2016 -- H 7325 | |
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LC003475 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2016 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- ENERGIZE RHODE ISLAND: CLEAN ENERGY | |
INVESTMENT AND CARBON PRICING ACT OF 2016 | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Regunberg, Handy, Carson, Tobon, and Bennett | |
Date Introduced: January 27, 2016 | |
Referred To: House Environment and Natural Resources | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 23 of the General Laws entitled "HEALTH AND SAFETY" is hereby |
2 | amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 82.1 |
4 | ENERGIZE RHODE ISLAND: CLEAN ENERGY INVESTMENT AND CARBON PRICING |
5 | ACT OF 2016 |
6 | 23-82.1-1. Short title. -- This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Energize |
7 | Rhode Island: Clean Energy Investment and Carbon Pricing Act of 2016". |
8 | 23-82.1-2. Legislative findings. -- The general assembly finds and declares that: |
9 | (1) Climate change increases risks to public health, including from health impacts from |
10 | extreme heat events, storms and floods, decreased air quality, and illnesses transmitted from food, |
11 | water, and disease carriers, as reported by the Rhode Island department of health; |
12 | (2) Climate change increases public safety risks and threats to our private property and |
13 | public infrastructure, including risks associated with storms, floods, and sea level rise, and these |
14 | risks have been recognized by the Rhode Island emergency management agency as warranting |
15 | specific attention; |
16 | (3) In order to promote the general welfare of the people of the state, Rhode Island must |
17 | strengthen its economy and make it more resilient over the long term in order to avoid the |
18 | economic consequences of climate change, which will require initiatives that encourage the |
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1 | development and use of innovative technologies and practices; |
2 | (4) Economic consequences, including wide spread damage to seaside communities |
3 | following Hurricane Sandy, lobster population reaching historic lows, and both coastal and river |
4 | flooding leading to increased costs for and closures of businesses across the state, have been well- |
5 | documented, and failing to address these risks will only lead to more severe and persistent |
6 | impacts upon our local economy; |
7 | (5) Carbon pricing has been established as the most cost-effective and efficient market- |
8 | based means to achieve carbon emissions reductions; |
9 | (6) Rhode Island spends over three billion dollars ($3,000,000,000) annually on fossil |
10 | fuels, which are a volatile resource from out-of-state, whereas carbon pricing mechanisms have |
11 | been shown to be effective in creating jobs and stimulating the local economy; |
12 | (7) The clean energy sector has proven to be one of the fastest growing segments of |
13 | Rhode Island's economy, currently providing nearly ten thousand (10,000) jobs and growing at a |
14 | rate much higher than the overall state economy; increased investment will provide even more |
15 | jobs in addition to a higher quality of life; |
16 | (8) Climate change poses substantial risks to Rhode Island's ecology and natural |
17 | resources, and a fundamental responsibility of the state is to secure the right of the people "to the |
18 | use and enjoyment of the natural resources of the state with due regard for the preservation of |
19 | their values;" |
20 | (9) In 2014, the general assembly enacted the "Resilient Rhode Island Act", which set |
21 | goals for reducing "greenhouse gas emissions" in Rhode Island, and established affirmative |
22 | obligations to meet these statutory goals. |
23 | 23-82.1-3. Legislative intent. -- It is the intent of the general assembly to: |
24 | (1) Create a clean energy and jobs fund to foster innovative practices, which will |
25 | strengthen Rhode Island's position in advancing efficient use of energy, make Rhode Island a |
26 | nationally recognized leader in energy efficiency, stimulate job creation, and enhance innovation- |
27 | based economic growth; |
28 | (2) Price carbon as an incentive to reduce carbon (greenhouse gas) emissions from use of |
29 | carbon based fuels by residents and businesses in Rhode Island; |
30 | (3) Provide access to weatherization and renewable energy for low-income families and |
31 | small businesses; |
32 | (4) Reduce public health, public safety, economic, and natural resource impairment risks |
33 | associated with climate change; and |
34 | (5) Meet the state emissions goals for 2035 as set by the "Resilient Rhode Island Act" in |
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1 | 2014. |
2 | 23-82.1-4. Definitions. -- As used in this chapter, the following words and terms shall |
3 | have the following meanings unless the context shall clearly indicate another or different meaning |
4 | or intent: |
5 | (1) "Carbon dioxide equivalent" ("CO2e") means a unit of measure used to compare the |
6 | emissions from various greenhouse gases based upon their global warming potential. |
7 | (2) "Carbon price" means the fee imposed by this chapter. |
8 | (3) "Clean energy and jobs fund" means the fund established under this chapter. |
9 | (4) "Commission" means the public utilities commission, set forth in chapter 39 of title |
10 | 39. |
11 | (5) "Electricity fuel mix" means the mix of fuels for any one-year period used to create |
12 | electricity by generators within the control area of ISO-NE. |
13 | (6) "Employer" means a person, firm, corporation, partnership, association or public |
14 | body, whether for profit or not-for-profit, that is located in Rhode Island and employs Rhode |
15 | Island residents. |
16 | (7) "Fossil fuel" means coal, oil, natural gas, propane, and any petroleum product. Fossil |
17 | fuels do not include renewable biomass or waste vegetable oil biodiesel. |
18 | (8) "Independent System Operator-New England" or "ISO-NE" means the regional |
19 | transmission organization for New England licensed by the federal energy regulatory commission |
20 | pursuant to the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C.12). |
21 | (9) "Low-income residential property" means a dwelling unit owned or occupied by a |
22 | household eligible to receive benefits under the low income energy assistance program (LIHEAP) |
23 | as set forth in §39-1-27.1; in instances where a premises contains multiple dwelling units, the |
24 | entire premises shall be considered a low-income residential property if fifty percent (50%) or |
25 | more of the dwelling units are occupied by LIHEAP-eligible households. |
26 | (10) "Person" means any individual, partnership, corporation, company, society, or |
27 | association, whether created for profit or nonprofit purposes. |
28 | (11) "Petroleum product" means all petroleum derivatives, whether in bond or not, which |
29 | are commonly burned to produce heat, electricity, or motion or which are commonly processed to |
30 | produce synthetic gas for burning, including without limitation, propane, gasoline, unleaded |
31 | gasoline, kerosene, heating oil, diesel fuel, kerosene base jet fuel, and number 4, number 5 and |
32 | residual oil for utility and non-utility uses. |
33 | (12) "Resident" means a person eighteen (18) years of age or older who is a resident of |
34 | Rhode Island. All persons registered to vote in Rhode Island or all persons eighteen (18) years of |
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1 | age or older who hold a valid Rhode Island driver's license or photo ID shall be presumptively |
2 | considered residents for the purposes of this chapter. Persons who do not meet the requirements |
3 | for presumptive eligibility may establish eligibility by presenting other acceptable documentation. |
4 | (13) "Small business property" means the premises, whether owned or leased, of any |
5 | employer, other than a public body, that is a small business as defined by the United States Small |
6 | Business Administration. |
7 | 23-82.1-5. Carbon pricing. -- (a) A fee shall be collected on all fossil fuels within the |
8 | state for purposes of distribution or use within the state, at the rate specified in subsection (b) of |
9 | this section, in the manner specified in subsections (e) through (l) of this section. |
10 | (b) Commencing January 1, 2017 through December 31, 2018, a fee shall be charged at a |
11 | rate of fifteen dollars ($15.00) per ton of CO2e that would be released by burning the fuel sold. |
12 | Commencing January 1, 2019 and thereafter, the fee shall increase in accordance with inflation, |
13 | as measured by the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index or, if that |
14 | index is not available, another index adopted by the director of revenue. |
15 | (c) The director of revenue shall calculate and publish the rate in current dollars for each |
16 | year, by December 1. |
17 | (d) In sales where greenhouse gas emissions from the fossil fuels are to be permanently |
18 | sequestered and not released into the atmosphere, charges on the fossil fuels shall be reduced by |
19 | the director of revenue in proportion to the amount of CO2e that is to be sequestered. The office |
20 | of energy resources shall ensure that in such cases, the emissions are actually sequestered and not |
21 | released into the atmosphere. |
22 | (e) The fee shall be collected on all petroleum products at their first point of sale within |
23 | the state for consumption or distribution within the state. |
24 | (f) All suppliers of electricity, including all electric distribution companies operating in |
25 | the state and all competitive suppliers of electricity to end users, shall pay the fee on behalf of all |
26 | of their electricity customers on the basis of each kilowatt-hour of electricity used by each |
27 | distribution customer. The per kilowatt-hour fee to be paid by the supplier of electricity will be |
28 | calculated in the following manner: |
29 | (1) The fee shall be calculated on an annual basis, based on the electricity fuel mix as |
30 | defined above. |
31 | (2) The CO2e of every kilowatt-hour of electricity shall be determined by taking the |
32 | weighted average of the natural gas, coal, and oil portions of the fuel mix and multiplying each of |
33 | those portions separately by the amount of CO2e emissions created per kilowatt-hour of |
34 | electricity produced by each such fuel, as those carbon intensity levels are from time to time |
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1 | determined by the United States Energy Information Administration (EIA). |
2 | (3) The supplier of electricity shall deduct from the fee calculated by subsections (f)(1) |
3 | and (f)(2) of this section by an amount equal to the amount it paid for the same year on account of |
4 | regional greenhouse gas initiative (RGGI) clearing auctions; provided, however, that the amount |
5 | so deducted may be no greater than the total amount of the fee as calculated in subsections (f)(1) |
6 | and (f)(2) of this section. The electricity supplier shall also deduct from the fee calculated an |
7 | amount equal to the amount it may have paid for GIS certificates as defined in §39-26-2. |
8 | (g) On April 1 of each year, each supplier of electricity shall file with the commission the |
9 | result of its proposed calculation for the year beginning the following July 1. The filing will |
10 | include sufficient supporting data to enable the commission to determine whether the calculation |
11 | by the supplier of electricity was made fully in accordance with subsection (f) of this section. |
12 | Upon receipt of the calculation by the supplier of electricity, the commission shall open a docket. |
13 | The sole purpose of the docket shall be for the commission to determine whether the calculation |
14 | by the supplier of electricity was made fully in accordance with subsection (f) of this section. If |
15 | the commission determines that the calculation by the supplier of electricity was made fully in |
16 | accordance with subsection (f) of this section, the commission shall, no later than May 15 of the |
17 | same year, issue its order approving the calculation. If the commission determines that the |
18 | calculation by the supplier of electricity did not fully comply with subsection (f) of this section, |
19 | the commission shall issue an order stating clearly the errors that were made by the supplier of |
20 | electricity. In that event, the supplier of electricity shall have twenty-one (21) days to make a |
21 | compliance filing with the commission, correcting the errors identified in the commission's order. |
22 | (h) Any person that generates more than twenty-five thousand (25,000) kilowatt-hours of |
23 | electricity for on-site use using any combination of one or more fossil fuels shall be obligated to |
24 | pay the carbon price, which shall be calculated by multiplying the quantity of each separate fossil |
25 | fuel combusted to produce electricity by the CO2e emissions of each separate fuel so combusted. |
26 | Within one year following the date of enactment of this chapter, the director of revenue shall |
27 | issue rules, pursuant to chapter 35 of title 42, for the regular and efficient calculation, assessment, |
28 | and collection of these carbon price amounts. Any fee already paid on said fuel pursuant to |
29 | subsections (a) through (g) and (i) through (l) of this section shall be deducted from the fee that |
30 | would otherwise be due under this subsection. |
31 | (i) The local distribution company for natural gas shall pay the fee on behalf of all of its |
32 | distribution customers. The fee shall be calculated by multiplying the number of cubic feet of |
33 | natural gas used by each customer by the amount of CO2e released by burning one cubic foot of |
34 | natural gas, as that value is from time to time determined by the United States Energy |
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1 | Information Administration (EIA). |
2 | (j) The office of energy resources shall determine the amount of CO2e released in the |
3 | form of escaped methane due to the extraction, transport, or distribution of natural gas before the |
4 | point of consumption in Rhode Island, and shall add an additional charge to the carbon price for |
5 | all natural gas or natural-gas-based electricity, based on the rate specified in subsection (b) of this |
6 | section. This fee shall be published no later than December 10 of each year. |
7 | (k) Entities whose primary purpose is to provide public transportation that enables energy |
8 | efficiency in the state economy shall not be subject to the cost of any fee set forth in §23-82.5-5 |
9 | for the portion of their business that provides public transport. |
10 | (l) The collection of the fee herein described shall commence upon the promulgation of |
11 | all necessary rules for its collection but not later than January 1, 2018. The fee established by this |
12 | chapter shall be reduced by the amount of any fee or payment due under any federal law that sets |
13 | a carbon price on the same fossil fuels for the same year as described in this chapter, provided |
14 | however that such reduction shall not be in an amount of less than zero. |
15 | 23-82.1-6. Clean energy and jobs fund. -- (a) There is hereby established a restricted |
16 | receipt account in the general fund to be known as the clean energy and jobs fund. All fees |
17 | collected under this chapter shall be deposited in the clean energy and jobs fund. |
18 | (b) Unexpended balances remaining in the clean energy and jobs fund shall not be subject |
19 | to the ten percent (10%) charge. Unexpended balances and any earnings thereon shall not revert |
20 | to the general fund but shall remain solely in the clean energy and jobs fund. The clean energy |
21 | and jobs fund shall be used solely to carry out the provisions of this chapter, and to help residents |
22 | and employers transition to cleaner energy options and mitigate any potential economic harm |
23 | from the carbon price imposed by this chapter. |
24 | (c) Proceeds from the clean energy and jobs fund may only be used for the purposes |
25 | described in §23-82.1-7. Proceeds shall be available for the purposes described in §23-82.1-7 |
26 | without appropriation. |
27 | 23-82.1-7. Clean energy and jobs fund uses. -- (a) The department of revenue shall use |
28 | the funds from the clean energy and jobs as follows: |
29 | (1) Twenty-five percent (25%) shall go to climate resilience, energy efficiency, energy |
30 | conservation, and renewable energy programs that benefit low-income residential properties and |
31 | small business properties, where there have been low levels of participation in energy efficiency |
32 | and renewable energy programs, to be administered under the auspices of the state infrastructure |
33 | bank in accordance with rules jointly promulgated by the office of energy resources and the |
34 | Rhode Island infrastructure bank; |
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1 | (2) Thirty percent (30%) shall be used to provide direct dividends to employers in the |
2 | state, in the manner specified in subsections (b) and (d) of this section; |
3 | (3) Forty percent (40%) shall be used to provide direct dividends to residents in the state, |
4 | in the manner specified in subsections (b) and (c) of this section; |
5 | (4) Up to five percent (5%) shall be used to pay for administrative costs associated with |
6 | collecting the charges, administering the clean energy fund, and carrying out other responsibilities |
7 | assigned to the office of energy resources and department of revenue under this chapter. Any |
8 | unexpended revenue from this five percent (5%) shall be reallocated to the low-income and small |
9 | business program, pursuant to §23-82.1-7(1). From the period commencing on the effective date |
10 | of this chapter through the implementation of the regulations necessary for the collection of fees |
11 | provided for under this chapter, the administrative allocation shall be the actual administrative |
12 | cost, up to ten percent (10%) of the revenue deposited into the clean energy fund, and the amount |
13 | of revenue directed to the weatherization program shall be reduced by the amount above five |
14 | percent (5%) that is used for administrative costs. |
15 | (b) The dividends specified above shall be implemented, at the discretion of the director |
16 | of revenue, through a refundable credit added to tax returns for residents and employers that file |
17 | tax returns. For residents and employers who do not file taxes, dividends will be granted in the |
18 | form of direct checks. The director of revenue shall make every reasonable effort to ensure that |
19 | every resident and employer, regardless of whether or not a particular resident or employer files |
20 | tax returns or actually owes taxes, including not-for-profit organizations and government entities, |
21 | receives a dividend. Dividends will be calculated based on estimated increased costs and |
22 | distributed at the beginning of each year. The first set of dividends shall be distributed by |
23 | December 31, 2017, based on estimated increased costs from the period of January 1, 2017 |
24 | through December 31, 2017, which may be subject to cost reconciliation based on actual total |
25 | costs by June 30, 2018. |
26 | (c) Every resident shall receive an equal dividend amount. Every resident who is a head |
27 | of household with children or dependents under the age of eighteen (18) shall have the dividend |
28 | increased based on the number of children or dependents under the age of eighteen (18) in |
29 | residence, with each child adding the value of one equal dividend amount. |
30 | (d) Every employer shall receive a dividend proportional, in terms of full-time equivalent |
31 | employees, to the employer's share of total employment in the state. |
32 | (e) The director of revenue shall issue a public report, submitted to the governor, the |
33 | speaker of the house, and the senate president, by December 31 of each year commencing with |
34 | 2017, stating the expenditures from the clean energy fund for the most recently completed fiscal |
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1 | year and plans to distribute the balance remaining in the fund, if any. |
2 | 23-82.1-8. Promulgation of rules. -- The department of revenue, office of energy |
3 | resources, and any other state agency or instrumentality designated by this chapter or by the |
4 | director of administration to perform functions or duties to effectuate the purposes and functions |
5 | of this chapter are hereby authorized to adopt, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 35 of |
6 | title 42, administer, and enforce any rules necessary or convenient to carry out the purposes of |
7 | this chapter. |
8 | 23-82.1-9. Construction of provisions. -- The provisions of this chapter shall be |
9 | liberally construed for the accomplishment of their purposes |
10 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect on July 1, 2016, or on the date of its enactment |
11 | whichever date is the later. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- ENERGIZE RHODE ISLAND: CLEAN ENERGY | |
INVESTMENT AND CARBON PRICING ACT OF 2016 | |
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1 | This act would establish a fee on companies that sell fossil fuels in Rhode Island, paid at |
2 | the point of sale within the state for consumption or distribution within the state. It would also |
3 | establish a "Clean Energy and Jobs Fund" to disburse the collected funds. The funds would be |
4 | disbursed through rebates to all residents and businesses in the state as well as allocated to |
5 | climate resilience, energy efficiency, energy conservation, and renewable energy programs that |
6 | benefit Rhode Islanders, particularly low income residential properties and small business |
7 | properties. |
8 | This act would take effect on July 1, 2016, or on the date of its enactment, whichever date |
9 | is the later. |
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