Bill Text: FL S1328 | 2016 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Energy Policy
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Failed) 2016-03-11 - Died in Communications, Energy, and Public Utilities [S1328 Detail]
Download: Florida-2016-S1328-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2016 SB 1328 By Senator Altman 16-01326-16 20161328__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to energy policy; amending s. 125.01, 3 F.S.; prohibiting a county from regulating local 4 renewable energy devices in a manner more stringent 5 than required under the Florida Building Code; 6 amending s. 166.041, F.S.; prohibiting a municipality 7 from regulating local renewable energy devices in a 8 manner more stringent than required under the Florida 9 Building Code; prohibiting a municipality from 10 enacting ordinances or adopting resolutions requiring 11 real property to connect to a specific electric 12 utility service; amending s. 366.02, F.S.; revising 13 definitions; amending s. 366.91, F.S.; revising and 14 providing definitions; authorizing a local renewable 15 energy supplier to sell local renewable energy to 16 certain end users; specifying conditions under which 17 an end user of electrical energy may interconnect with 18 a local renewable energy supplier or a local electric 19 utility; providing for establishment of terms under 20 which a local renewable energy supplier may 21 interconnect with a public utility, a municipal 22 electric utility, or a rural electric cooperative; 23 providing conditions under which certain net metering 24 provisions apply to a local renewable energy supplier; 25 providing procedures for the accumulation and use of 26 credits; prohibiting an electric utility from imposing 27 new or additional charges or fees to customers who 28 engage in net metering or buy power from certain 29 energy suppliers; providing exceptions; specifying 30 conditions under which a developer, a homeowners’ 31 association, or a property owners’ association is not 32 considered an electric utility when providing 33 electricity to certain parcels; amending s. 720.3035, 34 F.S.; prohibiting any covenant, standard, or guideline 35 in a declaration of covenants from regulating local 36 renewable energy devices in a manner more stringent 37 than required under the Florida Building Code; 38 amending ss. 366.92, 373.236, and 403.973, F.S.; 39 conforming cross-references; creating s. 366.8253, 40 F.S.; prohibiting under certain circumstances the 41 enactment or enforcement of certain state laws, rules, 42 or executive orders enacted pursuant to federal 43 regulations that mandate state action; providing an 44 effective date. 45 46 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 47 48 Section 1. Subsection (8) is added to section 125.01, 49 Florida Statutes, to read: 50 125.01 Powers and duties.— 51 (8) The legislative and governing body of a county may not 52 regulate the design, specification, location, type, or 53 appearance of devices that produce local renewable energy, as 54 defined in s. 366.91(9), in a manner more stringent than 55 required under the Florida Building Code. 56 Section 2. Present subsections (4) through (8) of section 57 166.041, Florida Statutes, are renumbered as subsections (6) 58 through (10), respectively, and new subsections (4) and (5) are 59 added to that section, to read: 60 166.041 Procedures for adoption of ordinances and 61 resolutions.— 62 (4) The governing body of a municipality may not enact an 63 ordinance or adopt a resolution that regulates the design, 64 specification, location, type, or appearance of devices that 65 produce local renewable energy, as defined in s. 366.91(9), in a 66 manner more stringent than required under the Florida Building 67 Code. 68 (5) The governing body of a municipality may not enact an 69 ordinance or adopt a resolution that mandates the connection of 70 real property to a specific electric utility service, and a 71 person or an entity may not be required to contract with a 72 specific electric utility service as a condition of occupying 73 real property. 74 Section 3. Subsections (1) and (2) of section 366.02, 75 Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 76 366.02 Definitions.—As used in this chapter: 77 (1) “Public utility” means every person, corporation, 78 partnership, association, or other legal entity and their 79 lessees, trustees, or receivers supplying electricity or gas 80 (natural, manufactured, or similar gaseous substance) to or for 81 the public within this state. However,; butthe term “public 82 utility” does not includeeithera cooperative now or hereafter 83 organized and existing under the Rural Electric Cooperative Law 84 of the state; a municipality or any agency thereof; any 85 dependent or independent special natural gas district; a local 86 renewable energy supplier who exclusively produces or sells 87 local renewable energy as provided in s. 366.91(9); any natural 88 gas transmission pipeline company making only sales or 89 transportation delivery of natural gas at wholesale and to 90 direct industrial consumers; any entity selling or arranging for 91 sales of natural gas which neither owns nor operates natural gas 92 transmission or distribution facilities within the state; or a 93 person supplying liquefied petroleum gas, in either liquid or 94 gaseous form, irrespective of the method of distribution or 95 delivery, or owning or operating facilities beyond the outlet of 96 a meter through which natural gas is supplied for compression 97 and delivery into motor vehicle fuel tanks or other 98 transportation containers, unless such person also supplies 99 electricity or manufactured or natural gas. 100 (2) “Electric utility” means any municipal electric 101 utility, investor-owned electric utility, or rural electric 102 cooperative thatwhichowns, maintains, or operates an electric 103 generation, transmission, or distribution system within the 104 state. However, the term “electric utility” does not include a 105 local renewable energy supplier who exclusively produces or 106 sells local renewable energy as provided in s. 366.91(9). 107 Section 4. Subsection (2) of section 366.91, Florida 108 Statutes, is amended, and subsections (9), (10), and (11) are 109 added to that section, to read: 110 366.91 Renewable energy.— 111 (2) As used in this section, the term: 112 (a) “Biomass” means a power source that is comprised of, 113 but not limited to, combustible residues or gases from forest 114 products manufacturing, waste, byproducts, or products from 115 agricultural and orchard crops, waste or coproducts from 116 livestock and poultry operations, waste or byproducts from food 117 processing, urban wood waste, municipal solid waste, municipal 118 liquid waste treatment operations, and landfill gas. 119 (b) “Customer-owned renewable generation” means an electric 120 generating system located on a customer’s premises that is 121 primarily intended to offset part or all of the customer’s 122 electricity requirements with renewable energy. 123 (c) “Electric utility” or “utility” means an electric 124 utility as defined in s. 366.02(2). 125 (d)(c)“Net metering” means a metering and billing 126 methodology established by an electric utility whereby a local 127 renewable energy supplier or customer-owned renewable generation 128 is allowed to offset the customer’s electricity consumption on 129 site. 130 (e)(d)“Renewable energy” means electrical energy produced 131 from a method that uses one or more of the following fuels or 132 energy sources: hydrogen produced from sources other than fossil 133 fuels, biomass, solar energy, geothermal energy, wind energy, 134 ocean energy, and hydroelectric power. The term includes the 135 alternative energy resource, waste heat, from sulfuric acid 136 manufacturing operations and electrical energy produced using 137 pipeline-quality synthetic gas produced from waste petroleum 138 coke with carbon capture and sequestration. 139 (9)(a) As used in this subsection, the term: 140 1. “Local electric utility” means the electric utility in 141 whose service territory a local renewable energy supplier is 142 located. 143 2. “Local renewable energy” has the same meaning as the 144 term “renewable energy” provided in subsection (2). For purposes 145 of this subsection, the term includes electrical energy produced 146 by natural gas or propane when used in conjunction with, and as 147 backup to, renewable energy production by a local renewable 148 energy supplier. 149 3. “Local renewable energy supplier” means a person who 150 generates local renewable energy from a device that is primarily 151 intended to satisfy part or all of the electricity requirements 152 of an end user of electrical energy who consumes electricity on 153 the property where the device is located or who consumes 154 electricity on property contiguous to the property where the 155 device is located. The term also means a person who generates 156 local renewable energy for such purposes and sells excess 157 electricity back to the electric grid pursuant to this 158 subsection. The maximum rated capacity of the device may not 159 exceed 2 megawatts. 160 (b) A local renewable energy supplier may sell local 161 renewable energy to an end user of electrical energy who 162 consumes electricity on the property where the device is located 163 or who consumes electricity on property contiguous to the 164 property where the device is located. 165 (c) An end user of electrical energy who purchases local 166 renewable energy from a local renewable energy supplier may 167 interconnect with both the local renewable energy supplier and 168 the local electric utility or interconnect only with the local 169 renewable energy supplier. 170 (d) The commission shall establish the terms under which a 171 local renewable energy supplier may interconnect with a public 172 utility as defined in s. 366.02. Each municipal electric utility 173 and rural electric cooperative shall establish the terms under 174 which a local renewable energy supplier may interconnect with 175 each such utility. 176 (e) The net metering provisions of subsections (5) and (6) 177 that apply to customer-owned renewable generation also apply to 178 a local renewable energy supplier who interconnects with the 179 local electric utility. During any billing cycle, excess 180 electricity delivered to the local electric utility’s electric 181 grid shall be credited to the local renewable energy supplier in 182 the next billing cycle. Credits shall accumulate for 12 months 183 and may be used to offset the renewable energy supplier’s energy 184 consumption for those 12 months. At the end of the 12-month 185 period, the utility shall pay the supplier for any unused energy 186 credits at the utility’s full avoided cost, as defined in s. 187 366.051, for such energy. 188 (10)(a) An electric utility that provides net metering to a 189 customer or serves a customer who also purchases power from a 190 local renewable energy supplier may not impose on such customer 191 a new or an additional charge or fee that is designed to recover 192 costs associated with providing access to or maintaining the 193 utility’s electric grid unless the charge or fee is also imposed 194 on all other customers of the same class who do not use net 195 metering. The commission may approve such a charge or fee if it 196 adjusts existing customer charges commensurately to reflect any 197 reallocation of costs from existing charges to the new or 198 additional charge or fee. 199 (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), the commission may 200 approve cost-based application fees for customers who wish to 201 interconnect renewable energy systems with a gross power rating 202 of more than 10 kilowatts and cost-based interconnection study 203 fees for customers who wish to interconnect renewable energy 204 systems with a gross power rating of more than 100 kilowatts. 205 (11) A developer, a homeowners’ association, or a property 206 owners’ association that owns multiple individual contiguous 207 parcels and supplies electricity for use exclusively by the 208 individual parcels is not an electric utility or a public 209 utility as those terms are defined in s. 366.02 and is not 210 subject to regulation under this chapter. Such developer, 211 homeowners’ association, or property owners’ association remains 212 exempt from regulation by the commission and is not an electric 213 utility or a public utility even if the individual parcels are 214 later sold and the developer, homeowners’ association, or 215 property owners’ association continues to generate electricity 216 for those parcels only. 217 Section 5. Subsection (6) is added to section 720.3035, 218 Florida Statutes, to read: 219 720.3035 Architectural control covenants; parcel owner 220 improvements; rights and privileges.— 221 (6) Beginning July 1, 2016, a covenant or other published 222 guideline or standard authorized by the declaration of covenants 223 may not contain a provision that restricts, regulates, or 224 requires a parcel owner to meet standards more stringent than 225 required under the Florida Building Code for the design, 226 specification, location, type, or appearance of local renewable 227 energy devices that the parcel owner installs on his or her 228 parcel. 229 Section 6. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section 230 366.92, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 231 366.92 Florida renewable energy policy.— 232 (2) As used in this section, the term: 233 (b) “Renewable energy” means renewable energy as defined in 234 s. 366.91(2)(e)366.91(2)(d). 235 Section 7. Subsection (7) of section 373.236, Florida 236 Statutes, is amended to read: 237 373.236 Duration of permits; compliance reports.— 238 (7) A permit approved for a renewable energy generating 239 facility or the cultivation of agricultural products on lands 240 consisting of 1,000 acres or more for use in the production of 241 renewable energy, as defined in s. 366.91(2)(e)366.91(2)(d), 242 shall be granted for a term of at least 25 years at the 243 applicant’s request based on the anticipated life of the 244 facility if there is sufficient data to provide reasonable 245 assurance that the conditions for permit issuance will be met 246 for the duration of the permit; otherwise, a permit may be 247 issued for a shorter duration that reflects the longest period 248 for which such reasonable assurances are provided. Such a permit 249 is subject to compliance reports under subsection (4). 250 Section 8. Paragraph (f) of subsection (3) and paragraph 251 (b) of subsection (19) of section 403.973, Florida Statutes, are 252 amended to read: 253 403.973 Expedited permitting; amendments to comprehensive 254 plans.— 255 (3) 256 (f) Projects resulting in the production of biofuels 257 cultivated on lands that are 1,000 acres or more or in the 258 construction of a biofuel or biodiesel processing facility or a 259 facility generating renewable energy, as defined in s. 260 366.91(2)(e)366.91(2)(d), are eligible for the expedited 261 permitting process. 262 (19) The following projects are ineligible for review under 263 this part: 264 (b) A project, the primary purpose of which is to: 265 1. Effect the final disposal of solid waste, biomedical 266 waste, or hazardous waste in this state. 267 2. Produce electrical power, unless the production of 268 electricity is incidental and not the primary function of the 269 project or the electrical power is derived from a fuel source 270 for renewable energy as defined in s. 366.91(2)(e)366.91(2)(d). 271 3. Extract natural resources. 272 4. Produce oil. 273 5. Construct, maintain, or operate an oil, petroleum, or 274 sewage pipeline. 275 Section 9. Section 366.8253, Florida Statutes, is created 276 to read: 277 366.8253 Enforcement of the Federal Clean Power Plan of 278 2015.—The Legislature is not required to enact a law codifying a 279 federal regulation, a guideline, or an executive order 280 concerning the emission of carbon from electrical power plants, 281 and the commission and the Department of Environmental 282 Protection are not required to enforce a law, rule, policy, or 283 plan enacted pursuant to such a federal regulation, a guideline, 284 or an executive order if the Florida Attorney General determines 285 that the federal regulation, guideline, or executive order 286 conflicts with the Tenth Amendment to the United States 287 Constitution by compelling the state to enact and enforce a 288 federal regulatory program that is not supported by the federal 289 legislation underlying the regulation, guideline, or executive 290 order. 291 Section 10. This act shall take effect July 1, 2016.