FERC-740, Availability of e-Tag Information to Commission Staff

ICR 201602-1902-002

OMB: 1902-0254

Federal Form Document

Forms and Documents
Document
Name
Status
Supplementary Document
2016-03-07
Supplementary Document
2016-02-25
Supplementary Document
2016-02-17
Supplementary Document
2016-02-03
Supplementary Document
2016-02-03
Supporting Statement A
2016-05-05
Supplementary Document
2013-04-17
Supplementary Document
2013-04-17
ICR Details
1902-0254 201602-1902-002
Historical Active 201212-1902-002
FERC FERC-740
FERC-740, Availability of e-Tag Information to Commission Staff
Extension without change of a currently approved collection   No
Regular
Approved with change 05/05/2016
Retrieve Notice of Action (NOA) 03/07/2016
In accordance with 5 CFR 1320, the information collection is approved for three years.
  Inventory as of this Action Requested Previously Approved
05/31/2019 36 Months From Approved 05/31/2016
1 0 12,000,000
1 0 8,334
0 0 0

In FERC Order 771 (issued 12/20/2012 in Docket No. RM11-12), the FERC-740 information collection (providing Commission staff access to e-Tag data) was implemented to provide the Commission, Market Monitoring Units (MMUs), Regional Transmission Organizations (RTOs), and Independent System Operators (ISOs) with information that allows them to perform market surveillance and analysis more effectively. The e-Tag information is necessary to understand the use of the interconnected electricity grid, particularly transactions occurring at interchanges. Due to the nature of the electricity grid, an individual transaction’s impact on an interchange cannot be assessed adequately in all cases without information from all connected systems, which is included in the e-Tags. The details of the physical path of a transaction included in the e-Tags helps the Commission to monitor, in particular, interchange transactions effectively, detect and prevent price manipulation over interchanges, and ensure the efficient and orderly use of the transmission grid. For example, the e-Tag data allows the Commission to identify transmission reservations as they go from one market to another and link the market participants involved in that transaction. Order No. 771 provided the Commission access to e-Tags by requiring that Purchasing-Selling Entities (PSEs) and Balancing Authorities (BAs), list the Commission on the "CC" list of e-Tags so that the Commission can receive a copy of the e-Tags. The Commission accesses the e-Tags by contracting with a commercial vendor, OATI. In early 2014, the North American Energy Standards Board (NAESB) incorporated the requirement that the Commission be added to the “CC” list on e-Tags as part of the tagging process. Even before NAESB added the FERC requirement to the tagging standards, the rules behind the "CC" list requirement had already been programmed into the industry standard tagging software so as to make the inclusion of FERC in the "CC" list automatic. The Commission expects that PSEs and BAs will continue to use existing, automated procedures to create and validate the e-Tags in a way that provides the Commission with access to them. In the rare event that a new BA would need to alert e-Tag administrators that certain tags it generates qualify for exemption under the Commission’s regulations (e.g., transmissions from a new Canadian BA into another Canadian BA), this administrative function would be expected to require less than an hour of effort total from both the BA and an e-Tag administrator to include the BA on the exemption list. New exempt BAs occur less frequently than every year, but for the purpose of estimation we will conservatively assume one appears each year creating an additional burden associated with the Commission’s FERC-740 requirement of $60.59.

US Code: 16 USC 824v, 825f Name of Law: Federal Power Act
  
None

Not associated with rulemaking

  80 FR 68312 11/04/2015
81 FR 11781 03/07/2016
No

  Total Approved Previously Approved Change Due to New Statute Change Due to Agency Discretion Change Due to Adjustment in Estimate Change Due to Potential Violation of the PRA
Annual Number of Responses 1 12,000,000 0 -11,999,999 0 0
Annual Time Burden (Hours) 1 8,334 0 -8,333 0 0
Annual Cost Burden (Dollars) 0 0 0 0 0 0
Yes
Miscellaneous Actions
Yes
Miscellaneous Actions
There is a program decrease due to the following. • The implementation phase of adding FERC as the ‘cc’ on the e-Tags is completed. The effort is now completely automated. • The requirement is also part of industry’s normal business function due to NAESB incorporating the requirement for FERC to be added as a ‘cc’ on e-Tags, as described further in the supporting statement. FERC is including a burden of one hour for any new Balancing Authority which may enter the field and need to perform the initial set-up to identify FERC as a ‘cc’ for e-Tags. We have deleted the previous 2 IC's and added a new IC for the possible new Balancing Authority & the now totally completed and automated efforts by Purchasing-Selling Entities (e-Tag Authors) and Balancing Authorities. See the supporting statement for more information.

$289,427
No
No
No
No
No
Uncollected
Steven Reich 202 502-6446 steven.reich@ferc.gov

  No

On behalf of this Federal agency, I certify that the collection of information encompassed by this request complies with 5 CFR 1320.9 and the related provisions of 5 CFR 1320.8(b)(3).
The following is a summary of the topics, regarding the proposed collection of information, that the certification covers:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    (i) Why the information is being collected;
    (ii) Use of information;
    (iii) Burden estimate;
    (iv) Nature of response (voluntary, required for a benefit, or mandatory);
    (v) Nature and extent of confidentiality; and
    (vi) Need to display currently valid OMB control number;
 
 
 
If you are unable to certify compliance with any of these provisions, identify the item by leaving the box unchecked and explain the reason in the Supporting Statement.
03/07/2016


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