AB 590, as amended, Dahle. Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.
The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 designates the State Air Resources Board as the state agency charged with monitoring and regulating sources of emissions of greenhouse gases. The act authorizes the state board to include the use of market-based compliance mechanisms. Existing law requires all moneys, except for fines and penalties, collected by the state board from the auction or sale of allowances as part of a market-based compliance mechanism to be deposited in the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.
This bill would create the Biomass State Cost Share Account within the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund. The bill would requirebegin delete an unspecified amount of moneysend deletebegin insert certain
amountsend insert to be transferred from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund to the Biomass State Cost Share Accountbegin insert for the 2015-16 through 2019-20 fiscal yearsend insert.begin delete Moneysend deletebegin insert The moneysend insert in the account, upon appropriation, would be available for expenditure by the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission for the purposes of maintaining the current level of biomass power generation in the state and revitalizing currently idle facilities in strategically located regions.begin insert The bill would establish requirements for an applicant to receive funding from the account for a facility’s eligible electrical
generation.end insert
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(a) California leads the nation in bioenergy production, with
4one-half of the industry located in this state, which has an abundant
5supply of bioenergy resources.
6(b) Biomass power generation provides electric ratepayers with
7clean, renewable energy that supplies the grid 24 hours a day,
8seven days a week regardless of atmospheric conditions. These
9benefits are paid for through contracts with the state’s electric
10utilities.
11(c) Biomass power generation also provides valuable,
12environmentally preferred wood waste disposal service for the
13disposal of 7.5
to 8 million tons of California’s annual solid waste
14stream and the avoidance of 1.5 to 3.5 million tons annually of
15biogenic CO2 emissions. By diverting biomass residues away from
16open burning, landfill burial, and accumulation in forests, the state
17benefits from reduced criteria air pollutants and greenhouse gas
18emissions, landfill capacity use, forest and watershed improvement,
19rural employment and economic development, and energy diversity
20and security. These services have been provided without
21compensation in the past, as the electricity market was able to fully
22underwrite the cost.
23(d) Numerous studies have shown a link between particulate
24matter (PM) exposure and asthma morbidity outcomes in children,
25and between exposure to ambient PM and increased heart and
26lung disease and death and health effects on the central nervous
27system. The latest
study was provided by scientists at the California
28Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of Environmental Health
29Hazard Assessment. Diverting wood material from open burning
30to biomass power production is an essential PM reduction strategy
31for many air districts around the state.
P3 1(d)
end delete
2begin insert(e)end insert The environmental services provided by biomass power
3production are clearly valuable to society and therefore provide
4the rationale for a state policy to pay for biomass power generation
5commensurate with its provision of waste disposal services.
6(e) Protecting these existing
resources will help the state meet
7its goals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, protect existing jobs,
8and provide waste disposal benefits.
9(f) Biomass power generation fits in the Cap and Trade Auction
10Proceeds Investment Plan in the categories of forest and ecosystem
11management, agricultural management, and waste diversion, and
12is identified as a recommended investment.
Section 16428.81 is added to the Government Code,
14to read:
begin insert(a)end insertbegin insert end insertThere is hereby created the Biomass State Cost
16Share Account within the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund
17established pursuant to Section 16428.8.begin delete Moneys in the amount
18of ____ dollars ($____) shall be transferred annually from the fund
19to the account. Moneys in the account, upon appropriation, shall
20be available for expenditure by the State Energy Resources
21Conservation and Development Commission for the purposes of
22maintaining the current level of biomass power generation in the
23state and revitalizing currently idle facilities in strategically located
24regions.end delete
25(b) The following amounts shall be transferred from the
26Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund to the Biomass State Cost Share
27Account:
28(1) In the 2015-16 fiscal year, seventy-four million dollars
29($74,000,000).
30(2) In the 2016-17 fiscal year, one hundred eighteen million
31dollars ($118,000,000).
32(3) In the 2017-18, 2018-19, and 2019-20 fiscal years, one
33hundred twenty million dollars ($120,000,000) in each of those
34fiscal years.
35(c) The moneys in the Biomass State Cost Share Account, upon
36appropriation by the Legislature, shall be available to the State
37Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission
38for expenditure for the purposes of maintaining the current level
39of biomass power generation in the state and revitalizing currently
40idle facilities in strategically located regions. Protecting these
P4 1existing resources will help the state meet its goals to reduce
2greenhouse gas emissions, protect existing jobs, and provide waste
3disposal benefits.
4(d) To be eligible for funding from the Biomass State Cost Share
5Account, a facility’s solid fuel biomass electrical generation shall
6satisfy all of the following requirements:
7(1) The energy is generated on and after January 1, 2016.
end insertbegin insert
8(2) The energy is generated within the state and sold to
9customers within the state.
10(3) The energy is net-metered generation. “Net-metered
11generation” for purposes of this section means energy that is sold
12to the grid and is not used onsite for the facility’s own electrical
13demand.
14(e) A facility seeking funding from the Biomass State Cost Share
15Account shall submit an application
to the commission that
16demonstrates that it is a solid fuel biomass facility and is California
17Renewables Portfolio Standard (RPS) Program certified. An
18applicant shall submit monthly invoices to the commission to
19document eligible generation and the fuel used for that generation.
20The commission shall review the submitted invoices and make
21monthly incentive payments to each applicant based on the eligible
22generation and the applicable production incentive rate.
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