Current through Vol. 42, No. 7, December 16, 2024
Section 165:45-19-3 - Downstream service unbundling plan(a) No later than September 1, 1998, each Class A utility with 25,000 or more customers shall commence a collaborative process wherein a downstream unbundling plan shall be developed. Interested parties, including, but not limited to, downstream service providers (marketers), the Attorney General, and the Commission's PUD, may participate in the collaborative process. The downstream unbundling plan should include but not be limited to the following requirements: (1) The unbundling of all downstream natural gas services for all classes of customers.(2) The establishment of an appropriate cost allocation and rate design for the downstream unbundled services.(3) Standards of conduct for transactions between the utility and its affiliate.(4) Tariffs reflecting all of the natural gas services that will provide open access to the utility's system by entities desiring to provide downstream services, establish interconnection requirements and that will allow end-users a choice to obtain natural gas services from entities other than the utility. Each tariff shall identify the terms and conditions under which such service will be made available to any end-user and the maximum rate which the utility may charge for such service.(5) That transportation shall be provided on a firm and interruptible basis to all end-users on a non-discriminatory basis. Therefore, unless otherwise ordered by the Commission, the transportation proposal should: (A) Eliminate volume restrictions.(B) Remove alternate fuel requirements.(C) Permit aggregation, where operationally and administratively feasible, for the purpose of making small consumer transportation viable; including nomination and imbalance provisions suitable for economically serving such customers. (D) Specify under what conditions "returning" customers will be accepted and how they will be charged.(6) Storage and balancing shall be provided as a separately priced service for customers interested in using storage and/or balancing services. This may include options keyed to varying conditions and/or time periods, wherein, each will be separately priced. (7) Standby shall be provided as a separately priced service for transportation customers who have had their capacity or commodity curtailed.(8) The utilities should clearly define if, when and how additional metering is required to provide additional services. The utility should be ready to demonstrate that the proposed metering requirements are not discriminatory and are truly necessary for operational reasons.(9) The utility should propose a mechanism for notifying in-state customers of available interstate capacity. The proposal should include creditworthiness standards, bidding criteria and recall rights for such capacity. The aim of the capacity release program should be to provide the greatest contribution to the system's fixed capacity costs, while maintaining reliability for the firm sales customers. (10) Curtailment plans should be updated in light of Order No. 636. Transportation customers should not be arbitrarily interrupted. The utilities should consider an operational condition that requires an interruption of load and also consider ways of interrupting only customers in those constrained areas. A pro-rata cutback arrangement may be put in place to relieve capacity constraints. If the utility finds that it is economical, it should arrange for the emergency/peak period use of customer owned gas under prearranged conditions and for a prescribed rate of compensation.(11) Rate schedules should reflect the appropriate costs to provide each of the above services. Rate structure should be supported by work papers and a description of the methodology employed.(12) Standards to allow customers to aggregate.(b) To ensure that the public interest is best served by the restructuring of the natural gas industry, the Commission may implement a consumer education program of its own design. The Commission may seek the assistance of those parties directly or indirectly involved. (c) The foregoing are intended as guidelines for a competitive rate and tariff structure. Utilities may find that one or more aspects of these guidelines are not practical for various reasons. Where this is the case the utilities may request an exemption from complying with that part of the guidelines. In such cases the utility should provide substantial documentation to support an exemption.(d) Any interested party may by August 1, 1998, file a statement with the Commission, with a copy mailed to the utility and the Attorney General, giving its notice of intent to participate in the collaborative process set forth in subsection (a).(e) Each collaborative process set forth in subsection (a) shall establish financial performance standards and appropriate consumer protection measures and safeguards.(f) On or before April 1, 1999, the utility shall file with the Commission an application for approval of the proposed downstream unbundling plan that was developed as a result of the collaborative process set forth in subsection (a). The Commission shall conduct an examination and review of the utility's application. It is intended that the collaborative process continue between the applicant utility, the entity(ies) desiring to provide the downstream service, the Attorney General and any other party granted intervention status.(g) The Commission shall conduct a public hearing on the utility's application for approval of its downstream unbundling plan and shall issue an order on or before June 1, 1999.(h) Upon issuance of the Commission order, the utility shall begin implementation of the approved downstream unbundling plan for an in service date of October 1, 1999.(i) It is recognized that the unbundling of the downstream system of a currently regulated utility may have potential tax implications. It is, therefore, contemplated that this subsection is subject to modification by the legislature or the Commission regarding tax implications, if any, and that the dates set forth herein may be modified by Commission order as appropriate to address tax issues.(j) The Commission will, from time to time, reconvene the collaborative group(s) formed in response to subsection (a) for the purposes of monitoring the progress of the unbundling implemented pursuant to this Subchapter and refining, as necessary, the terms, conditions, and rates adopted as a result of those collaborative discussions. New parties may join the collaborative group at any time by giving notice of their intent to participate to a collaborative group as it then exists.(k) The dates, stated herein, may be reestablished by order of the Commission for utilities with less than 25,000 customers.(l) In lieu of the requirements of this Subchapter, a utility that has not begun implementation of a downstream unbundling plan as of July 1, 2014, shall submit a statement annually, detailing the basis for which implementation has not occurred, to the PUD Director.Okla. Admin. Code § 165:45-19-3
Added at 15 Ok Reg 2177, eff 7-1-98Amended by Oklahoma Register, Volume 31, Issue 24, September 2, 2014, eff. 9/12/2014Amended by Oklahoma Register, Volume 36, Issue 21, July 15, 2019, eff. 7/25/2019