AB 2581,
as amended, Bradford. Energy: appliance standards: public domain computer program: home energybegin delete rating.end deletebegin insert rating: energy efficiency program for appliances.end insert
(1) Existing law requires the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission to prescribe, by regulation, standards for minimum levels of operating efficiency, and authorizes the commission to prescribe other cost-effective measures, to promote the use of energy and water-efficient appliances whose use requires a significant amount of energy or water on a statewide basis.
This bill would instead authorize the commission to prescribe or adopt other cost-effectivebegin delete measures, including voluntary agreements.end deletebegin insert measures. The bill would authorize the commission to consider or recognize voluntary agreements in lieu of regulation described above and to
take voluntary agreements into account in its planning.end insert The bill would authorize the commission to repeal a standard of minimum levels operating efficiency for an appliance if it finds that the standard is duplicative or inconsistent with federal or state law.begin insert The bill would require any labeling requirement prescribed by the commission to allow a manufacturer to use electronic labeling as appropriate.end insert The bill would require the commission to rely on the most current data possible and, whenever feasible, to rely on data no older than one year prior to the commencement of a rulemaking proceeding to consider adoption or amendment of a standard for an appliance.
(2) Existing law requires the commission to prescribe, by regulation, lighting, insulation climate control system, and other building design and construction standards that increase the efficiency in the use of energy and water for new residential and new nonresidential buildings. Existing law also requires the commission to prescribe, by regulation, energy and water conservation design standards for new residential and new nonresidential buildings. In order to implement these requirements, existing law requires the commission to develop a public domain computer program that enables contractors, builders, architects, engineers, and government officials to estimate energy consumed by residential and nonresidential buildings and requires the commission to establish a formal process for certification of compliance options for new products, materials, and calculation methods, as prescribed.
This bill would require the commission to approve and make publicly available, not less than 6 months prior to the effective date of adopted or updated efficiency standards, the public domain computer program. The bill would require the commission, before approving the public domain computer program, to perform preliminary tests of the public domain computer program using common examples of residential and nonresidential buildings and building systems to ensure the usability of the program by users of the program. The bill would require the commission to make the results of those preliminary tests publicly available.
(3) Existing law requires the commission to establish criteria for adopting a statewide home energy rating program for residential dwellings.
For existing single-family residential dwellings and multifamily residential dwellings with up to 4 units, the bill would require the commission, in administering the statewide home energy rating program, to ensure that energy assessment tools used by the commission are routinely adjusted to improve modeling accuracy and to ensure that consumers receive a notice with the output of the energy assessment tools explaining the assumptions used in the energy assessment tools and how they may differ from actual usage patterns.
begin insert(4) Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations, as defined. The Public Utilities Act requires the Public Utilities Commission to review and accept, modify, or reject a procurement plan for each electrical corporation in accordance with specified elements, incentive mechanisms, and objectives. The act requires that an electrical corporation’s proposed procurement plan include certain elements, including a showing that the electrical corporation will first meet its unmet needs through all available energy efficiency and demand reduction resources that are cost effective, reliable, and feasible.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would require the Public Utilities Commission, no later than January 1, 2016, to include in its energy efficiency portfolio program, a program to provide incentives to an electrical corporation that adopts an energy efficiency program to reduce electrical demand from indoor appliances. In order to receive incentives from the program, the bill would require the Public Utilities Commission to require an energy efficiency program for indoor appliances adopted by an electrical corporation to be established and maintained at a net to gross ratio of 0.8 for 36 consecutive months. After 36 months, the bill would authorize the Public Utilities Commission to evaluate the energy efficiency program and adjust the net to gross ratio on a prospective basis.
end insertVote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 25402 of the Public Resources Code is
2amended to read:
The commission shall, after one or more public
4hearings, do all of the following, in order to reduce the wasteful,
5uneconomic, inefficient, or unnecessary consumption of energy,
6including the energy associated with the use of water:
7(a) (1) Prescribe, by regulation, lighting, insulation climate
8control system, and other building design and construction
9standards that increase the efficiency in the use of energy and water
10for new residential and new nonresidential buildings. The
11commission shall periodically update the standards and adopt any
P4 1revision that, in its judgment, it deems necessary. Six months after
2the commission certifies an energy conservation
manual pursuant
3to subdivision (c) of Section 25402.1, a city, county, city and
4county, or state agency shall not issue a permit for a building unless
5the building satisfies the standards prescribed by the commission
6pursuant to this subdivision or subdivision (b) that are in effect on
7the date an application for a building permit is filed. Water
8efficiency standards adopted pursuant to this subdivision shall be
9demonstrated by the commission to be necessary to save energy.
10(2) Prior to adopting a water efficiency standard for residential
11buildings, the Department of Housing and Community
12Development and the commission shall issue a joint finding
13whether the standard (A) is equivalent or superior in performance,
14safety, and for the protection of life, health, and general welfare
15to standards in Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations
and
16(B) does not unreasonably or unnecessarily impact the ability of
17Californians to purchase or rent affordable housing, as determined
18by taking account of the overall benefit derived from water
19efficiency standards. This subdivision does not in any way reduce
20the authority of the Department of Housing and Community
21Development to adopt standards and regulations pursuant to Part
221.5 (commencing with Section 17910) of Division 13 of the Health
23and Safety Code.
24(3) Water efficiency standards and water conservation design
25standards adopted pursuant to this subdivision and subdivision (b)
26shall be consistent with the legislative findings of this division to
27ensure and maintain a reliable supply of electrical energy and be
28equivalent to or superior to the performance, safety, and protection
29of life, health, and general welfare
standards contained in Title 24
30of the California Code of Regulations. The commission shall
31consult with the members of the coordinating council as established
32in Section 18926 of the Health and Safety Code in the development
33of these standards.
34(b) (1) Prescribe, by regulation, energy and water conservation
35design standards for new residential and new nonresidential
36buildings. The standards shall be performance standards and shall
37be promulgated in terms of energy consumption per gross square
38foot of floorspace, but may also include devices, systems, and
39techniques required to conserve energy and water. The commission
40shall periodically review the standards and adopt any revision that,
P5 1in its judgment, it deems necessary. A building that satisfies the
2standards prescribed pursuant to this subdivision need not comply
3with
the standards prescribed pursuant to subdivision (a). Water
4conservation design standards adopted pursuant to this subdivision
5shall be demonstrated by the commission to be necessary to save
6energy. Prior to adopting a water conservation design standard for
7residential buildings, the Department of Housing and Community
8Development and the commission shall issue a joint finding
9whether the standard (A) is equivalent or superior in performance,
10safety, and for the protection of life, health, and general welfare
11to standards in the California Building Standards Code and (B)
12does not unreasonably or unnecessarily impact the ability of
13Californians to purchase or rent affordable housing, as determined
14by taking account of the overall benefit derived from the water
15conservation design standards. Nothing in this subdivision in any
16way reduces the authority of the Department of Housing and
17Community
Development to adopt standards and regulations
18pursuant to Part 1.5 (commencing with Section 17910) of Division
1913 of the Health and Safety Code.
20(2) In order to increase public participation and improve the
21efficacy of the standards adopted pursuant to subdivisions (a) and
22(b), the commission shall, prior to publication of the notice of
23proposed action required by Section 18935 of the Health and Safety
24Code, involve parties who would be subject to the proposed
25regulations in public meetings regarding the proposed regulations.
26All potential affected parties shall be provided advance notice of
27these meetings and given an opportunity to provide written or oral
28comments. During these public meetings, the commission shall
29receive and take into consideration input from all parties
30concerning the parties’ design recommendations, cost
31considerations,
and other factors that would affect consumers and
32California businesses of the proposed standard. The commission
33shall take into consideration prior to the start of the notice of
34proposed action any input provided during these public meetings.
35(3) The standards adopted or revised pursuant to subdivisions
36(a) and (b) shall be cost-effective when taken in their entirety and
37when amortized over the economic life of the structure compared
38with historic practice. When determining cost-effectiveness, the
39commission shall consider the value of the water or energy saved,
40impact on product efficacy for the consumer, and the life-cycle
P6 1cost of complying with the standard. The commission shall consider
2other relevant factors, as required by Sections 18930 and 18935
3of the Health and Safety Code, including, but not limited to, the
4impact on housing costs, the
total statewide costs and benefits of
5the standard over its lifetime, economic impact on California
6businesses, and alternative approaches and their associated costs.
7(c) (1) (A) Prescribe, by regulation, standards for minimum
8levels of operating efficiency, based on a reasonable use pattern,
9and may prescribe or adopt other cost-effective measures, including
10incentive programs, fleet averaging, energy and water consumption
11labeling not preempted by federal labeling law,begin insert end insertbegin insertandend insert consumer
12education programs,begin delete and voluntary agreementsend delete to promote the
use
13of energy and water efficient appliances whose use, as determined
14by the commission, requires a significant amount of energy or
15water on a statewide basis. The minimum levels of operating
16efficiency shall be based on feasible and attainable efficiencies or
17feasible improved efficiencies that will reduce the energy or water
18consumption growth rates. The standards shall become effective
19no sooner than one year after the date of adoption or revision. A
20new appliance manufactured on or after the effective date of the
21standards shall not be sold or offered for sale in the state, unless
22it is certified by the manufacturer thereof to be in compliance with
23the standards. The standards shall be drawn so that they do not
24result in any added total costs for consumers over the designed
25life of the appliances concerned.
26(B) In order to
increase public participation and improve the
27efficacy of the standards adopted pursuant to this subdivision, the
28commission shall, prior to publication of the notice of proposed
29
action required by Section 18935 of the Health and Safety Code,
30involve parties who would be subject to the proposed regulations
31in public meetings regarding the proposed regulations. All potential
32affected parties shall be provided advance notice of these meetings
33and given an opportunity to provide written or oral comments.
34During these public meetings, the commission shall receive and
35take into consideration input from all parties concerning the parties’
36design recommendations, cost considerations, and other factors
37that would affect consumers and California businesses of the
38proposed standard. The commission shall take into consideration
39prior to the start of the notice of proposed action any input provided
40during these public meetings.
P7 1(C) The standards adopted or revised pursuant to this subdivision
2shall not result in any
added total costs for consumers over the
3designed life of the appliances concerned. When determining
4
cost-effectiveness, the commission shall consider the value of the
5water or energy saved, impact on product efficacy for the
6consumer, and the life-cycle cost to the consumer of complying
7with the standard. The commission shall consider other relevant
8factors, as required by Sections 11346.5 and 11357 of the
9Government Code, including, but not limited to, the impact on
10housing costs, the total statewide costs and benefits of the standard
11over its lifetime, economic impact on California businesses, and
12alternative approaches and their associated costs.
13(D) Any labeling requirement prescribed by the commission
14pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall allow a manufacturer to use
15electronic labeling as appropriate. The use of electronic labeling
16does not alter requirements to submit data to
the commission’s
17appliance efficiency database.
18(2) A new appliance, except for any plumbing fitting, regulated
19under paragraph (1), that is manufactured on or after July 1, 1984,
20shall not be sold, or offered for sale, in the state, unless the date
21of the manufacture is permanently displayed in an accessible place
22on that appliance.
23(3) During the period of five years after the commission has
24adopted a standard for a particular appliance under paragraph (1),
25an increase or decrease in the minimum level of operating
26efficiency required by the standard for that appliance shall not
27become effective, unless the commission adopts other cost-effective
28measures for that appliance.
29(4) Neither the
commission nor any other state agency shall
30take any action to decrease any standard adopted under this
31subdivision on or before June 30, 1985, prescribing minimum
32levels of operating efficiency or other energy conservation
33measures for any appliance, unless the commission finds by a
34four-fifths vote that a decrease is of benefit to ratepayers, and that
35there is significant evidence of changed circumstances. Before
36January 1, 1986, the commission shall not take any action to
37increase a standard prescribing minimum levels of operating
38efficiency for any appliance or adopt a new standard under
39paragraph (1). Before January 1, 1986, any appliance manufacturer
40doing business in this state shall provide directly, or through an
P8 1appropriate trade or industry association, information, as specified
2by the commission after consultation with manufacturers doing
3business in the state and appropriate trade or
industry associations
4on sales of appliances so that the commission may study the effects
5of regulations on those sales. These informational requirements
6shall remain in effect until the information is received. The trade
7or industry association may submit sales information in an
8aggregated form in a manner that allows the commission to carry
9out the purposes of the study. The commission shall treat any sales
10information of an individual manufacturer as confidential and that
11information shall not be a public record. The commission shall not
12request any information that cannot be reasonably produced in the
13exercise of due diligence by the manufacturer. At least one year
14prior to the adoption or amendment of a standard for an appliance,
15the commission shall notify the Legislature of its intent, and the
16justification to adopt or amend a standard for the appliance. The
17commission shall rely on the most
current data available and,
18whenever feasible, shall rely on data no older than one year prior
19to the commencement of a rulemaking proceeding to consider
20adoption or amendment of a standard for an appliance pursuant to
21this subdivision. Notwithstanding paragraph (3) and this paragraph,
22the commission may do any of the following:
23(A) Increase the minimum level of operating efficiency in an
24existing standard up to the level of the National Voluntary
25Consensus Standards 90, adopted by the American Society of
26Heating, Refrigeration, and Air Conditioning Engineers or, for
27appliances not covered by that standard, up to the level established
28in a similar nationwide consensus standard.
29(B) Change the measure or rating of efficiency of any standard,
30if the minimum level of operating
efficiency remains substantially
31the same.
32(C) Adjust the minimum level of operating efficiency in an
33existing standard in order to reflect changes in test procedures that
34the standards require manufacturers to use in certifying compliance,
35if the minimum level of operating efficiency remains substantially
36the same.
37(D) Readopt a standard preempted, enjoined, or otherwise found
38legally defective by an administrative agency or a lower court, if
39final legal action determines that the standard is valid and if the
P9 1standard that is readopted is not more stringent than the standard
2that was found to be defective or preempted.
3(E) Repeal a standard for a particular appliance adopted under
4paragraph (1) if it finds that the
standard is duplicative or
5inconsistent with federal or state law.
6(F) Adopt or amend any existing or new standard at any level
7of operating efficiency, if the Governor has declared an energy
8emergency as described in Section 8558 of the Government Code.
9(5) Notwithstanding paragraph (4), the commission may adopt
10standards pursuant to Commission Order No. 84-0111-1, on or
11before June 30, 1985.
12(6) (A) The commission may consider or recognize voluntary
13agreements in lieu of regulation pursuant to paragraph (1).
14(B) The commission may take voluntary agreements into account
15in its planning.
16(d) (1) Recommend minimum standards of efficiency for the
17operation of a new facility at a particular site that are technically
18and economically feasible. A site and related facility shall not be
19certified pursuant to Chapter 6 (commencing with Section 25500),
20unless the applicant certifies that standards recommended by the
21commission have been considered, which certification shall include
22a statement specifying the extent to which conformance with the
23recommended standards will be achieved.
24(2) Whenever this section and Chapter 11.5 (commencing with
25Section 19878) of Part 3 of Division 13 of the Health and Safety
26Code
are in conflict, the commission shall be governed by that
27chapter of the Health and Safety Code to the extent of the conflict.
28(e) The commission shall do all of the following:
29(1) Not later than January 1, 2004, amend any regulations in
30effect on January 1, 2003, pertaining to the energy efficiency
31standards for residential clothes washers to require that residential
32clothes washers manufactured on or after January 1, 2007, be at
33least as water efficient as commercial clothes washers.
34(2) Not later than April 1, 2004, petition the federal Department
35of Energy for an exemption from any relevant federal regulations
36governing energy efficiency standards that are applicable to
37residential clothes washers.
38(3) Not later than January 1, 2005, report to the Legislature on
39its progress with respect to the requirements of paragraphs (1) and
40(2).
Section 25402.1 of the Public Resources Code is
2amended to read:
In order to implement the requirements of subdivisions
4(a) and (b) of Section 25402, all of the following shall apply:
5(a) The commission shall develop a public domain computer
6program that will enable contractors, builders, architects, engineers,
7and government officials to estimate the energy consumed by
8residential and nonresidential buildings. The commission may
9charge a fee for the use of the program, which shall be based upon
10the actual cost of the program, including any computer costs.
11(b) The commission shall establish a formal process for
12certification of compliance options for new products, materials,
13and
calculation methods that provides for adequate technical and
14public review to ensure accurate, equitable, and timely evaluation
15of certification applications. Proponents filing applications for new
16products, materials, and calculation methods shall provide all
17information needed to evaluate the application that is required by
18the commission. The commission shall publish annually the results
19of its certification decisions and instructions to users and local
20building officials concerning requirements for showing compliance
21with the building standards for new products, materials, or
22calculation methods. The commission may charge and collect a
23reasonable fee from applicants to cover the costs under this
24subdivision. Any funds received by the commission for purposes
25of this subdivision shall be deposited in the Energy Resources
26Programs Account and, notwithstanding Section 13340 of the
27Government Code,
are continuously appropriated to the
28commission for the purposes of this subdivision. Any
29unencumbered portion of funds collected as a fee for an application
30remaining in the Energy Resources Programs Account after
31completion of the certification process for that application shall
32be returned to the applicant within a reasonable period of time.
33(c) The commission shall include a prescriptive method of
34complying with the standards, including design aids such as a
35manual, sample calculations, and model structural designs.
36(d) The commission shall conduct a pilot project of field testing
37of actual residential buildings to calibrate and identify potential
38needed changes in the modeling assumptions to increase the
39accuracy of the public domain computer program specified in
40subdivision
(a) and to evaluate the impacts of the standards,
P11 1including, but not limited to, the energy savings, cost-effectiveness,
2and the effects on indoor air quality. The pilot project shall be
3conducted pursuant to a contract entered into by the commission.
4The commission shall consult with the participants designated
5pursuant to Section 9202 of the Public Utilities Code, as that
6section read on December 31, 2003, to seek funding and support
7for field monitoring in each public utility service territory, with
8the University of California to take advantage of its extensive
9building monitoring expertise, and with the California Building
10Industry Association to coordinate the involvement of builders
11and developers throughout the state. The pilot project shall include
12periodic public workshops to develop plans and review progress.
13The commission shall prepare and submit a report to the Legislature
14on progress and
initial findings not later than December 31, 1988,
15and a final report on the results of the pilot project on residential
16buildings not later than June 30, 1990. The report shall include
17recommendations regarding the need and feasibility of conducting
18further monitoring of actual residential and nonresidential
19buildings. The report shall also identify any revisions to the public
20
domain computer program and energy conservation standards if
21the pilot project determines that revisions are appropriate.
22(e) The commission shall certify, not later than 180 days after
23approval of the standards by the State Building Standards
24Commission, an energy conservation manual for use by designers,
25builders, and contractors of residential and nonresidential buildings.
26The manual shall be furnished upon request at a price sufficient
27to cover the costs of production and shall be distributed at no cost
28to all affected local agencies. The manual shall contain, but not be
29limited to, the following:
30(1) The standards for energy conservation established by the
31commission.
32(2) Forms, charts, tables, and
other data to assist designers and
33builders in meeting the standards.
34(3) Design suggestions for meeting or exceeding the standards.
35(4) Any other information which the commission finds will
36assist persons in conforming to the standards.
37(5) Instructions for use of the computer program for calculating
38energy consumption in residential and nonresidential buildings.
39(6) The prescriptive method for use as an alternative to the
40computer program.
P12 1(f) The commission shall approve and make publicly available,
2not less than six months prior to the effective date of adopted or
3updated standards, the public domain
computer program developed
4pursuant to subdivision (a). Before approving the public domain
5computer program, the commission shall do both of the following:
6(1) Perform preliminary tests of the public domain computer
7program using common examples of residential and nonresidential
8buildings and building systems to ensure the usability of the public
9domain computer program by users of the program, including, but
10not limited to, architects, builders, contractors, and local code
11enforcement personnel.
12(2) Make the results of the preliminary tests publicly available.
13(g) The commission shall establish a continuing program of
14technical assistance to local building departments in the
15enforcement of subdivisions (a) and (b) of
Section 25402 and this
16section. The program shall include the training of local officials
17in building technology and enforcement procedures related to
18energy conservation, and the development of complementary
19training programs conducted by local governments, educational
20institutions, and other public or private entities. The technical
21assistance program shall include the preparation and publication
22of forms and procedures for local building departments in
23performing the review of building plans and specifications. The
24commission shall provide, on a contract basis, a review of building
25plans and specifications submitted by a local building department,
26and shall adopt a schedule of fees sufficient to repay the cost of
27those services.
28(h) Subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 25402 and this section,
29and the rules and regulations of the
commission adopted pursuant
30to those provisions, shall be enforced by the building department
31of every city, county, or city and county.
32(1) A building permit for a residential or nonresidential building
33shall not be issued by a local building department, unless a review
34by the building department of the plans for the proposed residential
35or nonresidential building contains detailed energy system
36specifications and confirms that the building satisfies the minimum
37standards established pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) of Section
3825402 and this section applicable to the building.
P13 1(2) Where there is no local building department, the commission
2shall enforce subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 25402 and this
3section.
4(3) If a local building department fails to enforce subdivisions
5(a) and (b) of Section 25402 and this section or any other provision
6of this chapter or standard adopted pursuant thereto, the
7commission may provide enforcement after furnishing 10 days’
8written notice to the local building department.
9(4) A city, county, or city and county may, by ordinance or
10resolution, prescribe a schedule of fees sufficient to pay the costs
11incurred in the enforcement of subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section
1225402 and this section. The commission may establish a schedule
13of fees sufficient to pay the costs incurred by that enforcement.
14(5) The construction of a state building shall not commence
15until the Department of General Services or the state agency that
16otherwise has jurisdiction
over the property reviews the plans for
17the proposed building and certifies that the plans satisfy the
18minimum standards established pursuant to Chapter 2.8
19(commencing with Section 15814.30) of Part 10b of Division 3 of
20Title 2 of the Government Code, subdivision (a) or (b) of Section
2125402, and this section that are applicable to the building.
22(i) Subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 25402 and this section
23shall apply only to new residential and nonresidential buildings
24on which actual site preparation and construction have not
25commenced prior to the effective date of rules and regulations
26adopted pursuant to those sections that are applicable to those
27buildings. Those sections shall not prohibit either of the following:
28(1) The enforcement of state or local energy conservation or
29energy
insulation standards, adopted prior to the effective date of
30rules and regulations adopted pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b)
31of Section 25402 and this section with regard to residential and
32nonresidential buildings on which actual site preparation and
33construction have commenced prior to that date.
34(2) The enforcement of city or county energy conservation or
35energy insulation standards, whenever adopted, with regard to
36residential and nonresidential buildings on which actual site
37preparation and construction have not commenced prior to the
38effective date of rules and regulations adopted pursuant to
39subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 25402 and this section, if the
40city or county files the basis of its determination that the standards
P14 1are cost effective with the commission and the commission finds
2that the standards will require the diminution
of energy
3consumption levels permitted by the rules and regulations adopted
4pursuant to those sections. If, after two or more years after the
5filing with the commission of the determination that those standards
6are cost effective, there has been a substantial change in the factual
7circumstances affecting the determination, upon application by
8any interested party, the city or county shall update and file a new
9basis of its determination that the standards are cost effective. The
10determination that the standards are cost effective shall be adopted
11by the governing body of the city or county at a public meeting.
12If, at the meeting on the matter, the governing body determines
13that the standards are no longer cost effective, the standards shall,
14as of that date, be unenforceable and no building permit or other
15entitlement shall be denied based on the noncompliance with the
16standards.
17(j) The commission may exempt from the requirements of this
18section and of any regulations adopted pursuant to this section any
19proposed building for which compliance would be impossible
20without substantial delays and increases in cost of construction, if
21the commission finds that substantial funds have been expended
22in good faith on planning, designing, architecture, or engineering
23prior to the date of adoption of the regulations.
24(k) If a dispute arises between an applicant for a building permit,
25or the state pursuant to paragraph (5) of subdivision (h), and the
26building department regarding interpretation of Section 25402 or
27the regulations adopted pursuant thereto, either party may submit
28the dispute to the commission for resolution. The commission’s
29determination of the
matter shall be binding on the parties.
30(l) Nothing in Section 25130, 25131, or 25402, or in this section
31prevents enforcement of any regulation adopted pursuant to this
32chapter, or Chapter 11.5 (commencing with Section 19878) of Part
333 of Division 13 of the Health and Safety Code as they existed
34prior to September 16, 1977.
Section 25942 of the Public Resources Code is
36amended to read:
(a) On or before July 1, 1995, the commission shall
38establish criteria for adopting a statewide home energy rating
39program for residential dwellings. The program criteria shall
40include, but are not limited to, all of the following elements:
P15 1(1) Consistent, accurate, and uniform ratings based on a single
2statewide rating scale.
3(2) Reasonable estimates of potential utility bill savings, and
4reliable recommendations on cost-effective measures to improve
5energy efficiency.
6(3) Training and certification procedures for home raters
and
7quality assurance procedures to promote accurate ratings and to
8
protect consumers.
9(4) In coordination with home energy rating service organization
10
databases, procedures to establish a centralized, publicly accessible,
11database that includes a uniform reporting system for information
12on residential dwellings, excluding proprietary information, needed
13to facilitate the program. There shall be no public access to
14information in the database concerning specific dwellings without
15the owner’s or occupant’s permission.
16(5) Labeling procedures that will meet the needs of home buyers,
17homeowners, renters, the real estate industry, and mortgage lenders
18with an interest in home energy ratings.
19(b) The commission shall adopt the program pursuant to
20subdivision (a) in consultation with representatives of the
21Department of Real Estate, the Department of Housing and
22Community Development, the Public Utilities
Commission,
23investor-owned and municipal utilities, cities and counties, real
24estate licensees, home builders, mortgage lenders, home appraisers
25and inspectors, home energy rating organizations, contractors who
26provide home energy services, consumer groups, and
27environmental groups.
28(c) On and after January 1, 1996, a home energy rating services
29shall not be performed in this state unless the services have been
30certified, if such a certification program is available, by the
31commission to be in compliance with the program criteria specified
32in subdivision (a) and, in addition, are in conformity with any other
33applicable element of the program.
34(d) On or before July 1, 1996, the commission shall consult with
35the agencies and organizations described in subdivision (b), to
36facilitate
a public information program to inform homeowners,
37rental property owners, renters, sellers, and others of the existence
38of the statewide home energy rating program adopted by the
39commission.
P16 1(e) The commission shall, as part of the biennial report prepared
2pursuant to Section 25302, report on the progress made to
3implement a statewide home energy rating program. The report
4shall include an evaluation of the energy savings attributable to
5the program, and a recommendation concerning which means and
6methods will be most efficient and cost-effective to induce home
7energy ratings for residential dwellings.
8(f) For existing single-family residential dwellings and
9multifamily residential dwellings with up to four units, the
10commission shall do both of the following in
administering the
11statewide home energy rating program:
12(1) Ensure energy assessment tools used by the commission are
13routinely adjusted to improve modeling accuracy.
14(2) Ensure that consumers receive a notice with the output of
15the energy assessment tools explaining the assumptions used in
16the energy assessment tools and how they may differ from actual
17usage patterns.
begin insertSection 454.58 is added to the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert,
19to read:end insert
(a) No later than January 1, 2016, the commission
21shall, in a new or existing proceeding, include a program in its
22energy efficiency portfolio program to provide incentives to an
23electrical corporation that adopts an energy efficiency program
24to reduce electrical demand from indoor appliances.
25(b) The program established by the commission pursuant to
26subdivision (a) shall address challenges and minimize
27programmatic barriers that may limit or inhibit the achievement
28of energy efficiency goals determined by the commission. The
29energy efficiency goals shall include, but not be limited to, all of
30the following:
31(1) Evaluation and attribution of energy savings.
32(2) Long-lasting, sustainable increases in the adoption of energy
33efficiency technologies through structural changes in the market
34and in behaviors of market actors for indoor appliances that
35receive electricity through power outlets, such as 110 voltage
36alternating current (VAC), and other emerging delivery
37mechanisms, including universal serial bus (USB), Power over
38Ethernet (PoE), and 24 volt direct current (VDC).
39(c) In order to receive incentives from the program, the
40commission shall require an energy efficiency program adopted
P17 1by an electrical corporation pursuant to subdivision (a) to be
2established and maintained at a net to gross ratio of 0.8 for a
3minimum of 36 consecutive months. After 36 months, the
4commission may evaluate the energy efficiency program and adjust
5the net to gross ratio on a prospective basis.
6(d) The commission shall update cost-effectiveness tools to
7account for long-term benefits and costs that accrue as a result of
8the establishment of programs pursuant to subdivision (a).
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