File No.
70-______
United
States Securities and Exchange Commission
Washington,
D.C. 20549
________________________________________
Form
U-1
Application/Declaration
Under
the
Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 1935
________________________________________
AGL
Resources Inc.
Ten
Peachtree Place
Suite
1000
Atlanta,
Georgia 30309
(Names of
companies filing this statement
and
addresses of principal executive offices)
________________________________________
Bryan E.
Seas, Vice President and Controller
AGL
Resources Inc.
Ten
Peachtree Place
Suite
1000
Atlanta,
Georgia 30309
(Names
and addresses of agents for service)
The
Commission is also requested to send copies
of any
communication in connection with this matter to:
Markian
M.W. Melnyk
LeBoeuf,
Lamb, Greene & MacRae, L.L.P.
1875
Connecticut Avenue, N.W.
Suite
1200
Washington,
D.C. 20009
Telephone:
(202) 986-8212
Facsimile:
(202) 956-3289 |
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
Item
1. |
|
Description
of the Proposed Transaction |
3 |
|
A. |
Introduction |
3 |
|
B. |
Background |
3 |
|
|
1.
AGLR, Generally |
3 |
|
|
2.
Sequent, LLC (“Sequent”) |
3 |
|
C. |
Overview
of the Requests |
4 |
|
D. |
Transaction |
4 |
|
|
1.
Proposed Investments |
4 |
|
|
a.
The Proposed Gas- and Energy-Related Businesses Are Appropriate
Non-Utility Businesses for a Gas Registered Holding
Company |
5 |
|
|
b.
Investments in Canadian and Mexican Energy Assets and Energy Marketing
Businesses Are Appropriate Non-Utility Businesses for a U.S.-Based
Registered Holding Company |
7 |
Item
2. |
|
Fees,
Commissions and Expenses |
8 |
Item
3. |
|
Applicable
Statutory Provisions and Legal Analysis |
8 |
Item
4. |
|
Regulatory
Approvals |
8 |
Item
5. |
|
Procedure |
8 |
Item
6. |
|
Exhibits
and Financial Statements |
9 |
Item
7. |
|
Information
as to Environmental Effects |
9 |
FORM
U-1
APPLICATION/DECLARATION
UNDER
THE PUBLIC UTILITY HOLDING COMPANY ACT OF 1935
Item
1. |
Description
of the Proposed Transaction |
AGL
Resources Inc. ("AGLR"), a registered public utility holding company under the
Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, as amended (the "Act"), hereby
requests authorization to organize and finance one or more direct or indirect
subsidiaries to engage in certain gas- and energy-related nonutility businesses
in Canada, Mexico and/or the United States, as described more fully
below.
1. AGLR,
Generally
AGLR's
common stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol ATG. AGLR
distributes natural gas to more than 2.3 million end-use customers through
public utility subsidiaries organized in Georgia (Atlanta Gas Light Company),
Tennessee (Chattanooga Gas Company), Virginia (Virginia Natural Gas Inc. and
Virginia Gas Distribution Company) and New Jersey (Pivotal Utility Holdings,
Inc.). Pivotal Utility Holdings owns and operates utility facilities in New
Jersey, Florida and Maryland through the following divisions: Elizabethtown Gas,
Florida City Gas, and Elkton Gas.
AGLR is
also involved in various energy- and gas-related nonutility businesses,
including retail natural gas marketing to end-use customers in Georgia; natural
gas asset management and related logistics activities for its own utilities as
well as for other non-affiliated companies; operation of high deliverability
underground natural gas storage; and construction and operation of
telecommunications conduit and fiber infrastructure within select metropolitan
areas.
2. Sequent,
LLC ("Sequent")
Sequent,
an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of AGLR, is engaged through various
subsidiaries in the optimization of natural gas assets, gas transportation and
storage, producer and peaking services and the wholesale marketing of natural
gas. Sequent's asset optimization business focuses on capturing value from idle
or underutilized natural gas assets, which are typically amassed by companies
via investments in, or contractual rights to, natural gas transportation and
storage facilities. Margins are typically created in this business by
participating in transactions that balance the needs of varying markets and time
horizons. Sequent provides its customers with natural gas from the major
producing regions and market hubs primarily in the Eastern and Mid-Continental
United States. Sequent also purchases transportation and storage capacity to
meet its delivery requirements and customer obligations in the marketplace.
Sequent’s customers benefit from its logistics expertise and ability to deliver
natural gas at prices that are advantageous relative to the other alternatives
available to its end-use customers.
C. |
Overview
of the Requests |
AGLR
seeks to expand on the expertise held by Sequent through the formation or
acquisition of, and investments in, energy- and gas-related nonutility
businesses operating in Canada, Mexico and/or the U.S. These investments would
typically be made through one or more direct or indirect subsidiaries of Sequent
and funded by the acquisition of the equity and debt securities of such
companies, borrowings by such companies from AGLR's nonutility money pool, and
guarantees.
AGLR
proposes to limit its direct and indirect investments in energy and gas-related
businesses that derive a substantial part of their revenues from the conduct of
business in Canada or Mexico to an aggregate amount not to exceed $300 million
(the "Investment Limit") in the form of equity, debt and guarantees, including
nonutility money pool borrowings, through September 31, 2008 (the "Authorization
Period").1 AGLR's
public utility subsidiary companies would not directly or indirectly acquire any
new energy- and gas-related businesses based on the authorization sought herein
and the utility subsidiaries would not provide funding for, extend credit to, or
guarantee the obligations of, such businesses.
1. Proposed
Investments
AGLR
seeks authorization to invest in certain gas- and energy-related nonutility
business, described below, that registered holding companies are permitted to
retain under Section 11 of the Act, through the Authorization Period, without
obtaining additional Commission authorization under the Act for each individual
acquisition. AGLR may form or acquire such businesses and, to the extent they
derive a substantial part of their revenues from the conduct of business in
Canada or Mexico, AGLR's investments in such businesses would not exceed the
Investment Limit.
The
specific nonutility businesses in which AGLR seeks authorization to invest
include:
1. |
energy
management services2
and other energy conservation related
businesses, |
2. |
the
maintenance and monitoring of utility
equipment, |
3. |
the
provision of utility related or derived software and
services, |
4. |
engineering,
consulting and technical services,3
operations and maintenance services, |
5. |
brokering
and marketing of natural gas, electricity and other energy commodities and
providing incidental related services, such as fuel management, storage
and procurement, and |
6. |
oil
and gas exploration, development, production, gathering, transportation,
storage, processing and marketing activities, and activities related or
incidental thereto.4 |
The
businesses proposed above would not include the acquisition and ownership of any
assets that would cause any subsidiary to be or become an "electric-utility
company" or "gas-utility company," as defined in sections 2(a)(3) and 2(a)(4) of
the Act.
a. The
Proposed Gas- and Energy-Related Businesses Are Appropriate Non-Utility
Businesses for a Gas Registered Holding Company
Under
section 2(a) of the Gas Related Activities Act of 1990 ("GRAA"), the
"acquisition by a registered company of any interest in any natural gas company
or of any interest in any company organized to participate in activities
involving the transportation or storage of natural gas, shall be deemed, for the
purposes of section 11(b)(1) of [the Act], to be reasonably incidental or
economically necessary or appropriate." The Natural Gas Act defines a "natural
gas company" as "a person engaged in the transportation of natural gas
interstate commerce, or the sale in interstate commerce of such gas for
resale."5
Numerous
registered holding companies have interests in natural gas transmission and
storage facilities. Included among these are, Dominion Resources and its
subsidiary, Consolidated Natural Gas Company, National Fuel Gas Company, and
NiSource through its registered holding company subsidiary, Columbia Energy
Group.
The
Commission also has recognized that the natural gas and petroleum liquids
businesses are tightly interwoven because the commodities are transported with
similar technology, managed and financed similarly and distributed to end-use
customers in many of the same ways. These common threads have led the Commission
to permit many registered holding companies to engage in various aspects of the
oil business. For example, Columbia Energy Resources, Inc., a subsidiary of
NiSource, until recently owned businesses that explored for, developed, gathered
and produced natural gas and oil in Appalachia and in Canada. Through Columbia
Petroleum Corp., Columbia also engaged in the business of producing, purchasing,
storing, selling and dealing in oil in the states of Kentucky, Ohio,
Pennsylvania and West Virginia.6 Dominion
Energy Inc., a subsidiary of Dominion Resources, Inc., is a participant in oil
and natural gas development programs in Canada and the U.S.7 Seneca
Resources Corp., a nonutility subsidiary of National Fuel Gas Company, is
engaged in the exploration and development of natural gas and oil producing
reserves in California, the Appalachian region of the United States, Wyoming and
in the Gulf Coast region of Texas and Louisiana.8
Notably,
American Electric Power Company Inc., an electric registered holding company,
has been authorized to acquire energy assets "without limitation" that are both
natural gas and oil related, including "natural gas production, gathering,
processing, storage, and transportation facilities and equipment, liquid oil
reserves and storage facilities, and associated facilities."9 The
Commission's order noted that AEP had been authorized in 1996 to form one or
more direct or indirect nonutility subsidiaries to broker and market certain
energy commodities,10 and that
AEP's proposal to acquire energy-related assets in the U.S. would be incidental
to, and would assist AEP in connection with, its energy trading, marketing and
brokering businesses. Accordingly, the AEP case evidences the Commission's view
that the acquisition of energy assets is reasonably incidental and related to
the energy marketing and brokering activities in which a registered holding
company may permissibly engage in under Section 11 of the Act.11
The
investments that AGLR proposes to make fall within the boundaries set by the
Commission's interpretation of the Act and the authority granted to the parties
discussed above. As the Commission has found:
[E]nergy-related
businesses may now be considered sufficiently related to the core utility
business of registered holding companies as not to require the imposition of
limitations upon transactions with non-associates. It is also reasonable to
expect that the participation in such activities by registered holding
companies, together with exempt holding companies and investor-owned utilities
not subject to the Act, will produce benefits to investors, consumers and the
public.12
b. Investments
in Canadian and Mexican Energy Assets and Energy Marketing Businesses Are
Appropriate Non-Utility Businesses for a U.S.-Based Registered Holding
Company
The
Commission has, on several occasions, granted authorization for US-based
registered holding companies to invest in gas- and energy-related assets in
Canada. For example, Seneca Resources Corp., a non-utility subsidiary of
National Fuel Gas Company, conducts exploration and production operations
through subsidiaries in the provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan and British
Columbia in Canada.13 KeySpan
Corp, through a Canadian general partnership, owns interests in 11 natural gas
processing plants, along with the associated raw gas gathering facilities,
located in Alberta and Saskatchewan, Canada. Gulf Midstream Services Partnership
("GMSP"), the operator of nine of those facilities also markets natural gas, on
behalf of approximately 40 producers, to about 50 customers in the United States
and Canada, and markets natural gas products (including propane, butane and
sulphur), on behalf of approximately 130 producers to about 50 customers in the
United States and Canada. Another KeySpan associate company, GMS Facilities
Limited ("GMF"), a Canadian corporation, owns an interest in a natural gas
processing plant in Alberta, which it operates. It also owns interests in crude
oil and natural gas liquids transportation facilities, which it operates, and
interests in natural gas liquids fractionation and storage facilities at
Edmonton, Alberta. Together, GMSP and GMF provide gas gathering and processing
services to approximately 215 producers.14
The
Commission has also allowed a Canadian-based registered holding company, Emera
Inc., to invest in "oil and gas exploration, development, production, gathering,
transportation, storage, processing and marketing activities, and related or
incidental activities."15 In
addition, recent orders have authorized energy marketing and brokering in Canada
and Mexico, in addition to the United States.16 These
authorizations recognize the legal ties between these nations (e.g., the
North American Free Trade Agreement), the natural synergies between United
States, Mexican and Canadian energy-related businesses due to geographic
proximity, and the high volume of interaction and cross-border investment
between United States, Canadian and Mexican companies.
The
activities proposed by AGLR fall squarely within the purview of this
long-recognized relationship and Commission precedent and should be
authorized.
2. Participation
in the Money Pool
AGLR
requests authorization for any newly-formed nonutility subsidiary engaged in the
proposed gas- and energy-related activities to participate as a borrower and
lender in the nonutility money pool authorized by Commission order dated April
1, 2004.17
Participation in the nonutility money pool would include unsecured short-term
borrowing, contributing surplus funds, and lending and extending credit to other
nonutility money pool participants. The participation by the new nonutility
subsidiaries is appropriate given their proposed business activities and the
restrictions on investments in such companies proposed herein.
Item
2. |
Fees,
Commissions and Expenses |
The
estimated fees, commission and expenses incurred by the Applicants in connection
with the proposed transaction are expected to be approximately
$12,000.
Item
3. |
Applicable
Statutory Provisions and Legal
Analysis |
The
proposed transaction is subject to Sections 6(a), 7, 9(a), 10, 11 and 12 of the
Act.
Rule 58,
which provides an exemption from section 9(a) of the Act for investments by a
registered holding company in gas- and energy-related businesses deriving
substantially all their income from U.S. sources is applicable by analogy. AGLR
proposes to report on investments in its Canadian and Mexican gas- and
energy-related companies in a supplement to its regular quarterly reports filed
on Form U-9C-3, although investments in such companies, because they are subject
to the Investment Limit proposed herein, would not be subject to the investment
limits imposed by Rule 58.
Item
4. |
Regulatory
Approvals |
No state
or federal regulatory agency, other than this Commission, has jurisdiction over
the transactions for which authority is requested herein.
Applicants
respectfully request the Commission to issue and publish forthwith the requisite
notice under Rule 23 with respect to the filing of this application, such notice
to specify the minimum period allowed for the submission of comments. It is
submitted that a recommended decision by a hearing or other responsible officer
of the Commission is not needed for approval of the application. The Division of
Investment Management may assist in the preparation of the Commission's
decision. There should be no waiting period between the issuance of the
Commission's order and the date on which it is to become effective.
Item
6. |
Exhibits
and Financial Statements |
Exhibits:
Exhibit
A |
Opinion
of counsel |
Exhibit
B |
Past
tense opinion of counsel (to be filed by amendment) |
Exhibit
C |
Form
of Notice |
Financial
Statements:
FS-1 |
AGL
Resources' financial statements for the year ended, and as of, December
31, 2004 are incorporated by reference to its Annual Report on Form 10-K,
SEC File No. 001-14174 (filed February 15, 2005). |
|
|
Item
7. |
Information
as to Environmental Effects |
The
transaction will not involve major federal action significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment as those terms are used in Section 102(2)(C) of
the National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 4321 et seq. ("NEPA").
First, no major federal action within the meaning of NEPA is involved. Second,
consummation of the transaction will not result in changes in the operations of
AGLR or its subsidiaries that would have any significant impact on the
environment. To the Applicants' knowledge, no federal agency is preparing an
environmental impact statement with respect to this matter.
SIGNATURES
Pursuant
to the requirements of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, the
undersigned company has duly caused this statement to be signed on its behalf by
the undersigned officer thereunto duly authorized.
Date: May
3, 2005
AGL
Resources Inc.
By:
/s/
Paul R. Shlanta
Name:
Paul R. Shlanta
Title:
Senior Vice President, General Counsel and
Chief
Compliance Officer
EXHIBIT
INDEX
Exhibit
A |
Opinion
of counsel |
|
|
Exhibit
C |
Form
of Notice |
1
Investments in gas- and energy-related businesses that may be acquired under
Rule 58 would be subject to the investment limits under Rule 58, not the
Investment Limit proposed herein.
2 Energy
management services include the marketing, sale, installation, operation and
maintenance of various products and services related to energy management and
demand-side management, including energy and efficiency audits; meter data
management, facility design and process control and enhancements; construction,
installation, testing, sales and maintenance of (and training client personnel
to operate) energy conservation equipment; design implementation, monitoring and
evaluation of energy conservation programs; development and review of
architectural, structural and engineering drawings for energy efficiency, design
and specification of energy consuming equipment and general advice on programs;
the design, construction, installation, testing, sales, operation and
maintenance of new and retrofit heating, ventilating, and air conditioning, gas,
electrical and power systems, alarm, security, access control and warning
systems, motors, pumps, lighting, water, water-purification and plumbing
systems, building automation and temperature controls, installation and
maintenance of refrigeration systems, building infrastructure wiring supporting
voice, video, data and controls networks, environmental monitoring and control,
ventilation system calibration and maintenance, piping and fire protection
systems, and design, sale, engineering, installation, operation and maintenance
of emergency or distributed power generation systems, and related structures, in
connection with energy-related needs; and the provision of services and products
designed to prevent, control, or mitigate adverse effects of power disturbances
on a customer's electrical systems. In the event AGLR proposes to acquire an
energy management services business that owns distributed power generation
systems that would constitute "utility assets" under the Act, AGLR will, as
necessary, seek any required approvals from the Commission. See
Black Hills Corp.,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 27931 (Dec. 28, 2004) (granting authorization to
engage in this list of activities in Canada, Mexico and the
U.S.).
3
Consulting and technical services include services involving technology
assessments, meter reading and repair, rate schedule design and analysis,
environmental services, engineering services, billing services (including
consolidation or centralized billing, bill desegregation tools and bill
inserts), risk management services, communications systems, information
systems/data processing, system planning, strategic planning, finance, general
management consulting including training activities, feasibility studies, and
other similar related services. Id.
See
also, Exelon Corporation, Holding
Co. Act Release No. 27545 (June 27, 2002); Progress
Energy, Inc.,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 27297 (December 12, 2000).
4 See
Black Hills Corp.,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 27931 (Dec. 28, 2004); American
Electric Power Company, Inc., et al.,
Holding Co. Act Release Nos. 27842 (April 30, 2004); Emera
Inc.,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 27865 (June 30, 2004); and E.ON
AG, Holding
Co. Act Release No. 27539 (June 14, 2002) (authorizing investments in the same
or substantially the same energy and gas-related activities).
6 The
Columbia Gas System, et al., Holding
Co. Act Release No. 16503 (October 24, 1969).
7 Dominion
Resources, Inc., Holding
Co. Act Release No. 27113 (December 15, 1999).
8 National
Fuel Gas Company, Holding
Co. Act Release No. 27790 (December 30, 2003).
9 American
Electric Power Company Inc., Holding
Co. Act Release No. 26933 (November 2, 1998).
10 See
American Electric Power Company, Inc.,
Holding Co. Act Release Nos. 26572 (Sept. 13, 1996) and 26583 (Sept. 27,
1996).
11 See
also, Alliant Energy Corp.,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 27930 (Dec. 28, 2004) (authorizing energy marketing
and brokering activities in the U.S. and Canada) and Black
Hills Corp.,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 27931 (Dec. 28, 2004) (authorizing energy marketing
and brokering activities in the U.S., Canada and Mexico).
12
Exemption of Acquisition by Registered Public Utility Holding Companies of
Securities of Nonutility Companies Engaged in Certain Energy-Related and
Gas-Related Businesses, Holding Co. Act Release No. 26313 (June 20, 1995) ("Rule
58 Proposing Release") at 31. In the same release the Commission determined that
it is unlikely that "the participation of registered holding companies will lead
to a recurrence of the evils that the Act was intended to address." Id.
13 National
Fuel Gas Company, Holding
Co. Act Release No. 27790 (December 30, 2003).
14 KeySpan
Corp.,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 27271 (November 7, 2000).
15 Emera
Inc., Holding
Co. Act Release No. 27445 (October 1, 2001).
16 Black
Hills Corp.,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 27931 (Dec. 28, 2004); Northeast
Utilities, et al.,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 27868A (July 2, 2004).
17 AGL
Resources Inc., Holding
Co. Act Release No. 27828 (April 1,
2004).