Houlton Water Company v. Public Utilities Commission , 2014 Me. LEXIS 41 ( 2014 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                        Reporter of Decisions
    Decision: 
    2014 ME 38
    Docket:   PUC-12-247
    Argued:   January 16, 2013
    Decided:  March 4, 2014
    Panel:       SAUFLEY, C.J., and LEVY, SILVER, MEAD, GORMAN, and JABAR, JJ.
    HOULTON WATER COMPANY et al.
    v.
    PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
    SAUFLEY, C.J.
    [¶1] The Office of the Public Advocate, Houlton Water Company, and the
    Industrial Energy Consumer Group (IECG) (collectively, the intervenors) appeal
    from the Public Utilities Commission’s approval, with multiple conditions, of the
    reorganization of two regulated electrical utilities in Maine. The reorganization
    involves changes in the corporate ownership of specific entities that transmit and
    distribute electricity in Maine such that they will be held in common ownership
    with generators of electricity in Maine, primarily generators of electricity from
    wind power.      The intervenors urge us to conclude that the Electric Industry
    Restructuring Act, 35-A M.R.S. §§ 3201-3217 (2013), prohibits, as a matter of
    law, the proposed union under a single ownership of transmission-and-distribution
    utilities and electricity generators. Alternatively, the intervenors argue that the
    specific affiliations and financial relationships proposed here contravene the goals
    2
    of the Act, the Commission erred in its legal analysis and its factual findings, and
    the Commission abused its discretion in approving and setting conditions on the
    reorganization.
    [¶2]     We conclude that the Commission’s interpretation of the Act’s
    prohibition on “financial” relationships is inconsistent with the goals and language
    of the Act. We vacate the approval and remand for further proceedings.1
    I. OVERVIEW
    [¶3] Effective in 1999 and 2000, the Legislature substantially changed the
    regulation of Maine’s electricity industry. See 35-A M.R.S. § 3204. By separating
    the generation of electricity from its transmission and distribution (T&D),2 the
    Electric Industry Restructuring Act was intended to effectuate the Legislature’s
    goal of encouraging competition and innovation in the generation of electrical
    power. See 
    id. §§ 3202,
    3203. “One of the purposes of the Restructuring Act was
    to create a competitive market in which Maine’s citizens would be able to
    comparison shop among various competitive electricity providers for their personal
    1
    Because we remand for further proceedings based on an error in statutory interpretation, we express
    no opinion on the intervenors’ other arguments on appeal.
    2
    As do the parties, we refer to the regulated entities that transmit and distribute electricity in Maine as
    “T&D” utilities. T&D utilities are public utilities. 35-A M.R.S. § 102(13) (2013). The Restructuring Act
    defines a T&D utility, in relevant part, as “a person, its lessees, trustees or receivers or trustees appointed
    by a court, owning, controlling, operating or managing a transmission and distribution plant for
    compensation within the State.” 35-A M.R.S. § 102(20-B) (2013).
    3
    and commercial electricity generation services.” Competitive Energy Servs. LLC v.
    Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 
    2003 ME 12
    , ¶ 2, 
    818 A.2d 1039
    .
    [¶4] To achieve its goals, the Act mandated that companies holding both
    generation and T&D assets divest themselves of the generation assets and
    generation-related activities by March 1, 2000.          35-A M.R.S. § 3204(1).
    Following divestiture, the Commission continues to regulate and oversee T&D
    utilities, which hold monopolistic rights to the limited T&D resources in Maine.
    See, e.g., 
    id. § 3204(5),
    (6).     “Because the Restructuring Act allowed the
    investor-owned electric utilities to keep their transmission and distribution assets,
    the former electricity providers were transformed into transmission and distribution
    utilities . . . fully regulated by the Commission.” Competitive Energy Servs., 
    2003 ME 12
    , ¶ 2, 
    818 A.2d 1039
    .
    [¶5] At the same time, the regulation of the production and generation of
    electricity was greatly reduced, so much so that the parties refer to power
    generation as “unregulated” in Maine, although the generators are subject to some
    restrictions and must be licensed. See generally 35-A M.R.S. § 3202 (deregulating
    retail access to generation services); 
    id. § 3203
    (authorizing the Commission to
    license competitive electricity providers).      In addition, the Act authorized
    competitive electricity providers to market, broker, aggregate, or sell the generated
    electricity to the public. 
    Id. §§ 3201(5),
    3202(1). Recognizing the potential effects
    4
    on competition, the Act now gives the Commission the authority to order
    divestiture by a T&D utility if another entity purchases 10% or more of the stock
    of the T&D utility and the Commission determines that an affiliated competitive
    electricity provider thereby obtains an unfair market advantage.                          See 
    id. § 3206-A(2).
    [¶6]      Following divestiture, any major change in the ownership or
    organization of a T&D utility is considered to be a reorganization that must be
    approved by the Commission. See 
    id. §§ 708,
    3204(5) (2013). The Restructuring
    Act and the more broadly applicable statute that regulates public utilities’
    reorganizations, 
    id. § 708,
    provide the statutory basis for the Commission’s review
    of the complex corporate transactions between and among energy corporations and
    their respective affiliates.3
    3
    The Restructuring Act defines “affiliate” for purposes of this dispute. See 35-A M.R.S.
    §§ 707(1)(A), 3201(1) (2013). The Restructuring Act provides, “‘Affiliated interest’ has the same
    meaning as provided in section 707, subsection 1, paragraph A.” 35-A M.R.S. § 3201(1). Section
    707(1)(A) provides,
    “Affiliated interest” means:
    (1) With respect to a public utility . . . :
    (a) Any person who owns directly, indirectly or through a chain of successive
    ownership 10% or more of the voting securities of a public utility;
    (b) Any person, 10% or more of whose voting securities are owned, directly or
    indirectly, by an affiliated interest as defined in division (a);
    (c) Any person, 10% or more of whose voting securities are owned, directly or
    indirectly, by a public utility;
    5
    [¶7] The appeal before us involves a challenge to a proposed reorganization
    that, in the end, involves several business entities that provide T&D or generation
    services in Maine. 4 Specifically, the Commission approved two petitions for
    reorganization—one filed by T&D utilities Bangor Hydro-Electric and Maine
    Public Service Company (MPS), and the other filed by the newly formed Northeast
    Wind Holdings, LLC, all of which are owned by a Canadian corporation, Emera,
    Inc., which operates in northeastern North America, in three Caribbean countries,
    and in California. The evidence indicated that, at the time of the hearings, more
    than 80% of Emera’s earnings came from regulated utilities.
    [¶8] In essence, the reorganization would allow Emera to make two major
    changes in its holdings. First, while continuing to hold the T&D utilities, Bangor
    Hydro and MPS, Emera would be allowed to obtain a greater share of electricity
    generators that generate power in Maine.                   Specifically, it would increase its
    ownership share of Algonquin Power & Utilities Corp. (APUC), a Canadian
    (d) Any person, or group of persons acting in concert, that the commission may
    determine, after investigation and hearing, exercises substantial influence over the
    policies and actions of a public utility, if the person or group of persons
    beneficially owns more than 3% of the public utility’s voting securities; or
    (e) Any public utility of which any person defined in divisions (a) to (d) is an
    affiliated interest.
    4
    As authorized by statute, the Commission entered several protective orders in these proceedings,
    shielding from public view a substantial amount of proprietary business information, not otherwise
    available to the public, that was required to be filed with the Commission in the course of the
    reorganization proceedings. See 35-A M.R.S. § 112 (2013). To effectuate those orders, this decision
    contains only those details of the transactions that are necessary to an understanding of the matters on
    appeal.
    6
    company that owns and operates a diversified portfolio of electrical generation and
    utility distribution businesses in North America, including several that generate
    electricity in Maine. Second, Emera would be authorized to engage in a joint
    venture with First Wind Holdings, LLC, a wind energy developer, to establish a
    new wind generation company to be called JV Holdco. JV Holdco would own and
    operate wind generation projects in Maine, Vermont, and New York.
    [¶9] Thus, the proposed transactions would allow Maine’s regulated T&D
    utilities—Bangor Hydro and MPS—to be held in common ownership with
    companies engaged in electricity generation in Maine, including several developers
    of wind energy projects. Cf. 
    id. § 707(1)(A).
    This ownership structure would not
    have been allowed during the initial divestiture phase of the Restructuring Act.
    See 
    id. § 3204(1).
    The intervenors argue that it is not allowed now. We must
    therefore determine whether the Restructuring Act prohibits or limits the proposed
    reorganizations.
    II. BACKGROUND
    A.    Proposed Transactions
    [¶10] The Commission consolidated two petitions for hearing and decision,
    each of which proposed a specific transaction.      The first transaction involves
    Emera’s plan to increase its ownership in APUC from 8.2% to a maximum of 25%
    7
    (the APUC transaction). One APUC subsidiary owns generation assets5 in Maine,
    and owns a subsidiary that acts as a competitive electricity provider, which is a
    “marketer, broker, aggregator or any other entity selling electricity to the public at
    retail.” 
    Id. § 3201(5).
    The initial plan was for APUC and Emera to engage in a
    joint venture in the creation of a new entity, Northeast Wind Holdings, but when
    APUC ultimately withdrew from that venture, the plan was altered to provide that
    Emera would own 100% of Northeast Wind Holdings. As a result, the proposal
    did not, at that stage, implicate section 3206-A(2), which regulates the
    relationships between T&D entities and competitive electricity providers.
    [¶11] The second transaction involved a proposed joint venture between
    that Emera subsidiary, Northeast Wind Holdings, and subsidiaries of First Wind
    Holdings, LLC, an entity involved in the development of utility-scale wind energy
    projects. Through this transaction, a newly created entity to be known as JV
    Holdco LLC would be held in joint ownership by the Emera-owned Northeast
    Wind, which would acquire a 49% interest in JV Holdco, and First Wind, which
    would hold the remaining 51% interest.                          To obtain its 49% interest,
    Emera-Northeast Wind would invest $333 million in the form of equity and a loan
    that may be converted to equity. First Wind would transfer a variety of wind
    5
    The Restructuring Act defines generation assets to include “all real estate, fixtures and personal
    property owned, controlled, operated or managed in connection with, or to facilitate, the generation of
    electric power.” 35-A M.R.S. § 3201(10) (2013).
    8
    projects in Maine and the northeast to JV Holdco. Additional wind projects could
    be transferred to JV Holdco over the next decade that would commit Emera,
    through Northeast Wind, to provide 49% of the necessary funding—more than $1
    billion.6
    [¶12] The First Wind transaction also involves the transfer of the Stetson
    Generator Lead7 to Northeast Wind or another Emera affiliate, and the execution of
    a Memorandum of Understanding between Bangor Hydro and First Wind whereby
    First Wind would purchase twenty years of transmission capacity from a T&D
    project undertaken by Bangor Hydro and National Grid.
    [¶13]       Accordingly, Bangor Hydro and MPS, both highly regulated
    providers of electricity transmission and distribution in Maine, would be Emera
    affiliates, and JV Holdco, which will own substantial generation assets located in
    Maine, would also be owned in part by Emera. See 
    id. §§ 707(1)(A),
    3201(1).
    Emera would also have a substantial financial relationship with First Wind, which
    holds generation or generation-related assets, through the joint venture of their
    subsidiaries.
    6
    The agreement allows for the expedited financing of new “shovel ready” projects if certain
    conditions are met.
    7
    Generation lead lines connect generation facilities to transmission lines.
    9
    [¶14] Primary among the concerns raised by the intervenors in response to
    the proposed reorganizations is the potential that an owner of generation assets
    such as JV Holdco or First Wind would, through these shared economic and
    business connections, obtain a competitive advantage over other generators in
    access to transmission and distribution by Bangor Hydro and MPS, thus potentially
    defeating the purposes of the Restructuring Act.
    B.        Procedural Background
    [¶15] On April 26, 2011, as required by 35-A M.R.S. § 708(2), Bangor
    Hydro and MPS filed a request for reorganization 8 concerning the originally
    anticipated APUC transaction.9 On May 5, 2011, the newly formed Northeast
    Wind requested Commission approval for the First Wind transaction. The hearing
    examiner consolidated the petitions into a single proceeding. Houlton Water, the
    Public Advocate, and IECG, among others, intervened.
    8
    Section 708(1)(A) defines “reorganization” as
    any creation, organization, extension, consolidation, merger, transfer of ownership or
    control, liquidation, dissolution or termination, direct or indirect, in whole or in part, of
    an affiliated interest as defined in section 707 accomplished by the issue, sale,
    acquisition, lease, exchange, distribution or transfer of voting securities or property.
    35-A M.R.S. § 708(1)(A) (2013). Section 708 further provides that “no reorganization may take place
    without the approval of the commission” unless “exempted by rule or order of the commission.”
    35 M.R.S. § 708(2)(A) (2013). The Commission may not approve the reorganization of a public utility
    “unless it is established by the applicant for approval that the reorganization is consistent with the
    interests of the utility’s ratepayers and investors.” 
    Id. 9 Although
    Bangor Hydro and MPS’s filing requested an exemption from the requirement of
    reorganization approval, the Commission treated their petition as a request for reorganization.
    10
    [¶16] In August 2011, the Public Advocate and Houlton Water, among
    others, moved to dismiss the petitions on the ground that the Commission’s
    approval of the reorganization petitions would violate the Restructuring Act by
    allowing T&D utilities’ corporate owner to own generation assets in Maine. The
    Commission denied the motion, concluding that 35-A M.R.S. § 3204(5)10 “clearly
    prohibits utilities from owning generation assets, but does not explicitly prohibit
    such ownership by utility affiliates.”                   The Commission reasoned that “the
    Legislature was aware of affiliate issues at the time it enacted the [Restructuring
    Act] . . . and could have explicitly prohibited affiliated ownership if that was the
    intent.”
    [¶17] In preparation for the hearing on the reorganization requests, Bangor
    Hydro and MPS filed testimony from officers at Emera Energy, Inc.;11 First Wind;
    Algonquin Energy Services, Inc.;12 and Bangor Hydro. The Public Advocate filed
    the testimony of a consultant.                 The hearing examiners for the Commission
    conducted a hearing in the Commission’s presence over the course of four days in
    10
    Title 35-A M.R.S. § 3204(5) (2013) provides, “Ownership of generation prohibited. Except as
    otherwise permitted under this chapter, on or after March 1, 2000, an investor-owned transmission and
    distribution utility may not own, have a financial interest in or otherwise control generation or
    generation-related assets.”
    11
    Emera Energy, Inc., is a wholly-owned direct subsidiary of Emera.
    12
    Algonquin Energy Services, Inc., is a wholly owned indirect subsidiary of APUC and is currently a
    Maine competitive electricity provider. See 35-A M.R.S. § 3201(5) (2013).
    11
    December 2011, and heard testimony from several of the witnesses who had
    pre-filed testimony and from Emera’s president and chief executive officer. See 
    id. § 1305(2)
    (2013).
    [¶18] In January 2012, the hearing examiners issued their report. See id.;
    
    9 C.M.R. 65
    407 110-7, -23 to -24 §§ 105(p), 750-752 (1999).13 The hearing
    examiners recommended that both reorganization requests be denied. Although
    the examiners’ report concluded that the proposed transactions were not prohibited
    by the financial interest or control prongs of 35-A M.R.S. § 3204(5), the examiners
    concluded that the net result to the public would be harmful, see 
    id. § 708(2)(A)(9).
    Finding “that the risk of harm to ratepayers exceeds the benefits, even if conditions
    intended to mitigate the risk of harm to ratepayers were imposed,” the examiners
    concluded that Bangor Hydro and MPS “have not met their burden of
    demonstrating no net harm to ratepayers as set forth in [section] 708.”                       The
    examiners also rejected the APUC transaction because of “the lack of benefits and
    the risks of undue preference created by the affiliation” between MPS and APUC.
    In the event that the Commission were to allow the reorganization, the examiners’
    report recommended that “any approval of the Proposed Transactions must include
    substantial and comprehensive conditions.” The examiners listed nearly thirty
    conditions that would protect against “harm to ratepayers of [Bangor Hydro] and
    13
    Chapter 110 of the Commission’s rules was recently replaced, effective November 26, 2012, and
    codified at 
    9 C.M.R. 65
    407 110 -1 to -13 §§ 1-14 (2013).
    12
    MPS in the form of higher T&D rates” and harm to the competitive market from
    preferential treatment of Emera affiliates.
    [¶19] Pursuant to 
    9 C.M.R. 65
    407 110-32 § 1001 (1999), Bangor Hydro
    and MPS filed exceptions to the examiners’ report. APUC then filed a letter
    informing the Commission that it had withdrawn from the Northeast Wind and JV
    Holdco transactions. The examiners ordered Bangor Hydro and MPS to provide a
    statement of clarification regarding changes to the proposed reorganization and
    provided the intervenors with an opportunity to respond.                        The statement of
    clarification explained that the First Wind transaction would remain substantially
    the same except that APUC would not have any ownership interest in JV Holdco
    and instead Emera would finance 100% of the investment in Northeast Wind.
    [¶20] The Commission then reopened the record, over the intervenors’
    objections, “for the sole and limited purpose of . . . develop[ing] the record on . . .
    issues related to APUC’s withdrawal from the First Wind transaction.”                             The
    Commission took evidence concerning (1) “[t]he financial impact on Emera and its
    Maine utility affiliates from APUC’s withdrawal” and (2) “[t]he impact on the
    northern Maine market issues resulting from APUC’s withdrawal.”14
    14
    On February 2, 2012, the intervenors moved to dismiss the reorganization approval proceeding
    based on (1) the unauthorized filing of First Wind’s exceptions and APUC’s letter and (2) Bangor Hydro
    and MPS’s proposal of new conditions in their exceptions to the examiners’ report. Although
    acknowledging that Bangor Hydro and MPS’s “actions in response to the Examiners’ Report created
    substantial substantive and procedural concerns and may not constitute proper practice,” the Commission
    13
    [¶21] After deliberations, the Commission approved both the APUC and
    First Wind transactions with extensive conditions. The Commission interpreted
    section 3204(5) as not prohibiting the affiliation of T&D utilities and generation
    entities with a shared parent company. It then turned its focus to section 3204(5)’s
    provision that utilities “may not own, have a financial interest in or otherwise
    control generation or generation-related assets,” and determined that, to contravene
    the statute, the T&D utility would have to hold “some type of control over the
    affiliates’ generation assets.” The Commission reasoned that such control “would
    occur, for example, if a utility owned a subsidiary that owns and operates
    generation assets,” but that Bangor Hydro and MPS “will have only the type of
    financial interest that any entity has in the success of its affiliates.”
    [¶22]    The Commission imposed more than fifty conditions on Bangor
    Hydro and MPS as well as on nonparties First Wind, Emera, APUC, and their
    affiliates to mitigate the risk that the proposed transactions would not be
    “consistent with the interests of the utility’s ratepayers and investors.”
    35-A M.R.S. § 708(2)(A).               The Commission explained that the proposed
    transactions, considered together, “would provide significant benefits to Maine
    concluded that “those actions [did] not justify dismissal of this proceeding.” The decision “emphasize[d]
    that the Commissioners (as is the case with judges) are capable of . . . disregarding information that is
    outside the record” and rejected the intervenors’ claims that First Wind’s and APUC’s filings constituted
    ex parte communications. Furthermore, the Commission concluded that the suggestion of new conditions
    by Bangor Hydro and MPS “was not improper” because “[a] party’s exceptions provide the only
    mechanism to respond to conditions proposed for the first time in an Examiners’ Report.”
    14
    ratepayers,” and that the imposed conditions would “sufficiently mitigate” the
    potential risks. Therefore, according to the Commission, the transactions “will not,
    on net, be harmful to ratepayers.”
    [¶23] After the Commission ruled on a motion for reconsideration and
    modified one of the conditions it imposed, the intervenors filed a timely appeal
    from the Commission’s order approving reorganization. See 35-A M.R.S. § 1320
    (2013); M.R. App. P. 2(b)(3), 22.
    III. DISCUSSION
    [¶24] In an appeal from a decision of the Public Utilities Commission, our
    review is deferential, and “[o]nly when the Commission abuses the discretion
    entrusted to it, or fails to follow the mandate of the legislature, or to be bound by
    the prohibitions of the constitution” will we intervene.       Dunn v. Pub. Utils.
    Comm’n, 
    2006 ME 4
    , ¶ 5, 
    890 A.2d 269
    (quotation marks omitted). We apply a
    two-part inquiry when reviewing the Commission’s interpretation of a statute that
    it administers and is within its expertise. Competitive Energy Servs., 
    2003 ME 12
    ,
    ¶ 15, 
    818 A.2d 1039
    .       First, we determine de novo whether the statute is
    ambiguous. 
    Id. “An ambiguous
    statute has language that is reasonably susceptible
    of different interpretations.” Dep’t of Corr. v. Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 
    2009 ME 40
    ,
    ¶ 8, 
    968 A.2d 1047
    (2009) (quotation marks omitted). Second, if the statute is not
    ambiguous, we determine whether the Commission misconstrued the statute’s
    15
    plain meaning. 
    Id. If the
    statute contains any ambiguity, however, we review the
    Commission’s construction for reasonableness, according “great deference to the
    Commission’s interpretation.” 
    Id. (quotation marks
    omitted); see also Competitive
    Energy Servs., 
    2003 ME 12
    , ¶ 15, 
    818 A.2d 1039
    .
    A.    Does Section 3204(5) Impose a Blanket Prohibition Against Maine T&D
    Utilities Sharing an Affiliate with Maine Generation and Generation-related
    Assets?
    [¶25] All parties agree that the proposed transactions involving Emera, First
    Wind, and APUC would result in Emera—a company with an affiliated interest in
    Maine T&D utilities Bangor Hydro and MPS—also holding what would constitute
    an “affiliated interest” in subsidiaries engaged in electric generation in Maine if
    that term applied to generators.   See 35-A M.R.S. § 707(1)(A)(1)(a) (defining
    “affiliated interest” with respect to a T&D utility to include “[a]ny person who
    owns directly, indirectly or through a chain of successive ownership 10% or more
    of the voting securities of a public utility”). Specifically, the Commission found
    that “Emera would have a greater than 10% ownership interest in APUC, NE Wind
    and JV Holdco.”
    [¶26] The intervenors argue that the Commission’s interpretation of the
    Restructuring Act as not expressly prohibiting affiliate-type ownership of Maine
    electric generation assets is unreasonable and inconsistent with the intent of the
    Restructuring Act. They contend that the Commission’s interpretation is contrary
    16
    to the plain language of section 3204(5) and violates rules of statutory
    interpretation.
    [¶27] The intervenors are correct that the Act unambiguously required that
    owners of T&D utilities initially divest themselves of the generation assets that
    they owned. See 35-A M.R.S. § 3204(1) (requiring, with some exceptions, that
    “on or before March 1, 2000, each investor-owned electric utility shall divest all
    generation assets and generation-related business activities”). The Act does not,
    however, expressly prohibit a parent company from owning both generation and
    T&D assets after divestiture. Instead, the Act prohibits any T&D utility from
    having certain interests in generation assets: “Ownership of generation
    prohibited. Except as otherwise permitted under this chapter, on or after March 1,
    2000, an investor-owned transmission and distribution utility may not own, have a
    financial interest in or otherwise control generation or generation-related assets.”
    
    Id. § 3204(5).
    [¶28] Thus, the statute does not expressly prohibit affiliation between a
    parent company that owns and operates generation assets and a T&D utility.
    See 
    id. The Legislature
    used the terms “affiliate,” “affiliated,” or “affiliated
    interest” in other parts of section 3204, see, e.g., 
    id. § 3204(1),
    (8), and in other
    parts of the Restructuring Act, see, e.g., 
    id. §§ 3201(1),
    3202(4)(A), 3205 to
    3206-A, 3212(2)(C). It could easily have drafted section 3204(5) to prohibit the
    17
    owners of T&D utilities from having any “affiliation” or “affiliated interest” with
    generation companies after divestiture. For example, as first introduced, the bill
    provided that “a large, investor-owned transmission and distribution utility may not
    have an affiliated interest in a competitive generation provider.” L.D. 1804 § 1
    (118th Legis. 1997) (emphasis added) (proposed as section 3204(4)).15
    [¶29] After multiple amendments, however, the Legislature chose not to use
    “affiliate” language in section 3204(5), but instead directed that T&D utilities
    “may not own, have a financial interest in or otherwise control generation or
    generation-related assets.” 35-A M.R.S. § 3204(5). Thus, construing the plain and
    unambiguous language of the statute, and consistent with our prior rulings, we
    conclude that section 3204(5) does not explicitly prohibit all affiliation, as defined
    by the Restructuring Act, between a T&D utility’s corporate owner and entities
    that own generation or generation-related assets. See 
    id. §§ 707(1)(A),
    3201(1);
    Dep’t of Corr., 
    2009 ME 40
    , ¶ 8, 
    968 A.2d 1047
    . Whether any specific proposed
    affiliation runs afoul of the prohibition against a T&D utility having ownership of,
    15
    A committee amendment made three changes to the bill that are relevant to this dispute. Comm.
    Amend. A to L.D. 1804, No. H-568, § 3 (118th Legis. 1997). First, the amendment eliminated the
    language prohibiting investor-owned T&D utilities from having “an affiliated interest” in generation
    companies. 
    Id. Second, the
    amendment eliminated the section entitled “Interests in generation
    restricted,” which had provided that T&D utilities may not “[a]cquire or hold any financial or ownership
    interest in generation assets or generation-related business activities or contracts for generation.” L.D.
    1804, § 1 (118th Legis. 1997) (proposed as section 3204(2)); see Comm. Amend. A to L.D. 1804,
    No. H-568, § 3 (118th Legis. 1997). Third, the amendment added a subsection entitled “Ownership of
    generation prohibited” that provided that T&D utilities “may not own, have a financial interest in or
    otherwise control generation or generation-related assets.” Comm. Amend. A to L.D. 1804, No. H-568,
    § 3 (118th Legis. 1997) (codified at 35-A M.R.S. § 3204(5)). The Legislature enacted the amended bill.
    2 Legis. Rec. S-1124 (1997).
    18
    a financial interest in, or otherwise exercising control over a generator must
    therefore be addressed individually.
    B.    Must a T&D Utility Have Control of Generation Assets or
    Generation-Related Assets for It to Have a “Financial Interest” in Them
    Pursuant to Section 3204(5)?
    [¶30] Section 3204(5) provides that, after divestiture, T&D utilities “may
    not own, have a financial interest in or otherwise control generation or
    generation-related assets.” 35-A M.R.S. § 3204(5). The proposed transactions
    will not result in Bangor Hydro or MPS directly owning generation companies or
    assets. The question, therefore, is whether the Commission’s approval of the
    proposed transactions contravenes section 3204(5) by permitting Bangor Hydro
    and MPS to “have a financial interest in or otherwise control” electric generation
    by virtue of the mutual relationship with the parent company, Emera. See 
    id. [¶31] The
    Commission construed “financial interest in or otherwise control”
    to require the T&D utility “to have some type of control over the affiliates’
    generation assets” for the restructuring to be barred by section 3204(5). In so
    doing, the Commission reasoned that “financial interest” must mean “something
    more than the interest that any corporate entity would have in the financial success
    of its affiliates.” As an example, the Commission explained that such control
    would arise if a T&D utility “owned a subsidiary that own[ed] and operat[ed]
    generation assets.”
    19
    [¶32]    The language of section 3204(5) is ambiguous.            Given the
    grammatical structure of the sentence, it is not clear whether the Legislature
    intended the word “otherwise” to result in the concept of control being imported
    into each of the first two prohibited acts: ownership and financial interest. “An
    agency’s interpretation of an ambiguous statute it administers is reviewed with
    great deference and will be upheld unless the statute plainly compels a contrary
    result.” Competitive Energy Servs., 
    2003 ME 12
    , ¶ 15, 
    818 A.2d 1039
    (quotation
    marks omitted).
    [¶33]   Read in the context of the Act’s expressly stated goals, and its
    limitations on relationships between and among generators and T&D utilities,
    however, we conclude that each of the three types of relationships set forth in
    section 3204(5)—to own, to have financial interest, or to otherwise control—must
    be interpreted to have independent meaning. See Carrier v. Sec’y of State, 
    2012 ME 142
    , ¶ 12, 
    60 A.3d 1241
    (stating that, in construing a statute based on its plain
    meaning, we are “attempting to give all of [the statute’s] words meaning”).
    Although the Commission interpreted the term “otherwise” to suggest that all three
    types of relationship required that the T&D utility have control over generation or
    generation-related assets, we do not interpret the statute in that manner because
    such a reading would run completely contrary to the goal of the act to preserve the
    independence of T&D utilities from generators. See Competitive Energy Servs.,
    20
    
    2003 ME 12
    , ¶ 18, 
    818 A.2d 1039
    (stating that we “avoid statutory constructions
    that create absurd, illogical or inconsistent results” (quotation marks omitted)).
    [¶34] For instance, using the Commission’s interpretation, a T&D utility
    could own a large percentage of non-voting shares in generation or
    generation-related assets as long as the T&D utility did not have control of the
    governance of those assets. Despite the absence of controlling ownership, the
    T&D utility would be highly motivated to enhance the success of its asset, the
    generator, thus providing a competitive advantage to that generator.          Such an
    interpretation would run entirely counter to the Act’s purpose to separate T&D
    from generation sufficiently to ensure competition among electricity generators
    and developers of electricity generation projects, and prevent incentives that would
    favor one or more of those developers or generators over others in obtaining the
    services of a T&D utility.
    [¶35]   Because the Commission’s interpretation is not reasonable when
    considered in light of the explicit goals of the Act, we conclude that a T&D utility
    may be prohibited from having a financial interest in generation assets or
    generation-related assets even without exercising control over those assets. We
    therefore hold that a T&D utility has a prohibited “financial interest” in generation
    assets or generation-related assets pursuant to section 3204(5) if there exists a
    21
    sufficient financial interest in the assets of a generator that the interest is likely to
    produce incentives for favoritism that would undermine the purpose of the Act.
    [¶36]    This financial interest may, but need not, arise from a parent
    company’s affiliate-type relationship with both T&D utilities and generation or
    generation-related assets. See 35-A M.R.S. §§ 707(1)(A), 3201(1). Although the
    statute uses language other than “affiliate,” there is no indication that the
    Legislature thereby intended to authorize or prohibit all affiliate-type relationships
    between a parent company and its T&D and generation or generation-related
    assets. We interpret the statute to prohibit a T&D utility from having a “financial
    interest” in generation or generation-related assets, which may or may not involve
    relationships similar to utility affiliation as defined in section 707(1)(A). If the
    financial relationship is sufficient to create an incentive for the T&D utility to
    favor certain generation assets or generation-related assets over others, whether
    through affiliate-type or other relationships, the Act’s prohibition comes into
    effect. Thus, although a parent company of a T&D utility is not flatly prohibited
    from having the kind of affiliated interest defined in section 707(1)(A) with an
    entity possessing generation or generation-related assets, if the relationship among
    the entities results in the T&D utility having a financial interest that would provide
    an incentive to favor certain generators over others, the proposed corporate
    restructuring is prohibited pursuant to section 3204(5).
    22
    [¶37] In sum, we conclude that the statute requires an interpretation of
    section 3204(5) that is contrary to that of the Commission. See Dep’t of Corr.,
    
    2009 ME 40
    , ¶ 8, 
    968 A.2d 1047
    . The Commission’s interpretation too strictly
    requires a financial interest that is tantamount to a controlling interest. Because the
    Commission misinterpreted the statute to prohibit a T&D utility’s financial interest
    only if that interest gives the T&D utility control of the generation or
    generation-related assets, the Commission must reexamine the transactions
    proposed here, applying section 3204(5) as construed herein.
    [¶38] Finally, the intervenors argue that the Commission did not have the
    authority to impose the more than fifty separate conditions, many of which appear
    to “re-regulate” the unregulated generation of electricity.           Moreover, the
    imposition of this substantial number of conditions could be seen as an indication
    that the financial relationships between the regulated T&D utilities and the
    “unregulated” generators run afoul of section 3204(5). We are cognizant of our
    role as an appellate body, however, and we therefore decline to make such
    determinations.   We are confident that, with guidance on the meaning of the
    statute, the Commission will undertake a thoughtful and thorough reexamination of
    the proposals to determine whether the Act permits the reorganization proposed in
    this case. Accordingly, we vacate the Commission’s decision and remand for
    further consideration consistent with this opinion.
    23
    The entry is:
    Order of the Public Utilities Commission vacated.
    Remanded for further proceedings consistent with
    this opinion.
    On the briefs:
    Alan G. Stone, Esq., and Adam R. Lee, Esq., Skelton, Taintor
    & Abbott, Auburn, for appellant Houlton Water Company
    Eric Bryant, Esq., Office of the Public Advocate, Augusta, for
    appellant Office of the Public Advocate
    Andrew Landry, Esq., Anthony W. Buxton, Esq., Robert B.
    Borowski, Esq., and Todd J. Griset, Esq., Preti Flaherty, LLP,
    Augusta, for appellant Industrial Energy Consumer Group
    Charles Cohen, Esq., and Mitchell M. Tannenbaum, Esq.,
    Maine Public Utilities Commission, Augusta, for appellee
    Public Utilities Commission
    William S. Harwood, Esq., Verrill Dana LLP, Portland, for
    appellees Bangor Hydro Electric Company and Maine Public
    Service Company
    At oral argument:
    Adam R. Lee, Esq., for appellant Houlton Water Company
    Eric Bryant, Esq., for appellant Office of the Public Advocate
    24
    Anthony Buxton, Esq., for appellant Industrial Energy
    Consumer Group
    Charles Cohen, Esq., for appellee Public Utilities Commission
    William S. Harwood, Esq., for appellees Bangor Hydro Electric
    Company and Maine Public Service Company
    Public Utilities Commission docket number 2011-170
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY