Bill Text: MI HB5862 | 2017-2018 | 99th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Energy; alternative sources; net metering programs, standard offer contracts for large generators and fair value tariffs; provide for in distributed generation program. Amends secs. 3, 5, 7, 9, 13, 173, 175 & 177 of 2008 PA 295 (MCL 460.1003 et seq.). TIE BAR WITH: HB 5863'18
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2018-04-25 - Bill Electronically Reproduced 04/24/2018 [HB5862 Detail]
Download: Michigan-2017-HB5862-Introduced.html
HOUSE BILL No. 5862
April 24, 2018, Introduced by Reps. Dianda, Rabhi, Chirkun, Cochran, Barrett and Glenn and referred to the Committee on Energy Policy.
A bill to amend 2008 PA 295, entitled
"Clean and renewable energy and energy waste reduction act,"
by amending sections 3, 5, 7, 9, 13, 173, 175, and 177 (MCL
460.1003, 460.1005, 460.1007, 460.1009, 460.1013, 460.1173,
460.1175, and 460.1177), as amended by 2016 PA 342.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec. 3. As used in this act:
(a) "Applicable regional transmission organization" means a
nonprofit, member-based organization governed by an independent
board of directors that serves as the regional transmission
organization approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
with oversight responsibility for the region that includes the
provider's service territory.
(b) "Biogas" means landfill gas or a mixture of gases composed
primarily of methane and carbon dioxide produced by biomass.
(c) (b)
"Biomass" means any
organic matter that is not derived
from fossil fuels, that can be converted to usable fuel for the
production of energy, and that replenishes over a human, not a
geological, time frame, including, but not limited to, all of the
following:
(i) Agricultural crops and crop wastes.
(ii) Short-rotation energy crops.
(iii) Herbaceous plants.
(iv) Trees and wood, but only if derived from sustainably
managed forests or procurement systems, as defined in section 261c
of the management and budget act, 1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1261c.
(v) Paper and pulp products.
(vi) Precommercial wood thinning waste, brush, or yard waste.
(vii) Wood wastes and residues from the processing of wood
products or paper.
(viii) Animal wastes.
(ix) Wastewater sludge or sewage.
(x) Aquatic plants.
(xi) Food production and processing waste.
(xii) Organic by-products from the production of biofuels.
(d) (c)
"Board" means the wind
energy resource zone board
created under section 143.
(e) (d)
"Carbon dioxide emissions
benefits" means that the
carbon dioxide emissions per megawatt hour of electricity generated
by the advanced cleaner energy system are at least 85% less or, for
an integrated gasification combined cycle facility or an integrated
pyrolysis combined cycle facility, 70% less than the average carbon
dioxide emissions per megawatt hour of electricity generated from
all coal-fired electric generating facilities operating in this
state on January 1, 2008.
(f) (e)
"Cogeneration facility"
means a facility that produces
both electricity and useful thermal energy, such as heat or steam,
in a way that is more efficient than the separate production of
those forms of energy.
(g) (f)
"Commission" means the
Michigan public service
commission.Public Service Commission.
(h) (g)
"Customer meter" means an
electric meter of a
provider's retail customer. Customer meter does not include a
municipal water pumping meter or additional meters at a single site
that were installed specifically to support interruptible air
conditioning, interruptible water heating, net metering, or time-
of-day tariffs.
(i) (h)
"Distributed generation
program" means the program
established by the commission under section 173.
Sec. 5. As used in this act:
(a) "Electric provider" means any of the following:
(i) Any person or entity that is regulated by the commission
for the purpose of selling electricity to retail customers in this
state.
(ii) A municipally owned electric utility in this state.
(iii) A cooperative electric utility in this state.
(iv) Except as used in subpart C of part 2, an alternative
electric supplier licensed under section 10a of 1939 PA 3, MCL
460.10a.
(b)
"Eligible electric generator" means a methane digester or
a
customer's renewable energy system, with
cogeneration facility
fueled by natural gas or biogas, or waste heat recovery system that
meets both of the following requirements:
(i) Is located in this state.
(ii) Has a
generation capacity limited to the customer's
electric
need and that does not exceed the following:
(i) For a renewable energy system, 150 kilowatts of
aggregate
generation
at a single site.
(ii) For a methane digester, 550 kilowatts of aggregate
generation
at a single site.that is
consistent with the safety and
reliability requirements of the customer's interconnection.
(c) "Energy conservation" means the reduction of customer
energy use through the installation of measures or changes in
energy usage behavior.
(d) "Energy efficiency" means a decrease in customer
consumption of electricity or natural gas achieved through measures
or programs that target customer behavior, equipment, devices, or
materials without reducing the quality of energy services.
(e) "Energy star" means the voluntary partnership among the
United States Department of Energy, the United States Environmental
Protection Agency, product manufacturers, local utilities, and
retailers to help promote energy efficient products by labeling
with the energy star logo, educate consumers about the benefits of
energy efficiency, and help promote energy efficiency in buildings
by benchmarking and rating energy performance.
(f) "Energy waste reduction", subject to subdivision (g),
means all of the following:
(i) Energy efficiency.
(ii) Load management, to the extent that the load management
reduces provider costs.
(iii) Energy conservation, but only to the extent that the
decreases in the consumption of electricity produced by energy
conservation are objectively measurable and attributable to an
energy waste reduction plan.
(g) Energy waste reduction does not include electric provider
infrastructure projects that are approved for cost recovery by the
commission other than as provided in this act.
(h) "Energy waste reduction credit" means a credit certified
pursuant to section 87 that represents achieved energy waste
reduction.
(i) "Energy waste reduction plan" means a plan under section
71.
(j) "Energy waste reduction standard" means the minimum energy
savings required to be achieved under section 77 or 78(1), as
applicable.
(k) "Federal approval" means approval by the applicable
regional transmission organization or other Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission-approved transmission planning process of a
transmission project that includes the transmission line. Federal
approval may be evidenced in any of the following manners:
(i) The proposed transmission line is part of a transmission
project included in the applicable regional transmission
organization's board-approved transmission expansion plan.
(ii) The applicable regional transmission organization has
informed the electric utility, affiliated transmission company, or
independent transmission company that a transmission project
submitted for an out-of-cycle project review has been approved by
the applicable regional transmission organization, and the approved
transmission project includes the proposed transmission line.
(iii) If, after October 6, 2008, the applicable regional
transmission organization utilizes another approval process for
transmission projects proposed by an electric utility, affiliated
transmission company, or independent transmission company, the
proposed transmission line is included in a transmission project
approved by the applicable regional transmission organization
through the approval process developed after October 6, 2008.
(iv) Any other Federal Energy Regulatory Commission-approved
transmission planning process for a transmission project.
Sec. 7. As used in this act:
(a) "Gasification facility" means a facility located in this
state that, using a thermochemical process that does not involve
direct combustion, produces synthesis gas, composed of carbon
monoxide
and hydrogen, from carbon-based feedstocks, ( such
as
coal, petroleum coke, wood, biomass, hazardous waste, medical
waste, industrial waste, and solid waste, including, but not
limited to, municipal solid waste, electronic waste, and waste
described in section 11514 of the natural resources and
environmental
protection act, 1994 PA 451, MCL 324.11514, ) and
that uses the synthesis gas or a mixture of the synthesis gas and
methane to generate electricity for commercial use. Gasification
facility includes the transmission lines, gas transportation lines
and facilities, and associated property and equipment specifically
attributable to such a facility. Gasification facility includes,
but is not limited to, an integrated gasification combined cycle
facility and a plasma arc gasification facility.
(b) "Incremental costs of compliance" means the net revenue
required by an electric provider to comply with the renewable
energy standard, calculated as provided under section 47.
(c) "Independent transmission company" means that term as
defined in section 2 of the electric transmission line
certification act, 1995 PA 30, MCL 460.562.
(d) "Integrated gasification combined cycle facility" means a
gasification facility that uses a thermochemical process, including
high temperatures and controlled amounts of air and oxygen, to
break substances down into their molecular structures and that uses
exhaust heat to generate electricity.
(e) "Integrated pyrolysis combined cycle facility" means a
pyrolysis facility that uses exhaust heat to generate electricity.
(f) "Island mode" means that a generation system is in a
status in which loads and energy resources are able to operate on-
site or within a local microgrid but power is not exchanged with
the utility-owned transmission or distribution network.
(g) (f)
"LEED" means the
leadership in energy and
environmental design green building rating system developed by the
United States Green Building Council.
(h) (g)
"Load management" means
measures or programs that
target equipment or behavior to result in decreased peak
electricity demand such as by shifting demand from a peak to an
off-peak period.
(i) (h)
"Megawatt",
"megawatt hour", or "megawatt hour of
electricity", unless the context implies otherwise, includes the
steam equivalent of a megawatt or megawatt hour of electricity.
(i)
"Modified net metering" means a utility billing method
that
applies the power supply component of the full retail rate to
the
net of the bidirectional flow of kilowatt hours across the
customer
interconnection with the utility distribution system,
during
a billing period or time-of-use pricing period. A negative
net
metered quantity during the billing period or during each time-
of-use
pricing period within the billing period reflects net excess
generation
for which the customer is entitled to receive credit
under
section 177(4). Under modified net metering, standby charges
for
distributed generation customers on an energy rate schedule
shall
be equal to the retail distribution charge applied to the
imputed
customer usage during the billing period. The imputed
customer
usage is calculated as the sum of the metered on-site
generation
and the net of the bidirectional flow of power across
the
customer interconnection during the billing period. The
commission
shall establish standby charges under modified net
metering
for distributed generation customers on demand-based rate
schedules
that provide an equivalent contribution to utility system
costs.
A charge for net metering and distributed generation
customers
established pursuant to section 6a of 1939 PA 3, MCL
460.6a,
shall not be recovered more than once. This subdivision is
subject
to section 177(5).
(j) "Microgrid" means a group of interconnected loads and
distributed energy resources with clearly defined electrical
boundaries that acts as a single controllable entity with respect
to the macrogrid and that connects and disconnects from the
macrogrid to enable it to operate in grid-connected or island mode.
Sec. 9. As used in this act:
(a) "Natural gas provider" means an investor-owned business
engaged in the sale and distribution at retail of natural gas
within this state whose rates are regulated by the commission.
(b) "Net metering" means a utility billing method that applies
the full retail rate to the net of the bidirectional flow of
kilowatt hours across the customer interconnection with the utility
distribution system, during a billing period or time-of-use pricing
period. A negative net metered quantity during the billing period
or during each time-of-use pricing period within the billing period
reflects net excess generation for which the customer is entitled
to receive credit under section 177(4).
(c) (b)
"Pet coke" means a solid
carbonaceous residue produced
from a coker after cracking and distillation from petroleum
refining operations.
(d) (c)
"Plasma arc gasification
facility" means a
gasification facility that uses a plasma torch to break substances
down into their molecular structures.
(e) (d)
"Provider" means an
electric provider or a natural gas
provider.
(f) (e)
"PURPA" means the public
utility regulatory policies
act of 1978, Public Law 95-617.
(g) (f)
"Pyrolysis facility"
means a facility that effects
thermochemical decomposition at elevated temperatures without the
participation of oxygen, from carbon-based feedstocks including,
but not limited to, coal, wood, biomass, industrial waste, or solid
waste, but not including pet coke, hazardous waste, coal waste, or
scrap tires. Pyrolysis facility includes the transmission lines,
gas transportation lines and facilities, and associated property
and equipment specifically attributable to the facility. Pyrolysis
facility includes, but is not limited to, an integrated pyrolysis
combined cycle facility.
Sec. 13. As used in this act:
(a) "Site" means a contiguous site, regardless of the number
of meters at that site. A site that would be contiguous but for the
presence of a street, road, or highway is considered to be
contiguous for the purposes of this subdivision.
(b) "Transmission line" means all structures, equipment, and
real property necessary to transfer electricity at system bulk
supply voltage of 100 kilovolts or more.
(c)
"True net metering" means a utility billing method that
applies
the full retail rate to the net of the bidirectional flow
of
kilowatt hours across the customer interconnection with the
utility
distribution system, during a billing period or time-of-use
pricing
period. A negative net metered quantity during the billing
period
or during each time-of-use pricing period within the billing
period
reflects net excess generation for which the customer is
entitled
to receive credit under section 177(4). This subdivision
is
subject to section 177(5).
(c) (d)
"Utility system resource cost
test" means a standard
that is met for an investment in energy waste reduction if, on a
life cycle basis, the total avoided supply-side costs to the
provider, including representative values for electricity or
natural gas supply, transmission, distribution, and other
associated costs, are greater than the total costs to the provider
of administering and delivering the energy waste reduction program,
including net costs for any provider incentives paid by customers
and capitalized costs recovered under section 89.
(d) (e)
"Wind energy conversion
system" means a system that
uses 1 or more wind turbines to generate electricity and has a
nameplate capacity of 100 kilowatts or more.
(e) (f)
"Wind energy resource
zone" or "wind zone" means an
area designated by the commission under section 147.
Sec. 173. (1) The commission shall establish a distributed
generation program by order issued not later than 90 days after the
effective
date of the 2016 2018 act that amended this section.
Under the distributed generation program, any customer of an
electric utility or alternative electric supplier may generate
electricity using an eligible electric generator interconnected
with the local electric utility and operated parallel to the
distribution system. The value of electricity generated by the
customer shall be credited to the customer pursuant to a fair value
tariff, a standard-offer contract, or net metering. However, an
electric utility or alternative electric supplier is required to
participate only in the net metering component of the customer
generation program. The commission may promulgate rules the
commission considers necessary to implement this program. Any rules
adopted regarding time limits for approval of parallel operation
shall recognize reliability and safety complications including
those arising from equipment saturation, use of multiple
technologies,
and proximity to synchronous motor loads. The program
shall
apply to all electric utilities whose rates are regulated by
the
commission and alternative electric suppliers in this state.
(2)
Except as otherwise provided under this part, an electric
customer
of any class is eligible to interconnect an eligible
electric
generator with the customer's local electric utility and
operate
the eligible electric generator in parallel with the
distribution
system. The distributed generation program shall be
designed
for a period of not less than 10 20 years and limit each
customer to generation capacity designed to meet up to 100% of the
customer's
electricity consumption for the previous 12 months. The
commission
may waive the application, interconnection, and
installation
requirements of this part for customers participating
in
the net metering program under the commission's March 29, 2005
order
in case no. U-14346.
(3)
An electric utility or alternative electric supplier is
not
required to allow for a distributed generation program that is
greater
than 1% of its average in-state peak load for the preceding
5
calendar years. The electric utility or alternative electric
supplier
shall notify the commission if its distributed generation
program
reaches the 1% limit under this subsection. The 1% limit
under
this subsection shall be allocated as follows:
(a)
No more than 0.5% for customers with an eligible electric
generator
capable of generating 20 kilowatts or less.
(b)
No more than 0.25% for customers with an eligible electric
generator
capable of generating more than 20 kilowatts but not more
than
150 kilowatts.
(c)
No more than 0.25% for customers with a methane digester
capable
of generating more than 150 kilowatts.
(3) (4)
Selection of customers for
participation in the
distributed
generation program shall be based on the order in which
the
applications for participation in the program are received by
the
electric utility or alternative electric supplier.solely on
meeting the interconnection and equipment requirements for
participation. An electric utility or alternative electric supplier
shall not restrict the number of participants in the customer
generation program unless it demonstrates to the satisfaction of
the commission that the restriction is necessary to protect the
public health and safety or the integrity of the distribution
system in a contested case hearing pursuant to chapter 4 of the
administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.271 to
24.287.
(4) (5)
An electric utility or alternative
electric supplier
shall not discontinue or refuse to provide electric service to a
customer solely because the customer participates in the
distributed generation program.
(5) (6)
The distributed generation program created
under
subsection
(1) shall include all of the
following:
(a) Statewide uniform interconnection requirements for all
eligible electric generators. The interconnection requirements
shall be designed to protect electric utility workers and equipment
and the general public.
(b)
Distributed generation equipment An eligible electric
generator and its installation shall meet all current local and
state electric and construction code requirements. Any equipment
that is certified by a nationally recognized testing laboratory to
IEEE 1547.1 testing standards and in compliance with UL 1741 scope
1.1A, effective May 7, 2007, or updates to those testing standards
and scope approved by the commission, and that is installed in
compliance with this part is considered to be compliant. Within the
time provided by the commission in rules promulgated under
subsection
(1) and consistent with good utility practice , and the
protection of electric utility workers, electric utility equipment,
and the general public, an electric utility may study, confirm, and
ensure that an eligible electric generator installation at the
customer's
site meets the IEEE 1547 anti-islanding requirements or
any
applicable successor anti-islanding requirements determined by
the
commission to be reasonable and consistent with the purposes of
this
subdivision. "IEEE 1547 Standard
for Interconnecting
Distributed Resources with Electric Power Systems", a commission-
approved update to IEEE 1547, or standards approved by the
commission that enable operation in island mode. If necessary to
promote reliability or safety, the commission may promulgate rules
that require the use of inverters that perform specific automated
grid-balancing functions to integrate distributed generation onto
the electric grid. Inverters that interconnect distributed
generation resources may be owned and operated by electric
utilities. Both of the following must be completed before the
equipment is operated in parallel with the distribution system of
the utility:
(i) Utility testing and approval of the interconnection,
including all metering.
(ii) Execution of a parallel operating agreement.
(c) A uniform distributed generation application form and
process to be used by all electric utilities and alternative
electric
suppliers in this state. Customers Applicants who are
served by an alternative electric supplier shall submit a copy of
the application to the electric utility for the customer's service
area.
(d)
Distributed generation customers with a system capable of
generating
20 kilowatts or less qualify for true net metering.
(e)
Distributed generation customers with a system capable of
generating
more than 20 kilowatts qualify for modified net
metering.
(d) (7)
Each A requirement that each electric utility and
alternative
electric supplier shall maintain records of all
applications and up-to-date records of all active eligible electric
generators located within their service area.
(6) Not later than 1 year after the effective date of the 2018
act that amended this section, the commission shall establish a
statewide uniform methodology by which an electric utility or
alternative electric supplier may establish a fair value tariff if
approved by the commission after a contested case hearing under the
administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to
24.328. Both of the following apply to a fair value tariff:
(a) A fair value tariff shall meet all of the following
requirements:
(i) Allow distributed generation for immediate self-service
without any charge to the customer.
(ii) Apply the same delivery and power supply charge for
electricity delivered to a customer that participates in the
distributed generation program as to a customer that is similarly
situated but does not participate.
(iii) Credit the customer for electricity generated by the
customer that is delivered to the local utility's distribution
system. The customer shall be credited at a rate that meets both of
the following requirements:
(A) Is not less than the full retail rate for a customer that
is similarly situated but does not participate in the customer
generation program at the time of excess generation, minus the
delivery charge.
(B) Includes the value of the costs and benefits that will
accrue over a period of not less than 20 years, considering the
location and time of generation. The costs and benefits include,
but are not limited to, the following:
(I) Energy generated.
(II) Generation capacity.
(III) Avoided line losses.
(IV) Avoided transmission capacity.
(V) Avoided or deferred distribution system investments.
(VI) Voltage support and regulation.
(VII) Health and environmental benefits resulting from
pollution reduction.
(VIII) Reduced fuel price risk to utility customers.
(IX) Reasonably quantifiable economic development benefits
including job creation and local tax revenue benefits.
(X) Any costs to the electric provider incurred to serve
distributed generation customers reflecting actual penetration
levels.
(iv) Not establish the rate or other terms based on
consideration of whether or to whom the customer sells renewable
energy credits owned by the customer under section 179. The
customer may, under a separate contract, sell the renewable energy
credits to the electric utility, the alternative electric supplier,
or a third party.
(v) Require a utility to recalculate a fair value tariff,
subject to commission approval, in any proceeding that changes
power supply tariffs.
(vi) Not impose any additional charges on a customer for
participation in the distributed generation program.
(b) A fair value tariff may do any of the following:
(i) If the tariff credits the customer for capacity without
deducting for forced outages, deduct standby charges for an
eligible electric generator with capacity in excess of 500
kilowatts based on the product of the utility's market cost of
capacity and the average peak-coincident forced outage rate of
customer generators using similar generation technology.
(ii) Based on known and measurable evidence of the cost or
benefit of the distributed generation program to the electric
utility or alternative electric supplier, incorporate other values
into the fair value tariff, including credit for an eligible
electric generator that is installed at a high-value location on
the distribution grid.
(7) The distributed generation program shall include uniform
provisions pursuant to which an electric utility or alternative
energy supplier may enter a standard-offer contract for electricity
generated by customers with eligible electric generators with a
capacity of 500 kilowatts or more. A standard-offer contract shall
meet all of the following requirements:
(a) Be on a form approved by the commission.
(b) In net present value, be economically equivalent to or
larger than the customer compensation that would be expected under
a fair value tariff and assign appropriate value to any reduced
uncertainty about future power supply costs for the electric
utility or alternative electric supplier and its other customers.
(c) Provide a fixed price schedule for power delivered from
the eligible electric generator over the full term of the contract,
subject to adjustment for changes in the Consumer Price Index. As
used in this subdivision, "Consumer Price Index" means the most
comprehensive index of consumer prices available for this state
from the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the United States Department
of Labor.
(d) Have a term of 20 years or more, unless a shorter term is
requested by the customer and agreed to by the electric utility or
alternative electric supplier.
(e) Provide a satisfactory basis for the customer to finance
the eligible electric generator through a lending institution under
normal commercial terms.
(f) Not establish the price or other terms based on
consideration of whether or to whom the customer sells the
renewable energy credits owned by the customer under section 179.
The customer may, under a separate contract, sell the renewable
energy credits to the electric utility, the alternative electric
supplier, or a third party.
(8) The distributed generation program shall include net
metering. An electric utility or alternative electric supplier
shall make net metering available to any customer that submits an
application. However, the commission may authorize an electric
utility or alternative electric supplier to suspend receipt of
applications to participate in net metering from customers with an
eligible electric generator with a capacity exceeding 500 kilowatts
when the electric utility or alternative supplier is offering a
fair value tariff or a standard-offer contract approved by the
commission for electricity from that type of eligible electric
generator. The commission may waive the application,
interconnection, and installation requirements under this part for
customers participating in the net metering program under the
commission's March 29, 2005 order in case no. U-14346.
Sec. 175. (1) An electric utility or alternative electric
supplier may charge a fee not to exceed $50.00 to process an
application to participate in the distributed generation program.
The
A customer shall pay all interconnection costs. The
commission
shall recognize the reasonable cost for each electric utility and
alternative electric supplier to operate a distributed generation
program. For an electric utility with 1,000,000 or more retail
customers in this state, the commission shall include in that
electric utility's nonfuel base rates all costs of meeting all
program requirements except that all energy costs of the program
shall be recovered through the utility's power supply cost recovery
mechanism under section 6j of 1939 PA 3, MCL 460.6j. For an
electric utility with fewer than 1,000,000 base distribution
customers in this state, the commission shall allow that electric
utility to recover all energy costs of the program through the
power supply cost recovery mechanism under section 6j of 1939 PA 3,
MCL 460.6j, and shall develop a cost recovery mechanism for that
utility to contemporaneously recover all other costs of meeting the
program requirements.
(2) The interconnection requirements of the distributed
generation program shall provide that an electric utility or
alternative electric supplier shall, subject to any time
requirements imposed by the commission and upon reasonable written
notice to the distributed generation customer, perform testing and
inspection of an interconnected eligible electric generator as is
necessary
to determine that the system eligible
electric generator
complies with all applicable electric safety, power quality, and
interconnection, including metering, requirements. The costs of
testing and inspection are considered a cost of operating a
distributed generation program and shall be recovered under
subsection (1).
(3)
The interconnection requirements shall require all
eligible electric generators, alternative electric suppliers, and
electric
utilities to comply with all applicable federal, state,
and local laws, rules, or regulations, and any national standards
as determined by the commission.
Sec.
177. (1) Electric In the
distributed generation program,
electric meters shall be used to determine the amount of the
customer's energy use in each billing period, net of any excess
energy the customer's eligible electric generator delivers to the
utility distribution system during that same billing period. For a
customer
with a generation system an
eligible electric generator
capable of generating more than 20 kilowatts, the utility shall
install and utilize a generation meter and a meter or meters
capable of measuring the flow of energy in both directions. A
customer
with a system an eligible
electric generator capable of
generating more than 150 kilowatts shall pay the costs of
installing any new meters.
(2) An electric utility serving over 1,000,000 customers in
this state may provide its customers participating in the
distributed generation program, at no additional charge, a meter or
meters capable of measuring the flow of energy in both directions.
(3) An electric utility serving fewer than 1,000,000 customers
in this state shall provide a meter or meters described in
subsection (2) to customers participating in the distributed
generation program at cost. Only the incremental cost above that
for meters provided by the electric utility to similarly situated
nongenerating
customers shall be paid by the eligible customer
participating in the distributed generation program.
(4)
If the quantity value of electricity generated and
delivered to the electric utility distribution system by an
eligible electric generator during a billing period exceeds the
quantity
value of electricity supplied from the electric utility or
alternative electric supplier during the billing period, the
eligible
customer shall be credited by their the supplier of
electric
generation service for the excess kilowatt hours value
generated during the billing period. The credit shall appear on the
bill
for the following billing period. and shall be limited to the
total
power supply charges on that bill. Any
excess kilowatt hours
value not used to offset electric generation charges in the next
billing period will be carried forward to subsequent billing
periods.
Notwithstanding any law or regulation, distributed
generation
customers shall not receive credits for electric utility
transmission
or distribution charges. The credit per kilowatt hour
for
kilowatt hours delivered into the utility's distribution system
shall
be either of the following:
(a)
The monthly average real-time locational marginal price
for
energy at the commercial pricing node within the electric
utility's
distribution service territory, or for distributed
generation
customers on a time-based rate schedule, the monthly
average
real-time locational marginal price for energy at the
commercial
pricing node within the electric utility's distribution
service
territory during the time-of-use pricing period.
(b)
The electric utility's or alternative electric supplier's
power
supply component, excluding transmission charges, of the full
retail
rate during the billing period or time-of-use pricing
period.
(5)
A charge for net metering and distributed generation
customers
established pursuant to section 6a of 1939 PA 3, MCL
460.6a,
shall not be reduced by any credit or other ratemaking
mechanism
for distributed generation under this section.
Enacting section 1. This amendatory act takes effect 90 days
after the date it is enacted into law.
Enacting section 2. This amendatory act does not take effect
unless Senate Bill No.____ or House Bill No. 5863 (request no.
02681'17) of the 99th Legislature is enacted into law.