2025 -- H 5167 | |
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LC000222 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2025 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- THE RHODE ISLAND CLEAN HEAT | |
STANDARD ACT | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Cortvriend, Speakman, Carson, McGaw, Boylan, Handy, | |
Date Introduced: January 24, 2025 | |
Referred To: House Environment and Natural Resources | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. |
2 | Legislative findings. |
3 | The general assembly hereby recognizes and declares that: |
4 | (1) There is a need for obligated parties to reduce greenhouse gas emissions attributable to |
5 | the Rhode Island thermal sector by retiring required amounts of clean heat credits to meet the |
6 | emissions reductions required in § 42-6.2-3 ("act on climate"). |
7 | (2) The clean heat standard shall be designed and implemented to enhance social equity by |
8 | minimizing adverse impacts to low-income and moderate-income customers and those households |
9 | with the highest energy burdens. The design shall ensure all customers have an equitable |
10 | opportunity to participate in, and benefit from, clean heat measures regardless of heating fuel used, |
11 | income level, geographic location, or homeownership status. |
12 | SECTION 2. Title 23 of the General Laws entitled "HEALTH AND SAFETY" is hereby |
13 | amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
14 | CHAPTER 23.8 |
15 | THE RHODE ISLAND CLEAN HEAT STANDARD ACT |
16 | 23-23.8-1. Short title. |
17 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Rhode Island Clean Heat Standard |
18 | Act." |
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1 | 23-23.8-2. Definitions. |
2 | As used in this chapter: |
3 | (1) "Clean heat credit" means a tradeable, non-tangible commodity that represents the |
4 | amount of greenhouse gas reduction caused by a clean heat measure. |
5 | (2) "Clean heat measure" means fuel and technologies delivered and installed to end-use |
6 | customers in Rhode Island that reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Clean heat measures shall not |
7 | include switching from one fossil fuel use to another fossil fuel use, or the use of renewable natural |
8 | gas or hydrogen. The council shall adopt a list of acceptable actions that qualify as clean heat |
9 | measures, which shall include weatherization, air-source heat pumps, air-source heat pump water |
10 | heaters, ground-source heat pumps, electric stoves, and electric dryers. |
11 | (3) "Council" or "the council" means the Rhode Island executive climate change |
12 | coordinating council. |
13 | (4) "Default delivery agent" means the entity designated by the council to provide services |
14 | that generate tradeable clean heat credits. |
15 | (5) "Energy burden" means the annual spending on thermal energy as a percentage of |
16 | household income. |
17 | (6) "Entity" means any individual, trustee, agency, partnership, association, corporation, |
18 | company, municipality, political subdivision, or any other form of organization. |
19 | (7) "Heating fuel" means fossil-based heating fuel, including oil, propane, natural gas, coal, |
20 | and kerosene. |
21 | (8) "Obligated party" means: |
22 | (i) A natural gas utility, whether investor-owned or a municipal utility, serving customers |
23 | in Rhode Island; or |
24 | (ii) For other heating fuels, the entity that makes the first sale of heating fuel into or in the |
25 | state for consumption within the state. Electricity suppliers shall not be obligated parties. |
26 | (9) "Thermal sector" means the residential, non-residential, commercial, and industrial fuel |
27 | use sectors. |
28 | (10) "Weatherized" and/or "weatherization" means the process of protecting a building and |
29 | its interior from the elements, particularly from sunlight, precipitation, and wind, and of modifying |
30 | a building to reduce energy consumption and optimize energy efficiency. |
31 | 23-23.8-3. Clean heat standard implementation. |
32 | (a) The council shall promulgate and enforce rules to establish or adopt a system of |
33 | tradeable clean heat credits earned from the delivery of clean heat measures that reduce greenhouse |
34 | gas emissions. |
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1 | (b) The council shall make every effort to coordinate with energy efficiency programs to |
2 | prioritize energy efficiency and weatherization first before implementing other clean heat |
3 | measures. Clean heat measures shall be consistent with least cost procurement in § 39-1-27.7. |
4 | (c) An obligated party may obtain the required amount of clean heat credits through |
5 | delivery of eligible clean heat measures, through contracts for delivery of eligible clean heat |
6 | measures, through the market purchase of clean heat credits, or through delivery of eligible clean |
7 | heat measures by a designated statewide default delivery agent. |
8 | (d) The council shall establish a system of recognition for clean heat credits pursuant to |
9 | this section. |
10 | 23-23.8-4. Compliance with the clean heat standard. |
11 | (a) Required amounts: |
12 | (1) The council shall establish the number of clean heat credits that each obligated party is |
13 | required to retire each calendar year. The size of the annual requirement shall be set at a pace |
14 | sufficient for the thermal sector to achieve lifecycle carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) emission |
15 | reductions consistent with chapter 6.2 of title 42 for 2030, 2040, and 2050. |
16 | (2) Annual requirements shall be expressed as a percent of each obligated party's |
17 | contribution to the thermal sector's lifecycle CO2e emissions in the previous year with the annual |
18 | percentages being the same for all parties. |
19 | (3) The council may adjust the annual requirements for good cause after notice and |
20 | opportunity for public process. Good cause may include a shortage of clean heat credits or undue |
21 | adverse financial impacts on particular customers or demographic segments. Any downward |
22 | adjustment shall be allowed for only a short, temporary period. |
23 | (b) Annual registration: |
24 | (1) The council shall require registration information to include legal name, doing business |
25 | as name if applicable, municipality, state, type of heating fuel sold, and the volume of sales of |
26 | heating fuels into or in the state for final sale or consumption in the state in the calendar year |
27 | immediately preceding the calendar year in which the entity is registering with the council. |
28 | (2) Each year, and not later than thirty (30) days following the annual registration deadline |
29 | established by the council, the council shall share complete registration information of obligated |
30 | parties with the department of environmental management for purposes of conducting the Rhode |
31 | Island greenhouse gas emissions inventory and forecast. |
32 | (3) The council shall maintain, and update annually, a list of registered entities on its |
33 | website that contains the required registration information, except that the public list shall not |
34 | include heating fuel volumes reported. |
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1 | (4) For any entity not registered, the first registration form shall be due thirty (30) days |
2 | after the first sale of heating fuel to a location in Rhode Island. |
3 | (5) Clean heat requirements shall transfer to entities that acquire an obligated party. |
4 | (c) Equitable distribution of clean heat measures: |
5 | A substantial portion of clean heat credits retired by each obligated party shall be sourced |
6 | from clean heat measures delivered to low-income and moderate-income customers. The portion |
7 | of each obligated party's required amount needed to satisfy the annual clean heat standard |
8 | requirement shall be at least twenty percent (20%) from low-income customers and twenty percent |
9 | (20%) from moderate-income customers, as those terms are provided for in § 39-2-1. |
10 | 23-23.8-5. Authority. |
11 | (a) The council shall designate the default delivery agent. The default delivery agent shall |
12 | be a single statewide entity capable of providing a variety of clean heat measures and contracted |
13 | for a multiyear period through a competitive procurement process. The entity selected as the default |
14 | delivery agent may also be a market participant but shall not be an obligated party. |
15 | (b) The council shall adopt annually the cost per clean heat credit to be paid to the default |
16 | delivery agent by an obligated party that chooses this option. In adjusting the default delivery agent |
17 | credit cost, the council shall consider the default delivery agent's anticipated costs to deliver clean |
18 | heat measures and costs borne by customers, among other factors determined by the council. |
19 | Changes to the cost of credits shall take effect not less than one hundred eighty (180) days after |
20 | adoption. |
21 | (c) All funds received from noncompliance payments pursuant to subsection (d) of this |
22 | section shall be used by the default delivery agent to provide clean heat measures to low-income |
23 | customers. |
24 | (d) The council may order an obligated party that fails to retire the number of clean heat |
25 | credits required in a given year, including the required amounts from low-income and moderate- |
26 | income customers, to make a noncompliance payment to the default delivery agent. The per-credit |
27 | amount of the noncompliance payment shall be three (3) times the amount established by the |
28 | council under this section for timely per-credit payments to the default delivery agent. |
29 | (e) The council is granted any additional authority to implement this section, and any rules |
30 | or orders adopted to implement the provisions of this section, as may be necessary beyond its |
31 | existing authorities including, but not limited to, issuing procedures, promulgating regulations, |
32 | consulting with stakeholders, conducting public engagement, ordering penalties and injunctive |
33 | relief, and contracting as appropriate to support administration of responsibilities under this |
34 | chapter. |
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1 | 23-23.8-6. Tradeable clean heat credit. |
2 | (a) The council shall establish or adopt a system of tradeable clean heat credits that may be |
3 | earned by reducing greenhouse gas emissions through the delivery of clean heat measures. While |
4 | credit denominations may be in simple terms for public understanding and ease of use, the |
5 | underlying value shall be based on units of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e). The system shall |
6 | provide a process for the recognition, approval, and monitoring of the clean heat credits. The |
7 | council shall perform the verification of clean heat credit claims. |
8 | (b) Clean heat credits shall be based on the lifecycle CO2e emission reductions that result |
9 | from the delivery of eligible clean heat measures to end-use customer locations in Rhode Island. |
10 | For clean heat measures that are installed, the value of the clean heat credits in each year shall be |
11 | the lifecycle CO2e emissions of the heating fuel avoided by the installation of the measure, minus |
12 | the lifecycle CO2e emissions of the energy that is used instead. |
13 | (c) To promote certainty for obligated parties and clean heat providers, the council shall, |
14 | by rule or order, establish a schedule of lifecycle emission rates for heating fuels and eligible clean |
15 | heat measures. The schedule shall be based on transparent and accurate emissions accounting |
16 | adapting the Argonne National Laboratory GREET Model, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate |
17 | Change (IPCC) modeling, or an alternative of comparable analytical rigor to achieve the thermal |
18 | sector greenhouse gas emissions reductions necessary to meet the sector's share of greenhouse gas |
19 | reduction requirements to accurately account for emissions from biogenic and geologic sources, |
20 | and to deter substantial unintended harmful consequences. The schedule may be amended based |
21 | upon changes in technology or evidence on emissions, but clean heat credits previously awarded |
22 | shall not be adjusted retroactively. |
23 | (d) Clean heat credits shall be "time stamped" for the year in which the clean heat measure |
24 | is delivered as well as each subsequent year during which the measure produces emission |
25 | reductions. Only clean heat credits with the current year time stamp, and credits banked from |
26 | previous years, shall be eligible to satisfy the current year obligation. |
27 | (e) Clean heat credits can be earned only in proportion to the deemed or measured thermal |
28 | sector greenhouse gas emission reductions achieved by a clean heat measure delivered in Rhode |
29 | Island. Other emissions offsets, wherever located, shall not be eligible measures. |
30 | (f) All eligible clean heat measures that are delivered in Rhode Island shall be eligible for |
31 | clean heat credits and may be retired and count towards an obligated party's emission reduction |
32 | obligations, regardless of who creates or delivers them and regardless of whether their creation or |
33 | delivery was required by other state policies and programs. The council shall determine whether |
34 | the total value of a clean heat credit for an installed measure shall be claimed in the year it is |
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1 | installed or whether the annual value of that credit shall be applied each year of the measure's life. |
2 | The council shall determine whether to require a certain portion of clean heat credits to be acquired |
3 | each year from weatherization projects to further the state's building efficiency goals. The council |
4 | shall recommend legislative changes, if needed, to accomplish this. |
5 | (g) The council shall create a registration system to lower administrative barriers to |
6 | individuals and businesses seeking to register qualified actions eligible to earn clean heat credits |
7 | and to facilitate the transfer of credits to obligated parties. The council may hire a third-party |
8 | consultant to evaluate, develop, implement, maintain, and support a database or other means for |
9 | tracking clean heat credits and compliance with the annual requirements of obligated parties. The |
10 | system shall require entities to submit the following information to receive the credit: the location |
11 | of the clean heat measure, whether the customer or tenant has a low- or moderate-income, the type |
12 | of property where the clean heat measure was installed or sold, the type of clean heat measure, and |
13 | any other information as required by the council. |
14 | (h) If any provision of this section or its application are held invalid or in violation of the |
15 | Constitution or laws of the United States or Rhode Island, the invalidity or the violation shall not |
16 | affect other provisions of this section that can be given effect without the invalid provision or |
17 | application, and to this end, the provisions of this section are severable. |
18 | (i) Within ninety (90) days following the enactment of this chapter, the council shall |
19 | commence any necessary proceedings to implement this chapter. |
20 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC000222 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- THE RHODE ISLAND CLEAN HEAT | |
STANDARD ACT | |
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1 | This act would create the Rhode Island clean heat standards act to implement a system of |
2 | tradeable clean heat credits earned from the delivery of clean heat measures that reduce greenhouse |
3 | gas emissions. |
4 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC000222 | |
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