Chapter 084
2024 -- S 2151 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED
Enacted 06/12/2024

A N   A C T
RELATING TO PUBLIC UTILITIES AND CARRIERS -- NET METERING

Introduced By: Senator Alana DiMario

Date Introduced: January 24, 2024

It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
     SECTION 1. Sections 39-26.4-2 and 39-26.4-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-26.4
entitled "Net Metering" are hereby amended to read as follows:
     39-26.4-2. Definitions.
     Terms not defined in this section herein shall have the same meaning as contained in
chapter 26 of this title. When used in this chapter:
     (1) “Community remote net-metering system” means a facility generating electricity using
an eligible net-metering resource that allocates net-metering credits to a minimum of one account
for a system associated with low- or moderate-income housing eligible credit recipients, or three
(3) eligible credit-recipient customer accounts, provided that no more than fifty percent (50%) of
the credits produced by the system are allocated to one eligible credit recipient, and provided further
at least fifty percent (50%) of the credits produced by the system are allocated to the remaining
eligible credit recipients in an amount not to exceed that which is produced annually by twenty-
five kilowatt (25 KW) AC capacity. The community remote net-metering system may transfer
credits to eligible credit recipients in an amount that is equal to or less than the sum of the usage of
the eligible credit recipient accounts measured by the three-year (3) average annual consumption
of energy over the previous three (3) years. A projected annual consumption of energy may be used
until the actual three-year (3) average annual consumption of energy over the previous three (3)
years at the eligible credit recipient accounts becomes available for use in determining eligibility
of the generating system. The community remote net-metering system may be owned by the same
entity that is the customer of record on the net-metered account or may be owned by a third party.
     (2) “Core forest” refers to unfragmented forest blocks of single or multiple parcels totaling
two hundred fifty (250) acres or greater unbroken by development and at least twenty-five (25)
yards from mapped roads, with eligibility questions to be resolved by the director of the department
of environmental management. Such determination shall constitute a contested case as defined in
§ 42-35-1.
     (3) “Electric distribution company” shall have the same meaning as § 39-1-2, but shall not
include Block Island Power Company or Pascoag Utility District, each of whom shall be required
to offer net metering to customers through a tariff approved by the public utilities commission after
a public hearing. Any tariff or policy on file with the public utilities commission on the date of
passage of this chapter shall remain in effect until the commission approves a new tariff.
     (4) “Eligible credit recipient” means one of the following eligible recipients in the electric
distribution company’s service territory whose electric service account or accounts may receive
net-metering credits from a community remote net-metering system. Eligible credit recipients
include the following definitions:
     (i) Residential accounts in good standing.
     (ii) “Low- or moderate-income housing eligible credit recipient” means an electric service
account or accounts in good standing associated with any housing development or developments
owned or operated by a public agency, nonprofit organization, limited-equity housing cooperative,
or private developer that receives assistance under any federal, state, or municipal government
program to assist the construction or rehabilitation of housing affordable to low- or moderate-
income households, as defined in the applicable federal or state statute, or local ordinance,
encumbered by a deed restriction or other covenant recorded in the land records of the municipality
in which the housing is located, that:
     (A) Restricts occupancy of no less than fifty percent (50%) of the housing to households
with a gross, annual income that does not exceed eighty percent (80%) of the area median income
as defined annually by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD);
     (B) Restricts the monthly rent, including a utility allowance, that may be charged to
residents, to an amount that does not exceed thirty percent (30%) of the gross, monthly income of
a household earning eighty percent (80%) of the area median income as defined annually by HUD;
     (C) Has an original term of not less than thirty (30) years from initial occupancy.
     Electric service account or accounts in good standing associated with housing
developments that are under common ownership or control may be considered a single low- or
moderate-income housing eligible credit recipient for purposes of this section. The value of the
credits shall be used to provide benefits to tenants.
     (iii) “Educational institutions” means public and private schools at the primary, secondary,
and postsecondary levels.
     (iv) “Commercial or industrial customers” means any nonresidential customer of the
electric distribution company.
     (5) “Eligible net-metering resource” means eligible renewable energy resource, as defined
in § 39-26-5 including biogas created as a result of anaerobic digestion, but, specifically excluding
all other listed eligible biomass fuels.
     (6) “Eligible net-metering system” means a facility generating electricity using an eligible
net-metering resource that is reasonably designed and sized to annually produce electricity in an
amount that is equal to, or less than, the renewable self-generator’s usage at the eligible net-
metering system site measured by the three-year (3) average annual consumption of energy over
the previous three (3) years at the electric distribution account(s) located at the eligible net-metering
system site. A projected annual consumption of energy may be used until the actual three-year (3)
average annual consumption of energy over the previous three (3) years at the electric distribution
account(s) located at the eligible net-metering system site becomes available for use in determining
eligibility of the generating system. The eligible net-metering system may be owned by the same
entity that is the customer of record on the net-metered accounts or may be owned by a third party
that is not the customer of record at the eligible net-metering system site and which may offer a
third-party, net-metering financing arrangement or net-metering financing arrangement, as
applicable. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, any eligible net-metering
resource: (i) Owned by a public entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, or multi-
municipal collaborative; or (ii) Owned and operated by a renewable-generation developer on behalf
of a public entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, or multi-municipal collaborative
through a net-metering financing arrangement shall be treated as an eligible net-metering system
and all accounts designated by the public entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, or
multi-municipal collaborative for net metering shall be treated as accounts eligible for net metering
within an eligible net-metering system site; or (iii) Owned and operated by a renewable-generation
developer on behalf of one or more commercial or industrial customer(s) through net-metering
financing arrangement(s) shall be treated as an eligible net-metering system within an eligible net-
metering system site. Notwithstanding any other provision to the contrary, effective July 1, 2060,
an eligible net-metering system means a facility generating electricity using an eligible net-
metering resource that is interconnected behind the same meter as the net-metering customer’s load.
     (7) “Eligible net-metering system site” means the site where the eligible net-metering
system or community remote net-metering system is located or is part of the same campus or
complex of sites contiguous to one another and the site where the eligible net-metering system or
community remote net-metering system is located or a farm on which the eligible net-metering
system or community remote net-metering system is located. Except for an eligible net-metering
system owned by or operated on behalf of a public entity, educational institution, hospital,
nonprofit, or multi-municipal collaborative or for a commercial or industrial customer through a
net-metering financing arrangement, the purpose of this definition is to reasonably assure that
energy generated by the eligible net-metering system is consumed by net-metered electric service
account(s) that are actually located in the same geographical location as the eligible net-metering
system. All energy generated from any eligible net-metering system is, and will be considered,
consumed at the meter where the renewable energy resource is interconnected for valuation
purposes. Except for an eligible net-metering system owned by, or operated on behalf of, a public
entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, or multi-municipal collaborative, or for a
commercial or industrial customer through a net-metering financing arrangement, or except for a
community remote net-metering system, all of the net-metered accounts at the eligible net-metering
system site must be the accounts of the same customer of record and customers are not permitted
to enter into agreements or arrangements to change the name on accounts for the purpose of
artificially expanding the eligible net-metering system site to contiguous sites in an attempt to avoid
this restriction. However, a property owner may change the nature of the metered service at the
accounts at the site to be master metered in the owner’s name, or become the customer of record
for each of the accounts, provided that the owner becoming the customer of record actually owns
the property at which the account is located. As long as the net-metered accounts meet the
requirements set forth in this definition, there is no limit on the number of accounts that may be net
metered within the eligible net-metering system site.
     (8) “Excess renewable net-metering credit” means a credit that applies to an eligible net-
metering system or community remote net-metering system for that portion of the production of
electrical energy beyond one hundred percent (100%) and no greater than one hundred twenty-five
percent (125%) of the renewable self-generator’s own consumption at the eligible net-metering
system site or the sum of the usage of the eligible credit recipient accounts associated with the
community remote net-metering system during the applicable billing period. Such excess
renewable net-metering credit shall be equal to the electric distribution company’s avoided cost
rate, which is hereby declared to be the electric distribution company’s last resort service kilowatt
hour (KWh) charge for the rate class and time-of-use billing period (if applicable) applicable to the
customer of record for the eligible net-metering system or applicable to the customer of record for
the community remote net-metering system. The commission shall have the authority to make
determinations as to the applicability of this credit to specific generation facilities to the extent
there is any uncertainty or disagreement.
     (9) “Farm” shall be defined in accordance with § 44-27-2, except that all buildings
associated with the farm shall be eligible for net-metering credits as long as: (i) The buildings are
owned by the same entity operating the farm or persons associated with operating the farm; and (ii)
The buildings are on the same farmland as the project on either a tract of land contiguous with, or
reasonably proximate to, such farmland or across a public way from such farmland.
     (10) “Hospital” means and shall be defined and established as set forth in chapter 17 of
title 23.
     (11) “Multi-municipal collaborative” means a group of towns and/or cities that enter into
an agreement for the purpose of co-owning a renewable-generation facility or entering into a
financing arrangement pursuant to subsection (15).
     (12) “Municipality” means any Rhode Island town or city, including any agency or
instrumentality thereof, with the powers set forth in title 45.
     (13) “Net metering” means using electrical energy generated by an eligible net-metering
system for the purpose of self-supplying electrical energy and power at the eligible net-metering
system site, or with respect to a community remote net-metering system, for the purpose of
generating net-metering credits to be applied to the electric bills of the eligible credit recipients
associated with the community net-metering system. The amount so generated will thereby offset
consumption at the eligible net-metering system site through the netting process established in this
chapter, or with respect to a community remote net-metering system, the amounts generated in
excess of that amount will result in credits being applied to the eligible credit-recipient accounts
associated with the community remote net-metering system.
     (14) “Net-metering customer” means a customer of the electric distribution company
receiving and being billed for distribution service whose distribution account(s) are being net
metered.
     (15) “Net-metering financing arrangement” means arrangements entered into by a public
entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, multi-municipal collaborative, or a commercial
or industrial customer with a private entity to facilitate the financing and operation of a net-metering
resource, in which the private entity owns and operates an eligible net-metering resource on behalf
of a public entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, multi-municipal collaborative, or
commercial or industrial customer, where: (i) The eligible net-metering resource is located on
property owned or controlled by the public entity, educational institution, hospital, municipality,
multi-municipal collaborative, or commercial or industrial customer as applicable; and (ii) The
production from the eligible net-metering resource and primary compensation paid by the public
entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, multi-municipal collaborative, or commercial or
industrial customer to the private entity for such production is directly tied to the consumption of
electricity occurring at the designated net-metered accounts.
     (16) “Nonprofit” means a nonprofit corporation as defined and established through chapter
6 of title 7, and shall include religious organizations that are tax exempt pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 
501(d).
     (17) “Person” means an individual, firm, corporation, association, partnership, farm, town
or city of the state of Rhode Island, multi-municipal collaborative, or the state of Rhode Island or
any department of the state government, governmental agency, or public instrumentality of the
state.
     (18) “Preferred site” means a location for a renewable energy system that has had prior
development, including, but not limited to: landfills, gravel pits and quarries, highway and major
road median strips, brownfields, superfund sites, parking lots or sites that are designated
appropriate for carports, and all rooftops including, but not limited to, residential, commercial,
industrial, and municipal buildings.
     (19) “Project” means a distinct installation of an eligible net-metering system or a
community remote net-metering system. An installation will be considered distinct if it is installed
in a different location, or at a different time, or involves a different type of renewable energy.
Subject to the safe-harbor provisions in § 39-26.4-3(a)(1), new and distinct projects cannot be
located on adjoining parcels of land within core forests, except for preferred sites.
     (20) “Public entity” means the federal government, the state of Rhode Island,
municipalities, wastewater treatment facilities, public transit agencies, or any water distributing
plant or system employed for the distribution of water to the consuming public within this state
including the water supply board of the city of Providence.
     (21) “Public entity net-metering system” means a system generating renewable energy at
a property owned or controlled by the public entity that is participating in a net-metering financing
arrangement where the public entity has designated accounts in its name to receive net-metering
credits.
     (22) “Renewable net-metering credit” means a credit that applies to an eligible net-
metering system or a community remote net-metering system up to one hundred percent (100%) of
either the renewable self-generator’s usage at the eligible net-metering system site or the sum of
the usage of the eligible credit-recipient accounts associated with the community remote net-
metering system over the applicable billing period. This credit shall be equal to the total kilowatt
hours of electrical energy generated up to the amount consumed on-site, and/or generated up to the
sum of the eligible credit-recipient account usage during the billing period multiplied by the sum
of the distribution company’s:
     (i) Last resort service kilowatt-hour charge for the rate class applicable to the net-metering
customer, except that for remote public entity and multi-municipality collaborative net-metering
systems that submit an application for an interconnection study on or after July 1, 2017, and
community remote net-metering systems, the last resort service kilowatt-hour charge shall be net
of the renewable energy standard charge or credit;
     (ii) Distribution kilowatt-hour charge;
     (iii) Transmission kilowatt-hour charge; and
     (iv) Transition kilowatt-hour charge.
     For projects after April 15, 2023, subject to the allowable two hundred seventy-five
megawatts alternating current (275 MWac), under § 39-26.4-3(a)(1)(vi), the credit shall be reduced
by twenty percent (20%).
     Notwithstanding the foregoing, except for systems that have requested an interconnection
study for which payment has been received by the distribution company, or if an interconnection
study is not required, a completed and paid interconnection application, by December 31, 2018, the
renewable net-metering credit for all remote public entity and multi-municipal collaborative net-
metering systems shall not include the distribution kilowatt-hour charge commencing on January
1, 2050.
     (23) “Renewable self-generator” means an electric distribution service customer of record
for the eligible net-metering system or community remote net-metering system at the eligible net-
metering system site which system is primarily designed to produce electrical energy for
consumption by that same customer at its distribution service account(s), and/or, with respect to
community remote net-metering systems, electrical energy which generates net-metering credits to
be applied to offset the eligible credit-recipient account usage.
     (24) “Third party” means and includes any person or entity, other than the renewable self-
generator, who or that owns or operates the eligible net-metering system or community remote net-
metering system on the eligible net-metering system site for the benefit of the renewable self-
generator.
     (25) “Third-party, net-metering financing arrangement” means the financing of eligible
net-metering systems or community remote net-metering systems through lease arrangements or
power/credit purchase agreements between a third party and renewable self-generator, except for
those entities under a public entity net-metering financing arrangement. A third party engaged in
providing financing arrangements related to such net-metering systems with a public or private
entity is not a public utility as defined in § 39-1-2.
     39-26.4-3. Net metering.
     (a) The following policies regarding net metering of electricity from eligible net-metering
systems and community remote net-metering systems and regarding any person that is a renewable
self-generator shall apply:
     (1)(i) The maximum allowable capacity for eligible net-metering systems, based on
nameplate capacity, shall be ten megawatts (10 MW).
     (ii) Eligible net-metering systems shall be sited outside of core forests with the exception
of development on preferred sites in the core forest and the exception of systems that, as of April
15, 2023, (A) Have submitted a complete application to the appropriate municipality for any
required permits and/or zoning changes, or (B) Have requested an interconnection study for which
payment has been received by the distribution company, or (C) If an interconnection study is not
required, systems that have a completed and paid interconnection application.
     (iii) For systems developed in core forests on preferred sites, no more than one hundred
thousand square feet (100,000 sq. ft) of core forest shall be removed, including except for work
required for utility interconnection or development of a brownfield, in which case no more core
forest than necessary for interconnection or brownfield development shall be removed.
     (iv) The aggregate amount of net metering in the Block Island Utility District doing
business as Block Island Power Company and the Pascoag Utility District shall not exceed a
maximum percentage of peak load for each utility district as set by the utility district based on its
operational characteristics, subject to commission approval.
     (v) Through December 31, 2018, the maximum aggregate amount of community remote
net-metering systems built shall be thirty megawatts (30 MW). Any of the unused MW amount
after December 31, 2018, shall remain available to community remote net-metering systems until
the MW aggregate amount is interconnected.
     (vi) The maximum aggregate capacity of remote net metering allowable for ground-
mounted eligible net-metering systems, as defined by § 39-26.4-2(6), with the exception of systems
that have, as of April 15, 2023, submitted a complete application to the appropriate municipality
for any required permits and/or zoning changes or have requested an interconnection study for
which payment has been received by the distribution company, or if an interconnection study is not
required, a completed and paid interconnection application by the distribution company date of
passage as of June 24, 2023, shall be two hundred seventy-five megawatts, alternating current (275
MWac MWAC MWac), excluding off-shore wind. None of the systems to which this cap applies
shall be in core forests unless on a preferred site located within the core forest. A project counts
against this maximum if it is in operation or under construction by July 1, 2030, as determined by
the local distribution company. All eligible ground-mounted net-metering systems must be under
construction or in operation by July 1, 2030. This restriction shall not apply to the following: (A)
The eligible net-metering system is interconnected behind the same meter as the net-metering
customer’s load; and/or (B) The energy generated by the eligible net-metering system is consumed
by net-metered electric service account(s) of the same owner of record that are actually located on
the same or contiguous parcels as the eligible net-metering system.
     (2) For ease of administering net-metered accounts and stabilizing net-metered account
bills, the electric distribution company may elect (but is not required) to estimate for any twelve-
month (12) period:
     (i) The production from the eligible net-metering system or community remote net-
metering system; and
     (ii) Aggregate consumption of the net-metered accounts at the eligible net-metering system
site or the sum of the consumption of the eligible credit-recipient accounts associated with the
community remote net-metering system, and establish a monthly billing plan that reflects the
expected credits that would be applied to the net-metered accounts over twelve (12) months. The
billing plan would be designed to even out monthly billings over twelve (12) months, regardless of
actual production and usage. If such election is made by the electric distribution company, the
electric distribution company would reconcile payments and credits under the billing plan to actual
production and consumption at the end of the twelve-month (12) period and apply any credits or
charges to the net-metered accounts for any positive or negative difference, as applicable. Should
there be a material change in circumstances at the eligible net-metering system site or associated
accounts during the twelve-month (12) period, the estimates and credits may be adjusted by the
electric distribution company during the reconciliation period. The electric distribution company
also may elect (but is not required) to issue checks to any net-metering customer in lieu of billing
credits or carry-forward credits or charges to the next billing period. For residential-eligible net-
metering systems and community remote net-metering systems twenty-five kilowatts (25 KW) or
smaller, the electric distribution company, at its option, may administer renewable net-metering
credits month to month allowing unused credits to carry forward into the following billing period.
     (3) If the electricity generated by an eligible net-metering system or community remote
net-metering system during a billing period is equal to, or less than, the net-metering customer’s
usage at the eligible net-metering system site or the sum of the usage of the eligible credit-recipient
accounts associated with the community remote net-metering system during the billing period, the
customer shall receive renewable net-metering credits, that shall be applied to offset the net-
metering customer’s usage on accounts at the eligible net-metering system site, or shall be used to
credit the eligible credit-recipient’s electric account.
     (4) If the electricity generated by an eligible net-metering system or community remote
net-metering system during a billing period is greater than the net-metering customer’s usage on
accounts at the eligible net-metering system site or the sum of the usage of the eligible credit-
recipient accounts associated with the community remote net-metering system during the billing
period, the customer shall be paid by excess renewable net-metering credits for the excess
electricity generated up to an additional twenty-five percent (25%) beyond the net-metering
customer’s usage at the eligible net-metering system site, or the sum of the usage of the eligible
credit-recipient accounts associated with the community remote net-metering system during the
billing period; unless the electric distribution company and net-metering customer have agreed to
a billing plan pursuant to subsection (a)(2).
     (5) The rates applicable to any net-metered account shall be the same as those that apply
to the rate classification that would be applicable to such account in the absence of net metering,
including customer and demand charges, and no other charges may be imposed to offset net-
metering credits.
     (b) The commission shall exempt electric distribution company customer accounts
associated with an eligible net-metering system from back-up or standby rates commensurate with
the size of the eligible net-metering system, provided that any revenue shortfall caused by any such
exemption shall be fully recovered by the electric distribution company through rates.
     (c) Any prudent and reasonable costs incurred by the electric distribution company
pursuant to achieving compliance with subsection (a) and the annual amount of any renewable net-
metering credits or excess renewable net-metering credits provided to accounts associated with
eligible net-metering systems or community remote net-metering systems, shall be aggregated by
the distribution company and billed to all distribution customers on an annual basis through a
uniform, per-kilowatt-hour (KWh) surcharge embedded in the distribution component of the rates
reflected on customer bills.
     (d) The billing process set out in this section shall be applicable to electric distribution
companies thirty (30) days after the enactment of this chapter.
     (e) The Rhode Island office of energy resources shall redesign the community solar remote
net metering program to reflect the provisions of this chapter and to include a commercial or
industrial anchor tenant up to but not to exceed fifty percent (50%) of the project. The remaining
fifty percent (50%) must be allocated or subscribed to low- and moderate-income (LMI) residents
and/or those living in areas defined as disadvantaged and environmental justice communities. The
Rhode Island office of energy resources shall design the net metering credit rate and factor in
federal energy funding and tax credits to develop the most cost-effective rate for community solar
projects. It is expected that these projects will be operational for a twenty-year (20) period. The
Rhode Island office of energy resources shall file a benefit and cost analysis with any program
proposal filed to the Rhode Island public utilities commission. Once the Rhode Island office of
energy resources files a program proposal to the Rhode Island public utilities commission, a docket
shall be established, and the Rhode Island public utilities commission shall issue a ruling on the
program no later than one hundred and fifty (150) days. If a program is approved, it will be subject
to no greater than twenty megawatts (20 MW) per year for two years until the forty megawatts (40
MW) cap is met. Eligible net-metering systems shall be sited outside of core forests with the
exception of development on preferred sites in the core forest.
     SECTION 2. Sections 39-26.6-1 and 39-26.6-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-26.6
entitled "The Renewable Energy Growth Program" are hereby amended to read as follows:
     39-26.6-1. Purpose.
     The purpose of this chapter is to enable the state to meet its climate and resilience goals,
including those established in the act on climate. This includes the goals to facilitate and promote
installation of grid-connected generation of renewable energy; support and encourage development
of distributed renewable energy generation systems while protecting important core forest areas
essential to climate resilience and complying with Rhode Island’s climate change mandates; reduce
environmental impacts; reduce carbon emissions that contribute to climate change by encouraging
the siting of renewable energy projects in the load zone of the electric distribution company and in
preferred areas that have already been disturbed by industry or other uses; diversify the energy-
generation sources within the load zone of the electric distribution company; stimulate economic
development; and improve distribution-system resilience and reliability with within the load zone
of the electric distribution company.
     39-26.6-3. Definitions.
     When used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
     (1) “Board” shall mean the distributed-generation board as established pursuant to the
provisions of § 39-26.2-10 under the title distributed generation standard contract board, but shall
also fulfill the responsibilities set forth in this chapter.
     (2) “Ceiling price” means the bidding price cap(s) applicable to each annual enrollment for
a given distributed-generation class, that shall be approved for each renewable energy class
pursuant to the procedure established in this chapter. The ceiling price(s) are not required to, but
may be, approved for up to three years. The ceiling price for each technology should be a price that
would allow a private owner to invest in a given project at a reasonable rate of return, based on
recently reported and forecast information on the cost of capital and the cost of generation
equipment. The calculation of the reasonable rate of return for a project shall include, where
applicable, any state or federal incentives, including, but not limited to, tax incentives. Nothing
shall prohibit the distributed-generation board from proposing revised ceiling prices prior to a
program year to account for changes to available federal or state tax incentives, trade tariffs, or
other federal or state incentives that would affect the calculation of the rate of return on a project.
     (3) “Commercial-scale solar project” means a solar distributed-generation project with the
nameplate capacity specified in § 39-26.6-7.
     (4) “Commission” means the Rhode Island public utilities commission.
     (5) “Community remote distributed-generation system” means a distributed-generation
facility greater than two hundred fifty kilowatt (250 KW) nameplate direct current that allocates
bill credits for each kilowatt hour (KWh) generated to a minimum of three (3), eligible recipient-
customer accounts, provided that no more than fifty percent (50%) of the credits produced by the
system are allocated to one eligible recipient-customer account, and provided further that at least
fifty percent (50%) of the credits produced by the system are allocated to eligible recipients in an
amount not to exceed that which is produced annually by twenty-five kilowatt (25 KW) AC
capacity. The community remote distributed-generation system may transfer credits to eligible
recipient-customer accounts in an amount that is equal to, or less than, the sum of the usage of the
eligible recipient-customer accounts measured by the three-year-average (3) annual consumption
of energy over the previous three (3) years. A projected, annual consumption of energy may be
used until the actual three-year-average (3) annual consumption of energy over the previous three
(3) years at the eligible recipient-customer accounts becomes available for use in determining
eligibility of the generating system. The community remote distributed-generation system may be
owned by the same entity that is the customer of record on the net-metered account or may be
owned by a third party.
     (6) “Core forest” refers to unfragmented forest blocks of single or multiple parcels totaling
two hundred fifty (250) acres or greater unbroken by development and at least twenty-five (25)
acres yards from mapped roads, with eligibility questions to be resolved by the director of the
department of environmental management. Such determination shall constitute a contested case as
defined in § 42-35-1. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, no renewable-
distributed-generation project that is located or planned to be located in or on a core forest, shall be
considered an eligible renewable-distributed-generation project or otherwise be eligible to
participate in this program, unless it is on a preferred site.
     (7) “Distributed-generation facility” means an electrical-generation facility located in the
electric distribution company’s load zone with a nameplate capacity no greater than five megawatts
(5 MW), except for solar projects as described in § 39-26.6-7 that may exceed five megawatts (5
MW) but shall not be greater than fifteen megawatts (15 MW), unless located on preferred sites, in
which case they may be sized up to thirty-nine megawatts (39 MW), using eligible renewable
energy resources as defined by § 39-26-5, including biogas created as a result of anaerobic
digestion, but, specifically excluding all other listed eligible biomass fuels, and connected to an
electrical power system owned, controlled, or operated by the electric distribution company. For
facilities developed in core forests on preferred sites, no more than one hundred thousand square
feet (100,000 sq. ft.) of core forest shall be removed, including except for work required for utility
interconnection or development of a brownfield, in which case no more core forest than necessary
for interconnection or brownfield development shall be removed. For purposes of this chapter, a
distributed-generation facility must be a new resource that:
     (i) Has not begun operation;
     (ii) Is not under construction, but excluding preparatory site work that is less than twenty-
five percent (25%) of the estimated total project cost; and
     (iii) Except for small-scale solar projects, does not have in place investment or lending
agreements necessary to finance the construction of the facility prior to the submittal of an
application or bid for which the payment of performance-based incentives is sought under this
chapter except to the extent that such financing agreements are conditioned upon the project owner
being awarded performance-based incentives under the provisions of this chapter. For purposes of
this definition, preexisting hydro generation shall be exempt from the provisions of subsection
(7)(i) regarding operation, if the hydro-generation facility will need a material investment to restore
or maintain reliable and efficient operation and meet all regulatory, environmental, or operational
requirements. For purposes of this provision, “material investment” shall mean investment
necessary to allow the project to qualify as a new, renewable energy resource under § 39-26-2. To
be eligible for this exemption, the hydro-project developer at the time of submitting a bid in the
applicable procurement must provide reasonable evidence with its bid application showing the level
of investment needed, along with any other facts that support a finding that the investment is
material, the determination of which shall be a part of the bid review process set forth in § 39-26.6-
16 for the award of bids.
     (8) “Distributed-generation project” means a distinct installation of a distributed-
generation facility. An installation will be considered distinct if it does not violate the segmentation
prohibition set forth in § 39-26.6-9.
     (9) “Electric distribution company” means a company defined in § 39-1-2(a)(12),
supplying standard-offer service, last-resort service, or any successor service to end-use customers,
but not including the Block Island Power Company or the Pascoag Utility District.
     (10) “ISO-NE” means Independent System Operator-New England, the Regional
Transmission Organization for New England designated by the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.
     (11) “Large distributed-generation project” means a distributed-generation project that has
a nameplate capacity that exceeds the size of a small distributed-generation project in a given year,
but is no greater than five megawatts (5 MW) nameplate capacity.
     (12) “Large-scale solar project” means a solar distributed-generation project with the
nameplate capacity specified in § 39-26.6-7.
     (13) “Medium-scale solar project” means a solar distributed-generation project with the
nameplate capacity specified in § 39-26.6-7.
     (14) “Office” means the Rhode Island office of energy resources.
     (15) “Preferred sites” means a location for a renewable energy system that has had prior
development, including, but not limited to: landfills, gravel pits and quarries, highway and major
road median strips, brownfields, superfund sites, parking lots or sites that are designated
appropriate for carports, and all rooftops including, but not limited to, residential, commercial,
industrial and municipal buildings.
     (16) “Program year” means a year beginning April 1 and ending March 31, except for the
first program year, that may commence after April 1, 2015, subject to commission approval.
     (17) “Renewable energy certificate” means a New England Generation Information System
renewable energy certificate as defined in § 39-26-2(14).
     (18) “Renewable energy classes” means categories for different renewable energy
technologies using eligible renewable energy resources as defined by § 39-26-5, including biogas
created as a result of anaerobic digestion, but, specifically excluding all other listed eligible biomass
fuels specified in § 39-26-2(6). For each program year, in addition to the classes of solar distributed
generation specified in § 39-26.6-7, the board shall determine the renewable energy classes as are
reasonably feasible for use in meeting distributed-generation objectives from renewable energy
resources and are consistent with the goal of meeting the annual target for the program year. The
board may make recommendations to the commission to add, eliminate, or adjust renewable energy
classes for each program year, provided that the solar classifications set forth in § 39-26.6-7 shall
remain in effect for at least the first two (2) program years and no distributed-generation project
may exceed five megawatts (5 MW) of nameplate capacity except for solar projects as described
in § 39-26.6-7.
     (19) “Shared solar facility” means a single small-scale or medium-scale solar facility that
must allocate bill credits to at least two (2), and no more than fifty (50), accounts in the same
customer class and on the same or adjacent parcels of land. Public entities may allocate such bill
credits to at least two (2), and up to fifty (50), accounts without regard to physical location so long
as the facility and accounts are within the same municipality. In no case will the annual allocated
credits in KWh exceed the prior three-year (3) annual average usage, less any reductions for verified
energy-efficiency measures installed at the customer premises, of the customer account to which
the bill credits are transferred.
     (20) “Small distributed-generation project” means a distributed-generation renewable
energy project that has a nameplate capacity within the following: Wind: fifty kilowatts (50 KW)
to one and one-half megawatts (1.5 MW); small-scale solar projects and medium-scale solar
projects with the capacity limits as specified in § 39-26.6-7. For technologies other than solar and
wind, the board shall set the nameplate capacity-size limits, but such limits may not exceed one
megawatt (1 MW).
     (21) “Small-scale solar project” means a solar distributed-generation project with the
nameplate capacity specified in § 39-26.6-7.
     SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC004281/SUB A
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