AB 687, as introduced, Roger Hernández. Electricity.
The Public Utilities Act requires the Public Utilities Commission, pursuant to electrical restructuring, to authorize and facilitate direct transactions between electricity suppliers and retail end-use customers. However, other existing law suspends the right of retail end-use customers other than community choice aggregators, as defined, to acquire service from certain electricity suppliers, after a period of time to be determined by the commission, until the Department of Water Resources no longer supplies electricity under that law. The act requires the commission to allow individual retail nonresidential end-use customers to acquire electric service from other providers in each electrical corporation’s distribution service territory up to a specified maximum allowable total kilowatthours annual limit. The act requires the commission to undertake specified actions when authorizing additional direct transactions for retail nonresidential end-use customers.
This bill would additionally require the commission to provide the highest priority to acquire electric services from other providers to entities treating and remediating groundwater that a federal, state, or local agency identifies as contaminated on a site listed as a Superfund site by the United States Environmental Protection Agency when authorizing additional direct transactions for retail nonresidential end-use customers.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 365.1 of the Public Utilities Code is
2amended to read:
(a) Except as expressly authorized by this section, and
4subject to the limitations in subdivisions (b) and (c), the right of
5retail end-use customers pursuant to this chapter to acquire service
6from other providers is suspended until the Legislature, by statute,
7lifts the suspension or otherwise authorizes direct transactions. For
8purposes of this section, “other provider” means any person,
9corporation, or other entity that is authorized to provide electric
10service within the service territory of an electrical corporation
11pursuant to this chapter, and includes an aggregator, broker, or
12marketer, as defined in Section 331, and an electric service
13provider, as defined in Section 218.3. “Other provider” does not
14include a community choice aggregator, as defined in Section
15331.1, and the limitations in this section do not apply to
the sale
16of electricity by “other providers” to a community choice
17aggregator for resale to community choice aggregation electricity
18consumers pursuant to Section 366.2.
19(b) The commission shall allow individual retail nonresidential
20end-use customers to acquire electric service from other providers
21in each electrical corporation’s distribution service territory, up to
22a maximum allowable total kilowatthours annual limit. The
23maximum allowable annual limit shall be established by the
24commission for each electrical corporation at the maximum total
25kilowatthours supplied by all other providers to distribution
26customers of that electrical corporation during any sequential
2712-month period between April 1, 1998, and the effective date of
28this section. Within six months of the effective date of this section,
29or by July 1, 2010, whichever is sooner, the commission shall
30adopt and implement a reopening schedule that commences
31immediately and will phase
in the allowable amount of increased
32kilowatthours over a period of not less than three years, and not
33more than five years, raising the allowable limit of kilowatthours
P3 1supplied by other providers in each electrical corporation’s
2distribution service territory from the number of kilowatthours
3provided by other providers as of the effective date of this section,
4to the maximum allowable annual limit for that electrical
5corporation’s distribution service territory. The commission shall
6review and, if appropriate, modify its currently effective rules
7governing direct transactions, but that review shall not delay the
8start of the phase-in schedule.
9(c) Once the commission has authorized additional direct
10transactions pursuant to subdivision (b), it shall dobegin delete bothend deletebegin insert allend insert
of the
11following:
12(1) Ensure that other providers are subject to the same
13requirements that are applicable to the state’s three largest electrical
14corporations under any programs or rules adopted by the
15commission to implement the resource adequacy provisions of
16Section 380, the renewables portfolio standard provisions of Article
1716 (commencing with Section 399.11), and the requirements for
18the electricity sector adopted by the State Air Resources Board
19pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006
20(Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health
21and Safety Code). This requirement applies notwithstanding any
22prior decision of the commission to the contrary.
23(2) (A) Ensure that, in the event that the commission authorizes,
24in the situation of a contract with a third party, or orders, in the
25situation of utility-owned generation,
an electrical corporation to
26obtain generation resources that the commission determines are
27needed to meet system or local area reliability needs for the benefit
28of all customers in the electrical corporation’s distribution service
29territory, the net capacity costs of those generation resources are
30allocated on a fully nonbypassable basis consistent with departing
31load provisions as determined by the commission, to all of the
32following:
33(i) Bundled service customers of the electrical corporation.
34(ii) Customers that purchase electricity through a direct
35transaction with other providers.
36(iii) Customers of community choice aggregators.
37(B) If the commission authorizes or orders an electrical
38corporation to obtain generation resources pursuant to
subparagraph
39(A), the commission shall ensure that those resources meet a system
40or local reliability need in a manner that benefits all customers of
P4 1the electrical corporation. The commission shall allocate the costs
2of those generation resources to ratepayers in a manner that is fair
3and equitable to all customers, whether they receive electric service
4from the electrical corporation, a community choice aggregator,
5or an electric service provider.
6(C) The resource adequacy benefits of generation resources
7acquired by an electrical corporation pursuant to subparagraph (A)
8shall be allocated to all customers who pay their net capacity costs.
9Net capacity costs shall be determined by subtracting the energy
10and ancillary services value of the resource from the total costs
11paid by the electrical corporation pursuant to a contract with a
12third party or the annual revenue requirement for the resource if
13the electrical corporation directly owns the
resource. An energy
14auction shall not be required as a condition for applying this
15allocation, but may be allowed as a means to establish the energy
16and ancillary services value of the resource for purposes of
17determining the net costs of capacity to be recovered from
18customers pursuant to this paragraph, and the allocation of the net
19capacity costs of contracts with third parties shall be allowed for
20the terms of those contracts.
21(D) It is the intent of the Legislature, in enacting this paragraph,
22to provide additional guidance to the commission with respect to
23the implementation of subdivision (g) of Section 380, as well as
24to ensure that the customers to whom the net costs and benefits of
25capacity are allocated are not required to pay for the cost of
26electricity they do not consume.
27(3) Ensure
that entities that are currently treating and
28remediating groundwater that federal, state, or local agency
29previously identified as contaminated at a site that is listed by the
30United States Environmental Protection Agency on the National
31Priorities List pursuant to the Comprehensive Environmental
32Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C.
33Sec. 9601 et seq.) have the highest priority in acquiring electric
34service by direct transactions.
35(d) (1) If the commission approves a centralized resource
36adequacy mechanism pursuant to subdivisions (h) and (i) of Section
37380, upon the implementation of the centralized resource adequacy
38mechanism the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (c)
39shall be suspended. If the commission later orders that electrical
40corporations cease procuring capacity through a centralized
P5 1resource adequacy mechanism, the requirements of paragraph (2)
2of
subdivision (c) shall again apply.
3(2) If the use of a centralized resource adequacy mechanism is
4authorized by the commission and has been implemented as set
5forth in paragraph (1), the net capacity costs of generation resources
6that the commission determines are required to meet urgent system
7or urgent local grid reliability needs, and that the commission
8authorizes to be procured outside of the Section 380 or Section
9454.5 processes, shall be recovered according to the provisions of
10paragraph (2) of subdivision (c).
11(3) begin deleteNothing in this end deletebegin insertThis end insertsubdivisionbegin delete supplantsend deletebegin insert
does not supplantend insert
12 the resource adequacy requirements of Section 380 or the resource
13procurement procedures established in Section 454.5.
14(e) The commission may report to the Legislature on the efficacy
15of authorizing individual retail end-use residential customers to
16enter into direct transactions, including appropriate consumer
17protections.
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