The act created the
Federal Power Commission (FPC) (now the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission) as the licensing authority for these plants. The FPC regulated the interstate activities of the electric power and
natural gas industries, and coordinated national hydroelectric power activities. The Commission's mandate called for it to maintain reasonable, nondiscriminatory and just rates to the consumer. It was ensured that 37.5% of the income derived from hydroelectric power leases given out under the Water Power Act of 1920 went to the state in which the dam was built. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) regulates under Parts II and III of the Federal Power Act. In 1935, the law was renamed the Federal Power Act, and the FPC's regulatory jurisdiction was expanded to include all interstate
electricity transmission and wholesale power sales (a/k/a "sales for resale"). The
Energy Policy Act of 2005 further amended the Federal Power Act to extend FERC's jurisdiction to certain power plant sales as well as the reliability of electric service. Other amendments to the law include the following: •
Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA) (1978) •
Energy Security Act (1980) • Electric Consumers Protection Act of 1986 •
Energy Policy Act of 1992 •
America's Water Infrastructure Act of 2018 __NOTOC__ ==See also==