The new court ruling shows that the pipelines are ripping people off for not just 54 percent more than their profits, as I have reported, but for double that.
In the latest twist in a case known colloquially as
United Airlines v. FERC, Senior Circuit Judge David B. Sentelle, who has been hearing appeals of FERC pipeline tax cases for a quarter-century, came to this conclusion on July 1 in the U.S. Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit Court.
Judge Sentelle wrote that United Airlines and eight other pipeline customers, known as the Shippers, complain that they are being overcharged because the rates they pay include covering taxes that the pipelines do not owe. You end up paying the bill when they pass these costs on through higher fares or in reduced profits earned by shareholders.
The Shippers “claim that because FERC’s rate-making methodology already ensures a sufficient after-tax rate of return to attract investment capital, and partnership pipelines otherwise do not incur en y-level taxes, FERC’s tax allowance policy permits partners in a partnership pipeline to ‘double recover’ their taxes.”
Judge Sentelle concluded that the plaintiffs were right.
Unfortunately, he did not include the tax algebra in his decision so that we could calculate the amount of the overcharges.
Previously I calculated from disclosure reports that the pipeline industry tax rip-off totals about $3.4 billion annually. A Congressional study prompted by my reporting estimated the cost at $1.9 billion. Judge Sentelle’s decision suggests the rip-off costs Americans somewhere between $3.8 billion to $6.8 billion annually.