Bill Text: TX HB3595 | 2011-2012 | 82nd Legislature | Introduced

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Relating to energy efficiency goals and energy efficiency programs.

Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (Republican 2-1)

Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2011-05-25 - Senate Amendments Analysis distributed [HB3595 Detail]

Download: Texas-2011-HB3595-Introduced.html
 
 
  By: Chisum H.B. No. 3595
 
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to energy efficiency goals and energy efficiency programs.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
  SECTION 1.  Section 39.905, Utilities Code, is amended to read as
  follows:
         (a)  It is the goal of the legislature that:
               (1)  electric utilities will administer energy
  efficiency incentive programs in a market-neutral,
  nondiscriminatory manner but will not offer underlying competitive
  services;
               (2)  all customers, in all customer classes and
  geographic regions, will have a choice of and access to energy
  efficiency alternatives and other choices from the market that
  allow each customer to reduce energy consumption, summer or winter
  peak demand, or energy costs;
               (3)  each electric utility will provide, through
  market-based standard offer programs or [limited, targeted,]
  market-transformation programs, incentives sufficient for retail
  electric providers and competitive energy service providers to
  acquire additional cost-effective energy efficiency for
  residential and commercial customers equivalent to at least:
                     (A)  25 [10] percent of the electric utility's
  annual growth in demand of residential and commercial customers by
  December 31, 2012 [2007];
                     (B)  one-half of one [15] percent of the electric
  utility's peak [annual growth in] demand of residential and
  commercial customers by December 31, 2013 [2008, provided that the
  electric utility's program expenditures for 2008 funding may not be
  greater than 75 percent above the utility's program budget for 2007
  for residential and commercial customers, as included in the April
  1, 2006, filing]; and
                     (C)  a percentage of peak demand of residential
  and commercial customers by December 31, 2014 and each year
  thereafter that the Commission annually shall determine to be
  reasonable to achieve, although the percentage shall not be less
  than one-half of one percent of the electric utility's peak demand
  of residential and commercial customers nor, except for good cause
  shown for an electric utility, less than any prior year's goal [20
  percent of the electric utility's annual growth in demand of
  residential and commercial customers by December 31, 2009, provided
  that the electric utility's program expenditures for 2009 funding
  may not be greater than 150 percent above the utility's program
  budget for 2007 for residential and commercial customers, as
  included in the April 1, 2006, filing];
               (4)  each electric utility in the ERCOT region shall
  use its best efforts to encourage and facilitate the involvement of
  the region's retail electric providers in the delivery of
  efficiency programs and demand response programs under this
  section;
               (5)  retail electric providers in the ERCOT region, and
  electric utilities outside of the ERCOT region, shall provide
  customers with energy efficiency educational materials;
               (6)  electric utilities may communicate with customers
  and provide rebate or incentive funds to their customers to promote
  of facilitate the success of programs; and
               (7) [(6)]  notwithstanding Subsection (a)(3), electric
  utilities shall continue to make available, at 2007 funding and
  participation levels, any load management standard offer programs
  developed for industrial customers and implemented prior to May 1,
  2007.
         (b)  The commission shall provide oversight and adopt rules
  and procedures to ensure that the utilities can achieve the goal of
  this section, including:
               (1)  establishing an energy efficiency cost recovery
  factor for ensuring timely and reasonable cost recovery for utility
  expenditures made to satisfy the goal of this section;
               (2)  establishing an incentive under Section 36.204 to
  reward utilities administering programs under this section that
  exceed the minimum goals established by this section;
               (3)  providing a utility that is unable to establish an
  energy efficiency cost recovery factor in a timely manner due to a
  rate freeze with a mechanism to enable the utility to:
                     (A)  defer the costs of complying with this
  section; and
                     (B)  recover the deferred costs through an energy
  efficiency cost recovery factor on the expiration of the rate
  freeze period;
               (4)  ensuring that the costs associated with programs
  provided under this section are borne by the customer classes that
  receive the services under the programs; and
               (5)  ensuring the program rules encourage the value of
  the incentives to be passed on to the end-use customer.
         (b-1)  The energy efficiency cost recovery factor under
  Subsection (b)(1) may not result in an over-recovery of costs but
  may be adjusted each year to change rates to enable utilities to
  match revenues against energy efficiency costs and any incentives
  to which they are granted.  The factor shall be adjusted to reflect
  any over-collection or under-collection of energy efficiency cost
  recovery revenues in previous years.
         (b-2)  [The commission shall conduct a study, to be funded by
  electric utilities, regarding cost effective energy efficiency in
  this state.  Not later than January 15, 2009, the commission shall
  submit to the legislature a report regarding the commission's
  findings that:
               (1)  considers the technical, economic, and achievable
  potential, and natural occurrence of energy efficiency in this
  state in terms of kilowatts and kilowatt hours for each element;
               (2)  determines the amount of savings that is
  achievable through utility programs in compliance with commission
  rules;
               (3)  recommends whether:
                     (A)  utility funding of energy efficiency in areas
  of the state with competitive retail electric service should
  continue;
                     (B)  energy efficiency in areas with competitive
  retail electric service is best provided by the competitive market;
  and
                     (C)  utilities should fund education programs to
  be conducted by the commission regarding the provision of energy
  efficiency service from the competitive market;
               (4)  provides estimates of achievable savings specific
  to each utility service area and each customer class;
               (5)  quantifies the costs and rate impacts associated
  with meeting energy efficiency goals;
               (6)  determines whether an increase in the goal to 30
  percent of the growth in demand for each utility is achievable by
  December 31, 2010, and whether an increase in the goal to 50 percent
  of the growth in demand for electricity is achievable by December
  31, 2015, by each utility in the service area served through the
  energy efficiency programs described by this section;
               (7)  recommends policies designed to promote energy
  efficiency in the areas of the state that are not served by the
  utilities which administer programs under this section; and
               (8)  identifies potential barriers to the increased
  participation by retail electric providers in the delivery of
  energy efficiency services to ERCOT customers, and to the increased
  potential for energy efficiency in ERCOT or in this state
  generally, including any recommended regulatory or statutory
  changes to eliminate such barriers or facilitate greater
  efficiency.
         (b-3)]  Beginning not later than January 1, 2008, the
  commission, in consultation with the State Energy Conservation
  Office, annually for a period of five years shall compute and report
  to ERCOT the projected annual and measure-life energy savings and
  summer and winter demand impacts for each entity in the ERCOT region
  that administers standard offer programs, market transformation
  programs, combined heating and power technology, demand response
  programs, solar incentive programs, appliance efficiency
  standards, energy efficiency programs in public buildings, and any
  other relevant programs that are reasonably anticipated to reduce
  electricity energy or peak demand or that serve as substitutes for
  electric supply.
         (b-3) [(b-4)]  The commission and ERCOT shall develop a
  method to account for the projected efficiency impacts under
  Subsection (b-2) [(b-3)] in ERCOT's annual forecasts of future
  capacity, demand, and reserves.
         (c)  A standard offer program provided under Subsection
  (a)(3) must be neutral with respect to technologies, equipment, and
  fuels, including thermal, chemical, mechanical, and electrical
  energy storage technologies.
         (d)  The commission shall establish a procedure for
  reviewing and evaluating market-transformation program options
  described by this subsection and other options.  In evaluating
  program options, the commission may consider the ability of a
  program option to reduce costs to customers through reduced demand,
  energy savings, and relief of congestion.  Utilities may choose to
  implement any program option approved by the commission after its
  evaluation in order to satisfy the goal in Subsection (a),
  including:
               (1)  energy-smart schools;
               (2)  appliance retirement and recycling;
               (3)  air conditioning system tune-ups;
               (4)  the installation of variable speed air
  conditioning system and motors;
               (5)  the use of trees or other landscaping for energy
  efficiency.;
               (6) [(5)]  customer energy management and demand
  response programs;
               (7) [(6)]  high performance residential and commercial
  buildings that will achieve the levels of energy efficiency
  sufficient to qualify those buildings for federal tax incentives;
               (8)  commissioning services for commercial and
  institutional buildings that result in operational and maintenance
  practices that reduce the buildings' energy consumption;
               (9) [(7)]  programs for customers who rent or lease
  their residence or commercial space;
               (10) [(8)]  programs providing energy monitoring
  equipment to customers that enable a customer to better understand
  the amount, price, and time of the customer's energy use;
               (11) [(9)]  energy audit programs for owners and other
  residents of single-family or multifamily residences and for small
  commercial customers;
               (12) [(10)]  net-zero energy new home programs;
               (13) [(11)]  solar thermal or solar electric programs;
  and
               (14) [(12)]  programs for using windows and other
  glazing systems, glass doors, and skylights in residential and
  commercial buildings that reduce solar gain by at least 30 percent
  from the level established for the federal Energy Star windows
  program.
         (e)  An electric utility may use money approved by the
  commission for energy efficiency programs to perform necessary
  energy efficiency research and development to foster continuous
  improvement and innovation in the application of energy efficiency
  technology and energy efficiency program design and
  implementation. Money the utility uses under this subsection may
  not exceed 10 percent of the greater of:
               (1)  the amount the commission approved for energy
  efficiency programs in the utility's most recent full rate
  proceeding; or
               (2)  the commission-approved expenditures by the
  utility for energy efficiency in the previous year.
         (f)  Unless funding is provided under Section 39.903, each
  unbundled transmission and distribution utility shall include in
  its energy efficiency plan a targeted low-income energy efficiency
  program as described by Section 39.903(f)(2), and the savings
  achieved by the program shall count toward the transmission and
  distribution utility's energy efficiency goal.  The commission
  shall determine the appropriate level of funding to be allocated to
  both targeted and standard offer low-income energy efficiency
  programs in each unbundled transmission and distribution utility
  service area.  The total expenditures for both targeted and
  standard offer low-income energy efficiency programs will be based
  on the amount spent by the transmission and distribution utility on
  the commission's hard-to-reach program in calendar year 2003.  This
  level of funding for low-income energy efficiency programs shall be
  provided from money approved by the commission for the transmission
  and distribution utility's energy efficiency programs.  The state
  agency that administers the federal weatherization assistance
  program shall provide reports as required by the commission to
  provide the most current information available on energy and peak
  demand savings achieved in each transmission and distribution
  utility service area.
         (g)  Schools may participate in more than one program and may
  use more than one product or strategy in order to maximize the
  school's energy and cost savings.  A utility may claim savings
  realized by the school for those programs that utilize utility
  resources.
         (h)  The commission may provide for a good cause exemption to
  a utility's liability for an administrative penalty or other
  sanction if the utility fails to meet a goal for energy efficiency
  under this section and the utility's failure to meet the goal is
  caused by one or more factors outside of the utility's control,
  including:
               (1)  insufficient demand by retail electric providers
  and competitive energy service providers for program incentive
  funds made available by the utility through its programs;
               (2)  changes in building energy codes; and
               (3)  changes in government-imposed appliance or
  equipment efficiency standards.
         SECTION 2.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
  a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
  provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this
  Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
  Act takes effect September 1, 2011.
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