15102890D
HOUSE BILL NO. 1913
Offered January 14, 2015
Prefiled January 13, 2015
A BILL to amend and reenact §56-585.2 of the Code of
Virginia, relating to electric utilities; renewable energy resources and energy
efficiency goals.
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Patron-- Lopez
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Committee Referral Pending
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Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That §56-585.2 of the Code of Virginia is amended and
reenacted as follows:
§56-585.2. Clean energy goals.
A. As used in this section:
"Qualified
investment" means an expense incurred in the Commonwealth by a
participating utility in conducting, either by itself or in partnership with
institutions of higher education in the Commonwealth or with industrial or
commercial customers that have established renewable energy research and
development programs in the Commonwealth, research and development activities
related to renewable or alternative energy sources, which expense (i) is
designed to enhance the participating utility's understanding of emerging
energy technologies and their potential impact on and value to the utility's
system and customers within the Commonwealth; (ii) promotes economic
development within the Commonwealth; (iii) supplements customer-driven
alternative energy or energy efficiency initiatives; (iv) supplements
alternative energy and energy efficiency initiatives at state or local
governmental facilities in the Commonwealth; or (v) is designed to mitigate the
environmental impacts of renewable energy projects.
"Renewable energy" shall have the same meaning
ascribed to it in §56-576, provided such renewable energy is (i) generated in
the Commonwealth or in the interconnection region of the regional transmission
entity of which the participating utility is a member, as it may change from
time to time, and purchased by a participating utility under a power purchase
agreement; provided, however, that if such agreement was executed on or after
July 1, 2013, the agreement shall expressly transfer ownership of renewable
attributes, in addition to ownership of the energy, to the participating
utility; (ii) generated by a public utility providing electric service in the
Commonwealth from a facility in which the public utility owns at least a 49
percent interest and that is located in the Commonwealth, in the
interconnection region of the regional transmission entity of which the
participating utility is a member, or in a control area adjacent to such
interconnection region; or (iii) represented by renewable energy certificates.
"Renewable energy" shall not include electricity generated from pumped
storage, but shall include run-of-river generation from a combined
pumped-storage and run-of-river facility.
"Renewable energy certificate" means either (i) a certificate
issued by an affiliate of the regional transmission entity of which the participating
utility is a member, as it may change from time to time, or any successor to
such affiliate, and held or acquired by such utility, that validates the
generation of renewable energy by eligible sources in the interconnection
region of the regional transmission entity or (ii) a
certificate issued by the Commission pursuant to subsection J and held or
acquired by a participating utility, that validates a qualified investment made
by the participating utility.
"Total electric energy sold in the base year" means
total electric energy sold to Virginia jurisdictional retail customers by a
participating utility in calendar year 2007, excluding an amount equivalent to
the average of the annual percentages of the electric energy that was supplied
to such customers from nuclear generating plants for the calendar years 2004
through 2006.
B. Participating utilities
shall make investments in solar energy generation, onshore wind generation,
offshore wind generation, and cumulative energy efficiency savings by calendar
year 2030, as described in this section.
C. Any
investor-owned incumbent electric utility may apply to the Commission for
approval to participate in a renewable energy portfolio standard program, as
defined in this section. The Commission shall approve such application if the
applicant demonstrates that it has a reasonable expectation of achieving 12
percent of its base year electric energy sales from renewable energy sources
during calendar year 2022, and 15 percent of its base year electric energy sales
from renewable energy sources during calendar year 2025, as provided in
subsection D E.
C. D. It is in
the public interest for utilities that seek
to have a renewable energy portfolio standard program to achieve the goals set
forth in subsection D E, such goals being referred
to herein as "RPS Goals." A utility shall receive
double credit toward meeting the renewable energy portfolio standard for energy
derived from sunlight, from onshore wind, or from facilities in the
Commonwealth fueled primarily by animal waste, and triple credit toward meeting
the renewable energy portfolio standard for energy derived from offshore wind.
D. E. Regarding
any renewable energy portfolio standard program, the total electric energy sold
by a utility to meet the RPS Goals shall be composed of the following amounts
of electric energy or renewable thermal energy equivalent from renewable energy
sources, as adjusted for any sales volumes lost through operation of the
customer choice provisions of subdivision A 3 or A 4 of §56-577:
RPS Goal I: In calendar year 2010, 4 percent of total electric
energy sold in the base year.
RPS Goal II: For calendar years 2011 through 2015, inclusive,
an average of 4 percent of total electric energy sold in the base year, and in
calendar year 2016, 7 percent of total electric energy sold in the base year.
RPS Goal III: For calendar years 2017 through 2021, inclusive,
an average of 7 percent of total electric energy sold in the base year, and in
calendar year 2022, 12 percent of total electric energy sold in the base year. In addition, through the
implementation of energy efficiency and demand-side management programs by
calendar year 2022, participating utilities shall reduce the consumption of
electric energy by retail customers by an amount equal to 10 percent of the
amount of electric energy consumed by retail customers in 2006.
RPS Goal IV: For calendar years 2023 and 2024, inclusive, an
average of 12 percent of total electric energy sold in the base year, and in
calendar year 2025, 15 percent of total electric energy sold in the base year. In addition, participating
utilities must maintain or increase the energy efficiency and demand-side
management savings achieved for RPS Goal III.
A utility may not apply renewable
energy certificates issued pursuant to subsection J to meet more than 20
percent of the sales requirement for the RPS Goal in any year.
For compliance with any RPS
Goal for calendar years 2015 through 2025, inclusive, a utility may only apply
(i) renewable energy generated from renewable energy generation facilities
owned by the utility, (ii) renewable energy
purchased or acquired by the utility from a non-utility generator, (iii)
renewable energy certificates purchased or acquired by the utility from
customer-generators participating in net energy metering pursuant to §56-594, or (iv)
renewable energy certificates purchased or acquired by the utility from
generators in the interconnection region of the regional transmission entity,
except that a utility may not apply such renewable energy certificates to meet
more than 20 percent of the sales requirement for the RPS Goal in any year.
A utility shall receive
double credit toward meeting the renewable energy portfolio standard for energy
derived from onshore wind obtained via power purchase agreements entered into
prior to January 1, 2013.
A utility may apply renewable energy sales achieved or
renewable energy certificates acquired during the periods covered by any such
RPS Goal that are in excess of the sales requirement for that RPS Goal to the
sales requirements for any future RPS Goals in the five calendar years after
the renewable energy was generated or the renewable energy certificates were
created, except that a utility shall be able to apply renewable energy
certificates acquired by the utility prior to January 1, 2014.
E. F. A
utility participating in such program shall have the right to recover all
incremental costs incurred for the purpose of such participation in such
program, as accrued against income, through rate adjustment clauses as provided
in subdivisions A 5 and A 6 of §56-585.1, including, but not limited to,
administrative costs, ancillary costs, capacity costs, costs of energy
represented by certificates described in subsection A, and, in the case of
construction of renewable energy generation facilities, allowance for funds
used during construction until such time as an enhanced rate of return, as
determined pursuant to subdivision A 6 of §56-585.1, on construction work in
progress is included in rates, projected construction work in progress,
planning, development and construction costs, life-cycle costs, and costs of
infrastructure associated therewith, plus an enhanced rate of return, as
determined pursuant to subdivision A 6 of §56-585.1. This
subsection shall not apply to qualified investments as provided in subsection
K. All incremental costs of the RPS program shall be
allocated to and recovered from the utility's customer classes based on the
demand created by the class and within the class based on energy used by the
individual customer in the class, except that the incremental costs of the RPS
program shall not be allocated to or recovered from customers that are served
within the large industrial rate classes of the participating utilities and
that are served at primary or transmission voltage.
F. G. A
utility participating in such program shall apply towards meeting its RPS Goals
any renewable energy from existing renewable energy sources owned by the
participating utility or purchased as allowed by contract at no additional cost
to customers to the extent feasible. A utility participating in such program
shall not apply towards meeting its RPS Goals renewable energy certificates
attributable to any renewable energy generated at a renewable energy generation
source in operation as of July 1, 2007, that is operated by a person that is
served within a utility's large industrial rate class and that is served at
primary or transmission voltage, except for those persons providing renewable
thermal energy equivalents to the utility. A participating utility shall be
required to fulfill any remaining deficit needed to fulfill its RPS Goals from
new renewable energy supplies at reasonable cost and in a prudent manner to be
determined by the Commission at the time of approval of any application made
pursuant to subsection B C. A participating utility may
sell renewable energy certificates produced at its own generation facilities
located in the Commonwealth or, if located outside the Commonwealth, owned by
such utility and in operation as of January 1, 2010, or renewable energy
certificates acquired as part of a purchase power agreement, to another entity
and purchase lower cost renewable energy certificates and the net difference in
price between the renewable energy certificates shall be credited to customers.
Utilities participating in such program shall collectively, either through the
installation of new generating facilities, through retrofit of existing
facilities or through purchases of electricity from new facilities located in
Virginia, use or cause to be used no more than a total of 1.5 million tons per
year of green wood chips, bark, sawdust, a tree or any portion of a tree which
is used or can be used for lumber and pulp manufacturing by facilities located
in Virginia, towards meeting RPS goals, excluding such fuel used at electric
generating facilities using wood as fuel prior to January 1, 2007. A utility
with an approved application shall be allocated a portion of the 1.5 million
tons per year in proportion to its share of the total electric energy sold in
the base year, as defined in subsection A, for all utilities participating in
the RPS program. A utility may use in meeting RPS goals, without limitation,
the following sustainable biomass and biomass based waste to energy resources:
mill residue, except wood chips, sawdust and bark; pre-commercial soft wood
thinning; slash; logging and construction debris; brush; yard waste; shipping
crates; dunnage; non-merchantable waste paper; landscape or right-of-way tree
trimmings; agricultural and vineyard materials; grain; legumes; sugar; and gas
produced from the anaerobic decomposition of animal waste.
G. H. The
Commission shall promulgate such rules and regulations as may be necessary to implement
the provisions of this section including a requirement that participants verify
whether the RPS goals are met in accordance with this section.
H. I. Each
investor-owned incumbent electric utility shall report to the Commission
annually by November 1 identifying:
1. The utility's efforts, if any, to meet the RPS Goals,
specifically identifying:
a. A list of all states where the purchased or owned renewable
energy was generated, specifying the number of megawatt hours or renewable energy
certificates originating from each state;
b. A list of the decades in which the purchased or owned
renewable energy generating units were placed in service, specifying the number
of megawatt hours or renewable energy certificates originating from those
units; and
c. A list of fuel types used to generate the purchased or
owned renewable energy, specifying the number of megawatt hours or renewable
energy certificates originating from each fuel type;
2. The utility's overall generation of renewable energy; and
3. Advances in renewable generation technology that affect
activities described in subdivisions 1 and 2.
I. J. The
Commission shall post on its website the reports submitted by each
investor-owned incumbent electric utility pursuant to subsection H I.
J. The Commission shall issue
to a participating utility a number of renewable energy certificates for
qualified investments, upon request by a participating utility, if it finds
that an expense satisfies the conditions set forth in this section for a
qualified investment, as follows:
1. By March 31 of each year,
the participating utility shall provide an analysis, as reasonably determined
by a qualified independent broker, of the average for the preceding year of the
publicly available prices for Tier 1 renewable energy certificates and Tier 2
renewable energy certificates, validating the generation of renewable energy by
eligible sources, that were issued in the interconnection region of the
regional transmission entity of which the participating utility is a member;
2. In the same annual
analysis provided to the Commission, the participating utility shall divide the
amount of the participating utility's qualified investments in the applicable
period by the average price determined pursuant to subdivision 1;
3. The number of renewable
energy certificates to be issued to the participating utility shall equal the
product obtained pursuant to subdivision 2; and
4. The Commission shall
review and validate the analysis provided by the participating utility within
90 days of submittal of its analysis to the Commission. If no corrections are
made by the Commission, then the analysis shall be deemed correct and the
renewable energy certificates shall be deemed issued to the participating
utility.
Each renewable energy
certificate issued to a participating utility pursuant to this subsection shall
represent the equivalent of one megawatt hour of renewable energy sales
achieved when applied to an RPS Goal.
K. Qualified investments
shall constitute reasonable and prudent operating expenses of a participating
utility. Notwithstanding subsection E, a participating utility shall not be
authorized to recover the costs associated with qualified investments through
rate adjustment clauses as provided in subdivisions A 5 and A 6 of §56-585.1.
In any proceeding conducted pursuant to §56-585.1 or other provision of this
title in which a participating utility seeks recovery of its qualified
investments as an operating expense, the participating utility shall not be
authorized to earn a return on its qualified investments.
L. A participating utility
shall not be eligible for a research and development tax credit pursuant to §
58.1-439.12:08 with regard to any expense incurred or investment made by the
participating utility that constitutes a qualified investment pursuant to this
section.
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