[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 18, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 18CFR284.12]

[Page 739-741]
 
           TITLE 18--CONSERVATION OF POWER AND WATER RESOURCES
 
  CHAPTER I--FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION, DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
 
PART 284_CERTAIN SALES AND TRANSPORTATION OF NATURAL GAS UNDER THE 
NATURAL GAS POLICY ACT OF 1978 AND RELATED AUTHORITIES--Table of Contents
 
               Subpart A_General Provisions and Conditions
 
Sec. 284.12  Standards for pipeline business operations and communications.

    (a) Incorporation by reference of NAESB standards. (1) An interstate 
pipeline that transports gas under subparts B or G of this part must 
comply with the following business practice and electronic communication 
standards promulgated by the North American Energy Standards Board, 
which are incorporated herein by reference:
    (i) Nominations Related Standards (Version 1.6, July 31, 2002) and 
the standards contained in Recommendation R02002 (October 31, 2002);
    (ii) Flowing Gas Related Standards (Version 1.6, July 31, 2002);
    (iii) Invoicing Related Standards (Version 1.6, July 31, 2002);
    (iv) Electronic Delivery Mechanism Related Standards (Version 1.6, 
July 31, 2002) with the exception of Standard 4.3.4; and
    (v) Capacity Release Related Standards (Version 1.6, July 31, 2002), 
with the exception of Standards 5.3.6 and 5.3.7, and including the 
standards contained in Recommendations R02002 and R02002-2 (October 31, 
2002).
    (2) This incorporation by reference was approved by the Director of 
the Federal Register in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 
51. Copies of these standards may be obtained from the North American 
Energy Standards Board , 1100 Louisiana, Suite 3625, Houston, TX 77002. 
Copies may be inspected at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 
Public Reference and Files Maintenance Branch, 888 First Street, NE., 
Washington, DC 20426 and at the Office of the Federal Register, 800 
North Capitol St., NW., Suite 700, Washington, DC.
    (b) Business practices and electronic communication requirements. An 
interstate pipeline that transports gas under subparts B or G of this 
part must comply with the following requirements. The regulations in 
this paragraph adopt the abbreviations and definitions contained in the 
Gas Industry Standards Board standards incorporated by reference in 
paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
    (1) Nominations.
    (i) Intra-day nominations.
    (A) A pipeline must give scheduling priority to an intra-day 
nomination submitted by a firm shipper over nominated and scheduled 
volumes for interruptible shippers. When an interruptible shipper's 
scheduled volumes are to be reduced as a result of an intra-day 
nomination by a firm shipper, the interruptible shipper must be provided 
with advance notice of such reduction and must be notified whether 
penalties will apply on the day its volumes are reduced.

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    (B) An intra-day nomination submitted on the day prior to gas flow 
will take effect at the start of the gas day at 9 a.m. CCT.
    (ii) Capacity release scheduling. (A) Pipelines must permit shippers 
acquiring released capacity to submit a nomination at the earliest 
available nomination opportunity after the acquisition of capacity. If 
the pipeline requires the replacement shipper to enter into a contract, 
the contract must be issued within one hour after the pipeline has been 
notified of the release, but the requirement for contracting must not 
inhibit the ability of the replacement shipper to submit a nomination at 
the earliest available nomination opportunity.
    (B) A pipeline must permit releasing shippers, as a condition of a 
capacity release, to recall released capacity and renominate such 
recalled capacity at each nomination opportunity. Each replacement 
shipper must be provided with advance notice of such recall and must be 
notified whether penalties will apply on the day its volumes are 
reduced.
    (2) Flowing gas.
    (i) Operational balancing agreements. A pipeline must enter into 
Operational Balancing Agreements at all points of interconnection 
between its system and the system of another interstate or intrastate 
pipeline.
    (ii) Netting and trading of imbalances. A pipeline must establish 
provisions permitting shippers and their agents to offset imbalances 
accruing on different contracts held by the shipper with the pipeline 
and to trade imbalances with other shippers where such imbalances have 
similar operational impact on the pipeline's system.
    (iii) Imbalance management. A pipeline with imbalance penalty 
provisions in its tariff must provide, to the extent operationally 
practicable, parking and lending or other services that facilitate the 
ability of its shippers to manage transportation imbalances. A pipeline 
also must provide its shippers the opportunity to obtain similar 
imbalance management services from other providers and shall provide 
those shippers using other providers access to transportation and other 
pipeline services without undue discrimination or preference.
    (iv) Operational flow orders. A pipeline must take all reasonable 
actions to minimize the issuance and adverse impacts of operational flow 
orders (OFOs) or other measures taken to respond to adverse operational 
events on its system. A pipeline must set forth in its tariff clear 
standards for when such measures will begin and end and must provide 
timely information that will enable shippers to minimize the adverse 
impacts of these measures.
    (v) Penalties. A pipeline may include in its tariff transportation 
penalties only to the extent necessary to prevent the impairment of 
reliable service. Pipelines may not retain net penalty revenues, but 
must credit them to shippers in a manner to be prescribed in the 
pipeline's tariff. A pipeline with penalty provisions in its tariff must 
provide to shippers, on a timely basis, as much information as possible 
about the imbalance and overrun status of each shipper and the imbalance 
of the pipeline's system.
    (3) Communication protocols.
    (i)(A) All electronic information provided and electronic 
transactions conducted by a pipeline must be provided on the public 
Internet. A pipeline must provide, upon request, private network 
connections using internet tools, internet directory services, and 
internet communication protocols and must provide these networks with 
non-discriminatory access to all electronic information. A pipeline may 
charge a reasonable fee to recover the costs of providing such an 
interconnection.
    (B) A pipeline must implement this requirement no later than June 1, 
2000.
    (ii) A pipeline must comply with the following requirements for 
documents constituting public information posted on the pipeline web 
site:
    (A) The documents must be accessible to the public over the public 
Internet using commercially available web browsers, without imposition 
of a password or other access requirement;
    (B) Users must be able to search an entire document online for 
selected words, and must be able to copy selected portions of the 
documents; and
    (C) Documents on the web site should be directly downloadable 
without the

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need for users to first view the documents on the web site.
    (iii) If a pipeline uses a numeric or other designation to represent 
information, an electronic cross-reference table between the numeric or 
other designation and the information represented must be available to 
users, at a cost not to exceed reasonable shipping and handling.
    (iv) A pipeline must provide the same content for all information 
regardless of the electronic format in which it is provided.
    (v) A pipeline must maintain, for a period of three years, all 
information displayed and transactions conducted electronically under 
this section and be able to recover and regenerate all such electronic 
information and documents. The pipeline must make this archived 
information available in electronic form for a reasonable fee.
    (vi) A pipeline must post notices of operational flow orders, 
critical periods, and other critical notices on its Internet web site 
and must notify affected parties of such notices in either of the 
following ways to be chosen by the affected party: Internet E-Mail or 
direct notification to the party's Internet URL address.

[Order 587, 61 FR 39068, July 26, 1996, as amended by Order 587-B, 62 FR 
5525, Feb. 6, 1997; Order 587-C, 62 FR 10690, Mar. 10, 1997; Order 587-
G, 63 FR 20095, Apr. 23, 1998; Order 587-H, 63 FR 39514, July 23, 1998; 
Order 587-I, 63 FR 53576, Oct. 6, 1998; Order 587-K, 64 FR 17278, Apr. 
9, 1999. Redesignated and amended by Order 637, 65 FR 10220, Feb. 25, 
2000; Order 637-A, 65 FR 35765, June 5, 2000; Order 587-M, 65 FR 77290, 
Dec. 11, 2000; Order 587-N, 67 FR 11916, Mar. 18, 2002; Order 587-0, 67 
FR 30794, May 8, 2002; Order No. 587-R, 68 FR 13819, Mar. 21, 2003]