能源法中的约束监管退出

Jim Rossi, H. Wiseman
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引用次数: 1

摘要

近年来,联邦政府开放竞争性电力市场的努力改变了我们对能源监管的看法。从许多方面来看,美国联邦能源监管委员会(FERC)从20世纪90年代开始的广泛“放松管制”的努力,似乎是J.B.鲁尔和吉姆·萨尔茨曼所定义的典型监管退出的例子。但是,我们对FERC对批发电力市场重组的案例研究揭示了一些重要的制度特征,这些特征使得在联邦制背景下以及在联邦法定职责下的退出成为一个丰富而困难的问题。在能源领域,退出一个监管领域可能会造成监管空白。这导致FERC在很大程度上退出了对批发电价的监管,转而加强对其他领域的监管。它还邀请了各种形式的政府间交流,因为各州已经模仿或以其他方式回应FERC在其管辖范围内的监管修改。从这个意义上说,向竞争性能源供应市场的过渡涉及有限制的退出,其特点是监管机构和机构之间在努力确保履行法定职责和满足其他公共需求方面的反复。这种对监管交换的评估具有规定性含义:寻求退出特定形式的传统监管的联邦监管机构需要积极制定促进监管交换的战略,同时保持其对与其监管使命相关的重要实质性价值的权威。为了确保不会出现有问题的监管缺口,往往需要注意“抵消”法规。在能源领域,这些战略可能还包括使用一些机制,让其他机构在实施退出战略方面有发言权,以及在部分退出后为市场执法制定更好的事前监管计划。我们认为,联邦监管机构认识到出口的水力特征不仅是一个好策略,而且《联邦电力法》等合作联邦主义法规也经常要求他们这样做。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Constrained Regulatory Exit in Energy Law
In recent years, the federal government’s efforts to open up competitive electricity markets have transformed how we think about the regulation of energy. In many respects, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s (FERC) broad “deregulatory” efforts, which commenced in the 1990s, might appear to be a case of paradigmatic regulatory exit as defined by J.B. Ruhl and Jim Salzman. But our case study of FERC’s restructuring of wholesale electricity markets reveals some important institutional features that make exit in federalism contexts, and under federal statutory duties, a rich and difficult problem. In the context of energy, exit from one regulatory sphere can create regulatory gaps. This has led FERC, which largely exited the regulation of wholesale electricity rates, to increase regulation in other spheres. It has also invited forms of intergovernmental exchange, as states have emulated or otherwise responded to FERC’s regulatory modifications in the areas in which states have jurisdiction. In this sense, the transition to competitive energy supply markets has involved constrained exit characterized by a hydraulic back-and-forth between regulators and institutions in an effort to ensure that statutory duties are fulfilled and other public needs are met. This assessment of regulatory exchange has a prescriptive implication: a federal regulator seeking to exit specific forms of conventional regulation needs to proactively develop strategies to facilitate regulatory exchange, while simultaneously preserving its authority over important substantive values related to its regulatory mission. Attention to “offsetting” regulations is often necessary to ensure that problematic regulatory gaps will not arise. In the energy context, these strategies might also include the use of mechanisms that give other institutions a voice in implementing exit strategies, as well as better ex ante regulatory planning for market enforcement that will continue after partial exit. We argue that it is not only a good strategy for federal regulators to recognize this hydraulic feature of exit, but that cooperative federalism statutes such as the Federal Power Act often require them to do so.
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