AB 2460, as introduced, Irwin. California Solar Initiative: low-income residential housing.
Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations, as defined. Decisions of the commission adopted the California Solar Initiative. Existing law requires the commission to undertake certain steps in implementing the California Solar Initiative.
This bill would make a nonsubstantive change to the law requiring the commission to undertake certain steps in implementing the California Solar Initiative.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 2851 of the Public Utilities Code is
2amended to read:
(a) In implementing the California Solar Initiative, the
4commission shall do all of the following:
5(1) (A) The commission shall authorize the award of monetary
6incentives for up to the first megawatt of alternating current
P2 1generated by solar energy systems that meet the eligibility criteria
2established by the Energy Commission pursuant to Chapter 8.8
3(commencing with Section 25780) of Division 15 of the Public
4Resources Code. The commission shall determine the eligibility
5of a solar energy system, as defined in Section 25781 of the Public
6Resources Code, to receive monetary incentives until the time the
7Energy Commission establishes eligibility criteria pursuant to
8Section 25782. Monetary incentives shall not be awarded for solar
9energy systems that do not meet the eligibility criteria. The
10incentive level authorized
by the commission shall decline each
11year following implementation of the California Solar Initiative,
12at a rate of no less than an average of 7 percent per year, and,
13except as provided in subparagraph (B), shall be zero as of
14December 31, 2016. The commission shall adopt and publish a
15schedule of declining incentive levels no less than 30 days in
16advance of the first decline in incentive levels. The commission
17may develop incentives based upon thebegin delete output of electricity fromend delete
18begin insert electricity generated byend insert the system, provided those incentives are
19consistent with the declining incentive levels of this paragraph and
20the incentives apply to only the first megawatt of electricity
21generated by the system.
22(B) The incentive level for the installation of a solar energy
23system pursuant to Section 2852
shall be zero as of December 31,
242021.
25(2) The commission shall adopt a performance-based incentive
26program so that by January 1, 2008, 100 percent of incentives for
27solar energy systems of 100 kilowatts or greater and at least 50
28percent of incentives for solar energy systems of 30 kilowatts or
29greater are earned based on the actual electrical output of the solar
30energy systems. The commission shall encourage, and may require,
31performance-based incentives for solar energy systems of less than
3230 kilowatts. Performance-based incentives shall decline at a rate
33of no less than an average of 7 percent per year. In developing the
34performance-based incentives, the commission may:
35(A) Apply performance-based incentives only to customer
36classes designated by the commission.
37(B) Design the performance-based incentives so that customers
38may receive a higher level of incentives than under incentives
39based on installed electrical
capacity.
P3 1(C) Develop financing options that help offset the installation
2costs of the solar energy system, provided that this financing is
3ultimately repaid in full by the consumer or through the application
4of the performance-based rebates.
5(3) By January 1, 2008, the commission, in consultation with
6the Energy Commission, shall require reasonable and cost-effective
7energy efficiency improvements in existing buildings as a condition
8of providing incentives for eligible solar energy systems, with
9appropriate exemptions or limitations to accommodate the limited
10financial resources of low-income residential housing.
11(4) Notwithstanding subdivision (g) of Section 2827, the
12commission may develop a time-variant tariff that creates the
13maximum incentive for ratepayers to install solar energy systems
14so that the system’s peak electricity production coincides with
15California’s peak electricity demands and that ensures that
16
ratepayers receive due value for their contribution to the purchase
17of solar energy systems and customers with solar energy systems
18continue to have an incentive to use electricity efficiently. In
19developing the time-variant tariff, the commission may exclude
20customers participating in the tariff from the rate cap for residential
21customers for existing baseline quantities or usage by those
22customers of up to 130 percent of existing baseline quantities, as
23required by Section 739.9. Nothing in this paragraph authorizes
24the commission to require time-variant pricing for ratepayers
25without a solar energy system.
26(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), in implementing the
27California Solar Initiative, the commission may authorize the award
28of monetary incentives for solar thermal and solar water heating
29devices, in a total amount up to one hundred million eight hundred
30thousand dollars ($100,800,000).
31(c) (1) In implementing the California
Solar Initiative, the
32commission shall not allocate more than fifty million dollars
33($50,000,000) to research, development, and demonstration that
34explores solar technologies and other distributed generation
35technologies that employ or could employ solar energy for
36generation or storage of electricity or to offset natural gas usage.
37Any program that allocates additional moneys to research,
38development, and demonstration shall be developed in
39collaboration with the Energy Commission to ensure there is no
40duplication of efforts, and adopted by the commission through a
P4 1rulemaking or other appropriate public proceeding. Any grant
2awarded by the commission for research, development, and
3demonstration shall be approved by the full commission at a public
4meeting. This subdivision does not prohibit the commission from
5continuing to allocate moneys to research, development, and
6demonstration pursuant to the self-generation incentive program
7for distributed generation resources originally established pursuant
8to
Chapter 329 of the Statutes of 2000, as modified pursuant to
9Section 379.6.
10(2) The Legislature finds and declares that a program that
11provides a stable source of monetary incentives for eligible solar
12energy systems will encourage private investment sufficient to
13make solar technologies cost effective.
14(d) (1) The commission shall not impose any charge upon the
15consumption of natural gas, or upon natural gas ratepayers, to fund
16the California Solar Initiative.
17(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any charge
18imposed to fund the program adopted and implemented pursuant
19to this section shall be imposed upon all customers not participating
20in the California Alternate Rates for Energy (CARE) or family
21electric rate assistance (FERA) programs, including those
22residential customers subject to the rate limitation specified in
23Section 739.9 for existing baseline quantities or usage up to 130
24percent
of existing baseline quantities of electricity.
25(3) The costs of the program adopted and implemented pursuant
26to this section shall not be recovered from customers participating
27in the California Alternate Rates for Energy or CARE program
28established pursuant to Section 739.1, except to the extent that
29program costs are recovered out of the nonbypassable system
30benefits charge authorized pursuant to Section 399.8.
31(e) Except as provided in subdivision (f), in implementing the
32California Solar Initiative, the commission shall ensure that the
33total cost over the duration of the program does not exceed three
34billion five hundred fifty million eight hundred thousand dollars
35($3,550,800,000). Except as provided in subdivision (f), financial
36components of the California Solar Initiative shall consist of the
37following:
38(1) Programs under the supervision of the commission funded
39by charges collected from customers of San Diego Gas
and Electric
40Company, Southern California Edison Company, and Pacific Gas
P5 1and Electric Company. Except as provided in subdivision (f), the
2total cost over the duration of these programs shall not exceed two
3billion three hundred sixty-six million eight hundred thousand
4dollars ($2,366,800,000) and includes moneys collected directly
5into a tracking account for support of the California Solar Initiative.
6(2) Programs adopted, implemented, and financed in the amount
7of seven hundred eighty-four million dollars ($784,000,000), by
8charges collected by local publicly owned electric utilities pursuant
9to Section 2854. Nothing in this subdivision shall give the
10commission power and jurisdiction with respect to a local publicly
11owned electric utility or its customers.
12(3) (A) Programs for the installation of solar energy systems
13on new construction (New Solar Homes Partnership Program),
14administered by the Energy Commission, and funded by
charges
15in the amount of four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000),
16collected from customers of San Diego Gas and Electric Company,
17Southern California Edison Company, and Pacific Gas and Electric
18Company. If the commission is notified by the Energy Commission
19that funding available pursuant to Section 25751 of the Public
20Resources Code for the New Solar Homes Partnership Program
21and any other funding for the purposes of this paragraph have been
22exhausted, the commission may require an electrical corporation
23to continue administration of the program pursuant to the guidelines
24established for the program by the Energy Commission, until the
25funding limit authorized by this paragraph has been reached. The
26commission may determine whether a third party, including the
27Energy Commission, should administer the utility’s continuation
28of the New Solar Homes Partnership Program. The commission,
29in consultation with the Energy Commission, shall supervise the
30administration of the continuation of the New Solar Homes
31
Partnership Program by an electrical corporation or third-party
32administrator. After the exhaustion of funds, the Energy
33Commission shall notify the Joint Legislative Budget Committee
3430 days prior to the continuation of the program. This subparagraph
35shall become inoperative on June 1, 2018.
36(B) If the commission requires a continuation of the program
37pursuant to subparagraph (A), any funding made available pursuant
38to the continuation program shall be encumbered through the
39issuance of rebate reservations by no later than June 1, 2018, and
40disbursed by no later than December 31, 2021.
P6 1(4) The changes made to this subdivision by Chapter 39 of the
2Statutes of 2012 do not authorize the levy of a charge or any
3increase in the amount collected pursuant to any existing charge,
4nor do the changes add to, or detract from, the commission’s
5existing authority to levy or increase charges.
6(f) Upon the expenditure or reservation in any
electrical
7corporation’s service territory of the amount specified in paragraph
8(1) of subdivision (e) for low-income residential housing programs
9pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 2852, the commission shall
10authorize the continued collection of the charge for the purposes
11of Section 2852. The commission shall ensure that the total amount
12collected pursuant to this subdivision does not exceed one hundred
13eight million dollars ($108,000,000). Upon approval by the
14commission, an electrical corporation may use amounts collected
15pursuant to subdivision (e) for purposes of funding the general
16market portion of the California Solar Initiative, that remain
17unspent and unencumbered after December 31, 2016, to reduce
18the electrical corporation’s portion of the total amount collected
19pursuant to this subdivision.
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