2025 -- S 0091 | |
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LC000179 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2025 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- BUILDING DECARBONIZATION ACT OF 2024 | |
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Introduced By: Senators Kallman, Sosnowski, DiMario, Euer, Lawson, Britto, Gu, Gallo, | |
Date Introduced: January 31, 2025 | |
Referred To: Senate Environment & Agriculture | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Findings and purpose. |
2 | The purpose of this chapter is to understand and reduce the greenhouse gas emissions of |
3 | buildings in Rhode Island, consistent with an Act on Climate, chapter 6.2-9 of title 42. Of the |
4 | building stock in 2050, approximately seventy percent (70%) has already been built, and addressing |
5 | these existing buildings is critical to achieving net-zero emissions by 2050. While significant |
6 | retrofits to existing buildings will eventually be needed, this chapter establishes a program for the |
7 | energy benchmarking of large buildings in Rhode Island and a standard for their energy |
8 | performance and requires that the construction or alteration of new buildings be electric-ready. |
9 | Further, the intent of the legislature is to ensure that the Executive Climate Change Coordinating |
10 | Council (EC4) has dedicated resources sufficient to administer its responsibilities under this chapter |
11 | to enable swift and steady progress towards Rhode Island's net-zero mandate. |
12 | SECTION 2. Title 23 of the General Laws entitled "HEALTH AND SAFETY" is hereby |
13 | amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
14 | CHAPTER 27.5 |
15 | BUILDING DECARBONIZATION ACT OF 2025 |
16 | 23-27.5-1. Definitions. |
17 | As used in this chapter: |
18 | (1) "Anonymized and aggregated usage data" means, for a specified time period, an |
19 | aggregation of utility usage data for a covered property whereby data from tenant meters and from |
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1 | owner meters are combined into one collective data point for each utility type, and where any |
2 | unique identifiers or other personal information related to tenants are removed. Data for a covered |
3 | property may be anonymized and aggregated where there are three (3) or more unique non- |
4 | residential accounts or five (5) or more unique residential accounts. |
5 | (2) "BPS fund" means the building performance standard fund established in § 23-27.5- |
6 | 7(g). |
7 | (3) "Building improvement tool" means an online tool to help building owners and |
8 | operators improve building energy and water efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions |
9 | through identifying, tracking, and verifying improvements and their performance, including the |
10 | capability to integrate with ENERGY STAR Portfolio Manager. |
11 | (4) "Building performance standard" means an objectively verifiable numeric value of a |
12 | defined building performance metric that covered properties are required to achieve by specified |
13 | dates. |
14 | (5) "Commercial building" means a building or multiple buildings on a property of which |
15 | not less than fifty percent (50%) of the gross floor area, including hallways or other common space, |
16 | but excluding parking, is used for commercial, retail, office, professional, educational or other |
17 | nonresidential purposes, or any grouping of commercial buildings designated by the EC4 as an |
18 | appropriate reporting unit for the purposes of this section; provided however, that "commercial |
19 | building" shall not include a public facility or a building owned or leased by the federal government, |
20 | and shall not include a facility in which the majority of energy is consumed for manufacturing, for |
21 | the generation of electric power or district thermal energy to be consumed off site, for |
22 | communications infrastructure, or for other process loads as determined by the EC4. |
23 | (6) "Community impacted by poverty and environmental injustice" means census tracts |
24 | that are highlighted as overburdened and underserved in the geospatial Climate and Economic |
25 | Justice Screening Tool (CEJST). |
26 | (7) "Condominium" means a property that combines separate ownership of individual |
27 | units with common ownership of other elements such as common areas. |
28 | (8) "Covered property" means any of the following with at least twenty-five thousand |
29 | square feet (25,000 sq. ft.) of gross floor area: |
30 | (i) A single building; |
31 | (ii) One or more buildings held in the condominium form of ownership, and governed by |
32 | a single board of managers; or |
33 | (iii) Two (2) or more buildings that are served by the same electric or gas meter or are |
34 | served by the same heating or cooling system(s), which is not a district energy system. Provided |
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1 | that buildings, spaces, or groups of buildings and spaces, that are sub-metered or otherwise subject |
2 | to easy determination of the resource consumption attributable to each individual building, space, |
3 | or group of buildings or spaces, shall be treated as separate "covered properties" as determined by |
4 | the EC4. |
5 | (9) "District energy system" means a system serving multiple covered properties and |
6 | consisting of non-combusting thermal energy generation, transfer, and distribution equipment |
7 | providing thermal energy in the form of heat and/or heat rejection. |
8 | (10) "Executive Climate Change Coordinating Council" or "Council" or "EC4" means the |
9 | council established by § 42-6.2-1. |
10 | (11) "Gross floor area" means the total area of a covered property, measured between the |
11 | outside surface of the exterior walls of the covered property building(s). The EC4 shall promulgate |
12 | rules and procedures governing the calculation of gross floor area, including areas that shall be |
13 | excluded from the calculation. |
14 | (12) "Owner" means any of the following: |
15 | (i) An individual or entity possessing title to a covered property; |
16 | (ii) The board of the owners' association, in the case of a condominium; |
17 | (iii) The master association, in the case of a condominium, where the powers of an owners' |
18 | association are exercised by or delegated to a master association; |
19 | (iv) The board of directors, in the case of a cooperative apartment corporation; or |
20 | (v) An agent authorized to act on behalf of any of the above. |
21 | (13) "Performance metrics" means each of the objectively verifiable numeric measures of |
22 | building performance as established by § 23-27.5-4(d). |
23 | (14) "Property type(s)" means a category of covered properties subject to the same interim |
24 | and final building performance standards, as defined by the EC4. Covered properties within each |
25 | property type shall have shared characteristics that facilitate the implementation and enforcement |
26 | of this law. The EC4 may define one or more property types to be identical to ENERGY STAR |
27 | property types. |
28 | (15) "Public facility" means any public institution, public facility, or any physical asset |
29 | owned, including its public real-property site, leased or controlled in whole or in part by this state, |
30 | a public agency, a municipality or a political subdivision, that is for public or government use and |
31 | that consumes energy. |
32 | (16) "Residential building" means a building or multiple buildings on a property of which |
33 | not less than fifty percent (50%) of the gross floor area, including hallways and other common |
34 | space serving residents, but excluding parking, is used for dwelling purposes, or any grouping of |
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1 | residential buildings designated by the EC4 as an appropriate reporting unit for the purposes of this |
2 | chapter; provided, however, that "residential building" shall not include a public facility or a |
3 | building owned or leased by the federal government. |
4 | (17) "Tenant" means any tenant, tenant-stockholder of a cooperative apartment |
5 | corporation, or condominium unit owner. |
6 | (18) "Utility" means a company, cooperative, association, or government entity that |
7 | distributes and sells electricity, natural gas, or district energy for use in buildings. |
8 | 23-27.5-2. Authority. |
9 | The EC4 is hereby granted authority to administer this chapter, which shall include the |
10 | authority to issue forms and guidance, promulgate rules and regulations, apply for and receive |
11 | federal funds, assess and receive fees, and contract with third parties to effectuate the powers |
12 | granted herein. |
13 | 23-27.5-3. Advisory Boards. |
14 | (a) For purposes of this chapter, the green building advisory committee (GBAC) |
15 | established by § 37-24-5(g) shall act as an advisory board to the EC4 concerning the |
16 | implementation of this chapter including, but not limited to, the establishment of the benchmarking |
17 | requirements, technical assistance, owner needs, outreach and education, opportunities for funding |
18 | related to the chapter, the implementation of state policies, programs, and statutes related to the |
19 | chapter and recommendations for building performance standards. |
20 | (b) No later than one hundred and twenty (120) days following the enactment of this |
21 | chapter the EC4 shall establish the environmental justice advisory board (EJAB) to advise the EC4 |
22 | on climate change efforts with respect to potential impacts on, benefits to, and special |
23 | considerations for individuals and communities impacted by poverty and environmental injustice. |
24 | (1) The EJAB shall be comprised of no fewer than nine (9) and no more than fifteen (15) |
25 | individuals who are representatives of communities impacted by poverty and environmental |
26 | injustice, representatives of nonprofit and public agencies who work with such individuals or |
27 | communities, including providers of affordable housing, small business owners or organizations, |
28 | and experts in areas related to racial and social equity, as well as one representative from the Rhode |
29 | Island AFL-CIO. The EC4 shall select individuals in consultation with the EC4 advisory board, to |
30 | serve on the EJAB following an opportunity for the public to apply in consultation with the EC4 |
31 | advisory board. |
32 | (2) All appointments to the EJAB shall be for a term of three (3) years. Members whose |
33 | appointed terms have expired shall be permitted to continue to serve for up to one year until |
34 | reappointed or replaced by a new appointee. |
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1 | (3) The EC4 shall fairly compensate EJAB members and provide stipends to cover the cost |
2 | of childcare and information technology needs as determined by the EJAB and EC4. |
3 | (4) The EJAB shall advise the EC4 on the implementation of this chapter with respect to |
4 | potential impacts on, benefits to, and special considerations for individuals and communities |
5 | impacted by poverty and environmental injustice, and small business owners from such |
6 | communities. |
7 | (5) The EJAB may develop a plan to allocate funds available in the BPS fund, established |
8 | under § 23-27.5-7(g), to improve the performance of covered buildings and ensure that those |
9 | investments benefit such communities. |
10 | (6) The EJAB may host, in partnership with the GBAC and the EC4, public meetings to |
11 | gather input regarding the benchmarking program as well as the design and implementation of the |
12 | building performance standards and complementary programs. Equitable engagement shall be a |
13 | priority. |
14 | 23-27.5-4. Building Benchmarking. |
15 | (a) There is hereby established an energy use benchmarking program to collect and analyze |
16 | such information in support of the statewide greenhouse gas emission reduction mandate provided |
17 | in chapter 6.2 of title 42 ("act on climate"). |
18 | (b) The program shall be conducted to determine whether each building subject to the |
19 | program utilizes more or less energy, and emits more or less greenhouse gases, than buildings of |
20 | comparable size, occupancies and uses, and to inform a statewide analysis of energy use trends and |
21 | opportunities to increase energy efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. |
22 | (c) Information to be collected in the benchmarking program and generally referred to as |
23 | "energy use information" shall include at a minimum: |
24 | (1) The name, mailing address, email, and telephone number of the owner, and the operator |
25 | if different from the owner; |
26 | (2) The address of the building and the municipality in which the building is located; |
27 | (3) The primary use, any additional uses, and gross floor area of the building; |
28 | (4) The building's total energy use in kBTU and total greenhouse gas emissions in pounds |
29 | of carbon dioxide equivalent; |
30 | (5) The breakdown of the building's energy use by electricity, gas, and other sources, and |
31 | any electricity generated by on-site renewable sources; and |
32 | (6) An energy performance rating or assessment score. |
33 | (d) The EC4 shall issue forms, guidance, or regulations as needed, to implement this section |
34 | including provisions related to compliance. The EC4 shall issue provisional guidance for public |
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1 | facilities greater than twenty-five thousand square feet (25,000 sq. ft.) by July 1, 2027. The EC4 |
2 | shall propose forms, guidance, or regulations as needed, for all covered properties by April 1, 2028, |
3 | and shall make all efforts to issue final forms, guidance, or regulations as needed, for all covered |
4 | properties by July 1, 2026. |
5 | (1) The EC4 may designate one or more alternative energy use benchmarking tools. |
6 | (2) The EC4 shall define one or more energy performance ratings or scores to aid building |
7 | owners, operators, the general public, and the EC4 in understanding the energy of greenhouse gas |
8 | emissions performance of the building relative to similar buildings. |
9 | (3) The EC4 shall identify the required information which shall include at a minimum, the |
10 | energy use information listed in subsection (c) of this section, and at least one of the energy |
11 | performance ratings or scores defined by the EC4, as well as necessary administrative information |
12 | such as the owner and operator of the building, contact information, and similar items. |
13 | (4) The EC4 shall promulgate regulations and procedures governing the calculation of |
14 | gross floor area, including areas that shall be excluded from the calculation. |
15 | (5) The EC4 shall promulgate regulations and procedures for the submission of required |
16 | information and may provide multiple alternatives for the form of submission, such as a paper form |
17 | and submission electronically via an online portal, and shall endeavor to streamline the submission |
18 | processes as appropriate. |
19 | (6) The EC4 shall promulgate regulations and procedures on data verification options for |
20 | required information. |
21 | (7) The EC4 may consider modeling property types, use details and other definitions |
22 | provided in the ENERGY STAR Portfolio Manager glossary. |
23 | (e) The EC4 shall provide technical support and guidance to owners and operators of |
24 | buildings subject to this section. |
25 | (1) The EC4 shall identify one or more building improvement tools as voluntary |
26 | complementary software or platforms that in the EC4's judgment can assist building owners and |
27 | operators in improving building performance and which may be public or private sector tools. |
28 | (2) The EC4 shall provide technical support and assistance on the use of the energy use |
29 | benchmarking tool and the building improvement tool, as well as building energy assessment, |
30 | improvement, and financial tools. |
31 | (3) Technical support and assistance may be provided directly and through contract and the |
32 | EC4 may consider a technical assistance hub. |
33 | (4) The EC4 may coordinate with the department of environmental management (DEM) |
34 | for enforcement of the building performance standards, and the standards and requirements set forth |
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1 | herein. |
2 | (5) The EC4 may apply for relevant federal funding opportunities in support of this chapter |
3 | and may partner with nonprofit organizations and associations to make such an application if |
4 | beneficial. |
5 | (f) In administering this section, the EC4 may: |
6 | (1) Designate subcategories of buildings based on common characteristics such as building |
7 | use, and may establish different reporting requirements for subcategories; and |
8 | (2) Consider whether tenant-occupied units or spaces are separately metered and may |
9 | address such conditions in any forms, instructions, or responses to questions. |
10 | (g) The EC4 shall provide to owners instructions regarding tenant energy consumption |
11 | data, including best practices for lease provisions and for estimates where obtaining metered data |
12 | is not practicable. |
13 | (h) Not later than the deadlines provided in subsections (k)(1) through (k)(3) of this section, |
14 | beginning in the year indicated, the owner of each covered property shall submit to the EC4 energy |
15 | use information for each covered property. Such submission shall include additional required |
16 | information, if any, identified by the EC4 and shall be in the form and manner, if any, prescribed |
17 | by the EC4. The failure of the EC4 to issue guidance shall not excuse owners of this obligation. |
18 | (i) When an owner submits required information accompanied by evidence of data |
19 | verification by a third party per regulations issued pursuant to this section, the owner shall have an |
20 | additional three (3) months beyond the dates indicated in subsection (k)(2) of this section to report. |
21 | (j) Within one hundred eighty (180) days of enactment of this chapter, the EC4 shall host |
22 | a workshop to explain the benchmarking requirements contained within this chapter. The EC4 shall |
23 | invite representatives from the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns, the Rhode Island AFL- |
24 | CIO, municipal building code officials, municipal planning officials, and other interested parties |
25 | identified by the commissioner of the EC4. |
26 | (k)(1) For public facilities with gross floor area greater than twenty-five thousand square |
27 | feet (25,000 sq ft), the first compliance date is April 1, 2028, for calendar year 2026 energy use |
28 | information, and thereafter the annual compliance date is April 1 for the prior calendar year. |
29 | (2) For covered properties with gross floor area greater than fifty thousand square feet |
30 | (50,000 sq ft), the first compliance date is March 31, 2028, for calendar year 2027 energy use |
31 | information, and thereafter the annual compliance date is March 31 for the prior calendar year. |
32 | (3) For covered properties with gross floor area greater than twenty-five thousand square |
33 | feet (25,000 sq ft), the first compliance date is March 31, 2029, for calendar year 2028 energy use |
34 | information, and thereafter the annual compliance date is March 31 for the prior calendar year. |
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1 | (l) To the extent permitted by law, an electric distribution company as defined in § 39-1- |
2 | 2(a)(12) or gas distribution company included as a public utility in § 39-1-2(a)(20) that has greater |
3 | than one hundred thousand (100,000) customers shall make available to owners of covered |
4 | properties anonymized and aggregated usage data for owner's covered property for the purpose of |
5 | compliance with this chapter. By nature of being aggregated, the intent is to anonymize individual |
6 | tenant energy use information, and not disclose this or any other personal information related to |
7 | tenant customers or their accounts. |
8 | (m) To the extent that gas and electric companies incur new or additional expenses to |
9 | collect, aggregate, organize, or provide energy use information under this chapter, prior to filing |
10 | for cost recovery, shall first demonstrate good faith efforts to secure federal, state, or other relevant |
11 | funding options. Thereafter, such additional expenses shall be eligible for cost recovery through |
12 | rates charged to customers under the appropriate cost recovery mechanisms as determined by the |
13 | public utilities commission. |
14 | (n) Electric and gas distribution utilities shall collaborate with the EC4 to identify best |
15 | practices for collecting and managing aggregated whole building data. |
16 | (o) The EC4 shall endeavor to ensure that electric and gas distribution companies or other |
17 | energy efficiency program administrator provide owners of buildings subject to this section with |
18 | up-to-date information about energy efficiency opportunities or actions available to increase energy |
19 | efficiency, including incentives in utility-administered or other energy efficiency programs and |
20 | changes in energy assessment technology. |
21 | 23-27.5-5. Municipal implementation of building energy benchmarking |
22 | requirements. |
23 | (a) The EC4 shall establish procedures, including a process and conditions, for a |
24 | municipality to apply to the EC4 for the right to implement, in place of the EC4, the building energy |
25 | benchmarking requirements. Such conditions shall include, at a minimum, acceptance of |
26 | responsibility to collect the information specified by the EC4 from the covered property owners on |
27 | the schedule specified by the EC4, and the provision of benchmarking data to the EC4 annually. |
28 | (b) The EC4 shall review any application from a municipality to implement the building |
29 | energy benchmarking requirements and the EC4 may deny a request if it is not satisfied that the |
30 | conditions in subsection (a) of this section are met. A denial shall include a finding of facts and |
31 | final determination that the municipal plan does not meet the requirements of this section. |
32 | (c) A municipality that is approved to implement the building energy benchmarking |
33 | requirements shall be authorized to assess any fines related to the program as provided in the |
34 | approval by the EC4. Funds collected by a municipality shall be retained by the municipality. |
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1 | (d) The EC4 shall evaluate any municipal programs established under this subsection at |
2 | least once every five (5) years and may withdraw its approval if municipal programs fail to comply |
3 | with those conditions. |
4 | (e) In the case of a municipality that has initiated a building energy benchmarking |
5 | requirement prior to the enactment of this law, the municipality may continue such program in lieu |
6 | of the benchmarking requirements to be established by the EC4. In such case, the municipality must |
7 | notify the EC4 of such intent within one hundred eighty (180) days of the enactment of this chapter |
8 | and must provide benchmarking data to the EC4 annually thereafter. |
9 | 23-27.5-6. Building performance improvement. |
10 | (a) On a regular basis, the EC4 shall evaluate data relevant to understanding the energy use |
11 | and greenhouse gas emissions of buildings in Rhode Island, including, but not limited, to the |
12 | benchmarking data collected under this chapter. The EC4 shall publish reports summarizing the |
13 | data and the status of building emissions in Rhode Island biennially. Beginning no later than August |
14 | 31, 2029, and annually thereafter, the EC4 shall post benchmarking data for the prior calendar year. |
15 | Such posted benchmarking data shall include, at a minimum, for each covered property required to |
16 | submit energy use information for the given calendar year, the address of the covered property and |
17 | its energy performance rating or assessment score. |
18 | (b) No later than August 31, 2029, the EC4 shall publish a report including a summary of |
19 | its activities and progress under this chapter and detailing recommended measures, policies and |
20 | programs to achieve building emission reductions aligned with Rhode Island's net zero goal. The |
21 | EC4 shall issue supplemental reports biennially for a period of twenty (20) years. |
22 | (c) Performance metrics shall include site energy use intensity and may also include |
23 | greenhouse gas emissions or other metrics relevant to the purpose of this chapter. |
24 | (d) No later than June 30, 2030, the EC4 shall select performance metrics and set a building |
25 | performance standard for each property type or subcategory. |
26 | (e) The EC4 shall set final building performance standards that shall collectively cause the |
27 | aggregate greenhouse gas emissions attributable to all covered properties to be reduced in line with |
28 | reaching net zero by 2050. |
29 | (f) The EC4 shall set interim building performance standards for covered properties that |
30 | are applicable at the end of each five (5) year period between adoption and 2050. In doing so the |
31 | EC4 may use a straight-line trajectory, from the covered property's baseline performance for each |
32 | performance metric to the final building performance standard for that performance metric such |
33 | that each calculated performance metric shall improve in equal increments during each five (5) year |
34 | period. The EC4 may use other means to calculate interim building performance standards if it |
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1 | deems the straight-line trajectory approach ill-suited for a covered property type. |
2 | (g) As of June 30, 2035, and at the end of every five (5) year period thereafter, the owner |
3 | of a covered property shall demonstrate progress toward each applicable final building performance |
4 | standard by achieving the interim building performance standard(s) set by the EC4 for the covered |
5 | property. |
6 | (h) If the owner of a covered property believes that the owner cannot reasonably meet one |
7 | or more of the applicable interim or final building performance standards, then the owner may |
8 | propose an alternative building performance action plan to the EC4. If the EC4 approves an |
9 | alternative building performance action plan for a covered property, then the owner shall be |
10 | responsible only to comply with the provisions of the alternative building performance action plan |
11 | until the next compliance date. |
12 | (i) The EC4 shall issue forms, guidance and promulgate regulations necessary to implement |
13 | this section including requirements for building performance action plans. |
14 | (j) In consultation with the EJAB, the EC4 shall provide technical assistance for owners |
15 | lacking the financial, operational, or technical capacity to meet interim or final building |
16 | performance standards. To the extent possible, such assistance shall include information on |
17 | potential loan, grant, and other financing options for owners. |
18 | (k) The EC4 shall coordinate with utility companies, energy efficiency program |
19 | administrators, the public utilities commission, state agencies, and local governments, as |
20 | appropriate, to support the implementation of its recommendations pursuant to this section. |
21 | (l) In the case of a municipality that has initiated a building energy performance |
22 | requirement prior to the enactment of this law, the municipality may continue such program in lieu |
23 | of the requirements to be established by the EC4 under this section. In such case, the municipality |
24 | must notify the EC4 of such intent within one hundred eighty (180) days of the enactment of this |
25 | chapter and must provide program and performance information to the EC4 annually thereafter. |
26 | 23-27.5-7. Compliance assurance. |
27 | (a) The EC4 shall establish a program to maximize owner compliance with this chapter. |
28 | The EC4 shall issue forms, guidance and promulgate regulations as necessary to implement the |
29 | compliance program, and shall revise such forms, guidance and regulations from time to time as |
30 | needed. |
31 | (b) The EC4 may grant an extension, adjustment or exemption to an interim or final |
32 | building performance standards for a covered property whose owner submits a request, together |
33 | with documentation, in a form and date prescribed by the EC4, if the covered property meets any |
34 | of the following criteria: |
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1 | (1) A demolition permit was issued, or demolition is planned, that will prevent achievement |
2 | of the next interim building performance standard; |
3 | (2) The covered building did not have a certificate of occupancy or temporary certificate |
4 | of occupancy for all twelve (12) months of the baseline year prior to the interim building |
5 | performance standard compliance schedule; |
6 | (3) The covered property is in financial hardship, as defined guidance or regulations issued |
7 | by the EC4; or |
8 | (4) The EC4 determines that strict compliance with the provisions of this law would cause |
9 | financial hardship or would not be in the public interest. |
10 | Any approved alternative, extension, adjustment or exemption shall apply only to the |
11 | specific interim or final building performance standard and shall expire no later than the end of the |
12 | relevant five (5) year period. |
13 | (c) The EC4 shall establish penalties for violations of this chapter through promulgation of |
14 | regulations issued pursuant to this chapter. In doing so, the EC4 shall endeavor to minimize |
15 | disproportionate impacts on communities impacted by poverty and environmental injustice. The |
16 | EC4 may coordinate with the department of environmental management (DEM) for enforcement |
17 | of the building performance standards, and the standards and requirements herein. |
18 | (d) Pursuant to each of the benchmarking requirements and the building performance |
19 | standards established under this chapter, the EC4 shall establish in regulations the process and |
20 | criteria for a building owner to apply for, and for the EC4 to grant or deny: |
21 | (1) A deadline extension; and/or |
22 | (2) A hardship waiver. |
23 | (e) The EC4 shall establish penalties for covered properties for violation of benchmarking |
24 | requirements and for violation of building performance standards. Such payment amounts or |
25 | formula shall reflect: |
26 | (1) The total number of annual benchmarking submissions which a covered property has |
27 | failed to achieve; |
28 | (2) The total number of interim and final building performance standards which a covered |
29 | property has failed to achieve; |
30 | (3) The assessed value of the covered property; and |
31 | (4) The magnitude of non-compliance under each performance metric. |
32 | (f) An owner whose covered property fails to comply with benchmarking requirements or |
33 | meet an interim or final building performance standard by the applicable compliance date shall be |
34 | required to make a penalty payment. Any owner who does not reside or conduct their business in |
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1 | the covered property, but leases the covered property to a tenant or multiple tenants, shall remain |
2 | the party responsible for ensuring compliance with this section. Any penalty payments rendered as |
3 | a result of non-compliance shall not be passed on to any tenant who may lease the covered property |
4 | in order to offset the cost to the owner. |
5 | (g) The BPS fund is hereby established as a permanent designated fund managed by the |
6 | EC4. The BPS fund shall be used to support the building benchmarking and performance |
7 | improvement program established in this law. |
8 | (1) All funds collected from payment of penalties assessed shall be deposited into the BPS |
9 | fund. |
10 | (2) All funds deposited into the BPS fund, and any interest earned on the funds, shall not |
11 | revert to the unrestricted fund balance of the general fund at the end of a fiscal year, or at any other |
12 | time, but shall be continually available for the uses and purposes set forth in this chapter without |
13 | regard to fiscal year limitation. |
14 | (3) Additional funds from other sources may also be deposited into the BPS fund. |
15 | 23-27.5-8. Rules and regulations. |
16 | The EC4 shall promulgate rules and regulations to implement and enforce the provisions |
17 | of this chapter. |
18 | 23-27.5-9. Appeals. |
19 | An owner aggrieved by this section or compliance orders resulting therefrom may appeal |
20 | pursuant to the provisions of chapter 35 of title 42 ("administrative procedures"). |
21 | SECTION 3. Chapter 23-27.3 of the General Laws entitled "State Building Code" is hereby |
22 | amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
23 | 23-27.3-130. Electric-ready new buildings. |
24 | The purpose of this section is to require that all new buildings be electric-ready. |
25 | 23-27.3-130.1. Definitions. |
26 | As used in this chapter: |
27 | (1) "Addition" means a significant extension or increase in the conditioned space floor area, |
28 | number of stories or height of a building or structure. |
29 | (2) "Alteration" means any construction, retrofit or renovation to an existing structure other |
30 | than repair or addition. "Alteration" includes a change in a building, or a building's electrical, gas, |
31 | mechanical or plumbing system that involves a significant extension, addition or change to the |
32 | arrangement, type or purpose of the original installation that requires a permit. |
33 | (3) "Building energy needs" means all space conditioning including heating and cooling, |
34 | water heating including pools and spas, cooking appliances and clothes drying appliances. |
| LC000179 - Page 12 of 16 |
1 | (4) "Electric ready" means a building, project, or portion thereof that contains electrical |
2 | systems and designs that provide sufficient capacity for a future retrofit of a mixed-fuel building to |
3 | an all-electric building, including sufficient space, drainage, electrical conductors or raceways, bus |
4 | bar capacity, and overcurrent protective devices for such retrofit. |
5 | (5) "Initial application" means the first site or building permit application for the building |
6 | or project. |
7 | (6) "Local approval" means a provision has been incorporated by reference into the |
8 | municipal code of ordinances by the legislative body of the municipality. Provision may be |
9 | included as a general or zoning ordinance or bylaws. |
10 | (7) "Mixed-fuel building" means a building that uses a combination of electricity and fossil |
11 | fuels to meet building energy needs. "Mixed-fuel building" shall not include buildings that use |
12 | geothermal or solar energy to meet heating and/or cooling building energy needs; provided, |
13 | however, that they are otherwise all-electric buildings. |
14 | (8) "Mixed-use building" means a building used for both residential and commercial |
15 | purposes. |
16 | (9) "NACC and AGMT" means the North American Contractor Certification and |
17 | Architectural Glass and Metal Technicians Contractor Certification. |
18 | (10) "Repair" means the reconstruction or renewal of any part of an existing building for |
19 | the purpose of its maintenance, or to upgrade or correct damage. |
20 | (11) "Renovation" means any major construction or retrofit to existing structure other than |
21 | a repair. Renovation includes a change in a building, or a building's electrical, gas, mechanical or |
22 | plumbing system that involves a significant extension, addition, or change to the arrangement, type |
23 | or purpose of the original installation that requires a permit. |
24 | 23-27.3-130.2. Requirement for electric-ready construction of new buildings. |
25 | No city or town shall issue a permit for the new construction or alteration of any residential, |
26 | commercial, or mixed-use building that is not electric-ready if the initial application for such permit |
27 | was submitted after January 30, 2026, unless the circumstances set forth in § 23-27.3-130.5 apply. |
28 | 23-27.3-130.3. Requirement for all-electric ready construction of public buildings. |
29 | (a) No permit shall be issued for new public building construction or alteration projects |
30 | that are not electric-ready if the initial application for such permit was submitted after December |
31 | 31, 2025, unless the circumstance set forth in § 23-27.3-130.3 apply. |
32 | (b) This subsection is applicable to the new construction or alteration of all buildings |
33 | owned by the State of Rhode Island, its political subdivisions including municipalities, any quasi- |
34 | public agencies, including buildings owned by the state and managed by other entities. |
| LC000179 - Page 13 of 16 |
1 | (1) The awarding authority of any project under this chapter shall take all necessary actions |
2 | to ensure that each contractor and subcontractor involved in new public building construction |
3 | projects or alteration projects over five million dollars ($5,000,000) requires all contractors and |
4 | subcontractor on the project to have or be affiliated with a non-provisionally approved registered |
5 | apprenticeship program conforming to the standards set forth in 29 CFR § 29.5. and also require |
6 | that not less than fifteen percent (15%) of the total hours worked by the contractors' and |
7 | subcontractors' employees to be completed by apprentices registered in registered apprenticeship |
8 | programs as defined herein. The awarding agency may lower the fifteen percent (15%) requirement |
9 | only if it determines in writing that compliance is not feasible or that it would be unduly cost |
10 | prohibitive to the project. |
11 | (2) The awarding authority of any project under this chapter shall conduct an independent, |
12 | objective, reasoned study, using reviewable criteria, to determine whether adoption of a project |
13 | labor agreement on the proposed project or projects will help achieve the goals of the state |
14 | purchases act, for all new public building construction projects or alteration projects over twenty- |
15 | five million dollars ($25,000,000). |
16 | 23-27.3-130.4. Exemptions. |
17 | (a) Notwithstanding the provisions of this chapter, a permit for construction of a new |
18 | mixed-fuel building may be issued upon a finding by the permitting body that constructing an all- |
19 | electric building or project is physically or technically infeasible and that a modification is |
20 | warranted. Financial considerations shall not be a sufficient basis to determine physical or technical |
21 | infeasibility. Modifications shall only be issued under this exception where the permitting body |
22 | finds that: |
23 | (1) Sufficient evidence was submitted to substantiate the infeasibility of an all-electric |
24 | building or project design. Such evidence shall show that the building either: |
25 | (i) Cannot satisfy necessary building code requirements without the usage of gas or oil |
26 | piping systems, fixtures and/or infrastructure; or |
27 | (ii) If the building is specifically designated for occupancy by commercial or industrial |
28 | uses which cannot feasibly operate using commercially available all-electric appliances; or |
29 | (iii) If mixed fuel is used to meet building energy needs and said building or group of |
30 | buildings are for the sole use as a hospital, medical facility, or laboratory for biological research. |
31 | (2) The installation of natural gas or oil piping systems, fixtures and/or infrastructure is |
32 | strictly limited to the system and area of the building for which an all-electric building or project |
33 | design is infeasible. |
34 | (3) The area or service within the project where gas or oil piping systems, fixtures and/or |
| LC000179 - Page 14 of 16 |
1 | infrastructure are installed is all-electric ready. |
2 | (4) The project's modified design provides equivalent health, safety, and fire protection to |
3 | an all-electric building or project design. |
4 | 23-27.3-130.5. Rules and regulations. |
5 | The state building code commission shall propose guidelines for electric-ready buildings |
6 | by September 1, 2025, and shall make all efforts to promulgate final rules by December 1, 2025. |
7 | SECTION 4. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC000179 - Page 15 of 16 |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- BUILDING DECARBONIZATION ACT OF 2024 | |
*** | |
1 | This act would establish the environmental justice advisory board (EJAB) which would |
2 | provide advice to the climate change coordinating council ("council") The act establishes an energy |
3 | use benchmarking program to determine whether each building subject to the program uses more |
4 | or less energy and emits more or less greenhouse gases than other comparable size building. The |
5 | council shall promulgate rules and regulation to implement the program. The act also phases in |
6 | building performance standards. |
7 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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| LC000179 - Page 16 of 16 |