Bill Text: MI SB0322 | 2013-2014 | 97th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Energy; alternative sources; renewable portfolio standard; increase for electric providers. Amends secs. 21, 27, 31, 45, 47 & 49 of 2008 PA 295 (MCL 460.1021 et seq.).
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 7-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2013-04-17 - Referred To Committee On Energy And Technology [SB0322 Detail]
Download: Michigan-2013-SB0322-Introduced.html
SENATE BILL No. 322
April 17, 2013, Introduced by Senators HOPGOOD, WHITMER, JOHNSON, YOUNG, WARREN, GREGORY and HOOD and referred to the Committee on Energy and Technology.
A bill to amend 2008 PA 295, entitled
"Clean, renewable, and efficient energy act,"
by amending sections 21, 27, 31, 45, 47, and 49 (MCL 460.1021,
460.1027, 460.1031, 460.1045, 460.1047, and 460.1049).
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec. 21. (1) This section applies only to electric providers
whose rates are regulated by the commission.
(2) Each electric provider shall file a proposed renewable
energy plan with the commission within 90 days after the commission
issues
a temporary order under section 171. 191. The proposed plan
shall meet all of the following requirements:
(a) Describe how the electric provider will meet the renewable
energy standards.
(b) Specify whether the number of megawatt hours of
electricity used in the calculation of the renewable energy credit
portfolio will be weather-normalized or based on the average number
of megawatt hours of electricity sold by the electric provider
annually during the previous 3 years to retail customers in this
state. Once the plan is approved by the commission, this option
shall not be changed.
(c) Include the expected incremental cost of compliance with
the
renewable energy standards for a 20-year 27-year period
beginning when the plan is approved by the commission. Not later
than 1 year after the effective date of the 2013 amendatory act
that amended this section, each electric provider shall file with
the commission a plan amendment to comply with the requirements of
this subdivision.
(d) For an electric provider that had 1,000,000 or more retail
customers in this state on January 1, 2008, describe the bidding
process to be used by the electric provider under section 33. The
description shall include measures to be employed in the
preparation of requests for proposals and the handling and
evaluation of proposals received to ensure that any bidder that is
an
affiliate of the electric utility provider is not afforded a
competitive advantage over any other bidder and that each bidder,
including any bidder that is an affiliate of the electric provider,
is treated in a fair and nondiscriminatory manner.
(3) The proposed plan shall establish a nonvolumetric
mechanism for the recovery of the incremental costs of compliance
within the electric provider's customer rates. The revenue recovery
mechanism shall not result in rate impacts that exceed the monthly
maximum retail rate impacts specified under section 45. The revenue
recovery mechanism is subject to adjustment under sections 47(4)
and 49. A customer participating in a commission-approved voluntary
renewable
energy program under an agreement in effect on the
effective
date of this act October 6,
2008 shall not incur charges
under
the revenue recovery mechanism unless except to the extent
that the charges under the revenue recovery mechanism exceed the
charges the customer is incurring for the voluntary renewable
energy
program. In that case, the customer shall only incur the
difference
between the charge assessed under the revenue recovery
mechanism
and the charges the customer is incurring for the
voluntary
renewable energy program. The
limitation on charges
applies only during the term of the agreement, not including
automatic
agreement renewals, or until 1 year after the effective
date
of this act, October 6, 2009,
whichever is later. Before
entering an agreement with a customer to participate in a
commission-approved voluntary renewable energy program and before
the last automatic monthly renewal of such an agreement that will
occur
less than 1 year after the effective date of this act, before
October 6, 2009, an electric provider shall notify the customer
that the customer will be responsible for the full applicable
charges under the revenue recovery mechanism and under the
voluntary renewable energy program as provided under this
subsection.
(4) If proposed by the electric provider in its proposed plan,
the revenue recovery mechanism shall result in an accumulation of
reserve funds in advance of expenditure and the creation of a
regulatory liability that accrues interest at the average short-
term borrowing rate available to the electric provider during the
appropriate period. If proposed by the electric provider in its
proposed plan, the commission shall establish a minimum balance of
accumulated reserve funds for the purposes of section 47(4).
(5) The commission shall conduct a contested case hearing on
the proposed plan filed under subsection (2), pursuant to the
administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to
24.328. If a renewable energy generator files a petition to
intervene in the contested case in the manner prescribed by the
commission's rules for interventions generally, the commission
shall grant the petition. Subject to subsections (6) and (10),
after the hearing and within 90 days after the proposed plan is
filed with the commission, the commission shall approve, with any
changes consented to by the electric provider, or reject the plan.
(6) The commission shall not approve an electric provider's
plan unless the commission determines both of the following:
(a) That the plan is reasonable and prudent. In making this
determination, the commission shall take into consideration
projected costs and whether or not projected costs included in
prior plans were exceeded.
(b) That the life-cycle cost of renewable energy acquired or
generated under the plan less the projected life-cycle net savings
associated with the provider's energy optimization plan does not
exceed the expected life-cycle cost of electricity generated by a
new
conventional coal-fired facility. In determining the expected
life-cycle
cost of electricity generated by a new conventional
coal-fired
facility, making this
determination, the commission
shall consider data from this state and the states of Ohio,
Indiana,
Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota, including , if
applicable,
the life-cycle costs of the
renewable energy system and
new conventional coal-fired facilities. When determining the life-
cycle costs of the renewable energy system and new conventional
coal-fired facilities, the commission shall use a methodology that
includes, but is not limited to, consideration of the value of
energy, capacity, and ancillary services. The commission shall also
consider other costs such as transmission, economic benefits, and
environmental costs, including, but not limited to, greenhouse gas
constraints or taxes. In performing its assessment, the commission
may utilize other available data, including national or regional
reports and data published by federal or state governmental
agencies, industry associations, and consumer groups.
(7) An electric provider shall not begin recovery of the
incremental costs of compliance within its rates until the
commission has approved its proposed plan.
(8) Every 2 years after initial approval of a plan under
subsection (5), the commission shall review the plan. The
commission shall conduct a contested case hearing on the plan
pursuant to the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306,
MCL 24.201 to 24.328. The annual renewable cost reconciliation
under section 49 for that year may be joined with the overall plan
review in the same contested case hearing. Subject to subsections
(6) and (10), after the hearing, the commission shall approve, with
any changes consented to by the electric provider, or reject the
plan and any proposed amendments to the plan.
(9) If an electric provider proposes to amend its plan at a
time other than during the biennial review process under subsection
(8), the electric provider shall file the proposed amendment with
the commission. If the proposed amendment would modify the revenue
recovery mechanism, the commission shall conduct a contested case
hearing on the amendment pursuant to the administrative procedures
act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328. The annual
renewable cost reconciliation under section 49 may be joined with
the plan amendment in the same contested case proceeding. Subject
to subsections (6) and (10), after the hearing and within 90 days
after the amendment is filed, the commission shall approve, with
any changes consented to by the electric provider, or reject the
plan and the proposed amendment or amendments to the plan.
(10) If the commission rejects a proposed plan or amendment
under this section, the commission shall explain in writing the
reasons for its determination.
Sec. 27. (1) Subject to sections 31 and 45, and in addition to
the requirements of subsection (3), an electric provider that is an
electric utility with 1,000,000 or more retail customers in this
state as of January 1, 2008 shall achieve a renewable energy
capacity portfolio of not less than the following:
(a) For an electric provider with more than 1,000,000 but less
than 2,000,000 retail electric customers in this state on January
1, 2008, a renewable energy capacity portfolio of 200 megawatts by
December 31, 2013 and 500 megawatts by December 31, 2015.
(b) For an electric provider with more than 2,000,000 retail
electric customers in this state on January 1, 2008, a renewable
energy capacity portfolio of 300 megawatts by December 31, 2013 and
600 megawatts by December 31, 2015.
(2) An electric provider's renewable energy capacity portfolio
shall be calculated by adding the following:
(a) The nameplate capacity in megawatts of renewable energy
systems owned by the electric provider that were not in commercial
operation
before the effective date of this act October 6, 2008.
(b) The capacity in megawatts of renewable energy that the
electric provider is entitled to purchase under contracts that were
not
in effect before the effective date of this act October 6,
2008.
(3) Subject to sections 31 and 45, an electric provider shall
achieve a renewable energy credit portfolio as follows:
(a) In 2012, 2013, 2014, and 2015, a renewable energy credit
portfolio based on the sum of the following:
(i) The number of renewable energy credits from electricity
generated
in the 1-year period preceding the effective date of this
act
October 6, 2008 that would have been transferred to the
electric provider pursuant to section 35(1), if this act had been
in effect during that 1-year period.
(ii) The number of renewable energy credits equal to the number
of megawatt hours of electricity produced or obtained by the
electric
provider in the 1-year period preceding the effective date
of
this act October 6, 2008 from renewable energy systems for which
recovery
in electric rates was approved on the effective date of
this
act as of October 6, 2008.
(iii) Renewable energy credits in an amount calculated as
follows:
(A) Taking into account the number of renewable energy credits
under subparagraphs (i) and (ii), determine the number of additional
renewable energy credits that the electric provider would need to
reach
a 10% renewable energy credit
portfolio in that year equal to
10% of the number of megawatt hours provided by the electric
provider as determined for that year subject to section 21(2)(b).
(B) Multiply the number under sub-subparagraph (A) by 20% for
2012, 33% for 2013, 50% for 2014, and 100% for 2015.
(b) In 2016 and each year thereafter through 2021, maintain a
renewable energy credit portfolio that consists of at least the
same number of renewable energy credits as were required in 2015
under subdivision (a).
(c) In 2022, a renewable energy credit portfolio based on the
sum of the following:
(i) The total number of renewable energy credits under
subdivision (a)(i) and (ii).
(ii) Taking into account the number of renewable energy credits
under subparagraph (i), the number of additional renewable energy
credits that the electric provider needs to reach a renewable
energy credit portfolio in that year equal to 22% of the number of
megawatt hours of electricity provided by the electric provider as
determined for that year subject to section 21(2)(b).
(d) In 2023 and each year thereafter, maintain a renewable
energy credit portfolio that consists of at least the same number
of renewable energy credits as were required in 2022 under
subdivision (c).
(4) An electric provider's renewable energy credit portfolio
shall be calculated as follows:
(a) Determine the number of renewable energy credits used to
comply with this subpart during the applicable year.
(b) Divide by 1 of the following at the option of the electric
provider as specified in its renewable energy plan:
(i) The number of weather-normalized megawatt hours of
electricity sold by the electric provider during the previous year
to retail customers in this state.
(ii) The average number of megawatt hours of electricity sold
by the electric provider annually during the previous 3 years to
retail customers in this state.
(c) Multiply the quotient under subdivision (b) by 100.
(5) Subject to subsection (6), each electric provider shall
meet the renewable energy credit standards with renewable energy
credits obtained by 1 or more of the following means:
(a) Generating electricity from renewable energy systems for
sale to retail customers.
(b) Purchasing or otherwise acquiring renewable energy credits
with or without the associated renewable energy.
(6) An electric provider may substitute energy optimization
credits, advanced cleaner energy credits with or without the
associated advanced cleaner energy, or a combination thereof for
renewable energy credits otherwise required to meet the renewable
energy credit standards if the substitution is approved by the
commission. However, commission approval is not required to
substitute advanced cleaner energy from industrial cogeneration for
renewable energy credits. The commission shall not approve a
substitution unless the commission determines that the substitution
is cost-effective compared to other sources of renewable energy
credits and, if the substitution involves advanced cleaner energy
credits, that the advanced cleaner energy system provides carbon
dioxide emissions benefits. In determining whether the substitution
of advanced cleaner energy credits is cost-effective, the
commission shall include as part of the costs of the system the
environmental costs attributed to the advanced cleaner energy
system, including the costs of environmental control equipment or
greenhouse gas constraints or taxes. The commission's
determinations shall be made after a contested case hearing that
includes consultation with the department of environmental quality
on the issue of carbon dioxide emissions benefits, if relevant, and
environmental costs.
(7) Under subsection (6), energy optimization credits,
advanced cleaner energy credits, or a combination thereof shall not
be used by a provider to meet more than 10% of the renewable energy
credit standards. Advanced cleaner energy from advanced cleaner
energy systems in existence on January 1, 2008 shall not be used by
a provider to meet more than 70% of this 10% limit. This 10% limit
does not apply to advanced cleaner energy credits from plasma arc
gasification.
(8) Substitutions under subsection (6) shall be made at the
following rates per renewable energy credit:
(a) One energy optimization credit.
(b) One advanced cleaner energy credit from plasma arc
gasification or industrial cogeneration.
(c) Ten advanced cleaner energy credits other than from plasma
arc gasification or industrial cogeneration.
Sec. 31. (1) Upon petition by an electric provider, the
commission may for good cause grant 2 extensions of the 2015 and 2
extensions of the 2022 renewable energy standard deadline under
section 27. Each extension shall be for up to 1 year.
(2) If 2 extensions of the 2015 or 2 extensions of the 2022
renewable energy standard deadline have been granted to an electric
provider under subsection (1), upon subsequent petition by the
electric provider at least 3 months before the expiration of the
second
extended extension of that
deadline, the commission shall,
after consideration of prior extension requests under this section
and for good cause, establish a revised renewable energy standard
attainable by the electric provider. If the electric provider
achieves the revised renewable energy standard, the provider is
considered to be in compliance with the renewable energy standard
otherwise required to be achieved under this subpart by that
deadline.
(3)
An electric provider that makes a good faith effort to
spend
the full amount of incremental costs of compliance as
outlined
in its approved renewable energy plan and that complies
with its approved plan, subject to any approved extensions or
revisions, and, if the provider's rates are regulated by the
commission, makes a good-faith effort to spend the full amount of
the expected incremental costs of compliance as set forth in the
plan shall be considered to be in compliance with this subpart.
(4) As used in this section, "good cause" includes, but is not
limited to, the electric provider's inability, as determined by the
commission, to meet a renewable energy standard because of a
renewable energy system feasibility limitation including, but not
limited to, any of the following:
(a) Renewable energy system site requirements, zoning, siting,
land use issues, permits, including environmental permits, any
certificate
of need necessity process under section 6s of 1939 PA
3, MCL 460.6s, or any other necessary governmental approvals that
effectively limit availability of renewable energy systems, if the
electric provider exercised reasonable diligence in attempting to
secure the necessary governmental approvals. For purposes of this
subdivision, "reasonable diligence" includes, but is not limited
to, submitting timely applications for the necessary governmental
approvals and making good faith efforts to ensure that the
applications are administratively complete and technically
sufficient.
(b)
Equipment cost or availability issues including electrical
equipment
or renewable energy system component shortages or high
costs
that High costs of or
shortages of renewable energy system
components or electrical equipment if the high costs or shortages
effectively limit availability of renewable energy systems.
(c) Cost, availability, or time requirements for electric
transmission and interconnection.
(d) Projected or actual unfavorable electric system
reliability or operational impacts.
(e) Labor shortages that effectively limit availability of
renewable energy systems.
(f) An order of a court of competent jurisdiction that
effectively limits the availability of renewable energy systems.
Sec. 45. (1) For an electric provider whose rates are
regulated by the commission, the commission shall determine the
appropriate charges for the electric provider's tariffs that permit
recovery of the incremental cost of compliance subject to the
retail rate impact limits set forth in subsection (2).
(2) An electric provider shall recover the incremental cost of
compliance with the renewable energy standards by an itemized
charge on the customer's bill for billing periods beginning not
earlier than 90 days after the commission approves the electric
provider's renewable energy plan under section 21 or 23 or
determines under section 25 that the plan complies with this act.
An electric provider shall not comply with the renewable energy
standards to the extent that, as determined by the commission,
recovery of the incremental cost of compliance will have a retail
rate impact that exceeds any of the following:
(a) $3.00 per month per residential customer meter.
(b) $16.58 per month per commercial secondary customer meter.
(c) $187.50 per month per commercial primary or industrial
customer meter.
(3) The retail rate impact limits of subsection (2) apply only
to the incremental costs of compliance and do not apply to costs
approved for recovery by the commission other than as provided in
this act.
(4) The incremental cost of compliance shall be calculated for
a
20-year 27-year period beginning with approval of the renewable
energy plan and shall be recovered on a levelized basis.
(5) In its billing statements for a residential customer, each
electric provider shall report to the residential customer all of
the following in a format consistent with other information on the
customer bill:
(a) An itemized monthly charge, expressed in dollars and
cents, collected from the customer for implementing the renewable
energy program requirements of this act. In the first bill issued
after the close of the previous year, an electric provider shall
notify each residential customer that the customer may be entitled
to an income tax credit to offset some of the annual amounts
collected for the renewable energy program.
(b) An itemized monthly charge, expressed in dollars and
cents, collected from the customer for implementing the energy
optimization program requirements of this act.
(c) An estimated monthly savings, expressed in dollars and
cents, for that customer to reflect the reductions in the monthly
energy bill produced by the energy optimization program under this
act.
(d) An estimated monthly savings, expressed in dollars and
cents, for that customer to reflect the long-term, life-cycle,
levelized costs of building and operating new conventional coal-
fired electric generating power plants avoided under this act as
determined by the commission.
(e) The website address at which the commission's annual
report under section 51 is posted.
(6) For the first year of the programs under this part, the
values reported under subsection (5) shall be estimates by the
commission. The values in following years shall be based on the
electric provider's actual customer experiences. If the electric
provider is unable to provide customer-specific information under
subsection (5)(b) or (c), it shall instead specify the state
average itemized charge or savings, as applicable, for residential
customers. The electric provider shall make this calculation based
on a method approved by the commission.
(7) In determining long-term, life-cycle, levelized costs of
building and operating and acquiring nonrenewable electric
generating capacity and energy for the purpose of subsection
(5)(d), the commission shall consider historic and predicted costs
of financing, construction, operation, maintenance, fuel supplies,
environmental protection, and other appropriate elements of energy
production. For purposes of this comparison, the capacity of
avoided new conventional coal-fired electric generating facilities
shall be expressed in megawatts and avoided new conventional coal-
fired electricity generation shall be expressed in megawatt hours.
Avoided costs shall be measured in cents per kilowatt hour.
Sec. 47. (1) Subject to the retail rate impact limits under
section 45, the commission shall consider all actual costs
reasonably and prudently incurred in good faith to implement a
commission-approved renewable energy plan by an electric provider
whose rates are regulated by the commission to be a cost of service
to be recovered by the electric provider. Subject to the retail
rate impact limits under section 45, an electric provider whose
rates are regulated by the commission shall recover through its
retail electric rates all of the electric provider's incremental
costs
of compliance during the 20-year 27-year period beginning
when the electric provider's plan is approved by the commission and
all reasonable and prudent ongoing costs of compliance during and
after that period. The recovery shall include, but is not limited
to, the electric provider's authorized rate of return on equity for
costs approved under this section, which shall remain fixed at the
rate of return and debt to equity ratio that was in effect in the
electric provider's base rates when the electric provider's
renewable energy plan was approved.
(2) Incremental costs of compliance shall be calculated as
follows:
(a) Determine the sum of the following costs to the extent
those costs are reasonable and prudent and not already approved for
recovery
in electric rates as of the effective date of this act
October 6, 2008:
(i) Capital, operating, and maintenance costs of renewable
energy systems or advanced cleaner energy systems, including
property taxes, insurance, and return on equity associated with an
electric provider's renewable energy systems or advanced cleaner
energy systems, including the electric provider's renewable energy
portfolio established to achieve compliance with the renewable
energy standards and any additional renewable energy systems or
advanced
cleaner energy systems , that
are built or acquired by the
electric provider to maintain compliance with the renewable energy
standards
during the 20-year 27-year
period beginning when the
electric provider's plan is approved by the commission.
(ii) Financing costs attributable to capital, operating, and
maintenance costs of capital facilities associated with renewable
energy
systems or advanced cleaner energy systems used to meet
comply with the renewable energy standard.
(iii) Costs that are not otherwise recoverable in rates approved
by the federal energy regulatory commission and that are related to
the infrastructure required to bring renewable energy systems or
advanced cleaner energy systems used to achieve compliance with the
renewable energy standards on to the transmission system, including
interconnection and substation costs for renewable energy systems
or
advanced cleaner energy systems used to meet comply with the
renewable energy standard.
(iv) Ancillary service costs determined by the commission to be
necessarily incurred to ensure the quality and reliability of
renewable energy or advanced cleaner energy used to meet the
renewable energy standards, regardless of the ownership of a
renewable energy system or advanced cleaner energy technology.
(v) Except to the extent the costs are allocated under a
different subparagraph, all of the following:
(A) The costs of renewable energy credits purchased under this
act.
(B) The costs of contracts described in section 33(1).
(vi) Expenses incurred as a result of state or federal
governmental actions related to renewable energy systems or
advanced cleaner energy systems attributable to the renewable
energy standards, including changes in tax or other law.
(vii) Any additional electric provider costs determined by the
commission to be necessarily incurred to ensure the quality and
reliability of renewable energy or advanced cleaner energy used to
meet the renewable energy standards.
(b) Subtract from the sum of costs not already included in
electric rates determined under subdivision (a) the sum of the
following revenues:
(i) Revenue derived from the sale of environmental attributes
associated with the generation of renewable energy or advanced
cleaner
energy systems attributable to the renewable energy
standards.
Such That revenue shall not be considered in determining
power supply cost recovery factors under section 6j of 1939 PA 3,
MCL 460.6j.
(ii) Interest on regulatory liabilities.
(iii) Tax credits specifically designed to promote renewable
energy or advanced cleaner energy.
(iv) Revenue derived from the provision of renewable energy or
advanced cleaner energy to retail electric customers subject to a
power supply cost recovery clause under section 6j of 1939 PA 3,
MCL 460.6j, of an electric provider whose rates are regulated by
the commission. After providing an opportunity for a contested case
hearing for an electric provider whose rates are regulated by the
commission, the commission shall annually establish a price per
megawatt
hour. In addition, an An electric provider whose rates are
regulated by the commission may at any time petition the commission
to revise the price. In setting the price per megawatt hour under
this subparagraph, the commission shall consider factors including,
but not limited to, projected capacity, energy, maintenance, and
operating costs; information filed under section 6j of 1939 PA 3,
MCL 460.6j; and information from wholesale markets, including, but
not limited to, locational marginal pricing. This price shall be
multiplied by the sum of the number of megawatt hours of renewable
energy and the number of megawatt hours of advanced cleaner energy
used to maintain compliance with the renewable energy standard. The
product shall be considered a booked cost of purchased and net
interchanged power transactions under section 6j of 1939 PA 3, MCL
460.6j. For energy purchased by such an electric provider under a
renewable energy contract or advanced cleaner energy contract, the
price shall be the lower of the amount established by the
commission or the actual price paid and shall be multiplied by the
number of megawatt hours of renewable energy or advanced cleaner
energy purchased. The resulting value shall be considered a booked
cost of purchased and net interchanged power under section 6j of
1939 PA 3, MCL 460.6j.
(v) Revenue from wholesale renewable energy sales and advanced
cleaner
energy sales. Such That revenue shall not be considered in
determining power supply cost recovery factors under section 6j of
1939 PA 3, MCL 460.6j.
(vi) Any additional electric provider revenue considered by the
commission to be attributable to the renewable energy standards.
(vii) Any revenues recovered in rates for renewable energy
costs that are included under subdivision (a).
(3) The commission shall authorize an electric provider whose
rates are regulated by the commission to spend in any given month
more to comply with this act and implement an approved renewable
energy plan than the revenue actually generated by the revenue
recovery mechanism. An electric provider whose rates are regulated
by the commission shall recover its commission approved pre-tax
rate of return on regulatory assets during the appropriate period.
An electric provider whose rates are regulated by the commission
shall record interest on regulatory liabilities at the average
short-term borrowing rate available to the electric provider during
the appropriate period. Any regulatory assets or liabilities
resulting from the recovery costs of renewable energy or advanced
cleaner energy attributable to renewable energy standards through
the power supply cost recovery clause under section 6j of 1939 PA
3, MCL 460.6j, shall continue to be reconciled under that section.
(4) If an electric provider's incremental costs of compliance
in
any given month during the 20-year 27-year period beginning
when
the electric provider's plan is approved by the commission are in
excess of the revenue recovery mechanism as adjusted under section
49 and in excess of the balance of any accumulated reserve funds,
subject to the minimum balance established under section 21, the
electric provider shall immediately notify the commission. The
commission shall promptly commence a contested case hearing
pursuant to the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306,
MCL 24.201 to 24.328, and modify the revenue recovery mechanism so
that the minimum balance is restored. However, if the commission
determines that recovery of the incremental costs of compliance
would otherwise exceed the maximum retail rate impacts specified
under section 45, it shall set the revenue recovery mechanism for
that electric provider to correspond to the maximum retail rate
impacts. Excess costs shall be accrued and deferred for recovery.
Not
later than the expiration of the 20-year 27-year period
beginning when the electric provider's plan is approved by the
commission, for an electric provider whose rates are regulated by
the commission, the commission shall determine the amount of
deferred costs to be recovered under the revenue recovery mechanism
and the recovery period, which shall not extend more than 5 years
beyond
the expiration of the 20-year 27-year
period beginning when
the electric provider's plan is approved by the commission. The
recovery of excess costs shall be proportional to the retail rate
impact limits in section 45 for each customer class. The recovery
of excess costs alone, or, if begun before the expiration of the
20-year
27-year period, in combination with the recovery of
incremental costs of compliance under the revenue recovery
mechanism, shall not exceed the retail rate impact limits of
section 45 for each customer class.
(5)
If, at the expiration of the 20-year 27-year period
beginning when the electric provider's plan is approved by the
commission, an electric provider whose rates are regulated by the
commission has a regulatory liability, the refund to customer
classes shall be proportional to the amounts paid by those customer
classes under the revenue recovery mechanism.
(6) After achieving compliance with the renewable energy
standard
for 2015 2022, the actual costs reasonably and prudently
incurred to continue to comply with this subpart both during and
after
the conclusion of the 20-year 27-year
period beginning when
the electric provider's plan is approved by the commission shall be
considered costs of service. The commission shall determine a
mechanism for an electric provider whose rates are regulated by the
commission to recover these costs in its retail electric rates,
subject to the retail rate impact limits in section 45. Remaining
and future regulatory assets shall be recovered consistent with
subsections
(2) (3) and (3) (4) and section 49.
Sec. 49. (1) This section applies only to an electric provider
whose rates are regulated by the commission. Concurrent with the
submission
of each report under section 51, 51(1), the commission
shall commence an annual proceeding, to be known as a renewable
cost reconciliation, for each electric provider whose rates are
regulated by the commission. The renewable cost reconciliation
proceeding shall be conducted as a contested case pursuant to the
administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to
24.328. Reasonable discovery shall be permitted before and during
the reconciliation proceeding to assist in obtaining evidence
concerning reconciliation issues including, but not limited to, the
reasonableness and prudence of expenditures and the amounts
collected pursuant to the revenue recovery mechanism.
(2) At the renewable cost reconciliation, an electric provider
may propose any necessary modifications of the revenue recovery
mechanism to ensure the electric provider's recovery of its
incremental cost of compliance with the renewable energy standards.
(3) The commission shall reconcile the pertinent revenues
recorded and the allowance for the nonvolumetric revenue recovery
mechanism with the amounts actually expensed and projected
according
to the electric provider's renewable
energy plan. for
compliance.
The commission shall consider any
issue regarding the
reasonableness and prudence of expenses for which customers were
charged in the relevant reconciliation period. In its order, the
commission shall do all of the following:
(a) Make a determination of an electric provider's compliance
with the renewable energy standards, subject to section 31.
(b) Adjust the revenue recovery mechanism for the incremental
costs of compliance. The commission shall ensure that the retail
rate impacts under this renewable cost reconciliation revenue
recovery mechanism do not exceed the maximum retail rate impacts
specified under section 45. The commission shall ensure that the
recovery mechanism is projected to maintain a minimum balance of
accumulated reserve so that a regulatory asset does not accrue.
(c) Establish the price per megawatt hour for renewable energy
and advanced cleaner energy capacity and for renewable energy and
advanced cleaner energy to be recovered through the power supply
cost recovery clause under section 6j of 1939 PA 3, MCL 460.6j, as
outlined in section 47(2)(b)(iv).
(d) Adjust, if needed, the minimum balance of accumulated
reserve funds established under section 21.
(4) If an electric provider has recorded a regulatory
liability
in any given month during the 20-year 27-year period
beginning when the electric provider's plan is approved by the
commission, interest on the regulatory liability balance shall be
accrued at the average short-term borrowing rate available to the
electric provider during the appropriate period, and shall be used
to fund incremental costs of compliance incurred in subsequent
periods
within the 20-year 27-year
period beginning when the
electric provider's plan is approved by the commission.