2026 -- S 3080 SUBSTITUTE B | |
======== | |
LC005832/SUB B | |
======== | |
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2026 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC UTILITIES AND CARRIERS -- THERMAL ENERGY NETWORK | |
AND JOBS ACT | |
| |
Introduced By: Senators Britto, McKenney, and Bissaillon | |
Date Introduced: March 13, 2026 | |
Referred To: Senate Environment & Agriculture | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 39 of the General Laws entitled "PUBLIC UTILITIES AND |
2 | CARRIERS" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 36 |
4 | THERMAL ENERGY NETWORK AND JOBS ACT |
5 | 39-36-1. Short title. |
6 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Thermal Energy Network and Jobs |
7 | Act". |
8 | 39-36-2. Purpose. |
9 | Thermal energy networks have the potential to contribute to the satisfaction of the |
10 | greenhouse gas reduction and just-transition requirements of chapter 6.2 of title 42 ("2021 act on |
11 | climate") while potentially offering reduced operating costs and decreased costs of future |
12 | expansion. The purpose of the thermal energy network and jobs act is to facilitate the study of this |
13 | technology in an effort to determine if these goals can be met by the implementation of thermal |
14 | energy networks in Rhode Island. |
15 | 39-36-3. Definitions. |
16 | When used in this chapter, the following words and phrases are construed as follows: |
17 | (1) "Environmental justice focus area" means a census tract that meets one or more of the |
18 | following criteria: |
| |
1 | (i) Annual median household income is not more than sixty-five percent (65%) of the |
2 | statewide annual median household income; |
3 | (ii) Minority population is equal to or greater than forty percent (40%) of the population; |
4 | (iii) Twenty-five percent (25%) or more of the households lack English language |
5 | proficiency; or |
6 | (iv) Minorities comprise twenty-five percent (25%) or more of the population, and the |
7 | annual median household income of the municipality in the proposed area does not exceed one |
8 | hundred fifty percent (150%) of the statewide annual median household income. |
9 | (2) "Public-private partnerships" means a long-term contract between the state and a private |
10 | partner that develops, finances, constructs, operates, or maintains a state-owned physical asset or |
11 | property in which the private party bears significant risk over the long term. |
12 | (3) "Public right-of-way" means the area on, below, or above any street, avenue, boulevard, |
13 | road, highway, sidewalk, alley, waterway, land, or easement that is owned, leased, or controlled by |
14 | a public or quasi-public entity. |
15 | (4) "Public utility" means the natural gas utility and or the electric distribution company as |
16 | defined in § 39-1-2(a)(20) that serves over twenty-five thousand (25,000) ratepayers. |
17 | (5) "PUC" means the public utilities commission. |
18 | (6) "Thermal energy" means piped non-combustible fluids used for transferring heat into |
19 | and out of buildings from heating and cooling processes, including comfort heating and cooling, |
20 | domestic hot water, and refrigeration. |
21 | (7) "Thermal energy network" means all real estate, fixtures, and personal property |
22 | operated, owned, used, or to be used for, or for the primary purpose of facilitating, a utility-scale |
23 | or community-scale distribution-infrastructure project that supplies thermal energy. |
24 | 39-36-4. Feasibility studies and recovery of approved implementation costs. |
25 | (a) Upon passage, the public utility shall, within twelve (12) months of the effective date |
26 | of this section, identify no fewer than two (2) and no more than twelve (12) potential locations for |
27 | thermal energy network feasibility studies representing diverse geographies and building types. |
28 | Within eighteen (18) months of the effective date of this section, the public utility shall commence |
29 | at least two (2) feasibility studies relating to the selected locations. |
30 | (b) At least one location considered shall be located within or directly benefit an |
31 | environmental justice focus area, as defined in § 39-36-3 as determined by the department of |
32 | environmental management. |
33 | (c) In evaluating the locations to determine which location(s) should be subject to a |
34 | feasibility study, the public utility shall consider: |
| LC005832/SUB B - Page 2 of 8 |
1 | (1) Greenhouse gas emissions reductions; |
2 | (2) Cost-effectiveness, including projected energy-cost savings and operations and |
3 | maintenance costs over the useful life of the equipment; |
4 | (3) Potential engineering and design requirements; |
5 | (4) Potential operations and maintenance requirements; |
6 | (5) Ownership of buildings or facilities receiving network benefits; and |
7 | (6) The degree to which the project benefits communities experiencing disproportionate |
8 | environmental or public-health burdens. |
9 | (d) In developing the initial list of locations to study, the public utility shall consider |
10 | diversity in geography, customer class, and average annual consumption of thermal energy. The |
11 | list shall include for consideration the following areas: |
12 | (1) The Port of Providence and neighboring communities; |
13 | (2) Residential, hospital, and health-care facilities; |
14 | (3) Lower South Providence; |
15 | (4) Facilities within the jurisdiction of the Rhode Island Convention Center Authority; |
16 | (5) Facilities within the jurisdiction of the Quonset Development Corporation; |
17 | (6) University of Rhode Island campuses; |
18 | (7) Aquidneck Island; |
19 | (8) The Port of Galilee; and |
20 | (9) Pastore Center Campus. |
21 | (e) All costs reasonably incurred by utilities in connection with its compliance with this |
22 | chapter shall be fully recoverable by said utility. Provided, however, that each utility shall endeavor |
23 | to secure available non-ratepayer funding, including from federal or state grants, subsidized loans, |
24 | or tax credits to reduce said costs. To the extent a utility receives such funding support, the cost |
25 | recovered pursuant to this subsection shall be offset by the amount of such funding support. |
26 | (f) Without limiting the generality of subsection (e) of this section, the PUC shall authorize |
27 | recovery of reasonable and prudently incurred costs associated with planning and feasibility studies |
28 | for thermal energy network projects, provided that: |
29 | (1) Such recovery shall be conditioned upon the utility's demonstration that it has pursued |
30 | available non-ratepayer funding, including federal or state grants, tax credits, or low-interest |
31 | financing; and |
32 | (2) The PUC shall ensure that any rate recovery is just, reasonable, and limited so as not to |
33 | impose an undue burden on ratepayers. |
34 | (g) The PUC may authorize the public utility to use or leverage existing demand side |
| LC005832/SUB B - Page 3 of 8 |
1 | management charge pursuant to § 39-2-1.2 for planning, design, and construction of thermal-energy |
2 | networks. |
3 | (h) The utility may draw upon available state funding including, but not limited to, the |
4 | office of energy resources ("OER") and Rhode Island infrastructure bank ("RIIB") programs and |
5 | incentives, as well as federal technical-assistance programs to support such studies. |
6 | (i) The OER may use Lead by Example (LBE) program funds and other state assistance to |
7 | support feasibility and engineering studies requested by utilities, municipalities, or public-private |
8 | partnerships. |
9 | 39-36-5. Thermal energy network pilot project. |
10 | (a) Upon the completion of any feasibility study conducted by a utility in accordance with |
11 | § 39-36-4, the relevant utility shall determine if the studied project is in fact feasible and, if so, may |
12 | prepare and submit a proposal to the PUC to develop a pilot project that is consistent with the |
13 | subject and results of said feasibility study. |
14 | (b) The PUC shall approve cost recovery for all just and reasonably incurred costs |
15 | associated with pilot projects that the PUC determines provide a net benefit to the relevant utility’s |
16 | ratepayers based on its consideration of the following factors: |
17 | (1) Greenhouse gas emissions reductions; |
18 | (2) Cost-effectiveness, including projected energy-cost savings and operations and |
19 | maintenance costs over the useful life of the equipment; |
20 | (3) The degree to which the projected pilot program costs are funded by sources other than |
21 | ratepayers, including by direct state support and/or by grants received by the utility in support of |
22 | the project; |
23 | (4) Benefits to communities experiencing disproportionate environmental or public-health |
24 | burdens; and |
25 | (5) A demonstration by the utility that non-ratepayer funding sources were explored to |
26 | offset costs to ratepayers including, but not limited to, federal or state grants, financing sourced |
27 | through public bonds, subsidized loans, or tax credits, pursuant to the provisions of this chapter. |
28 | (c) For the avoidance of doubt, a utility shall have no obligation to proceed with a pilot |
29 | project unless said project has been: |
30 | (1) Approved by the PUC; and |
31 | (2) The PUC has approved full cost recovery for the project other than to the extent such |
32 | costs are funded by direct state support or by grants received by the utility in support of the project. |
33 | (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any public utility engaged in the business |
34 | of natural gas distribution shall, subject to approval by the public utilities commission, be entitled |
| LC005832/SUB B - Page 4 of 8 |
1 | to own, construct, or operate thermal energy networks for the purpose of selling and distributing |
2 | thermal energy and shall be entitled to charge and collect payment from its customers in connection |
3 | therewith in accordance with and subject to the provisions of title 39. Nothing in this subsection |
4 | shall be construed to limit the authority of the state, municipalities, cooperatives, or nonprofit |
5 | entities to develop thermal energy networks in partnership with a public utility. |
6 | 39-36-6. Thermal energy networks regulation. |
7 | (a) As part of any agreement with a public entity to construct a thermal energy network |
8 | project that enters or crosses a public right-of-way, as defined in § 39-36-3, the public utility |
9 | company shall: |
10 | (1) For the construction of projects of one thousand dollars ($1,000) or greater, the public |
11 | utility, and each contractor or subcontractor who performs work on those projects shall: |
12 | (i) Pay each construction employee wages and benefits that are not less than the prevailing |
13 | wage and fringe benefit rates in compliance with chapter 13 of title 37 ("labor and payment of debts |
14 | by contractors") for the corresponding classification in which the employee is employed; and |
15 | (ii) Be subject to all reporting and compliance requirements of chapter 13 of title 37; |
16 | (2) For the construction of projects of one million dollars ($1,000,000) or greater, the public |
17 | utility, and each contractor or subcontractor who performs work on those projects shall ensure that, |
18 | no less than fifteen percent (15%) of the labor hours worked on the project shall be performed by |
19 | registered apprentices for all crafts or trades with approved apprenticeship programs, as defined in |
20 | § 39-26.9-2, that will be employed on the project; |
21 | (b) For purposes of this section, a Class A Apprenticeship program is an apprenticeship |
22 | program currently registered with the U.S. Department of Labor or a state apprenticeship agency |
23 | and has graduated apprentices to journeyperson status for at least three (3) of the past five (5) years. |
24 | This may be a program subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. |
25 | § 1001 et seq. ("ERISA"), or a non-ERISA program. |
26 | (c) To demonstrate compliance with this section, the public utility, contractor, or |
27 | subcontractor, as applicable, shall provide, with this certification, a list of all trades or |
28 | classifications of craft employees it will employ on the project and documentation verifying it |
29 | participates in a Class A Apprenticeship program for each trade or classification listed. If the public |
30 | utility, contractor, or subcontractor is unable to meet the fifteen percent (15%) requirement due to |
31 | the unavailability of apprentices meeting the requirements of this section, said party may comply |
32 | with this section by submitting the certification along with evidence of the efforts taken to comply |
33 | herewith including, but not limited to, the bidding and responsive documents for the relevant scopes |
34 | of work and evidence that: |
| LC005832/SUB B - Page 5 of 8 |
1 | (1) A trade or field does not have an apprenticeship program or cannot produce members |
2 | from its program capable of performing the scope of work within the contract; or |
3 | (2) The size and scope of the work will not allow for the contractor to comply with the |
4 | apprenticeship ratio requirements for the craft affected; or |
5 | (3) For any other non-economic justifiable reason that demonstrates good cause. |
6 | (d) Contractors and subcontractors that violate subsection (a) of this section shall be subject |
7 | to penalties and sanctions in accordance with chapter 13 of title 37. |
8 | (e) Public utilities shall ensure that all contracts require contractors and subcontractors to |
9 | comply with the provisions of this section in connection with their own employees; provided that, |
10 | in connection with said contracts, the administrative reporting obligations herein shall be solely the |
11 | responsibility of said contractors and subcontractors. This subsection shall not limit the public |
12 | utility's obligations in connection with its own employees. |
13 | (f) Any thermal energy network constructed under this section shall demonstrate that the |
14 | public utility company has entered into a labor peace agreement, as defined in § 39-26.9-2, with a |
15 | bona fide labor organization, as defined in § 39-26.9-2, of jurisdiction that is actively engaged in |
16 | representing gas and electric company employees for the operations and maintenance of such |
17 | thermal energy networks. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to supersede or invalidate |
18 | an existing collective bargaining agreement. Where employees performing operations and |
19 | maintenance work are already covered by a collective bargaining agreement, such agreement shall |
20 | satisfy the requirements of this subsection. |
21 | (g) Notwithstanding the other provisions to the contrary, the provisions of this section shall |
22 | not apply to: |
23 | (1) Work performed by employees or contractors of a relevant public utility and/or |
24 | subcontractors thereof, who already are subject to the terms of an existing collective bargaining |
25 | agreement, in which case the terms of the existing collective bargaining agreement shall control; |
26 | or |
27 | (2) Work performed by employees or contractors of a relevant public utility and/or |
28 | subcontractor thereof who are ineligible to bargain collectively under the National Labor Relations |
29 | Act. |
30 | 39-36-7. Thermal energy network taskforce. |
31 | (a) The PUC shall form a thermal energy network taskforce, which shall be an advisory |
32 | committee to evaluate the results of the feasibility studies conducted in accordance with § 39-36-4 |
33 | and any pilot project undertaken in accordance with § 39-36-5. The taskforce shall meet not less |
34 | than quarterly at the PUC and shall be comprised of eleven (11) members appointed by the PUC, |
| LC005832/SUB B - Page 6 of 8 |
1 | which shall include: the commissioner of the office of energy resources, or designee; the |
2 | administrator of the division of public utilities and carriers, or designee; the president of the Rhode |
3 | Island AFL-CIO, or designee; the president of the Rhode Island building & construction trades |
4 | council, or designee; four (4) members from a public utility that is subject to the provisions of this |
5 | chapter, appointed by the chairperson of the PUC; one representative of utility workers and one |
6 | representative of steelworkers, each appointed by the president of the Rhode Island AFL-CIO; and |
7 | one member of the public appointed by the chairperson of the PUC who shall be selected to ensure |
8 | balanced representation of the following interests and areas of expertise: |
9 | (1) Community, environmental and climate justice organizations or advocates; and |
10 | (2) State or municipal policy and planning, including in connection with energy, |
11 | environment, and infrastructure. |
12 | (b) The taskforce shall provide periodic written updates on the status and insights from the |
13 | feasibility studies and any pilot projects. |
14 | (c) The purpose of said taskforce shall be to advise the PUC and public utility on the |
15 | deployment of thermal energy and thermal energy networks throughout the state. As such, the |
16 | taskforce shall: |
17 | (1) Identify and align funding mechanisms (federal, state, rate-based, and private); |
18 | (2) Recommend coordination among utilities, municipalities, and private developers: |
19 | (3) Advise on workforce transition and labor standards; |
20 | (4) Recommend locations and models for pilots and permanent projects; and |
21 | (5) Create a framework to guide the state in planning for the expansion and accelerated |
22 | deployment of thermal energy and thermal energy network systems, including recommendations |
23 | for statewide infrastructure planning, integration with existing utility assets, and prioritization of |
24 | environmental justice focus areas. |
25 | (d) The taskforce shall submit a written report to the PUC, DEM, OER, and the general |
26 | assembly no later than eighteen (18) months following its receipt of the complete results from the |
27 | feasibility studies, which report shall include, but not be limited to, findings and actionable |
28 | recommendations for consideration in state planning and regulatory processes, including pertaining |
29 | to the following: |
30 | (1) Creation of fair market access rules for utility-owned thermal energy networks to accept |
31 | thermal energy that aligns with the climate justice, just transition, and greenhouse gas emissions |
32 | reductions requirements of chapter 6.2 of title 42 ("2021 act on climate") and that does not increase |
33 | greenhouse gas emissions or co-pollutants; |
34 | (2) Criteria for cost-effectiveness; |
| LC005832/SUB B - Page 7 of 8 |
1 | (3) Potential rate structures for thermal energy networks; |
2 | (4) Promotion of the training and transition of workers in the fossil fuel industry impacted |
3 | by this chapter; and |
4 | (5) The establishment of equitable rules for cost recovery by utilities for thermal energy |
5 | networks. |
6 | (e) The taskforce shall expire six (6) months following the delivery of the report identified |
7 | in subsection (d) of this section, unless extended by the general assembly. |
8 | 39-36-8. Thermal energy networks regulation. |
9 | (a) The general assembly finds and declares that thermal energy networks have the |
10 | potential to be important to the state meeting the just transition, equity, and decarbonization |
11 | requirements of chapter 6.2 of title 42 ("2021 act on climate") and further finds and declares that: |
12 | (1) To the extent feasible, the public utility shall pursue cost effective investments in |
13 | thermal energy networks when it is in the public interest; and |
14 | (2) The public utilities commission shall exercise its authority to implement the provisions |
15 | of this chapter and, to the extent feasible, support the implementation of thermal energy networks, |
16 | pursuant to chapter 6.2 of title 42 ("2021 act on climate"). |
17 | (b) In promulgating rules and regulations for thermal energy networks, the PUC shall |
18 | consider the advisory opinion and report findings of the taskforce. |
19 | 39-36-9. Severability. |
20 | If any provision of this chapter or the application thereof to any person or circumstances is |
21 | held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications of the chapter, which |
22 | can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of |
23 | this chapter are declared to be severable. |
24 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
======== | |
LC005832/SUB B | |
======== | |
| LC005832/SUB B - Page 8 of 8 |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC UTILITIES AND CARRIERS -- THERMAL ENERGY NETWORK | |
AND JOBS ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would establish the thermal energy network and jobs act to facilitate the study of |
2 | this technology to determine if these goals can be met by the implementation of thermal energy |
3 | networks in Rhode Island. The act would create a twelve (12) member task force of interested |
4 | parties which would be an advisory committee to evaluate the results of the feasibility studies. |
5 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
======== | |
LC005832/SUB B | |
======== | |
| LC005832/SUB B - Page 9 of 8 |