WASHINGTON, D.C. – The departments of
the Interior, Commerce, and Agriculture
announced today new Interim Final Rules to
improve licensing procedures for hydropower
while protecting threatened and endangered fish
species, water quality, and federal and tribal
resources. The rules mark the first time that
the three departments have established joint
procedures for dispute resolution regarding
hydropower licensing.
The new rules, which will be effective
immediately as mandated by the Energy Policy Act
of 2005, will be published in the
Federal Register on Nov. 17, 2005. The
public will have 60 days to review and submit
comments on the rules, which could result in
changes in a revised Final Rule.
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 (Sec. 241)
requires the departments of the Interior,
Commerce, and Agriculture to jointly develop a
rule in consultation with the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (FERC), that enables
hydropower license applicants and other parties
to hydropower license proceedings to request
trial-type hearings on disputed issues of
material fact, such as whether fish were
historically present in a river. These issues
relate to conditions or prescriptions that may
be developed by one or more of the departments
to address the above mentioned concerns. The
Energy Policy Act passed by wide margins in both
Houses of Congress after years of congressional
consideration of ways to improve hydropower
licensing.
Hydropower licenses authorize operations for
decades, after which the facilities must be
relicensed for operations to continue.
Relicensing is an opportunity to deal with
specific resource protection concerns, such as
enabling fish passage for species listed as
threatened or endangered or to improve water
quality. However, conditions or prescriptions
may require utilities to incur significant costs
that may in turn affect their consumers. In some
cases, utilities have expressed concern that
these costs are excessive. Other stakeholders
have on occasion argued that some conditions are
not stringent enough to protect important
natural resources such as native salmon and
trout.
In accordance with the Act, the Interim Final
Rules announced today provide for expedited
hearings before an administrative law judge. The
participating parties will be able to present
evidence and examine witnesses as in similar
administrative proceedings. The rules include
details on how to request hearings, materials
that are required and time frames.
The Act also allows applicants and other
parties to license proceedings to submit
alternative conditions or prescriptions for
consideration by the respective federal
departments, which will accept them unless they
make specific findings as to why they cannot.
Such alternatives might propose ways to lower
costs to utilities and consumers while still
protecting critical resources. The Interim Final
Rules include details on how and where to submit
alternative conditions or prescriptions for
consideration.
Hydropower is an important part of the
nation's energy infrastructure. It provides
about 7 percent of America's electricity
nationally. Hydropower licenses for non-federal
operations including many dams are issued by
FERC. Conditions or prescriptions are developed
by federal agencies such as the Interior
Department's U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Bureau of Land Management, and the Bureau of
Indian Affairs; the Department of Commerce's
National Marine Fisheries Service; and the
Department of Agriculture's U.S. Forest Service.
The Federal Power Act authorizes agencies to
provide to FERC these conditions or
prescriptions to address the need for fishways,
water quality protection, and to protect Indian
Trust values such as critical fisheries.
The new processes Congress has enacted are
open to license applicants and other parties
that may include Indian Tribes, states and other
governmental units and nongovernmental
organizations, such as environmental groups.
They apply to any current license proceeding
before FERC, i.e., one in which a license has
not yet been issued, as well as to all future
license proceedings. Both the trial-type
hearings and the process for the submittal and
consideration of alternative conditions and
prescriptions will be completed within the tight
timeframe mandated by FERC's licensing rules.
The rules are effective immediately as
Interim Final Rules. A proposed rule is not
being issued because Congress made clear its
intent that a rule be put in place 90 days after
enactment of the Energy Policy Act. The public
will have 60 days from the date of publication
in the Federal Register to comment on the rules.
The departments will consider the comments and
their initial experience in implementing the new
processes, and consider issuing revised Final
Rules within approximately 18 months.