AB 674, as amended, Mullin. Electricity: distributed generation.
Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations, as defined. Existing law authorizes the Public Utilities Commission to fix the rates and charges for every public utility, and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable. Existing law requires the Public Utilities Commission to require each electrical corporation under the operational control of the Independent System Operator as of January 1, 2001, to modify tariffs so that all customers that install new distributed energy resources, as defined, in accordance with specified criteria are served under rates, rules, and requirements identical to those of a customer within the same rate schedule that does not use distributed energy resources, and to withdraw any provisions in otherwise applicable tariffs that activate other tariffs, rates, or rules if a customer uses distributed energy resources. Existing law provides, notwithstanding these requirements, that a customer that installs new distributed energy resources not be exempted from (1) reasonable interconnection charges, (2) charges imposed pursuant to the Reliable Electric Service Investment Act, and (3) charges imposed to repay the Department of Water Resources for electricity procurement expenses incurred in response to the electricity crisis of 2000-01. Existing law requires the Public Utilities Commission, in establishing the rates applicable to customers that install new distributed energy resources, to create a firewall that segregates distribution cost recovery so that any net costs, taking into account the actual costs and benefits of distributed energy resources, proportional to each customer class, as determined by the Public Utilities Commission, resulting from the tariff modifications granted to members of each customer class may be recovered only from that class.
This bill would, to the extent authorized by federal law, require the Public Utilities Commission, by July 1, 2016, to do both of the following for those electrical corporation customers thatbegin delete have installedend deletebegin insert installend insert clean distributed energy resources, as defined, after January 1, 2016: (1) require each electrical corporation to collect all applicable nonbypassable charges fixed, implemented, administered, or imposed by the Public Utilities Commission based only on the actual metered consumption of electricity delivered to the customer through the electrical corporation’s transmission or distribution system, which charges are to be at the same rate per kilowatthour as paid by other customers that do not employ a clean distributed energy resource, and (2) calculate a reserve capacity
for standby service, if applicable, based on the capacity needed by an electrical corporation to serve a customer’s electrical demand during an outage of the clean distributed energy resource providing electric service for that customer.begin insert The bill would require each electrical corporation to identify the total amount of nonbypassable charges that would be collected each year from customers served by clean distributed energy resources installed after January 1, 2016, based on gross consumption without any adjustment for the generation of the clean distributed energy resources. The bill would require that this total amount be fully recovered from customers in the same customer class as those customers served by clean distributed energy resources installed after January 1, 2016, and would prohibit any amount from being shifted to any other customer class. The bill would require a customer served by a clean distributed energy
resource, upon request, to provide relevant data to the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board and the facility be subject to onsite inspection, to verify equipment operation and performance, including capacity, thermal output, and usage to verify criteria air pollutant and greenhouse gases emissions performance.end insert The bill would require the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission to report to the Legislature and the relevant policy committees of the Legislature on the impact of its provisions on specified issues by July 1, 2021.
Under existing law, a violation of the Public Utilities Act or any order, decision, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the commission is a crime.
Because the provisions of this bill would be a part of the act and because a violation of an order or decision of the commission implementing its requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program by creating a new crime.
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 no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(a) Clean onsite generation of electricity yields multiple benefits,
4including increased electrical reliability and efficiency, reduced
5emissions of greenhouse gases and oxides of nitrogen (NOx), and
6electrical grid resiliency.
7(b) In 2011, Governor Jerry Brown released a Clean Energy
8Jobs Plan that called for 12,000 megawatts of localized electrical
9generation, also known as distributed generation, to maximize
10energy efficiency and minimize environmental impacts, while
11increasing reliability and security.
12(c) Increased deployment of clean onsite electrical generation
13reduces the need for generation that emits higher levels of
14greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change and higher
15levels of NOx that contribute to smog formation.
P4 1(d) Several types of clean onsite electrical generation
2technologies currently exist and others are being developed, with
3many being developed and manufactured in California.
4(e) begin deleteResidential, commercial, end deletebegin insertCommercial end insertand industrial
5customers are willing to invest their own capital to install clean
6onsite generation technologies.
7(f) Nonbypassable charges create an economic barrier to the
8installation of clean onsite electricalbegin delete generation and, as
a result,
9prevent cost savings for all ratepayers and environmental benefits
10for all Californians.end delete
11(g) Among states with similarly high energy prices and
12environmental goals, California is the only state that allows
13electrical corporations to apply nonbypassable charges to electricity
14produced and consumed onsite.
15(h) Ratepayers would see a net cost savings from increased
16deployment of onsite electricity generation at customer sites that
17pay nonbypassable charges only on their electricity purchases from
18the grid. This ratepayer savings arises because onsite electricity
19generation reduces demand on the electrical grid, which reduces
20market electricity prices, and avoids transmission and distribution
21costs and energy losses.
22(i) Other cost-saving benefits to all ratepayers from clean onsite
23electrical generation include reductions in future generating
24capacity requirements, reductions in electrical grid congestion
25prices, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases and criteria
26air pollutants, and increases in electrical grid resiliency and
27
security.
Section 354 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to
29read:
(a) As used in this section, “clean distributed energy
31resource” means a facility that is located on the customer’s
32premises and generates electricity, or electricity and useful heat,
33where the electricity generated is used for a purpose described in
34paragraph (1) or (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 218, and that
35meets either of the following requirements:
36(1) It meets all of the following criteria:
37(A) Produces emissions of greenhouse gases that are less than
38thebegin delete levels established by the commission pursuant to paragraph begin insert
average emissions rate for
39(2) of subdivision (b) of Section 379.6.end delete
40delivered electricity reported by the electrical corporation for the
P5 1service territory in which the project is located for the calendar
2year prior to the year the facility is installed.end insert
3(B) Produces emissions of nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides
4that are less than the levels permitted for an advanced electrical
5distributed generation technology pursuant to Section 379.8.
6(C) Has a nameplate rated generation capacity of 20 megawatts
7or less.
8(D) Is sized to meet the electrical demand of, or use the available
9waste heat of, the customer that will be served by the generating
10facility.
11(2) It is an “eligible renewable
energy resource” pursuant to the
12California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16
13(commencing with Section 399.11)), has a nameplate rated
14generation capacity of 20 megawatts or less, is sized to meet the
15electrical demand of the customer that will be served by the
16generating facility, and will not otherwise be addressed in the
17commission’s implementation of Section 769 or 2827.1.
18(b) To the extent authorized by federal law, by July 1, 2016, the
19commission shall require each electrical corporation to do the
20following for customers served by clean distributed energy
21resources installed after January 1, 2016:
22(1) begin insert(A)end insertbegin insert end insertCollect all applicable nonbypassable
charges fixed,
23implemented, administered, or imposed by the commission based
24only on the actual metered consumption of electricity delivered to
25the customer through the electrical corporation’s transmission or
26distribution system. All charges shall be at the same rate per
27kilowatthour as paid by other customers that do not employ a clean
28distributed energy resource under the electrical corporation’s
29applicable rate schedule.
30(B) Identify the total amount of nonbypassable charges that
31would be collected each year from customers served by clean
32distributed energy resources installed after January 1, 2016, based
33on gross consumption without any adjustment for the generation
34of the clean distributed energy resources. This total amount shall
35be fully recovered from customers in the same customer class as
36those
customers served by clean distributed energy resources
37installed after January 1, 2016, and no amount may be shifted to
38any other customer class.
39(2) (A) Calculate a reserve capacity for standby service, if
40applicable, based on the capacity needed by an electrical
P6 1corporation to serve a customer’s electrical demand during an
2outage of the clean distributed energy resource providing electric
3service for that customer.
4(B) Initial reserve capacity shall be established by the customer
5for a minimum of 12 months based on the clean distributed energy
6resource generation technology’s historical operation, the number,
7size, and outage diversity of the clean distributed energy resource,
8and the annual average reduction of customer load that could occur
9
during an outage.
10(C) If after the initial 12-month period, the electrical corporation
11reasonably determines that the reserve capacity does not reflect
12the customer’s actual standby demand, averaged over the previous
1312 months, the electrical corporation shall modify the reserve
14capacity once every 12 months to reflect the customer’s actual
15average annual reserve capacity based on the same criteria used
16to establish the initial reserve capacity. Calculation of actual
17average annual reserve capacity shall exclude the customer’s
18electrical demand served by the electrical corporation within 24
19hours following an outage of the clean distributed energy resource
20resulting from any event on the electrical corporation’s
21transmission or distribution grid that is outside of the customer’s
22control that requires the customer to reduce onsite
generation.
23(c) A customer served by a clean distributed energy resource
24shall, upon request, provide relevant data to the commission and
25the State Air Resources Board and the facility is subject to onsite
26inspection to verify equipment operation and performance,
27including capacity, thermal output, and usage to verify criteria
28air pollutant and greenhouse gases emissions performance.
29Requests for relevant data shall occur no more than once per year.
30(c)
end delete
31begin insert(d)end insert (1) By July 1, 2021, the Energy Commission, in consultation
32with
the commission, shall report on the impacts of this section to
33the Legislature and the relevant policy committees of the
34Legislature in regard to all of the following:
35(A) Avoided transmission and distribution costs.
36(B) Avoided energy losses.
37(C) Wholesale electricity market prices.
38(D) Electricity costs to ratepayers.
39(E) Air quality.
40(F) Emissions of greenhouse gases.
P7 1(G) Job creation.
2(H) Energy reliability.
3(2) The report to be submitted to the Legislature pursuant to
4this subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section
59795 of the Government Code.
6(3) The requirement for submitting a report pursuant to this
7subdivision is inoperative on July 1, 2025, pursuant to Section
810231.5 of the Government Code.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
10Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
11the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
12district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
13infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
14for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
15the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
16the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
17Constitution.
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