Proposed R1 Reference Service v Proposed T1, P1 and B1 Reference Services
491 The following paragraphs provide the background necessary for a consideration of the first of those three matters.
492 Three reference services were specified in the 2005 access arrangement:
(1) a full haul T1 reference service: that service was a firm full haul service with:
(a) a receipt point (the point at which the shipper delivers the gas to DBP upstream of main line valve 31 on the pipeline located near compressor station 2 (near Onslow); and
(b) a delivery point (that is, the point at which the pipeline delivers gas to the shipper) downstream of compressor station 9 on the pipeline, located near the town of Gingin.
(2) a part haul P1 reference service: that service was a firm part haul service, that is, a forward haul gas transportation service which is not full haul. A forward haul gas transportation service is one where the inlet point is upstream of the outlet point.
(3) a back haul B1 reference service: a back haul service means that the receipt point is downstream of the delivery point.
493 A firm service is a type of service obliging DBP to provide up to the contracted volume without interruption or curtailment, subject to certain permitted exceptions.
494 During the period of the 2005 access arrangement:
(1) access to the pipeline was by way of SSCs which were substantially independent of the access terms;
(2) no user obtained access to any of the 2005 reference services, nor was any capacity of the pipeline contracted under the 2005 reference services; and
(3) SSCs accounted for all of the pipeline's capacity.
495 DBP's revised access arrangement proposed that there be only one reference service, namely, a full haul service it described as the R1 Service.
496 The proposed R1 reference service was described as a full haul service in which the applicant (subject to the availability of capacity):
(i) takes receipt, at one or more Inlet Points on a Gas Day, of a quantity of the Shipper's Gas not exceeding:
A. the sum of the Shipper's Contracted Capacity at the Inlet Points;
B. plus or minus the quantity of Gas required to correct any Accumulated Imbalance on the preceding Gas Day;
(ii) delivers to the Shipper at one or more Outlet Points on that Gas Day a quantity of Gas not exceeding the Shipper's Contracted Capacity at Outlet Points, without interruption or curtailment except as permitted by the Access Contract Terms and Conditions; and
(iii) otherwise provides R1 Service on terms and conditions set out in the Access Contract Terms and Conditions.
497 The applicant's revised access arrangement also proposed that specified part haul and back haul services offered by the applicant would be non-reference services. The suite of non-reference services the applicant proposed to offer included:
(1) a firm full haul T1 service which would, subject to availability of capacity, be provided on the terms and conditions in a T1 SSC Access Contract;
(2) a forward part haul P1 service which would, subject to availability of capacity, be provided on the terms and conditions in a P1 SSC Access Contract; and
(3) a back haul B1 service which would, subject to availability of capacity, be provided on the terms and conditions in a B1 SSC Access Contract.
498 As indicated above, the ERA's access arrangement proposal pursuant to s 64(1) of the NGL gave effect to the required amendments set out in its Final Decision for the removal of the proposed R1 service as a reference service. It also required the inclusion of a full haul T1 service, a part haul P1 service and a back haul B1 service as reference services.
499 As may be seen from the following paragraphs, the T1, P1 and B1 reference services should have more relevance as a touchstone for a shipper negotiating the tariffs to apply from 2016 under a SSC than during the revised access arrangement period.
500 During the period of the revised access arrangement:
(1) access to the pipeline will be by way of a SSC, substantially independent of the reference services in the proposed access arrangement; and
(2) the pipeline's forward haul capacity is fully accounted for under the SSCs and it is unlikely that any capacity of the pipeline will be contracted under the reference services unless a current user is no longer able to honour its obligations under its SSC, such as if it were to become insolvent.
501 The SSCs were entered into in 2004 with terms of 15 years and options of two further terms of five years, thus extending beyond the revised access arrangement period.
502 The main difference between the 2005 access arrangement's T1, P1 or B1 reference services and its equivalent under a SSC lies in the latter's mechanism for funding the pipeline's expansion. Put simply, that mechanism involved a user acquiring a service under a SSC paying a tariff higher than the then reference tariffs - the higher tariff being paid on the basis that it would revert to a regulated reference tariff in 2016. If a pipeline expansion were to have been required to provide additional capacity for a prospective user of the 2005 access arrangement's reference services, the prospective user would have had to rely on the arrangement's extension/expansion policy. The same may be said, mutatis mutandis, in relation to a service provided under a SSC in the proposed access arrangement period and a service that might be offered under the ERA's proposed T1, P1 or B1 reference services. An additional difference between the SSCs and the ERA's proposed P1 reference service lies in the definition of that service. This difference gives rise to DBP's complaint referred to in [448(2)] above and is canvassed below.
503 The SSCs were negotiated to enable the pipeline to be purchased out of receivership and in order to fund expansion of the pipeline. It was Alinta and Verve's submission that absent the higher tariff under the SSCs, not only would the pipeline not have been expanded after 2004, it is most likely that the pipeline would not have been purchased out of receivership at all. They also submitted that the offering of the services under the SSCs was therefore fundamental to the continued operation of the pipeline and what they described as the very significant expansion and investment in it that has occurred since 2004.
504 The APA Group submitted that the fact that a reference service may not be supplied at its tariff during the access arrangement period is not of direct relevance to the ERA's determination because the reference service, reference tariff and other reference terms of access will still have a significant role in the regulatory system established under the NGL and the NGR. It noted in this regard that:
(1) the terms provide a basis for negotiating access to the pipeline and, if there is an access dispute, they may effectively be enforced through arbitration; and
(2) the part haul P1 reference tariff would provide a basis from which non-reference services might be negotiated and, ultimately, something the access seeker may revert to in the event it is unable to reach agreement.
505 The APA Group also submitted that the specification of the reference services and tariffs will have even more significance than they had previously. That is because the SSCs tariffs revert to arrangements tied to the access arrangement applying to the pipeline in 2016, which reversion will occur during the proposed access arrangement period. It submitted in this regard that:
(1) it may be anticipated that the parties to the SSCs will review their arrangements which apply beyond 2015 and, perhaps, seek to enter into negotiations with the applicant as to the arrangements that should apply following the date that their tariffs are governed by the access arrangement; and
(2) such reviews of the SSCs and any negotiations would be properly informed by an access arrangement which specifies reference services that those shippers are likely to demand over the access arrangement period.
506 If approved, DBP's proposed R1 reference service would have fewer features than an existing SSC T1 service, in particular, less flexibility in relation to imbalances, peaking and overrun.
507 As counsel for DBP explained it, the proposed R1 reference service would, if approved, be a "plain vanilla" service and its T1 non-reference service "one with the bells and whistles". For example, the SSC T1 service allows peaking and imbalance rights that would give a user an ability to effectively reserve more capacity in the pipeline than might actually be necessary. Thus, she submitted, a user might be attracted to a plain vanilla R1 reference service rather than paying extra for the bells and whistles of the SSC T1 service which may never be used.
508 On the other hand, Verve and Alinta submitted that the R1 reference service was an inferior and less valuable service than the T1 reference service. Counsel for these companies supported that submission by reference to paragraph [46] of the Draft Decision which notes that a majority of submissions made to the ERA claimed that there was no evidence that the proposed R1 reference service would be sought by a significant part of the market because the service is of a lower quality than the existing T1 service. He reinforced his submission by noting that the eight shippers listed by the ERA in a footnote to the paragraph gave a resounding "No" in answer to the question whether existing shippers had an interest in the proposed R1 reference service.
509 The Draft Decision also noted that:
(1) the proposed Rl reference service had limited attractiveness to existing and prospective shippers which now have access to the T1 service on more attractive terms and conditions at the same price (citing in support of that observation submissions from Alinta, BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto, and Verve); and
(2) several parties (Alinta, Verve and the APA Group) had submitted that reference services additional to DBP's proposed R1 reference service are necessary to accommodate gas storage facilities; in particular, the APA Group submitted that a range of additional reference services should be included to support development and use of the Mondarra Gas Storage Facility (MGSF).
510 Another criticism of the proposed R1 reference service levelled by Verve and Alinta relates to DBP allocating costs to the services provided to shippers with SSCs as if those shippers had been provided with the R1 reference service and that costs allocated for recovery by the R1 reference service match the total forecast revenue for the pipeline. As their counsel explained (using the T1 service as a shorthand for the three reference services under the 2005 access arrangement):
… costs were allocated to determine the tariff to all the T1 shippers as if they were taking R1. In other words, the costs for the lesser R1 service are equated to the costs for the superior T1 service ….
…
So the T1 costs, what would otherwise be the T1 revenue, was proposed by the applicant to be allocated to R1 [sic].
511 Thus, as seen by the protagonists (and as the ERA observed in its Final Decision), while the existence of the SSCs mean that the 2011-2015 reference services and reference tariffs under the revised access arrangement may not significantly affect users, the parameters of the revised access arrangement will have a significant effect on the starting point for the subsequent (2016-2021) access arrangement, including the approved building-block components that will determine the total revenue requirement and reference tariffs in 2016.
512 Acknowledging that the proposed reference services/tariffs may not have an immediate application during the proposed access arrangement period, Verve and Alinta submitted that:
(1) ensuring that the agreed relationship between the SSCs and the regulatory regime is maintained is fundamental to ensuring that the operation of, and investment in, the pipeline is consistent with the national gas objective in s 23 of the NGL;
(2) any undermining of that relationship would be inconsistent with achieving the objective and potentially contrary to s 321 of the NGL as it would have the effect of depriving SSCs shippers of protected contractual rights, namely, the rights set out in clause 20.5 and the reversion to a regulated tariff from 2016; and
(3) clause 20.5 is to have effect as a contractual right for the purposes of ss 188 and 321 of the NGL.
Accordingly, Verve and Alinta submitted that the ERA erred in deciding that DBP's proposal would not contravene s 321.
513 Expanding on that submission, counsel for Verve and Alinta contended that clause 20.5 commits DBP to do what it can to seek to preserve the T1 service as a reference service in the proposed access arrangement period because in 2016 the tariff under the SSC reverts to a regulated tariff, being the tariff for the reference service which is closest to the T1 service under the contract. Thus, he submitted a reference service needs to be identified which is closest to the service provided under the SSC, and the tariff for that service then, in broad terms, becomes the tariff in 2016. Accordingly, the interest of Verve and Alinta in preserving the T1 service as a reference service is that the further the reference services under the proposed access arrangement depart from the SSC regime, the harder it is going to be to make them apply in the way that it is intended.
514 In reply to Verve's and Alinta's contractual/ss 188 and 321 submission DBP submitted that the only contractual right created by clause 20.5, for the purposes of ss 188 and 321 of the NGL, is the right of a shipper to have DBP include a T1 service as a reference service when DBP considers it appropriate to do so.
515 The Verve and Alinta contractual/ss 188 and 321 submission was squarely addressed by the ERA in the following paragraphs in the Final Decision:
22. In submissions to the Authority on the proposed revised access arrangement, some parties … [Alinta and Verve] … contend that the link between the standard shipper contract and the access arrangement is explicit and needs to be maintained to ensure the transition in 2016 to reference tariffs. Some users submitted that the link is critical to the re-commercialisation and ongoing investment in the DBNGP and users have paid a premium over and above the reference tariff to ensure this. Further, it was submitted that the link needs to be maintained and to do otherwise would be inconsistent with section 23 (the national gas objective) and section 321 (protection of certain pre-existing contractual rights) of the NGL.
…
24 The Authority considers that the existence and terms of the standard shipper contract (and any other contract for services that DBNGP may have) do not have a direct bearing on the Authority's assessment of the access arrangement proposal except that, under section 321 of the NGL, an access arrangement must not have the effect of depriving a person of a relevant protected contractual right.
25. The Authority has considered the terms of clause 20.5(f)(iii) of the standard shipper contract (relating to obligations of the operator in respect of a reference service for the access arrangement and the tariff for that service) in light of the requirements of section 321. The Authority is of the view, however, that whether or not this clause creates contractual obligations for DBP to make certain inclusions in the access arrangement is a matter for DBP and its contracted shippers to resolve and does not affect the Authority's assessment of the access arrangement proposal.
26. Indeed, the parties themselves appear to have recognised this, as clause 20.5(f)(iii) required no more from the Operator than "to endeavour ... to have the Regulator approve amendments" to the access arrangement that would have specified outcomes. This is implicit acknowledgement that any submissions made to the Authority would have, at best, persuasive value and would not be binding on the Authority.
516 In advancing its case in relation to these matters, DBP contended that the ERA erred in:
(1) its construction of rules 48(1)(c) and (d) and 101(2) of the NGR and, in particular, made an error of fact in finding that the SSCs were an important indicator of the relevant market for pipeline services; and
(2) failing to give sufficient weight to the national gas objective in s 23 of the NGL and, in particular, DBP's submission that its proposed R1 reference service would offer a more efficient utilisation of the pipeline's capacity.
Each contention is considered seriatim below.
517 Rules 48 and 101 of the NGR relevantly provide:
48 Requirements for full access arrangement (and full access arrangement proposal)
(1) A full access arrangement must:
…
(b) describe the pipeline services the service provider proposes to offer to provide by means of the pipeline; and
(c) specify the reference services; and
(d) specify for each reference service:
(i) the reference tariff; and
(ii) the other terms and conditions on which the reference service will be provided; and
…
101 Full access arrangement to contain statement of reference services
(1) A full access arrangement must specify all reference services.
(2) A reference service is a pipeline service that is likely to be sought by a significant part of the market.
518 To make its case that the ERA erred in its construction of rules 48 and 101, DBP also relied on the following definition of "pipeline service" in s 2 of the NGL:
pipeline service means-
(a) a service provided by means of a pipeline, including -
(i) a haulage service (such as firm haulage, interruptible haulage, spot haulage and backhaul); and
(ii) a service providing for, or facilitating, the interconnection of pipelines; and
(b) a service ancillary to the provision of a service referred to in paragraph (a),
but does not include the production, sale or purchase of natural gas or processable gas;
519 DBP asserted two construction errors on the ERA's part. The first concerned the relevant market for determining the demand for reference services. The second concerned the specification of a reference service in the access arrangement.
520 The first difference between DBP and the ERA turns on whether, in determining if a service is "… likely to be sought by a significant part of the market" (rule 102(2)), regard should be had to:
(1) only a narrow class of users or prospective users who are likely to wish to enter contracts for further services during the access arrangement period; or
(2) a broader class of existing users and prospective users who are likely to be supplied with existing or further services during the access arrangement period.
DBP opted for the former, the ERA the latter.
521 The second difference between DBP and the ERA turns on whether in specifying a reference service for the purpose of rule 48 DBP needs to:
(1) only specify it by reference to the availability, length and direction of the haulage provided (eg: firm haulage, interruptible haulage, spot haulage, full haul or back haul); or
(2) specify it by reference to all the particular terms and conditions upon which it may be provided.
DBP opted for the former, the ERA the latter.
522 The Draft Decision required amendments to remove from DBP's revised access arrangement its proposed R1 reference service and include as reference services the T1, P1 and B1 services as described in the 2005 access arrangement. In deciding on the amendments the ERA concluded, amongst other things, that the services provided under the SSCs were evidence of the relevant market and the services that should be specified reference services.
523 Relying on its construction of rules 48 and 101, DBP submitted in response to the Draft Decision that the SSCs are not, of themselves, evidence of:
(1) the relevant market for pipeline services; and
(2) whether the pipeline services to be provided under the SSCs are services likely to be sought by a significant part of the market.
524 DBP also challenged the Draft Decision's conclusion that whether a service is likely to be sought by a significant part of the market (rule 101(2)) requires consideration of the nature of services demanded by users and prospective users, unconstrained by the availability of pipeline capacity to expand the provision of services during the course of the access arrangement period.
525 A further challenge to the ERA's construction of rules 48 and 101 in the Draft Decision was based on DBP's interpretation of the NGL's definition of "pipeline services". As observed, it opted for a broad interpretation suggesting that the reference to pipeline service in rule 101 should be characterised by its general nature rather than its specific terms and conditions; that is, a firm haulage service or an interruptible haulage service, without regard to the differences in the terms and conditions on which the service is provided. According to this view, DBP submitted, its R1 reference service, the negotiated T1 SSC service and the T1 reference service are merely different forms of firm haulage services and it is immaterial that the proposed R1 reference service differed, even in significant respects, from the existing T1 service.
526 Submissions in response to the Draft Decision from Alinta, Verve and BHP supported the ERA's amendments to remove from DBP's revised access arrangement its proposed R1 reference service and include as reference services the T1, P1 and B1 services as described in the 2005 access arrangement.
527 Alinta agreed with the ERA's interpretation of rule 48 and 101 and stated:
As the T1, P1 and B1 services continue to be the primary services required by shippers on the … [pipeline] … during the period 2011 lo 2015, it is clear that those
services are likely to be sought by a significant part of the market and are therefore required to be Reference Services under rule 101 of the NGR.
528 In its submission, Verve noted that:
DBP has not provided any evidence that the proposed R1 service is one that would be sought by a significant part of the market and is therefore required to be a Reference Service under the NGRs. Third party submissions overwhelmingly disagree with DBP's Proposed Revisions, and in so doing reject the introduction of the R1 service and require that the Tl, P1 and B1 services are included as Reference Services.
Verve agrees with the ERA's interpretation of rules 48(1)(b) and 101 of the NGRs as to the relevant services (including Reference Services) to be included in the Access Arrangement. Verve agrees with the ERA that the question, under rule 101(2) of the NGRs, whether a pipeline service is likely to be sought by a significant part of the market requires consideration of the nature of services sought by users and prospective users, unconstrained by the availability of pipeline capacity to expand the provision of services during the course of the relevant access arrangement period. As the T1, P1 and B1 services continue to be the primary services required by shippers on the DBNGP during the period 2011 to 2015, it is clear that those services are likely to be sought by a significant part of the market and are therefore required to be Reference Services under rule 101 of the NGR.
529 BHP submitted that along with other shippers it maintained that:
… the proposed Rl Service is unlikely to be sought by a significant part of the market. Therefore, in light of rule 101(2) of the NGR, such service which is not demanded by users and prospective users should not be a reference service.
BHPB concurs with the Regulator's Draft Decision that T1, Pl and B1 Services are all pipeline services that will be sought by a significant part of the market during the period covered by the access arrangement. Consequently, BHPB agrees that these services should be specified as reference services in the DBNGP Access Arrangement.
Based on the above, and the submissions made in BHPB's First Submission, BHPB submits that DBP's proposal in the Amended Proposed Access Arrangement to retain the Rl Service and not include the T1, Pl and Bl Services as reference services be rejected.
530 In the Final Decision the ERA noted that the users referred to in footnote 12 to paragraph [46] of its Draft Decision consistently submitted that the proposed R1 service is of an inferior quality to the existing T1 Service and that they would not be seeking to use the R1 Service.
531 It is clear from the following paragraphs in the Final Decision that the ERA had regard to DBP's submissions summarised above and rejected them:
84. In its draft decision, the Authority took the view that, under rule 101(2) of the NGR, the question of whether a pipeline service is likely to be sought by a significant part of the market requires consideration of the nature of services sought by users and prospective users, unconstrained by the availability of pipeline capacity to expand the provision of services during the course of the relevant access arrangement period. That is, the Authority took the view that the question of whether a pipeline service is likely to be sought by a significant part of the market requires consideration of the totality of demand for services and should not be limited to consideration of only incremental demand over and above the quantum of services already contracted for under pre-existing contracts.
…
132. The Authority disagrees with DBP's contention that a consideration of reference services should only occur according to the "general character" of the service and without regard to the terms and conditions for the service. The character of the service is in large part determined by the principal terms on which the service is provided. In the case of the R1 Service, this service is characterised by features established in the terms and conditions, including priority of curtailment relative to other services; provisions for overrun, imbalances and peaking; and provisions for aggregation across inlet and outlet points. Users regard the R1 service as different from the T1 Service as a result of these terms and conditions.
133. On the matter of the relevant market for services that forms the basis of consideration of which services should be reference services, the Authority maintains the view expressed in the draft decision that the relevant market is the total market for pipeline services provided by the DBNGP, which will include any expected increase in provision of services during the access arrangement period for which the approved access arrangement will apply.
134. On the matter of the relevance of existing contracts for services, the Authority maintains the view that existing contracts comprise one source of evidence of the nature of services demanded by users, which indicates a demand for services in the nature of the T1, P1 and B1 services. A second source of evidence is submissions from users of the DBNGP that clearly indicate a demand for the T1, P1 and B1 Services included in the current access arrangement, and indicate that there is no demand for a service in the nature of the proposed Rl Service. Together, these two sources of evidence are the only substantive evidence available to the Authority on the nature of services sought by users. In contrast to this evidence, DBP has not provided any supporting evidence of demand for the proposed R1 Service.
532 DBP contends that in exercising its discretion to remove the proposed Rl reference service the ERA failed to consider, or give sufficient weight to, the following matters:
(1) DBP's proposed Rl reference service would better achieve the national gas objective and, by reason of rule 40(3), it was not open to the ERA to prefer its T1 reference service; and
(2) the terms and conditions attaching to the proposed Rl reference service would offer a more efficient utilisation of the pipeline's capacity for the long-term benefit of all shippers and prospective users.
533 Rule 40 governs the exercise of the ERA's discretion. Rule 40(1) sets out when the ERA has no discretion in its decision making process, rule 40(2) when it has limited discretion and rule 40(3) when it has full discretion by providing that in all other cases:
… [ERA] has a discretion to withhold its approval to an element of an access arrangement proposal if in the [ERA's] opinion, a preferable alternative exists that:
(a) complies with applicable requirements of the Law; and
(b) is consistent with applicable criteria (if any) prescribed by the Law,.
534 In its written submissions to the Tribunal, DBP contended that its proposed R1 reference service satisfied the requirements of the NGL and NGR and should have been accepted as the relevant reference service because its terms and conditions would:
(1) modify the behaviour of shippers and prospective users by imposing stricter limits (relating to accumulation of imbalances and peaking and overrun limits) upon their utilisation of pipeline capacity; and
(2) offer more efficient utilisation of the pipeline for the long-term benefit of all shippers and prospective users than the T1 service.
535 Responding to DBP's written submissions concerning the practical implications of how imposing stricter limits relating to accumulation of imbalances and peaking and overrun limits, the ERA noted that such submissions were:
(1) not advanced prior to the Final Decision; and
(2) only advanced by DBP in its Submission 73, submitted 13 December 2011.
536 While conceding that prior to the Final Decision, DBP's Submission 50 contained assertions that its proposed R1 service was:
(1) likely to encourage competition and growth leading to efficient operation and use of natural gas services consistent with the national gas objective; and
(2) was a service that would lead to better utilisation of pipeline capacity,
the ERA submitted that DBP's Submission 50 contained no explanation or evidence to substantiate those assertions.
537 The Final Decision concluded that DBP had not substantiated its submissions that its proposals dealing with imbalances, peaking and overrun limits would benefit the integrity of the pipeline or efficient use of pipeline capacity.
538 The ERA submitted that in the circumstances its failure to expressly address DBP's Submission 73 does not give rise to reviewable error because:
(1) it was not obliged to undertake consultations with respect to that aspect of the Final Decision prior to proposing its access arrangement decision pursuant to rule 64(2); and
(2) it would have been improper for it to take account of Submission 73 after making the Final Decision without giving other interested parties an opportunity to respond to those submissions.
539 Having regard to the Tribunal's finding set out below that there is no merit in these grounds of review, it is not necessary for the Tribunal to give detailed consideration to Verve and Alinta's contractual/ss 188 and 321 submission. Suffice it to say that parties that are subject to the regulatory scheme under consideration here may neither contract out of their regulatory obligations nor may they contract to govern the ERA's determination in relation to an access arrangement proposal. The Tribunal agrees with the ERA's observations in those regards in paragraph [26] of its Final Decision.
540 The Tribunal also agrees with the submission by counsel for Verve and Alinta to the effect that the terms and conditions on which a reference service is to be offered are inseparable from the nature of the service. That is clear from rule 48(1)(b),(c) and (d). That was the ERA's conclusion in paragraph [132] of its Final Decision. The Tribunal agrees with the conclusion. To support his submission that the terms and conditions cannot be separated from the nature of the service as contended by DBP, counsel referred to the revenue and pricing principles in s 24 of the NGL.
541 Thus, if there were to be bifurcation of the nature of a reference service, on the one hand, and its terms and conditions, on the other, it would not be possible to make the assessment required by s 24(2) whether a reference service provided a reasonable opportunity to recover at least the efficient costs of providing the service. Likewise with s 24(5), which requires an assessment whether a reference tariff allows for a return commensurate with the regulatory and commercial risks involved in providing the reference service to which the tariff relates.
542 As counsel submitted:
… the whole point of specifying a reference service is to understand what is being provided and allocate costs and revenue to it efficiently, and … that can't be done … if you separate the terms and conditions from the specification of the reference service."
…
… nothing is to be read into the fact that …[rule 48(1)] …(c) talks about specifying a reference service and … (d) talks about specifying the terms and conditions. They are inseparable as a concept.
The Tribunal is of the same mind.
543 The Tribunal also agrees with the submission by counsel for the APA Group to the effect that DBP's construction of rule 48 conflates two different requirements of rule 48(1), namely sub-rules (b) and (c). As he submitted, each sub-rule requires a different thing. Rule 48(1)(b) requires a description of the pipeline services which the pipeline service provider proposes to offer. Rule 48(c) requires a specification of the reference services. They are different things, yet by DBP's construction of the definition of "pipeline services" it conflates the services it might offer with the services that are to be reference services. The Tribunal adopts this submission that that is not the scheme of rule 48. Further, the suggestion that a reference service might be described in some short form way by reference to the definition is incorrect. The reference service is, by rule 48(1)(d), to be described together with its tariff and its terms and conditions.
544 Turning now to the construction of rule 101. It follows from what is said in the preceding paragraphs concerning the construction of rule 48 that rule 101(1) requires more than just specification of the reference services in terms of the definition of pipeline services in s 5 of the NGA. Specification in terms of rule 101(1) requires the applicant to specify the material terms and conditions. As counsel for Verve and Alinta submitted:
A description such as "firm, forward, full haul" is not enough. Indeed, even the description "firm", for example "firm service", is meaningless unless the terms and conditions accompany it. Just saying it's firm provides no real guidance on how firm it is, how interruptible it is, what the curtailment rates are, where it stands in the curtailment plan; all of these are important and describing or specifying a service in any meaningful way requires that terms such as those and many others be specified.
Again, the Tribunal is of the same mind.
545 The Tribunal rejects DBP's submission that the assessment required by rule 101(2) of whether a pipeline service is likely to be sought by a significant part of the market is confined to a narrow class of users or prospective users who are likely to wish to enter contracts for further services during the access arrangement period. As observed by the ERA in paragraphs [84] and [134] of its Final Decision, the SSCs are but one source of evidence about the nature of the services demanded by users. It is not just the incremental demand above the SSCs users which is to be taken into account in determining whether a pipeline service is likely to be sought by a significant part of the market.
546 The word "market" used in rule 101(2) is not a word defined in the NGL or the NGR. Absent such a definition, it is "back to basics". That is to apply the ordinary meaning of the word in the context of rule 101(2) and the regulatory scheme as a whole. The ordinary meaning of "market" in that context is "… a demand for a commodity or service" (The Australian Concise Oxford Dictionary). Applying that ordinary meaning, the ERA was correct in having regard to the totality of the market and not just a segment of it artificially conceived by DBP to suit its construction.
547 Contrary to DBP's submission, there is no an error of fact in the ERA finding that the SSCs were an important indicator of the relevant market for pipeline services. As is clear from paragraph [134] of the Final Decision, the SSCs were but one of two indicators taken into account by the ERA. The second was the submissions from users that indicated a demand for T1, P1 and B1 services and no demand for DBP's proposed R1 reference service. Leaving to one side Submission 73, those indicators were the only hard information available to the ERA at the time of its Final Decision and DBP did not provide any supporting hard information of a demand for its proposed R1 reference service.
548 Again leaving to one side Submission 73, prior to the Final Decision there was no explanation, no material or hard information advanced by DBP to support its assertions that its proposed R1 reference service would offer a more efficient utilisation of the pipeline's capacity. All that was advanced by DBP were assertions.
549 An explanation came only after the Final Decision. It took the form of Submission 73 purporting to be in response to an invitation issued by the ERA after its Final Decision to make submissions on amendments to DBP's proposed revised access arrangement additional to those in the Final Decision. The Tribunal accepts the ERA's submission that:
(1) only Sections 10 and 11 of Submission 73 were responsive its invitation; and
(2) those parts of Submission 73 that might explain and/or support DBP's assertions were not responsive to the invitation.
550 The Tribunal has previously made observations to the effect that a regulated entity subject to a limited merits review regime, like the one governing this application, must ensure that material it wants considered by the Tribunal is put fairly and squarely to the regulator in accord with the regime.
551 In this matter the explanatory material that DBP sought to have the Tribunal consider in support of its assertions was put to the ERA only after its Final Decision.
552 The regulatory regime under consideration here envisages consultations with DBP and interested parties following:
(1) submission of DBP's revised access proposal; and
(2) publication of the ERA's Draft Decision,
but not after the publication of the ERA's Final Decision and prior to formulation of the access arrangement that s 64(1)of the NGL requires it must propose if it refuses to approve DBP's proposal.
553 Section 64(3) of the NGL is very clear in that regard - it provides the ERA may (but is not obliged to) consult on its s 64(1) proposal. There are sound reasons for not imposing a post-Final Decision requirement to consult. First, consultation, indeed usually extensive consultation, will have occurred prior to the Final Decision. Secondly, if, as here, the ERA refuses to approve DBP's proposal, s 64(1) imposes a time constraint upon the ERA which may well preclude a proper consideration of additional post-Final Decision material. A fortiori as procedural justice dictates that any such material submitted by DBP would have to be the subject of consultation with interested third parties, then, more likely than not, it would provoke a further round of submissions to which the applicant would have to be given the right of reply. Thus, the regulatory scheme draws a line leaving it to the ERA's unfettered discretion whether to proceed down that path. The APA Group's submission in this regard made in respect of the ground of review under this heading about the definition of "part-haul" service and canvassed below is particularly pertinent.
554 Here, the Draft Decision and post Draft Decision third party submissions should have left no doubt in DBP's mind that it would take more than mere assertions (indeed that it would take hard information) to convince the ERA that:
(1) the proposed R1 reference service was in fact a superior service in terms of national gas objective; and
(2) would offer a more efficient utilisation of the pipeline's capacity.
555 DBP's post-Draft Decision submission failed to provide that hard information. Parts of its post-Final Decision Submission 73 may or may not have provided such hard information. The ERA exercised its discretion not to consider those parts of Submission 73. There was no error by the ERA in so exercising its discretion.
556 Nor was there error on the part of the ERA in the paragraphs of its Final Decision where it made observations to the effect that:
(1) it expected DBP's proposal would be supported by a clear demonstration that the benefits to the integrity of the pipeline (and hence to all pipeline users) justified it and any additional cost to users; and
(2) despite the opportunity to do so, the applicant had not provided such a demonstration.