Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 12H— - PACIFIC NORTHWEST ELECTRIC POWER PLANNING AND CONSERVATION › § 839f
The Administrator may make contracts under the Bonneville Project Act and must run the office following that Act, related laws, and this chapter. The Administrator must carry out the chapter on a timely, businesslike basis. Contracts to sell or swap power for use outside the Pacific Northwest must follow limits like those in the Act of August 31, 1964. “Surplus energy” means power that has no market in the Pacific Northwest at the set rate. “Surplus peaking capacity” means peaking power that has no demand in the Pacific Northwest at the set rate. When figuring a Pacific Northwest customer’s power needs, the Administrator must exclude energy the customer sold outside the region if that sale raised firm needs, unless the Administrator finds the energy could not reasonably have been kept for regional use. If energy is excluded this way, any replacement power sold by the Administrator may only be energy that would otherwise be surplus. The rules in (c) do not stop a utility from selling power if the sale does not make the Administrator supply more firm power. Certain final actions can be reviewed in court, including adoption of the Council’s plan or program, power sales and purchases, resource acquisitions, conservation actions, assistance contracts, credits, final rate decisions, and rules. Court review is limited to the administrative record. Lawsuits over these actions must be filed in the appropriate U.S. court of appeals within 90 days (60 days for the Council’s plan or program). The Administrator’s purchase of government resources will not change the tax-exempt status of interest on certain government bonds if the Administrator certifies buyers are public bodies, co-ops, or federal agencies and the Treasury finds most of the resource goes to such exempt buyers. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission must set up a joint State board when it reviews certain utility rates. A company that sells at least 90 percent of its electricity to the Administrator and meets organization and offering rules is not treated as an “electric utility company,” subject to conditions, contract approvals, and periodic review. Customers can ask the Administrator to buy replacement power or help sell power, and the Administrator must provide transmission and related services unless doing so would interfere with other obligations. The Council must study retail rate designs to encourage conservation and small consumer-owned renewables and make recommendations. The Administrator may help customers analyze and estimate savings. An executive position for conservation and renewable resources is created in the Administration.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 839f
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73