AB 793, as amended, Gray. Renewable energy: publicly owned electric utility: hydroelectric generation facility.
The California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program, referred to as the RPS program, requires a retail seller of electricity, as defined, and local publicly owned electric utilities to purchase specified minimum quantities of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources, as defined, for specified compliance periods, sufficient to ensure that the procurement of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources achieves 20% of retail sales for the period from January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2013, inclusive, 25% of retail sales by December 31, 2016, and 33% of retail sales by December 31, 2020, and in all subsequent years. The RPS program, consistent with the goals of procuring the least-cost and best-fit eligible renewable energy resources that meet project viability principles, requires that all retail sellers procure a balanced portfolio of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources, as specified, referred to as portfolio content requirements.
This bill would require a local publicly owned electric utility that receives 50% or greater of its consumption load demand from hydrodelectric generation meeting specified requirements and other renewable energy resources to procure eligible renewable energy resources, including renewable energy credits, to meet only the electricity demands unsatisfied by its hydroelectric generation in any given year to satisfy its portfolio content requirements.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 399.30 of the Public Utilities Code is 
2amended to read:
(a) To fulfill unmet long-term generation resource 
4needs, each local publicly owned electric utility shall adopt and 
5implement a renewable energy resources procurement plan that 
6requires the utility to procure a minimum quantity of electricity 
7products from eligible renewable energy resources, including 
8renewable energy credits, as a specified percentage of total 
9kilowatthours sold to the utility’s retail end-use customers, each 
10compliance period, to achieve the targets of subdivision (c).
11(b) The governing board shall implement procurement targets 
12for a local publicly owned electric utility that require the utility to 
13procure a minimum quantity of eligible renewable energy resources 
14for
						each of the following compliance periods:
15(1) January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2013, inclusive.
16(2) January 1, 2014, to December 31, 2016, inclusive.
17(3) January 1, 2017, to December 31, 2020, inclusive.
18(c) The governing board of a local publicly owned electric utility 
19shall ensure all of the following:
20(1) The quantities of eligible renewable energy resources to be 
21procured for the compliance period from January 1, 2011, to 
22December 31, 2013, inclusive, are equal to an average of 20 percent 
23of retail sales.
24(2) The quantities of eligible
						renewable energy resources to be 
25procured for all other compliance periods reflect reasonable 
26progress in each of the intervening years sufficient to ensure that 
27the procurement of electricity products from eligible renewable 
28energy resources achieves 25 percent of retail sales by December 
P3    131, 2016, and 33 percent of retail sales by December 31, 2020. 
2The local governing board shall require the local publicly owned 
3electric utilities to procure not less than 33 percent of retail sales 
4of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources 
5in all subsequent years.
6(3) A local publicly owned electric utility shall adopt 
7procurement requirements consistent with Section 399.16.
8(d) The governing board of a local publicly owned electric utility 
9may adopt the following
						measures:
10(1) Rules permitting the utility to apply excess procurement in 
11one compliance period to subsequent compliance periods in the 
12same manner as allowed for retail sellers pursuant to Section 
13399.13.
14(2) Conditions that allow for delaying timely compliance 
15consistent with subdivision (b) of Section 399.15.
16(3) Cost limitations for procurement expenditures consistent 
17with subdivision (c) of Section 399.15.
18(e) The governing board of the local publicly owned electric 
19utility shall adopt a program for the enforcement of this article on 
20or before January 1, 2012. The program shall be adopted at a 
21publicly noticed meeting offering all interested parties an 
22opportunity
						to comment. Not less than 30 days’ notice shall be 
23given to the public of any meeting held for purposes of adopting 
24the program. Not less than 10 days’ notice shall be given to the 
25public before any meeting is held to make a substantive change to 
26the program.
27(f) (1) Each local publicly owned electric utility shall annually 
28post notice, in accordance with Chapter 9 (commencing with 
29Section 54950) of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 5 of the Government 
30Code, whenever its governing body will deliberate in public on its 
31renewable energy resources procurement plan.
32(2) Contemporaneous with the posting of the notice of a public 
33meeting to consider the renewable energy resources procurement 
34plan, the local publicly owned electric utility shall notify the 
35Energy
						Commission of the date, time, and location of the meeting 
36in order to enable the Energy Commission to post the information 
37on its Internet Web site. This requirement is satisfied if the local 
38publicly owned electric utility provides the uniform resource
39
						locator (URL) that links to this information.
P4    1(3) Upon distribution to its governing body of information 
2related to its renewable energy resources procurement status and 
3future plans, for its consideration at a noticed public meeting, the 
4local publicly owned electric utility shall make that information 
5available to the public and shall provide the Energy Commission 
6with an electronic copy of the documents for posting on the Energy 
7Commission’s Internet Web site. This requirement is satisfied if 
8the local publicly owned electric utility provides the uniform 
9resource locator (URL) that links to the documents or information 
10regarding other manners of access to the documents.
11(g) A public utility district that receives all of its electricity 
12pursuant to a preference right
						adopted and authorized by the United 
13States Congress pursuant to Section 4 of the Trinity River Division 
14Act of August 12, 1955 (Public Law 84-386) shall be in compliance 
15with the renewable energy procurement requirements of this article.
16(h) For a local publicly owned electric utility that was in 
17existence on or before January 1, 2009, that provides retail electric 
18service to 15,000 or fewer customer accounts in California, and is 
19interconnected to a balancing authority located outside this state 
20but within the WECC, an eligible renewable energy resource 
21includes a facility that is located outside California that is 
22connected to the WECC transmission system, if all of the following 
23conditions are met:
24(1) The electricity generated by the facility is procured by the 
25local
						publicly owned electric utility, is delivered to the balancing 
26authority area in which the local publicly owned electric utility is 
27located, and is not used to fulfill renewable energy procurement 
28requirements of other states.
29(2) The local publicly owned electric utility participates in, and 
30complies with, the accounting system administered by the Energy 
31Commission pursuant to this article.
32(3) The Energy Commission verifies that the electricity 
33generated by the facility is eligible to meet the renewables portfolio 
34standard procurement requirements.
35(i) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), for a local publicly owned 
36electric utility that is a joint powers authority of districts established 
37pursuant to state law on or before
						January 1, 2005, that furnish 
38electric services other than to residential customers, and is formed 
39pursuant to the Irrigation District Law (Division 11 (commencing 
40with Section 20500) of the Water Code), the percentage of total 
P5    1kilowatthours sold to the district’s retail end-use customers, upon 
2which the renewables portfolio standard procurement requirements 
3in subdivision (b) are calculated, shall be based on the authority’s 
4average retail sales over the previous seven years. If the authority 
5has not furnished electric service for seven years, then the 
6calculation shall be based on average retail sales over the number 
7of completed years during which the authority has provided electric 
8service.
9(j) A local publicly owned electric utility in a city and county 
10that only receives greater than 67 percent of its electricity sources 
11from
						hydroelectric generation located within the state that it owns 
12and operates, and that does not meet the definition of a “renewable 
13electrical generation facility” pursuant to Section 25741 of the 
14Public Resources Code, shall be required to procure eligible 
15renewable energy resources, including renewable energy credits, 
16to meet only the electricity demands unsatisfied by its hydroelectric 
17generation in any given year, in order to satisfy its renewable 
18energy procurement requirements.
19(k) (1) A local publicly owned electric utility that receives 50 
20percent or greater of its consumption load demand from 
21hydrodelectric generation and other renewable energy resources 
22shall be required to procure eligible renewable energy resources, 
23including renewable energy credits, to meet only the electricity 
24demands unsatisfied by its
						hydroelectric generation in any given 
25year to satisfy its renewable energy procurement requirements.
26(2) For the purposes of this subdivision, “hydroelectric 
27generation facility” means a hydroelectric facility satisfying all of 
28the following:
29(A) Is owned solely and operated by the local publicly owned 
30electric utility as of 1967.
31(B) Has a distribution system demand of less than 150 
32megawatts.
33(C) Involves a contract in which an electrical corporation 
34receives the benefit of the electric generation through June of 2014, 
35at which time the benefit reverts back to the ownership and control 
36of the local publicly owned electric utility.
37(D) Has a maximum penstock flow capacity of no more than 
383,000 cubic feet per second and includes a regulating reservoir 
39with a small hydroelectric generation facility producing fewer than 
P6    120 megawatts with a maximum penstock flow capacity of no more 
2than 2,700 cubic feet per second.
3(3) This subdivision does not reduce or eliminate any renewable 
4procurement requirement for any compliance period ending prior 
5to January 1, 2014.
6(l) A local publicly owned electric utility shall retain discretion 
7over both of the following:
8(1) The mix of eligible renewable energy resources procured 
9by
						the utility and those additional generation resources procured 
10by the utility for purposes of ensuring resource adequacy and 
11reliability.
12(2) The reasonable costs incurred by the utility for eligible 
13renewable energy resources owned by the utility.
14(m) On or before July 1, 2011, the Energy Commission shall 
15adopt regulations specifying procedures for enforcement of this 
16article. The regulations shall include a public process under which 
17the Energy Commission may issue a notice of violation and 
18correction against a local publicly owned electric utility for failure 
19to comply with this article, and for referral of violations to the 
20State Air Resources Board for penalties pursuant to subdivision 
21(o).
22(n) (1) Upon a determination by the Energy Commission that 
23a local publicly owned electric utility has failed to comply with 
24this article, the Energy Commission shall refer the failure to comply 
25with this article to the State Air Resources Board, which may 
26impose penalties to enforce this article consistent with Part 6 
27(commencing with Section 38580) of Division 25.5 of the Health 
28and Safety Code. Any penalties imposed shall be comparable to 
29those adopted by the commission for noncompliance by retail 
30sellers.
31(2) If Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the 
32Health and Safety Code is suspended or repealed, the State Air 
33Resources Board may take action to enforce this article on local 
34publicly owned electric utilities consistent with Section 41513 of 
35the Health and Safety Code, and impose penalties on a local 
36publicly
						owned electric utility consistent with Article 3 
37(commencing with Section 42400) of Chapter 4 of Part 4 of, and 
38Chapter 1.5 (commencing with Section 43025) of Part 5 of, 
39Division 26 of the Health and Safety Code.
P7    1(3) For the purpose of this subdivision, this section is an 
2emissions reduction measure pursuant to Section 38580 of the 
3Health and Safety Code.
4(4) If the State Air Resources Board has imposed a penalty upon 
5a local publicly owned electric utility for the utility’s failure to 
6comply with this article, the State Air Resources Board shall not 
7impose an additional penalty for the same infraction, or the same 
8failure to comply, with any renewables procurement requirement 
9imposed upon the utility pursuant to the California Global Warming 
10Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5
						(commencing with Section 
1138500) of the Health and Safety Code).
12(5) Any penalties collected by the State Air Resources Board 
13pursuant to this article shall be deposited in the Air Pollution 
14Control Fund and, upon appropriation by the Legislature, shall be 
15expended for reducing emissions of air pollution or greenhouse 
16gases within the same geographic area as the local publicly owned 
17electric utility.
18(o) The commission has no authority or jurisdiction to enforce 
19any of the requirements of this article on a local publicly owned 
20electric utility.
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