BILL NUMBER: SB 107	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  JULY 13, 2005
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  JUNE 21, 2005
	AMENDED IN SENATE  MAY 4, 2005
	AMENDED IN SENATE  APRIL 19, 2005

INTRODUCED BY   Senators Simitian and Perata
    (   Principal coauthor:   Assembly Member
 Levine   ) 
    (   Coauthor:   Assembly Member  
Blakeslee   ) 

                        JANUARY 20, 2005

   An act to amend Sections 25740, 25741, 25743, and 25744 of,
 to add and repeal Section 25305.1 of,  and to
repeal Sections 25745 and 25749 of, the Public Resources Code, and to
amend Sections 387, 399.11, 399.12, 399.13, 399.14, and 399.15 of,
 to add Section 399.17 to,  and to add Article 9
(commencing with Section 635) to Chapter 3 of Part 1 of Division 1
of,  and to repeal Section 399.16 of,  the Public Utilities
Code, relating to energy.



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 107, as amended, Simitian  Renewable energy.
   (1) Existing law expresses the intent of the Legislature, in
establishing the Renewable Energy Resources Program, to increase the
amount of renewable electricity generated per year, so that it equals
at least 17% of the total electricity generated for consumption in
California per year by 2006.
   This bill would revise and recast that intent language so that the
amount of electricity generated per year from eligible renewable
energy resources is increased to an amount that equals at least 20%
of the total electricity sold to retail customers in California per
year by December 31, 2010. The bill would make conforming changes
related to this provision.
   (2) The Public Utilities Act imposes various duties and
responsibilities on the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC)
with respect to the purchase of electricity and requires the CPUC to
review and adopt a procurement plan and a renewable energy
procurement plan for each electrical corporation pursuant to the
California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program. The program
requires that a retail seller of electricity, including electrical
corporations, community choice aggregators, and electric service
providers, but not including local publicly owned electric utilities,
purchase a specified minimum percentage of electricity generated by
eligible renewable energy resources, as defined, in any given year as
a specified percentage of total kilowatthours sold to retail end-use
customers each calendar year (renewables portfolio standard). The
renewables portfolio standard requires each electrical corporation to
increase its total procurement of eligible renewable energy
resources by at least an additional 1% of retail sales per year so
that 20% of its retail sales are procured from eligible renewable
energy resources no later than December 31, 2017.
   This bill would instead require that each retail seller, as
defined, increase its total procurement of eligible renewable energy
resources by at least an additional 1% of retail sales per year so
that 20% of its retail sales are procured from eligible renewable
energy resources no later than December 31, 2010.
   (3) Existing law requires the State Energy Resources Conservation
and Development Commission (Energy Commission) to certify eligible
renewable energy resources, to design and implement an accounting
system to verify compliance with the renewables portfolio standard by
retail sellers, and to allocate and award supplemental energy
payments to cover above-market costs of renewable energy.
   This bill would require the Energy Commission to develop tracking,
accounting, verification, and enforcement mechanisms for renewable
energy credits, as defined.  The   bill would  
specify that facilities located out of state shall not be eligible
for supplemental energy payments unless certain requirements are met.
 The bill would require that deliveries of electricity from an
eligible renewable energy resource under any electricity purchase
contract with a retail seller executed before January 1, 
2003   2002  , be tracked and included in the
baseline quantity of eligible renewable energy resources of the
purchasing retail seller. The bill would require that electricity
generated pursuant to a prescribed federal act and pursuant to a
 purchased   purchase  contract executed on
or after January 1,  2003   2002  , count
towards the renewables portfolio standard requirements of the retail
seller. The bill would provide for the tracking of deliveries under
these purchase contracts through a prescribed accounting system.
 The bill would require the Energy Commission to certify, and
would specify criteria for, the eligibility of electricity delivered
to a local publicly owned electric utility by an eligible renewable
energy resource, for purposes of compliance with the renewables
portfolio standard by a retail seller.  The bill would make
other technical and conforming changes.
   (4) Existing law  requires the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission to prepare an integrated
energy policy report every 2 years. Existing law requires the report
to contain an overview of major energy trends and issues facing the
state, including, but not limited to, supply, demand, pricing,
reliability, efficiency, and impacts on public health and safety, the
economy, resources, and the environment.   permits the
Energy Commission to consider an electric generating facility that is
located outside the state to be an eligible renewable energy
resource if it meets specific criteria   . 
   This bill would  require the Energy Commission to include
in the integrated energy policy report to be adopted November 1,
2007, an assessment of the feasibility of increasing the target for
the amount of electricity to be procured from eligible renewable
energy resources to 33% by the year 2020, and to recommend how to
induce local publicly owned electric utilities to implement and
enforce a renewables portfolio standard utilizing eligible renewable
energy resources   delete that provision .
   (5) Under existing law, the governing board of a local publicly
owned electric utility is responsible for implementing and enforcing
a renewables portfolio standard that recognizes the intent of the
Legislature to encourage renewable energy resources, while taking
into consideration the effect of the standard on rates, reliability,
and financial resources and the goal of environmental improvement.
Existing law requires the governing board of a local publicly owned
electric utility to annually report certain information relative to
renewable energy resources to its customers.
   This bill would additionally require that the governing board of a
local publicly owned electric utility annually report the utility's
status in implementing a renewables portfolio standard and progress
toward attaining the standard to its customers and to report to the
Energy Commission the information that the governing board is
required to annually report to their customers. These additional
reporting requirements would thereby impose a state-mandated local
program.
   (6) Under the Public Utilities Act, the CPUC requires electrical
corporations to identify a separate rate component to fund programs
that enhance system reliability and provide in-state benefits. This
rate component is a nonbypassable element of local distribution and
collected on the basis of usage. The funds are collected to support
cost-effective energy efficiency and conservation activities, public
interest research and development not adequately provided by
competitive and regulated markets, and renewable energy resources
(renewable energy public goods charge).  Under existing law, 51.5% of
the money collected as part of the renewable energy public goods
charge is required to be used for programs designed to foster the
development of new in-state renewable electricity generation
facilities, and to secure for the state the environmental, economic,
and reliability benefits that operation of those facilities will
provide. Existing law also provides that any of those funds used for
new in-state renewable electricity generation facilities are required
to be expended in accordance with a specified report of the Energy
Commission to the Legislature, subject to certain requirements,
including the awarding of supplemental energy payments.
   This bill would require that these funds be awarded only to a
project that is selected by an electrical corporation pursuant to a
competitive solicitation procedure found by the CPUC to comply with
the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program and that the
project participant has entered into an electricity purchase
agreement resulting from that solicitation that is approved by the
CPUC. The bill would authorize certain projects supplying electricity
to retail sellers, as defined, to the extent the retail seller is
servicing load that is within the distribution area of an electrical
corporation and subject to the renewable energy public goods charge,
to receive supplemental energy payments under certain circumstances.
The bill would prohibit the Energy Commission from awarding
supplemental energy payments for the sale or purchase of renewable
energy credits or to service load that is not subject to the
renewable energy public goods charge. The bill would revise existing
criteria for Energy Commission consideration of an out-of-state
electrical generation facility as an eligible renewable energy
resource.
   (7) Existing law requires that 17.5% of the money collected under
the renewable energy public goods charge be used for a multiyear,
consumer-based program to foster the development of emerging
renewable technologies in distributed generation applications, and
that certain funds be expended in accordance with the above-described
report, subject to, among other things, the requirement that funding
for emerging technologies be provided through a competitive,
market-based process.
   This bill would make technical and nonsubstantive changes to these
provisions.
   (8) Existing law requires that 10% of the money collected under
the renewable energy public goods charge be used for 
customer  credits to customers that entered into a direct
transaction on or before September 20, 2001, for purchases of
electricity produced by registered in-state renewable electricity
generating facilities.
   This bill would delete this provision.
   (9) Existing law requires the use of standard terms and conditions
by all electrical corporations in contracting for eligible renewable
energy resources.
   This bill would require that those terms and conditions include
the requirement that, no later than 6 months after the CPUC's
approval of an electricity purchase agreement, the following
information about the agreement be disclosed by the CPUC: party
names, resource type, project location, and project capacity.

   (10) The existing Public Utilities Act prohibits any electrical
corporation from beginning the construction of, among other things, a
line, plant, or system, or of any extension thereof, without having
first obtained from the CPUC a certificate that the present or future
public convenience and necessity require or will require that
construction (certificate of public convenience and necessity). The
act requires that the CPUC consider certain factors in determining
whether to issue a certificate of public convenience and necessity.
Existing law provides that, if the CPUC finds that new transmission
facilities are necessary to facilitate achievement of the renewable
power goals established under the renewables portfolio standard, the
CPUC is required to deem the new transmission facilities necessary to
the provision of electric service in acting upon an application by
an electrical corporation for a certificate of public convenience and
necessity.  
   This bill would provide that if the CPUC finds that new
transmission facilities, including certain facilities that Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission precedent would define as generation-tie
facilities, due to certain factors, will facilitate achievement of
the renewable power goals established in the renewables portfolio
standard, the CPUC is required to deem the new transmission
facilities necessary to the provision of electric service in acting
upon an application by an electrical corporation for a certificate of
public convenience and necessity.  
   (11) 
    (10)    This bill would require an electrical
corporation or local publicly owned electric utility to adopt certain
strategies in a long-term plan or a procurement plan, as applicable,
to achieve efficiency in the use of fossil fuels and to address
carbon emissions, as specified. 
   (12) 
    (11)    This bill would delete certain obsolete
and duplicative provisions and make technical and conforming
changes. 
   (13) 
    (12)    Existing law makes a violation of the
Public Utilities Act or a violation of an order of the CPUC a crime.

   Certain of the provisions of this bill are a part of the act and
an order of the CPUC would be required to implement these provisions.
Because a violation of the provisions of the bill that are part of
the act or of any CPUC order implementing these provisions would be a
crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program by
creating new crimes. 
   (14) 
    (13)    The California Constitution requires
the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for
certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish
procedures for making that reimbursement.
   This bill would provide that with regard to certain mandates no
reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
   With regard to any other mandates, this bill would provide that,
if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains
costs so mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall
be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: yes.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  
  SECTION 1.  Section 25305.1 is added to the Public Resources Code,
to read:
   25305.1.  (a) In addition to the assessments required by Section
25305, the public interest energy strategies portion of the
integrated energy policy report to be adopted November 1, 2007, shall
include the following additional assessments:
   (1) A review of the feasibility of increasing the target for
electricity to be procured from eligible renewable energy resources,
as defined in Section 399.12 of the Public Utilities Code, to 33
percent by the year 2020. The review shall consider and report on all
of the following:
   (A) The deliverability of electricity from eligible renewable
energy resources to end users and any needed additions or upgrades to
the transmission grid system.
   (B) The potential impacts upon the rates of electrical
corporations and whether or not a renewable energy public goods
charge is necessary to fund the above-market costs of electricity
generated from eligible renewable energy resources.
   (C) The progress made by electrical corporations and all other
retail sellers, as defined in Section 399.12 of the Public Utilities
Code, and local publicly owned electric utilities, as defined in
Section 9604 of the Public Utilities Code, toward meeting the goal of
procuring from eligible renewable energy resources 20 percent of the
electricity sold to retail customers per year by December 31, 2010.

   (2) Recommendations for how to induce each local publicly owned
electric utility, as defined in Section 9604 of the Public Utilities
Code, to implement and enforce a renewables portfolio standard
meeting the requirements of Article 16 (commencing with Section
399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public
Utilities Code, utilizing eligible renewable energy resources, as
defined in Section 399.12 of the Public Utilities Code.
   (b) The commission shall use existing resources to comply with
this section.
   (c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
2008, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2008, deletes or extends
that date. 
   SEC. 2.   SECTION 1.   Section 25740 of
the Public Resources Code is amended to read:
   25740.  It is the intent of the Legislature in establishing this
program, to increase the amount of electricity generated from
eligible renewable energy resources per year, so that it equals at
least 20 percent of total retail sales of electricity in California
per year by December 31, 2010.
   SEC. 3.   SEC. 2.   Section 25741 of the
Public Resources Code is amended to read:
   25741.  As used in this chapter, the following terms have the
following meaning:
   (a) "In-state renewable electricity generation facility" means a
facility that meets all of the following criteria:
   (1) The facility uses biomass, solar thermal, photovoltaic, wind,
geothermal, fuel cells using renewable fuels, small hydroelectric
generation of 30 megawatts or less, digester gas, municipal solid
waste conversion, landfill gas, ocean wave, ocean thermal, or tidal
current, and any additions or enhancements to the facility using that
technology.
   (2) The facility satisfies either of the following requirements:
   (A) The facility is located in the state or near the border of the
state with the first point of connection to the transmission network
within the Western Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC) service
territory located within this state and electricity produced by the
facility is delivered to an in-state location.
   (B) The facility has its first point of interconnection to the
transmission network outside the state and satisfies all of the
following requirements:
   (i) It is connected to the transmission network within the Western
Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC) service territory.
   (ii) It commences initial commercial operation after January 1,
2005.
   (iii) Electricity produced by the facility is delivered to an
in-state location.
   (iv) It will not cause or contribute to any violation of a
California environmental quality standard or requirement.
   (v) If the facility is outside of the United States, it is
developed and operated in a manner that is as protective of the
environment as a similar facility located in the state.
   (vi) It participates in the accounting system to verify compliance
with the renewables portfolio standard by retail sellers, once
established by the Energy Commission pursuant to subdivision (b) of
Section 399.13 of the Public Utilities Code.
   (3) For the purposes of this subdivision, "solid waste conversion"
means a technology that uses a noncombustion thermal process to
convert solid waste to a clean-burning fuel for the purpose of
generating electricity, and that meets all of the following criteria:

   (A) The technology does not use air or oxygen in the conversion
process, except ambient air to maintain temperature control.
   (B) The technology produces no discharges of air contaminants or
emissions, including greenhouse gases as defined in Section 42801.1
of the Health and Safety Code.
   (C) The technology produces no discharges to surface or
groundwaters of the state.
   (D) The technology produces no hazardous wastes.
   (E) To the maximum extent feasible, the technology removes all
recyclable materials and marketable green waste compostable materials
from the solid waste stream prior to the conversion process and the
owner or operator of the facility certifies that those materials will
be recycled or composted.
   (F) The facility at which the technology is used is in compliance
with all applicable laws, regulations, and ordinances.
   (G) The technology meets any other conditions established by the
commission.
   (H) The facility certifies that any local agency sending solid
waste to the facility diverted at least 30 percent of all solid waste
it collects through solid waste reduction, recycling, and
composting. For purposes of this paragraph "local agency" means any
city, county, or special district, or subdivision thereof, which is
authorized to provide solid waste handling services.
   (b) "Renewable energy public goods charge" means that portion of
the nonbypassable system benefits charge authorized to be collected
and to be transferred to the Renewable Resource Trust Fund pursuant
to the Reliable Electric Service Investments Act (Article 15
(commencing with Section 399) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1
of the Public Utilities Code).
   (c) "Report" means the report entitled "Investing in Renewable
Electricity Generation in California" (June 2001, Publication Number
P500-00-022) submitted to the Governor and the Legislature by the
commission.
   (d) "Retail seller" means a "retail seller" as defined in Section
399.12 of the Public Utilities Code.
   (e) "Delivered"  means the electrical output of an
in-state renewable electricity generation facility that serves retail
end-use customers located within the state. Subject to verification
pursuant to the accounting system established by the commission
pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 399.13 of the Public Utilities
Code, an in-state renewable electricity generation facility must
meet the following conditions:  
   (1) The electricity is either provided to a retail seller at an
in-state location or, if provided at a location adjacent to the
state, the electricity subsequently arrives at an in-state location.

    (2)     An in-state
location is one that is within the control area of the Independent
System Operator, the Imperial Irrigation District, the Sacramento
Municipal Utility District, the Turlock Irrigation District, the Los
Angeles Department of Water and Power, or any other control area
subsequently established within the state.   and
"delivery   " mean the electricity output of an in-state
renewable electric generation facility that is used to serve end-use
retail customers located within the state. Subject to verification by
the accounting system established by the commission pursuant to
subdivision (b) of Section 399.13 of the Public Utilities Code,
electricity shall be deemed delivered if   it is either
provided at a location within the state, or, if provided at a
location adjacent to the state, the electricity is subsequently
metered and settled at a location within the state. 
   SEC. 4.   SEC. 3.   Section 25743 of the
Public Resources Code is amended to read:
   25743.  (a) Fifty-one and one-half percent of the money collected
pursuant to the renewable energy public goods charge shall be used
for programs designed to foster the development of new in-state
renewable electricity generation facilities, and to secure for the
state the environmental, economic, and reliability benefits that
operation of those facilities will provide.
   (b) Any funds used for new in-state renewable electricity
generation facilities pursuant to this section shall be expended in
accordance with the report, subject to all of the following
requirements:
   (1) In order to cover the above market costs of eligible renewable
energy resources as approved by the Public Utilities Commission and
selected by retail sellers to fulfill their obligations under Article
16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of
Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, the commission shall award
funds in the form of supplemental energy payments, subject to the
following criteria:
   (A) The commission may establish caps on supplemental energy
payments. The caps shall be designed to provide for a viable energy
market capable of achieving the goals of Article 16 (commencing with
Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public
Utilities Code. The commission may waive application of the caps to
accommodate a facility if it is demonstrated to the satisfaction of
the commission that operation of the facility would provide
substantial economic and environmental benefits to end-use customers
subject to the renewable energy public goods charge.
   (B) Supplemental energy payments shall be awarded only to
facilities that are eligible for funding under this section.
   (C) Supplemental energy payments awarded to facilities selected by
an electrical corporation pursuant to Article 16 (commencing with
Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public
Utilities Code shall be paid for no longer than 10 years, but shall,
subject to the payment caps in subparagraph (A), be equal to the
cumulative above-market costs relative to the applicable market price
referent at the time of initial contracting, over the duration of
the contract with the electrical corporation.
   (D) The commission shall reduce or terminate supplemental energy
payments for projects that fail either to commence and maintain
operations consistent with the contractual obligations to an
electrical corporation, or that fail to meet eligibility
requirements.
   (E) Funds shall be managed in an equitable manner in order for
retail sellers to meet their obligation under Article 16 (commencing
with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the
Public Utilities Code.
   (F) A project selected by an electrical corporation may receive
supplemental energy payments only if it results from a competitive
solicitation that is found by the Public Utilities Commission to
comply with the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program
under Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of
Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, and the project
has entered into an electricity purchase agreement resulting from
that solicitation, that is approved by the Public Utilities
Commission.  An in-state renewable electricity generation
facility owned by an electrical corporation shall be eligible to
receive supplemental energy payments if selected by an electrical
corporation pursuant to a competitive solicitation process approved
by the Public Utilities Commission and operated on a cost-of-service
basis.  A project selected for an electricity purchase
agreement by another retail seller may receive supplemental energy
payments only if the retail seller demonstrates to the Public
Utilities Commission that the selection of the project is consistent
with the results of a least-cost and best-fit process, and the
supplemental energy payments are reasonable in comparison to those
paid under similar contracts with other retail sellers. The
commission may not award supplemental energy payments to service load
that is not subject to the renewable energy public goods charge.

   (2) A facility that is located outside of California shall not be
eligible for funding under this section unless it meets all of the
following requirements:  
   (A) It is located near the border of the state with its first
point of interconnection to the Western Electricity Coordinating
Council (WECC) transmission system located within the state. 

   (B) It is developed with guaranteed contracts to sell its
generation to end-use customers subject to the funding requirements
of Sections 381, 399.7, and 399.8, or to marketers that provide this
guarantee for resale of the generation, for a period of time at least
equal to the amount of time it receives incentive payments under
this subdivision.  
   (C) It will not cause or contribute to any violation of a state
environmental quality standard or requirement.  
   (D) If the facility is outside of the United States, it is
developed and operated in a manner that is as protective of the
environment as a similar facility located in the state.  
   (E) It meets any other condition established by the commission.
 
   (2) 
    (3)    Facilities that are eligible to receive
funding pursuant to this section shall be registered in accordance
with criteria developed by the commission and those facilities may
not receive payments for any electricity produced that has any of the
following characteristics:
   (A) Is sold under an existing long-term contract with an existing
in-state electrical corporation if the contract includes fixed energy
or capacity payments, except for that electricity that satisfies
subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 399.6
of the Public Utilities Code.
   (B) Is used onsite or is sold to customers in a manner that
excludes competition transition charge payments, or is otherwise
excluded from competition transition charge payments.
   (C) Is a hydroelectric generation project that will require a new
or increased appropriation of water under Part 2 (commencing with
Section 1200) of Division 2 of the Water Code.
   (D) Is a solid waste conversion facility, unless the facility
meets the criteria established in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of
Section 25741 and the facility certifies that any local agency
sending solid waste to the facility is in compliance with Division 30
(commencing with Section 40000), has reduced, recycled, or composted
solid waste to the maximum extent feasible, and shall have been
found by the California Integrated Waste Management Board to have
diverted at least 30 percent of all solid waste through source
reduction, recycling, and composting. 
   (3) 
    (4)    Eligibility to compete for funds or to
receive funds shall be contingent upon having to sell the electricity
generated by the renewable electricity generation facility to
customers subject to the renewable energy public goods charge.

   (4) 
    (5)    The commission may require applicants
competing for funding to post a forfeitable bid bond or other
financial guaranty as an assurance of the applicant's intent to move
forward expeditiously with the project proposed. The amount of any
bid bond or financial guaranty may not exceed 10 percent of the total
amount of the funding requested by the applicant. 
   (5) 
    (6)    In awarding funding, the commission may
provide preference to projects that provide tangible demonstrable
benefits to communities with a plurality of minority or low-income
populations.
   (c) Repowered existing facilities shall be eligible for funding
under this subdivision if the capital investment to repower the
existing facility equals at least 80 percent of the value of the
repowered facility.
   (d) Facilities engaging in the direct combustion of municipal
solid waste or tires are not eligible for funding under this
subdivision.
   (e) Production incentives awarded under this subdivision prior to
January 1, 2002, shall commence on the date that a project begins
electricity production, provided that the project was operational
prior to January 1, 2002, unless the commission finds that the
project will not be operational prior to January 1, 2002, due to
circumstances beyond the control of the developer. Upon making a
finding that the project will not be operational due to circumstances
beyond the control of the developer, the commission shall pay
production incentives over a five-year period, commencing on the date
of operation, provided that the date that a project begins
electricity production may not extend beyond January 1, 2007.
   (f) Facilities generating electricity from biomass energy shall be
considered an in-state renewable electricity generation facility to
the extent that they report to the commission the types and
quantities of biomass fuels used and certify to the satisfaction of
the commission that fuel utilization is limited to the following:
   (1) Agricultural crops and agricultural wastes and residues.
   (2) Solid waste materials such as waste pallets, crates, dunnage,
manufacturing, and construction wood wastes, landscape or
right-of-way tree trimmings, mill residues that are directly the
result of the milling of lumber, and rangeland maintenance residues.

   (3) Wood and wood wastes that meet all of the following
requirements:
   (A) Have been harvested pursuant to an approved timber harvest
plan prepared in accordance with the Z'berg-Nejedly Forest Practice
Act of 1973 (Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 4511) of Part 2 of
Division 4).
   (B) Have been harvested for the purpose of forest fire fuel
reduction or forest stand improvement.
   (C) Do not transport or cause the transportation of species known
to harbor insect or disease nests outside zones of infestation or
current quarantine zones, as identified by the Department of Food and
Agriculture or the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection,
unless approved by the Department of Food and Agriculture and the
Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
   SEC. 5.   SEC. 4.   Section 25744 of the
Public Resources Code is amended to read:
   25744.  (a) Seventeen and one-half percent of the money collected
pursuant to the renewable energy public goods charge shall be used
for a multiyear, consumer-based program to foster the development of
emerging renewable technologies in distributed generation
applications.
   (b) Any funds used for emerging technologies pursuant to this
section shall be expended in accordance with the report, subject to
all of the following requirements:
   (1) Funding for emerging technologies shall be provided through a
competitive, market-based process that is in place for a period of
not less than five years, and is structured to allow eligible
emerging technology manufacturers and suppliers to anticipate and
plan for increased sale and installation volumes over the life of the
program.
   (2) The program shall provide monetary rebates, buydowns, or
equivalent incentives, subject to paragraph (3), to purchasers,
lessees, lessors, or sellers of eligible electricity generating
systems. Incentives shall benefit the end-use consumer of renewable
generation by directly and exclusively reducing the purchase or lease
cost of the eligible system, or the cost of electricity produced by
the eligible system. Incentives shall be issued on the basis of the
rated electrical generating capacity of the system measured in watts,
or the amount of electricity production of the system, measured in
kilowatthours. Incentives shall be limited to a maximum percentage of
the system price, as determined by the commission.
   (3) Eligible distributed emerging technologies are photovoltaic,
solar thermal electric, fuel cell technologies that utilize renewable
fuels, and wind turbines of not more than 50 kilowatts rated
electrical generating capacity per customer site, and other
distributed renewable emerging technologies that meet the emerging
technology eligibility criteria established by the commission.
Eligible electricity generating systems are intended primarily to
offset part or all of the consumer's own electricity demand, and
shall not be owned by local publicly owned electric utilities, nor be
located at a customer site that is not receiving distribution
service from an electrical corporation that is subject to the
renewable energy public goods charge and contributing funds to
support programs under this chapter. All eligible electricity
generating system components shall be new and unused, shall not have
been previously placed in service in any other location or for any
other application, and shall have a warranty of not less than five
years to protect against defects and undue degradation of electrical
generation output. Systems and their fuel resources shall be located
on the same premises of the end-use consumer where the consumer's own
electricity demand is located, and all eligible electricity
generating systems shall be connected to the utility grid in
California. The commission may require eligible electricity
generating systems to have meters in place to monitor and measure a
system's performance and generation. Only systems that will be
operated in compliance with applicable law and the rules of the
Public Utilities Commission shall be eligible for funding.
   (4) The commission shall limit the amount of funds available for
any system or project of multiple systems and reduce the level of
funding for any system or project of multiple systems that has
received, or may be eligible to receive, any government or utility
funds, incentives, or credit.
   (5) In awarding funding, the commission may provide preference to
systems that provide tangible demonstrable benefits to communities
with a plurality of minority or low-income populations.
   (6) In awarding funding, the commission shall develop and
implement eligibility criteria and a system that provides preference
to systems based upon system performance, taking into account
factors, including shading, insulation levels, and installation
orientation.
   (7) At least once annually, the commission shall publish and make
available to the public the balance of funds available for emerging
renewable energy resources for rebates, buydowns, and other
incentives for the purchase of these resources.
   (c) Notwithstanding Section 399.6 of the Public Utilities Code,
the commission may expend, until December 31, 2008, up to sixty
million dollars ($60,000,000) of the funding allocated to the
Renewable Resources Trust Fund for the program established in this
section, subject to the repayment requirements of subdivision (f) of
Section 25751.
   SEC. 6.   SEC. 5.   Section 25745 of the
Public Resources Code is repealed.
   SEC. 7.   SEC. 6.   Section 25749 of the
Public Resources Code is repealed.
   SEC. 8.   SEC. 7.   Section 387 of the
Public Utilities Code is amended to read:
   387.  (a) Each governing body of a local publicly owned electric
utility, as defined in Section 9604, shall be responsible for
implementing and enforcing a renewables portfolio standard that
recognizes the intent of the Legislature to encourage renewable
resources, while taking into consideration the effect of the standard
on rates, reliability, and financial resources and the goal of
environmental improvement.
   (b) Each local publicly owned electric utility shall report, on an
annual basis, to its customers and to the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission, the following:
   (1) Expenditures of public goods funds collected pursuant to
Section 385 for eligible renewable energy resource development.
Reports shall contain a description of programs, expenditures, and
expected or actual results.
   (2) The resource mix used to serve its customers by fuel type.
Reports shall contain the contribution of each type of eligible
renewable energy resource with separate categories for those fuels
considered eligible renewable energy resources as defined in Section
399.12.
   (3) The utility's status in implementing a renewables portfolio
standard pursuant to subdivision (a) and the utility's progress
toward attaining the standard following implementation.
   SEC. 9.   SEC. 8   Section 399.11 of the
Public Utilities Code is amended to read:
   399.11.  The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:

   (a) In order to attain a target of generating 20 percent of total
retail sales of electricity in California from eligible renewable
energy resources by December 31, 2010, and for the purposes of
increasing the diversity, reliability, public health and
environmental benefits of the energy mix, it is the intent of the
Legislature that the commission and the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission implement the California
Renewables Portfolio Standard Program described in this article.
   (b) Increasing California's reliance on eligible renewable energy
resources may promote stable electricity prices, protect public
health, improve environmental quality, stimulate sustainable economic
development, create new employment opportunities, and reduce
reliance on imported fuels.
   (c) The development of eligible renewable energy resources and the
delivery of the electricity generated by those resources to
customers in California may ameliorate air quality problems
throughout the state and improve public health by reducing the
burning of fossil fuels and the associated environmental impacts and
by reducing in-state fossil fuel
     consumption.
   (d) The California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program is
intended to complement the Renewable Energy Resources Program
administered by the State Energy Resources Conservation and
Development Commission and established pursuant to Chapter 8.6
(commencing with Section 25740) of Division 15 of the Public
Resources Code.
   (e) New and modified electric transmission facilities may be
necessary to facilitate the state achieving its renewables portfolio
standard targets.
   SEC. 10.   SEC. 9.   Section 399.12 of
the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:
   399.12.  For purposes of this article, the following terms have
the following meanings:
   (a)  "Deliver," "delivery," "delivered," and "deliveries,"
when used in reference to electricity, means the electrical output
of an in-state renewable electricity generation facility that
satisfies the following conditions:   
   (1) The electricity is either provided to a retail seller at an
in-state substation or, if provided to a retail seller at a location
adjacent to the state that directly connects to any in-state
substation, the electricity subsequently arrives at an in-state
substation.  
   (2) An in-state substation is located within the control area of
the Independent System Operator, the Imperial Irrigation District,
the Sacramento Municipal Utility District, or the Los Angeles
Department of Water and Power. 
    Fulfillment of the conditions in paragraphs (1) and (2)
shall be verified by the accounting system established by the
commission pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 399.13. 
 "Delivered" and "delivery" have the same meaning as provided in
subdivision   (e) of Section 25741 of the Public Resources
Code. 
   (b) "Eligible renewable energy resource" means an electric
generating facility that meets the definition of "in-state renewable
electricity generation facility" in Section 25741 of the Public
Resources Code, subject to the following limitations:
   (1) A geothermal generation facility originally commencing
operation prior to September 26, 1996, shall be eligible for purposes
of adjusting a retail seller's baseline quantity of eligible
renewable energy resources except for electricity certified as
incremental geothermal production by the Energy Commission, provided
that the incremental electricity was not sold to an electrical
corporation under contract entered into prior to September 26, 1996.
For each facility seeking certification, the Energy Commission shall
determine historical production trends and establish criteria for
measuring incremental geothermal production that recognizes the
declining geothermal output of existing steamfields and the
contribution of capital investments in the facility or wellfield.
This paragraph shall remain operative only until January 1, 2010.
   (2) (A) An existing small hydroelectric generation facility of 30
megawatts or less shall be eligible only if a retail seller owned or
procured the electricity from the facility as of December 31, 2003,
and that electricity shall be eligible only for purposes of adjusting
the retail seller's baseline quantity of eligible renewable energy
resources. A new hydroelectric facility is not an eligible renewable
energy resource if it will require a new or increased appropriation
or diversion of water under Part 2 (commencing with Section 1200) of
Division 2 of the Water Code.
   (B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), an existing conduit
hydroelectric facility, as defined by Section 823a of Title 16 of the
United States Code, of 30 megawatts or less, shall be eligible for
the purposes of adjusting a retail seller's baseline quantity of
eligible renewable energy resources. A new conduit hydroelectric
facility, as defined by Section 823a of Title 16 of the United States
Code, of 30 megawatts or less, shall be an eligible renewable energy
resource so long as it does not require a new or increased
appropriation or diversion of water under Part 2 (commencing with
Section 1200) of Division 2 of the Water Code.
   (3) A facility engaged in the combustion of municipal solid waste
shall not be considered an eligible renewable resource unless it is
located in Stanislaus County and was operational prior to September
26, 1996. Electricity generated by a facility meeting these
requirements shall be eligible only for the purpose of adjusting a
retail seller's baseline quantity of eligible renewable energy
resources.
   (4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), any geothermal electricity
included in the baseline of a retail seller from a facility under a
long-term contract executed before January 1, 2004, shall be eligible
to satisfy the annual procurement targets of any retail seller upon
the expiration of that contract. This paragraph shall become
inoperative on January 1, 2010, unless a later enacted statute
deletes or extends that date.
   (c) "Energy Commission" means the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission.
   (d) "Procure" means that a retail seller receives delivered
electricity generated by an eligible renewable energy resource that
it owns or for which it has entered into an electricity purchase
contract. Nothing in this article is intended to imply that the
purchase of electricity from third parties in a wholesale transaction
is the preferred method of fulfilling a retail seller's obligation
to comply with this article.
   (e) "Retail seller" means an entity engaged in the retail sale of
electricity to end-use customers located within the state , including
any of the following:
   (1) An electrical corporation, as defined in Section 218.
   (2) A community choice aggregator. The commission shall institute
a rulemaking to determine the manner in which a community choice
aggregator will participate in the renewables portfolio standard
program subject to the same terms and conditions applicable to an
electrical corporation.
   (3) An electric service provider, as defined in Section 218.3,
subject to the following conditions:
   (A) An electric service provider shall be considered a retail
seller under this article for sales to any customer acquiring service
after January 1, 2003.
   (B) An electric service provider shall be considered a retail
seller under this article for sales to all its customers beginning on
the earlier of January 1, 2006, or the date on which a contract
between an electric service provider and a retail customer expires.
Nothing in this subdivision may require an electric service provider
to disclose the terms of the contract to the commission.
   (C) The commission shall institute a rulemaking to determine the
manner in which electric service providers will participate in the
renewables portfolio standard program. The electric service provider
shall be subject to the same terms and conditions applicable to an
electrical corporation pursuant to this article. Nothing in this
paragraph shall impair a contract entered into between an electric
service provider and a retail customer prior to the suspension of
direct access by the commission pursuant to Section 80110 of the
Water Code.
   (4) "Retail seller" does not include any of the following:
   (A) A corporation or person employing cogeneration technology or
producing electricity consistent with subdivision (b) of Section 218.

   (B) The Department of Water Resources acting in its capacity
pursuant to Division 27 (commencing with Section 80000) of the Water
Code.
   (C) A local publicly owned electric utility as defined in Section
9604.
   (f) "Renewables portfolio standard" means the specified percentage
of electricity generated by eligible renewable energy resources that
a retail seller is required to procure pursuant to this article.
   (g) (1) "Renewable energy credit" means a certificate of proof,
issued through the accounting system established by the Energy
Commission pursuant to Section 399.13, that one unit of electricity
was generated by an eligible renewable energy resource.
   (2) "Renewable energy credit" includes all renewable and
environmental attributes associated with the production of
electricity from the eligible renewable energy resource, except for
an emissions reduction credit issued pursuant to Section 40709 of the
Health and Safety Code.
   (3) No electricity generated by an eligible renewable energy
resource attributable to the use of nonrenewable fuels, beyond a de
minimus quantity, as determined by the Energy Commission, shall
result in the creation of a renewable energy credit.
   (4) A renewable energy credit shall not be eligible to satisfy
annual procurement targets established pursuant to this article,
unless it is bundled  with electricity delivered to a retail
seller, the Independent System Operator, or to a local publicly owned
electric utility in compliance with subdivision (e) of Section
399.13.   delivered electricity. 
   SEC. 11.   SEC. 10.   Section 399.13 of
the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:
   399.13.  The Energy Commission shall do all of the following:
   (a) Certify eligible renewable energy resources that it determines
meet the criteria described in subdivision (a) of Section 399.12.
   (b) Design and implement an accounting system to verify compliance
with the renewables portfolio standard by retail sellers, to ensure
that electricity generated by an eligible renewable energy resource
is counted only once for the purpose of meeting the renewables
portfolio standard of this state or any other state, to certify
renewable energy credits produced by eligible renewable energy
resources, and to verify retail product claims in this state or any
other state. In establishing the guidelines governing this accounting
system, the Energy Commission shall collect data from electricity
market participants that it deems necessary to verify compliance of
retail sellers, in accordance with the requirements of this article
and the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with
Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code). In
seeking data from electrical corporations, the Energy Commission
shall request data from the commission. The commission shall collect
data from electrical corporations and remit the data to the Energy
Commission within 90 days of the request.
   (c) Establish a system for tracking and verifying renewable energy
credits that, through the use of independently audited data,
verifies the generation and delivery of electricity associated with
each renewable energy credit and protects against multiple counting
of the same renewable energy credit. The Energy Commission shall
consult with other western states and with the Western Electricity
Coordinating Council in the development of this system.
   (d) Allocate and award supplemental energy payments pursuant to
Chapter 8.6 (commencing with Section 25740) of Division 15 of the
Public Resources Code, to eligible renewable energy resources to
cover above-market costs of renewable energy. A project selected by
an electrical corporation may receive supplemental energy payments
only if it results from a competitive solicitation that is found by
the commission to comply with the California Renewables Portfolio
Standard Program under this article and the project has entered into
an electricity purchase agreement resulting from that solicitation
that is approved by the commission. A project selected for an
electricity purchase agreement by another retail seller may receive
supplemental energy payments only if the retail seller demonstrates
to the commission that the selection of the project is consistent
with the results of a least-cost and best-fit process, and that the
supplemental energy payments are reasonable in comparison to those
paid under similar contracts with other retail sellers. 
   (e) Certify, for purposes of compliance with the renewables
portfolio standard by a retail seller, the eligibility of deliveries
of electricity by an eligible renewable energy resource to a local
publicly owned electric utility if the Energy Commission determines
that the following conditions have been satisfied:  

   (1) The local publicly owned electric utility procuring the
electricity complies with the requirements of Section 387. 

   (2) The local publicly owned electric utility has established
annual procurement targets comparable to those applicable to an
electrical corporation and is procuring sufficient eligible renewable
energy resources to satisfy the targets.  
   (f) 
    (e)    Deliveries of electricity from an
eligible renewable energy resource under an electricity purchase
contract with a retail seller executed before January 1, 
2003   2002  , shall be tracked through the
accounting system described in subdivision (b) and included in the
baseline quantity of eligible renewable energy resources of the
purchasing retail seller pursuant to Section 399.15. 
   (g) 
    (f)    Deliveries of electricity from an
eligible renewable energy resource under an electricity purchase
contract with a retail seller executed after January 1,  2003
  2002  , pursuant to the federal Public Utility
Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (16 U.S.C. Sec. 2601 et seq.), shall
be tracked through the accounting system described in subdivision (b)
and count towards the renewables portfolio standard obligations of
the purchasing retail seller.
   SEC. 12.   SEC. 11.   Section 399.14 of
the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:
   399.14.  (a) (1) The commission shall direct each electrical
corporation to prepare a renewable energy procurement plan as
described in paragraph (3) to satisfy its obligations under the
renewables portfolio standard. To the extent feasible, this
procurement plan shall be proposed, reviewed, and adopted by the
commission as part of, and pursuant to, a general procurement plan
process. The commission shall require each electrical corporation to
review and update its renewable energy procurement plan as it
determines to be necessary.
   (2) The commission shall adopt, by rulemaking for all electrical
corporations, all of the following:
   (A) A process for determining market prices pursuant to
subdivision (c) of Section 399.15. The commission shall make specific
determinations of market prices after the closing date of a
competitive solicitation conducted by an electrical corporation for
eligible renewable energy resources. In order to ensure that the
market price established by the commission pursuant to subdivision
(c) of Section 399.15 does not influence the amount of a bid
submitted through the competitive solicitation in a manner that would
increase the amount ratepayers are obligated to pay for electricity
generated by eligible renewable energy resources, and in order to
ensure that the bid price does not influence the establishment of the
market price, the electrical corporation shall not transmit or share
the results of any competitive solicitation for eligible renewable
energy resources until the commission has established market prices
pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 399.15.
   (B) A process that provides criteria for the rank ordering and
selection of least-cost and best-fit eligible renewable energy
resources to comply with the annual California Renewables Portfolio
Standard Program obligations on a total cost basis. This process
shall consider estimates of indirect costs associated with needed
transmission investments and ongoing utility expenses resulting from
integrating and operating eligible renewable energy resources.
   (C) Flexible rules for compliance, including rules permitting
electrical corporations to apply excess procurement in one year to
subsequent years or inadequate procurement in one year to no more
than the following three years.
   (D) Standard terms and conditions to be used by all electrical
corporations in contracting for eligible renewable energy resources,
including performance requirements for renewable generators. A
contract for the purchase of electricity generated by an eligible
renewable energy resource shall, at a minimum, include the renewable
energy credits associated with all electricity generation specified
under the contract. The standard terms and conditions shall include
the requirement that, no later than six months after the commission's
approval of an electricity purchase agreement entered into pursuant
to this article, the following information about the agreement shall
be disclosed by the commission: party names, resource type, project
location, and project capacity.
   (3) Consistent with the goal of procuring the least-cost and
best-fit eligible renewable energy resources, the renewable energy
procurement plan submitted by an electrical corporation shall include
all of the following:
   (A) An assessment of annual or multiyear portfolio supplies and
demand to determine the optimal mix of eligible renewable energy
resources with deliverability characteristics that may include
peaking, dispatchable, baseload, firm, and as-available capacity.
   (B) Provisions for employing available compliance flexibility
mechanisms established by the commission.
   (C) A bid solicitation setting forth the need for eligible
renewable energy resources of each deliverability characteristic,
required online dates, and locational preferences, if any.
   (4) In soliciting and procuring eligible renewable energy
resources, each electrical corporation shall offer contracts of no
less than 10 years in duration, unless the commission approves of a
contract of shorter duration. Any bid solicitation or contract of
less than 10 years in duration shall be considered nonconforming.
   (5) In soliciting and procuring eligible renewable energy
resources, each electrical corporation may give preference to
projects that provide tangible demonstrable benefits to communities
with a plurality of minority or low-income populations.
   (b) The commission shall review and accept, modify, or reject each
electrical corporation's renewable energy procurement plan prior to
the commencement of renewable procurement pursuant to this article by
an electrical corporation.
   (c) The commission shall review the results of an eligible
renewable energy resources solicitation submitted for approval by an
electrical corporation and accept or reject proposed contracts with
eligible renewable energy resources based on consistency with the
approved renewable energy procurement plan. If the commission
determines that the bid prices are elevated due to a lack of
effective competition amongst the bidders, the commission shall
direct the electrical corporation to renegotiate the contracts or
conduct a new solicitation.
   (d) If an electrical corporation fails to comply with a commission
order adopting a renewable energy procurement plan, the commission
shall exercise its authority pursuant to Section 2113 to require
compliance. The commission shall enforce comparable penalties on any
other retail seller that fails to meet annual procurement targets
established pursuant to Section 399.15.
   (e) Upon application by a retail seller, the commission may
authorize a procurement entity to enter into contracts on behalf of
customers of the retail seller for deliveries of eligible renewable
energy resources to satisfy the annual renewables portfolio standard
obligations, subject to similar terms and conditions applicable to a
retail seller. If the rates of the procurement entity are regulated
by the commission, the commission shall allow the procurement entity
to recover reasonable costs through retail rates subject to review
and approval.
   (f) Procurement and administrative costs associated with long-term
contracts entered into by an electrical corporation for eligible
renewable energy resources pursuant to this article, at or below the
market price determined by the commission pursuant to subdivision (c)
of Section 399.15, shall be deemed reasonable per se, and shall be
recoverable in rates.
   (g) Construction, alteration, demolition, installation, and repair
work on an eligible renewable energy resource that receives
production incentives or supplemental energy payments pursuant to
Sections 25742 and 25743 of the Public Resources Code, including work
performed to qualify, receive, or maintain production incentives or
supplemental energy payments is "public works" for the purposes of
Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 1720) of Part 7 of Division 2 of
the Labor Code.
   SEC. 13.   SEC. 12.   Section 399.15 of
the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:
   399.15.  (a) In order to fulfill unmet long-term resource needs,
the commission shall establish a renewables portfolio standard
requiring all electrical corporations to procure a minimum quantity
of electricity generated by eligible renewable energy resources as a
specified percentage of total kilowatthours sold to their retail
end-use customers each calendar year, if sufficient funds are made
available pursuant to Section 399.6 and Chapter 8.6 (commencing with
Section 25740) of Division 15 of the Public Resources Code, to cover
the above-market costs of eligible renewable energy resources.
   (b) The commission shall implement annual procurement targets for
each retail seller as follows:
   (1) Beginning on January 1, 2003, each retail seller shall,
pursuant to subdivision (a), increase its total procurement of
eligible renewable energy resources by at least an additional 1
percent of retail sales per year so that 20 percent of its retail
sales are procured from eligible renewable energy resources no later
than December 31, 2010.   Achievement of these targets is
subject to the rules for flexible compliance adopted pursuant to
subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section
399.14. 
   (2) For purposes of setting annual procurement targets, the
commission shall establish an initial baseline for each retail seller
based on the actual percentage of retail sales procured from
eligible renewable energy resources in 2001, and, to the extent
applicable, adjusted going forward pursuant to subdivision (a) of
Section 399.12.
   (3) Only for purposes of establishing these targets, the
commission shall include all electricity sold to retail customers by
the Department of Water Resources pursuant to Section 80100 of the
Water Code in the calculation of retail sales by an electrical
corporation.
   (4) In the event that a retail seller fails to procure sufficient
eligible renewable energy resources in a given year to meet any
annual target established pursuant to this subdivision, the retail
seller shall procure additional eligible renewable energy resources
in subsequent years to compensate for the shortfall if sufficient
funds are made available pursuant to Section 399.6 and Chapter 8.6
(commencing with Section 25740) of Division 15 of the Public
Resources Code, to cover any above-market costs of eligible renewable
energy resources.
   (5) If supplemental energy payments from the Energy Commission, in
combination with the market prices approved by the commission, are
insufficient to cover any above-market costs of eligible renewable
energy resources, the commission shall allow a retail seller to limit
its annual procurement obligation to the quantity of eligible
renewable energy resources that can be procured with available
supplemental energy payments. A retail seller shall not be required
to enter into long-term contracts with operators of eligible
renewable energy resources that exceed the market prices established
pursuant to subdivision (c).
   (c) The commission shall establish a methodology to determine the
market price of electricity for terms corresponding to the length of
contracts with eligible renewable energy resources, in consideration
of the following:
   (1) The long-term market price of electricity for fixed price
contracts, determined pursuant to an electrical corporation's general
procurement activities as authorized by the commission.
   (2) The long-term ownership, operating, and fixed-price fuel costs
associated with fixed-price electricity from new generating
facilities.
   (3) The value of different products including baseload, peaking,
and as-available electricity.
   (d) The Energy Commission shall provide supplemental energy
payments from funds in the New Renewable Resources Account of the
Renewable Resource Trust Fund to eligible renewable energy resources
pursuant to Chapter 8.6 (commencing with Section 25740) of Division
15 of the Public Resources Code, consistent with this article, for
any above-market costs. Indirect costs associated with the purchase
of eligible renewable energy resources by an electrical corporation,
including imbalance energy charges, sale of excess energy, decreased
generation from existing resources, or transmission upgrades, shall
not be eligible for supplemental energy payments, but are recoverable
in rates, as authorized by the commission. The Energy Commission
shall not award supplemental energy payments to service load that is
not subject to the renewable energy public goods charge.
   (e) The establishment of a renewables portfolio standard shall not
constitute implementation by the commission of the federal Public
Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (Public Law 95-617).
   (f) The commission shall consult with the Energy Commission in
calculating market prices under subdivision (c) and establishing
other renewables portfolio standard policies.   
  SEC. 13.  Section 399.16 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.
 
   399.16   The Energy Commission may consider an electric generating
facility that is located outside the state to be an eligible
renewable energy resource if it meets the criteria described in
Section 399.12 and all of the following requirements:
   (a) It is located so that it is, or will be, connected to the
Western Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC) transmission system.

   (b) It is developed with guaranteed contracts to sell its
generation, and demonstrates delivery of energy, to a retail seller
or the Independent System Operator.
   (c) It participates in the accounting system to verify compliance
with the renewables portfolio standard by retail sellers, once
established by the Energy Commission pursuant to subdivision (b) of
Section 399.13.  
  SEC. 14.  Section 399.17 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to
read:
             399.17.  (a) Subject to the provisions of this section,
the requirements of this article apply to an electrical corporation
with 60,000 or fewer customer accounts in California that serves
retail end-use customers outside California.
   (b) For an electrical corporation with 60,000 or fewer customer
accounts in California that serves retail end-use customers outside
California, an eligible renewable energy resource includes a facility
that is located outside California, if the facility is connected to
the transmission network within the Western Electricity Coordinating
Council (WECC) service territory, provided all of the following
conditions are met:
   (1) The electricity generated by the facility is procured by the
electrical corporation on behalf of its California customers, and is
not used to fulfill renewable energy procurement requirements in
other states.
   (2) The electrical corporation participates in, and complies with,
the accounting system administered by the Energy Commission pursuant
to subdivision (b) of Section 399.13.
   (3) The Energy Commission verifies that the electricity generated
by the facility is eligible to meet the annual procurement targets of
this article.
   (c) The commission shall determine the annual procurement targets
for an electrical corporation with 60,000 or fewer customer accounts
in California that serves retail end-use customers outside
California, as a specified percentage of total kilowatthours sold by
the electrical corporation to its retail end-use customers in
California in a calendar year.
   (d) An electrical corporation with 60,000 or fewer customer
accounts in California that serves retail end-use customers outside
California, may use an integrated resource plan prepared in
compliance with the requirements of another state utility regulatory
commission, to fulfill the requirement to prepare a renewable energy
procurement plan pursuant to this article, provided the plan meets
the requirements of Sections 399.11, 399.12, 399.13, and 399.14, as
modified by this section.
   (e) Procurement and administrative costs associated with long-term
contracts entered into by an electrical corporation with 60,000 or
fewer customer accounts in California that serves retail end-use
customers outside California, for eligible renewable energy resources
pursuant to this article, at or below the market price determined by
the commission pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 399.15, shall
be deemed reasonable per se, and shall be recoverable in rates of the
electrical corporation's California customers, provided the costs
are not recoverable in rates in other states served by the electrical
corporation.  
  SEC. 15.  Section 399.25 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to
read:
   399.25.  (a) Notwithstanding any other provision in Sections 1001
to 1013, inclusive, an application of an electrical corporation for a
certificate authorizing the construction of new transmission
facilities, including high-voltage, bulk-transfer transmission
facilities that interconnect with areas of large concentrations of
potential eligible renewable energy resources that Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission precedent would define as generation-tie
facilities, shall be deemed to be necessary to the provision of
electric service for purposes of any determination made under Section
1003 if the commission finds that the new transmission facility, due
to the location, magnitude, and expected cost of eligible renewable
energy resource development, will facilitate achievement of the
renewable power goals established in this article.
   (b) With respect to a transmission facility described in
subdivision (a), the commission shall take all feasible actions to
ensure that the transmission rates established by the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission are fully reflected in any retail rates
established by the commission. These actions shall include, but are
not limited to:
   (1) Making findings, where supported by an evidentiary record,
that those transmission facilities provide benefit to the
transmission network and are necessary to facilitate the achievement
of the renewables portfolio standard established in Article 16
(commencing with Section 399.11).
   (2) Directing the utility to which the generator will be
interconnected, where the direction is not preempted by federal law,
to seek the recovery through general transmission rates of the costs
associated with the transmission facilities.
   (3) Asserting the positions described in paragraphs (1) and (2) to
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in appropriate proceedings.

   (4) Allowing recovery in retail rates of any increase in
transmission costs incurred by an electrical corporation resulting
from the construction of the transmission facilities that are not
approved for recovery in transmission rates by the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission after the commission determines that the costs
were prudently incurred in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section
454.  
   SEC. 16.   SEC. 14.   Article 9
(commencing with Section 635) is added to Chapter 3 of Part 1 of
Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:

      Article 9.  Long-Term Plans and Procurement Plans

   635.  In a long-term plan adopted by an electrical corporation or
in a procurement plan implemented by a local publicly owned electric
utility, the electrical corporation or local publicly owned electric
utility shall adopt a strategy applicable both to newly constructed
or repowered generation owned and procured by the electrical
corporation or local publicly owned electric utility to achieve
efficiency in the use of fossil fuels and to address carbon
emissions.
   SEC. 17.   SEC. 15   No reimbursement is
required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the
California Constitution for certain costs that may be incurred by a
local agency or school district because, in that regard, this act
creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction,
or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning
of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of
a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the
California Constitution.
   However, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that this
act contains other costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to
local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made
pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of
Title 2 of the Government Code.