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art.011/7/011/6/011/5/011/4/011/3/011/2 | ||
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1 | ARTICLE 11 AS AMENDED | |
2 | RELATING TO ENERGY | |
3 | SECTION 1. Sections 37-24-3 and 37-24-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 37-24 entitled | |
4 | "The Green Buildings Act" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
5 | 37-24-3. Definitions. | |
6 | For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions shall apply: | |
7 | (1) “Construction” means the process of building, altering, repairing, improving, or | |
8 | demolishing forty percent (40%) or more of any public structures, public buildings, public real | |
9 | property or other public improvements of any kind to any public structures, public buildings or | |
10 | public real property. | |
11 | (2) “Department” means the department of administration the office of the state building | |
12 | code commissioner. | |
13 | (3) “Equivalent standard” means a high-performance green building standard, other than | |
14 | LEED, LEED for Neighborhood Development, and SITES, that provides an independent, third- | |
15 | party verification and certification of a rating system or measurement tool, that, when used, leads | |
16 | to outcomes equivalent to, LEED, LEED for Neighborhood Development, and SITES outcomes, | |
17 | in terms of green building, green infrastructure, and green site performance; current accepted | |
18 | equivalent standards include green globes, Northeast collaborative high-performance schools | |
19 | protocol; or other equivalent high-performance green building, green infrastructure, and green site | |
20 | standards accepted by the department. | |
21 | (4) “LEED” also, “LEED for Neighborhood Development, and SITES certified standard” | |
22 | means the current version of the U.S. Green Building Council Leadership in Energy and | |
23 | Environmental Design (LEED) green building rating standard referred to as LEED, LEED for | |
24 | Neighborhood Development, and SITES certified. SITES means the U.S. Green Building Council’s | |
25 | SITES — The Sustainable SITES Initiative. | |
26 | (5) “Public agency” means every state or municipal office, board, commission, committee, | |
27 | bureau, department, or public institution of education, or any political subdivision thereof. | |
28 | (6) “Public facility” means any public institution, public facility, public equipment, or any | |
29 | physical asset owned, including its public real-property site, leased or controlled in whole or in part | |
30 | by this state, a public agency, a municipality or a political subdivision, that is for public or | |
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1 | government use. | |
2 | (7) “Public major facility project” means: | |
3 | (i) A public facility building construction project larger than ten thousand (10,000) gross | |
4 | square feet of occupied or conditioned space, and its public real-property site; or | |
5 | (ii) A public facility building renovation project larger than ten thousand (10,000) gross | |
6 | square feet of occupied or conditioned space, and its public real-property site. | |
7 | 37-24-5. Administration and reports — Green buildings advisory committee. | |
8 | (a) The department shall promulgate such regulations as are necessary to enforce this | |
9 | section by January 1, 2023. Effective July 1, 2026, the office of the state building code | |
10 | commissioner will assume responsibility for promulgating the rules and regulations regarding the | |
11 | green buildings advisory committee. The rules and regulations promulgated under title 220, chapter | |
12 | 70, subchapter 00, part 1 of the Rhode Island code of regulations will remain in full force and effect | |
13 | and shall be enforced by the department of administration until such a time as the rules and | |
14 | regulations are properly transferred to and promulgated by the office of the state building code | |
15 | commissioner title within the Rhode Island code of regulations. | |
16 | Those regulations shall include how the department will determine whether a project | |
17 | qualifies for an exception from the LEED, LEED for Neighborhood Development, and SITES | |
18 | certified or equivalent high-performance green building standard, and the green building standards | |
19 | that may be imposed on projects that are granted exceptions. | |
20 | (b) The department shall monitor and document ongoing operating savings that result from | |
21 | major facility projects designed, constructed, and certified as meeting the LEED, LEED for | |
22 | Neighborhood Development, and SITES certified standard annually publish a public report of | |
23 | findings and recommended changes in policy. The report shall also include a description of projects | |
24 | that were granted exceptions from the LEED, LEED for Neighborhood Development, and SITES | |
25 | certified standard, the reasons for exception, and the lesser green building standards imposed. | |
26 | (c) — (f) [Deleted by P.L. 2022, ch. 204, § 1 and P.L. 2022, ch. 205, § 1.] | |
27 | (g) A green buildings advisory committee shall be created composed of nineteen (19) | |
28 | members. The advisory committee shall have eleven (11) public members and eight (8) public | |
29 | agency members. Five (5) of the public members shall be appointed by the governor; three (3) of | |
30 | the public members shall be appointed by the president of the senate; and, three (3) of the public | |
31 | members shall be appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives. | |
32 | (1) The eleven (11) public members of the advisory committee shall be composed of nine | |
33 | (9) representatives one from each of the following fields: architecture, engineering, landscape | |
34 | architecture, energy, labor through the Rhode Island AFL-CIO, general construction contracting, | |
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1 | building product and building materials industries who are involved in, and have recognized | |
2 | knowledge and accomplishment in their respective professions, of high-performance green | |
3 | building standards, relating to the standards set forth in § 37-24-4; in addition to two (2) public | |
4 | members, one representing an urban municipality from Providence, Cranston, Warwick, | |
5 | Pawtucket, Woonsocket, or Newport, and one public member representing the other thirty-two (32) | |
6 | municipalities in the state in order to ensure geographic diversity. | |
7 | (2) The advisory committee shall have eight (8) public agency members representing | |
8 | personnel from affected public agencies, and cities and towns, that oversee public works projects | |
9 | and workforce development, who shall be appointed by the directors or chief executive officers of | |
10 | the respective public agencies which shall include the department of administration; the department | |
11 | of environmental management; the department of education; the department of transportation; the | |
12 | department of labor and training; the office of the state building code commissioner; the Rhode | |
13 | Island infrastructure bank, and the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns. | |
14 | (3) The chairperson of the green buildings advisory committee shall be a public member | |
15 | chosen by the green buildings advisory committee. | |
16 | (4) Of the initial eleven (11) public members, six (6) shall serve three-year (3) terms and | |
17 | five (5) shall have two-year (2) terms. Each appointing authority shall appoint two (2) public | |
18 | members to three-year (3) terms with the remainder of the public member appointments serving | |
19 | two-year terms. Thereafter, all public members shall be appointed to three-year (3) terms. | |
20 | (h) The green buildings advisory committee shall: | |
21 | (1) Make recommendations regarding an ongoing evaluation process of the green buildings | |
22 | act to help the department and the executive climate change coordinating council implement this | |
23 | chapter; | |
24 | (2) Identify the needs, actions, and funding required to implement the requirements set | |
25 | forth in this chapter, in achieving high-performance green building projects for our public | |
26 | buildings, public structures, and our public real properties; | |
27 | (3) Establish clear, measurable targets for implementing the standards, defined in this | |
28 | chapter, for all public major facility projects including timeline, workforce needs, anticipated costs | |
29 | and other measures identified by the green buildings advisory committee and required by chapter | |
30 | 6.2 of title 42 (“2021 act on climate”); and | |
31 | (4) Identify ways to monitor and document ongoing operating savings and greenhouse gas | |
32 | emission reductions that result from public major facility projects designed, constructed and | |
33 | certified as meeting the LEED, LEED for Neighborhood Development, SITES certified standard, | |
34 | Green Globes, Northeast Collaborative for High-Performance Schools Protocol, Version 1.1 or | |
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1 | above and annually publish a report to the general assembly and the executive climate change | |
2 | coordinating council of findings and recommended changes in policy. | |
3 | (i) All requests for proposals, requests for information, requests for bids, requests for | |
4 | design/build, requests for construction managers, and any requests relating to obtaining the | |
5 | professional services, pricing, and construction for major facility projects by a public agency for a | |
6 | public facility, shall include the notice of the statutory requirements of this chapter (“the green | |
7 | buildings act”). | |
8 | (j) The green buildings advisory committee shall have no responsibility for, and shall not | |
9 | develop requests for proposals, requests for information, requests for bids, requests for | |
10 | design/build, requests for construction managers, and any requests relating to obtaining the | |
11 | professional services, pricing, and construction for major facility projects by a public agency for a | |
12 | public facility; and the green buildings advisory committee shall have no responsibility for, and | |
13 | shall not select any vendors for any requests for proposals, requests for information, requests for | |
14 | bids, requests for design/build, requests for construction managers, and any requests relating to | |
15 | obtaining the professional services, pricing, and construction for major facility projects by a public | |
16 | agency for a public facility. Nothing shall prohibit public members of the green buildings advisory | |
17 | committee from responding to, and being involved with, any submittals of requests for proposals, | |
18 | requests for information, requests for bids, requests for design/build, requests for construction | |
19 | managers, and any requests relating to obtaining the professional services, pricing, and construction | |
20 | for major facility projects by a public agency for a public facility. | |
21 | (k) The department of administration shall commission a report to analyze the costs and/or | |
22 | benefits of LEED certification compared to equivalent standards. This includes, but is not limited | |
23 | to, the impact of obtaining formal LEED certification on project budget and timeline. | |
24 | SECTION 2. Section 39-2.2-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-2.2 entitled "Rhode | |
25 | Island Utility Fair Share Roadway Repair Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
26 | 39-2.2-2. Road repair by public utility or utility facility. | |
27 | (a) Any public utility as defined by § 39-1-2 or any utility facility as defined by chapter 8.1 | |
28 | of title 24 that shall alter, excavate, disrupt, or disturb a roadway shall be responsible for complete | |
29 | repaving and repair of the roadway from curbline to curbline complete repaving and repair or | |
30 | restoration of the full width of the affected travel lane for the entire length of the excavation or as | |
31 | required in accordance with the state or municipal utility permit requirements. | |
32 | (b) Any public utility as defined by § 39-1-2 or any utility facility as defined by chapter | |
33 | 8.1 of title 24 shall recover all costs required of this chapter in accordance with generally accepted | |
34 | accounting principles. | |
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1 | SECTION 3. Chapter 39-2 of the General Laws entitled "Duties of Utilities and Carriers" | |
2 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: | |
3 | 39-2-29. In-state transmission owner required to participate in the regional | |
4 | independent system operator. | |
5 | On and after the effective date of this section, no electric distribution company, as defined | |
6 | in § 39-1-2, shall own, operate, or control a transmission facility, as defined in § 39-1-2, located in | |
7 | the state unless such company joins or is a member of ISO New England, Inc. or its successor | |
8 | organization as approved by the federal energy regulatory commission. | |
9 | SECTION 4. Section 39-26.1-4 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-26.1 entitled "Long- | |
10 | Term Contracting Standard for Renewable Energy" is hereby repealed. | |
11 | 39-26.1-4. Financial remuneration and incentives. | |
12 | In order to achieve the purposes of this chapter, electric distribution companies shall be | |
13 | entitled to financial remuneration and incentives for long-term contracts for newly developed | |
14 | renewable energy resources, which are over and above the base rate revenue requirement | |
15 | established in its cost of service for distribution ratemaking. Such remuneration and incentives shall | |
16 | compensate the electric distribution company for accepting the financial obligation of the long- | |
17 | term contracts. The financial remuneration and incentives described in this section shall apply only | |
18 | to long-term contracts for newly developed renewable energy resources. For long-term contracts | |
19 | approved pursuant to this chapter before January 1, 2022, the financial remuneration and incentives | |
20 | shall be in the form of annual compensation, equal to two and three quarters percent (2.75%) of the | |
21 | actual annual payments made under the contracts for those projects that are commercially | |
22 | operating, unless determined otherwise by the commission at the time of approval. For long-term | |
23 | contracts approved pursuant to this chapter on or after January 1, 2022, including contracts above | |
24 | the minimum long-term contract capacity, the financial remuneration and incentives shall be in the | |
25 | form of annual compensation up to one percent (1.0%) of the actual annual payments made under | |
26 | the contracts through December 31, 2026, for those projects that are commercially operating. For | |
27 | all long-term contracts approved pursuant to this chapter on or after January 1, 2027, financial | |
28 | remuneration and incentives shall not be applied, unless otherwise granted by the commission. For | |
29 | any calendar year in which the electric distribution company’s actual return on equity exceeds the | |
30 | return on equity allowed by the commission in the electric distribution company’s last general rate | |
31 | case, the commission shall have the authority to adjust any or all remuneration paid to the electric | |
32 | distribution company pursuant to this section in order to assure that such remuneration does not | |
33 | result in or contribute toward the electric distribution company earning above its allowed return for | |
34 | such calendar year. | |
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1 | SECTION 5. Sections 39-26.4-2 and 39-26.4-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-26.4 | |
2 | entitled "Net Metering" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
3 | 39-26.4-2. Definitions. | |
4 | Terms not defined in this section herein shall have the same meaning as contained in | |
5 | chapter 26 of this title. When used in this chapter: | |
6 | (1) “Community remote net-metering system” means a facility generating electricity using | |
7 | an eligible net-metering resource that allocates net-metering credits to a minimum of one account | |
8 | for a system associated with low- or moderate-income housing eligible credit recipients, or three | |
9 | (3) eligible credit-recipient customer accounts, provided that no more than fifty percent (50%) of | |
10 | the credits produced by the system are allocated to one eligible credit recipient, and provided further | |
11 | at least fifty percent (50%) of the credits produced by the system are allocated to the remaining | |
12 | eligible credit recipients in an amount not to exceed that which is produced annually by twenty- | |
13 | five kilowatt (25 KW) AC capacity. The community remote net-metering system may transfer | |
14 | credits to eligible credit recipients in an amount that is equal to or less than the sum of the usage of | |
15 | the eligible credit recipient accounts measured by the three-year (3) average annual consumption | |
16 | of energy over the previous three (3) years. A projected annual consumption of energy may be used | |
17 | until the actual three-year (3) average annual consumption of energy over the previous three (3) | |
18 | years at the eligible credit recipient accounts becomes available for use in determining eligibility | |
19 | of the generating system. The community remote net-metering system may be owned by the same | |
20 | entity that is the customer of record on the net-metered account or may be owned by a third party. | |
21 | (2) “Core forest” refers to unfragmented forest blocks of single or multiple parcels totaling | |
22 | two hundred fifty (250) acres or greater unbroken by development and at least twenty-five (25) | |
23 | yards from mapped roads, with eligibility questions to be resolved by the director of the department | |
24 | of environmental management. Such determination shall constitute a contested case as defined in | |
25 | § 42-35-1. | |
26 | (3) “Electric distribution company” shall have the same meaning as § 39-1-2, but shall not | |
27 | include Block Island Power Company or Pascoag Utility District, each of whom shall be required | |
28 | to offer net metering to customers through a tariff approved by the public utilities commission after | |
29 | a public hearing. Any tariff or policy on file with the public utilities commission on the date of | |
30 | passage of this chapter shall remain in effect until the commission approves a new tariff. | |
31 | (4) “Eligible credit recipient” means one of the following eligible recipients in the electric | |
32 | distribution company’s service territory whose electric service account or accounts may receive | |
33 | net-metering credits from a community remote net-metering system. Eligible credit recipients | |
34 | include the following definitions: | |
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1 | (i) Residential accounts in good standing. | |
2 | (ii) “Low- or moderate-income housing eligible credit recipient” means an electric service | |
3 | account or accounts in good standing associated with any housing development or developments | |
4 | owned or operated by a public agency, nonprofit organization, limited-equity housing cooperative, | |
5 | or private developer that receives assistance under any federal, state, or municipal government | |
6 | program to assist the construction or rehabilitation of housing affordable to low- or moderate- | |
7 | income households, as defined in the applicable federal or state statute, or local ordinance, | |
8 | encumbered by a deed restriction or other covenant recorded in the land records of the municipality | |
9 | in which the housing is located, that: | |
10 | (A) Restricts occupancy of no less than fifty percent (50%) of the housing to households | |
11 | with a gross, annual income that does not exceed eighty percent (80%) of the area median income | |
12 | as defined annually by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD); | |
13 | (B) Restricts the monthly rent, including a utility allowance, that may be charged to | |
14 | residents, to an amount that does not exceed thirty percent (30%) of the gross, monthly income of | |
15 | a household earning eighty percent (80%) of the area median income as defined annually by HUD; | |
16 | (C) Has an original term of not less than thirty (30) years from initial occupancy. | |
17 | Electric service account or accounts in good standing associated with housing | |
18 | developments that are under common ownership or control may be considered a single low- or | |
19 | moderate-income housing eligible credit recipient for purposes of this section. The value of the | |
20 | credits shall be used to provide benefits to tenants. | |
21 | (iii) “Educational institutions” means public and private schools at the primary, secondary, | |
22 | and postsecondary levels. | |
23 | (iv) “Commercial or industrial customers” means any nonresidential customer of the | |
24 | electric distribution company. | |
25 | (5) “Eligible net-metering resource” means eligible renewable energy resource, as defined | |
26 | in § 39-26-5 including biogas created as a result of anaerobic digestion, but, specifically excluding | |
27 | all other listed eligible biomass fuels. | |
28 | (6) “Eligible net-metering system” means a facility generating electricity using an eligible | |
29 | net-metering resource that, for any system with a nameplate capacity in excess of twenty-five | |
30 | kilowatts (25 KW), is reasonably designed and sized to annually produce electricity in an amount | |
31 | that is equal to, or less than, the renewable self-generator’s usage at the eligible net-metering system | |
32 | site measured by the three-year (3) average annual consumption of energy over the previous three | |
33 | (3) years at the electric distribution account(s) located at the eligible net-metering system site. A | |
34 | projected annual consumption of energy may be used until the actual three-year (3) average annual | |
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1 | consumption of energy over the previous three (3) years at the electric distribution account(s) | |
2 | located at the eligible net-metering system site becomes available for use in determining eligibility | |
3 | of the generating system. For any system with a nameplate capacity equal to or less than twenty- | |
4 | five kilowatts (25 KW), eligibility shall not be restricted based on prior consumption. The eligible | |
5 | net-metering system may be owned by the same entity that is the customer of record on the net- | |
6 | metered accounts or may be owned by a third party that is not the customer of record at the eligible | |
7 | net-metering system site and which may offer a third-party, net-metering financing arrangement or | |
8 | net-metering financing arrangement, as applicable. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this | |
9 | chapter, any eligible net-metering resource: (i) Owned by a public entity, educational institution, | |
10 | hospital, nonprofit, or multi-municipal collaborative; or (ii) Owned and operated by a renewable- | |
11 | generation developer on behalf of a public entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, or | |
12 | multi-municipal collaborative through a net-metering financing arrangement shall be treated as an | |
13 | eligible net-metering system and all accounts designated by the public entity, educational | |
14 | institution, hospital, nonprofit, or multi-municipal collaborative for net metering shall be treated as | |
15 | accounts eligible for net metering within an eligible net-metering system site; or (iii) Owned and | |
16 | operated by a renewable-generation developer on behalf of one or more commercial or industrial | |
17 | customer(s) through net-metering financing arrangement(s) shall be treated as an eligible net- | |
18 | metering system within an eligible net-metering system site. Notwithstanding any other provision | |
19 | to the contrary, effective July 1, 2060, an eligible net-metering system means a facility generating | |
20 | electricity using an eligible net-metering resource that is interconnected behind the same meter as | |
21 | the net-metering customer’s load. | |
22 | (7) “Eligible net-metering system site” means the site where the eligible net-metering | |
23 | system or community remote net-metering system is located or is part of the same campus or | |
24 | complex of sites contiguous to one another and the site where the eligible net-metering system or | |
25 | community remote net-metering system is located or a farm on which the eligible net-metering | |
26 | system or community remote net-metering system is located. Except for an eligible net-metering | |
27 | system owned by or operated on behalf of a public entity, educational institution, hospital, | |
28 | nonprofit, or multi-municipal collaborative or for a commercial or industrial customer through a | |
29 | net-metering financing arrangement, the purpose of this definition is to reasonably assure that | |
30 | energy generated by the eligible net-metering system is consumed by net-metered electric service | |
31 | account(s) that are actually located in the same geographical location as the eligible net-metering | |
32 | system. All energy generated from any eligible net-metering system is, and will be considered, | |
33 | consumed at the meter where the renewable energy resource is interconnected for valuation | |
34 | purposes. Except for an eligible net-metering system owned by, or operated on behalf of, a public | |
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1 | entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, or multi-municipal collaborative, or for a | |
2 | commercial or industrial customer through a net-metering financing arrangement, or except for a | |
3 | community remote net-metering system, all of the net-metered accounts at the eligible net-metering | |
4 | system site must be the accounts of the same customer of record and customers are not permitted | |
5 | to enter into agreements or arrangements to change the name on accounts for the purpose of | |
6 | artificially expanding the eligible net-metering system site to contiguous sites in an attempt to avoid | |
7 | this restriction. However, a property owner may change the nature of the metered service at the | |
8 | accounts at the site to be master metered in the owner’s name, or become the customer of record | |
9 | for each of the accounts, provided that the owner becoming the customer of record actually owns | |
10 | the property at which the account is located. As long as the net-metered accounts meet the | |
11 | requirements set forth in this definition, there is no limit on the number of accounts that may be net | |
12 | metered within the eligible net-metering system site. | |
13 | (8) “Excess renewable net-metering credit” means a credit that applies to an eligible net- | |
14 | metering system or community remote net-metering system for that portion of the production of | |
15 | electrical energy beyond one hundred percent (100%) and no greater than one hundred twenty-five | |
16 | percent (125%), except for any system with a nameplate capacity equal to or less than twenty-five | |
17 | kilowatts (25 KW) for which excess renewable net-metering credit applies to all production of | |
18 | electrical energy beyond one hundred percent (100%) of the renewable self-generator’s own | |
19 | consumption at the eligible net-metering system site or the sum of the usage of the eligible credit | |
20 | recipient accounts associated with the community remote net-metering system during the | |
21 | applicable billing period. | |
22 | For electrical energy produced greater than one hundred percent (100%) of the renewable | |
23 | self-generator’s own electricity consumption at the eligible net-metering system site or the sum of | |
24 | the usage of the eligible credit recipient accounts associated with the community remote net- | |
25 | metering system during the applicable billing period, excess renewable net-metering credits shall | |
26 | be equal to the wholesale electricity rate, which is hereby declared to be the ISO-New England | |
27 | energy clearing price. When applying the ISO-New England energy clearing price to calculate the | |
28 | value of excess renewable net-metering credits, the electric distribution company, subject to | |
29 | commission approval and subject to amendment from time to time, may use an annual average, | |
30 | monthly average, or other time increment and may use Rhode Island zone pricing or other | |
31 | applicable locational pricing. The commission shall have the authority to make determinations as | |
32 | to the applicability of this credit to specific generation facilities to the extent there is any uncertainty | |
33 | or disagreement. | |
34 | (9) “Farm” shall be defined in accordance with § 44-27-2, except that all buildings | |
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1 | associated with the farm shall be eligible for net-metering credits as long as: (i) The buildings are | |
2 | owned by the same entity operating the farm or persons associated with operating the farm; and (ii) | |
3 | The buildings are on the same farmland as the project on either a tract of land contiguous with, or | |
4 | reasonably proximate to, such farmland or across a public way from such farmland. | |
5 | (10) “Hospital” means and shall be defined and established as set forth in chapter 17 of | |
6 | title 23. | |
7 | (11) “Multi-municipal collaborative” means a group of towns and/or cities that enter into | |
8 | an agreement for the purpose of co-owning a renewable-generation facility or entering into a | |
9 | financing arrangement pursuant to subsection (15). | |
10 | (12) “Municipality” means any Rhode Island town or city, including any agency or | |
11 | instrumentality thereof, with the powers set forth in title 45. | |
12 | (13) “Net metering” means using electrical energy generated by an eligible net-metering | |
13 | system for the purpose of self-supplying electrical energy and power at the eligible net-metering | |
14 | system site, or with respect to a community remote net-metering system, for the purpose of | |
15 | generating net-metering credits to be applied to the electric bills of the eligible credit recipients | |
16 | associated with the community net-metering system. The amount so generated will thereby offset | |
17 | consumption at the eligible net-metering system site through the netting process established in this | |
18 | chapter, or with respect to a community remote net-metering system, the amounts generated in | |
19 | excess of that amount will result in credits being applied to the eligible credit-recipient accounts | |
20 | associated with the community remote net-metering system. | |
21 | (14) “Net-metering customer” means a customer of the electric distribution company | |
22 | receiving and being billed for distribution service whose distribution account(s) are being net | |
23 | metered. | |
24 | (15) “Net-metering financing arrangement” means arrangements entered into by a public | |
25 | entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, multi-municipal collaborative, or a commercial | |
26 | or industrial customer with a private entity to facilitate the financing and operation of a net-metering | |
27 | resource, in which the private entity owns and operates an eligible net-metering resource on behalf | |
28 | of a public entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, multi-municipal collaborative, or | |
29 | commercial or industrial customer, where: (i) The eligible net-metering resource is located on | |
30 | property owned or controlled by the public entity, educational institution, hospital, municipality, | |
31 | multi-municipal collaborative, or commercial or industrial customer as applicable; and (ii) The | |
32 | production from the eligible net-metering resource and primary compensation paid by the public | |
33 | entity, educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, multi-municipal collaborative, or commercial or | |
34 | industrial customer to the private entity for such production is directly tied to the consumption of | |
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1 | electricity occurring at the designated net-metered accounts. | |
2 | (16) “Nonprofit” means a nonprofit corporation as defined and established through chapter | |
3 | 6 of title 7, and shall include religious organizations that are tax exempt pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § | |
4 | 501(d). | |
5 | (17) “Person” means an individual, firm, corporation, association, partnership, farm, town | |
6 | or city of the state of Rhode Island, multi-municipal collaborative, or the state of Rhode Island or | |
7 | any department of the state government, governmental agency, or public instrumentality of the | |
8 | state. | |
9 | (18)“Preferred site” means a location for a renewable energy system that has had prior | |
10 | development, including, but not limited to: landfills, gravel pits and quarries, highway and major | |
11 | road median strips, brownfields, superfund sites, parking lots or sites that are designated | |
12 | appropriate for carports, and all rooftops including, but not limited to, residential, commercial, | |
13 | industrial, and municipal buildings. | |
14 | (19) “Project” means a distinct installation of an eligible net-metering system or a | |
15 | community remote net-metering system. An installation will be considered distinct if it is installed | |
16 | in a different location, or at a different time, or involves a different type of renewable energy. | |
17 | Subject to the safe-harbor provisions in § 39-26.4-3(a)(1), new and distinct projects cannot be | |
18 | located on adjoining parcels of land within core forests, except for preferred sites. | |
19 | (20) “Public entity” means the federal government, the state of Rhode Island, | |
20 | municipalities, wastewater treatment facilities, public transit agencies, or any water distributing | |
21 | plant or system employed for the distribution of water to the consuming public within this state | |
22 | including the water supply board of the city of Providence. | |
23 | (21) “Public entity net-metering system” means a system generating renewable energy at | |
24 | a property owned or controlled by the public entity that is participating in a net-metering financing | |
25 | arrangement where the public entity has designated accounts in its name to receive net-metering | |
26 | credits. | |
27 | (22) “Renewable net-metering credit” means a credit that applies to an eligible net- | |
28 | metering system or a community remote net-metering system up to one hundred percent (100%) of | |
29 | either the renewable self-generator’s usage at the eligible net-metering system site or the sum of | |
30 | the usage of the eligible credit-recipient accounts associated with the community remote net- | |
31 | metering system over the applicable billing period. This credit shall be equal to the total kilowatt | |
32 | hours of electrical energy generated up to the amount consumed on-site, and/or generated up to the | |
33 | sum of the eligible credit-recipient account usage during the billing period multiplied by the sum | |
34 | of the distribution company’s: | |
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| |
1 | (i) Last resort service kilowatt-hour charge for the rate class applicable to the net-metering | |
2 | customer, except that for remote public entity and multi-municipality collaborative net-metering | |
3 | systems that submit an application for an interconnection study on or after July 1, 2017, and | |
4 | community remote net-metering systems, the last resort service kilowatt-hour charge shall be net | |
5 | of the renewable energy standard charge or credit; | |
6 | (ii) Distribution kilowatt-hour charge; | |
7 | (iii) Transmission kilowatt-hour charge; and | |
8 | (iv) Transition kilowatt-hour charge. | |
9 | For projects after April 15, 2023 that have not elected to receive the fixed renewable net- | |
10 | metering credit pursuant to § 39-26.4-3(f), subject to the allowable be two hundred seventy-five | |
11 | one hundred seventy-five megawatts, alternating current (275 175 MWac), under § 39-26.4- | |
12 | 3(a)(1)(vi), the credit shall be reduced by twenty percent (20%). | |
13 | Notwithstanding the foregoing, except for systems that have requested an interconnection | |
14 | study for which payment has been received by the distribution company, or if an interconnection | |
15 | study is not required, a completed and paid interconnection application, by December 31, 2018, the | |
16 | renewable net-metering credit for all remote public entity and multi-municipal collaborative net- | |
17 | metering systems shall not include the distribution kilowatt-hour charge commencing on January | |
18 | 1, 2060. | |
19 | (23) “Renewable self-generator” means an electric distribution service customer of record | |
20 | for the eligible net-metering system or community remote net-metering system at the eligible net- | |
21 | metering system site which system is primarily designed to produce electrical energy for | |
22 | consumption by that same customer at its distribution service account(s), and/or, with respect to | |
23 | community remote net-metering systems, electrical energy which generates net-metering credits to | |
24 | be applied to offset the eligible credit-recipient account usage. | |
25 | (24) “Third party” means and includes any person or entity, other than the renewable self- | |
26 | generator, who or that owns or operates the eligible net-metering system or community remote net- | |
27 | metering system on the eligible net-metering system site for the benefit of the renewable self- | |
28 | generator. | |
29 | (25) “Third-party, net-metering financing arrangement” means the financing of eligible | |
30 | net-metering systems or community remote net-metering systems through lease arrangements or | |
31 | power/credit purchase agreements between a third party and renewable self-generator, except for | |
32 | those entities under a public entity net-metering financing arrangement. A third party engaged in | |
33 | providing financing arrangements related to such net-metering systems with a public or private | |
34 | entity is not a public utility as defined in § 39-1-2. | |
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| |
1 | 39-26.4-3. Net metering. | |
2 | (a) The following policies regarding net metering of electricity from eligible net-metering | |
3 | systems and community remote net-metering systems and regarding any person that is a renewable | |
4 | self-generator shall apply: | |
5 | (1)(i) The maximum allowable capacity for eligible net-metering systems, based on | |
6 | nameplate capacity, shall be ten megawatts (10 MW). | |
7 | (ii) Eligible net-metering systems shall be sited outside of core forests with the exception | |
8 | of development on preferred sites in the core forest and the exception of systems that, as of April | |
9 | 15, 2023, (A) Have submitted a complete application to the appropriate municipality for any | |
10 | required permits and/or zoning changes, or (B) Have requested an interconnection study for which | |
11 | payment has been received by the distribution company, or (C) If an interconnection study is not | |
12 | required, systems that have a completed and paid interconnection application. | |
13 | (iii) For systems developed in core forests on preferred sites, no more than one hundred | |
14 | thousand square feet (100,000 sq. ft) of core forest shall be removed, except for work required for | |
15 | utility interconnection or development of a brownfield, in which case no more core forest than | |
16 | necessary for interconnection or brownfield development shall be removed. | |
17 | (iv) The aggregate amount of net metering in the Block Island Utility District doing | |
18 | business as Block Island Power Company and the Pascoag Utility District shall not exceed a | |
19 | maximum percentage of peak load for each utility district as set by the utility district based on its | |
20 | operational characteristics, subject to commission approval. | |
21 | (v) Through December 31, 2018, the maximum aggregate amount of community remote | |
22 | net-metering systems built shall be thirty megawatts (30 MW). Any of the unused MW amount | |
23 | after December 31, 2018, shall remain available to community remote net-metering systems until | |
24 | the MW aggregate amount is interconnected. | |
25 | (vi) The maximum aggregate capacity of remote net metering allowable for ground- | |
26 | mounted eligible net-metering systems, as defined by § 39-26.4-2(6), with the exception of systems | |
27 | under § 39-26.4-3(e) and systems that have, as of April 15, 2023, submitted a complete application | |
28 | to the appropriate municipality for any required permits and/or zoning changes or have requested | |
29 | an interconnection study for which payment has been received by the distribution company, or if | |
30 | an interconnection study is not required, a completed and paid interconnection application by the | |
31 | distribution company as of June 24, 2023, shall be two hundred seventy-five one hundred seventy- | |
32 | five megawatts, alternating current (275 175 MWac), excluding off-shore wind. None of the | |
33 | systems to which this cap applies shall be in core forests unless on a preferred site located within | |
34 | the core forest. A project counts against this maximum if it is in operation or under construction by | |
|
| |
1 | July 1, 2030 December 31, 2032, as determined by the local distribution company. All eligible | |
2 | ground-mounted net-metering systems must be under construction or in operation by July 1, 2030 | |
3 | December 31, 2032. This restriction shall not apply to the following: (A) The eligible net-metering | |
4 | system is interconnected behind the same meter as the net-metering customer’s load; and/or (B) | |
5 | The energy generated by the eligible net-metering system is consumed by net-metered electric | |
6 | service account(s) of the same owner of record that are actually located on the same or contiguous | |
7 | parcels as the eligible net-metering system. | |
8 | (2) For ease of administering net-metered accounts and stabilizing net-metered account | |
9 | bills, the electric distribution company may elect (but is not required) to estimate for any twelve- | |
10 | month (12) period: | |
11 | (i) The production from the eligible net-metering system or community remote net- | |
12 | metering system; and | |
13 | (ii) Aggregate consumption of the net-metered accounts at the eligible net-metering system | |
14 | site or the sum of the consumption of the eligible credit-recipient accounts associated with the | |
15 | community remote net-metering system, and establish a monthly billing plan that reflects the | |
16 | expected credits that would be applied to the net-metered accounts over twelve (12) months. The | |
17 | billing plan would be designed to even out monthly billings over twelve (12) months, regardless of | |
18 | actual production and usage. If such election is made by the electric distribution company, the | |
19 | electric distribution company would reconcile payments and credits under the billing plan to actual | |
20 | production and consumption at the end of the twelve-month (12) period and apply any credits or | |
21 | charges to the net-metered accounts for any positive or negative difference, as applicable. Should | |
22 | there be a material change in circumstances at the eligible net-metering system site or associated | |
23 | accounts during the twelve-month (12) period, the estimates and credits may be adjusted by the | |
24 | electric distribution company during the reconciliation period. The electric distribution company | |
25 | also may elect (but is not required) to issue checks to any net-metering customer in lieu of billing | |
26 | credits or carry-forward credits or charges to the next billing period. For residential-eligible net- | |
27 | metering systems and community remote net-metering systems twenty-five kilowatts (25 KW) or | |
28 | smaller, the electric distribution company, at its option, may administer renewable net-metering | |
29 | credits month to month allowing unused credits to carry forward into the following billing period. | |
30 | (3) If the electricity generated by an eligible net-metering system or community remote | |
31 | net-metering system during a billing period is equal to, or less than, the net-metering customer’s | |
32 | usage at the eligible net-metering system site or the sum of the usage of the eligible credit-recipient | |
33 | accounts associated with the community remote net-metering system during the billing period, the | |
34 | customer shall receive renewable net-metering credits, that shall be applied to offset the net- | |
|
| |
1 | metering customer’s usage on accounts at the eligible net-metering system site, or shall be used to | |
2 | credit the eligible credit-recipient’s electric account. | |
3 | (4) If the electricity generated by an eligible net-metering system or community remote | |
4 | net-metering system during a billing period is greater than the net-metering customer’s usage on | |
5 | accounts at the eligible net-metering system site or the sum of the usage of the eligible credit- | |
6 | recipient accounts associated with the community remote net-metering system during the billing | |
7 | period, the customer shall be paid by excess renewable net-metering credits for the excess | |
8 | electricity generated; provided that, for any excess electricity generated by a system with a | |
9 | nameplate capacity in excess of twenty-five kilowatts (25 KW), excess renewable net-metering | |
10 | credits shall be limited to excess up to an additional twenty-five percent (25%) beyond the net- | |
11 | metering customer’s usage at the eligible net-metering system site, or the sum of the usage of the | |
12 | eligible credit-recipient accounts associated with the community remote net-metering system | |
13 | during the billing period; unless the electric distribution company and net-metering customer have | |
14 | agreed to a billing plan pursuant to subsection (a)(2). Subject to the completion of any applicable | |
15 | annual reconciliation of renewable net-metering credits and excess renewable net metering credits, | |
16 | customers shall have the option to cash out any credit balance remaining provided that the amount | |
17 | of the cash out shall be the lower of: | |
18 | (i) The credit balance shown from the annual reconciliation of the applicable account; or | |
19 | (ii) The credit balance on the applicable account on the date the electric distribution | |
20 | company processes the cash out. | |
21 | (5) The rates applicable to any net-metered account shall be the same as those that apply | |
22 | to the rate classification that would be applicable to such account in the absence of net metering, | |
23 | including customer and demand charges, and no other charges may be imposed to offset net- | |
24 | metering credits. | |
25 | (b) The commission shall exempt electric distribution company customer accounts | |
26 | associated with an eligible net-metering system from back-up or standby rates commensurate with | |
27 | the size of the eligible net-metering system, provided that any revenue shortfall caused by any such | |
28 | exemption shall be fully recovered by the electric distribution company through rates. | |
29 | (c) Any prudent and reasonable costs incurred by the electric distribution company | |
30 | pursuant to achieving compliance with subsection (a) and the annual amount of any renewable net- | |
31 | metering credits or excess renewable net-metering credits provided to accounts associated with | |
32 | eligible net-metering systems or community remote net-metering systems, shall be aggregated by | |
33 | the distribution company and billed to all distribution customers on an annual basis through a | |
34 | uniform, per-kilowatt-hour (KWh) surcharge embedded in the distribution component of the rates | |
|
| |
1 | reflected on customer bills. | |
2 | (d) The billing process set out in this section shall be applicable to electric distribution | |
3 | companies thirty (30) days after the enactment of this chapter. | |
4 | (e) The Rhode Island office of energy resources shall redesign the community solar remote | |
5 | net metering program to reflect the provisions of this chapter and to include a commercial or | |
6 | industrial anchor tenant up to but not to exceed fifty percent (50%) of the project. The remaining | |
7 | fifty percent (50%) must be allocated or subscribed to low- and moderate-income (LMI) residents | |
8 | and/or those living in areas defined as disadvantaged and environmental justice communities. The | |
9 | Rhode Island office of energy resources shall design the net metering credit rate and factor in | |
10 | federal energy funding and tax credits to develop the most cost-effective rate for community solar | |
11 | projects. It is expected that these projects will be operational for a twenty-year (20) period. The | |
12 | Rhode Island office of energy resources shall file a benefit and cost analysis with any program | |
13 | proposal filed to the Rhode Island public utilities commission. Once the Rhode Island office of | |
14 | energy resources files a program proposal to the Rhode Island public utilities commission, a docket | |
15 | shall be established, and the Rhode Island public utilities commission shall issue a ruling on the | |
16 | program no later than one hundred and fifty (150) days. If a program is approved, it will be subject | |
17 | to no greater than twenty megawatts (20 MW) per year for two years until the forty megawatts (40 | |
18 | MW) cap is met. Eligible net-metering systems shall be sited outside of core forests with the | |
19 | exception of development on preferred sites in the core forest. | |
20 | (f)(1) An eligible net-metering system owned by, or operated on behalf of, a public entity, | |
21 | educational institution, hospital, nonprofit, or multi-municipal collaborative, or for a commercial | |
22 | or industrial customer through a net-metering financing arrangement, or an eligible community | |
23 | remote net-metering system may make a one-time, irrevocable election by the later of: (i) the date | |
24 | that is ninety (90) days after the commission approves a tariff pursuant to § 39-26.4-3(f)(2); or (ii) | |
25 | the date that is sixty (60) days after execution of an interconnection agreement, to receive a fixed | |
26 | renewable net-metering credit rate of nineteen cents ($0.19) per kilowatt-hour. Such fixed credit | |
27 | rate shall be increased by 2.75% on a compound annual basis beginning January 1, 2028, and on | |
28 | January 1 of each year thereafter. The fixed credit rate elected pursuant to this subsection shall | |
29 | apply for a term of twenty-five (25) years from the date of such election and shall be governed by | |
30 | § 39-26.4-3(f)(4). Eligible net-metering systems making an election under this subsection shall | |
31 | remain subject to the requirements of § 39-26.4-3(a)(4). | |
32 | (2) No later than August 15, 2026, the electric distribution company shall file a tariff with | |
33 | the commission to implement the fixed renewable net-metering credit for eligible net metering | |
34 | systems that elect such credit, under terms and conditions set forth in the tariff. The tariff shall set | |
|
| |
1 | forth, at a minimum, the rights and obligations of the eligible net-metering systems and the electric | |
2 | distribution company, including the conditions governing the calculation and payment of credits | |
3 | by the electric distribution company. The commission shall approve a tariff no later than December | |
4 | 1, 2026. | |
5 | (3) The commission shall have the authority to determine the final terms and conditions in | |
6 | the tariff that is filed with the commission pursuant to this section. Once approved, the commission | |
7 | shall retain exclusive jurisdiction over all payments, terms, conditions, rights, enforcement, and | |
8 | implementation of the tariff, subject to appeals pursuant to chapter 5 of this title. | |
9 | (4) It is the intention of the general assembly in enacting this provision that the developers, | |
10 | owners, investors, customers, and lenders of eligible net-metering systems receiving credits under | |
11 | the tariff be able to rely on the tariff for the entire term of the tariff for purposes of obtaining | |
12 | financing. Consistent with that intention and expectation, the terms under the tariff, once approved | |
13 | by the commission, shall not be altered in any way that would undermine such reliance on those | |
14 | tariffs during the applicable terms of the tariff; and in no circumstance will the credit rate paid to | |
15 | an eligible net-metering system be reduced during the term of the tariff once a project has elected | |
16 | to receive a tariff under the terms of this chapter. | |
17 | SECTION 6. Chapter 39-26 of the General Laws entitled "Renewable Energy Standard" is | |
18 | hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: | |
19 | 39-26-5.1. Zero-emission resources. | |
20 | (a) Zero-emission resources are: | |
21 | (1) Nuclear energy resources, meaning electricity generated by a nuclear fission or nuclear | |
22 | fusion facility that is licensed by the United States Regulatory Commission or its successor, and | |
23 | that produces no direct emissions of greenhouse gases or criteria air pollutants at the point of | |
24 | generation. | |
25 | (2) Large-scale hydroelectric facilities, meaning hydroelectric generation units that are not | |
26 | “small hydro facilities” as defined in § 39-26-2, that generate electricity through the conversion of | |
27 | the energy of flowing or falling water and that produce no direct emissions of greenhouse gases or | |
28 | criteria air pollutants at the point of generation. | |
29 | (b) For the purposes of the regulations promulgated under this chapter, eligible zero- | |
30 | emission energy resources are generation units in the NEPOOL control area using zero-emission | |
31 | energy resources as defined in this section. | |
32 | (c) A generation unit located in an adjacent control area outside of the NEPOOL may | |
33 | qualify as an eligible zero-emission energy resource, but the associated generation attributes shall | |
34 | be applied to any zero-emission standard established under this chapter only to the extent that the | |
|
| |
1 | energy produced by the generation unit is actually delivered into NEPOOL for consumption by | |
2 | New England customers. The delivery of the energy from the generation unit into NEPOOL shall | |
3 | be demonstrated by: | |
4 | (1) A unit-specific bilateral contract for the sale and delivery of such energy into NEPOOL; | |
5 | (2) Confirmation from ISO-New England that the zero-emission energy was actually | |
6 | settled in the NEPOOL system; and | |
7 | (3) Confirmation through the North American Electric Reliability Corporation tagging | |
8 | system, or its successor, that the import of the energy into NEPOOL actually occurred; or | |
9 | (4) Any such other requirements as the commission deems appropriate. | |
10 | (d) NE-GIS certificates associated with the energy production from off-grid generation and | |
11 | customer-sited generation facilities certified by the commission as eligible zero-emission energy | |
12 | resources may also be used to demonstrate compliance with any zero-emission standard. | |
13 | SECTION 7. Sections 39-26-1, 39-26-2, 39-26-4 and 39-26-6 of the General Laws in | |
14 | Chapter 39-26 entitled "Renewable Energy Standard" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
15 | 39-26-1. Legislative findings. | |
16 | The General Assembly finds that: | |
17 | (1) The people and energy users of Rhode Island have an interest in having electricity | |
18 | supplied in the state come from a diversity of energy sources including renewable and zero- | |
19 | emission resources; | |
20 | (2) Increased use of renewable and zero-emission energy may have the potential to lower | |
21 | and stabilize future energy costs and protect ratepayers from the volatility of regional energy | |
22 | markets; | |
23 | (3) Increased use of renewable and zero-emission energy can reduce air pollutants, | |
24 | including carbon dioxide emissions, that adversely affect public health and contribute to global | |
25 | warming; | |
26 | (4) Massachusetts, Connecticut, and other states have established renewable and zero- | |
27 | emission energy standard programs to encourage the development of renewable energy sources; | |
28 | (5) It is in the interest of the people, in order to protect public health and the environment | |
29 | and to promote the general welfare and to ensure affordability and reliability, to establish a | |
30 | renewable and zero-emission energy standard program to increase levels of electrical energy | |
31 | supplied in the state from renewable resources in a manner that prioritizes efficiency and cost- | |
32 | effectiveness. | |
33 | 39-26-2. Definitions. | |
34 | When used in this chapter: | |
|
| |
1 | (1) “Alternative compliance payment” means a payment to the renewable energy | |
2 | development fund of fifty dollars ($50.00) per megawatt-hour of renewable energy obligation, in | |
3 | 2003 dollars, adjusted annually up or down by the consumer price index, which may be made in | |
4 | lieu of standard means of compliance with this statute. | |
5 | (1) “Alternative compliance payment” starting with compliance year 2026 means a | |
6 | payment made in lieu of standard means of compliance with this statute, as follows: | |
7 | (i) For new renewable energy and zero-emission resources, an alternative compliance | |
8 | payment of forty dollars ($40.00) per megawatt-hour of renewable energy obligation; | |
9 | (ii) For existing renewable energy and zero-emission resources, an alternative compliance | |
10 | payment of eleven dollars ($11.00) per megawatt-hour of renewable energy obligation; | |
11 | (iii) All such payments shall be deposited into the renewable energy development fund and | |
12 | distributed in accordance with § 39-26-7. | |
13 | (2) “Commission” means the Rhode Island public utilities commission. | |
14 | (3) “Compliance year” means a calendar year beginning January 1 and ending December | |
15 | 31, for which an obligated entity must demonstrate that it has met the requirements of this statute. | |
16 | (4) “Customer-sited generation facility” means a generation unit that is interconnected on | |
17 | the end-use customer’s side of the retail electricity meter in such a manner that it displaces all or | |
18 | part of the metered consumption of the end-use customer. | |
19 | (5) “Electrical energy product” means an electrical energy offering, including, but not | |
20 | limited to, last-resort and standard-offer service, that can be distinguished by its generation | |
21 | attributes or other characteristics, and that is offered for sale by an obligated entity to end-use | |
22 | customers. | |
23 | (6) “Eligible biomass fuel” means fuel sources including brush, stumps, lumber ends and | |
24 | trimmings, wood pallets, bark, wood chips, shavings, slash, and other clean wood that is not mixed | |
25 | with other solid wastes; agricultural waste, food, and vegetative material; energy crops; landfill | |
26 | methane; biogas; or neat biodiesel and other neat liquid fuels that are derived from such fuel | |
27 | sources. | |
28 | (7) “Eligible renewable energy resource” means resources as defined in § 39-26-5. | |
29 | (8) “End-use customer” means a person or entity in Rhode Island that purchases electrical | |
30 | energy at retail from an obligated entity. | |
31 | (9) “Existing renewable energy resources” means generation units using eligible renewable | |
32 | energy resources and first going into commercial operation before December 31, 1997. | |
33 | (10) “Generation attributes” means the nonprice characteristics of the electrical energy | |
34 | output of a generation unit including, but not limited to, the unit’s fuel type, emissions, vintage, | |
|
| |
1 | and policy eligibility. | |
2 | (11) “Generation unit” means a facility that converts a fuel or an energy resource into | |
3 | electrical energy. | |
4 | (12) “High-heat medical waste processing facility” means a facility that: | |
5 | (i) Generates electricity from the combustion, gasification, or pyrolysis of regulated | |
6 | medical waste; | |
7 | (ii) Generates electricity from the combustion of fuel derived from the gasification or | |
8 | pyrolysis of regulated medical waste; or | |
9 | (iii) Disposes of, processes, or treats regulated medical waste through combustion, | |
10 | gasification, pyrolysis, or any process that exposes waste to temperatures above four hundred | |
11 | degrees Fahrenheit (400ºF). | |
12 | (13) “NE-GIS” means the generation information system operated by NEPOOL, its | |
13 | designee or successor entity, that includes a generation information database and certificate system, | |
14 | and that accounts for the generation attributes of electrical energy consumed within NEPOOL. | |
15 | (14) “NE-GIS certificate” means an electronic record produced by the NE-GIS that | |
16 | identifies the relevant generation attributes of each megawatt-hour accounted for in the NE-GIS. | |
17 | (15) “NEPOOL” means the New England Power Pool or its successor. | |
18 | (16) “New renewable energy resources” means generation units using eligible renewable | |
19 | energy resources and first going into commercial operation after December 31, 1997; or the | |
20 | incremental output of generation units using eligible renewable energy resources that have | |
21 | demonstrably increased generation in excess of ten percent (10%) using eligible renewable energy | |
22 | resources through capital investments made after December 31, 1997; but in no case involve any | |
23 | new impoundment or diversion of water with an average salinity of twenty (20) parts per thousand | |
24 | or less. | |
25 | (17) “Obligated entity” means a person or entity who or that sells electrical energy to end- | |
26 | use customers in Rhode Island, including, but not limited to: nonregulated power producers and | |
27 | electric utility distribution companies, as defined in § 39-1-2, supplying standard-offer service, last- | |
28 | resort service, or any successor service to end-use customers, including Narragansett Electric, but | |
29 | not to include Block Island Power Company as described in § 39-26-7 or Pascoag Utility District. | |
30 | (18) “Off-grid generation facility” means a generation unit that is not connected to a utility | |
31 | transmission or distribution system. | |
32 | (19) “Renewable energy resource” means any one or more of the renewable energy | |
33 | resources described in § 39-26-5(a). | |
34 | (20) “Reserved certificate” means a NE-GIS certificate sold independent of a transaction | |
|
| |
1 | involving electrical energy, pursuant to Rule 3.4 or a successor rule of the operating rules of the | |
2 | NE-GIS. | |
3 | (21) “Reserved certificate account” means a specially designated account established by | |
4 | an obligated entity, pursuant to Rule 3.4 or a successor rule of the operating rules of the NE-GIS, | |
5 | for transfer and retirement of reserved certificates from the NE-GIS. | |
6 | (22) “Self-generator” means an end-use customer in Rhode Island that displaces all or part | |
7 | of its retail electricity consumption, as metered by the distribution utility to which it interconnects, | |
8 | through the use of a customer-sited generation facility, and the ownership of any such facility shall | |
9 | not be considered an obligated entity as a result of any such ownership arrangement. | |
10 | (23) “Small hydro facility” means a facility employing one or more hydroelectric turbine | |
11 | generators and with an aggregate capacity not exceeding thirty megawatts (30 MW). For purposes | |
12 | of this definition, “facility” shall be defined in a manner consistent with Title 18 of the Code of | |
13 | Federal Regulations, section 292.204; provided, however, that the size of the facility is limited to | |
14 | thirty megawatts (30 MW), rather than eighty megawatts (80 MW). | |
15 | 39-26-4. Renewable energy standard. | |
16 | (a) Starting in compliance year 2007, all obligated entities shall obtain at least three percent | |
17 | (3%) of the electricity they sell at retail to Rhode Island end-use customers, adjusted for electric | |
18 | line losses, from eligible renewable energy resources, escalating, according to the following | |
19 | schedule: | |
20 | (1) At least three percent (3%) of retail electricity sales in compliance year 2007; | |
21 | (2) An additional one-half of one percent (0.5%) of retail electricity sales in each of the | |
22 | following compliance years 2008, 2009, 2010; | |
23 | (3) An additional one percent (1%) of retail electricity sales in each of the following | |
24 | compliance years 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, provided that the commission has determined the | |
25 | adequacy, or potential adequacy, of renewable energy supplies to meet these percentage | |
26 | requirements; | |
27 | (4) There shall be no increase to the renewable energy standard for compliance year 2015, | |
28 | and the incremental increases shall resume in the subsequent compliance years as provided in | |
29 | subsections (a)(5) through (a)(12) of this section; | |
30 | (4)(5) An additional one and one-half percent (1.5%) of retail electricity sales in each of | |
31 | the following compliance years 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022; | |
32 | (5)(6) [Deleted by P.L. 2016, ch. 144, § 1 and P.L. 2016, ch. 155, § 1.] | |
33 | (6)(7) An additional four percent (4%) of retail electricity sales in 2023; | |
34 | (7)(8) An additional five percent (5%) of retail electricity sales in 2024; | |
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1 | (8)(9) An additional six percent (6%) of retail electricity sales in 2025; | |
2 | (9)(10) An additional seven percent (7%) of retail electricity sales in 2026 and 2027; | |
3 | (10)(11) An additional seven and one-half percent (7.5%) of retail electricity sales in 2028; | |
4 | (11)(12) An additional eight percent (8%) of retail electricity sales in 2029; | |
5 | (12)(13) An additional eight and one-half percent (8.5%) of retail electricity sales in 2030; | |
6 | (13)(14) An additional nine percent (9%) of retail electricity sales in 2031; and | |
7 | (14)(15) An additional nine and one-half percent (9.5%) of retail electricity sales in 2032 | |
8 | and 2033 to achieve the goal that one hundred percent (100%) of Rhode Island’s retail electricity | |
9 | demand sales is from renewable energy and zero-emission resources by 2033 and each year | |
10 | thereafter. | |
11 | (b) For each obligated entity and in each compliance year, the amount of retail electricity | |
12 | sales used to meet obligations under this statute that are derived from existing renewable energy | |
13 | and zero-emission resources shall not exceed two percent (2%) of total retail electricity sales | |
14 | through compliance year 2026. For compliance year 2027, for each obligated entity the amount of | |
15 | retail electricity sales used to meet obligations under this statute that are derived from existing | |
16 | renewable energy resources and zero-emission resources shall not exceed fourteen percent (14%) | |
17 | of total retail sales and an additional one percent (1% ) of total retail electricity sales for each of | |
18 | compliance years, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, and for compliance year 2033 and each | |
19 | compliance year thereafter, shall not exceed twenty percent (20%). | |
20 | (c) The minimum renewable energy percentages set forth in subsection (a) shall be met for | |
21 | each electrical energy product offered to end-use customers, in a manner that ensures that the | |
22 | amount of renewable energy of end-use customers voluntarily purchasing renewable energy is not | |
23 | counted toward meeting such percentages. Notwithstanding the foregoing, municipalities engaged | |
24 | in aggregation pursuant to § 39-3-1.2 may include in their aggregation plan terms that would allow | |
25 | voluntary renewable energy products to be counted toward meeting such percentages. In 2024, the | |
26 | commission, with input from the office of energy resources, division of public utilities and carriers, | |
27 | obligated entities, other market participants, and the public, shall assess the impact of allowing | |
28 | voluntary renewable energy purchases to be counted toward meeting the annual percentages. The | |
29 | commission shall submit a report of its findings and recommendations to the governor, speaker of | |
30 | the house, and senate president no later than September 1, 2024. | |
31 | (d) To the extent consistent with the requirements of this chapter, compliance with the | |
32 | renewable energy standard may be demonstrated through procurement of NE-GIS certificates | |
33 | relating to generating units certified by the commission as using eligible renewable energy sources | |
34 | and zero-emission resources, as evidenced by reports issued by the NE-GIS administrator. | |
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1 | Procurement of NE-GIS certificates from off-grid and customer-sited generation facilities, verified | |
2 | by the commission as eligible renewable energy resources and zero-emission resources, may also | |
3 | be used to demonstrate compliance. With the exception of contracts for generation supply entered | |
4 | into prior to 2002, initial title to NE-GIS certificates from off-grid and customer-sited generation | |
5 | facilities and from all other eligible renewable energy and zero-emission resources, shall accrue to | |
6 | the owner of such a generation facility, unless such title has been explicitly deemed transferred | |
7 | pursuant to contract or regulatory order. | |
8 | (e) In lieu of providing NE-GIS certificates pursuant to subsection (d) of this section, an | |
9 | obligated entity may also discharge all or any portion of its compliance obligations by making an | |
10 | alternative compliance payment to the renewable energy development fund established pursuant to | |
11 | § 39-26-7. | |
12 | (f) Retail electricity sales pursuant to a nonregulated power producer’s supply contract that | |
13 | was executed prior to July 1, 2022, shall be required to obtain an additional one and one-half percent | |
14 | (1.5%) of retail electricity sales each year and are exempted from the requirements of subsections | |
15 | (a)(6) through (a)(14) of this section until the end date of the term of the nonregulated power | |
16 | producer’s supply contract. | |
17 | 39-26-6. Duties of the commission. | |
18 | (a) The commission shall: | |
19 | (1) Develop and adopt regulations on or before December 31, 2005, for implementing a | |
20 | renewable energy standard, which regulations shall include, but be limited to, provisions for: | |
21 | (i) Verifying the eligibility of renewable energy and zero-emission generators and the | |
22 | production of energy from such generators, including requirements to notify the commission in the | |
23 | event of a change in a generator’s eligibility status; | |
24 | (ii) Standards for contracts and procurement plans for renewable energy and zero-emission | |
25 | resources to achieve the purposes of this chapter; | |
26 | (iii) Flexibility mechanisms for the purposes of easing compliance burdens; facilitating | |
27 | bringing new renewable resources on-line; and avoiding and/or mitigating conflicts with state-level | |
28 | source disclosure requirements and green marketing claims throughout the region; which flexibility | |
29 | mechanisms shall allow obligated entities to: (A) Demonstrate compliance over a compliance year; | |
30 | and (B) Bank excess compliance for new and existing renewable and zero-emissions resources for | |
31 | two (2) subsequent compliance years, capped at thirty percent (30%) of the current year’s obligation | |
32 | up to three (3) subsequent compliance years with no limitation on quantity; and | |
33 | (iv) Annual compliance filings to be made by all obligated entities within one month after | |
34 | NE-GIS reports are available for the fourth (4th) quarter of each calendar year. All electric-utility- | |
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1 | distribution companies shall cooperate with the commission in providing data necessary to assess | |
2 | the magnitude of obligation and verify the compliance of all obligated entities. | |
3 | (2) Authorize rate recovery by electric-utility-distribution companies of all prudent | |
4 | incremental costs arising from the implementation of this chapter, including, without limitation: | |
5 | the purchase of NE-GIS certificates including certificates from zero-emission resources; the | |
6 | payment of alternative compliance payments; required payments to support the NE-GIS; | |
7 | assessments made pursuant to § 39-26-7(c); and the incremental costs of complying with energy | |
8 | source disclosure requirements. | |
9 | (3) Certify eligible renewable energy and zero-emission resources by issuing statements of | |
10 | qualification within ninety (90) days of application. The commission shall provide prospective | |
11 | reviews for applicants seeking to determine whether a facility would be eligible. | |
12 | (4) [Deleted by P.L. 2022, ch. 218, § 1 and P.L. 2022, ch. 226, § 1.] | |
13 | (5) Establish sanctions for those obligated entities that, after investigation, have been found | |
14 | to fail to reasonably comply with the commission’s regulations. No sanction or penalty shall relieve | |
15 | or diminish an obligated entity from liability for fulfilling any shortfall in its compliance obligation; | |
16 | provided, however, that no sanction shall be imposed if compliance is achieved through alternative | |
17 | compliance payments. The commission may suspend or revoke the certification of generation units, | |
18 | certified in accordance with subsection (a)(3) of this section, that are found to provide false | |
19 | information or that fail to notify the commission in the event of a change in eligibility status or | |
20 | otherwise comply with its rules. Financial penalties resulting from sanctions from obligated entities | |
21 | shall not be recoverable in rates. | |
22 | (6) Report, by February 15, 2006, and by February 15 each year thereafter, to the governor, | |
23 | the speaker of the house, and the president of the senate on the status of the implementation of the | |
24 | renewable energy standards in Rhode Island and other states, and which report shall include in | |
25 | 2009, and each year thereafter, the level of use of renewable energy certificates by eligible | |
26 | renewable energy and zero-emission resources and the portion of renewable energy standards met | |
27 | through alternative compliance payments, and the amount of rate increases authorized pursuant to | |
28 | subsection (a)(2) of this section. | |
29 | (b) Consistent with the public policy objective of developing renewable generation as an | |
30 | option in Rhode Island, and subject to the review and approval of the commission, the electric | |
31 | distribution company is authorized to propose and implement pilot programs to own and operate | |
32 | no more than fifteen megawatts (15 MW) of renewable-generation demonstration projects in Rhode | |
33 | Island and may include the costs and benefits in rates to distribution customers. At least two (2) | |
34 | demonstration projects shall include renewable generation installed at, or in the vicinity of | |
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1 | nonprofit, affordable-housing projects where energy savings benefits are provided to reduce | |
2 | electric bills of the customers at the nonprofit, affordable-housing projects. Any renewable- | |
3 | generation proposals shall be subject to the review and approval of the commission. The | |
4 | commission shall annually make an adjustment to the minimum amounts required under the | |
5 | renewable energy standard under this chapter in an amount equal to the kilowatt hours generated | |
6 | by such units owned by the electric distribution company. The electric and gas distribution | |
7 | company shall also be authorized to propose and implement smart-metering and smart-grid | |
8 | demonstration projects in Rhode Island, subject to the review and approval of the commission, in | |
9 | order to determine the effectiveness of such new technologies for reducing and managing energy | |
10 | consumption, and may include the costs of such demonstration projects in distribution rates to | |
11 | electric customers to the extent the project pertains to electricity usage and in distribution rates to | |
12 | gas customers to the extent the project pertains to gas usage. | |
13 | SECTION 8. Chapter 39-26 of the General Laws entitled "Renewable Energy Standard" is | |
14 | hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: | |
15 | 39-26-4.1. Legislative reporting. | |
16 | (a) On or before January 1, 2027, the public utilities commission shall conduct a | |
17 | comprehensive review of: | |
18 | (1) The status of the state’s progress toward meeting the renewable energy standard; | |
19 | (2) The status of the state’s progress toward meeting the greenhouse gas emissions | |
20 | reduction requirements; | |
21 | (3) The extent to which renewable energy procurement and development within the state | |
22 | is sufficient to ensure long-term compliance with such requirements; | |
23 | (4) The impact on meeting mandated carbon reduction goals in § 42-6.2-9; | |
24 | (5) Estimated cost of compliance of the renewable energy standard; and | |
25 | (6) Recommendations for creation of an intervenor compensation program to provide | |
26 | compensation in the form of a grant for legal fees, expert witness fees and other reasonable costs | |
27 | to an intervenor in public utility commission proceedings. | |
28 | (b) On or before December 31, 2027, public utilities commission shall submit a report of | |
29 | their findings, and recommendation of actions required pursuant to this section, to the governor, | |
30 | the speaker of the house, the president of the senate, and the chairs of the house committees on | |
31 | environment and natural resources, finance, and corporations and the senate committees on finance, | |
32 | environment and agriculture, and commerce. The report shall detail the following: | |
33 | (1) Renewable and zero-emission resources used for compliance; | |
34 | (2) Estimated cost of compliance of the renewable energy standard; | |
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1 | (3) Impact on meeting mandated carbon reduction goals in § 42-6.2-9; and | |
2 | (4) Any statutory changes needed to reach the 2033 targets established pursuant to this | |
3 | chapter. | |
4 | SECTION 9. Section 39-31-11 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-31 entitled "Affordable | |
5 | Clean Energy Security Act" is hereby repealed. | |
6 | 39-31-11. Financial remuneration and incentives. | |
7 | In order to achieve the purposes of this chapter, electric distribution companies shall be | |
8 | entitled to financial remuneration and incentives for long-term contracts for newly developed | |
9 | renewable energy resources, which are over and above the base rate revenue requirement | |
10 | established in its cost of service for distribution ratemaking. Such remuneration and incentives shall | |
11 | compensate the electric distribution company for accepting the financial obligation of the long- | |
12 | term contracts. For long-term contracts approved pursuant to this chapter on or after January 1, | |
13 | 2022, the financial remuneration and incentives shall be in the form of annual compensation up to | |
14 | one percent (1.0%) of the actual annual payments made under the contracts through December 31, | |
15 | 2026, for those projects that are commercially operating. For long-term contracts approved | |
16 | pursuant to this chapter on or after January 1, 2027, financial remuneration and incentives shall not | |
17 | be applied, unless otherwise granted by the commission. For any calendar year in which the electric | |
18 | distribution company’s actual return on equity exceeds the return on equity allowed by the | |
19 | commission in the electric distribution company’s last general rate case, the commission shall have | |
20 | the authority to adjust any or all remuneration paid to the electric distribution company pursuant to | |
21 | this section in order to assure that such remuneration does not result in or contribute toward the | |
22 | electric distribution company earning above its allowed return for such calendar year. | |
23 | SECTION 10. Chapter 42-12 of the General Laws entitled "Department of Human | |
24 | Services" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: | |
25 | 42-12-1.6. Transfer of functions to the office of energy resources. | |
26 | (a) There is hereby transferred from the department of human services to the office of | |
27 | energy resources the administration, management, all functions and resources associated with: | |
28 | (1) The weatherization assistance program which offers weatherization grants and heating | |
29 | system upgrades using funds from the federal department of energy and the federal low-income | |
30 | home energy assistance program, and any state funded or privately funded weatherization | |
31 | assistance program of a similar nature assigned to it; | |
32 | (b) The department is authorized to offer advisory assistance to the office of energy | |
33 | resources in order to maintain continuity to eligible households. | |
34 | SECTION 11. Section 42-12-1.5 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-12 entitled | |
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1 | "Department of Human Services" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
2 | 42-12-1.5. Transfer of functions from the office of energy resources. | |
3 | (a) There is hereby transferred from the office of energy resources to the department of | |
4 | human services the administration, management, all functions and resources associated with: | |
5 | (1) The federal low-income home energy assistance program (LIHEAP), which provides | |
6 | heating assistance to eligible low-income persons and any state funded or privately funded heating | |
7 | assistance program of a similar nature assigned to it for administration; | |
8 | (2) The weatherization assistance program, which offers home weatherization grants and | |
9 | heating system upgrades to LIHEAP eligible households; and, | |
10 | (3)(2) The emergency fuel program, which provides oil deliveries to families experiencing | |
11 | a heating emergency. | |
12 | (b) The department is authorized to request advisory assistance from the office of energy | |
13 | resources in order to maintain continuity of assistance provided to LIHEAP eligible households | |
14 | pursuant to § 39-2-1(d). | |
15 | SECTION 12. Section 42-140-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-140 entitled "Rhode | |
16 | Island Energy Resources Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
17 | 42-140-3. Purposes. | |
18 | The purposes of the office shall be to: | |
19 | (1) Develop and put into effect plans and programs to promote, encourage, and assist the | |
20 | provision of energy resources for Rhode Island in a manner that enhances economic well-being, | |
21 | social equity, and environmental quality; | |
22 | (2) Monitor, forecast, and report on energy use, energy prices, and energy demand and | |
23 | supply forecasts, and make findings and recommendations with regard to energy supply diversity, | |
24 | reliability, and procurement, including least-cost procurement; | |
25 | (3) Develop and to put into effect plans and programs to promote, encourage, and assist | |
26 | the efficient and productive use of energy resources in Rhode Island, and to coordinate energy | |
27 | programs for natural gas, electricity, and heating oil to maximize the aggregate benefits of | |
28 | conservation and efficiency of investments; | |
29 | (4) Monitor and report technological developments that may result in new and/or improved | |
30 | sources of energy supply, increased energy efficiency, and reduced environmental impacts from | |
31 | energy supply, transmission, and distribution; | |
32 | (5) Administer the programs, duties, and responsibilities heretofore exercised by the state | |
33 | energy office, except as these may be assigned by executive order or the general laws to other | |
34 | departments and agencies of state government; | |
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1 | (6) Develop, recommend, and, as appropriate, implement integrated and/or comprehensive | |
2 | strategies, including at regional and federal levels, to secure Rhode Island’s interest in energy | |
3 | resources, their supply and efficient use, and as necessary to interact with persons, private sector, | |
4 | nonprofit, regional, federal entities and departments and agencies of other states to effectuate this | |
5 | purpose; | |
6 | (7) Cooperate with agencies, departments, corporations, and entities of the state and of | |
7 | political subdivisions of the state in achieving its purposes; | |
8 | (8) Cooperate with and assist the state planning council and the division of state planning | |
9 | in developing, maintaining, and implementing state guide plan elements pertaining to energy and | |
10 | renewable energy; | |
11 | (9) Coordinate the energy efficiency, least-cost procurement, and systems reliability plans | |
12 | and programs with the energy efficiency and resources management council; | |
13 | (10) Participate in, monitor implementation of, and provide technical assistance for the | |
14 | low-income home energy assistance program enhancement plan established pursuant to § 39-1- | |
15 | 27.12; | |
16 | (11) Participate in and monitor the distributed generation standard contracts program | |
17 | pursuant to chapter 26.2 of title 39; | |
18 | (12)(11) Coordinate opportunities with and enter into contracts and/or agreements with the | |
19 | commerce corporation associated with the energy efficiency, least-cost procurement, system | |
20 | reliability, and renewable energy fund programs; | |
21 | (13)(12) Provide support and information to the division of planning and the state planning | |
22 | council in the development of a ten-year (10) Rhode Island Energy Guide Plan, which shall be | |
23 | reviewed and amended if necessary every five (5) years; | |
24 | (13) Administer the federal Weatherization Assistance Program and any state or privately | |
25 | funded weatherization program; | |
26 | (14) Advise and provide technical assistance to state and federally funded energy programs | |
27 | to support: | |
28 | (i) The federal low-income home energy assistance program which provides heating | |
29 | assistance to eligible low-income persons and any state funded or privately funded heating | |
30 | assistance program of a similar nature assigned to it for administration; | |
31 | (ii) The weatherization assistance program which offers home weatherization grants and | |
32 | heating system upgrades to eligible persons of low-income; | |
33 | (iii) The emergency fuel program which provides oil deliveries to families experiencing a | |
34 | heating emergency; | |
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1 | (iv) The energy conservation program, which offers service and programs to all sectors; | |
2 | (v) [Deleted by P.L. 2008, ch. 228, § 2, and P.L. 2008, ch. 422, § 2.] | |
3 | (15) Advise the commerce corporation in the development of standards and rules for the | |
4 | solicitation and award of renewable energy program investment funds in accordance with § 42-64- | |
5 | 13.2; | |
6 | (16) Develop, recommend, and evaluate energy programs for state facilities and operations | |
7 | in order to achieve and demonstrate the benefits of energy-efficiency, diversification of energy | |
8 | supplies, energy conservation, and demand management; and | |
9 | (17) Advise the governor and the general assembly with regard to energy resources and all | |
10 | matters relevant to achieving the purposes of the office. | |
11 | SECTION 13. Chapter 42-140 of the General Laws entitled "Rhode Island Energy | |
12 | Resources Act" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: | |
13 | 42-140-13. Energy Benchmarking And Performance Standards Program. | |
14 | (a) Definitions. For the purposes of this section: | |
15 | (1) “Department” means all state departments whose directors are enumerated in § 42-6-3 | |
16 | and shall additionally include the executive office of health and human services, the executive | |
17 | office of commerce, and the executive office of housing. | |
18 | (2) “Public buildings” for the purpose of this section means all municipal and school | |
19 | buildings owned by a municipality that are at least twenty-five thousand gross square feet (25,000 | |
20 | GSF). | |
21 | (3) “State-owned, state-occupied facilities” means buildings owned by the state that | |
22 | primarily contain offices or other administrative work space for state employees and are at least | |
23 | twenty-five thousand gross square feet (25,000 GSF). | |
24 | (b) State facilities energy usage reporting | |
25 | (1) State departments, coordinated and supported by the office of energy resources, shall | |
26 | be required to measure and report monthly energy usage by energy source for their respective state- | |
27 | owned, state-occupied facilities, as well as the gross square footage for each building. | |
28 | (2) Beginning March 31, 2029, and recurring annually thereafter, departments, coordinated | |
29 | and supported by the office of energy resources, shall report to the office energy use data by source | |
30 | for state-owned, state-occupied facilities for the preceding calendar year. No later than one hundred | |
31 | eighty (180) days from the March 31 reporting deadline each year, the office shall compile, publish | |
32 | and post on its website each facility’s energy use data by fuel and total emissions. | |
33 | (c) State facilities benchmarking and performance standards program | |
34 | (1) Utilizing the data due March 31, 2029, in subsection (b)(2), the office of energy | |
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1 | resources shall, with consultation from departments, develop and publish performance standards | |
2 | for state-owned, state-occupied facilities by March 31, 2030 and may update the performance | |
3 | standards and any revision to the standards thereafter. The performance standards published must | |
4 | include: | |
5 | (i) An annualized emissions standard based on energy usage for each state-owned, state- | |
6 | occupied facility as necessary, to achieve by specified dates; | |
7 | (ii) A schedule for compliance terminating in 2050; and | |
8 | (iii) The cost-benefit analysis used to determine which state-owned, state-occupied | |
9 | facilities are assigned performance standards, as set forth in subsection (c)(2) below. | |
10 | (2) The performance standards shall be determined by evaluating: | |
11 | (i) The total amount of emissions reductions that could be achieved while maintaining state | |
12 | operations; | |
13 | (ii) The relative contribution of the emissions reductions to decadal targets established by | |
14 | § 42-6.2-2 compared to other strategies, programs, and actions established by the executive climate | |
15 | change coordinating council in its plan due December 31, 2025, in accordance with § 42-6.2- | |
16 | 2(2)(i); and | |
17 | (iii) The fiscal impacts of achieving the performance standards. | |
18 | (3) The departments shall meet the performance standards set in accordance with | |
19 | subsection (c)(2). No later than ninety (90) days after each specified compliance date established | |
20 | in accordance with subsection (c)(1), the office of energy resources shall publish a performance | |
21 | standards compliance report demonstrating the status of each state-owned, state-occupied facility | |
22 | subject to a performance standard and post on its website. In the event that a state-owned, state- | |
23 | occupied facility fails to meet a performance standard, the office of energy resources shall provide | |
24 | a corrective action plan with which the state-owned, state-occupied facility shall comply within | |
25 | ninety (90) days of the compliance deadline. | |
26 | (4) Subsections (c)(1), (c)(2), and (c)(3) shall not apply to state-owned, state-occupied | |
27 | facilities which the office and department of administration determine are not suitable candidates | |
28 | for achieving greenhouse gas emission reductions due to economic infeasibility or unique | |
29 | operational or physical limitations. Any such determinations shall be published in addition to the | |
30 | standards required in subsection (c)(2) and posted on the office’s website. | |
31 | (d) Voluntary energy benchmarking program for public buildings | |
32 | (i) The office of energy resources shall provide technical and financial assistance to | |
33 | municipalities for a voluntary public buildings energy benchmarking program of public buildings | |
34 | on municipal properties in which buildings are greater than twenty-five thousand square feet | |
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1 | (25,000 ft2). | |
2 | (ii) The office of energy resources shall maintain a website that tracks its implementation | |
3 | of the voluntary public buildings energy benchmarking program. The office shall submit to the | |
4 | governor and general assembly by May 1, 2028, and annually thereafter a progress report on the | |
5 | voluntary public buildings energy benchmarking program. | |
6 | SECTION 14. This article shall take effect upon passage. | |
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