SB 793, as amended, Wolk. Green Tariff Shared Renewables Program.
Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations. Existing law authorizes the commission to fix the rates and charges for every public utility, and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable. The Green Tariff Shared Renewables Program requires a participating utility, defined as being an electrical corporation with 100,000 or more customers in California, to file with the commission an application requesting approval of a tariff to implement a program enabling ratepayers to participate in electrical generation facilities that use eligible renewable energy resources, consistent with certain legislative findings and statements of intent. Existing law requires the commission, by July 1, 2014, to issue a decision concerning the participating utility’s application, determining whether to approve or disapprove the application, with or without modifications. Existing law requires the commission, after notice and opportunity for public comment, to approve the application if the commission determines that the proposed program is reasonable and consistent with the legislative findings and statements of intent and requires the commission to require that a participating utility’s green tariff shared renewables program be administered in accordance with specified provisions. Existing law repeals the program on January 1, 2019.
This bill would require the commission to additionally require that a participating utility’s green tariff shared renewables program permit a participating customer to subscribe to the program andbegin delete receive a reasonably estimated bill credit and bill charge,end deletebegin insert be provided
with a nonbinding estimate of reasonably anticipated bill credits and bill charges,end insert as determined by the commission, for a period of up to 20 years.
Under existing law, a violation of any order, decision, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the commission is a crime.
Because the bill would require action by the commission to implement its requirements and a violation of those requirements would be a crime, the bill wouldbegin delete imposedend deletebegin insert imposeend insert a state-mandated local program by expanding the definition of a 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:
Section 2833 of the Public Utilities Code is
2amended to read:
(a) The commission shall require a green tariff shared
4renewables program to be administered by a participating utility
5in accordance with this section.
6(b) Generating facilities participating in a participating utility’s
7green tariff shared renewables program shall be eligible renewable
8energy resources with a nameplate rated generating capacity not
9exceeding 20 megawatts, except for those generating facilities
10reserved for location in areas identified by the California
11Environmental Protection Agency as the most impacted and
P3 1disadvantaged communities pursuant to paragraph (1) of
2subdivision (d), which shall not exceed one megawatt nameplate
3rated generating capacity.
4(c) A participating utility shall use commission-approved tools
5and mechanisms to procure additional eligible renewable energy
6resources for the green tariff shared renewables program from
7electrical generation facilities that are in addition to those required
8by the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article
916 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1).
10For purposes of this subdivision, “commission-approved tools and
11mechanisms” means those procurement methods approved by the
12commission for an electrical corporation to procure eligible
13renewable energy resources for purposes of meeting the
14procurement requirements of the California Renewables Portfolio
15Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11)
16of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1).
17(d) A participating utility shall permit customers within the
18service territory of the utility to purchase electricity pursuant to
19the tariff approved by the commission to implement the utility’s
20green tariff shared renewables program, until the utility meets its
21proportionate share of a statewide limitation of 600 megawatts of
22customer participation, measured by nameplate rated generating
23capacity. The proportionate share shall be calculated based on the
24ratio of each participating utility’s retail sales to total retail sales
25of electricity by all participating utilities. The commission may
26place other restrictions on purchases under a green tariff shared
27renewables program, including restricting participation to a certain
28level of capacity each year. The following restrictions shall apply
29to the statewide 600 megawatt limitation:
30(1) (A) One hundred megawatts shall be reserved for facilities
31that are no larger than one megawatt nameplate rated generating
32capacity and that are located in areas previously identified by the
33California Environmental Protection Agency as the most impacted
34and disadvantaged communities. These communities shall be
35identified by census tract, and shall be determined to be the most
36impacted 20 percent based on results from the best available
37cumulative impact screening methodology designed to identify
38each of the following:
P4 1(i) Areas disproportionately affected by environmental pollution
2and other hazards that can lead to negative public health effects,
3exposure, or environmental degradation.
4(ii) Areas with socioeconomic vulnerability.
5(B) (1) For purposes of this paragraph, “previously identified”
6means identified prior to commencing construction of the facility.
7(2) Not less than 100 megawatts shall be reserved for
8participation by residential class customers.
9(3) Twenty megawatts shall be reserved for the City of Davis.
10(e) To the extent possible, a participating utility shall seek to
11procure eligible renewable energy resources that are located in
12reasonable proximity to enrolled participants.
13(f) A participating utility’s green tariff shared renewables
14program shall support diverse procurement and the goals of
15commission
General Order 156.
16(g) A participating utility’s green tariff shared renewables
17program shall not allow a customer to subscribe to more than 100
18percent of the customer’s electricity demand.
19(h) Except as authorized by this subdivision, a participating
20utility’s green tariff shared renewables program shall not allow a
21customer to subscribe to more than two megawatts of nameplate
22generating capacity. This limitation does not apply to a federal,
23state, or local government, school or school district, county office
24of education, the California Community Colleges, the California
25State University, or the University of California.
26(i) A participating utility’s green tariff shared renewables
27program shall not allow any single
entity or its affiliates or
28subsidiaries to subscribe to more than 20 percent of any single
29calendar year’s total cumulative rated generating capacity.
30(j) To the extent possible, a participating utility shall actively
31market the utility’s green tariff shared renewables program to
32low-income and minority communities and customers.
33(k) Participating customers shall receive bill credits for the
34generation of a participating eligible renewable energy resource
35using the class average retail generation cost as established in the
36participating utility’s approved tariff for the class to which the
37participating customer belongs, plus a renewables adjustment value
38representing the difference between the time-of-delivery profile
39of the eligible renewable energy resource used to serve the
40participating
customer and the class average time-of-delivery
P5 1profile and the resource adequacy value, if any, of the resource
2contained in the utility’s green tariff shared renewables program.
3The renewables adjustment value applicable to a time-of-delivery
4profile of an eligible renewable energy resource shall be determined
5according to rules adopted by the commission. For these purposes,
6“time-of-delivery profile” refers to the daily generating pattern of
7a participating eligible renewable energy resource over time, the
8value of which is determined by comparing the generating pattern
9of that participating eligible renewable energy resource to the
10demand for electricity over time and other generating resources
11available to serve that demand.
12(l) Participating customers shall pay a renewable generation
13rate established by the commission, the administrative
costs of the
14participating utility, and any other charges the commission
15determines are just and reasonable to fully cover the cost of
16procuring a green tariff shared renewables program’s resources to
17serve a participating customer’s needs.
18(m) A participating customer’s rates shall be debited or credited
19with any other commission-approved costs or values applicable
20to the eligible renewable energy resources contained in a
21participating utility’s green tariff shared renewables program’s
22portfolio. These additional costs or values shall be applied to new
23customers when they initially subscribe after the cost or value has
24been approved by the commission.
25(n) Participating customers shall pay all otherwise applicable
26charges without modification.
27(o) A participating utility shall permit a participating customer
28to subscribe to the program andbegin delete receive a reasonably estimated begin insert be provided with a nonbinding estimate
29bill credit and bill charge,end delete
30of reasonably anticipated bill credits and bill charges,end insert as
31determined by the commission, for a period of up to 20 years.
32(p) A participating utility shall provide support for enhanced
33community renewables programs to facilitate development of
34eligible renewable energy resource projects located close to the
35source of demand.
36(q) The commission shall ensure that
charges and credits
37associated with a participating utility’s green tariff shared
38renewables program are set in a manner that ensures nonparticipant
39ratepayer indifference for the remaining bundled service, direct
40access, and community choice aggregation customers and ensures
P6 1that no costs are shifted from participating customers to
2nonparticipating ratepayers.
3(r) A participating utility shall track and account for all revenues
4and costs to ensure that the utility recovers the actual costs of the
5utility’s green tariff shared renewables program and that all costs
6and revenues are fully transparent and auditable.
7(s) Any renewable energy credits associated with electricity
8procured by a participating utility for the utility’s green tariff shared
9renewables program and utilized
by a participating customer shall
10be retired by the participating utility on behalf of the participating
11customer. Those renewable energy credits shall not be further sold,
12transferred, or otherwise monetized for any purpose. Any
13renewable energy credits associated with electricity procured by
14a participating utility for the shared renewable energy
15
self-generation program, but not utilized by a participating
16customer, shall be counted toward meeting that participating
17utility’s renewables portfolio standard.
18(t) A participating utility shall, in the event of participant
19customer attrition or other causes that reduce customer participation
20or electrical demand below generation levels, apply the excess
21generation from the eligible renewable energy resources procured
22through the utility’s green tariff shared renewables program to the
23utility’s renewable portfolio standard procurement obligations or
24bank the excess generation for future use to benefit all customers
25in accordance with the renewables portfolio standard banking and
26procurement rules approved by the commission.
27(u) In calculating its procurement
requirements to meet the
28requirements of the California Renewables Portfolio Standard
29Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter
302.3 of Part 1), a participating utility may exclude from total retail
31sales the kilowatthours generated by an eligible renewable energy
32resource that is credited to a participating customer pursuant to
33the utility’s green tariff shared renewables program, commencing
34with the point in time at which the generating facility achieves
35commercial operation.
36(v) All renewable energy resources procured on behalf of
37participating customers in the participating utility’s green tariff
38shared renewables program shall comply with the State Air
39Resources Board’s Voluntary Renewable Electricity Program.
40California-eligible greenhouse gas allowances associated with
P7 1these purchases shall be retired on
behalf of participating customers
2as part of the board’s Voluntary Renewable Electricity Program.
3(w) A participating utility shall provide a municipality with
4
aggregated consumption data for participating customers within
5the municipality’s jurisdiction to allow for reporting on progress
6toward climate action goals by the municipality. A participating
7utility shall also publicly disclose, on a geographic basis,
8consumption data and reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases
9achieved by participating customers in the utility’s green tariff
10shared renewables program, on an aggregated basis consistent with
11privacy protections as specified in Chapter 5 (commencing with
12Section 8380) of Division 4.1.
13(x) Nothing in this section prohibits or restricts a community
14choice aggregator from offering its own voluntary renewable
15energy programs to participating customers of the community
16choice aggregation.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
18Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
19the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
20district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
21infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
22for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
23the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
24the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
25Constitution.
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