Amended in Senate May 31, 2016

Amended in Senate April 25, 2016

Amended in Senate April 7, 2016

Amended in Senate March 28, 2016

Senate BillNo. 1441


Introduced by Senators Leno and Pavley

February 19, 2016


An actbegin delete to add Section 39731.5 to the Health and Safety Code, andend delete to amend Section 977 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to natural gas.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SB 1441, as amended, Leno. Natural gas: methane emissions.

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(1) 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 state board is required to adopt a statewide greenhouse gas emissions limit equivalent to the statewide greenhouse gas emissions level in 1990 to be achieved by 2020 and to adopt rules and regulations in an open, public process to achieve the maximum, technologically feasible, and cost-effective greenhouse gas emissions reductions.

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The state board is also required to complete a comprehensive strategy to reduce emissions of short-lived climate pollutants, as defined, in the state and to take specified actions and conduct specified analyses with respect to methane emissions.

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This bill would require the state board, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and other relevant state agencies, to adopt by regulation no later than January 1, 2020, methane emissions reduction measures for the emissions associated with the extraction, production, storage, processing, and transportation of natural gas used in the state, including imports, that will achieve a reduction in methane emissions of at least 40% below 2013 levels for systemwide methane emissions from natural gas used in California by 2025, as specified. The bill also would require the state board, in consultation with the commission and other relevant state agencies, to consider, among other things, developing new incentives or investment programs to facilitate emissions reductions in basins and fields from which the state receives a significant portion of its natural gas and imposing new requirements on the state’s regulated gas corporations related to natural gas procurement and the tracking of interstate deliveries.

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(2) Under

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begin insertUnderend insert existing law, thebegin delete commissionend deletebegin insert Public Utilities Commission,end insert has regulatory authority over public utilities, including gas corporations, as defined. 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.

This bill would, in establishing rates for gas corporations, prohibit the commission from allowing gas corporations to seek or receive recovery from ratepayers for the value of natural gas lost to the atmosphere during the extraction, production, storage, processing, transportation, and delivery of the natural gas, as specified.

Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

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P2    1

SECTION 1.  

The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:

3(a) California is the nation’s second largest user of natural gas,
4comprising nearly 10 percent of the entire national consumption.
5This natural gas comes from a variety of basins, with over 90
6percent of the natural gas used in the state being imported from
7locations across the southwestern United States, the Rocky
8Mountains, and western Canada before being transported through
9more than 100,000 miles of pipe to over 11 million customers in
10the state.

11(b) Methane, the principle component of natural gas, is a
12greenhouse gas known by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
13Change to have a global warming potential 28 times that of carbon
P3    1dioxide over a 100-year time horizon and 84 times that of carbon
2dioxide over a 20-year time horizon.

3(c) Methane leakage during the drilling, production, and
4transportation of natural gas used in the state contributes to the
5overall climate footprint of the energy system of the state, and
6although additional scientific research and analysis is presently
7being conducted to evaluate how much methane is leaked, there
8is enough information and it is imperative to continue to act to
9reduce that leakage.

10(d) The Legislature has established a policy goal to significantly
11reduce emissions of greenhouse gases in California, including
12methane leakage, but there is insufficient accountability over
13methane that is released into the atmosphere from operations within
14the state or from operations connected to gas imported into the
15state.

16(e) Requiring accountability for methane leakage associated
17with operations necessary to bring natural gas to state residents,
18in addition to adjusting and creating incentives to reduce leakage,
19will enable a more thorough approach to meeting the state’s climate
20change goals while providing for a full accounting of the state’s
21climate footprint.

22(f) The Legislature also has established that the safety of the
23natural gas pipeline infrastructure in the state is a priority for the
24Public Utilities Commission and gas corporations, and nothing in
25this act shall compromise or deprioritize safety as a top
26consideration.

27(g) While providing just and reasonable rate revenues for
28California gas corporations to find, categorize, and repair leaks
29 promptly when discovered, including employing an adequate
30workforce, is in the public interest and promotes the interests of
31customers and the public, providing revenue to gas corporations
32to compensate them for the value of gas they lose to the atmosphere
33is not in the public interest.

34(h) While action in other states and by the federal government
35is necessary to fully address methane pollution from operations
36associated with natural gas imported into the state, integrating the
37full climate footprint of California natural gas into statewide
38planning efforts while also developing initiatives to actually reduce
39that footprint benefits the environment and reduces the leakage
40associated with the state’s climate programs.

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SEC. 2.  

Section 39731.5 is added to the Health and Safety
2Code
, to read:

3

39731.5.  

(a) Notwithstanding Sections 38550 and 38551, no
4later than January 1, 2020, the state board, in consultation with the
5Public Utilities Commission and other relevant state agencies,
6shall adopt by regulation methane emissions reduction measures
7for the emissions associated with the extraction, production,
8storage, processing, and transportation of natural gas used in the
9state, including imports, that will achieve a reduction in methane
10emissions of at least 40 percent below 2013 levels for systemwide
11methane emissions from natural gas used in California, by 2025.

12(b) The regulation adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall
13include both of the following:

14(1) Information gathered or acquired pursuant to subdivision
15(b) of Section 39731 to determine the 2013 levels for systemwide
16methane emissions.

17(2) Interim targets to reach the methane emissions level
18described in subdivision (a).

19(c) The state board, in consultation with the Public Utilities
20Commission and other relevant state agencies, shall consider all
21of the following:

22(1) Developing new incentives or investment programs to
23facilitate emissions reductions in basins and fields from which the
24state receives a significant portion of its natural gas.

25(2) Imposing new requirements on the state’s regulated gas
26corporations related to natural gas procurement and the tracking
27of interstate deliveries.

28(3) Modifying the state’s market-based emissions reduction
29measures, including a market-based compliance mechanism
30adopted pursuant to Section 38570, to account for and include
31methane emissions within the compliance obligations of natural
32gas utilities or fuel importers.

33(4) Participating in or forming interstate and federal working
34groups, compacts, or agreements.

35(d) Regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be
36designed in a manner that seeks to minimize the costs and
37maximize total benefits.

38(e) This section shall be implemented to the extent feasible and
39consistent with law.

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2
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Section 977 of the Public Utilities Code is
3amended to read:

4

977.  

In order to achieve transparency and accountability for
5rate revenues and best value for ratepayers, and consistent with
6the commission’s existing ratemaking procedures and authority
7to establish just and reasonable rates, the commission shall consider
8all of the following:

9(a) Providing an adequate workforce to achieve the objectives
10of reducing hazards and emissions from leaks, including leak
11avoidance, reduction, and repair.

12(b) (1) Providing revenues for all activities identified and
13 required pursuant to Section 975, including any adjustment of
14allowance for lost and unaccounted for gas related to actual leakage
15volumes.

16(2) In establishing rates for gas corporations, to the extent
17feasible as determined by thebegin delete commission,end deletebegin insert commissionend insert in an
18individual rulemaking proceeding or in general rate cases, the
19commission shall not allow gas corporations to seek or receive
20recovery from ratepayers for the value of natural gas lost to the
21atmosphere during the extraction, production, storage, processing,
22transportation, and delivery of the natural gas.

23(c) Providing guidance for treatment of expenditures as being
24either an item of expense or a capital investment.

25(d) The impact on affordability of gas service for vulnerable
26customers as a result of the incremental costs of compliance with
27the adopted rules and procedures.



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