199 F.3d 1370 (D.C. Cir. 2000)
Frederick W. Martin, Petitionerv.Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, RespondentPortland Natural Gas Transmission System, Intervenor
No. 98-1398
United States Court of AppealsFOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Submitted October 15, 1999Decided January 25, 2000

On Petition for Review of Orders of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
Frederick W. Martin, appearing pro se, was on the briefs  for petitioner.
Jay L. Witkin, Solicitor, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, John H. Conway, Deputy Solicitor, and David H.  Coffman, Attorney, were on the brief for respondent.
George H. Williams, Jr. and Gunnar Birgisson were on  the brief for intervenor.
Before:  Williams, Ginsburg and Tatel, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge Ginsburg.
Ginsburg, Circuit Judge:


1
Frederick Martin petitions for  review of a decision of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission authorizing the construction of a new pipeline that  would traverse part of Mr. Martin's property.  Despite Mr.  Martin's failure to designate the correct order in his petition  for review, we hold that we have jurisdiction to review the  Certificate Order.  Because the Commission's decision was  not arbitrary and capricious, we deny the petition.

I. Background

2
In 1997 the Commission authorized the Portland Natural  Gas Transmission System to construct a pipeline nearly one  mile of which would use an existing right-of-way through Mr.  Martin's farm in North Stratford, New Hampshire.  Portland  Natural Gas Transmission Sys., 80 FERC p 61,345 (1997)  (the "Certificate Order").  The farm was established by an  ancestor of Mr. Martin's in the early 1830s and the farmhouse  and surrounding 112-acre tract are characteristic of early  19th century building and farming patterns.  Mr. Martin has  improved the farm but maintained its historic character and  function.  The property was listed in the National Register of  Historic Places one year after the Commission authorized  Portland to construct the pipeline.


3
Before the Commission, Mr. Martin challenged the plan to  build the pipeline across his property upon various environmental grounds, alleging that the pipeline would damage the  open fields and other scenic and natural resources on his  property and endanger the historic farmhouse.  Mr. Martin  suggested an alternative route for the pipeline, but the Commission rejected that route in favor of the Portland plan to  use the existing right-of-way.  Mr. Martin requested rehearing but the Commission denied his application.  Portland  Natural Gas Transmission System, 83 FERC p 61,080 (1998)  (the "Rehearing Order").

II. Analysis

4
Although Mr. Martin seeks to challenge the Commission's  Certificate Order, his petition for review mentions only the  Rehearing Order.  Before we reach the merits of Mr. Martin's argument, therefore, we must determine whether we  have jurisdiction to hear his claim.

A. Jurisdiction

5
After the Commission denied Mr. Martin's request for  rehearing, he filed a petition for review and a motion for stay  of construction.  In the petition, Mr. Martin sought review of  the Commission's Rehearing Order, in which the Commission  had denied his request that the agency reconsider its decision  to grant the certificate to Portland.  It is clear from Mr.  Martin's briefs before this court, however, that what he really  wants is review of the Certificate Order, which is the order  actually authorizing Portland to construct the pipeline across  his property.


6
Under 15 U.S.C.  717r(b):  "Any party ... aggrieved by  an order issued by the Commission ... may obtain a review  of such order in the court of appeals ... by filing ... a  written petition praying that the order ... be modified or set  aside...."  Mr. Martin is aggrieved by the Certificate Order,  not the Rehearing Order, which simply denied rehearing. Indeed, an order denying rehearing is unreviewable except  insofar as the request for rehearing was based upon new  evidence or changed circumstances.  See ICC v. Brotherhood  of Locomotive Engineers, 482 U.S. 270, 278-80 (1987).


7
The Commission argues that, because Mr. Martin failed to  designate the Certificate Order in his petition for review, this  court lacks jurisdiction to review that Order.  According to  the Commission, the two orders do not "merge" such that an appeal of the Rehearing Order may be construed as an appeal  of the Certificate Order.  Cf. Conecuh-Monroe Community  Action Agency v. Bowen, 852 F.2d 581, 586 (D.C. Cir. 1988)  (noting that, where district court simultaneously denied preliminary injunction and entered judgment on underlying complaint, "the preliminary injunction question ... merged into  the final judgment").


8
In general, this court reviews only the order(s) designated  in the petition for review.  See Fed. R. App. P. 15(a) (1998)  ("petition must ... designate ... the order or part thereof to  be reviewed");  see also John D. Copanos & Sons, Inc. v.  FDA, 854 F.2d 510, 527 (D.C. Cir. 1988).*  The failure to  designate an order in the petition is not necessarily fatal to its  review, however.  As we said in Southwestern Bell Telephone  Co. v. FCC, a party may demonstrate its intention to appeal  from one order despite referring only to a different order in  its petition for review if the petitioner's intent " 'can be fairly  inferred' " from the petition or documents filed more or less  contemporaneously with it.  180 F.3d 307, 313 (D.C. Cir.  1999) (quoting Brookens v. White, 795 F.2d 178, 180 (D.C. Cir.  1986)).


9
In Southwestern Bell, the FCC had denied a local exchange  carrier's petition for rehearing of an Investigation Order in  which the agency had found that the carrier had underestimated its future tariff requirements.  See id. at 309-10.Southwestern Bell then petitioned this court for review, citing  only the Reconsideration Order.  See id.  Upon examination  of Southwestern Bell's petition for review and its subsequent  filings, we found that "nothing prior to the brief filed in this  court ... gave the Commission any notice of Southwestern  Bell's intent to seek review of the Investigation Order."  Id. at 313.  The petition designated for review only the Reconsideration Order and only that order was appended to the  petition;  likewise, the docketing statement named only the  Reconsideration Order and only that order was attached to it; and the preliminary statement of issues focused upon Southwestern Bell's petition for review of the Reconsideration  Order.  See id.


10
Like the petitioner in Southwestern Bell, Mr. Martin designated in his petition for review only the order denying  rehearing, but unlike the earlier petitioner, he made his  intent to seek review of the underlying order fairly inferable  from his contemporaneous filings.  On the same day that Mr.  Martin filed his petition for review, he filed a motion to stay  the construction of a portion of the pipeline pending review of  his petition.  The motion for stay bespeaks in two ways Mr.  Martin's intent to seek review of the Certificate Order.


11
First, by attaching to the motion a copy of his application  to the Commission for rehearing, in which he cites and  discusses the Certificate Order, Mr. Martin identified the  order from which his dispute with the Commission arose. Second, the nature of the motion for stay itself sufficed to  indicate Mr. Martin's purpose in filing his petition for review.  He sought a stay in order to prevent the irreparable harm to  his property that allegedly would attend the construction of  the pipeline.  Because Portland clearly derived its authority  to construct the pipeline from the Certificate Order, Mr.  Martin's motion for stay was necessarily directed to that  order.  And if Mr. Martin sought to stay enforcement of the  Certificate Order, then he must also have meant to seek  review of the Certificate Order, not the Rehearing Order.  Cf.  Foman v. Davis, 371 U.S. 178, 181 (1962) (holding that where  petitioner submitted two notices of appeal, one that was  premature and one that failed to specify judgment from which  appeal was being taken, "Court of Appeals should have  treated the [second] ... as an effective, although inept,  attempt to appeal from the judgment sought to be vacated. Taking the two notices and the appeal papers together, petitioner's intention ... was manifest").  Moreover, Mr.  Martin's filings subsequent to the petition for review, including the docketing statement and the certificate as to rulings  under review, indicated that he was challenging the Certificate Order as well as the Rehearing Order.


12
Nor does the Commission claim to suffer any prejudice  from our review of the Certificate Order despite Mr. Martin's  failure to designate it in his petition for review.  Although an  agency is under no obligation to determine whether a party  that petitions for review of an unreviewable order meant to  specify a different order, see Southwestern Bell, 180 F.3d at  314, here the Commission's filings in response to Mr. Martin's  petition for review and motion for stay indicate that the  agency was aware from the outset that Mr. Martin meant to  seek review of the Certificate Order.


13
The Commission's opposition to Mr. Martin's motion for  stay lists the Certificate Order as one of several orders  "relevant to this proceeding."  In moving to transfer Mr.  Martin's case from the First Circuit to this circuit, the  Commission invoked the authority of 28 U.S.C.  2112(a)(1):"If proceedings are instituted in two or more courts of  appeals with respect to the same order ... the agency ...  shall file the record in the court in which proceedings with  respect to the order were first instituted."  The Commission  expressly argued that the First Circuit should transfer Mr.  Martin's case to this circuit because another party had filed a  petition for review of the Preliminary Order and the Certificate Order in this circuit before Mr. Martin had filed his  petition for review.  That the Commission understood Mr.  Martin's petition for review to encompass the Certificate  Order, therefore, is apparent;  indeed, its argument for transfer of the case depended upon it.


14
In sum, despite Mr. Martin's failure to refer to the Certificate Order in his petition for review, his accompanying motion for stay provided the Commission with notice of his  intent to seek review of the Certificate Order.  Accordingly,  we have jurisdiction to consider Mr. Martin's claim.

B.The Merits

15
Mr. Martin challenges the Certificate Order as arbitrary  and capricious on the grounds that the Commission failed to  comply with regulations promulgated under the National  Environmental Protection Act and the National Gas Act in  order to protect scenic and historic places.  Under the regulations implementing the NEPA, the agency was required to  prepare an Environmental Impact Statement in which it  discussed any inconsistency between the proposed project  and a state or local environmental plan or law.  40 C.F.R.   1506.2(d).  Mr. Martin complains that the Commission  failed to discuss the consistency of Portland's proposed pipeline with a "river corridor management plan" adopted by the  State of New Hampshire.  The Commission points out, dispositively, that no inconsistency with any state or local plans  was raised before it, and that the cited regulation does not  require it affirmatively to address consistency with such  plans.


16
The NGA regulation governing placement of pipeline  rights-of-way provides:


17
Where practical, rights-of-way should avoid ... placeslisted in the National Register of Historic Places....  Ifrights-of-way must be routed through such historicplaces ... they should be located in areas or placed in amanner so as to be least visible from areas of public viewand so far as possible in a manner designed to preservethe character of the area.18 C.F.R.  2.69(a)(1)(ii).  Mr. Martin claims that because a  portion of his land lies within a state-designated "river corridor" and because the State had certified his entire property  as "historic" before the Commission prepared its Final Environmental Impact Statement, the agency should have addressed in the certification proceedings whether the regulations required an adjustment to take the proposed pipeline  route around Mr. Martin's property.  Mr. Martin proposed  such an adjustment to the Commission.


18
The Commission considered the "visual impact" of the  proposed pipeline on historic properties such as Mr. Martin's,  as well as the practicality of the alternative route Mr. Martin  proposed.  The Commission rejected the alternative route  because it would have required Portland to develop a new  right-of-way, in contravention of 18 C.F.R.  2.69(a)(1)(i),  which states that "[i]n locating proposed facilities, consideration should be given to the utilization, enlargement or extension of existing rights-of-way."  We cannot fault the Commission for approving Portland's use of the existing right-of-way  through Mr. Martin's property rather than requiring the  pipeline company to develop a new route through previously  undisturbed properties.


19
The Commission also notes that, New Hampshire's designation notwithstanding, Mr. Martin's property was not listed  on the National Register of Historic Places at the time of the  proceedings, nor even as of his request for rehearing, and  that he therefore did not raise before the agency any claim  related to listing on the National Register.  The record of the  certification proceeding bears out the Commission's point. Therefore, the agency's decision was in no respect arbitrary  and capricious.

III. Conclusion

20
For the foregoing reasons, we have jurisdiction to review  the Certificate Order, and the petition for review is


21
Denied.



Notes:


*
 Effective December 1, 1998, Fed. R. App. P. 15(a) was amended  (in style but not in substance) to require that a petitioner "specify"  rather than "designate" the order or part thereof to be reviewed. Because Mr. Martin filed his petition prior to the amendment, we  refer to the earlier version of the Rule in this opinion.


