FERC Commissioner Rob Powelson Spent Much of His First Months in Office Meeting With the Fossil Fuel Industry

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In his first few months at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), commissioner Robย Powelson scheduled the great majority of his meetings with fossil fuel energy companies and utilities, his work calendar shows. The calendar, obtained by DeSmog through an open records request, can be viewedย below.

Nominated to FERC by President Trump, Powelson began serving on the commission last August. He previously served on the Pennsylvania Public Utilityย Commission.

A review of his FERC calendar shows that between September 4 and December 10 2017, Powelson had a total 76 work meetings scheduled with various stakeholders. Of those meetings, 62 (82 percent) were with fossil fuel and pipeline companies, utilities, and trade groups predominantly representing those industries. The remaining 14 meetings were with regional transmission organizations (RTOs), government agencies, public utilities, and renewable energy companies and their tradeย groups.

According to his calendar, Powelson did not have scheduled meetings with representatives of other stakeholders potentially affected by FERCโ€™s decisions, such as environmental organizations, public interest groups, and everydayย citizens.

From the calendar, meetings with major fossil fuel companies and utilitiesย include:

  • September 6: Williams Companies, Talen Energy, Tellurian/Driftwood LNG
  • September 12: Jordan Cove LNG
  • September 21: Exelon, PG&E
  • September 26: Colonial Pipeline Company, Excelย Energy
  • October 3: Invenergy,ย NextEra
  • October 12: TransCanada, Southern California Edison,ย Eversource
  • October 18: NRG
  • October 19: Convata Energy, Southwesternย Energy
  • October 23: New Jersey Resources, LSย Power
  • October 24: Calpineย Corporation
  • October 25:ย Avangrid
  • November 7: Shell Pipelineย Company
  • November 30: Conย Edison
  • December 5: LNGย Limited
  • December 7: Public Service Enterprise Group (PSEG)

These are all FERC-regulated entities, several of which currently have projects pending the commissionโ€™s approval. For example, when New Jersey Resources met with Powelson, it was seeking FERCโ€™s authorization for the PennEast pipeline, of which the company owns a 20 percent stake. FERC went on to approve the controversial 115-mile gas pipeline in January thisย year.

Powelson also met with FirstEnergy, a coal-based utility which at the time was trying to convince FERC to adopt Energy Secretary Rick Perryโ€™s industry-led proposal to support coal and nuclear power plants. FERC has since objected to theย plan.

In addition, one of the only projects FERC has rejected is Oregonโ€™s Jordan Cove LNG (liquefied natural gas) export terminal and Pacific Connector gas pipeline. However, after the CEO of the company behind Jordan Cove met with the Trump administration in early 2017, the project was resurrected, despite local and state resistance. Powelson met with Jordan Cove on September 12 and roughly a week later, on September 21, the company announced it was filing new FERC applications for the export terminal andย pipeline.

The commissionerโ€™s calendar also shows meetings scheduled with a number of industry and utilities trade groups,ย including:

  • September 21: Electric Power Supplyย Association
  • September 26: Edison Electric Institute ย 
  • September 27 and December 4: Natural Gas Supplyย Association
  • October 5: Utilities Technology Association, Advanced Energy Managementย Alliance
  • October 19: New England Power Generatorsย Association
  • October 24: Association of Oilย Pipelines
  • October 26: American Forest & Paperย Association
  • October 30: Retail Energy Supplyย Association
  • November 1: Energy Storageย Association
  • November 6: Americans for a Clean Energyย Grid
  • December 5: Process Gas Consumersย Group
  • December 7: Nuclear Energyย Institute

Additionally, during this period, Powelson had 20 scheduled one-on-one meetings and lunches (excluding those with FERC personnel). Of these, 13 meetings were with fossil fuel company representatives and lobbyists. Theyย include:

  • September 18: Marty Durbin, executive vice president at the American Petroleum Institute. Durbin is lobbying FERC on a slew of energy-related issues, including legislation for infrastructureย projects.
  • September 18: Lunch with Mike Krancer, former head of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection who is currently a lobbyist with Blank Rome LLP and his own lobbying shop, Silent Majorityย Strategies
  • September 26: Kevin Sunday, lobbyist for the Pennsylvania Chamber of Business andย Industry
  • October 2: Martin Silverstein, attorney for the legal and lobbying firm Greenbergย Traurig
  • October 10: Colin Hayes, until recently staff director for the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources who co-founded his own lobbying shop, Lot Sixteen, which lobbies for NRG.
  • October 18 and November 6: Joe McGinn, former lobbyist with Energy Transfer Partners who recently opened his own lobbying company, McGinn Publicย Strategies
  • October 25: Larry Gasteiger, a former FERC official who is now director of federal regulatory policy at PSEG
  • November 16: Lunch with David Lynch, lobbyist for the Texas-based utility Energy Futureย Holdings
  • November 29: David Urban, a senior operative during the Trump presidential campaign and a lobbyist for American Continental Group. Urban lobbies for CONSOLย Energy.
  • December 4: Jeffrey Kupfer, former Chevron executive and current director for Atlas Energyย ย ย ย ย 

The other seven one-one-one meetings were with state utility commissioners, former RTO chiefs, an academic, and members of congress or theirย staff.

Powelsonโ€™s calendar also displayed several scheduled industry conferences and events,ย including:

  • September 13: The Greater Pittsburgh Chamber of Commerce event at the Washington, D.C. restaurantย Bullfeathers
  • October 3: Filming a video for the Midstream PA oil and gasย conference
  • October 26: American Gas Associationโ€™s annual Energy Market Regulation Conference in Washington, D.C.
  • October 31: The Communications and Energy Committee of the Southern New Jerseyโ€™s Chamber of Commerce event at the Westin Mount Laurelย Hotel
  • November 2: Chester County Chamber of Business and Industry event at the Longwood Gardens in Kenneth Square,ย Pennsylvania
  • November 4: Edison Electric Instituteโ€™s Financial Conference in the Walt Disney World Dolphin Resort near Orlando,ย Florida
  • November 7: Speaking at the Industrial Energy Consumers of America meeting at the Le Mรฉridien Hotel in Arlington, Virginia. The IECA is a fossil fuel advocacy group run by the energy lobbying company Carbonleaf LLCย ย 
  • November 9: Speaking at the Blank Rome LLP conference inย Pittsburgh
  • November 15: Speaking at the Association of Oil Pipelines meetings at the Madison Hilton in Washington, D.C.
  • November 20: Greater Pittsburgh Chamber of Commerceย event
  • December 1: The Pennsylvania Societyโ€™s Blank Rome LLP/GT Power Energy Summit in New Yorkย City
  • December 6: Southern Companyโ€™s Holiday Reception in Union Station in Washington. A FERC spokesperson said Commissioner Powelson did not attend this event. Southern Company did not provide comment.ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย 

DeSmog asked FERC why Commissioner Powelson does not balance his meetings to include a greater variety of stakeholders affected by FERCโ€™s decisions. Craig Cano, a spokesperson for the commission, said: โ€œCommissioner Powelsonโ€™s office takes meetings with anyone who requests them, subject to availability and ex parteย concerns.โ€

Powelson also had a cozy relationship with the energy industry during his days at the Pennsylvania Public Utilities Commission. As DeSmog previously reported, this included receiving from NRG two tickets to an NFLย game.

Yet calendars for other past and present FERC commissioners show that Powelson is certainly not alone in taking a majority of meetings with the industry he regulates. As E&E News recently reported, commissioner Neil Chatterjeeโ€™s work calendar reveals a similarย trend.

Environmental organizations opposing the extensive oil and gas pipeline buildup around the country have in recent years targeted FERC for what they see as a clear industry bias within the agency. Activists, who call for reforming FERC, point out that in its 40 years of existence, FERC has rejected only two projects while approving countlessย others.ย ย ย 

Main image: FERC Commissioner Rob Powelsonย Credit: U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, publicย domain

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Itai Vardi is a sociologist and freelance journalist. He lives and works in Boston,ย Massachusetts.

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