Title 16 › Chapter 12H— PACIFIC NORTHWEST ELECTRIC POWER PLANNING AND CONSERVATION › § 839e
The Administrator must set and regularly update the prices charged for selling electricity, capacity, and for transmitting non‑Federal power. Prices must cover the costs of getting, saving, and moving power, including paying back the Federal investment in the Federal Columbia River Power System (and irrigation costs repaid from power revenues) over a reasonable number of years. New rates only take effect after the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) reviews and approves them (except temporary rates), and FERC must find that the rates will repay the Federal investment, are based on the Administrator’s total system costs, and fairly split transmission costs between Federal and non‑Federal users. The Administrator must publish proposed rates, hold hearings with chances to submit evidence and question witnesses, and base final rates on the hearing record. FERC may allow interim approval under procedures set within one year after December 5, 1980; until those procedures exist, the Secretary could approve interim rates for a period and such interim rates could remain in effect until July 1, 1982. Rates for different customer groups follow specific rules. One set of general rates covers public bodies, cooperatives, Federal agencies in the Pacific Northwest and certain utility loads; after July 1, 1985 there are limits on projected firm power charges for those customers over any year plus the following four years under defined assumptions tied to December 5, 1980 contracts and load treatments. Any shortfall is recovered by extra charges to other customers. Rates for direct service industrial customers are set to recover costs before July 1, 1985 and to be fair compared to local retail industrial rates after that date, with adjustments for reserve value and interruptions. Discounts or special interruptible rates can be applied for customers with low system density or for certain mineral‑using industries. The Administrator may set peaking, time‑of‑day, seasonal, or other rate forms. Costs and benefits such as conservation, fish and wildlife, reserves, and experimental resource costs must be fairly allocated to rates unless law says otherwise. Rates for nonfirm sales outside the region, international sales, and impact aid payments to local governments have additional rules, and fish and wildlife costs recovered in rates are limited to the Administrator’s forecasted expenditures for the fiscal year 2002–2006 rate period while preserving reserves and Treasury payment probability.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 839e
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60