AB 2529, as amended, Williams. Energy: usage: plug-in equipment.
Existing law requires the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission), on a biennial basis, to conduct assessments and forecasts of all aspects of energy industry supply, production, transportation, delivery, and distribution. Existing law requires the Energy Commission, beginning November 1, 2003, and biennially thereafter, to adopt an integrated energy policy report containing an overview of major energy trends and issues facing the state.
Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory jurisdiction over the public utilities, including electrical corporations.
This bill would require the Energy Commission and the Public Utilities Commission, working jointly, to perform a baseline study, by January 1,begin delete 2016,end deletebegin insert
2017,end insert of energy usage by plug-in equipment, as defined, during the year 2014, and to develop a coordinated implementation plan to achieve by 2030 specified aggregate reductions in energy consumption by plug-in equipment from the 2014 baseline, with biennial intermediate targets.begin insert The bill would authorize the Energy Commission and the Public Utilities Commission to increase or decrease the aggregate reduction targets in energy consumption, if the Energy Commission and the Public Utilities Commission jointly determine, based on the baseline study, that those aggregate reduction targets are either unattainable or uneconomic for ratepayers, or are too conservative and would require a notice to be submitted to the Legislature, if those targets are increased or decreased due to unforseen developments in plug-in equipment technology or the market for plug-in equipment.end insert The
bill would require the Energy Commission to report on the progressbegin delete towardsend deletebegin insert
towardend insert
meeting the reduction targets and update the implementation plan as a part of the integrated energy policy report.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
(a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(1) Energy efficiency programs and standards are essential tools
4to help California conserve energy.
5(2) Currently, the various types of plug-in equipment, such as
6indoor and outdoor appliances, consumer and office electronics,
7and power tools, are responsible for over 50 percent of residential
8electricity consumption and 16 percent of commercial electricity
9consumption in California and this electricity consumption is
10projected to increase by 2030.
11(3) California has set ambitious goals for energy efficiency in
12buildings and lighting, but does not have quantified goals for a
13category that represents the majority of residential electricity
14consumption.
15(4) Large and cost-effective energy savings opportunities remain
16available in plug-in equipment. There is a need to supplement
17appliance efficiency standards by expanding existing incentive
18programs and developing other approaches including partnerships
19with industry, research and development, and consumer education.
20(5) Market barriers, such as a lack of consumer awareness and
21information on product lifetime energy costs, and split incentives
22between manufacturers who make the key design decisions and
23consumers who pay the electricity bill give
efficiency programs a
P3 1critical role in realizing the economic potential for energy
2efficiency in plug-in equipment.
3(6) Challenges with the evaluation and the attribution of program
4savings to utilities and implementers, as well as the focus on
5short-term savings, are limiting the utilities’ ability to achieve
6market transformation saving opportunities that take longer to
7implement and require upfront investment to yield large future
8savings.
9(7) There are insufficient opportunities for the State Energy
10Resources Conservation and Development Commission and the
11Public Utilities Commission to integrate key industry expertise
12into program design and implementation.
13(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to set a goal for plug-in
14equipment energy consumption to ensure both of the following:
15(1) Energy savings opportunities in support of the state’s energy
16and climate change goals are captured.
17(2) The effective utilization of incentive programs, partnerships
18with industry, research and development, consumer education, and
19efficiency standards to meet the state’s energy and climate goals.
Section 25327 is added to the Public Resources Code,
21to read:
(a) (1) For the purposes of this section, except as
23provided in paragraph (2), “plug-in equipment” means an electrical
24device that plugs into a wall outlet, including, but not limited to,
25indoor appliances, such as kitchen and laundry appliances,
26begin insert portable, window-mounted, or through-the-wall HVAC equipend insertbegin insertment, end insert
27commercial plug-in refrigeration, and security appliances;begin insert plug-inend insert
28 outdoorbegin delete appliances, such as hot tub and pool pumps;end deletebegin insert
appliances;end insert
29 consumer and office electronics; personal care products; and power
30tools.
31(2) “Plug-in equipment” does not include the following:
32(A) Servers at industrial-scale data centers located in buildings
33whose primary function is to be a data center.
34(B) begin deleteHeating, end deletebegin insertNonend insertbegin insert-plug-in heating, end insertventilation, and cooling
35begin delete (HVAC) equipment.end deletebegin insert
equipment, including split, packaged, or built
36up HVAC equipment that is typically installed by an HVAC
37contractor.end insert
38(C) Built-in or portable lighting.
39(D) Infrastructure loads connected directly to the building
40wiring, such as Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) breakers
P4 1and outlets, smoke or carbon monoxide detectors, dimming
2switches,begin delete doorbells, and garage openers.end deletebegin insert
and doorbells.end insert
3(E) Electric vehicles.
4(F) Medical devices, as defined in subsection (h) of Section 321
5of Title 21 of the United States Code.
6(3) For purposes of this subdivision, wall outlets include line
7outlets, such as 110 Voltage Alternating Current (VAC) and other
8emerging delivery mechanisms, including Universal Serial Bus
9(USB), Power over Ethernet (PoE), and 24 volt direct current (V
10DC).
11(4) For purposes of this subdivision “HVAC” means heating,
12ventilation, and air conditioning.
13(b) The commission
and the Public Utilities Commission,
14working jointly, shall do all of the following:
15(1) On or before January 1,begin delete 2016,end deletebegin insert 2017,end insert perform a baseline study
16of energy use by plug-in equipment in both the residential and
17commercial sectors of the state during the yearbegin delete 2014.end deletebegin insert 2014, in
18accordance with the following:end insert
19(A) The study shall identify the average energy consumption
20of individual product
categories that account for 80 percent of
21total plug-in electricity consumption in the residential sector and
22in the commercial sector.
23(B) The study shall include those products that the commission
24and the Public Utilities Commission elect to include, based on
25market and technology trends.
26(C) When conducting the study, priority shall be given to the
27use of existing recent and relevant studies whenever possible,
28including those performed in other states, instead of performing
29new field studies.
30(2) Develop a coordinated implementation plan, in consultation
31with
stakeholders, to achieve by 2030 at least a 25-percent
32aggregate reduction in energy consumption per residential
33household, and a 40-percent aggregate reduction in energy
34consumption per square foot of commercial space, by plug-in
35equipment in the state from the 2014 baseline determined pursuant
36to paragraph (1), with biennial intermediate targets betweenbegin delete 2016end delete
37begin insert 2018end insert to 2030begin insert, except as provided in subdivision (c)end insert. The
38coordinated implementation plan shall meet all of the following
39requirements:
P5 1(A) Be comprised of a complementary portfolio of techniques,
2applications, and practices
that may include, but need not be limited
3to, incentive programs, rebate programs,begin insert appliance early
4replacement rebate programs that link purchase and disposal
5rebates, upstream market transformation programs, voluntary
6initiatives andend insert partnerships with industry to promote innovation,
7begin insert expandedend insert research and development, public outreach and education
8efforts, and efficiency standards.
9(B) Consider costs and ratepayer protections, consistent with
10Section 25000.1.
11(C) Use an accurate cost-effectiveness methodology for
12assessing the long-term value of efficiency savings and ensure that
13benefits outweigh costs to
ratepayers.
14(3) Work with stakeholders to address challenges that may limit
15or inhibit the achievement of the reduction targets set forth in
16paragraph (2), including, but not limited to, the
evaluation and
17attribution of energy savings, and the enablement of market
18transformation programs.
19(4) Track the implementation of the plan in meeting the
20reduction targets annually through the Electricity Supply Analysis
21Division of the commission and the Energy Division of the Public
22Utilities Commission.
23(5) Revise the implementation plan and priorities in consultation
24with stakeholders.
25(c) (1) The commission and the Public Utilities Commission
26may increase or decrease the aggregate reduction targets for
27energy consumption specified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (b),
28if the commission and the Public Utilities Commission jointly
29
determine, based on the baseline energy use study conducted
30pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), that those aggregate
31reduction targets for energy consumption are either unattainable
32or uneconomic for ratepayers, or are too conservative.
33(2) If, as a result of unforseen developments in plug-in
34equipment technology or the market for plug-in equipment, the
35commission and the Public Utilities Commission take action
36pursuant to paragraph (1), the commission and the Public Utilities
37Commission shall submit a notice to the Legislature, in accordance
38with Section 9795 of the Government Code, describing that action,
39including the basis for that action.
40(c)
end delete
P6 1begin insert(end insertbegin insertd)end insert The commission shall report on the progressbegin delete towardsend deletebegin insert towardend insert
2 meeting the reduction targets through the tracking pursuant to
3paragraph (4) of subdivision (b) and update the implementation
4plan, as a part of the integrated energy policy report required
5pursuant to Section 25302.
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