retail sales of electricity. And FERC may also regulate, as it
did here, practices and rules affecting wholesale pricesâthat is, matÂ
ters beyond wholesale sales themselvesâso long as, in doing so, it does
not trespass on the Statesâ authority to regulate retail sales of electric
power. See supra, at 3.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 19
Opinion of the Court
tween federal and state realms cannot exist). When FERC
sets a wholesale rate, when it changes wholesale market
rules, when it allocates electricity as between wholesale
purchasersâin short, when it takes virtually any action
respecting wholesale transactionsâit has some effect, in
either the short or the long term, on retail rates. That is
of no legal consequence. See, e.g., Mississippi Power &
Light Co. v. Mississippi ex rel. Moore, 487 U. S. 354, 365,
370â373 (1988) (holding that an order regulating wholeÂ
sale purchases fell within FERCâs jurisdiction, and
preempted contrary state action, even though it clearly
affected retail prices); Nantahala Power & Light Co. v.
Thornburg, 476 U. S. 953, 959â961, 970 (1986) (same);
FPC v. Louisiana Power & Light Co., 406 U. S. 621, 636â
641 (1972) (holding similarly in the natural gas context).
When FERC regulates what takes place on the wholesale
market, as part of carrying out its charge to improve how
that market runs, then no matter the effect on retail rates,
§824(b) imposes no bar.
And in setting rules for demand response, that is all
FERC has done. The Commissionâs Rule addressesâand
addresses onlyâtransactions occurring on the wholesale
market. Recall once again how demand response worksâ
and forgive the coming italics. See supra, at 7â8. Whole-
sale market operators administer the entire program,
receiving every demand response bid made. Those operaÂ
tors accept such a bid at the mandated price when (and
only when) the bid provides value to the wholesale market
by balancing supply and demand more âcostÂ
effective[ly]ââi.e., at a lower cost to wholesale purchasÂ
ersâthan a bid to generate power. 76 Fed. Reg. 16659,
16666, ¶2, 48. The compensation paid for a successful bid
(LMP) is whatever the operatorâs auction has determined
is the marginal price of wholesale electricity at a particuÂ
lar location and time. See id., at 16659, ¶2. And those
footing the bill are the same wholesale purchasers that
20 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
have benefited from the lower wholesale price demand
response participation has produced. See id., at 16674,
¶¶99â100. In sum, whatever the effects at the retail level,
every aspect of the regulatory plan happens exclusively on
the wholesale market and governs exclusively that marÂ
ketâs rules.
What is more, the Commissionâs justifications for reguÂ
lating demand response are all about, and only about,
improving the wholesale market. Cf. Oneok, 575 U. S., at
___ (slip op., at 11) (considering âthe target at which [a]
law aimsâ in determining whether a State is properly
regulating retail or, instead, improperly regulating wholeÂ
sale sales). In Order No. 719, FERC explained that deÂ
mand response participation could help create a âwellÂ
functioning competitive wholesale electric energy marketâ
with âreduce[d] wholesale power pricesâ and âenhance[d]
reliability.â 73 Fed. Reg. 64103, ¶16. And in the Rule
under review, FERC expanded on that theme. It listed the
several ways in which âdemand response in organized
wholesale energy markets can help improve the functionÂ
ing and competitiveness of those marketsâ: by replacing
high-priced, inefficient generation; exerting âdownward
pressureâ on âgenerator bidding strategiesâ; and âsupÂ
port[ing] system reliability.â 76 id., at 16660, ¶10; see
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for Order No. 745, 75 id.,
at 15363â15364, ¶4 (2010) (noting similar aims); supra, at
7â8. FERC, that is, focused wholly on the benefits that
demand response participation (in the wholesale market)
could bring to the wholesale market. The retail market
figures no more in the Ruleâs goals than in the mechanism
through which the Rule operates.
EPSAâs primary argument that FERC has usurped state
power (echoed in the dissent) maintains that the Rule
âeffectively,â even though not ânominal[ly],â regulates
retail prices. See, e.g., Brief for Respondents 1, 10, 23â27,
35â39; Tr. of Oral Arg. 26, 30; post, at 4â6. The argument
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 21
Opinion of the Court
begins on universally accepted ground: Under §824(b),
only the States, not FERC, can set retail rates. See, e.g.,
FPC v. Conway Corp., 426 U. S. 271, 276 (1976). But as
EPSA concedes, that tenet alone cannot make its case,
because FERCâs Rule does not set actual rates: States
continue to make or approve all retail rates, and in doing
so may insulate them from price fluctuations in the wholeÂ
sale market. See Brief for Respondents 39. Still, EPSA
contends, rudimentary economic analysis shows that the
Rule does the âfunctional equivalen[t]â of settingâmore
particularly, of raisingâretail rates. Id., at 36. That is
because the opportunity to make demand response bids in
the wholesale market changes consumersâ calculations. In
deciding whether to buy electricity at retail, economically-
minded consumers now consider both the cost of making
such a purchase and the cost of forgoing a possible deÂ
mand response payment. So, EPSA explains, if a factory
can buy electricity for $10/unit, but can earn $5/unit for
not buying power at peak times, then the effective retail
rate at those times is $15/unit: the $10 the factory paid at
retail plus the $5 it passed up. See id., at 10. And by thus
increasing effective retail rates, EPSA concludes, FERC
trespasses on the Statesâ ground.
The modifier âeffectiveâ is doing quite a lot of work in
that argumentâmore work than any conventional underÂ
standing of rate-setting allows. The standard dictionary
definition of the term ârateâ (as used with reference to
prices) is â[a]n amount paid or charged for a good or serÂ
vice.â Blackâs Law Dictionary 1452 (10th ed. 2014); see,
e.g., 13 Oxford English Dictionary 208â209 (2d ed. 1989)
(ârateâ means âprice,â âcost,â or âsum paid or asked for a
. . . thingâ). To set a retail electricity rate is thus to estabÂ
lish the amount of money a consumer will hand over in
exchange for power. Nothing in §824(b) or any other part
of the FPA suggests a more expansive notion, in which
FERC sets a rate for electricity merely by altering conÂ
22 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
sumersâ incentives to purchase that product.8 And neither
does anything in this Courtâs caselaw. Our decisions
uniformly speak about rates, for electricity and all else, in
only their most prosaic, garden-variety sense. As the
Solicitor General summarized that view, âthe rate is what
it is.â Tr. of Oral Arg. 7. It is the price paid, not the price
paid plus the cost of a forgone economic opportunity.
Consider a familiar scenario to see what is odd about
EPSAâs theory. Imagine that a flight is overbooked. The
airline offers passengers $300 to move to a later plane that
has extra seats. On EPSAâs view, that offer adds $300â
the cost of not accepting the airlineâs proffered paymentâ
to the price of every continuing passengerâs ticket. So a
person who originally spent $400 for his ticket, and deÂ
cides to reject the airlineâs proposal, paid an âeffectiveâ
price of $700. But would any passenger getting off the
plane say he had paid $700 to fly? That is highly unlikely.
And airline lawyers and regulators (including many, we
are sure, with economics Ph. D.âs) appear to share that
common-sensical view. It is in fact illegal to âincrease the
priceâ of âair transportation . . . after [such] air transportaÂ
tion has been purchased by the consumer.â 14 CFR
§399.88(a) (2015). But it is a safe bet that no airline has
ever gotten into trouble by offering a payment not to fly.9
ââââââ
8 The dissent offers, alternatively, a definition of âprice,â but that only
further proves our point. âPrice,â says the dissent, is â[t]he amount of
money or other consideration asked for or given in exchange for someÂ
thing else.â Post, at 6 (quoting Blackâs Law Dictionary 1380). But the
âeffectiveâ rates posited by EPSA and the dissent do not meet that test.
If $10 is the actual rate for a unit of retail electricity, that is the only
amount either âasked forâ or âgivenâ in exchange for power. A retail
customer is asked to pay $10 by its LSE, and if it buys that electricity,
it gives the LSE that same $10. By contrast, the $15 âeffectiveâ rate is
neither asked for nor given by anyone.
9 The dissent replaces our simple, real-world example with a convoÂ
luted, fictitious oneâbut once again merely confirms our point. SupÂ
pose, the dissent says, that an airline cancels a passengerâs $400 ticket;
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 23
Opinion of the Court
And EPSAâs âeffective price increaseâ claim fares even
worse when it comes to payments not to use electricity. In
EPSAâs universe, a wholesale demand response program
raises retail rates by compelling consumers to âpayâ the
price of forgoing demand response compensation. But
such a consumer would be even more surprised than our
air traveler to learn of that price hike, because the natural
consequence of wholesale demand response programs is to
bring down retail rates. Once again, wholesale market
operators accept demand response bids only if those offers
lower the wholesale price. See supra, at 7â8. And when
wholesale prices go down, retail prices tend to follow,
because state regulators can, and mostly do, insist that
wholesale buyers eventually pass on their savings to
consumers. EPSAâs theoretical construct thus runs headÂ
long into the real world of electricity salesâwhere the
Rule does anything but increase retail prices.
EPSAâs second argument that FERC intruded into the
Statesâ sphere is more historical and purposive in nature.
According to EPSA, FERC deliberately âlured [retail cusÂ
tomers] into the[ ] wholesale marketsââand, more, FERC
did so âonly because [it was] dissatisfied with the Statesâ
exercise of their undoubted authorityâ under §824(b) to
regulate retail sales. Brief for Respondents 23; see id., at
2â3, 31, 34. In particular, EPSA asserts, FERC disapÂ
proved of âmany Statesâ continued preferenceâ for stable
ââââââ
gives him a refund plus an extra $300; and then tells him that if he
wants to repurchase the ticket, he must pay $700. Aha!, says the
dissentâisnât the price now $700? See post, at 5â6. Well, yes it is,
because that is now the actual amount the passenger will have to hand
over to the airline to receive a ticket in exchange (or in the dissentâs
definition of price, the amount âasked forâ and âgiven,â see n. 8, supra).
In other words, in search of an intuitive way to explain its âeffective
rateâ theory, the dissent must rely on an âactual rateâ hypothetical.
But all that does is highlight the distance, captured in the law, between
real prices (reflecting amounts paid) and effective ones (reflecting
opportunity costs).
24 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
pricingâthat is, for insulating retail rates from short-term
fluctuations in wholesale costs. Id., at 28. In promoting
demand response programsâor, in EPSAâs somewhat less
neutral language, in âforc[ing] retail customers to respond
to wholesale price signalsââFERC acted âfor the express
purpose of overridingâ that state policy. Id., at 29, 49.
That claim initially founders on the true facts of how
wholesale demand response came about. Contra EPSA,
the Commission did not invent the practice. Rather, and
as described earlier, the impetus came from wholesale
market operators. See supra, at 8. In designing their
newly organized markets, those operators recognized
almost at once that demand response would lower wholeÂ
sale electricity prices and improve the gridâs reliability. So
they quickly sought, and obtained, FERCâs approval to
institute such programs. Demand response, then,
emerged not as a Commission power grab, but instead as a
market-generated innovation for more optimally balancing
wholesale electricity supply and demand.
And when, years later (after Congress, too, endorsed the
practice), FERC began to play a more proactive role, it did
so for the identical reason: to enhance the wholesale, not
retail, electricity market. Like the market operators,
FERC saw that sky-high demand in peak periods threatÂ
ened network breakdowns, compelled purchases from
inefficient generators, and consequently drove up wholeÂ
sale prices. See, e.g., 73 Fed. Reg. 64103, ¶16; 76 id., at
16660, ¶10; see supra, at 6â7. Addressing those probÂ
lemsâwhich demand response doesâfalls within the
sweet spot of FERCâs statutory charge. So FERC took
action promoting the practice. No doubt FERC recognized
connections, running in both directions, between the
Statesâ policies and its own. The Commission understood
that by insulating consumers from price fluctuations,
States contributed to the wholesale marketâs difficulties in
optimally balancing supply and demand. See 76 Fed. Reg.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 25
Opinion of the Court
16667â16668, ¶¶57, 59; supra, at 6â7. And FERC realized
that increased use of demand response in that market
would (by definition) inhibit retail sales otherwise subject
to State control. See 73 Fed. Reg. 64167. But nothing
supports EPSAâs more feverish idea that the Commissionâs
interest in wholesale demand response emerged from a
yen to usurp State authority over, or impose its own reguÂ
latory agenda on, retail sales. In promoting demand
response, FERC did no more than follow the dictates of its
regulatory mission to improve the competitiveness, effiÂ
ciency, and reliability of the wholesale market.
Indeed, the finishing blow to both of EPSAâs arguments
comes from FERCâs notable solicitude toward the States.
As explained earlier, the Rule allows any State regulator
to prohibit its consumers from making demand response
bids in the wholesale market. See 76 id., at 16676, ¶114;
73 id., at 64119, ¶154; supra, at 12. Although claiming
the ability to negate such state decisions, the Commission
chose not to do so in recognition of the linkage between
wholesale and retail markets and the Statesâ role in overÂ
seeing retail sales. See 76 Fed. Reg. 16676, ¶¶112â114.
The veto power thus granted to the States belies EPSAâs
view that FERC aimed to âobliterate[ ]â their regulatory
authority or âoverrideâ their pricing policies. Brief for
Respondents 29, 33. And that veto gives States the means
to block whatever âeffectiveâ increases in retail rates
demand response programs might be thought to produce.
Wholesale demand response as implemented in the Rule is
a program of cooperative federalism, in which the States
retain the last word. That feature of the Rule removes
any conceivable doubt as to its compliance with §824(b)âs
allocation of federal and state authority.
C
One last point, about how EPSAâs position would subÂ
vert the FPA.
26 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
EPSAâs jurisdictional claim, as may be clear by now,
stretches very far. Its point is not that this single Rule,
relating to compensation levels, exceeds FERCâs power.
Instead, EPSAâs argumentsâthat rewarding energy conÂ
servation raises effective retail rates and that âluringâ
consumers onto wholesale markets aims to disrupt state
policiesâsuggest that the entire practice of wholesale
demand response falls outside what FERC can regulate.
EPSA proudly embraces that point: FERC, it declares,
âhas no business regulating âdemand responseâ at all.â Id.,
at 24. Under EPSAâs theory, FERCâs earlier Order No.
719, although never challenged, would also be ultra vires
because it requires operators to open their markets to
demand response bids. And more: FERC could not even
approve an operatorâs voluntary plan to administer a
demand response program. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 44. That
too would improperly allow a retail customer to participate
in a wholesale market.
Yet state commissions could not regulate demand reÂ
sponse bids either. EPSA essentially concedes this point.
See Brief for Respondents 46 (âThat may well be trueâ).
And so it must. The FPA âleaves no room either for direct
state regulation of the prices of interstate wholesalesâ or
for regulation that âwould indirectly achieve the same
result.â Northern Natural Gas Co. v. State Corporation
Commân of Kan., 372 U. S. 84, 91 (1963). A State could not
oversee offers, made in a wholesale market operatorâs
auction, that help to set wholesale prices. Any effort of
that kind would be preempted.
And all of that creates a problem. If neither FERC nor
the States can regulate wholesale demand response, then
by definition no one can. But under the Act, no electricity
transaction can proceed unless it is regulable by someone.
As earlier described, Congress passed the FPA precisely to
eliminate vacuums of authority over the electricity marÂ
kets. See supra, at 2â3. The Act makes federal and state
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 27
Opinion of the Court
powers âcomplementaryâ and âcomprehensive,â so that
âthere [will] be no âgapsâ for private interests to subvert
the public welfare.â Louisiana Power & Light Co., 406
U. S., at 631. Or said otherwise, the statute prevents the
creation of any regulatory âno manâs land.â FPC v. Trans-
continental Gas Pipe Line Corp., 365 U. S. 1, 19 (1961); see
id., at 28. Some entity must have jurisdiction to regulate
each and every practice that takes place in the electricity
markets, demand response no less than any other.10
For that reason, the upshot of EPSAâs view would be to
extinguish the wholesale demand response program in its
entirety. Under the FPA, each market operator must
submit to FERC all its proposed rules and procedures.
See 16 U. S. C. §§824d(c)â(d); 18 CFR §§35.28(c)(4),
35.3(a)(1). Assume that, as EPSA argues, FERC could not
authorize any demand response program as part of that
package. Nor could FERC simply allow such plans to go
into effect without its consideration and approval. There
are no âoff the booksâ programs in the wholesale electricity
marketsâbecause, once again, there is no regulatory âno
manâs land.â Transcontinental, 365 U. S., at 19. The FPA
mandates that FERC review, and ensure the reasonableÂ
ââââââ
10 The dissent contests this point (complaining that our decadesâ
worth of precedents affirming it partly rely on legislative history), but
the example the dissent offers in response misses the mark. See post,
at 7â8. The dissent hypothesizes a rule enabling generators to sell
directly to consumers and fixing all generation, transmission, and retail
rates. But of course neither FERC nor the States could issue such a
rule: If FERC did so, it would interfere with the Statesâ authority over
retail sales and rates as well as (most) generation; if a State did so, it
would interfere with FERCâs power over transmission. Thus, to impleÂ
ment such a scheme, the States would need to do some things and
FERC to do others. And if the one or the other declined to cooperate,
then the full scheme could not proceed. But that just goes to show that
the FPA divides regulatory power over electricity matters between
FERC and the States. The example does nothing to demonstrate that
some electricity transactions can proceed outside any regulatorâs
authority.
28 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
ness of, every wholesale rule and practice. See 16 U. S. C.
§§824d(a), 824e(a); supra, at 3, 14â15. If FERC could not
carry out that duty for demand response, then those proÂ
grams could not go forward.
And that outcome would flout the FPAâs core objects.
The statute aims to protect âagainst excessive pricesâ and
ensure effective transmission of electric power. Pennsyl-
vania Water & Power Co. v. FPC, 343 U. S. 414, 418
(1952); see Gulf States Util. Co. v. FPC, 411 U. S. 747, 758
(1973). As shown above, FERC has amply explained how
wholesale demand response helps to achieve those ends,
by bringing down costs and preventing service interrupÂ
tions in peak periods. See supra, at 20. No one taking
part in the rulemaking processânot even EPSAâ
seriously challenged that account. Even as he objected to
FERCâs compensation formula, Commissioner Moeller
noted the unanimity of opinion as to demand responseâs
value: â[N]owhere did I review any comment or hear any
testimony that questioned the benefit of having demand
response resources participate in the organized wholesale
energy markets. On this point, there is no debate.â 76
Fed. Reg. 16679; see also App. 82, EPSA, Comments on
Proposed Rule (avowing âfull[ ] supportâ for demand reÂ
sponse participation in wholesale markets because of its
âeconomic and operationalâ benefits).11 Congress itself
ââââââ
11 EPSA now contends that wholesale demand response is unnecesÂ
sary because state regulators can adopt programs to reduce demand at
the retail level. See Brief for Respondents 46â47. For example, States
can insist that utilities give rebates to customers for not using energy
at certain times. See n. 2, supra. But according to both the CommisÂ
sion and market participants, state-level programs cannot offer nearly
the same benefits as wholesale demand response because individual
utilities lack the regional scope and real-time information needed to
identify when demand response will lower prices and ensure reliability
system-wide. See 73 Fed. Reg. 64103, ¶18; Energy Primer 45â46; Brief
for NRG Energy, Inc., as Amicus Curiae 20â22. Similarly, FERC
addressed and rejected the dissentâs suggestion that wholesale market
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 29
Opinion of the Court
agreed, âencourag[ing]â greater use of demand response
participation at the wholesale level. EPAct §1252(f ), 119
Stat. 966. That undisputed judgment extinguishes any
last flicker of life in EPSAâs argument. We will not read
the FPA, against its clear terms, to halt a practice that so
evidently enables the Commission to fulfill its statutory
duties of holding down prices and enhancing reliability in
the wholesale energy market.
III
These cases present a second, narrower question: Is
FERCâs decision to compensate demand response providÂ
ers at LMPâthe same price paid to generatorsâarbitrary
and capricious? Recall here the basic issue. See supra, at
9â12. Wholesale market operators pay a single priceâ
LMPâfor all successful bids to supply electricity at a
given time and place. The Rule orders operators to pay
the identical price for a successful bid to conserve electricÂ
ity so long as that bid can satisfy a ânet benefits testââ
meaning that it is sure to bring down costs for wholesale
purchasers. In mandating that payment, FERC rejected
an alternative proposal under which demand response
providers would receive LMP minus G (LMP-G), where G
is the retail rate for electricity. According to EPSA and
others favoring that approach, demand response providers
get a windfallâa kind of âdouble-paymentââunless marÂ
ket operators subtract the savings associated with conÂ
serving electricity from the ordinary compensation level.
76 Fed. Reg. 16663, ¶24. EPSA now claims that FERC
failed to adequately justify its choice of LMP rather than
ââââââ
operators could pay LSEs to reduce their electricity purchases: Because
LSEs lose revenues whenever demand goes down, any demand reÂ
sponse programs targeting those actors would be highly inefficient. See
FERC, Assessment of Demand Response and Advanced Metering 72
(2006); Tr. of Oral Arg. 56 (Solicitor General noting that LSEs engaged
in demand response would be âcannibaliz[ing] their own profitsâ).
30 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
LMP-G.
In reviewing that decision, we may not substitute our
own judgment for that of the Commission. The âscope of
review under the âarbitrary and capriciousâ standard is
narrow.â Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Assn. of United States, Inc.
v. State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co., 463 U. S. 29, 43
(1983). A court is not to ask whether a regulatory decision
is the best one possible or even whether it is better than
the alternatives. Rather, the court must uphold a rule if
the agency has âexamine[d] the relevant [considerations]
and articulate[d] a satisfactory explanation for its action[,]
including a rational connection between the facts found
and the choice made.â Ibid. (internal quotation marks
omitted). And nowhere is that more true than in a techÂ
nical area like electricity rate design: â[W]e afford great
deference to the Commission in its rate decisions.â Mor-
gan Stanley, 554 U. S., at 532.
Here, the Commission gave a detailed explanation of its
choice of LMP. See 76 Fed. Reg. 16661â16669, ¶¶18â67.
Relying on an eminent regulatory economistâs views,
FERC chiefly reasoned that demand response bids should
get the same compensation as generatorsâ bids because
both provide the same value to a wholesale market. See
id., at 16662â16664, 16667â16668, ¶¶20, 31, 57, 61; see
also App. 829â851, Reply Affidavit of Dr. Alfred E. Kahn
(Aug. 30, 2010) (Kahn Affidavit). FERC noted that a
market operator needs to constantly balance supply and
demand, and that either kind of bid can perform that
service cost-effectivelyâi.e., in a way that lowers costs for
wholesale purchasers. See 76 Fed. Reg. 16667â16668,
¶¶56, 61. A compensation system, FERC concluded,
therefore should place the two kinds of bids âon a competiÂ
tive par.â Id., at 16668, ¶61 (quoting Kahn Affidavit); see
also App. 830, Kahn Affidavit (stating that âeconomic
efficiency requiresâ compensating the two equally given
their equivalent function in a âcompetitive power marÂ
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 31
Opinion of the Court
ket[ ]â). With both supply and demand response available
on equal terms, the operator will select whichever bids, of
whichever kind, provide the needed electricity at the
lowest possible cost. See Rehearing Order, 137 FERC, at
62,301â62,302, ¶68 (âBy ensuring that both . . . receive the
same compensation for the same service, we expect the
Final Rule to enhance the competitivenessâ of wholesale
markets and âresult in just and reasonable ratesâ).
That rationale received added support from FERCâs
adoption of the net benefits test. The Commission realized
during its rulemaking that in some circumstances a deÂ
mand response bidâdespite reducing the wholesale rateâ
does not provide the same value as generation. See 76
Fed. Reg. 16664â16665, ¶38. As described earlier, that
happens when the distinctive costs associated with comÂ
pensating a demand response bid exceed the savings from
a lower wholesale rate: The purchaser then winds up
paying more than if the operator had accepted the best
(even though higher priced) supply bid available. See
supra, at 10â11. And so FERC developed the net benefits
test to filter out such cases. See 76 Fed. Reg. 16666â
16667, ¶¶50â53. With that standard in place, LMP is paid
only to demand response bids that benefit wholesale purÂ
chasersâin other words, to those that function as âcostÂ
effective alternative[s] to the next highest-bid generation.â
Id., at 16667, ¶54. Thus, under the Commissionâs apÂ
proach, a demand response provider will receive the same
compensation as a generator only when it is in fact providÂ
ing the same service to the wholesale market. See ibid.,
¶53.
The Commission responded at length to EPSAâs conÂ
trary view that paying LMP, even in that situation, will
overcompensate demand response providers because they
are also âeffectively receiv[ing] âG,â the retail rate that they
do not need to pay.â Id., at 16668, ¶60. FERC explained
that compensation ordinarily reflects only the value of the
32 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
service an entity providesânot the costs it incurs, or
benefits it obtains, in the process. So when a generator
presents a bid, âthe Commission does not inquire into the
costs or benefits of production.â Ibid., ¶62. Different
power plants have different cost structures. And, indeed,
some plants receive tax credits and similar incentive
payments for their activities, while others do not. See
Rehearing Order, 137 FERC, at 62,301, ¶65, and n. 122.
But the Commission had long since decided that such
matters are irrelevant: Paying LMP to all generatorsâ
although some then walk away with more profit and some
with lessââencourages more efficient supply and demand
decisions.â 76 Fed. Reg. 16668, ¶62 (internal quotation
marks omitted). And the Commission could see no ecoÂ
nomic reason to treat demand response providers any
differently. Like generators, they too experience a range
of benefits and costsâboth the benefits of not paying for
electricity and the costs of not using it at a certain time.
But, FERC again concluded, that is immaterial: To inÂ
crease competition and optimally balance supply and
demand, market operators should compensate demand
response providers, like generators, based on their contriÂ
bution to the wholesale system. See ibid.; 137 FERC, at
62,300, ¶60.
Moreover, FERC found, paying LMP will help demand
response providers overcome certain barriers to participaÂ
tion in the wholesale market. See 76 Fed. Reg. 16667â
16668, ¶¶57â59. Commenters had detailed significant
start-up expenses associated with demand response, inÂ
cluding the cost of installing necessary metering technol-
ogy and energy management systems. See id., at 16661,
¶18, 16667â16668, ¶57; see also, e.g., App. 356, Viridity
Energy, Inc., Comments on Proposed Rule on Demand
Response Compensation in Organized Wholesale Energy
Markets (May 13, 2010) (noting the âcapital investments
and operational changes neededâ for demand response
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 33
Opinion of the Court
participation). The Commission agreed that such factors
inhibit potential demand responders from competing with
generators in the wholesale markets. See 76 Fed. Reg.
16668, ¶59. It concluded that rewarding demand response
at LMP (which is, in any event, the price reflecting its
value to the market) will encourage that competition and,
in turn, bring down wholesale prices. See ibid.
Finally, the Commission noted that determining the âGâ
in the formula LMP-G is easier proposed than accomÂ
plished. See ibid., ¶63. Retail rates vary across and even
within States, and change over time as well. Accordingly,
FERC concluded, requiring market operators to incorpoÂ
rate G into their prices, âeven though perhaps feasible,â
would âcreate practical difficulties.â Ibid. Better, then,
not to impose that administrative burden.
All of that together is enough. The Commission, not this
or any other court, regulates electricity rates. The dis-
puted question here involves both technical understanding
and policy judgment. The Commission addressed that
issue seriously and carefully, providing reasons in support
of its position and responding to the principal alternative
advanced. In upholding that action, we do not discount
the cogency of EPSAâs arguments in favor of LMP-G. Nor
do we say that in opting for LMP instead, FERC made the
better call. It is not our job to render that judgment, on
which reasonable minds can differ. Our important but
limited role is to ensure that the Commission engaged in
reasoned decisionmakingâthat it weighed competing
views, selected a compensation formula with adequate
support in the record, and intelligibly explained the
reasons for making that choice. FERC satisfied that
standard.
IV
FERCâs statutory authority extends to the Rule at issue
here addressing wholesale demand response. The Rule
34 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
Opinion of the Court
governs a practice directly affecting wholesale electricity
rates. And although (inevitably) influencing the retail
market too, the Rule does not intrude on the Statesâ power
to regulate retail sales. FERC set the terms of transacÂ
tions occurring in the organized wholesale markets, so as
to ensure the reasonableness of wholesale prices and the
reliability of the interstate gridâjust as the FPA contemÂ
plates. And in choosing a compensation formula, the
Commission met its duty of reasoned judgment. FERC
took full account of the alternative policies proposed, and
adequately supported and explained its decision. AccordÂ
ingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia Circuit and remand the cases for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE ALITO took no part in the consideration or
decision of these cases.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 1
SCALIA, J., dissenting
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 14â840 and 14â841
_________________
FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION,
PETITIONER
14â840 v.
ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSOCIATION, ET AL.
ENERNOC, INC., ET AL., PETITIONERS
14â841 v.
ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSOCIATION, ET AL.
ON WRITS OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
[January 25, 2016]
JUSTICE SCALIA, with whom JUSTICE THOMAS joins,
dissenting.
I believe the Federal Power Act (FPA or Act), 16 U. S. C.
§791a et seq., prohibits the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC) from regulating the demand response
of retail purchasers of power. I respectfully dissent from
the Courtâs holding to the contrary.
I
A
I agree with the majority that FERC has the authority
to regulate practices âaffectingâ wholesale rates.
§§824d(a), 824e(a); Mississippi Power & Light Co. v. Mis-
sissippi ex rel. Moore, 487 U. S. 354, 371 (1988). I also
agree that this so-called âaffectingâ jurisdiction cannot be
limitless. And I suppose I could even live with the Courtâs
âdirect effectâ test as a reasonable limit. Ante, at 15. But
as the majority recognizes, ante, at 17, that extratextual
limit on the âaffectingâ jurisdiction merely supplements,
2 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
SCALIA, J., dissenting
not supplants, limits that are already contained in the
statutory text and structure. I believe the Court miscon-
strues the primary statutory limit. (Like the majority, I
think that deference under Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natu-
ral Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U. S. 837 (1984),
is unwarranted because the statute is clear.)
The Act grants FERC authority to regulate the âgenera-
tion . . . [and] transmission of electric energy in interstate
commerce and the sale of such energy at wholesale.â
§824(a). Yet the majority frames the issue thusly: â[T]o
uphold the [r]ule, we also must determine that it does not
regulate retail electricity sales.â Ante, at 17. That formu-
lation inverts the proper inquiry. The pertinent question
under the Act is whether the rule regulates sales âat
wholesale.â If so, it falls within FERCâs regulatory author-
ity. If not, the rule is unauthorized whether or not it
happens to regulate âretail electricity salesâ; for, with
exceptions not material here, the FPA prohibits FERC
from regulating âany other sale of electric energyâ that is
not at wholesale. §824(b)(1) (emphasis added). (The
majority wisely ignores FERCâs specious argument that
the demand-response rule does not regulate any sale,
wholesale or retail. See Brief for Petitioner in No. 14â840,
p. 39. Paying someone not to conclude a transaction that
otherwise would without a doubt have been concluded is
most assuredly a regulation of that transaction. Cf. Gon-
zales v. Raich, 545 U. S. 1, 39â40 (2005) (SCALIA, J., con-
curring in judgment).)
Properly framing the inquiry matters not because I
think there exists âsome undefined category of . . . electric-
ity salesâ that is ânon-retail [and] non-wholesale,â ante, at
18, n. 7,* but because a proper framing of the inquiry is
ââââââ
* Although the majority dismisses this possibility, in fact it appears to
think that demand response is in that category: It rejects the conclusion
that the demand-response rule regulates retail sales, ante, at 17â23,
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 3
SCALIA, J., dissenting
important to establish the default presumption regarding
the scope of FERCâs authority. While the majority would
find every sale of electric energy to be within FERCâs
authority to regulate unless the transaction is demonstra-
bly a retail sale, the statute actually excludes from FERCâs
jurisdiction all sales of electric energy except those that
are demonstrably sales at wholesale.
So what, exactly, is a âsale of electric energy at whole-
saleâ? We need not guess, for the Act provides a defini-
tion: âa sale of electric energy to any person for resale.â
§824(d) (emphasis added). No matter how many times the
majority incants and italicizes the word âwholesale,â ante,
at 19â20, nothing can change the fact that the vast major-
ity of (and likely all) demand-response participantsâ
â[a]ggregators of multiple users of electricity, as well as
large-scale individual users like factories or big-box
stores,â ante, at 7âdo not resell electric energy; they con-
sume it themselves. FERCâs own definition of demand
response is aimed at energy consumers, not resellers. 18
CFR §35.28(b)(4) (2015).
It is therefore quite beside the point that the challenged
â[r]ule addressesâand addresses onlyâtransactions
occurring on the wholesale market,â ante, at 19. For
FERCâs regulatory authority over electric-energy sales
depends not on which âmarketâ the âtransactions occu[r]
onâ (whatever that means), but rather on the identity of
the putative purchaser. If the purchaser is one who resells
electric energy to other customers, the transaction is one
âat wholesaleâ and thus within FERCâs authority. If not,
then not. Or so, at least, says the statute. As we long ago
said of the parallel provision in the Natural Gas Act, 15
U. S. C. §717, â[t]he line of the statute [i]s thus clear and
ââââââ
yet also implicitly rejects the conclusion that it regulates wholesale
salesâotherwise why rely on FERCâs âaffecting â jurisdiction to rescue
the ruleâs legitimacy?
4 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
SCALIA, J., dissenting
complete. It cut[s] sharply and cleanly between sales for
resale and direct sales for consumptive uses. No excep-
tions [a]re made in either category for particular uses,
quantities, or otherwise.â Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line
Co. v. Public Serv. Commân of Ind., 332 U. S. 507, 517
(1947). The majority makes no textual response to this
plain reading of the statute.
The demand-response bidders here indisputably do not
resell energy to other customers. It follows that the rule
does not regulate electric-energy sales âat wholesale,â and
16 U. S. C. §824(b)(1) therefore forbids FERC to regulate
these demand-response transactions. See New York v.
FERC, 535 U. S. 1, 17 (2002). That is so whether or not
those transactions âdirectly affectâ wholesale rates; as we
recently said in another context, we will not adopt a con-
struction that âneedlessly produces a contradiction in the
statutory text.â Shapiro v. McManus, 577 U. S. ___, ___
(2015) (slip op., at 4). A faithful application of that princi-
ple would compel the conclusion that FERC may not âdo
under [§§824d(a) and 824e(a)] what [it] is forbidden to do
under [§824(b)(1)].â Id., at ___ (slip op., at 5).
B
The analysis could stop there. But the majority is
wrong even on its own terms, for the rule at issue here
does in fact regulate âretail electricity sales,â which are
indisputably âmatters . . . subject to regulation by the
Statesâ and therefore off-limits to FERC. §824(a); see FPC
v. Conway Corp., 426 U. S. 271, 276 (1976); Panhandle
Eastern Pipe Line Co., supra, at 517â518. The demand-
response participants are retail customersâthey purchase
electric energy solely for their own consumption. And
FERCâs demand-response scheme is intentionally âde-
signed to induce lower consumption of electric energyââin
other words, to induce a reduction in âretail electricity
salesââby offering âincentive paymentsâ to those custom-
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 5
SCALIA, J., dissenting
ers. 18 CFR §35.28(b)(4). The incentive payments effec-
tively increase the retail price of electric energy for partic-
ipating customers because they must now account for the
opportunity cost of using, as opposed to abstaining from
using, more energy. In other words, it literally costs them
more to buy energy on the retail market. In the court
below, FERC conceded that offering credits to retail cus-
tomers to reduce their electricity consumption âwould be
an impermissible intrusion into the retail marketâ because
it would in effect regulate retail rates. 753 F. 3d 216, 223
(CADC 2014). Demand-response incentive payments are
identical in substance.
The majority resists this elementary economic conclu-
sion (notwithstanding its own exhortation to âthink back
to Econ 101,â ante, at 5). Why? Because its self-
proclaimed âcommon-sensicalâ view dictates otherwise.
Ante, at 22. Maybe the easiest way to see the majorityâs
error is to take its own example: an airline passenger who
rejects a $300 voucher for taking a later flight. Consider
the following formulation of that example, indistinguish-
able in substance from the majorityâs formulation. (Indis-
tinguishable because the hypothetical passenger has
exactly the same options and outcomes available to him.)
Suppose the airline said to the passenger: âWe have proac-
tively canceled your ticket and refunded $400 to your
account; and because we have inconvenienced you, we
have also deposited an extra $300. The money is yours to
use as you like. But if you insist on repurchasing a ticket
on the same flight, you must not only pay us $400, but
return the $300 too.â Now what is the effective price of
the ticket? Sometimes an allegedly commonsensical intui-
tion is just thatâan intuition, often mistaken.
Moving closer to home, recall that demand-response
participants must choose either to purchase a unit of
energy at the prevailing retail price (say $10) or to with-
hold from purchasing that unit and receive instead an
6 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
SCALIA, J., dissenting
incentive payment (of say $5). The two options thus pre-
sent a choice between having a unit of energy, on the one
hand, and having $15 more in the bank, on the other. To
repeat: take the energy, be $15 poorer; forgo the energy, be
$15 richer. Is that not the very definition of price? See
Blackâs Law Dictionary 1380 (10th ed. 2014) (â[t]he
amount of money or other consideration asked for or given
in exchange for something elseâ). In fact, is that not the
majorityâs definition of price? Ante, at 21 (âthe amount of
money a consumer will hand over in exchange for powerâ).
In any event, the majority appears to recognize that the
effective price is indeed $15âjust as the effective price of
the airline ticket in the hypothetical is $700. Ante, at 22â
23, n. 9. That recognition gives away the game. For
FERC is prohibited not just from directly setting or modi-
fying retail prices; it is prohibited from regulating retail
sales, no matter the means. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line
Co., supra, at 517. Whether FERC sets the ârealâ retail
price (to use the majorityâs idiosyncratic terminology, ante,
at 23, n. 9) or the âeffectiveâ retail price is immaterial;
either way, the ruleâby designâinduces demand-
response participants to forgo retail electric-energy pur-
chases they otherwise would have made. As noted, even
FERC conceded that offering credits to retail customers
would impermissibly regulate retail sales. The majority
blithely overlooks this concession in favor of its own my-
opic view of retail pricingâall the while evading the incon-
venient fact that fiddling with the effective retail price of
electric energy, be it through incentive payments or hypo-
thetical credits, regulates retail sales of electric energy no
less than does direct ratesetting.
C
The majority cites dicta in several of our opinions ex-
pressing the assumption that state jurisdiction and federal
jurisdiction under FERC cover the field, so that there is no
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 7
SCALIA, J., dissenting
regulatory âgapâ; one entity or the other âmust have juris-
diction to regulate each and every practice that takes
place in the electricity markets.â Ante, at 27. The cases
that express such a principle, with respect to the Federal
Power Act and its companion the Natural Gas Act, base it
(no surprise) on legislative history. See, e.g., FPC v. Loui-
siana Power & Light Co., 406 U. S. 621, 631 (1972); FPC v.
Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp., 365 U. S. 1, 19
(1961); Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co., 332 U. S., at
517â518, and n. 13. One would expect the congressional
proponents of legislation to assert that it is âcomprehen-
siveâ and leaves no stone unturned. But even if one is a
fan of legislative history, surely one cannot rely upon such
generalities in determining what a statute actually does.
Whether it is âcomprehensiveâ and leaves not even the
most minor regulatory âgapâ surely depends on what it
says and not on what its proponents hoped to achieve. I
cannot imagine a more irrational interpretive principle
than the following, upon which the majority evidently
relies:
â[W]hen a dispute arises over whether a given trans-
action is within the scope of federal or state regulatory
authority, we are not inclined to approach the prob-
lem negatively, thus raising the possibility that a âno
manâs landâ will be created. That is to say, in a bor-
derline case where congressional authority is not ex-
plicit we must ask whether state authority can practi-
cably regulate a given area and, if we find that it
cannot, then we are impelled to decide that federal
authority governs.â Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line
Corp., supra, at 19â20 (citation omitted).
That extravagant and otherwise-unheard-of method of
establishing regulatory jurisdiction was not necessary to
the judgments that invoked it, and should disappear in the
Courtâs memory hole.
8 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
SCALIA, J., dissenting
Suppose FERC decides that eliminating the middleman
would benefit the public, and therefore promulgates a rule
allowing electric-energy generators to sell directly to retail
consumers across state lines and fixing generation, trans-
mission, and retail rates for such sales. I think it obvious
this hypothetical scheme would be forbidden to FERC.
Yet just as surely the States could not enact it either, for
only FERC has authority to regulate âthe transmission of
electric energy in interstate commerce.â 16 U. S. C.
§824(b)(1); see also New York, 535 U. S., at 19â20. Is this
a regulatory âgapâ? Has the generator-to-consumer sales
scheme fallen into a regulatory âno manâs landâ? Must
FERC therefore be allowed to implement this scheme on
its own? Applying the majorityâs logic would yield nothing
but âyesses.â Yet the majority acknowledges that neither
FERC nor the States have regulatory jurisdiction over this
scheme. Ante, at 27, n. 10. Such sales transactions, in-
volving a mix of retail and wholesale playersâas the
demand-response scheme doesâcan be regulated (if at all)
only by joint action. I would not call that a âproblem,â
ante, at 26; I would call it an inevitable consequence of the
federal-state division created by the FPA.
The majority is evidently distraught that affirming the
decision below âwould . . . extinguish the wholesale de-
mand response program in its entirety.â Ante, at 27.
Alarmist hyperbole. Excluding FERC jurisdiction would
at most eliminate this particular flavor of FERC-regulated
demand response. Nothing prevents FERC from tweaking
its demand-response scheme by requiring incentive pay-
ments to be offered to wholesale customers, rather than
retail ones. Brief for Respondent Electric Power Supply
Assn. (EPSA) et al. 47â48; Brief for Respondents Midwest
Load-Serving Entities 10â11. And retail-level demand-
response programs, run by the States, do and would con-
tinue to exist. See Brief for Respondent EPSA et al. 46â
47; Brief for Respondents Midwest Load-Serving Entities
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 9
SCALIA, J., dissenting
6â11. In fact Congress seemed to presuppose that States,
not FERC, would run such programs: The relevant provi-
sions of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, 119 Stat. 594 et
seq., are intended âto encourage States to coordinate, on a
regional basis, State energy policies to provide reliable and
affordable demand response services.â §1252(e)(1), id., at
965, codified at 16 U. S. C. §2642 note (emphasis added).
That statute also imposes several duties on the Secretary
of Energy to assist States in implementing demand-
response programs. §§1252(e)(2), (e)(3), 119 Stat. 965â
966. In context, §1252(f) of the 2005 Act is therefore best
read as directing the Secretary to eliminate âunnecessary
barriersâ to Statesâ adopting and implementing demand-
response systemsâand not, as the majority contends,
as âpraising wholesale demand responseâ systems to be
deployed and regulated by FERC, ante, at 9 (emphasis
added).
Moreover, the rule itself allows States to forbid their
retail customers to participate in the existing demand-
response scheme. 18 CFR §35.28(g)(1)(i)(A); see Brief for
Petitioner in No. 14â840, at 43. The majority accepts
FERCâs argument that this is merely a matter of grace,
and claims that it puts the âfinishing blowâ to respondentsâ
argument that 16 U. S. C. §824(b)(1) prohibits the scheme.
Ante, at 25. Quite the contrary. Remember that the
majority believes FERCâs authority derives from 16
U. S. C. §§824d(a) and 824e(a), the grants of âaffectingâ
jurisdiction. Yet those provisions impose a duty on FERC
to ensure that âall rules and regulations affecting or per-
taining to [wholesale] rates or charges shall be just and
reasonable.â §824d(a) (emphasis added); see §824e(a)
(similar); Conway Corp., 426 U. S., at 277â279. If induc-
ing retail customers to participate in wholesale demand-
response transactions is necessary to render wholesale
rates âjust and reasonable,â how can FERC, consistent
with its statutory mandate, permit States to thwart such
10 FERC v. ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY ASSN.
SCALIA, J., dissenting
participation? See Brief for United States as Amicus
Curiae 20â21, in Hughes v. Talen Energy Marketing, LLC,
No. 14â614 etc., now pending before the Court (making an
argument similar to ours); cf. New England Power Co. v.
New Hampshire, 455 U. S. 331, 339â341 (1982). Although
not legally relevant, the fact that FERCâordinarily so
jealous of its regulatory authority, see Brief for United
States as Amicus Curiae in No. 14â614 etc.âis willing to
let States opt out of its demand-response scheme serves to
highlight just how far the rule intrudes into the retail
electricity market.
II
Having found the rule to be within FERCâs authority,
the Court goes on to hold that FERCâs choice of compen-
sating demand-response bidders with the âlocational
marginal priceâ is not arbitrary and capricious. There are
strong arguments that it is. Brief for Robert L. Borlick
et al. as Amici Curiae 5â34. Since, however, I believe
FERCâs rule is ultra vires I have neither need nor desire to
analyze whether, if it were not ultra vires, it would be
reasonable.
* * *
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.