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---------------------- Forwarded by Judy Townsend/HOU/ECT on 02/07/2000 10:37
AM --------------------------- Enron North America Corp. From: Rebecca W Cantrell 01/10/2000 03:27 PM To: John Hodge/Corp/Enron@ENRON, Judy Townsend/HOU/ECT@ECT, Katherine L Kelly/HOU/ECT@ECT, Scott Neal/HOU/ECT@ECT, Barend VanderHorst/HOU/EES@EES, Carrie Hollomon/HOU/ECT@ect, Robert Superty/HOU/ECT@ECT, Colleen Sullivan/HOU/ECT@ECT cc: Subject: New CNG Facilities to Replace Tennessee Agreement CNG TRANSMISSION FILES APPLICATION FOR CERTIFICATE TO BUILD NEW PIPELINE AND COMPRESSION FACILITIES AS SUBSTITUTE FOR TENNESSEE'S LOOP SERVICE 01/06/2000 Foster Natural Gas Report 7 © Copyright 2000, Foster Associates, Inc. On December 29 CNG Transmission Corp. (CP00-64) submitted a certificate application to FERC requesting authorization to construct facilities in Pennsylvania and New York in order to substitute its own transportation capacity for market area service entitlements that CNG currently holds on Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. pursuant to terms of an expiring contract. CNG's contract with Tennessee has a primary term until 11/1/2000 with a one-year notification requirement to terminate. Acting quickly on terms of a settlement (RP00-15) approved by the Commission on 12/21/99, which capped CNG's upstream costs and freed CNG to build its own facilities to replace capacity currently purchased from Tennessee, CNG proposes to construct approximately 13 miles of 30-inch pipeline (TL474x2), a loop of its existing pipeline in Armstrong County, Pennsylvania; to install approximately 13,250 horsepower of additional compression in three Pennsylvania counties and approximately 7,000 hp of compression at Brookman Corners Station, in Montgomery County, New York; to construct and operate approximately 800 feet of 30-inch pipeline, known as the Connector Line (TL-510), between TL-474x2 and lines LN-26 and LN-380 in Armstrong County; and to abandon approximately 12.9 miles of a 12-inch diameter pipeline in Armstrong County known as LN-9 (CNG's existing parallel pipeline, LN-19, purportedly is sufficient to maintain existing services to the markets served by this part of CNG's system). These facilities are designed to re-create south-to-north delivery capacity on the CNG system to substitute for looping service that has been purchased from Tennessee. In support, CNG claims, first, its proposal results in near-term and long-term savings to its existing firm service customers, without degrading service. Second, by not requiring assignees to maintain firm upstream entitlements to service on the Tennessee system, the project will reduce the fixed cost burden for consumers downstream of CNG's LDC customers. Third, CNG's proposal eases the constraint for deliveries on CNG's system from southern receipt points to northern delivery points, across the Valley Gate Junction located in central Pennsylvania. CNG, thus, will be able to eliminate its "standing must-flow" operational flow order. After placing the proposed facilities in service, CNG will modify its tariff to eliminate the requirement that customers with "North of Valley" receipt points -- primarily CNG's interconnection with Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp. at Leidy, Pennsylvania -- can be directed to use their capacity to tender quantities of gas to CNG throughout the Winter Period. Fourth, the proposed construction will enable CNG to meet its existing market commitments. During the first three years after the projected in-service date of this project, less than 15% of CNG's firm transportation capacity will be eligible to expire. Fifth, to the extent that markets can be served in the future either by CNG's own facilities or by the turned-back capacity that Tennessee accrues in its Zones 3 through 5, the CNG construction presents a competitive alternative. Background: CNG's long-haul contract with Tennessee provides for delivery of natural gas from the Gulf of Mexico, plus reliance on an operational loop of CNG's system, operated by Tennessee, that allows CNG to offer more storage and transportation capacity than CNG could provide on its own. In the aftermath of Order No. 636, however, CNG unbundled its storage and transportation services and exited the merchant function. CNG, which no longer required a significant portion of the Tennessee capacity from the Gulf to Tennessee's interconnections with CNG in Tennessee Zone 3, agreed to assign its upstream capacity on Tennessee from the production area to a Zone 3 transfer point (South Webster), while retaining the capacity from South Webster to delivery points interconnecting with CNG in Tennessee Zones 4 and 5 to facilitate dispatching and no-notice service to CNG's customers. In conjunction with CNG's restructuring settlement, one transaction on the Tennessee system thus was separated into two parts, with CNG and its assignees paying Tennessee reservation and usage charges for the capacity as if Tennessee had a single customer from the Gulf to the market area. Tennessee charged CNG's converting customers the applicable Zone 3 delivery rate for transporting gas from Zones 0 and 1 to West Virginia and the South Webster transfer point. CNG, in turn, is charged an incremental rate for transporting gas from South Webster to CNG's delivery points in Zone 4 and 5, determined by subtracting the maximum reservation and usage rates applicable to Tennessee's Zone 3 (including applicable surcharges) from the maximum reservation and usage rates (including surcharges) for the haul rate from the Gulf to either Zone 4 or 5. The incremental rate is approximately one-third of Tennessee's maximum tariff rates for Rate Schedule FT-A service from Zones 3 to 5 or Zones 4 to 5, respectively. In negotiations to examine the fate of the expiring contract, Tennessee conveyed to CNG that, in order to preserve revenue neutrality, the assigned upstream contract that feeds the CNG/Tennessee market contract (No. 3919) must match exactly the maximum daily quantity (MDQ) of the downstream contract. Any mismatched quantities will be priced to CNG at Tennessee's maximum tariff rates for FT-A service. Unless CNG were to require all assignees to continue to hold upstream capacity on the Tennessee system, therefore, CNG would no longer qualify for the incremental rate on Tennessee on the mismatched capacity retained by CNG. Meanwhile, as CNG's assignees have elected to turn back upstream Tennessee capacity, CNG's costs would go up unless CNG chooses to turn back an equal quantity of service downstream of South Webster. The cost increase on CNG to its customers, if all assignees turned back, would be approximately $27 million per year. CNG notified Tennessee on November 1 that it will extend only a portion of its current contract for a one-year period in order to accommodate a new CNG construction schedule. The initial termination dates for CNG's customers' upstream contracts (all assigned from CNG's original contract with Tennessee) were the same. Absent the termination notice, the contract provides for an automatic extension for a primary term of five years. Proposal to Build Facilities: Given the circumstances, CNG proposes to build the facilities needed to serve its existing market without having to rely on Tennessee for the traditional looping service provided under this contract. Thus, CNG's customers would avoid the anticipated Tennessee cost increase that would result if CNG renewed the contract at Tennessee's maximum rates. Instead, CNG's customers will experience an annual cost decrease as a result when compared to the transportation costs approved by the Commission in CNG's Docket TMOO-1. CNG proposes to roll the costs of this project into CNG's general system transportation rates. Such treatment, the applicant argued, is supported by the projected cost decrease to existing customers as well as by the system-wide benefits that will result. The benefits outweigh any adverse impacts on the affected interests, as examined pursuant to FERC's policy (PL99-3). No subsidies exist under the circumstances, as the facilities actually will prevent a cost increase to existing customers. The proposed construction "also makes certain cost reductions possible for all of the CNG customers that took assignment of upstream firm services on Tennessee during CNG's restructuring proceeding . . . ." Accordingly, CNG has met the Commission's policy threshold requirement to establish that its project satisfies the public convenience and necessity standard. Pursuant to the Transportation Cost Recovery Adjustment (TCRA) terms in the settlement approved by the Commission on December 21, CNG will continue to collect its TCRA at agreed levels, a specified portion of which will be attributed to the costs of the project. The annual cost of this project to CNG's firm transportation customers will be $19.8 million, which corresponds to the incremental payment that CNG had been making to Tennessee for Zones 3-4 and 3-5 firm transportation services through the TCRA. CNG related that turnbacks are due to state retail unbundling initiatives that reduce the LDCs' need to maintain pipeline capacity in support of a merchant role. In addition, increased liquidity in the commodity market, largely because of Commission policies supporting market centers, has increased opportunities to purchase gas in the market area. These developments, coupled with the potential for significant fixed-cost savings, motivated CNG's assignees to want to terminate upstream capacity contracts. Therefore, while CNG could have required its assignees to maintain upstream Tennessee capacity, the proposed construction offers a more effective long-term mechanism to enable CNG to manage the risk of future cost increases for its customers. The applicant said a recognized potential adverse impact on the captive customers of Tennessee (who might face cost shifting) is outweighed by the public benefits of CNG's proposal. Moreover, Tennessee need re-market only a portion of the former CNG market-area capacity in order to recoup CNG's contribution to Tennessee's revenue requirement. Tennessee also has expressed confidence in its ability to secure markets for this newly available capacity. In order to avoid unnecessary construction, CNG indicated it conducted a reverse open season for two weeks during October, 1999, in which CNG solicited customer interest in turning back firm service entitlements through an announcement on its electronic bulletin board. No customer sought to turn back service entitlements in support of the proposed project. To address potential landowner concerns, CNG plans to construct this pipeline adjacent to an existing natural gas pipeline right-of-way, for which CNG already holds easement agreements. CNG has also directly contacted each affected landowner and secured landowner authorization to conduct both engineering and environmental studies on 100% of the proposed right-of-way. ______________________________________________________________________ Copyright © 2000 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved
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