Here’s the latest in a case we’ve been following.

In City of Oberlin v. FERC, No. 20-1492 (July 8, 2022), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit held FERC adequately explained why, in granting a certificate of public convenience, it relied in part on evidence that some of the natural gas in the pipeline was slated to go to Canada. 

Earlier, the court held FERC had explained why well enough (or at all), and sent the case back down to give FERC the chance to do so. The handwriting was on the wall in the remand order because the court pointedly did not vacate FERC’s order granting the certificate: “we remand without vacatur, because we find it plausible that the Commission will be able to supply the explanations required, and vacatur of the Commission’s orders would be quite disruptive, as the Nexus pipeline is currently operational.”

So full steam ahead, pipeline, while FERC gets its ducks in a row.

This is one of those Natural Gas Act pipeline cases, involving FERC’s approval of a certificate of public convenience. That, as you know, is the trigger to a private pipeline exercising the NGA’s delegated power of eminent domain, because it effectively settles the question of whether the takings are for a public use or purpose. Also, as you know, an agency’s decision is, generally speaking, subject to a highly deferential judicial standard of review under the Admin Procedures Act, and a certificate may only be set aside if it is arbitrary and capricious.

Here, the city argued that FERC didn’t do it right, and the certificate should be set aside. FERC concluded that the agreements the pipeline company already had made to distribute the gas to be transported was sufficient to support a determination of public use or purpose. But, the owners argued, a large percentage of that (42%) would be going to — the horror! — Canada, and FERC never reached any conclusion whether the remaining gas for distribution in the U.S. would support a finding of public use.

Perhaps not surprisingly in light of the D.C. Circuit’s remand order, FERC “elaborated on its reasoning for considering the export precedent agreements in its decision to grant the certificate.” Slip op. at 8. Even though some of the gas was headed to the Great White North, some gas was still in U.S. interstate commerce and not within a single state.

Was this “arbitrary and capricious” or “contrary to law” as the standard of review commanded? We’ll give you one guess (no). See slip op. at 11-3. 

Let’s skip to the Public Use analysis. “[T[he City maintains that FERC’s crediting export precedent agreements as a benefit runs afoul of the Takings Clause because a pipeline shipping gas for export ‘does not serve a public use.'” Slip op. at 15. Given the court’s answer to the earlier question of whether FERC’s reasons for granting the certificate of public convenience was not arbitrary and capricious, what do you think the court’s answer was to the public use question?

The court upheld the taking, concluded that FERC’s reasons were adequate, even if the evidence about exports was excluded. The pipeline “was needed to alleviate a bottleneck from the Appalachian Basin and to increase supply to Midwestern markets.” Slip op. at 17-18. “FERC also explained that building a pipeline with excess capacity would enhance the pipeline grid for the future.” Slip op. at 18.

The court rejected the city’s other public use objections:

The City launches a few objections at FERC’s analysis, but none render the decision arbitrary and capricious. First, the City contends that FERC did not identify which pipelines FERC considered in determining that existing pipelines did not have enough capacity to transport the gas the Nexus Pipeline would move. But FERC identified the pipelines on remand in precisely the same manner it did in its initial order—by looking at “other pipeline compan[ies’] electronic bulletin boards.” Compare Remand Order P 27, with Certificate Order P 40 n.29. Even assuming that is insufficient, the City did not challenge this aspect of FERC’s order in Oberlin I and therefore cannot do so now. Nw. Ind. Tel. Co. v. FCC, 872 F.2d 465, 470 (D.C. Cir. 1989) (“It is elementary that where an argument could have been raised on an initial appeal, it is inappropriate to consider that argument on a second appeal following remand.”).

Second, the City complains FERC did not analyze a hypothetical pipeline specifically sized to transport 42% of the Nexus Project’s capacity. But given that FERC had analyzed a pipeline sized to transport 59% of the Nexus Project’s capacity, there was no need for FERC to start its analysis anew. FERC had already found that shrinking the project would barely reduce the amount of land that the project would require, and that excess capacity could reduce the costs and disruption from constructing additional pipelines in the future. Certificate Order PP 42–45. FERC’s determination that this reasoning applied to a pipeline sized for 42% of the Nexus Project’s capacity was reasonable.

Slip op. at 18 (footnote omitted).

City of Oberlin v. Fed. Energy Reg. Comm’n, No. 20-1492 (D.C. Cir. July 8, 2022)