21世纪的FPA优先权

M. Christiansen
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2月24日,最高法院将听取休斯诉塔伦能源营销案的口头辩论。在裁决此案时,法院必须确定马里兰州鼓励建设新发电厂的努力是否受到《联邦电力法》(“FPA”)的预先控制——也就是说,马里兰州法律是否侵犯了一个完全由联邦政府监管的领域。本评论敦促法院在冲突优先而非实地优先标准下评估马里兰州的规定。特别是,法院应澄清领域优先-一种禁止任何州在特定法律领域进行监管的原则-仅适用于州针对《联邦能源监管法》下联邦管辖权的核心方面,即联邦能源监管委员会(“FERC”)确定批发价格是否公正合理的能力。冲突优先——规定州法律只有在干扰或挫败联邦监管制度时才被优先——为评估休斯案中存在争议的法律类型提供了一个优越得多的框架。它更符合FPA的核心目标,进一步推动了重要的州政策,有点矛盾的是,它增强了FERC在其管辖范围内有效监管电力部门各个方面的能力。冲突优先处理方法不仅是一项好政策,而且与法院的FPA优先判例完全一致。特别是,法院先前的判决可以解读为支持一种侵入性较低的实地优先调查- -本评论认为,这种解读应该适用于法院在休斯案中的事实。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
FPA Preemption in the 21st Century
On February 24, the Supreme Court will hear oral argument in Hughes v. Talen Energy Marketing. In deciding this case, the Court must determine whether an effort by the State of Maryland to incentivize the construction of new power plants is field preempted by the Federal Power Act (“FPA”) — that is, whether the Maryland law intrudes on an area that is exclusively the federal government’s to regulate. This Comment urges the Court to evaluate Maryland’s regulation under a conflict-preemption, as opposed to a field-preemption, standard. In particular, the Court should clarify that field preemption — a doctrine that prohibits any state regulation in a particular area of the law — applies only when a State targets the core aspects of federal jurisdiction under the FPA, namely the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s (“FERC”) ability to determine whether a wholesale rate is just and reasonable. Conflict preemption — which provides that state laws are preempted only when they interfere with or frustrate the federal regulatory regime — provides a far superior framework for evaluating the type of law at issue in Hughes. It conforms more closely to the FPA’s core objectives, furthers important state policies, and somewhat paradoxically, enhances FERC’s ability to regulate effectively the aspects of the electricity sector under its jurisdiction. Not only is a conflict-preemption approach good policy, it is also entirely consistent with the Court’s FPA preemption jurisprudence. In particular, the Court’s prior decisions can be read to support a less intrusive field-preemption inquiry — a reading which, this Comment argues, should be applied the facts before the Court in Hughes.
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