Rep. Robert Rita

Filed: 11/15/2016

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 2814

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 2814, AS AMENDED,
3by replacing everything after the enacting clause with the
4following:
 
5    "Section 1. Findings.
6    (a) In 2011, the General Assembly encouraged and enabled
7the State's largest electric utilities to undertake
8substantial investment to refurbish, rebuild, modernize, and
9expand Illinois' century-old electric grid. Among those
10investments were the deployment of a smart grid and advanced
11metering infrastructure platform that would be accessible to
12all retail customers through new, digital smart meters. This
13investment, now well underway, not only allows utilities to
14continue to provide safe, reliable, and affordable service to
15the State's current and future utility customers, but also
16empowers the citizens of this State to directly access and
17participate in the rapidly emerging clean energy economy while

 

 

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1also presenting them with unprecedented choices in their source
2of energy supply and pricing.
3    To ensure that the State and its citizens, including
4low-income citizens, are equipped to enjoy the opportunities
5and benefits of the smart grid and evolving clean energy
6marketplace, the General Assembly finds and declares that
7Illinois should continue in its efforts to build the grid of
8the future using the smart grid and advanced metering
9infrastructure platform, as well as maximize the impact of the
10State's existing energy efficiency and renewable energy
11portfolio standards. Specifically, the Generally Assembly
12finds that:
13        (1) the State should encourage: the adoption and
14    deployment of cost-effective distributed energy resource
15    technologies and devices, such as photovoltaics, which can
16    encourage private investment in renewable energy
17    resources, stimulate economic growth, enhance the
18    continued diversification of Illinois' energy resource
19    mix, and protect the Illinois environment; investment in
20    renewable energy resources, including, but not limited to,
21    photovoltaic distributed generation, which should benefit
22    all citizens of the State, including low-income
23    households;
24        (2) the State's existing energy efficiency standard
25    should be updated to ensure that customers continue to
26    realize increased value, to incorporate and optimize

 

 

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1    measures enabled by the smart grid, including voltage
2    optimization measures, and to provide incentives for
3    electric utilities to achieve the energy savings goals; and
4        (3) the State's electric utilities should initiate
5    programs to study the benefits of smart-grid enabled
6    technologies, including, but not limited to, deploying
7    microgrids. Such programs are not required to be cost
8    effective so long as a goal of the program is to analyze
9    cost effectiveness. The costs to implement, manage, and
10    analyze such programs shall be recovered through delivery
11    service rates.
12    (b) The General Assembly further finds that the expansion
13of distributed generation technologies and devices across the
14State necessarily disrupts existing electricity generation and
15distribution models and frameworks, including related rate and
16tariff schedules, which can lead to inequitable charges,
17especially for low-income customers who often encounter the
18most substantial obstacles to adopting costly distributed
19generation technologies and devices. As a result, the General
20Assembly finds that low-income customers should be included
21within the State's efforts to expand the use of distributed
22generation technologies and devices. To address these issues,
23electric utilities should also be permitted to file revised
24tariffs related to implementing low-income programs, average
25grid impact delivery services charges, and unbundling
26supply-related charges. These changes should be designed to

 

 

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1ensure both an equitable allocation of costs so that no
2customers have to pay more than their fair share of these costs
3and that all costs are recovered, thus ensuring better and more
4equitable access to distributed generation and other energy
5options.
 
6    Section 1.5. Zero emission standard legislative findings.
7The General Assembly finds and declares:
8        (1) Reducing emissions of carbon dioxide and other air
9    pollutants, such as sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides, and
10    particulate matter, is critical to improving air quality in
11    Illinois for Illinois residents.
12        (2) Sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides, and particulate
13    emissions have significant adverse health effects on
14    persons exposed to them, and carbon dioxide emissions
15    result in climate change trends that could significantly
16    adversely impact Illinois.
17        (3) The existing renewable portfolio standard has been
18    successful in promoting the growth of renewable energy
19    generation to reduce air pollution in Illinois. However, to
20    achieve its environmental goals, Illinois must expand its
21    commitment to zero emission energy generation and value the
22    environmental attributes of zero emission generation that
23    currently falls outside the scope of the existing renewable
24    portfolio standard, including, but not limited to, nuclear
25    power.

 

 

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1        (4) Preserving existing zero emission energy
2    generation and promoting new zero emission energy
3    generation is vital to placing the State on a glide path to
4    achieving its environmental goals and ensuring that air
5    quality in Illinois continues to improve.
6        (5) The Illinois Commerce Commission, the Illinois
7    Power Agency, the Illinois Environmental Protection
8    Agency, and the Department of Commerce and Economic
9    Opportunity issued a report dated January 5, 2015 titled
10    "Potential Nuclear Power Plant Closings in Illinois" (the
11    Report), which addressed the issues identified by Illinois
12    House Resolution 1146 of the 98th General Assembly, which,
13    among other things, urged the Illinois Environmental
14    Protection Agency to prepare a report showing how the
15    premature closure of existing nuclear power plants in
16    Illinois will affect the societal cost of increased
17    greenhouse gas emissions based upon the Environmental
18    Protection Agency's published societal cost of greenhouse
19    gases.
20        (6) The Report also included analysis from PJM
21    Interconnection, LLC, which identified significant adverse
22    consequences for electric reliability, including
23    significant voltage and thermal violations in the
24    interstate transmission network, in the event that
25    Illinois' existing nuclear facilities close prematurely.
26    The Report also found that nuclear power plants are among

 

 

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1    the most reliable sources of energy, which means that
2    electricity from nuclear power plants is available on the
3    electric grid all hours of the day and when needed, thereby
4    always reducing carbon emissions.
5        (7) Illinois House Resolution 1146 further urged that
6    the Report make findings concerning potential market-based
7    solutions that will ensure that the premature closure of
8    these nuclear power plants does not occur and that the
9    associated dire consequences to the environment, electric
10    reliability, and the regional economy are averted.
11        (8) The Report identified potential market-based
12    solutions that will ensure that the premature closure of
13    these nuclear power plants does not occur and that the
14    associated dire consequences to the environment, electric
15    reliability, and the regional economy are averted.
16    The General Assembly further finds that the Social Cost of
17Carbon is an appropriate valuation of the environmental
18benefits provided by zero emission facilities, provided that
19the valuation is subject to a price adjustment that can reduce
20the price for zero emission credits below the Social Cost of
21Carbon. This will ensure that the procurement of zero emission
22credits remains affordable for retail customers even if energy
23and capacity prices are projected to rise above 2016 levels
24reflected in the baseline market price index.
25    The General Assembly therefore finds that it is necessary
26to establish and implement a zero emission standard, which will

 

 

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1increase the State's reliance on zero emission energy through
2the procurement of zero emission credits from zero emission
3facilities, in order to achieve the State's environmental
4objectives and reduce the adverse impact of emitted air
5pollutants on the health and welfare of the State's citizens.
 
6    Section 5. The Illinois Power Agency Act is amended by
7changing Sections 1-5, 1-10, 1-20, 1-25, 1-56, and 1-75 as
8follows:
 
9    (20 ILCS 3855/1-5)
10    Sec. 1-5. Legislative declarations and findings. The
11General Assembly finds and declares:
12        (1) The health, welfare, and prosperity of all Illinois
13    citizens require the provision of adequate, reliable,
14    affordable, efficient, and environmentally sustainable
15    electric service at the lowest total cost over time, taking
16    into account any benefits of price stability.
17        (2) (Blank). The transition to retail competition is
18    not complete. Some customers, especially residential and
19    small commercial customers, have failed to benefit from
20    lower electricity costs from retail and wholesale
21    competition.
22        (3) (Blank). Escalating prices for electricity in
23    Illinois pose a serious threat to the economic well-being,
24    health, and safety of the residents of and the commerce and

 

 

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1    industry of the State.
2        (4) It To protect against this threat to economic
3    well-being, health, and safety it is necessary to improve
4    the process of procuring electricity to serve Illinois
5    residents, to promote investment in energy efficiency and
6    demand-response measures, and to maintain and support
7    development of clean coal technologies, generation
8    resources that operate at all hours of the day and under
9    all weather conditions, zero emission facilities, and
10    renewable resources.
11        (5) Procuring a diverse electricity supply portfolio
12    will ensure the lowest total cost over time for adequate,
13    reliable, efficient, and environmentally sustainable
14    electric service.
15        (6) Including cost-effective renewable resources and
16    zero emission credits from zero emission facilities in that
17    portfolio will reduce long-term direct and indirect costs
18    to consumers by decreasing environmental impacts and by
19    avoiding or delaying the need for new generation,
20    transmission, and distribution infrastructure. Developing
21    new renewable energy resources in Illinois, including
22    brownfield solar projects and community solar projects,
23    will help to diversify Illinois electricity supply, avoid
24    and reduce pollution, reduce peak demand, and enhance
25    public health and well-being of Illinois residents.
26        (7) Developing community solar projects in Illinois

 

 

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1    will help to expand access to renewable energy resources to
2    more Illinois residents.
3        (8) Developing brownfield solar projects in Illinois
4    will help return blighted or contaminated land to
5    productive use while enhancing public health and the
6    well-being of Illinois residents.
7        (9) (7) Energy efficiency, demand-response measures,
8    zero emission energy, and renewable energy are resources
9    currently underused in Illinois. These resources should be
10    used, when cost effective, to reduce costs to consumers,
11    improve reliability, and improve environmental quality and
12    public health.
13        (10) (8) The State should encourage the use of advanced
14    clean coal technologies that capture and sequester carbon
15    dioxide emissions to advance environmental protection
16    goals and to demonstrate the viability of coal and
17    coal-derived fuels in a carbon-constrained economy.
18        (11) (9) The General Assembly enacted Public Act
19    96-0795 to reform the State's purchasing processes,
20    recognizing that government procurement is susceptible to
21    abuse if structural and procedural safeguards are not in
22    place to ensure independence, insulation, oversight, and
23    transparency.
24        (12) (10) The principles that underlie the procurement
25    reform legislation apply also in the context of power
26    purchasing.

 

 

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1    The General Assembly therefore finds that it is necessary
2to create the Illinois Power Agency and that the goals and
3objectives of that Agency are to accomplish each of the
4following:
5        (A) Develop electricity procurement plans to ensure
6    adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and
7    environmentally sustainable electric service at the lowest
8    total cost over time, taking into account any benefits of
9    price stability, for electric utilities that on December
10    31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000
11    customers in Illinois and for small multi-jurisdictional
12    electric utilities that (i) on December 31, 2005 served
13    less than 100,000 customers in Illinois and (ii) request a
14    procurement plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load.
15    The procurement plan shall be updated on an annual basis
16    and shall include renewable energy resources and,
17    beginning with the delivery year commencing June 1, 2017,
18    zero emission credits from zero emission facilities
19    sufficient to achieve the standards specified in this Act.
20        (B) Conduct competitive procurement processes to
21    procure the supply resources identified in the procurement
22    plan.
23        (C) Develop electric generation and co-generation
24    facilities that use indigenous coal or renewable
25    resources, or both, financed with bonds issued by the
26    Illinois Finance Authority.

 

 

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1        (D) Supply electricity from the Agency's facilities at
2    cost to one or more of the following: municipal electric
3    systems, governmental aggregators, or rural electric
4    cooperatives in Illinois.
5        (E) Ensure that the process of power procurement is
6    conducted in an ethical and transparent fashion, immune
7    from improper influence.
8        (F) Continue to review its policies and practices to
9    determine how best to meet its mission of providing the
10    lowest cost power to the greatest number of people, at any
11    given point in time, in accordance with applicable law.
12        (G) Operate in a structurally insulated, independent,
13    and transparent fashion so that nothing impedes the
14    Agency's mission to secure power at the best prices the
15    market will bear, provided that the Agency meets all
16    applicable legal requirements.
17        (H) Implement renewable energy procurement and
18    training programs throughout the State to diversify
19    Illinois electricity supply, improve reliability, avoid
20    and reduce pollution, reduce peak demand, and enhance
21    public health and well-being of Illinois residents,
22    including low-income residents.
23(Source: P.A. 97-325, eff. 8-12-11; 97-618, eff. 10-26-11;
2497-813, eff. 7-13-12.)
 
25    (20 ILCS 3855/1-10)

 

 

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1    Sec. 1-10. Definitions.
2    "Agency" means the Illinois Power Agency.
3    "Agency loan agreement" means any agreement pursuant to
4which the Illinois Finance Authority agrees to loan the
5proceeds of revenue bonds issued with respect to a project to
6the Agency upon terms providing for loan repayment installments
7at least sufficient to pay when due all principal of, interest
8and premium, if any, on those revenue bonds, and providing for
9maintenance, insurance, and other matters in respect of the
10project.
11    "Authority" means the Illinois Finance Authority.
12    "Brownfield site photovoltaic project" means photovoltaics
13that are:
14        (1) interconnected to an electric utility as defined in
15    this Section, a municipal utility as defined in this
16    Section, a public utility as defined in Section 3-105 of
17    the Public Utilities Act, or an electric cooperative, as
18    defined in Section 3-119 of the Public Utilities Act; and
19        (2) located at a site that is regulated by any of the
20    following entities under the following programs:
21            (A) the United States Environmental Protection
22        Agency under the federal Comprehensive Environmental
23        Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980, as
24        amended;
25            (B) the United States Environmental Protection
26        Agency under the Corrective Action Program of the

 

 

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1        federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, as
2        amended;
3            (C) the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
4        under the Illinois Site Remediation Program; or
5            (D) the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
6        under the Illinois Solid Waste Program.
7    "Clean coal facility" means an electric generating
8facility that uses primarily coal as a feedstock and that
9captures and sequesters carbon dioxide emissions at the
10following levels: at least 50% of the total carbon dioxide
11emissions that the facility would otherwise emit if, at the
12time construction commences, the facility is scheduled to
13commence operation before 2016, at least 70% of the total
14carbon dioxide emissions that the facility would otherwise emit
15if, at the time construction commences, the facility is
16scheduled to commence operation during 2016 or 2017, and at
17least 90% of the total carbon dioxide emissions that the
18facility would otherwise emit if, at the time construction
19commences, the facility is scheduled to commence operation
20after 2017. The power block of the clean coal facility shall
21not exceed allowable emission rates for sulfur dioxide,
22nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, particulates and mercury for
23a natural gas-fired combined-cycle facility the same size as
24and in the same location as the clean coal facility at the time
25the clean coal facility obtains an approved air permit. All
26coal used by a clean coal facility shall have high volatile

 

 

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1bituminous rank and greater than 1.7 pounds of sulfur per
2million btu content, unless the clean coal facility does not
3use gasification technology and was operating as a conventional
4coal-fired electric generating facility on June 1, 2009 (the
5effective date of Public Act 95-1027).
6    "Clean coal SNG brownfield facility" means a facility that
7(1) has commenced construction by July 1, 2015 on an urban
8brownfield site in a municipality with at least 1,000,000
9residents; (2) uses a gasification process to produce
10substitute natural gas; (3) uses coal as at least 50% of the
11total feedstock over the term of any sourcing agreement with a
12utility and the remainder of the feedstock may be either
13petroleum coke or coal, with all such coal having a high
14bituminous rank and greater than 1.7 pounds of sulfur per
15million Btu content unless the facility reasonably determines
16that it is necessary to use additional petroleum coke to
17deliver additional consumer savings, in which case the facility
18shall use coal for at least 35% of the total feedstock over the
19term of any sourcing agreement; and (4) captures and sequesters
20at least 85% of the total carbon dioxide emissions that the
21facility would otherwise emit.
22    "Clean coal SNG facility" means a facility that uses a
23gasification process to produce substitute natural gas, that
24sequesters at least 90% of the total carbon dioxide emissions
25that the facility would otherwise emit, that uses at least 90%
26coal as a feedstock, with all such coal having a high

 

 

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1bituminous rank and greater than 1.7 pounds of sulfur per
2million btu content, and that has a valid and effective permit
3to construct emission sources and air pollution control
4equipment and approval with respect to the federal regulations
5for Prevention of Significant Deterioration of Air Quality
6(PSD) for the plant pursuant to the federal Clean Air Act;
7provided, however, a clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall
8not be a clean coal SNG facility.
9    "Commission" means the Illinois Commerce Commission.
10    "Community renewable generation project" means an electric
11generating facility that:
12        (1) is powered by wind, solar thermal energy,
13    photovoltaic cells or panels, biodiesel, crops and
14    untreated and unadulterated organic waste biomass, tree
15    waste, and hydropower that does not involve new
16    construction or significant expansion of hydropower dams;
17        (2) is interconnected at the distribution system level
18    of an electric utility as defined in this Section, a
19    municipal utility as defined in this Section, a public
20    utility as defined in Section 3-105 of the Public Utilities
21    Act, or an electric cooperative, as defined in Section
22    3-119 of the Public Utilities Act;
23        (3) credits the value of electricity generated by the
24    facility to the subscribers of the facility; and
25        (4) is limited in nameplate capacity to less than or
26    equal to 2,000 kilowatts.

 

 

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1    "Costs incurred in connection with the development and
2construction of a facility" means:
3        (1) the cost of acquisition of all real property,
4    fixtures, and improvements in connection therewith and
5    equipment, personal property, and other property, rights,
6    and easements acquired that are deemed necessary for the
7    operation and maintenance of the facility;
8        (2) financing costs with respect to bonds, notes, and
9    other evidences of indebtedness of the Agency;
10        (3) all origination, commitment, utilization,
11    facility, placement, underwriting, syndication, credit
12    enhancement, and rating agency fees;
13        (4) engineering, design, procurement, consulting,
14    legal, accounting, title insurance, survey, appraisal,
15    escrow, trustee, collateral agency, interest rate hedging,
16    interest rate swap, capitalized interest, contingency, as
17    required by lenders, and other financing costs, and other
18    expenses for professional services; and
19        (5) the costs of plans, specifications, site study and
20    investigation, installation, surveys, other Agency costs
21    and estimates of costs, and other expenses necessary or
22    incidental to determining the feasibility of any project,
23    together with such other expenses as may be necessary or
24    incidental to the financing, insuring, acquisition, and
25    construction of a specific project and starting up,
26    commissioning, and placing that project in operation.

 

 

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1    "Delivery services" has the same definition as found in
2Section 16-102 of the Public Utilities Act.
3    "Delivery year" means the consecutive 12-month period
4beginning June 1 of a given year and ending May 31 of the
5following year.
6    "Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic
7Opportunity.
8    "Director" means the Director of the Illinois Power Agency.
9    "Demand-response" means measures that decrease peak
10electricity demand or shift demand from peak to off-peak
11periods.
12    "Distributed renewable energy generation device" means a
13device that is:
14        (1) powered by wind, solar thermal energy,
15    photovoltaic cells or and panels, biodiesel, crops and
16    untreated and unadulterated organic waste biomass, tree
17    waste, and hydropower that does not involve new
18    construction or significant expansion of hydropower dams;
19        (2) interconnected at the distribution system level of
20    either an electric utility as defined in this Section, an
21    alternative retail electric supplier as defined in Section
22    16-102 of the Public Utilities Act, a municipal utility as
23    defined in this Section 3-105 of the Public Utilities Act,
24    or a rural electric cooperative as defined in Section 3-119
25    of the Public Utilities Act;
26        (3) located on the customer side of the customer's

 

 

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1    electric meter and is primarily used to offset that
2    customer's electricity load; and
3        (4) limited in nameplate capacity to less than or equal
4    to no more than 2,000 kilowatts.
5    "Energy efficiency" means measures that reduce the amount
6of electricity or natural gas consumed in order required to
7achieve a given end use. "Energy efficiency" includes voltage
8optimization measures that optimize the voltage at points on
9the electric distribution voltage system and thereby reduce
10electricity consumption by electric customers' end use
11devices. "Energy efficiency" also includes measures that
12reduce the total Btus of electricity, and natural gas, and
13other fuels needed to meet the end use or uses.
14    "Electric utility" has the same definition as found in
15Section 16-102 of the Public Utilities Act.
16    "Facility" means an electric generating unit or a
17co-generating unit that produces electricity along with
18related equipment necessary to connect the facility to an
19electric transmission or distribution system.
20    "Governmental aggregator" means one or more units of local
21government that individually or collectively procure
22electricity to serve residential retail electrical loads
23located within its or their jurisdiction.
24    "Local government" means a unit of local government as
25defined in Section 1 of Article VII of the Illinois
26Constitution.

 

 

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1    "Municipality" means a city, village, or incorporated
2town.
3    "Municipal utility" means a public utility owned and
4operated by any subdivision or municipal corporation of this
5State.
6    "Nameplate capacity" means the aggregate inverter
7nameplate capacity in kilowatts AC.
8    "Person" means any natural person, firm, partnership,
9corporation, either domestic or foreign, company, association,
10limited liability company, joint stock company, or association
11and includes any trustee, receiver, assignee, or personal
12representative thereof.
13    "Project" means the planning, bidding, and construction of
14a facility.
15    "Public utility" has the same definition as found in
16Section 3-105 of the Public Utilities Act.
17    "Real property" means any interest in land together with
18all structures, fixtures, and improvements thereon, including
19lands under water and riparian rights, any easements,
20covenants, licenses, leases, rights-of-way, uses, and other
21interests, together with any liens, judgments, mortgages, or
22other claims or security interests related to real property.
23    "Renewable energy credit" means a tradable credit that
24represents the environmental attributes of one megawatt hour a
25certain amount of energy produced from a renewable energy
26resource.

 

 

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1    "Renewable energy resources" includes energy and its
2associated renewable energy credit or renewable energy credits
3from wind, solar thermal energy, photovoltaic cells and panels,
4biodiesel, anaerobic digestion, crops and untreated and
5unadulterated organic waste biomass, tree waste, and
6hydropower that does not involve new construction or
7significant expansion of hydropower dams, and other
8alternative sources of environmentally preferable energy. For
9purposes of this Act, landfill gas produced in the State is
10considered a renewable energy resource. "Renewable energy
11resources" does not include the incineration or burning of
12tires, garbage, general household, institutional, and
13commercial waste, industrial lunchroom or office waste,
14landscape waste other than tree waste, railroad crossties,
15utility poles, or construction or demolition debris, other than
16untreated and unadulterated waste wood.
17    "Retail customer" has the same definition as found in
18Section 16-102 of the Public Utilities Act.
19    "Revenue bond" means any bond, note, or other evidence of
20indebtedness issued by the Authority, the principal and
21interest of which is payable solely from revenues or income
22derived from any project or activity of the Agency.
23    "Sequester" means permanent storage of carbon dioxide by
24injecting it into a saline aquifer, a depleted gas reservoir,
25or an oil reservoir, directly or through an enhanced oil
26recovery process that may involve intermediate storage,

 

 

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1regardless of whether these activities are conducted by a clean
2coal facility, a clean coal SNG facility, a clean coal SNG
3brownfield facility, or a party with which a clean coal
4facility, clean coal SNG facility, or clean coal SNG brownfield
5facility has contracted for such purposes.
6    "Service area" has the same definition as found in Section
716-102 of the Public Utilities Act.
8    "Sourcing agreement" means (i) in the case of an electric
9utility, an agreement between the owner of a clean coal
10facility and such electric utility, which agreement shall have
11terms and conditions meeting the requirements of paragraph (3)
12of subsection (d) of Section 1-75, (ii) in the case of an
13alternative retail electric supplier, an agreement between the
14owner of a clean coal facility and such alternative retail
15electric supplier, which agreement shall have terms and
16conditions meeting the requirements of Section 16-115(d)(5) of
17the Public Utilities Act, and (iii) in case of a gas utility,
18an agreement between the owner of a clean coal SNG brownfield
19facility and the gas utility, which agreement shall have the
20terms and conditions meeting the requirements of subsection
21(h-1) of Section 9-220 of the Public Utilities Act.
22    "Subscriber" means a person who (i) takes delivery service
23from an electric utility, and (ii) has a subscription of no
24less than 200 watts to a community renewable generation project
25that is located in the electric utility's service area. No
26subscriber's subscriptions may total more than 40% of the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 22 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1nameplate capacity of an individual community renewable
2generation project. Entities that are affiliated by virtue of a
3common parent shall not represent multiple subscriptions that
4total more than 40% of the nameplate capacity of an individual
5community renewable generation project.
6    "Subscription" means an interest in a community renewable
7generation project expressed in kilowatts, which is sized
8primarily to offset part or all of the subscriber's electricity
9usage.
10    "Substitute natural gas" or "SNG" means a gas manufactured
11by gasification of hydrocarbon feedstock, which is
12substantially interchangeable in use and distribution with
13conventional natural gas.
14    "Total resource cost test" or "TRC test" means a standard
15that is met if, for an investment in energy efficiency or
16demand-response measures, the benefit-cost ratio is greater
17than one. The benefit-cost ratio is the ratio of the net
18present value of the total benefits of the program to the net
19present value of the total costs as calculated over the
20lifetime of the measures. A total resource cost test compares
21the sum of avoided electric utility costs, representing the
22benefits that accrue to the system and the participant in the
23delivery of those efficiency measures and including avoided
24costs associated with reduced use of natural gas or other
25fuels, avoided costs associated with reduced water
26consumption, and avoided costs associated with reduced

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 23 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1operation and maintenance costs, as well as other quantifiable
2societal benefits, including avoided natural gas utility
3costs, to the sum of all incremental costs of end-use measures
4that are implemented due to the program (including both utility
5and participant contributions), plus costs to administer,
6deliver, and evaluate each demand-side program, to quantify the
7net savings obtained by substituting the demand-side program
8for supply resources. In calculating avoided costs of power and
9energy that an electric utility would otherwise have had to
10acquire, reasonable estimates shall be included of financial
11costs likely to be imposed by future regulations and
12legislation on emissions of greenhouse gases. In discounting
13future societal costs and benefits for the purpose of
14calculating net present values, a societal discount rate based
15on actual, long-term Treasury bond yields should be used.
16Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, the TRC test shall
17not include or take into account a calculation of market price
18suppression effects or demand reduction induced price effects.
19    "Utility-scale solar project" means an electric generating
20facility that:
21        (1) generates electricity using photovoltaic cells;
22    and
23        (2) has a nameplate capacity that is greater than 2,000
24    kilowatts.
25    "Utility-scale wind project" means an electric generating
26facility that:

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 24 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (1) generates electricity using wind; and
2        (2) has a nameplate capacity that is greater than 2,000
3    kilowatts.
4    "Zero emission credit" means a tradable credit that
5represents the environmental attributes of one megawatt hour of
6energy produced from a zero emission facility.
7    "Zero emission facility" means a facility that: (1) is
8fueled by nuclear power; and (2) is interconnected with PJM
9Interconnection, LLC or the Midcontinent Independent System
10Operator, Inc., or their successors.
11(Source: P.A. 97-96, eff. 7-13-11; 97-239, eff. 8-2-11; 97-491,
12eff. 8-22-11; 97-616, eff. 10-26-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12;
1398-90, eff. 7-15-13.)
 
14    (20 ILCS 3855/1-20)
15    Sec. 1-20. General powers of the Agency.
16    (a) The Agency is authorized to do each of the following:
17        (1) Develop electricity procurement plans to ensure
18    adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and
19    environmentally sustainable electric service at the lowest
20    total cost over time, taking into account any benefits of
21    price stability, for electric utilities that on December
22    31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000
23    customers in Illinois and for small multi-jurisdictional
24    electric utilities that (A) on December 31, 2005 served
25    less than 100,000 customers in Illinois and (B) request a

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 25 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    procurement plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load.
2    The electricity procurement plans shall be updated on an
3    annual basis and shall, through May 31, 2017, include
4    electricity generated from renewable resources sufficient
5    to achieve the standards specified in this Act. Beginning
6    with the delivery year commencing June 1, 2017, the
7    electricity procurement plans shall also include
8    electricity generated from zero emission facilities
9    sufficient to achieve the standards specified in this Act.
10        (1.5) Beginning with the delivery year commencing June
11    1, 2017, develop a long-term renewable resources
12    procurement plan in accordance with subsection (c) of
13    Section 1-75 of this Act for renewable energy credits in
14    amounts sufficient to achieve the standards specified in
15    this Act.
16        (2) Conduct competitive procurement processes to
17    procure the supply resources identified in the electricity
18    procurement plan, pursuant to Section 16-111.5 of the
19    Public Utilities Act, and, for the delivery year commencing
20    June 1, 2017, conduct procurement processes to procure zero
21    emission credits from zero emission facilities, under
22    subsection (d-5) of Section 1-75 of this Act.
23        (2.5) Beginning with the 2017 delivery year, conduct
24    competitive procurement processes and implement programs
25    to procure renewable energy credits identified in the
26    long-term renewable resources procurement plan developed

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 26 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    and approved under subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this
2    Act and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
3        (3) Develop electric generation and co-generation
4    facilities that use indigenous coal or renewable
5    resources, or both, financed with bonds issued by the
6    Illinois Finance Authority.
7        (4) Supply electricity from the Agency's facilities at
8    cost to one or more of the following: municipal electric
9    systems, governmental aggregators, or rural electric
10    cooperatives in Illinois.
11    (b) Except as otherwise limited by this Act, the Agency has
12all of the powers necessary or convenient to carry out the
13purposes and provisions of this Act, including without
14limitation, each of the following:
15        (1) To have a corporate seal, and to alter that seal at
16    pleasure, and to use it by causing it or a facsimile to be
17    affixed or impressed or reproduced in any other manner.
18        (2) To use the services of the Illinois Finance
19    Authority necessary to carry out the Agency's purposes.
20        (3) To negotiate and enter into loan agreements and
21    other agreements with the Illinois Finance Authority.
22        (4) To obtain and employ personnel and hire consultants
23    that are necessary to fulfill the Agency's purposes, and to
24    make expenditures for that purpose within the
25    appropriations for that purpose.
26        (5) To purchase, receive, take by grant, gift, devise,

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 27 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    bequest, or otherwise, lease, or otherwise acquire, own,
2    hold, improve, employ, use, and otherwise deal in and with,
3    real or personal property whether tangible or intangible,
4    or any interest therein, within the State.
5        (6) To acquire real or personal property, whether
6    tangible or intangible, including without limitation
7    property rights, interests in property, franchises,
8    obligations, contracts, and debt and equity securities,
9    and to do so by the exercise of the power of eminent domain
10    in accordance with Section 1-21; except that any real
11    property acquired by the exercise of the power of eminent
12    domain must be located within the State.
13        (7) To sell, convey, lease, exchange, transfer,
14    abandon, or otherwise dispose of, or mortgage, pledge, or
15    create a security interest in, any of its assets,
16    properties, or any interest therein, wherever situated.
17        (8) To purchase, take, receive, subscribe for, or
18    otherwise acquire, hold, make a tender offer for, vote,
19    employ, sell, lend, lease, exchange, transfer, or
20    otherwise dispose of, mortgage, pledge, or grant a security
21    interest in, use, and otherwise deal in and with, bonds and
22    other obligations, shares, or other securities (or
23    interests therein) issued by others, whether engaged in a
24    similar or different business or activity.
25        (9) To make and execute agreements, contracts, and
26    other instruments necessary or convenient in the exercise

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 28 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    of the powers and functions of the Agency under this Act,
2    including contracts with any person, including personal
3    service contracts, or with any local government, State
4    agency, or other entity; and all State agencies and all
5    local governments are authorized to enter into and do all
6    things necessary to perform any such agreement, contract,
7    or other instrument with the Agency. No such agreement,
8    contract, or other instrument shall exceed 40 years.
9        (10) To lend money, invest and reinvest its funds in
10    accordance with the Public Funds Investment Act, and take
11    and hold real and personal property as security for the
12    payment of funds loaned or invested.
13        (11) To borrow money at such rate or rates of interest
14    as the Agency may determine, issue its notes, bonds, or
15    other obligations to evidence that indebtedness, and
16    secure any of its obligations by mortgage or pledge of its
17    real or personal property, machinery, equipment,
18    structures, fixtures, inventories, revenues, grants, and
19    other funds as provided or any interest therein, wherever
20    situated.
21        (12) To enter into agreements with the Illinois Finance
22    Authority to issue bonds whether or not the income
23    therefrom is exempt from federal taxation.
24        (13) To procure insurance against any loss in
25    connection with its properties or operations in such amount
26    or amounts and from such insurers, including the federal

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 29 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    government, as it may deem necessary or desirable, and to
2    pay any premiums therefor.
3        (14) To negotiate and enter into agreements with
4    trustees or receivers appointed by United States
5    bankruptcy courts or federal district courts or in other
6    proceedings involving adjustment of debts and authorize
7    proceedings involving adjustment of debts and authorize
8    legal counsel for the Agency to appear in any such
9    proceedings.
10        (15) To file a petition under Chapter 9 of Title 11 of
11    the United States Bankruptcy Code or take other similar
12    action for the adjustment of its debts.
13        (16) To enter into management agreements for the
14    operation of any of the property or facilities owned by the
15    Agency.
16        (17) To enter into an agreement to transfer and to
17    transfer any land, facilities, fixtures, or equipment of
18    the Agency to one or more municipal electric systems,
19    governmental aggregators, or rural electric agencies or
20    cooperatives, for such consideration and upon such terms as
21    the Agency may determine to be in the best interest of the
22    citizens of Illinois.
23        (18) To enter upon any lands and within any building
24    whenever in its judgment it may be necessary for the
25    purpose of making surveys and examinations to accomplish
26    any purpose authorized by this Act.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 30 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (19) To maintain an office or offices at such place or
2    places in the State as it may determine.
3        (20) To request information, and to make any inquiry,
4    investigation, survey, or study that the Agency may deem
5    necessary to enable it effectively to carry out the
6    provisions of this Act.
7        (21) To accept and expend appropriations.
8        (22) To engage in any activity or operation that is
9    incidental to and in furtherance of efficient operation to
10    accomplish the Agency's purposes, including hiring
11    employees that the Director deems essential for the
12    operations of the Agency.
13        (23) To adopt, revise, amend, and repeal rules with
14    respect to its operations, properties, and facilities as
15    may be necessary or convenient to carry out the purposes of
16    this Act, subject to the provisions of the Illinois
17    Administrative Procedure Act and Sections 1-22 and 1-35 of
18    this Act.
19        (24) To establish and collect charges and fees as
20    described in this Act.
21        (25) To conduct competitive gasification feedstock
22    procurement processes to procure the feedstocks for the
23    clean coal SNG brownfield facility in accordance with the
24    requirements of Section 1-78 of this Act.
25        (26) To review, revise, and approve sourcing
26    agreements and mediate and resolve disputes between gas

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 31 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    utilities and the clean coal SNG brownfield facility
2    pursuant to subsection (h-1) of Section 9-220 of the Public
3    Utilities Act.
4        (27) To implement job training programs as described in
5    Section 1-56 of this Act.
6(Source: P.A. 96-784, eff. 8-28-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10;
797-96, eff. 7-13-11; 97-325, eff. 8-12-11; 97-618, eff.
810-26-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12.)
 
9    (20 ILCS 3855/1-25)
10    Sec. 1-25. Agency subject to other laws. Unless otherwise
11stated, the Agency is subject to the provisions of all
12applicable laws, including but not limited to, each of the
13following:
14        (1) The State Records Act.
15        (2) The Illinois Procurement Code, except that the
16    Illinois Procurement Code does not apply to the hiring of
17    procurement administrators, or procurement planning
18    consultants, third-party program managers, or other
19    persons who will implement the programs described in
20    Sections 1-56 and pursuant to Section 1-75 of the Illinois
21    Power Agency Act.
22        (3) The Freedom of Information Act.
23        (4) The State Property Control Act.
24        (5) (Blank).
25        (6) The State Officials and Employees Ethics Act.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 32 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1(Source: P.A. 97-618, eff. 10-26-11.)
 
2    (20 ILCS 3855/1-56)
3    Sec. 1-56. Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy
4Resources Fund; Illinois Solar for All Program.
5    (a) The Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources
6Fund is created as a special fund in the State treasury.
7    (b) The Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources
8Fund shall be administered by the Agency as described in this
9subsection (b).
10        (1) The Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy
11    Resources Fund shall be used to purchase renewable energy
12    credits according to any approved procurement plan
13    developed by the Agency prior to June 1, 2017.
14        (2) The Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy
15    Resources Fund shall also be used to create the Illinois
16    Solar for All Program, which shall include incentives for
17    low-income distributed generation and community solar
18    projects, solar job training programs as described in this
19    subsection (b), and other associated approved
20    expenditures. The objectives of the Illinois Solar for All
21    Program are to bring photovoltaics to low-income
22    communities in this State in a manner that maximizes the
23    development of new photovoltaic generating facilities, to
24    provide workforce development and job training
25    opportunities within low-income communities, to create a

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 33 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    long-term, low-income solar marketplace throughout this
2    State, to integrate with existing energy efficiency
3    initiatives, and to minimize administrative costs. The
4    Agency shall include the Illinois Solar for All Program as
5    part of the long-term renewable resources procurement plan
6    authorized by subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this Act,
7    and the program shall be designed to grow the low-income
8    solar market. The Agency shall purchase renewable energy
9    credits from the (i) photovoltaic distributed renewable
10    energy generation projects and (ii) community solar
11    projects that are approved by the Commission under this
12    subsection (b). The program shall include the following
13    components:
14            (A) Job training: The Illinois Solar for All
15        Program shall include the following job training
16        programs, which the Agency shall procure through
17        contracts and fund in the amounts identified using the
18        monies available in the Illinois Power Agency
19        Renewable Energy Resources Fund, subject to
20        appropriation:
21                (i) Solar Training Pipeline Program:
22            $10,000,000 in programs designed to establish a
23            solar installer training pipeline for the purpose
24            of training participants to work on low-income
25            incentive projects implemented under this
26            subsection (b). The program may include single

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 34 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            event training programs. Solar companies
2            participating under this subsection (b) shall
3            commit to hiring job trainees for installations of
4            projects under this subsection (b). Not-for-profit
5            job training based installation models are exempt
6            from the hiring requirement. The program described
7            in this item (i) shall be designed to ensure that
8            training partners and trainees are located in the
9            same communities that the program aims to serve and
10            that the program provides trainees with the
11            opportunity to obtain real-world experience. The
12            program described in this item (i) shall also be
13            designed to assist trainees so that they can obtain
14            applicable certifications or participate in an
15            apprenticeship program. The program described in
16            this item (i) shall also be designed as a
17            partnership opportunity for existing training
18            programs to offer additional hands-on training
19            experience, including, but not limited to,
20            programs such as union apprenticeships, technical
21            and community colleges, utility training programs,
22            State of Illinois job training programs, or
23            not-for-profit organizations. It is a goal of the
24            program described in this item (i) that at least
25            50% of the trainees in this program come from
26            within environmental justice communities.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 35 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1                (ii) CONSTRUCT Enhancement Program: $2,000,000
2            in programs over a period not to exceed 5 years, to
3            enlarge and enhance job training programs of
4            electric utilities that serve at least 3,000,000
5            retail customers in this State that were being
6            offered as of January 1, 2016. Funding under this
7            item (ii) shall expand these job training programs
8            to include solar-related training opportunities
9            and also to offer these training programs
10            throughout the State. It is a goal of this item
11            (ii) that at least 50% of the trainees in this
12            program come from within environmental justice
13            communities.
14                (iii) Renewable and Energy Efficiency
15            Manufacturing Program: $3,000,000 in job training
16            programs offered to manufacturers, with a
17            preference for programs related to clean energy,
18            renewable energy, and energy efficiency. Funds and
19            programs may be distributed across a period not to
20            exceed 5 years. The Agency shall strive to ensure a
21            geographic balance in the procurement of contracts
22            to ensure a Statewide benefit. It is a goal of this
23            item (iii) that at least 50% of the trainees in
24            this program come from within environmental
25            justice communities.
26                (iv) Solar Training Pilot Program: Under this

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 36 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            program, persons, organizations, governmental
2            entities, not-for-profit organizations, and
3            education facilities can propose pilot or
4            single-event training projects that expand solar
5            training opportunities, which the Agency or
6            administrator, through delegated authority, deems
7            to meet a need that is not being currently served
8            through items (i), (ii), or (iii) of this
9            subparagraph (A) or other training programs not
10            funded under this subsection (b). The program
11            described under this item (iv) may provide grants
12            under this item (iv) to training projects that
13            diversify training opportunities, increase
14            partnerships with community organization or
15            workforce development agencies, increase
16            geographic diversity of trainees served, or
17            increase opportunities to train underserved
18            populations. The Agency or administrator, through
19            delegated authority, shall prioritize funding
20            targeted qualified persons with a record who are
21            transitioning with job training and job placement
22            programs, and programs administered to provide
23            training to individuals who are or were foster
24            children. The Agency or program administrator may
25            develop an incentive to facilitate an increase of
26            hiring of qualified persons with a record and

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 37 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            individuals who are or were foster children, with a
2            goal to achieve 2,000 hires of this type. Funding
3            for this program shall not exceed $5,000,000.
4            The training programs described in this
5        subparagraph (A) shall be provided throughout the
6        State, and administrative costs associated with these
7        training programs shall not exceed 10% of the moneys
8        allocated for these programs. For the purposes of this
9        subparagraph (A), "qualified person with a record"
10        means any person who (1) has been convicted of a crime
11        in this State or of an offense in any other
12        jurisdiction, not including an offense or attempted
13        offense that would subject a person to registration
14        under the Sex Offender Registration Act; (2) has a
15        record of an arrest or an arrest that did not result in
16        conviction for any crime in this State or of an offense
17        in any other jurisdiction; or (3) has a juvenile
18        delinquency adjudication.
19            (B) Programs. The Illinois Solar for All Program
20        shall also include the program offerings described in
21        items (i) through (iv) of this subparagraph (B), which
22        the Agency shall procure through contracts and,
23        subject to appropriation, fund in the amounts
24        identified using monies available in the Illinois
25        Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources Fund, after
26        considering the contracts executed for, and the funds

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 38 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        committed to, the training programs described in
2        subparagraph (A) of this paragraph (2). The monies
3        available shall be allocated among the programs
4        described in this subparagraph (B), as follows: 22.5%
5        of these funds shall be allocated to programs described
6        in item (i) of this subparagraph (B), 37.5% of these
7        funds shall be allocated to programs described in item
8        (ii) of this subparagraph (B), 15% of these funds shall
9        be allocated to programs described in item (iii) of
10        this subparagraph (B), and 25% of these funds, but in
11        no event more than $50,000,000, shall be allocated to
12        programs described in item (iv) of this subparagraph
13        (B). The allocation of funds among items (i), (ii), or
14        (iii) of this subparagraph (B) may be changed if the
15        Agency or administrator, through delegated authority,
16        determines incentives in items (i), (ii), or (iii) of
17        this subparagraph (B) have not been adequately
18        subscribed to fully utilize the Illinois Power Agency
19        Renewable Energy Resources Fund. The determination
20        shall include input through a stakeholder process.
21            The Illinois Solar for All Program shall identify
22        the best method to ensure the wholesale market value of
23        the energy is credited to participating low-income
24        customers or organizations and to ensure tangible
25        economic benefits flow directly to program
26        participants, except in the case of low-income

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 39 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        multi-family housing where the low-income customer
2        does not directly pay for energy. Priority shall be
3        given to projects that demonstrate meaningful
4        involvement of low-income community members in
5        designing the initial proposals. Acceptable proposals
6        to implement projects must demonstrate the applicant's
7        ability to conduct initial community outreach,
8        education, and recruitment of low-income participants
9        in the community. Projects must include job training
10        opportunities.
11                (i) Low-income distributed generation
12            incentive: This program will provide incentives to
13            increase the participation of low-income
14            households in photovoltaic on-site distributed
15            generation. Solar companies participating in this
16            program, and offering the low-income incentive,
17            shall commit to hiring job trainees for a portion
18            of their low-income installations, and an
19            administrator shall facilitate offerings from a
20            variety of job training partners. It is a goal of
21            this program that a minimum of 25% of the
22            incentives for this program be allocated to
23            projects located within environmental justice
24            communities.
25                (ii) Low-Income Community Solar Project
26            Initiative: Incentives shall be offered to

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 40 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            increase the participation of low-income
2            subscribers of community solar projects. The
3            developer of each project shall identify its
4            partnership with community stakeholders regarding
5            the location, development, and participation in
6            the project, provided that nothing shall preclude
7            a project from including an anchor tenant that does
8            not qualify as low-income. Incentives should also
9            be offered to community solar projects that are
10            100% low-income subscriber owned, which includes
11            low-income households, not-for-profit
12            organizations, and affordable housing owners. It
13            is a goal of this program that a minimum of 25% of
14            the incentives for this program be allocated to
15            community photovoltaic projects in environmental
16            justice communities.
17                (iii) Incentives for non-profits and public
18            facilities: A portion of the funds shall be
19            allocated to on-site photovoltaic distributed
20            renewable energy generation device programs to
21            serve the load associated with not-for-profit
22            customers and to photovoltaic distributed
23            renewable energy generation device programs that
24            use photovoltaic technology to serve the load
25            associated with public sector customers taking
26            service at public buildings. Contracts

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 41 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            implementing programs under this item (iii) may
2            require certification that not less than the
3            prevailing wage will be paid to employees who are
4            engaged in construction and installation
5            activities associated with the project. It is a
6            goal of this program that at least 25% of the
7            incentives for this program be allocated to
8            projects located in environmental justice
9            communities. For the purposes of this item (iii),
10            "prevailing wage" shall have the meaning set forth
11            in subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this Act.
12                (iv) Low-Income Community Solar Pilot
13            Projects: Under this program, persons, including,
14            but not limited to, electric utilities, can
15            propose pilot community solar projects. Community
16            solar projects proposed under this item (iv) may
17            exceed 2,000 kilowatts in nameplate capacity, but
18            funds granted per project may not exceed
19            $20,000,000. Proposed pilot projects must result
20            in economic benefits for the members of the
21            community in which the project will be located. The
22            application for project funds, and funding awards,
23            must include a partnership with at least one
24            community-based organization. Approved pilot
25            projects shall be competitively bid by the Agency,
26            subject to fair and equitable guidelines that

 

 

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1            include, but are not limited to, a prohibition on
2            cross-subsidization by other customers. Funding
3            available under this item (iv) may not be
4            distributed solely to a utility, and at least some
5            funds under this item (iv) must include a project
6            partnership including community ownership.
7        "Qualified person", as defined in paragraph (1) of
8    subsection (i) of this Section, does not apply to the
9    Illinois Solar for All Program described in this subsection
10    (b), and the Commission may adopt rules regarding
11    qualifications for installer trainees under subparagraphs
12    (A) and (B) of this paragraph (2) to allow for hands-on
13    training opportunities.
14        (3) Costs associated with the Illinois Solar for All
15    Program and its components described in paragraph (2) of
16    this subsection (b), including, but not limited to, costs
17    associated with procuring experts, consultants, and the
18    program administrator referenced in this subsection (b)
19    and related incremental costs, and costs related to the
20    evaluation of the Illinois Solar for All Program, may be
21    paid for using monies in the Illinois Power Agency
22    Renewable Energy Resources Fund, but the Agency or program
23    administrator shall strive to minimize administrative
24    expenses in the implementation of the program. The Agency
25    shall purchase renewable energy credits through an upfront
26    payment per installed kilowatt of nameplate capacity paid

 

 

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1    once the device is interconnected at the distribution
2    system level of the utility and is energized. The payment
3    shall be in exchange for an assignment of all renewable
4    energy credits generated by the system during the first 15
5    years of operation and shall be structured to overcome
6    barriers to participation in the solar market by the
7    low-income community. The Agency shall ensure
8    collaboration with community agencies, and allocate funds
9    to community-based groups to assist in grassroots
10    education efforts related to the Illinois Solar for All
11    Program. The Agency shall retire any renewable energy
12    credits purchased from this program and the credits shall
13    count towards the obligation under subsection (c) of
14    Section 1-75 of this Act for the electric utility to which
15    the project is interconnected.
16        (4) The Agency shall, consistent with the requirements
17    of this subsection (b), propose the Illinois Solar for All
18    Program terms, conditions, and requirements, including the
19    purchase price of renewable energy credits, through the
20    development, review, and approval of the Agency's
21    long-term renewable resources procurement plan described
22    in subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this Act and Section
23    16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act. In the course of the
24    Commission proceeding initiated to review the
25    implementation of the plan, including the Illinois Solar
26    for All Program proposed by the Agency, a party may propose

 

 

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1    an additional low-income solar, solar job training, or
2    solar incentive program or modifications to the programs
3    proposed by the Agency, and the Commission may approve an
4    additional program, or modifications to the Agency's
5    proposed program, if the additional or modified program
6    more effectively maximizes the benefits to low-income
7    customers after taking into account all relevant factors,
8    including, but not limited to, the extent to which a
9    competitive market for low-income solar has developed.
10    Following the Commission's approval of the Illinois Solar
11    for All Program, the Agency or a party may propose
12    adjustments to the program terms, conditions, and
13    requirements, including the price offered to new systems,
14    to ensure the long-term viability and success of the
15    program. The Commission shall review and approve any
16    modifications to the program through the plan revision
17    process described in Section 16-111.5 of the Public
18    Utilities Act.
19        (5) The Agency shall issue a request for qualifications
20    for a third-party program administrator to administer all
21    or a portion of the Illinois Solar for All Program. The
22    third-party program administrator shall be chosen through
23    a competitive bid process based on selection criteria and
24    requirements developed by the Agency, including, but not
25    limited to, experience in administering low-income energy
26    programs, providing job training opportunities, and

 

 

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1    overseeing statewide clean energy or energy efficiency
2    services. If the Agency retains a program administrator to
3    implement all or a portion of the Illinois Solar for All
4    Program, the administrator shall periodically submit
5    reports to the Agency and Commission for each program that
6    it administers, at appropriate intervals to be identified
7    by the Agency in its long-term renewable resources
8    procurement plan, provided that the reporting interval is
9    at least quarterly.
10        (6) The long-term renewable resources procurement plan
11    shall also provide for an independent evaluation of the
12    Illinois Solar for All Program. At least every 2 years, the
13    Agency shall select an independent evaluator to review and
14    report on the Illinois Solar for All Program and the
15    performance of the third-party program administrator of
16    the Illinois Solar for All Program. The evaluation shall be
17    based on objective criteria developed through a public
18    stakeholder process. The process shall include feedback
19    and participation from Illinois Solar for All Program
20    stakeholders, including participants in environmental
21    justice and historically underserved communities. The
22    report shall include a summary of the evaluation of the
23    Illinois Solar for All Program based on the stakeholder
24    developed objective criteria. The report shall include the
25    number of projects installed; the total installed capacity
26    in kilowatts; the average cost per kilowatt of installed

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 46 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    capacity; the total number of jobs or job training
2    opportunities, and other economic, social, and
3    environmental benefits created; and the total
4    administrative costs expended by the Agency and program
5    administrator to implement and evaluate the program. The
6    report shall be delivered to the Commission and posted on
7    the Agency's website, and shall be used, as needed, to
8    revise the Illinois Solar for All Program. The Commission
9    shall also consider the results of the evaluation as part
10    of its review of the long-term renewable resources
11    procurement plan under subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of
12    this Act.
13        (7) If additional funding for the programs described in
14    this subsection (b) is available under subsection (k) of
15    Section 16-108 of the Public Utilities Act, then the Agency
16    shall submit a procurement plan to the Commission no later
17    than September 1, 2018, that proposes how the Agency will
18    procure programs on behalf of the applicable utility. After
19    notice and hearing, the Commission shall approve, or
20    approve with modification, the plan no later than November
21    1, 2018.
22    As used in this subsection (b), "lower-income households"
23means persons and families whose income does not exceed 80% of
24area median income, adjusted for family size and revised every
255 years.
26    For the purposes of this subsection (b), the Agency shall

 

 

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1define "environmental justice community" as part of program
2development, to ensure, to the extent practicable,
3compatibility with other agencies' definitions.
4    (b-5) After the receipt of all payments required by Section
516-115D of the Public Utilities Act, no additional funds shall
6be deposited into the Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy
7Resources Fund unless directed by order of the Commission.
8    (b-10) After the receipt of all payments required by
9Section 16-115D of the Public Utilities Act and payment in full
10of all contracts executed by the Agency under subsections (b)
11and (i) of this Section, the Illinois Power Agency Renewable
12Energy Resources Fund shall be terminated if the balance of the
13Fund falls below $5,000. Any remaining funds, or funds
14submitted to the Fund after the date that the Fund is
15terminated, shall be transferred to the Low Income Home Energy
16Assistance Program, as authorized by the Energy Assistance Act.
17to procure renewable energy resources. Prior to June 1, 2011,
18resources procured pursuant to this Section shall be procured
19from facilities located in Illinois, provided the resources are
20available from those facilities. If resources are not available
21in Illinois, then they shall be procured in states that adjoin
22Illinois. If resources are not available in Illinois or in
23states that adjoin Illinois, then they may be purchased
24elsewhere. Beginning June 1, 2011, resources procured pursuant
25to this Section shall be procured from facilities located in
26Illinois or states that adjoin Illinois. If resources are not

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 48 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1available in Illinois or in states that adjoin Illinois, then
2they may be procured elsewhere. To the extent available, at
3least 75% of these renewable energy resources shall come from
4wind generation. Of the renewable energy resources procured
5pursuant to this Section at least the following specified
6percentages shall come from photovoltaics on the following
7schedule: 0.5% by June 1, 2012; 1.5% by June 1, 2013; 3% by
8June 1, 2014; and 6% by June 1, 2015 and thereafter. Of the
9renewable energy resources procured pursuant to this Section,
10at least the following percentages shall come from distributed
11renewable energy generation devices: 0.5% by June 1, 2013,
120.75% by June 1, 2014, and 1% by June 1, 2015 and thereafter.
13To the extent available, half of the renewable energy resources
14procured from distributed renewable energy generation shall
15come from devices of less than 25 kilowatts in nameplate
16capacity. Renewable energy resources procured from distributed
17generation devices may also count towards the required
18percentages for wind and solar photovoltaics. Procurement of
19renewable energy resources from distributed renewable energy
20generation devices shall be done on an annual basis through
21multi-year contracts of no less than 5 years, and shall consist
22solely of renewable energy credits.
23    The Agency shall create credit requirements for suppliers
24of distributed renewable energy. In order to minimize the
25administrative burden on contracting entities, the Agency
26shall solicit the use of third-party organizations to aggregate

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 49 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1distributed renewable energy into groups of no less than one
2megawatt in installed capacity. These third-party
3organizations shall administer contracts with individual
4distributed renewable energy generation device owners. An
5individual distributed renewable energy generation device
6owner shall have the ability to measure the output of his or
7her distributed renewable energy generation device.
8    (c) (Blank). The Agency shall procure renewable energy
9resources at least once each year in conjunction with a
10procurement event for electric utilities required to comply
11with Section 1-75 of the Act and shall, whenever possible,
12enter into long-term contracts on an annual basis for a portion
13of the incremental requirement for the given procurement year.
14    (d) (Blank). The price paid to procure renewable energy
15credits using monies from the Illinois Power Agency Renewable
16Energy Resources Fund shall not exceed the winning bid prices
17paid for like resources procured for electric utilities
18required to comply with Section 1-75 of this Act.
19    (e) All renewable energy credits procured using monies from
20the Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources Fund shall
21be permanently retired.
22    (f) The selection of the third-party program manager or
23managers, the selection of the independent evaluator, and the
24procurement process described in this Section are exempt from
25the requirements of the Illinois Procurement Code, under
26Section 20-10 of that Code. The procurement process described

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 50 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1in this Section is exempt from the requirements of the Illinois
2Procurement Code, pursuant to Section 20-10 of that Code.
3    (g) All disbursements from the Illinois Power Agency
4Renewable Energy Resources Fund shall be made only upon
5warrants of the Comptroller drawn upon the Treasurer as
6custodian of the Fund upon vouchers signed by the Director or
7by the person or persons designated by the Director for that
8purpose. The Comptroller is authorized to draw the warrant upon
9vouchers so signed. The Treasurer shall accept all warrants so
10signed and shall be released from liability for all payments
11made on those warrants.
12    (h) The Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources
13Fund shall not be subject to sweeps, administrative charges, or
14chargebacks, including, but not limited to, those authorized
15under Section 8h of the State Finance Act, that would in any
16way result in the transfer of any funds from this Fund to any
17other fund of this State or in having any such funds utilized
18for any purpose other than the express purposes set forth in
19this Section.
20    (h-5) The Agency may assess fees to each bidder to recover
21the costs incurred in connection with a procurement process
22held under this Section.
23    (i) Supplemental procurement process.
24        (1) Within 90 days after the effective date of this
25    amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, the Agency
26    shall develop a one-time supplemental procurement plan

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 51 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    limited to the procurement of renewable energy credits, if
2    available, from new or existing photovoltaics, including,
3    but not limited to, distributed photovoltaic generation.
4    Nothing in this subsection (i) requires procurement of wind
5    generation through the supplemental procurement.
6        Renewable energy credits procured from new
7    photovoltaics, including, but not limited to, distributed
8    photovoltaic generation, under this subsection (i) must be
9    procured from devices installed by a qualified person. In
10    its supplemental procurement plan, the Agency shall
11    establish contractually enforceable mechanisms for
12    ensuring that the installation of new photovoltaics is
13    performed by a qualified person.
14        For the purposes of this paragraph (1), "qualified
15    person" means a person who performs installations of
16    photovoltaics, including, but not limited to, distributed
17    photovoltaic generation, and who: (A) has completed an
18    apprenticeship as a journeyman electrician from a United
19    States Department of Labor registered electrical
20    apprenticeship and training program and received a
21    certification of satisfactory completion; or (B) does not
22    currently meet the criteria under clause (A) of this
23    paragraph (1), but is enrolled in a United States
24    Department of Labor registered electrical apprenticeship
25    program, provided that the person is directly supervised by
26    a person who meets the criteria under clause (A) of this

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 52 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    paragraph (1); or (C) has obtained one of the following
2    credentials in addition to attesting to satisfactory
3    completion of at least 5 years or 8,000 hours of documented
4    hands-on electrical experience: (i) a North American Board
5    of Certified Energy Practitioners (NABCEP) Installer
6    Certificate for Solar PV; (ii) an Underwriters
7    Laboratories (UL) PV Systems Installer Certificate; (iii)
8    an Electronics Technicians Association, International
9    (ETAI) Level 3 PV Installer Certificate; or (iv) an
10    Associate in Applied Science degree from an Illinois
11    Community College Board approved community college program
12    in renewable energy or a distributed generation
13    technology.
14        For the purposes of this paragraph (1), "directly
15    supervised" means that there is a qualified person who
16    meets the qualifications under clause (A) of this paragraph
17    (1) and who is available for supervision and consultation
18    regarding the work performed by persons under clause (B) of
19    this paragraph (1), including a final inspection of the
20    installation work that has been directly supervised to
21    ensure safety and conformity with applicable codes.
22        For the purposes of this paragraph (1), "install" means
23    the major activities and actions required to connect, in
24    accordance with applicable building and electrical codes,
25    the conductors, connectors, and all associated fittings,
26    devices, power outlets, or apparatuses mounted at the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 53 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    premises that are directly involved in delivering energy to
2    the premises' electrical wiring from the photovoltaics,
3    including, but not limited to, to distributed photovoltaic
4    generation.
5        The renewable energy credits procured pursuant to the
6    supplemental procurement plan shall be procured using up to
7    $30,000,000 from the Illinois Power Agency Renewable
8    Energy Resources Fund. The Agency shall not plan to use
9    funds from the Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy
10    Resources Fund in excess of the monies on deposit in such
11    fund or projected to be deposited into such fund. The
12    supplemental procurement plan shall ensure adequate,
13    reliable, affordable, efficient, and environmentally
14    sustainable renewable energy resources (including credits)
15    at the lowest total cost over time, taking into account any
16    benefits of price stability.
17        To the extent available, 50% of the renewable energy
18    credits procured from distributed renewable energy
19    generation shall come from devices of less than 25
20    kilowatts in nameplate capacity. Procurement of renewable
21    energy credits from distributed renewable energy
22    generation devices shall be done through multi-year
23    contracts of no less than 5 years. The Agency shall create
24    credit requirements for counterparties. In order to
25    minimize the administrative burden on contracting
26    entities, the Agency shall solicit the use of third parties

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 54 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    to aggregate distributed renewable energy. These third
2    parties shall enter into and administer contracts with
3    individual distributed renewable energy generation device
4    owners. An individual distributed renewable energy
5    generation device owner shall have the ability to measure
6    the output of his or her distributed renewable energy
7    generation device.
8        In developing the supplemental procurement plan, the
9    Agency shall hold at least one workshop open to the public
10    within 90 days after the effective date of this amendatory
11    Act of the 98th General Assembly and shall consider any
12    comments made by stakeholders or the public. Upon
13    development of the supplemental procurement plan within
14    this 90-day period, copies of the supplemental procurement
15    plan shall be posted and made publicly available on the
16    Agency's and Commission's websites. All interested parties
17    shall have 14 days following the date of posting to provide
18    comment to the Agency on the supplemental procurement plan.
19    All comments submitted to the Agency shall be specific,
20    supported by data or other detailed analyses, and, if
21    objecting to all or a portion of the supplemental
22    procurement plan, accompanied by specific alternative
23    wording or proposals. All comments shall be posted on the
24    Agency's and Commission's websites. Within 14 days
25    following the end of the 14-day review period, the Agency
26    shall revise the supplemental procurement plan as

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 55 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    necessary based on the comments received and file its
2    revised supplemental procurement plan with the Commission
3    for approval.
4        (2) Within 5 days after the filing of the supplemental
5    procurement plan at the Commission, any person objecting to
6    the supplemental procurement plan shall file an objection
7    with the Commission. Within 10 days after the filing, the
8    Commission shall determine whether a hearing is necessary.
9    The Commission shall enter its order confirming or
10    modifying the supplemental procurement plan within 90 days
11    after the filing of the supplemental procurement plan by
12    the Agency.
13        (3) The Commission shall approve the supplemental
14    procurement plan of renewable energy credits to be procured
15    from new or existing photovoltaics, including, but not
16    limited to, distributed photovoltaic generation, if the
17    Commission determines that it will ensure adequate,
18    reliable, affordable, efficient, and environmentally
19    sustainable electric service in the form of renewable
20    energy credits at the lowest total cost over time, taking
21    into account any benefits of price stability.
22        (4) The supplemental procurement process under this
23    subsection (i) shall include each of the following
24    components:
25            (A) Procurement administrator. The Agency may
26        retain a procurement administrator in the manner set

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 56 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        forth in item (2) of subsection (a) of Section 1-75 of
2        this Act to conduct the supplemental procurement or may
3        elect to use the same procurement administrator
4        administering the Agency's annual procurement under
5        Section 1-75.
6            (B) Procurement monitor. The procurement monitor
7        retained by the Commission pursuant to Section
8        16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act shall:
9                (i) monitor interactions among the procurement
10            administrator and bidders and suppliers;
11                (ii) monitor and report to the Commission on
12            the progress of the supplemental procurement
13            process;
14                (iii) provide an independent confidential
15            report to the Commission regarding the results of
16            the procurement events;
17                (iv) assess compliance with the procurement
18            plan approved by the Commission for the
19            supplemental procurement process;
20                (v) preserve the confidentiality of supplier
21            and bidding information in a manner consistent
22            with all applicable laws, rules, regulations, and
23            tariffs;
24                (vi) provide expert advice to the Commission
25            and consult with the procurement administrator
26            regarding issues related to procurement process

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 57 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            design, rules, protocols, and policy-related
2            matters;
3                (vii) consult with the procurement
4            administrator regarding the development and use of
5            benchmark criteria, standard form contracts,
6            credit policies, and bid documents; and
7                (viii) perform, with respect to the
8            supplemental procurement process, any other
9            procurement monitor duties specifically delineated
10            within subsection (i) of this Section.
11            (C) Solicitation, pre-qualification, and
12        registration of bidders. The procurement administrator
13        shall disseminate information to potential bidders to
14        promote a procurement event, notify potential bidders
15        that the procurement administrator may enter into a
16        post-bid price negotiation with bidders that meet the
17        applicable benchmarks, provide supply requirements,
18        and otherwise explain the competitive procurement
19        process. In addition to such other publication as the
20        procurement administrator determines is appropriate,
21        this information shall be posted on the Agency's and
22        the Commission's websites. The procurement
23        administrator shall also administer the
24        prequalification process, including evaluation of
25        credit worthiness, compliance with procurement rules,
26        and agreement to the standard form contract developed

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 58 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        pursuant to item (D) of this paragraph (4). The
2        procurement administrator shall then identify and
3        register bidders to participate in the procurement
4        event.
5            (D) Standard contract forms and credit terms and
6        instruments. The procurement administrator, in
7        consultation with the Agency, the Commission, and
8        other interested parties and subject to Commission
9        oversight, shall develop and provide standard contract
10        forms for the supplier contracts that meet generally
11        accepted industry practices as well as include any
12        applicable State of Illinois terms and conditions that
13        are required for contracts entered into by an agency of
14        the State of Illinois. Standard credit terms and
15        instruments that meet generally accepted industry
16        practices shall be similarly developed. Contracts for
17        new photovoltaics shall include a provision attesting
18        that the supplier will use a qualified person for the
19        installation of the device pursuant to paragraph (1) of
20        subsection (i) of this Section. The procurement
21        administrator shall make available to the Commission
22        all written comments it receives on the contract forms,
23        credit terms, or instruments. If the procurement
24        administrator cannot reach agreement with the parties
25        as to the contract terms and conditions, the
26        procurement administrator must notify the Commission

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 59 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        of any disputed terms and the Commission shall resolve
2        the dispute. The terms of the contracts shall not be
3        subject to negotiation by winning bidders, and the
4        bidders must agree to the terms of the contract in
5        advance so that winning bids are selected solely on the
6        basis of price.
7            (E) Requests for proposals; competitive
8        procurement process. The procurement administrator
9        shall design and issue requests for proposals to supply
10        renewable energy credits in accordance with the
11        supplemental procurement plan, as approved by the
12        Commission. The requests for proposals shall set forth
13        a procedure for sealed, binding commitment bidding
14        with pay-as-bid settlement, and provision for
15        selection of bids on the basis of price, provided,
16        however, that no bid shall be accepted if it exceeds
17        the benchmark developed pursuant to item (F) of this
18        paragraph (4).
19            (F) Benchmarks. Benchmarks for each product to be
20        procured shall be developed by the procurement
21        administrator in consultation with Commission staff,
22        the Agency, and the procurement monitor for use in this
23        supplemental procurement.
24            (G) A plan for implementing contingencies in the
25        event of supplier default, Commission rejection of
26        results, or any other cause.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 60 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (5) Within 2 business days after opening the sealed
2    bids, the procurement administrator shall submit a
3    confidential report to the Commission. The report shall
4    contain the results of the bidding for each of the products
5    along with the procurement administrator's recommendation
6    for the acceptance and rejection of bids based on the price
7    benchmark criteria and other factors observed in the
8    process. The procurement monitor also shall submit a
9    confidential report to the Commission within 2 business
10    days after opening the sealed bids. The report shall
11    contain the procurement monitor's assessment of bidder
12    behavior in the process as well as an assessment of the
13    procurement administrator's compliance with the
14    procurement process and rules. The Commission shall review
15    the confidential reports submitted by the procurement
16    administrator and procurement monitor and shall accept or
17    reject the recommendations of the procurement
18    administrator within 2 business days after receipt of the
19    reports.
20        (6) Within 3 business days after the Commission
21    decision approving the results of a procurement event, the
22    Agency shall enter into binding contractual arrangements
23    with the winning suppliers using the standard form
24    contracts.
25        (7) The names of the successful bidders and the average
26    of the winning bid prices for each contract type and for

 

 

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1    each contract term shall be made available to the public
2    within 2 days after the supplemental procurement event. The
3    Commission, the procurement monitor, the procurement
4    administrator, the Agency, and all participants in the
5    procurement process shall maintain the confidentiality of
6    all other supplier and bidding information in a manner
7    consistent with all applicable laws, rules, regulations,
8    and tariffs. Confidential information, including the
9    confidential reports submitted by the procurement
10    administrator and procurement monitor pursuant to this
11    Section, shall not be made publicly available and shall not
12    be discoverable by any party in any proceeding, absent a
13    compelling demonstration of need, nor shall those reports
14    be admissible in any proceeding other than one for law
15    enforcement purposes.
16        (8) The supplemental procurement provided in this
17    subsection (i) shall not be subject to the requirements and
18    limitations of subsections (c) and (d) of this Section.
19        (9) Expenses incurred in connection with the
20    procurement process held pursuant to this Section,
21    including, but not limited to, the cost of developing the
22    supplemental procurement plan, the procurement
23    administrator, procurement monitor, and the cost of the
24    retirement of renewable energy credits purchased pursuant
25    to the supplemental procurement shall be paid for from the
26    Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources Fund. The

 

 

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1    Agency shall enter into an interagency agreement with the
2    Commission to reimburse the Commission for its costs
3    associated with the procurement monitor for the
4    supplemental procurement process.
5(Source: P.A. 97-616, eff. 10-26-11; 98-672, eff. 6-30-14.)
 
6    (20 ILCS 3855/1-75)
7    Sec. 1-75. Planning and Procurement Bureau. The Planning
8and Procurement Bureau has the following duties and
9responsibilities:
10    (a) The Planning and Procurement Bureau shall each year,
11beginning in 2008, develop procurement plans and conduct
12competitive procurement processes in accordance with the
13requirements of Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act
14for the eligible retail customers of electric utilities that on
15December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000
16customers in Illinois. Beginning with the delivery year
17commencing on June 1, 2017, the Planning and Procurement Bureau
18shall develop plans and processes for the procurement of zero
19emission credits from zero emission facilities under
20subsection (d-5) of this Section for all of the utilities'
21retail customers. The Planning and Procurement Bureau shall
22also develop procurement plans and conduct competitive
23procurement processes in accordance with the requirements of
24Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act for the eligible
25retail customers of small multi-jurisdictional electric

 

 

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1utilities that (i) on December 31, 2005 served less than
2100,000 customers in Illinois and (ii) request a procurement
3plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load. This Section shall
4not apply to a small multi-jurisdictional utility until such
5time as a small multi-jurisdictional utility requests the
6Agency to prepare a procurement plan for their Illinois
7jurisdictional load. For the purposes of this Section, the term
8"eligible retail customers" has the same definition as found in
9Section 16-111.5(a) of the Public Utilities Act.
10    Beginning with the planning process for the plan or plans
11to be implemented in the 2017 delivery year, the Agency shall
12no longer include the procurement of renewable energy resources
13in the annual procurement plans required by this subsection (a)
14and shall instead develop a long-term renewable resources
15procurement plan in accordance with subsection (c) of this
16Section and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
17    Notwithstanding the provisions of this Act or the Public
18Utilities Act, the Planning and Procurement Bureau shall for
19each year, beginning with the delivery year commencing June 1,
202018, conduct competitive procurement processes in accordance
21with Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, the results
22of which shall be subject to approval of the Commission,
23through which electric utilities that serve less than 3,000,000
24retail customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in this
25State shall procure capacity required for all of the electric
26utility's retail customers that are located in the Applicable

 

 

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1Local Resource Zone of the Midcontinent Independent System
2Operator, Inc., or its successor. For purposes of this Section,
3"Local Resource Zone" shall have the meaning set forth in the
4open access transmission and energy markets tariff of the
5Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., or its
6successor, as such tariff may be updated from time to time, and
7Applicable Local Resource Zone means the Local Resource Zone or
8Zones within Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc.,
9or its successor, that incorporates all retail customers of
10electric utilities that serve less than 3,000,000 retail
11customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in this State.
12        (1) The Agency shall each year, beginning in 2008, as
13    needed, issue a request for qualifications for experts or
14    expert consulting firms to develop the procurement plans in
15    accordance with Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
16    Act. In order to qualify an expert or expert consulting
17    firm must have:
18            (A) direct previous experience assembling
19        large-scale power supply plans or portfolios for
20        end-use customers;
21            (B) an advanced degree in economics, mathematics,
22        engineering, risk management, or a related area of
23        study;
24            (C) 10 years of experience in the electricity
25        sector, including managing supply risk;
26            (D) expertise in wholesale electricity market

 

 

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1        rules, including those established by the Federal
2        Energy Regulatory Commission and regional transmission
3        organizations;
4            (E) expertise in credit protocols and familiarity
5        with contract protocols;
6            (F) adequate resources to perform and fulfill the
7        required functions and responsibilities; and
8            (G) the absence of a conflict of interest and
9        inappropriate bias for or against potential bidders or
10        the affected electric utilities.
11        (2) The Agency shall each year, as needed, issue a
12    request for qualifications for a procurement administrator
13    to conduct the competitive procurement processes in
14    accordance with Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
15    Act. In order to qualify an expert or expert consulting
16    firm must have:
17            (A) direct previous experience administering a
18        large-scale competitive procurement process;
19            (B) an advanced degree in economics, mathematics,
20        engineering, or a related area of study;
21            (C) 10 years of experience in the electricity
22        sector, including risk management experience;
23            (D) expertise in wholesale electricity market
24        rules, including those established by the Federal
25        Energy Regulatory Commission and regional transmission
26        organizations;

 

 

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1            (E) expertise in credit and contract protocols;
2            (F) adequate resources to perform and fulfill the
3        required functions and responsibilities; and
4            (G) the absence of a conflict of interest and
5        inappropriate bias for or against potential bidders or
6        the affected electric utilities.
7        (3) The Agency shall provide affected utilities and
8    other interested parties with the lists of qualified
9    experts or expert consulting firms identified through the
10    request for qualifications processes that are under
11    consideration to develop the procurement plans and to serve
12    as the procurement administrator. The Agency shall also
13    provide each qualified expert's or expert consulting
14    firm's response to the request for qualifications. All
15    information provided under this subparagraph shall also be
16    provided to the Commission. The Agency may provide by rule
17    for fees associated with supplying the information to
18    utilities and other interested parties. These parties
19    shall, within 5 business days, notify the Agency in writing
20    if they object to any experts or expert consulting firms on
21    the lists. Objections shall be based on:
22            (A) failure to satisfy qualification criteria;
23            (B) identification of a conflict of interest; or
24            (C) evidence of inappropriate bias for or against
25        potential bidders or the affected utilities.
26        The Agency shall remove experts or expert consulting

 

 

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1    firms from the lists within 10 days if there is a
2    reasonable basis for an objection and provide the updated
3    lists to the affected utilities and other interested
4    parties. If the Agency fails to remove an expert or expert
5    consulting firm from a list, an objecting party may seek
6    review by the Commission within 5 days thereafter by filing
7    a petition, and the Commission shall render a ruling on the
8    petition within 10 days. There is no right of appeal of the
9    Commission's ruling.
10        (4) The Agency shall issue requests for proposals to
11    the qualified experts or expert consulting firms to develop
12    a procurement plan for the affected utilities and to serve
13    as procurement administrator.
14        (5) The Agency shall select an expert or expert
15    consulting firm to develop procurement plans based on the
16    proposals submitted and shall award contracts of up to 5
17    years to those selected.
18        (6) The Agency shall select an expert or expert
19    consulting firm, with approval of the Commission, to serve
20    as procurement administrator based on the proposals
21    submitted. If the Commission rejects, within 5 days, the
22    Agency's selection, the Agency shall submit another
23    recommendation within 3 days based on the proposals
24    submitted. The Agency shall award a 5-year contract to the
25    expert or expert consulting firm so selected with
26    Commission approval.

 

 

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1    (b) The experts or expert consulting firms retained by the
2Agency shall, as appropriate, prepare procurement plans, and
3conduct a competitive procurement process as prescribed in
4Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, to ensure
5adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and environmentally
6sustainable electric service at the lowest total cost over
7time, taking into account any benefits of price stability, for
8the applicable eligible retail customers of electric utilities
9that on December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least
10100,000 customers in the State of Illinois, and for eligible
11Illinois retail customers of small multi-jurisdictional
12electric utilities that (i) on December 31, 2005 served less
13than 100,000 customers in Illinois and (ii) request a
14procurement plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load.
15    (c) Renewable portfolio standard.
16        (1)(A) The Agency shall develop a long-term renewable
17    resources procurement plan that shall include procurement
18    programs and competitive procurement events necessary to
19    meet the goals set forth in this subsection (c). The
20    initial long-term renewable resources procurement plan
21    shall be released for comment no later than 120 days after
22    the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th
23    General Assembly. The Agency shall review, and may revise
24    on an expedited basis, the long-term renewable resources
25    procurement plan at least every 2 years, which shall be
26    conducted in conjunction with the procurement process

 

 

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1    under Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act to the
2    extent practicable to minimize administrative expense. The
3    long-term renewable resources procurement plans shall be
4    subject to review and approval by the Commission under
5    Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
6        (B) Subject to subparagraph (F) of this paragraph (1),
7    the long-term renewable resources procurement plan shall
8    include the procurement of renewable energy credits to meet
9    at least the following overall percentages: 13% by the 2017
10    delivery year; increasing by at least 1.5% each delivery
11    year thereafter to at least 25% by the 2025 delivery year;
12    and continuing at no less than 25% for each delivery year
13    thereafter. In the event of a conflict between these goals
14    and the new wind and new photovoltaic procurement
15    requirements described in items (i) through (iii) of
16    subparagraph (C) of this paragraph (1), the long-term plan
17    shall prioritize compliance with the new wind and new
18    photovoltaic procurement requirements described in items
19    (i) through (iii) of subparagraph (C) of this paragraph (1)
20    over the annual percentage targets described in this
21    subparagraph (B).
22    For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2017, the
23procurement plan shall include cost-effective renewable energy
24resources equal to at least 13% of each utility's load for
25eligible retail customers and 13% of the applicable portion of
26each utility's load for retail customers who are not eligible

 

 

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1retail customers, which applicable portion shall equal 50% of
2the utility's load for retail customers who are not eligible
3retail customers on February 28, 2017.
4    For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2018, the
5procurement plan shall include cost-effective renewable energy
6resources equal to at least 14.5% of each utility's load for
7eligible retail customers and 14.5% of the applicable portion
8of each utility's load for retail customers who are not
9eligible retail customers, which applicable portion shall
10equal 75% of the utility's load for retail customers who are
11not eligible retail customers on February 28, 2017.
12    For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2019, and for each
13year thereafter, the procurement plans shall include
14cost-effective renewable energy resources equal to a minimum
15percentage of each utility's load for all retail customers as
16follows: 16% by June 1, 2019; increasing by 1.5% each year
17thereafter to 25% by June 1, 2025; and 25% by June 1, 2026 and
18each year thereafter.
19        For each delivery year, the Agency shall first
20    recognize each utility's obligations for that delivery
21    year under existing contracts. Any renewable energy
22    credits under existing contracts, including renewable
23    energy credits as part of renewable energy resources, shall
24    be used to meet the goals set forth in this subsection (c)
25    for the delivery year.
26        (C) Of the renewable energy credits procured under this

 

 

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1    subsection (c), at least 75% shall come from wind and
2    photovoltaic projects. The long-term renewable resources
3    procurement plan described in subparagraph (A) of this
4    paragraph (1) shall include the procurement of renewable
5    energy credits in amounts equal to at least the following:
6            (i) By the end of the 2020 delivery year:
7                At least 2,000,000 renewable energy credits
8            for each delivery year shall come from new wind
9            projects; and
10                At least 2,000,000 renewable energy credits
11            for each delivery year shall come from new
12            photovoltaic projects; of that amount, to the
13            extent possible, the Agency shall procure: at
14            least 50% from solar photovoltaic projects using
15            the program outlined in subparagraph (K) of this
16            paragraph (1) from distributed renewable energy
17            generation devices or community renewable
18            generation projects; at least 40% from
19            utility-scale solar projects; at least 2% from
20            brownfield site photovoltaic projects that are not
21            community renewable generation projects; and the
22            remainder shall be determined through the
23            long-term planning process described in
24            subparagraph (A) of this paragraph (1).
25            (ii) By the end of the 2025 delivery year:
26                At least 3,000,000 renewable energy credits

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 72 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            for each delivery year shall come from new wind
2            projects; and
3                At least 3,000,000 renewable energy credits
4            for each delivery year shall come from new
5            photovoltaic projects; of that amount, to the
6            extent possible, the Agency shall procure: at
7            least 50% from solar photovoltaic projects using
8            the program outlined in subparagraph (K) of this
9            paragraph (1) from distributed renewable energy
10            devices or community renewable generation
11            projects; at least 40% from utility-scale solar
12            projects; at least 2% from brownfield site
13            photovoltaic projects that are not community
14            renewable generation projects; and the remainder
15            shall be determined through the long-term planning
16            process described in subparagraph (A) of this
17            paragraph (1).
18            (iii) By the end of the 2030 delivery year:
19                At least 4,000,000 renewable energy credits
20            for each delivery year shall come from new wind
21            projects; and
22                At least 4,000,000 renewable energy credits
23            for each delivery year shall come from new
24            photovoltaic projects; of that amount, to the
25            extent possible, the Agency shall procure: at
26            least 50% from solar photovoltaic projects using

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 73 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            the program outlined in subparagraph (K) of this
2            paragraph (1) from distributed renewable energy
3            devices or community renewable generation
4            projects; at least 40% from utility-scale solar
5            projects; at least 2% from brownfield site
6            photovoltaic projects that are not community
7            renewable generation projects; and the remainder
8            shall be determined through the long-term planning
9            process described in subparagraph (A) of this
10            paragraph (1).
11            For purposes of this Section:
12                "New wind projects" means wind renewable
13            energy facilities that are energized after June 1,
14            2017 for the delivery year commencing June 1, 2017
15            or within 3 years after the date the Commission
16            approves contracts for subsequent delivery years.
17            For projects located within Illinois, the owner of
18            the new wind project must certify that not less
19            than the prevailing wage was or will be paid to
20            employees who are engaged in construction
21            activities associated with the project.
22                "New photovoltaic projects" means photovoltaic
23            renewable energy facilities that are energized
24            after June 1, 2017. For projects over 1,000
25            kilowatts in nameplate capacity, the owner of the
26            new photovoltaic project must certify that not

 

 

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1            less than the prevailing wage was or will be paid
2            to employees who are engaged in construction
3            activities associated with the project.
4            Photovoltaic projects developed under Section 1-56
5            of this Act shall not apply towards the new
6            photovoltaic project requirements in this
7            subparagraph (C).
8                "Prevailing wage" has the same definition as
9            in subparagraph (F) of paragraph (3) of subsection
10            (a) of Section 5.5 of the Illinois Enterprise Zone
11            Act.
12        (D) Renewable energy credits shall be cost effective.
13    For purposes of this subsection (c), "cost effective" means
14    that the costs of procuring renewable energy resources do
15    not cause the limit stated in subparagraph (E) of this
16    paragraph (1) to be exceeded and, for renewable energy
17    credits procured through a competitive procurement event,
18    do not exceed benchmarks based on market prices for like
19    products in the region. For purposes of this subsection
20    (c), "like products" means contracts for renewable energy
21    credits from the same technology, same vintage (new or
22    existing), the same or substantially similar quantity, and
23    the same or substantially similar contract length and
24    structure. Benchmarks shall be developed by the
25    procurement administrator, in consultation with the
26    Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 75 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    monitor and shall be subject to Commission review and
2    approval. If price benchmarks for like products in the
3    region are not available, the procurement administrator
4    shall establish price benchmarks based on publicly
5    available data on regional technology costs and expected
6    current and future regional energy prices. The benchmarks
7    in this Section shall not be used to curtail or otherwise
8    reduce contractual obligations entered into by or through
9    the Agency prior to the effective date of this amendatory
10    Act of the 99th General Assembly.
11        (E) For purposes of this subsection (c), the required
12    procurement of cost-effective renewable energy resources
13    for a particular year commencing prior to June 1, 2017
14    shall be measured as a percentage of the actual amount of
15    electricity (megawatt-hours) supplied by the electric
16    utility to eligible retail customers in the delivery year
17    ending immediately prior to the procurement, and, for
18    delivery years commencing on and after June 1, 2017, the
19    required procurement of cost-effective renewable energy
20    resources for a particular year shall be measured as a
21    percentage of the actual amount of electricity
22    (megawatt-hours) delivered by the electric utility in the
23    delivery year ending immediately prior to the procurement,
24    to all retail customers in its service territory. For
25    purposes of this subsection (c), the amount paid per
26    kilowatthour means the total amount paid for electric

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 76 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For purposes
2    of this subsection (c), the total amount paid for electric
3    service includes without limitation amounts paid for
4    supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges, and add-on
5    taxes.
6        Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
7    (c), the total of renewable energy resources procured under
8    the procurement plan for any single year shall be subject
9    to the limitations of this subparagraph (E). Such
10    procurement shall be reduced for all retail customers based
11    on the amount necessary to limit the annual estimated
12    average net increase due to the costs of these resources
13    included in the amounts paid by eligible retail customers
14    in connection with electric service to no more than the
15    greater of 2.015% of the amount paid per kilowatthour by
16    those customers during the year ending May 31, 2007 or the
17    incremental amount per kilowatthour paid for these
18    resources in 2011. To arrive at a maximum dollar amount of
19    renewable energy resources to be procured for the
20    particular delivery year, the resulting per kilowatthour
21    amount shall be applied to the actual amount of
22    kilowatthours of electricity delivered, or applicable
23    portion of such amount as specified in paragraph (1) of
24    this subsection (c), as applicable, by the electric utility
25    in the delivery year immediately prior to the procurement
26    to all retail customers in its service territory. The

 

 

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1    calculations required by this subparagraph (E) shall be
2    made only once for each delivery year at the time that the
3    renewable energy resources are procured. Once the
4    determination as to the amount of renewable energy
5    resources to procure is made based on the calculations set
6    forth in this subparagraph (E) and the contracts procuring
7    those amounts are executed, no subsequent rate impact
8    determinations shall be made and no adjustments to those
9    contract amounts shall be allowed. All costs incurred under
10    such contracts shall be fully recoverable by the electric
11    utility as provided in this Section.
12        (F) If the limitation on the amount of renewable energy
13    resources procured in subparagraph (E) of this paragraph
14    (1) prevents the Agency from meeting all of the goals in
15    this subsection (c), the Agency's long-term plan shall
16    prioritize compliance with the requirements of this
17    subsection (c) regarding renewable energy credits in the
18    following order:
19            (i) renewable energy credits under existing
20        contractual obligations;
21            (i-5)funding for the Illinois Solar for All
22        Program, as described in subparagraph (O) of this
23        paragraph (1);
24            (ii) renewable energy credits necessary to comply
25        with the new wind and new photovoltaic procurement
26        requirements described in items (i) through (iii) of

 

 

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1        subparagraph (C) of this paragraph (1); and
2            (iii) renewable energy credits necessary to meet
3        the remaining requirements of this subsection (c).
4        (G) The following provisions shall apply to the
5    Agency's procurement of renewable energy credits under
6    this subsection (c):
7            (i) The Agency shall conduct an initial forward
8        procurement for renewable energy credits from new
9        utility-scale wind projects within 120 days after the
10        effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th
11        General Assembly. For the purposes of this initial
12        forward procurement, the Agency shall solicit 15-year
13        contracts for delivery of 1,000,000 renewable energy
14        credits delivered annually from new utility-scale wind
15        projects to begin delivery on June 1, 2019, if
16        available, but not later than June 1, 2021. Payments to
17        suppliers of renewable energy credits shall commence
18        upon delivery. Renewable energy credits procured under
19        this initial procurement shall be included in the
20        Agency's long-term plan and shall apply to all
21        renewable energy goals in this subsection (c).
22            (ii) The Agency shall conduct an initial forward
23        procurement for renewable energy credits from new
24        utility-scale solar projects and brownfield site
25        photovoltaic projects within one year of the effective
26        date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 79 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        Assembly. For the purposes of this initial forward
2        procurement, the Agency shall solicit 15-year
3        contracts for delivery of 1,000,000 renewable energy
4        credits delivered annually from new utility-scale
5        solar projects and brownfield site photovoltaic
6        projects to begin delivery on June 1, 2019, if
7        available, but not later than June 1, 2021. The Agency
8        may structure this initial procurement in one or more
9        discrete procurement events. Payments to suppliers of
10        renewable energy credits shall commence upon delivery.
11        Renewable energy credits procured under this initial
12        procurement shall be included in the Agency's
13        long-term plan and shall apply to all renewable energy
14        goals in this subsection (c).
15            (iii) Subsequent forward procurements for
16        utility-scale wind projects shall solicit at least
17        1,000,000 renewable energy credits delivered annually
18        per procurement event and shall be planned, scheduled,
19        and designed such that the cumulative amount of
20        renewable energy credits delivered from all new wind
21        projects in each delivery year shall not exceed the
22        Agency's projection of the cumulative amount of
23        renewable energy credits that will be delivered from
24        all new photovoltaic projects, including utility-scale
25        and distributed photovoltaic devices, in the same
26        delivery year at the time scheduled for wind contract

 

 

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1        delivery.
2            (iv) If, at any time after the time set for
3        delivery of renewable energy credits pursuant to the
4        initial procurements in items (i) and (ii) of this
5        subparagraph (G), the cumulative amount of renewable
6        energy credits projected to be delivered from all new
7        wind projects in a given delivery year exceeds the
8        cumulative amount of renewable energy credits
9        projected to be delivered from all new photovoltaic
10        projects in that delivery year by 200,000 or more
11        renewable energy credits, then the Agency shall within
12        60 days adjust the procurement programs in the
13        long-term renewable resources procurement plan to
14        ensure that the projected cumulative amount of
15        renewable energy credits to be delivered from all new
16        wind projects does not exceed the projected cumulative
17        amount of renewable energy credits to be delivered from
18        all new photovoltaic projects by 200,000 or more
19        renewable energy credits, provided that nothing in
20        this Section shall preclude the projected cumulative
21        amount of renewable energy credits to be delivered from
22        all new photovoltaic projects from exceeding the
23        projected cumulative amount of renewable energy
24        credits to be delivered from all new wind projects in
25        each delivery year and provided further that nothing in
26        this item (iv) shall require the curtailment of an

 

 

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1        executed contract. The Agency shall update, on a
2        quarterly basis, its projection of the renewable
3        energy credits to be delivered from all projects in
4        each delivery year. Notwithstanding anything to the
5        contrary, the Agency may adjust the timing of
6        procurement events conducted under this subparagraph
7        (G). The long-term renewable resources procurement
8        plan shall set forth the process by which the
9        adjustments may be made.
10            (v) All procurements under this subparagraph (G)
11        shall comply with the geographic requirements in
12        subparagraph (I) of this paragraph (1) and shall follow
13        the procurement processes and procedures described in
14        this Section and Section 16-111.5 of the Public
15        Utilities Act to the extent practicable, and these
16        processes and procedures may be expedited to
17        accommodate the schedule established by this
18        subparagraph (G).
19        (H) The procurement of renewable energy resources for a
20    given delivery year shall be reduced as described in this
21    subparagraph (H) if an alternate retail electric supplier
22    meets the requirements described in this subparagraph (H).
23            (i) Within 45 days after the effective date of this
24        amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, an
25        alternative retail electric supplier or its successor
26        shall submit an informational filing to the Illinois

 

 

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1        Commerce Commission certifying that, as of December
2        31, 2015, the alternative retail electric supplier
3        owned one or more electric generating facilities that
4        generates renewable energy resources as defined in
5        Section 1-10 of this Act, provided that these
6        facilities are not powered by wind or photovoltaics,
7        and the facilities generate one renewable energy
8        credit for each megawatthour of energy produced from
9        the facility.
10            The informational filing shall identify each
11        facility that was eligible to satisfy the alternative
12        retail electric supplier's obligations under Section
13        16-115D of the Public Utilities Act as described in
14        this item (i).
15            (ii) For a given delivery year, the alternative
16        retail electric supplier may elect to supply its retail
17        customers with renewable energy credits from the
18        facility or facilities described in item (i) of this
19        subparagraph (H) that continue to be owned by the
20        alternative retail electric supplier.
21            (iii) The alternative retail electric supplier
22        shall notify the Agency and the applicable utility, no
23        later than February 28 of the year preceding the
24        applicable delivery year, of its election under item
25        (ii) of this subparagraph (H) to supply renewable
26        energy credits to retail customers of the utility. Such

 

 

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1        election shall identify the amount of renewable energy
2        credits to be supplied by the alternative retail
3        electric supplier to the utility's retail customers
4        and the source of the renewable energy credits
5        identified in the informational filing as described in
6        item (i) of this subparagraph (H), subject to the
7        following limitations:
8                For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2018,
9            the maximum amount of renewable energy credits to
10            be supplied by an alternative retail electric
11            supplier under this subparagraph (H) shall be 68%
12            multiplied by 25% multiplied by 14.5% multiplied
13            by the amount of metered electricity
14            (megawatt-hours) delivered by the alternative
15            retail electric supplier to Illinois retail
16            customers during the delivery year ending May 31,
17            2016.
18                For delivery years beginning June 1, 2019 and
19            each year thereafter, the maximum amount of
20            renewable energy credits to be supplied by an
21            alternative retail electric supplier under this
22            subparagraph (H) shall be 68% multiplied by 50%
23            multiplied by 16% multiplied by the amount of
24            metered electricity (megawatt-hours) delivered by
25            the alternative retail electric supplier to
26            Illinois retail customers during the delivery year

 

 

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1            ending May 31, 2016, provided that the 16% value
2            shall increase by 1.5% each delivery year
3            thereafter to 25% by the delivery year beginning
4            June 1, 2025, and thereafter the 25% value shall
5            apply to each delivery year.
6            For each delivery year, the total amount of
7        renewable energy credits supplied by all alternative
8        retail electric suppliers under this subparagraph (H)
9        shall not exceed 9% of the Illinois target renewable
10        energy credit quantity. The Illinois target renewable
11        energy credit quantity for the delivery year beginning
12        June 1, 2018 is 14.5% multiplied by the total amount of
13        metered electricity (megawatt-hours) delivered in the
14        delivery year immediately preceding that delivery
15        year, provided that the 14.5% shall increase by 1.5%
16        each delivery year thereafter to 25% by the delivery
17        year beginning June 1, 2025, and thereafter the 25%
18        value shall apply to each delivery year.
19            If the requirements set forth in items (i) through
20        (iii) of this subparagraph (H) are met, the charges
21        that would otherwise be applicable to the retail
22        customers of the alternative retail electric supplier
23        under paragraph (6) of this subsection (c) for the
24        applicable delivery year shall be reduced by the ratio
25        of the quantity of renewable energy credits supplied by
26        the alternative retail electric supplier compared to

 

 

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1        that supplier's target renewable energy credit
2        quantity. The supplier's target renewable energy
3        credit quantity for the delivery year beginning June 1,
4        2018 is 14.5% multiplied by the total amount of metered
5        electricity (megawatt-hours) delivered by the
6        alternative retail supplier in that delivery year,
7        provided that the 14.5% shall increase by 1.5% each
8        delivery year thereafter to 25% by the delivery year
9        beginning June 1, 2025, and thereafter the 25% value
10        shall apply to each delivery year.
11            On or before April 1 of each year, the Agency shall
12        annually publish a report on its website that
13        identifies the aggregate amount of renewable energy
14        credits supplied by alternative retail electric
15        suppliers under this subparagraph (H).
16        (I) The Agency shall design its long-term renewable
17    energy procurement plan to maximize the State's interest in
18    the health, safety, and welfare of its residents, including
19    but not limited to minimizing sulfur dioxide, nitrogen
20    oxide, particulate matter and other pollution that
21    adversely affects public health in this State, increasing
22    fuel and resource diversity in this State, enhancing the
23    reliability and resiliency of the electricity distribution
24    system in this State, meeting goals to limit carbon dioxide
25    emissions under federal or State law, and contributing to a
26    cleaner and healthier environment for the citizens of this

 

 

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1    State. In order to further these legislative purposes,
2    renewable energy credits shall be eligible to be counted
3    toward the renewable energy requirements of this
4    subsection (c) if they are generated from facilities
5    located in this State. The Agency may qualify renewable
6    energy credits from facilities located in states adjacent
7    to Illinois if the generator demonstrates and the Agency
8    determines that the operation of such facility or
9    facilities will help promote the State's interest in the
10    health, safety, and welfare of its residents based on the
11    public interest criteria described above. To ensure that
12    the public interest criteria are applied to the procurement
13    and given full effect, the Agency's long-term procurement
14    plan shall describe in detail how each public interest
15    factor shall be considered and weighted for facilities
16    located in states adjacent to Illinois.
17        (J) In order to promote the competitive development of
18    renewable energy resources in furtherance of the State's
19    interest in the health, safety, and welfare of its
20    residents, renewable energy credits shall not be eligible
21    to be counted toward the renewable energy requirements of
22    this subsection (c) if they are sourced from a generating
23    unit whose costs were being recovered through rates
24    regulated by this State or any other state or states on or
25    after January 1, 2017. Each contract executed to purchase
26    renewable energy credits under this subsection (c) shall

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 87 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    provide for the contract's termination if the costs of the
2    generating unit supplying the renewable energy credits
3    subsequently begin to be recovered through rates regulated
4    by this State or any other state or states. Each contract
5    shall further provide that, in that event, the supplier of
6    the credits must return 110% of all payments received under
7    the contract. Amounts returned under the requirements of
8    this subparagraph (J) shall be retained by the utility and
9    all of these amounts shall be used for the procurement of
10    additional renewable energy credits from new wind or new
11    photovoltaic resources as defined in this subsection (c).
12    The long-term plan shall provide that these renewable
13    energy credits shall be procured in the next procurement
14    event.
15        Notwithstanding the limitations of this subparagraph
16    (J), renewable energy credits sourced from generating
17    units that are constructed, purchased, owned, or leased by
18    an electric utility as part of an approved project,
19    program, or pilot under either Section 1-56 of this Act or
20    Section 16-108.9 of the Public Utilities Act shall be
21    eligible to be counted toward the renewable energy
22    requirements of this subsection (c), regardless of how the
23    costs of these units are recovered.
24        (K) The long-term renewable resources procurement plan
25    developed by the Agency in accordance with subparagraph (A)
26    of this paragraph (1) shall include an Adjustable Block

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 88 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    program for the procurement of renewable energy credits
2    from new photovoltaic projects that are distributed
3    renewable energy generation devices or new photovoltaic
4    community renewable generation projects. The Adjustable
5    Block program shall be designed to provide a transparent
6    schedule of prices and quantities to enable the
7    photovoltaic market to scale up and for renewable energy
8    credit prices to adjust at a predictable rate over time.
9    The prices set by the declining block program can be
10    reflected as a set value or as the product of a formula.
11        The Adjustable Block program shall include for each
12    category of eligible projects: (i) a schedule of standard
13    block purchase prices to be offered; (ii) a series of
14    steps, with associated nameplate capacity and purchase
15    prices that adjust from step to step; and (iii) automatic
16    opening of the next step as soon as the nameplate capacity
17    and available purchase prices for an open step are fully
18    committed or reserved. Only projects energized on or after
19    June 1, 2017 shall be eligible for the Adjustable Block
20    program. For each block group the Agency shall determine
21    the number of blocks, the amount of generation capacity in
22    each block, and the purchase price for each block, provided
23    that the purchase price provided and the total amount of
24    generation in all blocks for all block groups shall be
25    sufficient to meet the goals in this subsection (c). The
26    Agency may periodically review its prior decisions

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 89 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    establishing the number of blocks, the amount of generation
2    capacity in each block, and the purchase price for each
3    block, and may propose, on an expedited basis, changes to
4    these previously set values, including but not limited to
5    redistributing these amounts and the available funds as
6    necessary and appropriate, subject to Commission approval
7    as part of the periodic plan revision process described in
8    Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act. The Agency
9    may define different block sizes, purchase prices, or other
10    distinct terms and conditions for projects located in
11    different utility service territories if the Agency deems
12    it necessary to meet the goals in this subsection (c).
13        The Adjustable Block program shall include at least the
14    following block groups in at least the following amounts,
15    which may be adjusted upon review by the Agency and
16    approval by the Commission as described in this
17    subparagraph (K):
18            (i) At least 25% from distributed renewable energy
19        generation devices with a nameplate capacity of no more
20        than 10 kilowatts.
21            (ii) At least 25% from distributed renewable
22        energy generation devices with a nameplate capacity of
23        more than 10 kilowatts and no more than 2,000
24        kilowatts. The Agency may create sub-categories within
25        this category to account for the differences between
26        projects for small commercial customers, large

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 90 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        commercial customers, and public or non-profit
2        customers.
3            (iii) At least 25% from photovoltaic community
4        renewable generation projects.
5            (iv) The remaining 25% shall be allocated as
6        specified by the Agency in the long-term renewable
7        resources procurement plan.
8        The Adjustable Block program shall be designed to
9    ensure that renewable energy credits are procured from
10    photovoltaic projects located throughout the State.
11        (L) The procurement of photovoltaic renewable energy
12    credits under items (i) through (iv) of subparagraph (K) of
13    this paragraph (1) shall be subject to the following
14    contract and payment terms:
15            (i) The Agency shall procure contracts of at least
16        15 years in length.
17            (ii) For those renewable energy credits that
18        qualify and are procured under item (i) of subparagraph
19        (K) of this paragraph (1), the renewable energy credit
20        purchase price shall be paid in full by the contracting
21        utilities at the time that the facility producing the
22        renewable energy credits is interconnected at the
23        distribution system level of the utility and
24        energized. The electric utility shall receive and
25        retire all renewable energy credits generated by the
26        project for the first 15 years of operation.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 91 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            (iii) For those renewable energy credits that
2        qualify and are procured under item (ii) and (iii) of
3        subparagraph (K) of this paragraph (1) and any
4        additional categories of distributed generation
5        included in the long-term renewable resources
6        procurement plan and approved by the Commission, 20
7        percent of the renewable energy credit purchase price
8        shall be paid by the contracting utilities at the time
9        that the facility producing the renewable energy
10        credits is interconnected at the distribution system
11        level of the utility and energized. The remaining
12        portion shall be paid ratably over the subsequent
13        4-year period. The electric utility shall receive and
14        retire all renewable energy credits generated by the
15        project for the first 15 years of operation.
16            (iv) Each contract shall include provisions to
17        ensure the delivery of the renewable energy credits for
18        the full term of the contract.
19            (v) The utility shall be the counterparty to the
20        contracts executed under this subparagraph (L) that
21        are approved by the Commission under the process
22        described in Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
23        Act. No contract shall be executed for an amount that
24        is less than one renewable energy credit per year.
25            (vi) If, at any time, approved applications for the
26        Adjustable Block program exceed funds collected by the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 92 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        electric utility or would cause the Agency to exceed
2        the limitation described in subparagraph (E) of this
3        paragraph (1) on the amount of renewable energy
4        resources that may be procured, then the Agency shall
5        consider future uncommitted funds to be reserved for
6        these contracts on a first-come, first-served basis,
7        with the delivery of renewable energy credits required
8        beginning at the time that the reserved funds become
9        available.
10            (vii) Nothing in this Section shall require the
11        utility to advance any payment or pay any amounts that
12        exceed the actual amount of revenues collected by the
13        utility under paragraph (6) of this subsection (c) and
14        subsection (k) of Section 16-108 of the Public
15        Utilities Act, and contracts executed under this
16        Section shall expressly incorporate this limitation.
17        (M) The Agency shall be authorized to retain one or
18    more experts or expert consulting firms to develop,
19    administer, implement, operate, and evaluate the
20    Adjustable Block program described in subparagraph (K) of
21    this paragraph (1), and the Agency shall retain the
22    consultant or consultants in the same manner, to the extent
23    practicable, as the Agency retains others to administer
24    provisions of this Act, including, but not limited to, the
25    procurement administrator. The selection of experts and
26    expert consulting firms and the procurement process

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 93 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    described in this subparagraph (M) are exempt from the
2    requirements of Section 20-10 of the Illinois Procurement
3    Code, under Section 20-10 of that Code. The Agency shall
4    strive to minimize administrative expenses in the
5    implementation of the Adjustable Block program.
6        The Agency and its consultant or consultants shall
7    monitor block activity, share program activity with
8    stakeholders and conduct regularly scheduled meetings to
9    discuss program activity and market conditions. If
10    necessary, the Agency may make prospective administrative
11    adjustments to the Adjustable Block program design, such as
12    redistributing available funds or making adjustments to
13    purchase prices as necessary to achieve the goals of this
14    subsection (c). Program modifications to any price,
15    capacity block, or other program element that do not
16    deviate from the Commission's approved value by more than
17    25% shall take effect immediately and are not subject to
18    Commission review and approval. Program modifications to
19    any price, capacity block, or other program element that
20    deviate more than 25% from the Commission's approved value
21    must be approved by the Commission as a long-term plan
22    amendment under Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
23    Act. The Agency shall consider stakeholder feedback when
24    making adjustments to the Adjustable Block design and shall
25    notify stakeholders in advance of any planned changes.
26        (N) The long-term renewable resources procurement plan

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 94 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    required by this subsection (c) shall include a community
2    renewable generation program. The Agency shall establish
3    the terms, conditions, and program requirements for
4    community renewable generation projects with a goal to
5    expand renewable energy generating facility access to a
6    broader group of energy consumers, including residential
7    and small commercial customers and those who cannot install
8    renewable energy on their own properties. Any plan approved
9    by the Commission shall allow subscriptions to community
10    renewable generation projects to be portable and
11    transferable. For purposes of this subparagraph (N),
12    "portable" means that subscriptions may be retained by the
13    subscriber even if the subscriber relocates or changes its
14    address within the same utility service territory; and
15    "transferable" means that a subscriber may assign or sell
16    subscriptions to another person within the same utility
17    service territory.
18        Electric utilities shall provide a monetary credit to a
19    subscriber's subsequent bill for service for the
20    proportional output of a community renewable generation
21    project attributable to that subscriber as specified in
22    Section 16-107.5 or Section 16-107.6 of the Public
23    Utilities Act, as applicable.
24        The Agency shall purchase renewable energy credits
25    from subscribed shares of photovoltaic community renewable
26    generation projects through the Adjustable Block program

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 95 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    described in subparagraph (K) of this paragraph (1) or
2    through the Illinois Solar for All Program described in
3    Section 1-56 of this Act. The electric utility shall
4    purchase any unsubscribed energy from community renewable
5    generation projects that are Qualifying Facilities ("QF")
6    under the electric utility's tariff for purchasing the
7    output from QFs under Public Utilities Regulatory Policies
8    Act of 1978.
9        The owners of and any subscribers to a community
10    renewable generation project shall not be considered
11    public utilities or alternative retail electricity
12    suppliers under the Public Utilities Act solely as a result
13    of their interest in or subscription to a community
14    renewable generation project and shall not be required to
15    become an alternative retail electric supplier by
16    participating in a community renewable generation project
17    with a public utility.
18        (O)For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2018, the
19    long-term renewable resources procurement plan required by
20    this subsection (c) shall provide for the Agency to procure
21    contracts to continue offering the Illinois Solar for All
22    Program described in subsection (b) of Section 1-56 of this
23    Act, and the contracts approved by the Commission shall be
24    executed by the utilities that are subject to this
25    subsection (c). The long-term renewable resources
26    procurement plan shall allocate 10% of the funds available

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 96 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    under the plan for the applicable delivery year, or
2    $20,000,000 per delivery year, whichever is greater, to
3    fund the programs, and the plan shall determine the amount
4    of funding to be apportioned to the programs identified in
5    subsection (b) of Section 1-56 of this Act. In making the
6    determinations required under this subparagraph (O), the
7    Commission shall consider the experience and performance
8    under the programs and any evaluation reports. The
9    Commission shall also provide for an independent
10    evaluation of those programs on a periodic basis that are
11    funded under this subparagraph (O). The procurement plans
12    shall include cost-effective renewable energy resources. A
13    minimum percentage of each utility's total supply to serve
14    the load of eligible retail customers, as defined in
15    Section 16-111.5(a) of the Public Utilities Act, procured
16    for each of the following years shall be generated from
17    cost-effective renewable energy resources: at least 2% by
18    June 1, 2008; at least 4% by June 1, 2009; at least 5% by
19    June 1, 2010; at least 6% by June 1, 2011; at least 7% by
20    June 1, 2012; at least 8% by June 1, 2013; at least 9% by
21    June 1, 2014; at least 10% by June 1, 2015; and increasing
22    by at least 1.5% each year thereafter to at least 25% by
23    June 1, 2025. To the extent that it is available, at least
24    75% of the renewable energy resources used to meet these
25    standards shall come from wind generation and, beginning on
26    June 1, 2011, at least the following percentages of the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 97 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    renewable energy resources used to meet these standards
2    shall come from photovoltaics on the following schedule:
3    0.5% by June 1, 2012, 1.5% by June 1, 2013; 3% by June 1,
4    2014; and 6% by June 1, 2015 and thereafter. Of the
5    renewable energy resources procured pursuant to this
6    Section, at least the following percentages shall come from
7    distributed renewable energy generation devices: 0.5% by
8    June 1, 2013, 0.75% by June 1, 2014, and 1% by June 1, 2015
9    and thereafter. To the extent available, half of the
10    renewable energy resources procured from distributed
11    renewable energy generation shall come from devices of less
12    than 25 kilowatts in nameplate capacity. Renewable energy
13    resources procured from distributed generation devices may
14    also count towards the required percentages for wind and
15    solar photovoltaics. Procurement of renewable energy
16    resources from distributed renewable energy generation
17    devices shall be done on an annual basis through multi-year
18    contracts of no less than 5 years, and shall consist solely
19    of renewable energy credits.
20        The Agency shall create credit requirements for
21    suppliers of distributed renewable energy. In order to
22    minimize the administrative burden on contracting
23    entities, the Agency shall solicit the use of third-party
24    organizations to aggregate distributed renewable energy
25    into groups of no less than one megawatt in installed
26    capacity. These third-party organizations shall administer

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 98 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    contracts with individual distributed renewable energy
2    generation device owners. An individual distributed
3    renewable energy generation device owner shall have the
4    ability to measure the output of his or her distributed
5    renewable energy generation device.
6        For purposes of this subsection (c), "cost-effective"
7    means that the costs of procuring renewable energy
8    resources do not cause the limit stated in paragraph (2) of
9    this subsection (c) to be exceeded and do not exceed
10    benchmarks based on market prices for renewable energy
11    resources in the region, which shall be developed by the
12    procurement administrator, in consultation with the
13    Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement
14    monitor and shall be subject to Commission review and
15    approval.
16        (2) (Blank). For purposes of this subsection (c), the
17    required procurement of cost-effective renewable energy
18    resources for a particular year shall be measured as a
19    percentage of the actual amount of electricity
20    (megawatt-hours) supplied by the electric utility to
21    eligible retail customers in the planning year ending
22    immediately prior to the procurement. For purposes of this
23    subsection (c), the amount paid per kilowatthour means the
24    total amount paid for electric service expressed on a per
25    kilowatthour basis. For purposes of this subsection (c),
26    the total amount paid for electric service includes without

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 99 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    limitation amounts paid for supply, transmission,
2    distribution, surcharges, and add-on taxes.
3        Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
4    (c), the total of renewable energy resources procured
5    pursuant to the procurement plan for any single year shall
6    be reduced by an amount necessary to limit the annual
7    estimated average net increase due to the costs of these
8    resources included in the amounts paid by eligible retail
9    customers in connection with electric service to:
10            (A) in 2008, no more than 0.5% of the amount paid
11        per kilowatthour by those customers during the year
12        ending May 31, 2007;
13            (B) in 2009, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
14        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
15        during the year ending May 31, 2008 or 1% of the amount
16        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
17        year ending May 31, 2007;
18            (C) in 2010, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
19        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
20        during the year ending May 31, 2009 or 1.5% of the
21        amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during
22        the year ending May 31, 2007;
23            (D) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
24        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
25        during the year ending May 31, 2010 or 2% of the amount
26        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 100 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        year ending May 31, 2007; and
2            (E) thereafter, the amount of renewable energy
3        resources procured pursuant to the procurement plan
4        for any single year shall be reduced by an amount
5        necessary to limit the estimated average net increase
6        due to the cost of these resources included in the
7        amounts paid by eligible retail customers in
8        connection with electric service to no more than the
9        greater of 2.015% of the amount paid per kilowatthour
10        by those customers during the year ending May 31, 2007
11        or the incremental amount per kilowatthour paid for
12        these resources in 2011.
13            No later than June 30, 2011, the Commission shall
14        review the limitation on the amount of renewable energy
15        resources procured pursuant to this subsection (c) and
16        report to the General Assembly its findings as to
17        whether that limitation unduly constrains the
18        procurement of cost-effective renewable energy
19        resources.
20        (3) (Blank). Through June 1, 2011, renewable energy
21    resources shall be counted for the purpose of meeting the
22    renewable energy standards set forth in paragraph (1) of
23    this subsection (c) only if they are generated from
24    facilities located in the State, provided that
25    cost-effective renewable energy resources are available
26    from those facilities. If those cost-effective resources

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 101 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    are not available in Illinois, they shall be procured in
2    states that adjoin Illinois and may be counted towards
3    compliance. If those cost-effective resources are not
4    available in Illinois or in states that adjoin Illinois,
5    they shall be purchased elsewhere and shall be counted
6    towards compliance. After June 1, 2011, cost-effective
7    renewable energy resources located in Illinois and in
8    states that adjoin Illinois may be counted towards
9    compliance with the standards set forth in paragraph (1) of
10    this subsection (c). If those cost-effective resources are
11    not available in Illinois or in states that adjoin
12    Illinois, they shall be purchased elsewhere and shall be
13    counted towards compliance.
14        (4) The electric utility shall retire all renewable
15    energy credits used to comply with the standard.
16        (5) Beginning with the 2010 delivery year and ending
17    June 1, 2017 year commencing June 1, 2010, an electric
18    utility subject to this subsection (c) shall apply the
19    lesser of the maximum alternative compliance payment rate
20    or the most recent estimated alternative compliance
21    payment rate for its service territory for the
22    corresponding compliance period, established pursuant to
23    subsection (d) of Section 16-115D of the Public Utilities
24    Act to its retail customers that take service pursuant to
25    the electric utility's hourly pricing tariff or tariffs.
26    The electric utility shall retain all amounts collected as

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 102 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    a result of the application of the alternative compliance
2    payment rate or rates to such customers, and, beginning in
3    2011, the utility shall include in the information provided
4    under item (1) of subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the
5    Public Utilities Act the amounts collected under the
6    alternative compliance payment rate or rates for the prior
7    year ending May 31. Notwithstanding any limitation on the
8    procurement of renewable energy resources imposed by item
9    (2) of this subsection (c), the Agency shall increase its
10    spending on the purchase of renewable energy resources to
11    be procured by the electric utility for the next plan year
12    by an amount equal to the amounts collected by the utility
13    under the alternative compliance payment rate or rates in
14    the prior year ending May 31.
15        (6) The electric utility shall be entitled to recover
16    all of its costs associated with the procurement of
17    renewable energy credits under plans approved under this
18    Section and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
19    These costs shall include associated reasonable expenses
20    for implementing the procurement programs, including, but
21    not limited to, the costs of administering and evaluating
22    the Adjustable Block program, through an automatic
23    adjustment clause tariff in accordance with subsection (k)
24    of Section 16-108 of the Public Utilities Act.
25        (7) Renewable energy credits procured from new
26    photovoltaic projects or new distributed renewable energy

 

 

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1    generation devices under this Section after the effective
2    date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly
3    must be procured from devices installed by a qualified
4    person in compliance with the requirements of Section
5    16-128A of the Public Utilities Act and any rules or
6    regulations adopted thereunder.
7        In meeting the renewable energy requirements of this
8    subsection (c), to the extent feasible and consistent with
9    State and federal law, the renewable energy credit
10    procurements, Adjustable Block solar program, and
11    community renewable generation program shall provide
12    employment opportunities for all segments of the
13    population and workforce, including minority-owned and
14    female-owned business enterprises, and shall not,
15    consistent with State and federal law, discriminate based
16    on race or socioeconomic status.
17    (d) Clean coal portfolio standard.
18        (1) The procurement plans shall include electricity
19    generated using clean coal. Each utility shall enter into
20    one or more sourcing agreements with the initial clean coal
21    facility, as provided in paragraph (3) of this subsection
22    (d), covering electricity generated by the initial clean
23    coal facility representing at least 5% of each utility's
24    total supply to serve the load of eligible retail customers
25    in 2015 and each year thereafter, as described in paragraph
26    (3) of this subsection (d), subject to the limits specified

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 104 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    in paragraph (2) of this subsection (d). It is the goal of
2    the State that by January 1, 2025, 25% of the electricity
3    used in the State shall be generated by cost-effective
4    clean coal facilities. For purposes of this subsection (d),
5    "cost-effective" means that the expenditures pursuant to
6    such sourcing agreements do not cause the limit stated in
7    paragraph (2) of this subsection (d) to be exceeded and do
8    not exceed cost-based benchmarks, which shall be developed
9    to assess all expenditures pursuant to such sourcing
10    agreements covering electricity generated by clean coal
11    facilities, other than the initial clean coal facility, by
12    the procurement administrator, in consultation with the
13    Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement
14    monitor and shall be subject to Commission review and
15    approval.
16        A utility party to a sourcing agreement shall
17    immediately retire any emission credits that it receives in
18    connection with the electricity covered by such agreement.
19        Utilities shall maintain adequate records documenting
20    the purchases under the sourcing agreement to comply with
21    this subsection (d) and shall file an accounting with the
22    load forecast that must be filed with the Agency by July 15
23    of each year, in accordance with subsection (d) of Section
24    16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
25        A utility shall be deemed to have complied with the
26    clean coal portfolio standard specified in this subsection

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 105 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    (d) if the utility enters into a sourcing agreement as
2    required by this subsection (d).
3        (2) For purposes of this subsection (d), the required
4    execution of sourcing agreements with the initial clean
5    coal facility for a particular year shall be measured as a
6    percentage of the actual amount of electricity
7    (megawatt-hours) supplied by the electric utility to
8    eligible retail customers in the planning year ending
9    immediately prior to the agreement's execution. For
10    purposes of this subsection (d), the amount paid per
11    kilowatthour means the total amount paid for electric
12    service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For purposes
13    of this subsection (d), the total amount paid for electric
14    service includes without limitation amounts paid for
15    supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges and add-on
16    taxes.
17        Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
18    (d), the total amount paid under sourcing agreements with
19    clean coal facilities pursuant to the procurement plan for
20    any given year shall be reduced by an amount necessary to
21    limit the annual estimated average net increase due to the
22    costs of these resources included in the amounts paid by
23    eligible retail customers in connection with electric
24    service to:
25            (A) in 2010, no more than 0.5% of the amount paid
26        per kilowatthour by those customers during the year

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 106 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        ending May 31, 2009;
2            (B) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
3        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
4        during the year ending May 31, 2010 or 1% of the amount
5        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
6        year ending May 31, 2009;
7            (C) in 2012, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
8        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
9        during the year ending May 31, 2011 or 1.5% of the
10        amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during
11        the year ending May 31, 2009;
12            (D) in 2013, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
13        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
14        during the year ending May 31, 2012 or 2% of the amount
15        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
16        year ending May 31, 2009; and
17            (E) thereafter, the total amount paid under
18        sourcing agreements with clean coal facilities
19        pursuant to the procurement plan for any single year
20        shall be reduced by an amount necessary to limit the
21        estimated average net increase due to the cost of these
22        resources included in the amounts paid by eligible
23        retail customers in connection with electric service
24        to no more than the greater of (i) 2.015% of the amount
25        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
26        year ending May 31, 2009 or (ii) the incremental amount

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 107 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        per kilowatthour paid for these resources in 2013.
2        These requirements may be altered only as provided by
3        statute.
4        No later than June 30, 2015, the Commission shall
5    review the limitation on the total amount paid under
6    sourcing agreements, if any, with clean coal facilities
7    pursuant to this subsection (d) and report to the General
8    Assembly its findings as to whether that limitation unduly
9    constrains the amount of electricity generated by
10    cost-effective clean coal facilities that is covered by
11    sourcing agreements.
12        (3) Initial clean coal facility. In order to promote
13    development of clean coal facilities in Illinois, each
14    electric utility subject to this Section shall execute a
15    sourcing agreement to source electricity from a proposed
16    clean coal facility in Illinois (the "initial clean coal
17    facility") that will have a nameplate capacity of at least
18    500 MW when commercial operation commences, that has a
19    final Clean Air Act permit on the effective date of this
20    amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, and that will
21    meet the definition of clean coal facility in Section 1-10
22    of this Act when commercial operation commences. The
23    sourcing agreements with this initial clean coal facility
24    shall be subject to both approval of the initial clean coal
25    facility by the General Assembly and satisfaction of the
26    requirements of paragraph (4) of this subsection (d) and

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 108 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    shall be executed within 90 days after any such approval by
2    the General Assembly. The Agency and the Commission shall
3    have authority to inspect all books and records associated
4    with the initial clean coal facility during the term of
5    such a sourcing agreement. A utility's sourcing agreement
6    for electricity produced by the initial clean coal facility
7    shall include:
8            (A) a formula contractual price (the "contract
9        price") approved pursuant to paragraph (4) of this
10        subsection (d), which shall:
11                (i) be determined using a cost of service
12            methodology employing either a level or deferred
13            capital recovery component, based on a capital
14            structure consisting of 45% equity and 55% debt,
15            and a return on equity as may be approved by the
16            Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which in any
17            case may not exceed the lower of 11.5% or the rate
18            of return approved by the General Assembly
19            pursuant to paragraph (4) of this subsection (d);
20            and
21                (ii) provide that all miscellaneous net
22            revenue, including but not limited to net revenue
23            from the sale of emission allowances, if any,
24            substitute natural gas, if any, grants or other
25            support provided by the State of Illinois or the
26            United States Government, firm transmission

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 109 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            rights, if any, by-products produced by the
2            facility, energy or capacity derived from the
3            facility and not covered by a sourcing agreement
4            pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection (d) or
5            item (5) of subsection (d) of Section 16-115 of the
6            Public Utilities Act, whether generated from the
7            synthesis gas derived from coal, from SNG, or from
8            natural gas, shall be credited against the revenue
9            requirement for this initial clean coal facility;
10            (B) power purchase provisions, which shall:
11                (i) provide that the utility party to such
12            sourcing agreement shall pay the contract price
13            for electricity delivered under such sourcing
14            agreement;
15                (ii) require delivery of electricity to the
16            regional transmission organization market of the
17            utility that is party to such sourcing agreement;
18                (iii) require the utility party to such
19            sourcing agreement to buy from the initial clean
20            coal facility in each hour an amount of energy
21            equal to all clean coal energy made available from
22            the initial clean coal facility during such hour
23            times a fraction, the numerator of which is such
24            utility's retail market sales of electricity
25            (expressed in kilowatthours sold) in the State
26            during the prior calendar month and the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 110 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            denominator of which is the total retail market
2            sales of electricity (expressed in kilowatthours
3            sold) in the State by utilities during such prior
4            month and the sales of electricity (expressed in
5            kilowatthours sold) in the State by alternative
6            retail electric suppliers during such prior month
7            that are subject to the requirements of this
8            subsection (d) and paragraph (5) of subsection (d)
9            of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act,
10            provided that the amount purchased by the utility
11            in any year will be limited by paragraph (2) of
12            this subsection (d); and
13                (iv) be considered pre-existing contracts in
14            such utility's procurement plans for eligible
15            retail customers;
16            (C) contract for differences provisions, which
17        shall:
18                (i) require the utility party to such sourcing
19            agreement to contract with the initial clean coal
20            facility in each hour with respect to an amount of
21            energy equal to all clean coal energy made
22            available from the initial clean coal facility
23            during such hour times a fraction, the numerator of
24            which is such utility's retail market sales of
25            electricity (expressed in kilowatthours sold) in
26            the utility's service territory in the State

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 111 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            during the prior calendar month and the
2            denominator of which is the total retail market
3            sales of electricity (expressed in kilowatthours
4            sold) in the State by utilities during such prior
5            month and the sales of electricity (expressed in
6            kilowatthours sold) in the State by alternative
7            retail electric suppliers during such prior month
8            that are subject to the requirements of this
9            subsection (d) and paragraph (5) of subsection (d)
10            of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act,
11            provided that the amount paid by the utility in any
12            year will be limited by paragraph (2) of this
13            subsection (d);
14                (ii) provide that the utility's payment
15            obligation in respect of the quantity of
16            electricity determined pursuant to the preceding
17            clause (i) shall be limited to an amount equal to
18            (1) the difference between the contract price
19            determined pursuant to subparagraph (A) of
20            paragraph (3) of this subsection (d) and the
21            day-ahead price for electricity delivered to the
22            regional transmission organization market of the
23            utility that is party to such sourcing agreement
24            (or any successor delivery point at which such
25            utility's supply obligations are financially
26            settled on an hourly basis) (the "reference

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 112 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            price") on the day preceding the day on which the
2            electricity is delivered to the initial clean coal
3            facility busbar, multiplied by (2) the quantity of
4            electricity determined pursuant to the preceding
5            clause (i); and
6                (iii) not require the utility to take physical
7            delivery of the electricity produced by the
8            facility;
9            (D) general provisions, which shall:
10                (i) specify a term of no more than 30 years,
11            commencing on the commercial operation date of the
12            facility;
13                (ii) provide that utilities shall maintain
14            adequate records documenting purchases under the
15            sourcing agreements entered into to comply with
16            this subsection (d) and shall file an accounting
17            with the load forecast that must be filed with the
18            Agency by July 15 of each year, in accordance with
19            subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public
20            Utilities Act;
21                (iii) provide that all costs associated with
22            the initial clean coal facility will be
23            periodically reported to the Federal Energy
24            Regulatory Commission and to purchasers in
25            accordance with applicable laws governing
26            cost-based wholesale power contracts;

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 113 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1                (iv) permit the Illinois Power Agency to
2            assume ownership of the initial clean coal
3            facility, without monetary consideration and
4            otherwise on reasonable terms acceptable to the
5            Agency, if the Agency so requests no less than 3
6            years prior to the end of the stated contract term;
7                (v) require the owner of the initial clean coal
8            facility to provide documentation to the
9            Commission each year, starting in the facility's
10            first year of commercial operation, accurately
11            reporting the quantity of carbon emissions from
12            the facility that have been captured and
13            sequestered and report any quantities of carbon
14            released from the site or sites at which carbon
15            emissions were sequestered in prior years, based
16            on continuous monitoring of such sites. If, in any
17            year after the first year of commercial operation,
18            the owner of the facility fails to demonstrate that
19            the initial clean coal facility captured and
20            sequestered at least 50% of the total carbon
21            emissions that the facility would otherwise emit
22            or that sequestration of emissions from prior
23            years has failed, resulting in the release of
24            carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the owner of
25            the facility must offset excess emissions. Any
26            such carbon offsets must be permanent, additional,

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 114 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            verifiable, real, located within the State of
2            Illinois, and legally and practicably enforceable.
3            The cost of such offsets for the facility that are
4            not recoverable shall not exceed $15 million in any
5            given year. No costs of any such purchases of
6            carbon offsets may be recovered from a utility or
7            its customers. All carbon offsets purchased for
8            this purpose and any carbon emission credits
9            associated with sequestration of carbon from the
10            facility must be permanently retired. The initial
11            clean coal facility shall not forfeit its
12            designation as a clean coal facility if the
13            facility fails to fully comply with the applicable
14            carbon sequestration requirements in any given
15            year, provided the requisite offsets are
16            purchased. However, the Attorney General, on
17            behalf of the People of the State of Illinois, may
18            specifically enforce the facility's sequestration
19            requirement and the other terms of this contract
20            provision. Compliance with the sequestration
21            requirements and offset purchase requirements
22            specified in paragraph (3) of this subsection (d)
23            shall be reviewed annually by an independent
24            expert retained by the owner of the initial clean
25            coal facility, with the advance written approval
26            of the Attorney General. The Commission may, in the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 115 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            course of the review specified in item (vii),
2            reduce the allowable return on equity for the
3            facility if the facility wilfully fails to comply
4            with the carbon capture and sequestration
5            requirements set forth in this item (v);
6                (vi) include limits on, and accordingly
7            provide for modification of, the amount the
8            utility is required to source under the sourcing
9            agreement consistent with paragraph (2) of this
10            subsection (d);
11                (vii) require Commission review: (1) to
12            determine the justness, reasonableness, and
13            prudence of the inputs to the formula referenced in
14            subparagraphs (A)(i) through (A)(iii) of paragraph
15            (3) of this subsection (d), prior to an adjustment
16            in those inputs including, without limitation, the
17            capital structure and return on equity, fuel
18            costs, and other operations and maintenance costs
19            and (2) to approve the costs to be passed through
20            to customers under the sourcing agreement by which
21            the utility satisfies its statutory obligations.
22            Commission review shall occur no less than every 3
23            years, regardless of whether any adjustments have
24            been proposed, and shall be completed within 9
25            months;
26                (viii) limit the utility's obligation to such

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 116 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            amount as the utility is allowed to recover through
2            tariffs filed with the Commission, provided that
3            neither the clean coal facility nor the utility
4            waives any right to assert federal pre-emption or
5            any other argument in response to a purported
6            disallowance of recovery costs;
7                (ix) limit the utility's or alternative retail
8            electric supplier's obligation to incur any
9            liability until such time as the facility is in
10            commercial operation and generating power and
11            energy and such power and energy is being delivered
12            to the facility busbar;
13                (x) provide that the owner or owners of the
14            initial clean coal facility, which is the
15            counterparty to such sourcing agreement, shall
16            have the right from time to time to elect whether
17            the obligations of the utility party thereto shall
18            be governed by the power purchase provisions or the
19            contract for differences provisions;
20                (xi) append documentation showing that the
21            formula rate and contract, insofar as they relate
22            to the power purchase provisions, have been
23            approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory
24            Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal
25            Power Act;
26                (xii) provide that any changes to the terms of

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 117 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            the contract, insofar as such changes relate to the
2            power purchase provisions, are subject to review
3            under the public interest standard applied by the
4            Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to
5            Sections 205 and 206 of the Federal Power Act; and
6                (xiii) conform with customary lender
7            requirements in power purchase agreements used as
8            the basis for financing non-utility generators.
9        (4) Effective date of sourcing agreements with the
10    initial clean coal facility.
11        Any proposed sourcing agreement with the initial clean
12    coal facility shall not become effective unless the
13    following reports are prepared and submitted and
14    authorizations and approvals obtained:
15            (i) Facility cost report. The owner of the initial
16        clean coal facility shall submit to the Commission, the
17        Agency, and the General Assembly a front-end
18        engineering and design study, a facility cost report,
19        method of financing (including but not limited to
20        structure and associated costs), and an operating and
21        maintenance cost quote for the facility (collectively
22        "facility cost report"), which shall be prepared in
23        accordance with the requirements of this paragraph (4)
24        of subsection (d) of this Section, and shall provide
25        the Commission and the Agency access to the work
26        papers, relied upon documents, and any other backup

 

 

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1        documentation related to the facility cost report.
2            (ii) Commission report. Within 6 months following
3        receipt of the facility cost report, the Commission, in
4        consultation with the Agency, shall submit a report to
5        the General Assembly setting forth its analysis of the
6        facility cost report. Such report shall include, but
7        not be limited to, a comparison of the costs associated
8        with electricity generated by the initial clean coal
9        facility to the costs associated with electricity
10        generated by other types of generation facilities, an
11        analysis of the rate impacts on residential and small
12        business customers over the life of the sourcing
13        agreements, and an analysis of the likelihood that the
14        initial clean coal facility will commence commercial
15        operation by and be delivering power to the facility's
16        busbar by 2016. To assist in the preparation of its
17        report, the Commission, in consultation with the
18        Agency, may hire one or more experts or consultants,
19        the costs of which shall be paid for by the owner of
20        the initial clean coal facility. The Commission and
21        Agency may begin the process of selecting such experts
22        or consultants prior to receipt of the facility cost
23        report.
24            (iii) General Assembly approval. The proposed
25        sourcing agreements shall not take effect unless,
26        based on the facility cost report and the Commission's

 

 

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1        report, the General Assembly enacts authorizing
2        legislation approving (A) the projected price, stated
3        in cents per kilowatthour, to be charged for
4        electricity generated by the initial clean coal
5        facility, (B) the projected impact on residential and
6        small business customers' bills over the life of the
7        sourcing agreements, and (C) the maximum allowable
8        return on equity for the project; and
9            (iv) Commission review. If the General Assembly
10        enacts authorizing legislation pursuant to
11        subparagraph (iii) approving a sourcing agreement, the
12        Commission shall, within 90 days of such enactment,
13        complete a review of such sourcing agreement. During
14        such time period, the Commission shall implement any
15        directive of the General Assembly, resolve any
16        disputes between the parties to the sourcing agreement
17        concerning the terms of such agreement, approve the
18        form of such agreement, and issue an order finding that
19        the sourcing agreement is prudent and reasonable.
20        The facility cost report shall be prepared as follows:
21            (A) The facility cost report shall be prepared by
22        duly licensed engineering and construction firms
23        detailing the estimated capital costs payable to one or
24        more contractors or suppliers for the engineering,
25        procurement and construction of the components
26        comprising the initial clean coal facility and the

 

 

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1        estimated costs of operation and maintenance of the
2        facility. The facility cost report shall include:
3                (i) an estimate of the capital cost of the core
4            plant based on one or more front end engineering
5            and design studies for the gasification island and
6            related facilities. The core plant shall include
7            all civil, structural, mechanical, electrical,
8            control, and safety systems.
9                (ii) an estimate of the capital cost of the
10            balance of the plant, including any capital costs
11            associated with sequestration of carbon dioxide
12            emissions and all interconnects and interfaces
13            required to operate the facility, such as
14            transmission of electricity, construction or
15            backfeed power supply, pipelines to transport
16            substitute natural gas or carbon dioxide, potable
17            water supply, natural gas supply, water supply,
18            water discharge, landfill, access roads, and coal
19            delivery.
20            The quoted construction costs shall be expressed
21        in nominal dollars as of the date that the quote is
22        prepared and shall include capitalized financing costs
23        during construction, taxes, insurance, and other
24        owner's costs, and an assumed escalation in materials
25        and labor beyond the date as of which the construction
26        cost quote is expressed.

 

 

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1            (B) The front end engineering and design study for
2        the gasification island and the cost study for the
3        balance of plant shall include sufficient design work
4        to permit quantification of major categories of
5        materials, commodities and labor hours, and receipt of
6        quotes from vendors of major equipment required to
7        construct and operate the clean coal facility.
8            (C) The facility cost report shall also include an
9        operating and maintenance cost quote that will provide
10        the estimated cost of delivered fuel, personnel,
11        maintenance contracts, chemicals, catalysts,
12        consumables, spares, and other fixed and variable
13        operations and maintenance costs. The delivered fuel
14        cost estimate will be provided by a recognized third
15        party expert or experts in the fuel and transportation
16        industries. The balance of the operating and
17        maintenance cost quote, excluding delivered fuel
18        costs, will be developed based on the inputs provided
19        by duly licensed engineering and construction firms
20        performing the construction cost quote, potential
21        vendors under long-term service agreements and plant
22        operating agreements, or recognized third party plant
23        operator or operators.
24            The operating and maintenance cost quote
25        (including the cost of the front end engineering and
26        design study) shall be expressed in nominal dollars as

 

 

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1        of the date that the quote is prepared and shall
2        include taxes, insurance, and other owner's costs, and
3        an assumed escalation in materials and labor beyond the
4        date as of which the operating and maintenance cost
5        quote is expressed.
6            (D) The facility cost report shall also include an
7        analysis of the initial clean coal facility's ability
8        to deliver power and energy into the applicable
9        regional transmission organization markets and an
10        analysis of the expected capacity factor for the
11        initial clean coal facility.
12            (E) Amounts paid to third parties unrelated to the
13        owner or owners of the initial clean coal facility to
14        prepare the core plant construction cost quote,
15        including the front end engineering and design study,
16        and the operating and maintenance cost quote will be
17        reimbursed through Coal Development Bonds.
18        (5) Re-powering and retrofitting coal-fired power
19    plants previously owned by Illinois utilities to qualify as
20    clean coal facilities. During the 2009 procurement
21    planning process and thereafter, the Agency and the
22    Commission shall consider sourcing agreements covering
23    electricity generated by power plants that were previously
24    owned by Illinois utilities and that have been or will be
25    converted into clean coal facilities, as defined by Section
26    1-10 of this Act. Pursuant to such procurement planning

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 123 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    process, the owners of such facilities may propose to the
2    Agency sourcing agreements with utilities and alternative
3    retail electric suppliers required to comply with
4    subsection (d) of this Section and item (5) of subsection
5    (d) of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act, covering
6    electricity generated by such facilities. In the case of
7    sourcing agreements that are power purchase agreements,
8    the contract price for electricity sales shall be
9    established on a cost of service basis. In the case of
10    sourcing agreements that are contracts for differences,
11    the contract price from which the reference price is
12    subtracted shall be established on a cost of service basis.
13    The Agency and the Commission may approve any such utility
14    sourcing agreements that do not exceed cost-based
15    benchmarks developed by the procurement administrator, in
16    consultation with the Commission staff, Agency staff and
17    the procurement monitor, subject to Commission review and
18    approval. The Commission shall have authority to inspect
19    all books and records associated with these clean coal
20    facilities during the term of any such contract.
21        (6) Costs incurred under this subsection (d) or
22    pursuant to a contract entered into under this subsection
23    (d) shall be deemed prudently incurred and reasonable in
24    amount and the electric utility shall be entitled to full
25    cost recovery pursuant to the tariffs filed with the
26    Commission.

 

 

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1    (d-5) Zero emission standard.
2        (1) Beginning with the delivery year commencing on June
3    1, 2017, the Agency shall, for electric utilities that
4    serve at least 100,000 retail customers in this State,
5    procure contracts with zero emission facilities that are
6    reasonably capable of generating cost-effective zero
7    emission credits in an amount approximately equal to 16.75%
8    of the actual amount of electricity delivered by each
9    electric utility to retail customers in the State during
10    calendar year 2015. For an electric utility serving fewer
11    than 100,000 retail customers in this State that requested,
12    under Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, that
13    the Agency procure power and energy for all or a portion of
14    the utility's Illinois load for the delivery year
15    commencing June 1, 2016, the Agency shall procure contracts
16    with zero emission facilities that are reasonably capable
17    of generating cost-effective zero emission credits in an
18    amount approximately equal to 16.75% of the portion of
19    power and energy to be procured by the Agency for the
20    utility. The duration of the contracts procured under this
21    subsection (d-5) shall be for the remaining useful life of
22    the zero emission facility. The quantity of zero emission
23    credits to be procured under the contracts shall be all of
24    the zero emission credits generated by the zero emission
25    facility in each delivery year; however, if the zero
26    emission facility is owned by more than one entity, then

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 125 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    the quantity of zero emission credits to be procured under
2    the contracts shall be the amount of zero emission credits
3    that are generated from the portion of the zero emission
4    facility that is owned by the winning supplier.
5        The 16.75% value identified in this paragraph (1) is
6    the average of the percentage targets in subparagraph (B)
7    of paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this
8    Act for the 6 delivery years beginning June 1, 2017.
9        The procurement process shall be subject to the
10    following provisions:
11            (A) Those zero emission facilities that intend to
12        participate in the procurement shall submit to the
13        Agency the following eligibility information for each
14        zero emission facility on or before the date
15        established by the Agency:
16                (i) the in-service date and remaining useful
17            life of the zero emission facility;
18                (ii) the amount of power generated annually
19            for each of the years 2005 through 2015, and the
20            projected zero emission credits to be generated
21            over the remaining useful life of the zero emission
22            facility, which shall be used to determine the
23            capability of each facility;
24                (iii) the annual zero emission facility cost
25            projections, expressed on a per megawatthour
26            basis, over the next 6 delivery years, which shall

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 126 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            include the following: operation and maintenance
2            expenses; fully allocated overhead costs, which
3            shall be allocated using the methodology developed
4            by the Institute for Nuclear Power Operations;
5            fuel expenditures; non-fuel capital expenditures;
6            spent fuel expenditures; a return on working
7            capital; the cost of operational and market risks
8            that could be avoided by ceasing operation; and any
9            other costs necessary for continued operations,
10            provided that "necessary" means, for purposes of
11            this item (iii), that the costs could reasonably be
12            avoided only by ceasing operations of the zero
13            emission facility; and
14                (iv) a commitment to continue operating, for
15            the duration of the contract or contracts executed
16            under the procurement held under this subsection
17            (d-5), the zero emission facility that produces
18            the zero emission credits to be procured in the
19            procurement.
20        The information described in item (iii) of this
21    subparagraph (A) may be submitted on a confidential basis
22    and shall be treated and maintained by the Agency, the
23    procurement administrator, and the Commission as
24    confidential and proprietary and exempt from disclosure
25    under subparagraphs (a) and (g) of paragraph (1) of Section
26    7 of the Freedom of Information Act.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 127 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            (B) The price for each zero emission credit
2        procured under this subsection (d-5) for each delivery
3        year shall be in an amount that equals the Social Cost
4        of Carbon, expressed on a price per megawatthour basis.
5        However, to ensure that the procurement remains
6        affordable to retail customers in this State if
7        electricity prices increase, the price in an
8        applicable delivery year shall be reduced below the
9        Social Cost of Carbon by the amount ("Price
10        Adjustment") by which the market price index for the
11        applicable delivery year exceeds the baseline market
12        price index for the consecutive 12-month period ending
13        May 31, 2016. If the Price Adjustment is greater than
14        or equal to the Social Cost of Carbon in an applicable
15        delivery year, then no payments shall be due in that
16        delivery year. The components of this calculation are
17        defined as follows:
18                (i) Social Cost of Carbon: The Social Cost of
19            Carbon is $16.50 per megawatthour, which is based
20            on the U.S. Interagency Working Group on Social
21            Cost of Carbon's price in the August 2016 Technical
22            Update using a 3% discount rate, adjusted for
23            inflation for each year of the program. Beginning
24            with the delivery year commencing June 1, 2023, the
25            price per megawatthour shall increase by $1 per
26            megawatthour, and continue to increase by an

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 128 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            additional $1 per megawatthour each delivery year
2            thereafter.
3                (ii) Baseline market price index: The baseline
4            market price index for the consecutive 12-month
5            period ending May 31, 2016 is $31.40 per
6            megawatthour, which is based on the sum of (aa) the
7            average day-ahead energy price across all hours of
8            such 12-month period at the PJM Interconnection
9            LLC Northern Illinois Hub, (bb) 50% multiplied by
10            the Base Residual Auction, or its successor,
11            capacity price for the rest of the RTO zone group
12            determined by PJM Interconnection LLC, divided by
13            24 hours per day, and (cc) 50% multiplied by the
14            Planning Resource Auction, or its successor,
15            capacity price for Zone 4 determined by the
16            Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc.,
17            divided by 24 hours per day.
18                (iii) Market price index: The market price
19            index for a delivery year shall be the sum of
20            projected energy prices and projected capacity
21            prices determined as follows:
22                    (aa) Projected energy prices: the
23                projected energy prices for the applicable
24                delivery year shall be calculated once for the
25                year using the forward market price for the PJM
26                Interconnection, LLC Northern Illinois Hub.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 129 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1                The forward market price shall be calculated as
2                follows: the energy forward prices for each
3                month of the applicable delivery year averaged
4                for each trade date during the calendar year
5                immediately preceding that delivery year to
6                produce a single energy forward price for the
7                delivery year. The forward market price
8                calculation shall use data published by the
9                Intercontinental Exchange, or its successor.
10                    (bb) Projected capacity prices:
11                        (I) For the delivery years commencing
12                    June 1, 2017, June 1, 2018, and June 1,
13                    2019, the projected capacity price shall
14                    be equal to the sum of (1) 50% multiplied
15                    by the Base Residual Auction, or its
16                    successor, price for the rest of the RTO
17                    zone group as determined by PJM
18                    Interconnection LLC, divided by 24 hours
19                    per day and, (2) 50% multiplied by either
20                    the Planning Resource Auction, or its
21                    successor, price for Local Resource Zone 4
22                    as determined by the Midcontinent
23                    Independent System Operator, Inc., or, if
24                    more than 80% of the Zone 4 load is subject
25                    to a fixed resource adequacy plan, then a
26                    price determined by the outcome of the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 130 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1                    procurements held under subsection (k) of
2                    Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
3                    Act, divided by 24 hours per day.
4                        (II) For the delivery year commencing
5                    June 1, 2020, and each year thereafter, the
6                    projected capacity price shall be equal to
7                    the sum of (1) 50% multiplied by the Base
8                    Residual Auction, or its successor, price
9                    for the ComEd zone as determined by PJM
10                    Interconnection LLC, divided by 24 hours
11                    per day, and (2) 50% multiplied by either
12                    the Planning Resource Auction, or its
13                    successor, price for Local Resource Zone 4
14                    as determined by the Midcontinent
15                    Independent System Operator, Inc., or, if
16                    more than 80% of the Zone 4 load is subject
17                    to a fixed resource adequacy plan, then a
18                    price determined by the outcome of the
19                    procurements held under subsection (k) of
20                    Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
21                    Act, divided by 24 hours per day.
22            For purposes of this subsection (d-5):
23                "Rest of the RTO" and "ComEd Zone" shall have
24            the meaning ascribed to them by PJM
25            Interconnection, LLC.
26                "RTO" means regional transmission

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 131 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            organization.
2            (C) No later than 45 days after the effective date
3        of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly,
4        the Agency shall publish its proposed zero emission
5        standard procurement plan. The plan shall be
6        consistent with the provisions of this paragraph (1)
7        and shall provide that winning bids shall be selected
8        based on public interest criteria that include, but are
9        not limited to, minimizing carbon dioxide emissions
10        that result from electricity consumed in Illinois and
11        minimizing sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and
12        particulate matter emissions that adversely affect the
13        citizens of this State. In particular, the selection of
14        winning bids shall take into account the incremental
15        environmental benefits resulting from the procurement,
16        such as any existing environmental benefits that are
17        preserved by the procurements held under this
18        amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly and would
19        cease to exist if the procurements were not held,
20        including the preservation of zero emission
21        facilities. The plan shall also describe in detail how
22        each public interest factor shall be considered and
23        weighted in the bid selection process to ensure that
24        the public interest criteria are applied to the
25        procurement and given full effect.
26            For purposes of developing the plan, the Agency

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 132 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        shall consider any reports issued by a State agency,
2        board, or commission under House Resolution 1146 of the
3        98th General Assembly and paragraph (4) of subsection
4        (d) of Section 1-75 of this Act, as well as publicly
5        available analyses and studies performed by or for
6        regional transmission organizations that serve the
7        State and their independent market monitors.
8            Upon publishing of the zero emission standard
9        procurement plan, copies of the plan shall be posted
10        and made publicly available on the Agency's website.
11        All interested parties shall have 10 days following the
12        date of posting to provide comment to the Agency on the
13        plan. All comments shall be posted to the Agency's
14        website. Following the end of the comment period, but
15        no more than 60 days later than the effective date of
16        this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, the
17        Agency shall revise the plan as necessary based on the
18        comments received and file its zero emission standard
19        procurement plan with the Commission.
20            If the Commission determines that the plan will
21        result in the procurement of cost-effective zero
22        emission credits, then the Commission shall, after
23        notice and hearing, but no later than 45 days after the
24        Agency filed the plan, approve the plan or approve with
25        modification. For purposes of this subsection (d-5),
26        "cost effective" means the projected costs of

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 133 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        procuring zero emission credits from zero emission
2        facilities do not cause the limit stated in paragraph
3        (2) of this subsection to be exceeded.
4            As part of the Commission's review and acceptance
5        or rejection of the procurement results, the
6        Commission shall identify, in its public notice of
7        successful bidders, how the winning bids satisfy the
8        public interest criteria described in this
9        subparagraph (C) of minimizing carbon dioxide
10        emissions that result from electricity consumed in
11        Illinois and minimizing sulfur dioxide, nitrogen
12        oxide, and particulate matter emissions that adversely
13        affect the citizens of this State. The Commission shall
14        also specifically address how the selection of winning
15        bids takes into account the incremental environmental
16        benefits resulting from the procurement, including any
17        existing environmental benefits that are preserved by
18        the procurements held under this amendatory Act of the
19        99th General Assembly and would have ceased to exist if
20        the procurements had not been held, such as the
21        preservation of zero emission facilities. In addition,
22        the Commission shall quantify the environmental
23        benefit of preserving such resources, including (i)
24        the value of avoided greenhouse gas emissions measured
25        as the product of the zero emission facilities' output
26        over the contract term multiplied by the U.S.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 134 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        Environmental Protection Agency eGrid subregion carbon
2        dioxide emission rate and the U.S. Interagency Working
3        Group on Social Cost of Carbon's price in the August
4        2016 Technical Update using a 3% discount rate,
5        adjusted for inflation for each delivery year; and (ii)
6        the costs of replacement with other zero carbon dioxide
7        resources, including wind and photovoltaic, based upon
8        the results of the procurements specified in
9        subparagraph (G) of paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of
10        Section 1-75 of this Act. Each utility shall enter into
11        binding contractual arrangements with the winning
12        suppliers.
13            Notwithstanding anything to the contrary and
14        regardless of whether a procurement event is conducted
15        under Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, the
16        procurement described in this subsection (d-5),
17        including, but not limited to, the execution of all
18        contracts procured, shall be completed no later than
19        May 10, 2017. Based on the effective date of this
20        amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, the Agency
21        and Commission may, as appropriate, modify the various
22        dates and timelines under this subparagraph (C). The
23        procurement and plan approval processes required by
24        this subsection (d-5) shall be conducted in
25        conjunction with the procurement and plan approval
26        processes required by subsection (c) of this Section

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 135 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, to
2        the extent practicable. Notwithstanding whether a
3        procurement event is conducted under Section 16-111.5
4        of the Public Utilities Act, the Agency shall
5        immediately initiate a procurement process on the
6        effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th
7        General Assembly.
8            (D) Following the procurement event described in
9        this paragraph (1) and consistent with subparagraph
10        (B) of this paragraph (1), the Agency shall calculate
11        the payments to be made under each contract for the
12        next delivery year based on the market price index for
13        that delivery year. The Agency shall publish the
14        payment calculations no later than May 25, 2017 and
15        every May 25 thereafter.
16            (E) The contracts executed under this subsection
17        (d-5) shall provide that the Commission or zero
18        emission facility may terminate a contract or
19        contracts to be effective on June 1 of a given delivery
20        year, provided that notice of such termination must be
21        made at least 4 years prior to the effective date of
22        such termination and the earliest date on which a
23        contract termination may take effect under this
24        subparagraph (E) is the earlier of June 1, 2023 or 2
25        years after the State has adopted and implemented a
26        plan under the provisions of Section 111(d) of the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 136 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        federal Clean Air Act, 42 U.S. C. 7411(d), as amended.
2            (F) Notwithstanding the requirements of this
3        subsection (d-5), the contracts executed under this
4        subsection (d-5) shall provide that the zero emission
5        facility may, as applicable, suspend or terminate
6        performance under the contracts in the following
7        instances:
8                (i) A zero emission facility shall be excused
9            from its performance under the contract for any
10            cause beyond the control of the resource,
11            including, but not restricted to, acts of God,
12            flood, drought, earthquake, storm, fire,
13            lightning, epidemic, war, riot, civil disturbance
14            or disobedience, labor dispute, labor or material
15            shortage, sabotage, acts of public enemy,
16            explosions, orders, regulations or restrictions
17            imposed by governmental, military, or lawfully
18            established civilian authorities, which, in any of
19            the foregoing cases, by exercise of commercially
20            reasonable efforts the zero emission facility
21            could not reasonably have been expected to avoid,
22            and which, by the exercise of commercially
23            reasonable efforts, it has been unable to
24            overcome. In such event, the zero emission
25            facility shall be excused from performance for the
26            duration of the event, including, but not limited

 

 

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1            to, delivery of zero emission credits, and no
2            payment shall be due to the zero emission facility
3            during the duration of the event.
4                (ii) A zero emission facility shall be
5            permitted to terminate the contract if legislation
6            is enacted into law by the General Assembly that
7            imposes or authorizes a new tax, special
8            assessment, or fee on the generation of
9            electricity, the ownership or leasehold of a
10            generating unit, or the privilege or occupation of
11            such generation, ownership, or leasehold of
12            generation units by a zero emission facility.
13            However, the provisions of this item (ii) do not
14            apply to any generally applicable tax, special
15            assessment or fee, or requirements imposed by
16            federal law.
17                (iii) A zero emission facility shall be
18            permitted to terminate the contract in the event
19            that the resource requires capital expenditures
20            that were neither known nor reasonably foreseeable
21            at the time it executed the contract and that a
22            prudent owner or operator of such resource would
23            not undertake.
24                (iv) A zero emission facility shall be
25            permitted to terminate the contract in the event
26            the Nuclear Regulatory Commission terminates the

 

 

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1            resource's license.
2            (G) Notwithstanding the requirements of this
3        subsection (d-5), an electric utility that is located
4        in the Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc.,
5        or its successor, shall not be required to execute any
6        contracts under this subsection (d-5) unless at least
7        one winning zero emission facility is interconnected
8        directly to the transmission system of the
9        Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., or its
10        successor, at the time the contract is executed. All
11        contracts executed by such electric utility under this
12        subsection (d-5) shall expressly permit termination,
13        at the time, if any, that no zero emission facilities
14        are generating electricity within the Midcontinent
15        Independent System Operator, Inc., or its successor.
16            Termination of a contract under this subparagraph
17        (G) shall become effective 90 days after notice of
18        termination.
19            (H) If the Commission or zero emission facility
20        elects to terminate a contract under subparagraph (E),
21        (F), or (G) of this paragraph (1), as applicable, then
22        the Commission shall reopen the docket in which the
23        Commission approved the zero emission standard
24        procurement plan under subparagraph (C) of this
25        paragraph (1) and enter an order acknowledging the
26        contract termination election.

 

 

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1        (2) For purposes of this subsection (d-5), the amount
2    paid per kilowatthour means the total amount paid for
3    electric service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For
4    purposes of this subsection (d-5), the total amount paid
5    for electric service includes, without limitation, amounts
6    paid for supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges,
7    and add-on taxes.
8        Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
9    (d-5), the contracts executed under this subsection (d-5)
10    shall provide that the total of zero emission credits
11    procured under a procurement plan shall be subject to the
12    limitations of this paragraph (2). For each rolling 4-year
13    period, the contractual volume shall be reduced for all
14    retail customers based on the amount necessary to limit the
15    annual estimated average net increase for each year in each
16    4-year period due to the costs of these credits included in
17    the amounts paid by eligible retail customers in connection
18    with electric service to no more than 2.015% of the amount
19    paid per kilowatthour by eligible retail customers during
20    the year ending May 31, 2009. The result of this
21    computation shall apply to and reduce the procurement for
22    all retail customers, and all those customers shall pay the
23    same single, uniform cents per kilowatthour charge under
24    subsection (k) of Section 16-108 of the Public Utilities
25    Act. To arrive at a maximum dollar amount of zero emission
26    credits to be procured for the particular delivery year,

 

 

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1    the resulting per kilowatthour amount shall be applied to
2    the actual amount of kilowatthours of electricity
3    delivered by the electric utility in the delivery year
4    immediately prior to the procurement, to all retail
5    customers in its service territory. The calculations
6    required by this paragraph (2) shall be made only once for
7    each procurement plan year. Once the determination as to
8    the amount of zero emission credits to procure is made
9    based on the calculations set forth in this paragraph (2),
10    no subsequent rate impact determinations shall be made and
11    no adjustments to those contract amounts shall be allowed.
12    All costs incurred under those contracts and in
13    implementing this subsection (d-5) shall be recovered by
14    the electric utility as provided in this Section.
15        No later than June 30, 2019, the Commission shall
16    review the limitation on the amount of zero emission
17    credits procured under this subsection (d-5) and report to
18    the General Assembly its findings as to whether that
19    limitation unduly constrains the procurement of
20    cost-effective zero emission credits.
21        (3) Six years after the execution of a contract under
22    this subsection (d-5), the Agency shall determine whether
23    the actual zero emission credit payments received by the
24    supplier over the 6-year period exceed the Average ZEC
25    Payment. In addition, if a zero emission facility's
26    contract is terminated under subparagraph (E), (F), or (G)

 

 

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1    of paragraph (1) of this subsection (d-5), then the Agency
2    shall determine whether the actual zero emission credit
3    payments received by the supplier over the term of the
4    contract exceed the Average ZEC Payment, after taking into
5    account any amounts previously credited back to the utility
6    under this paragraph (3). If the Agency determines that the
7    actual zero emission credit payments received by the
8    supplier over the relevant period exceed the Average ZEC
9    Payment, then the supplier shall credit the difference back
10    to the utility. The amount of the credit shall be remitted
11    to the applicable electric utility no later than 120 days
12    after the Agency's determination, which the utility shall
13    reflect as a credit on its retail customer bills as soon as
14    practicable; however, the credit remitted to the utility
15    shall not exceed the total amount of payments received by
16    the facility under its contract.
17        For purposes of this Section, the Average ZEC Payment
18    shall be calculated by multiplying the quantity of zero
19    emission credits delivered under the contract times the
20    average contract price. The average contract price shall be
21    determined by subtracting the amount calculated under
22    subparagraph (B) of this paragraph (3) from the amount
23    calculated under subparagraph (A) of this paragraph (3), as
24    follows:
25            (A) The average of the Social Cost of Carbon, as
26        defined in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of this

 

 

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1        subsection (d-5), during the term of the contract.
2            (B) The average of the market price indices, as
3        defined in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of this
4        subsection (d-5), during the term of the contract,
5        minus the baseline market price index, as defined in
6        subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of this subsection
7        (d-5).
8    If the subtraction yields a negative number, then the
9Average ZEC Payment shall be zero.
10        (4) Cost-effective zero emission credits procured from
11    zero emission facilities shall satisfy the applicable
12    definitions set forth in Section 1-10 of this Act.
13        (5) The electric utility shall retire all zero emission
14    credits used to comply with the requirements of this
15    subsection (d-5).
16        (6) Electric utilities shall be entitled to recover all
17    of the costs associated with the procurement of zero
18    emission credits through an automatic adjustment clause
19    tariff in accordance with subsection (k) of Section 16-108
20    of the Public Utilities Act.
21    (e) The draft procurement plans are subject to public
22comment, as required by Section 16-111.5 of the Public
23Utilities Act.
24    (f) The Agency shall submit the final procurement plan to
25the Commission. The Agency shall revise a procurement plan if
26the Commission determines that it does not meet the standards

 

 

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1set forth in Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
2    (g) The Agency shall assess fees to each affected utility
3to recover the costs incurred in preparation of the annual
4procurement plan for the utility.
5    (h) The Agency shall assess fees to each bidder to recover
6the costs incurred in connection with a competitive procurement
7process.
8    (i) A renewable energy credit, carbon emission credit, or
9zero emission credit can only be used once to comply with a
10single portfolio or other standard as set forth in subsection
11(c), subsection (d), or subsection (d-5) of this Section,
12respectively. A renewable energy credit, carbon emission
13credit, or zero emission credit cannot be used to satisfy the
14requirements of more than one standard. If more than one type
15of credit is issued for the same megawatt hour of energy, only
16one credit can be used to satisfy the requirements of a single
17standard. After such use, the credit must be retired together
18with any other credits issued for the same megawatt hour of
19energy.
20(Source: P.A. 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 99-536, eff. 7-8-16.)
 
21    Section 10. The Illinois Procurement Code is amended by
22changing Section 20-10 as follows:
 
23    (30 ILCS 500/20-10)
24    (Text of Section from P.A. 96-159, 96-588, 97-96, 97-895,

 

 

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1and 98-1076)
2    Sec. 20-10. Competitive sealed bidding; reverse auction.
3    (a) Conditions for use. All contracts shall be awarded by
4competitive sealed bidding except as otherwise provided in
5Section 20-5.
6    (b) Invitation for bids. An invitation for bids shall be
7issued and shall include a purchase description and the
8material contractual terms and conditions applicable to the
9procurement.
10    (c) Public notice. Public notice of the invitation for bids
11shall be published in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin at
12least 14 calendar days before the date set in the invitation
13for the opening of bids.
14    (d) Bid opening. Bids shall be opened publicly in the
15presence of one or more witnesses at the time and place
16designated in the invitation for bids. The name of each bidder,
17the amount of each bid, and other relevant information as may
18be specified by rule shall be recorded. After the award of the
19contract, the winning bid and the record of each unsuccessful
20bid shall be open to public inspection.
21    (e) Bid acceptance and bid evaluation. Bids shall be
22unconditionally accepted without alteration or correction,
23except as authorized in this Code. Bids shall be evaluated
24based on the requirements set forth in the invitation for bids,
25which may include criteria to determine acceptability such as
26inspection, testing, quality, workmanship, delivery, and

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 145 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1suitability for a particular purpose. Those criteria that will
2affect the bid price and be considered in evaluation for award,
3such as discounts, transportation costs, and total or life
4cycle costs, shall be objectively measurable. The invitation
5for bids shall set forth the evaluation criteria to be used.
6    (f) Correction or withdrawal of bids. Correction or
7withdrawal of inadvertently erroneous bids before or after
8award, or cancellation of awards of contracts based on bid
9mistakes, shall be permitted in accordance with rules. After
10bid opening, no changes in bid prices or other provisions of
11bids prejudicial to the interest of the State or fair
12competition shall be permitted. All decisions to permit the
13correction or withdrawal of bids based on bid mistakes shall be
14supported by written determination made by a State purchasing
15officer.
16    (g) Award. The contract shall be awarded with reasonable
17promptness by written notice to the lowest responsible and
18responsive bidder whose bid meets the requirements and criteria
19set forth in the invitation for bids, except when a State
20purchasing officer determines it is not in the best interest of
21the State and by written explanation determines another bidder
22shall receive the award. The explanation shall appear in the
23appropriate volume of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. The
24written explanation must include:
25        (1) a description of the agency's needs;
26        (2) a determination that the anticipated cost will be

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 146 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    fair and reasonable;
2        (3) a listing of all responsible and responsive
3    bidders; and
4        (4) the name of the bidder selected, the total contract
5    price, and the reasons for selecting that bidder.
6    Each chief procurement officer may adopt guidelines to
7implement the requirements of this subsection (g).
8    The written explanation shall be filed with the Legislative
9Audit Commission and the Procurement Policy Board, and be made
10available for inspection by the public, within 30 calendar days
11after the agency's decision to award the contract.
12    (h) Multi-step sealed bidding. When it is considered
13impracticable to initially prepare a purchase description to
14support an award based on price, an invitation for bids may be
15issued requesting the submission of unpriced offers to be
16followed by an invitation for bids limited to those bidders
17whose offers have been qualified under the criteria set forth
18in the first solicitation.
19    (i) Alternative procedures. Notwithstanding any other
20provision of this Act to the contrary, the Director of the
21Illinois Power Agency may create alternative bidding
22procedures to be used in procuring professional services under
23subsections subsection (a) and (c) of Section 1-75 and
24subsection (d) of Section 1-78 of the Illinois Power Agency Act
25and Section 16-111.5(c) of the Public Utilities Act and to
26procure renewable energy resources under Section 1-56 of the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 147 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1Illinois Power Agency Act. These alternative procedures shall
2be set forth together with the other criteria contained in the
3invitation for bids, and shall appear in the appropriate volume
4of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin.
5    (j) Reverse auction. Notwithstanding any other provision
6of this Section and in accordance with rules adopted by the
7chief procurement officer, that chief procurement officer may
8procure supplies or services through a competitive electronic
9auction bidding process after the chief procurement officer
10determines that the use of such a process will be in the best
11interest of the State. The chief procurement officer shall
12publish that determination in his or her next volume of the
13Illinois Procurement Bulletin.
14    An invitation for bids shall be issued and shall include
15(i) a procurement description, (ii) all contractual terms,
16whenever practical, and (iii) conditions applicable to the
17procurement, including a notice that bids will be received in
18an electronic auction manner.
19    Public notice of the invitation for bids shall be given in
20the same manner as provided in subsection (c).
21    Bids shall be accepted electronically at the time and in
22the manner designated in the invitation for bids. During the
23auction, a bidder's price shall be disclosed to other bidders.
24Bidders shall have the opportunity to reduce their bid prices
25during the auction. At the conclusion of the auction, the
26record of the bid prices received and the name of each bidder

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 148 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1shall be open to public inspection.
2    After the auction period has terminated, withdrawal of bids
3shall be permitted as provided in subsection (f).
4    The contract shall be awarded within 60 calendar days after
5the auction by written notice to the lowest responsible bidder,
6or all bids shall be rejected except as otherwise provided in
7this Code. Extensions of the date for the award may be made by
8mutual written consent of the State purchasing officer and the
9lowest responsible bidder.
10    This subsection does not apply to (i) procurements of
11professional and artistic services, (ii) telecommunications
12services, communication services, and information services,
13and (iii) contracts for construction projects, including
14design professional services.
15(Source: P.A. 97-96, eff. 7-13-11; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12;
1698-1076, eff. 1-1-15.)
 
17    (Text of Section from P.A. 96-159, 96-795, 97-96, 97-895,
18and 98-1076)
19    Sec. 20-10. Competitive sealed bidding; reverse auction.
20    (a) Conditions for use. All contracts shall be awarded by
21competitive sealed bidding except as otherwise provided in
22Section 20-5.
23    (b) Invitation for bids. An invitation for bids shall be
24issued and shall include a purchase description and the
25material contractual terms and conditions applicable to the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 149 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1procurement.
2    (c) Public notice. Public notice of the invitation for bids
3shall be published in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin at
4least 14 calendar days before the date set in the invitation
5for the opening of bids.
6    (d) Bid opening. Bids shall be opened publicly in the
7presence of one or more witnesses at the time and place
8designated in the invitation for bids. The name of each bidder,
9the amount of each bid, and other relevant information as may
10be specified by rule shall be recorded. After the award of the
11contract, the winning bid and the record of each unsuccessful
12bid shall be open to public inspection.
13    (e) Bid acceptance and bid evaluation. Bids shall be
14unconditionally accepted without alteration or correction,
15except as authorized in this Code. Bids shall be evaluated
16based on the requirements set forth in the invitation for bids,
17which may include criteria to determine acceptability such as
18inspection, testing, quality, workmanship, delivery, and
19suitability for a particular purpose. Those criteria that will
20affect the bid price and be considered in evaluation for award,
21such as discounts, transportation costs, and total or life
22cycle costs, shall be objectively measurable. The invitation
23for bids shall set forth the evaluation criteria to be used.
24    (f) Correction or withdrawal of bids. Correction or
25withdrawal of inadvertently erroneous bids before or after
26award, or cancellation of awards of contracts based on bid

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 150 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1mistakes, shall be permitted in accordance with rules. After
2bid opening, no changes in bid prices or other provisions of
3bids prejudicial to the interest of the State or fair
4competition shall be permitted. All decisions to permit the
5correction or withdrawal of bids based on bid mistakes shall be
6supported by written determination made by a State purchasing
7officer.
8    (g) Award. The contract shall be awarded with reasonable
9promptness by written notice to the lowest responsible and
10responsive bidder whose bid meets the requirements and criteria
11set forth in the invitation for bids, except when a State
12purchasing officer determines it is not in the best interest of
13the State and by written explanation determines another bidder
14shall receive the award. The explanation shall appear in the
15appropriate volume of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. The
16written explanation must include:
17        (1) a description of the agency's needs;
18        (2) a determination that the anticipated cost will be
19    fair and reasonable;
20        (3) a listing of all responsible and responsive
21    bidders; and
22        (4) the name of the bidder selected, the total contract
23    price, and the reasons for selecting that bidder.
24    Each chief procurement officer may adopt guidelines to
25implement the requirements of this subsection (g).
26    The written explanation shall be filed with the Legislative

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 151 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1Audit Commission and the Procurement Policy Board, and be made
2available for inspection by the public, within 30 days after
3the agency's decision to award the contract.
4    (h) Multi-step sealed bidding. When it is considered
5impracticable to initially prepare a purchase description to
6support an award based on price, an invitation for bids may be
7issued requesting the submission of unpriced offers to be
8followed by an invitation for bids limited to those bidders
9whose offers have been qualified under the criteria set forth
10in the first solicitation.
11    (i) Alternative procedures. Notwithstanding any other
12provision of this Act to the contrary, the Director of the
13Illinois Power Agency may create alternative bidding
14procedures to be used in procuring professional services under
15subsections subsection (a) and (c) of Section 1-75 and
16subsection (d) of Section 1-78 of the Illinois Power Agency Act
17and Section 16-111.5(c) of the Public Utilities Act and to
18procure renewable energy resources under Section 1-56 of the
19Illinois Power Agency Act. These alternative procedures shall
20be set forth together with the other criteria contained in the
21invitation for bids, and shall appear in the appropriate volume
22of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin.
23    (j) Reverse auction. Notwithstanding any other provision
24of this Section and in accordance with rules adopted by the
25chief procurement officer, that chief procurement officer may
26procure supplies or services through a competitive electronic

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 152 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1auction bidding process after the chief procurement officer
2determines that the use of such a process will be in the best
3interest of the State. The chief procurement officer shall
4publish that determination in his or her next volume of the
5Illinois Procurement Bulletin.
6    An invitation for bids shall be issued and shall include
7(i) a procurement description, (ii) all contractual terms,
8whenever practical, and (iii) conditions applicable to the
9procurement, including a notice that bids will be received in
10an electronic auction manner.
11    Public notice of the invitation for bids shall be given in
12the same manner as provided in subsection (c).
13    Bids shall be accepted electronically at the time and in
14the manner designated in the invitation for bids. During the
15auction, a bidder's price shall be disclosed to other bidders.
16Bidders shall have the opportunity to reduce their bid prices
17during the auction. At the conclusion of the auction, the
18record of the bid prices received and the name of each bidder
19shall be open to public inspection.
20    After the auction period has terminated, withdrawal of bids
21shall be permitted as provided in subsection (f).
22    The contract shall be awarded within 60 calendar days after
23the auction by written notice to the lowest responsible bidder,
24or all bids shall be rejected except as otherwise provided in
25this Code. Extensions of the date for the award may be made by
26mutual written consent of the State purchasing officer and the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 153 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1lowest responsible bidder.
2    This subsection does not apply to (i) procurements of
3professional and artistic services, (ii) telecommunications
4services, communication services, and information services,
5and (iii) contracts for construction projects, including
6design professional services.
7(Source: P.A. 97-96, eff. 7-13-11; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12;
898-1076, eff. 1-1-15.)
 
9    Section 15. The Public Utilities Act is amended by changing
10Sections 8-103, 8-104, 16-107, 16-107.5, 16-108, 16-111.5,
1116-111.5B, 16-111.7, 16-115A, 16-115D, 16-119A, and 16-127 and
12by adding Sections 8-103B, 8-512, 9-105, 9-107, 16-103.3,
1316-107.6, 16-107.7, 16-108.9, and 16-108.10 as follows:
 
14    (220 ILCS 5/8-103)
15    Sec. 8-103. Energy efficiency and demand-response
16measures.
17    (a) It is the policy of the State that electric utilities
18are required to use cost-effective energy efficiency and
19demand-response measures to reduce delivery load. Requiring
20investment in cost-effective energy efficiency and
21demand-response measures will reduce direct and indirect costs
22to consumers by decreasing environmental impacts and by
23avoiding or delaying the need for new generation, transmission,
24and distribution infrastructure. It serves the public interest

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 154 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1to allow electric utilities to recover costs for reasonably and
2prudently incurred expenses for energy efficiency and
3demand-response measures. As used in this Section,
4"cost-effective" means that the measures satisfy the total
5resource cost test. The low-income measures described in
6subsection (f)(4) of this Section shall not be required to meet
7the total resource cost test. For purposes of this Section, the
8terms "energy-efficiency", "demand-response", "electric
9utility", and "total resource cost test" shall have the
10meanings set forth in the Illinois Power Agency Act. For
11purposes of this Section, the amount per kilowatthour means the
12total amount paid for electric service expressed on a per
13kilowatthour basis. For purposes of this Section, the total
14amount paid for electric service includes without limitation
15estimated amounts paid for supply, transmission, distribution,
16surcharges, and add-on-taxes.
17    (a-5) This Section applies to electric utilities serving
18500,000 or less but more than 200,000 retail customers in this
19State. Through December 31, 2017, this Section also applies to
20electric utilities serving more than 500,000 retail customers
21in the State.
22    (b) Electric utilities shall implement cost-effective
23energy efficiency measures to meet the following incremental
24annual energy savings goals:
25        (1) 0.2% of energy delivered in the year commencing
26    June 1, 2008;

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 155 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (2) 0.4% of energy delivered in the year commencing
2    June 1, 2009;
3        (3) 0.6% of energy delivered in the year commencing
4    June 1, 2010;
5        (4) 0.8% of energy delivered in the year commencing
6    June 1, 2011;
7        (5) 1% of energy delivered in the year commencing June
8    1, 2012;
9        (6) 1.4% of energy delivered in the year commencing
10    June 1, 2013;
11        (7) 1.8% of energy delivered in the year commencing
12    June 1, 2014; and
13        (8) 2% of energy delivered in the year commencing June
14    1, 2015 and each year thereafter.
15    Electric utilities may comply with this subsection (b) by
16meeting the annual incremental savings goal in the applicable
17year or by showing that the total cumulative annual savings
18within a 3-year planning period associated with measures
19implemented after May 31, 2014 was equal to the sum of each
20annual incremental savings requirement from May 31, 2014
21through the end of the applicable year.
22    (c) Electric utilities shall implement cost-effective
23demand-response measures to reduce peak demand by 0.1% over the
24prior year for eligible retail customers, as defined in Section
2516-111.5 of this Act, and for customers that elect hourly
26service from the utility pursuant to Section 16-107 of this

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 156 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1Act, provided those customers have not been declared
2competitive. This requirement commences June 1, 2008 and
3continues for 10 years.
4    (d) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsections (b)
5and (c) of this Section, an electric utility shall reduce the
6amount of energy efficiency and demand-response measures
7implemented over a 3-year planning period by an amount
8necessary to limit the estimated average annual increase in the
9amounts paid by retail customers in connection with electric
10service due to the cost of those measures to:
11        (1) in 2008, no more than 0.5% of the amount paid per
12    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
13    31, 2007;
14        (2) in 2009, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
15    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
16    year ending May 31, 2008 or 1% of the amount paid per
17    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
18    31, 2007;
19        (3) in 2010, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
20    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
21    year ending May 31, 2009 or 1.5% of the amount paid per
22    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
23    31, 2007;
24        (4) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
25    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
26    year ending May 31, 2010 or 2% of the amount paid per

 

 

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1    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
2    31, 2007; and
3        (5) thereafter, the amount of energy efficiency and
4    demand-response measures implemented for any single year
5    shall be reduced by an amount necessary to limit the
6    estimated average net increase due to the cost of these
7    measures included in the amounts paid by eligible retail
8    customers in connection with electric service to no more
9    than the greater of 2.015% of the amount paid per
10    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
11    31, 2007 or the incremental amount per kilowatthour paid
12    for these measures in 2011.
13    No later than June 30, 2011, the Commission shall review
14the limitation on the amount of energy efficiency and
15demand-response measures implemented pursuant to this Section
16and report to the General Assembly its findings as to whether
17that limitation unduly constrains the procurement of energy
18efficiency and demand-response measures.
19    (e) Electric utilities shall be responsible for overseeing
20the design, development, and filing of energy efficiency and
21demand-response plans with the Commission. Electric utilities
22shall implement 100% of the demand-response measures in the
23plans. Electric utilities shall implement 75% of the energy
24efficiency measures approved by the Commission, and may, as
25part of that implementation, outsource various aspects of
26program development and implementation. The remaining 25% of

 

 

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1those energy efficiency measures approved by the Commission
2shall be implemented by the Department of Commerce and Economic
3Opportunity, and must be designed in conjunction with the
4utility and the filing process. The Department may outsource
5development and implementation of energy efficiency measures.
6A minimum of 10% of the entire portfolio of cost-effective
7energy efficiency measures shall be procured from units of
8local government, municipal corporations, school districts,
9and community college districts. The Department shall
10coordinate the implementation of these measures.
11    The apportionment of the dollars to cover the costs to
12implement the Department's share of the portfolio of energy
13efficiency measures shall be made to the Department once the
14Department has executed rebate agreements, grants, or
15contracts for energy efficiency measures and provided
16supporting documentation for those rebate agreements, grants,
17and contracts to the utility. The Department is authorized to
18adopt any rules necessary and prescribe procedures in order to
19ensure compliance by applicants in carrying out the purposes of
20rebate agreements for energy efficiency measures implemented
21by the Department made under this Section.
22    The details of the measures implemented by the Department
23shall be submitted by the Department to the Commission in
24connection with the utility's filing regarding the energy
25efficiency and demand-response measures that the utility
26implements.

 

 

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1    A utility providing approved energy efficiency and
2demand-response measures in the State shall be permitted to
3recover costs of those measures through an automatic adjustment
4clause tariff filed with and approved by the Commission. The
5tariff shall be established outside the context of a general
6rate case. Each year the Commission shall initiate a review to
7reconcile any amounts collected with the actual costs and to
8determine the required adjustment to the annual tariff factor
9to match annual expenditures.
10    Each utility shall include, in its recovery of costs, the
11costs estimated for both the utility's and the Department's
12implementation of energy efficiency and demand-response
13measures. Costs collected by the utility for measures
14implemented by the Department shall be submitted to the
15Department pursuant to Section 605-323 of the Civil
16Administrative Code of Illinois, shall be deposited into the
17Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standards Fund, and shall be used
18by the Department solely for the purpose of implementing these
19measures. A utility shall not be required to advance any moneys
20to the Department but only to forward such funds as it has
21collected. The Department shall report to the Commission on an
22annual basis regarding the costs actually incurred by the
23Department in the implementation of the measures. Any changes
24to the costs of energy efficiency measures as a result of plan
25modifications shall be appropriately reflected in amounts
26recovered by the utility and turned over to the Department.

 

 

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1    The portfolio of measures, administered by both the
2utilities and the Department, shall, in combination, be
3designed to achieve the annual savings targets described in
4subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, as modified by
5subsection (d) of this Section.
6    The utility and the Department shall agree upon a
7reasonable portfolio of measures and determine the measurable
8corresponding percentage of the savings goals associated with
9measures implemented by the utility or Department.
10    No utility shall be assessed a penalty under subsection (f)
11of this Section for failure to make a timely filing if that
12failure is the result of a lack of agreement with the
13Department with respect to the allocation of responsibilities
14or related costs or target assignments. In that case, the
15Department and the utility shall file their respective plans
16with the Commission and the Commission shall determine an
17appropriate division of measures and programs that meets the
18requirements of this Section.
19    If the Department is unable to meet incremental annual
20performance goals for the portion of the portfolio implemented
21by the Department, then the utility and the Department shall
22jointly submit a modified filing to the Commission explaining
23the performance shortfall and recommending an appropriate
24course going forward, including any program modifications that
25may be appropriate in light of the evaluations conducted under
26item (7) of subsection (f) of this Section. In this case, the

 

 

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1utility obligation to collect the Department's costs and turn
2over those funds to the Department under this subsection (e)
3shall continue only if the Commission approves the
4modifications to the plan proposed by the Department.
5    (f) No later than November 15, 2007, each electric utility
6shall file an energy efficiency and demand-response plan with
7the Commission to meet the energy efficiency and
8demand-response standards for 2008 through 2010. No later than
9October 1, 2010, each electric utility shall file an energy
10efficiency and demand-response plan with the Commission to meet
11the energy efficiency and demand-response standards for 2011
12through 2013. Every 3 years thereafter, each electric utility
13shall file, no later than September 1, an energy efficiency and
14demand-response plan with the Commission. If a utility does not
15file such a plan by September 1 of an applicable year, it shall
16face a penalty of $100,000 per day until the plan is filed.
17Each utility's plan shall set forth the utility's proposals to
18meet the utility's portion of the energy efficiency standards
19identified in subsection (b) and the demand-response standards
20identified in subsection (c) of this Section as modified by
21subsections (d) and (e), taking into account the unique
22circumstances of the utility's service territory. The
23Commission shall seek public comment on the utility's plan and
24shall issue an order approving or disapproving each plan within
255 months after its submission. If the Commission disapproves a
26plan, the Commission shall, within 30 days, describe in detail

 

 

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1the reasons for the disapproval and describe a path by which
2the utility may file a revised draft of the plan to address the
3Commission's concerns satisfactorily. If the utility does not
4refile with the Commission within 60 days, the utility shall be
5subject to penalties at a rate of $100,000 per day until the
6plan is filed. This process shall continue, and penalties shall
7accrue, until the utility has successfully filed a portfolio of
8energy efficiency and demand-response measures. Penalties
9shall be deposited into the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund. In
10submitting proposed energy efficiency and demand-response
11plans and funding levels to meet the savings goals adopted by
12this Act the utility shall:
13        (1) Demonstrate that its proposed energy efficiency
14    and demand-response measures will achieve the requirements
15    that are identified in subsections (b) and (c) of this
16    Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e).
17        (2) Present specific proposals to implement new
18    building and appliance standards that have been placed into
19    effect.
20        (3) Present estimates of the total amount paid for
21    electric service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis
22    associated with the proposed portfolio of measures
23    designed to meet the requirements that are identified in
24    subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, as modified by
25    subsections (d) and (e).
26        (4) Coordinate with the Department to present a

 

 

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1    portfolio of energy efficiency measures proportionate to
2    the share of total annual utility revenues in Illinois from
3    households at or below 150% of the poverty level. The
4    energy efficiency programs shall be targeted to households
5    with incomes at or below 80% of area median income.
6        (5) Demonstrate that its overall portfolio of energy
7    efficiency and demand-response measures, not including
8    programs covered by item (4) of this subsection (f), are
9    cost-effective using the total resource cost test and
10    represent a diverse cross-section of opportunities for
11    customers of all rate classes to participate in the
12    programs.
13        (6) Include a proposed cost-recovery tariff mechanism
14    to fund the proposed energy efficiency and demand-response
15    measures and to ensure the recovery of the prudently and
16    reasonably incurred costs of Commission-approved programs.
17        (7) Provide for an annual independent evaluation of the
18    performance of the cost-effectiveness of the utility's
19    portfolio of measures and the Department's portfolio of
20    measures, as well as a full review of the 3-year results of
21    the broader net program impacts and, to the extent
22    practical, for adjustment of the measures on a
23    going-forward basis as a result of the evaluations. The
24    resources dedicated to evaluation shall not exceed 3% of
25    portfolio resources in any given year.
26    (g) No more than 3% of energy efficiency and

 

 

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1demand-response program revenue may be allocated for
2demonstration of breakthrough equipment and devices.
3    (h) This Section does not apply to an electric utility that
4on December 31, 2005 provided electric service to fewer than
5100,000 customers in Illinois.
6    (i) If, after 2 years, an electric utility fails to meet
7the efficiency standard specified in subsection (b) of this
8Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e), it shall make
9a contribution to the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance
10Program. The combined total liability for failure to meet the
11goal shall be $1,000,000, which shall be assessed as follows: a
12large electric utility shall pay $665,000, and a medium
13electric utility shall pay $335,000. If, after 3 years, an
14electric utility fails to meet the efficiency standard
15specified in subsection (b) of this Section, as modified by
16subsections (d) and (e), it shall make a contribution to the
17Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program. The combined total
18liability for failure to meet the goal shall be $1,000,000,
19which shall be assessed as follows: a large electric utility
20shall pay $665,000, and a medium electric utility shall pay
21$335,000. In addition, the responsibility for implementing the
22energy efficiency measures of the utility making the payment
23shall be transferred to the Illinois Power Agency if, after 3
24years, or in any subsequent 3-year period, the utility fails to
25meet the efficiency standard specified in subsection (b) of
26this Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e). The

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 165 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1Agency shall implement a competitive procurement program to
2procure resources necessary to meet the standards specified in
3this Section as modified by subsections (d) and (e), with costs
4for those resources to be recovered in the same manner as
5products purchased through the procurement plan as provided in
6Section 16-111.5. The Director shall implement this
7requirement in connection with the procurement plan as provided
8in Section 16-111.5.
9    For purposes of this Section, (i) a "large electric
10utility" is an electric utility that, on December 31, 2005,
11served more than 2,000,000 electric customers in Illinois; (ii)
12a "medium electric utility" is an electric utility that, on
13December 31, 2005, served 2,000,000 or fewer but more than
14100,000 electric customers in Illinois; and (iii) Illinois
15electric utilities that are affiliated by virtue of a common
16parent company are considered a single electric utility.
17    (j) If, after 3 years, or any subsequent 3-year period, the
18Department fails to implement the Department's share of energy
19efficiency measures required by the standards in subsection
20(b), then the Illinois Power Agency may assume responsibility
21for and control of the Department's share of the required
22energy efficiency measures. The Agency shall implement a
23competitive procurement program to procure resources necessary
24to meet the standards specified in this Section, with the costs
25of these resources to be recovered in the same manner as
26provided for the Department in this Section.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 166 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    (k) No electric utility shall be deemed to have failed to
2meet the energy efficiency standards to the extent any such
3failure is due to a failure of the Department or the Agency.
4    (l)(1) The energy efficiency and demand-response plans of
5electric utilities serving more than 500,000 retail customers
6in the State that were approved by the Commission on or before
7the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
8Assembly for the period June 1, 2014 through May 31, 2017 shall
9continue to be in force and effect through December 31, 2017 so
10that the energy efficiency programs set forth in those plans
11continue to be offered during the period June 1, 2017 through
12December 31, 2017. Each such utility is authorized to increase,
13on a pro rata basis, the energy savings goals and budgets
14approved in its plan to reflect the additional 7 months of the
15plan's operation.
16        (2) If an electric utility serving more than 500,000
17    retail customers in the State filed with the Commission,
18    under subsection (f) of this Section, its proposed energy
19    efficiency and demand-response plan for the period June 1,
20    2017 through May 31, 2020, and the Commission has not yet
21    entered its final order approving such plan on or before
22    the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th
23    General Assembly, then the utility shall file a notice of
24    withdrawal with the Commission, following such effective
25    date, to withdraw the proposed energy efficiency and
26    demand-response plan. Upon receipt of such notice, the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 167 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    Commission shall dismiss with prejudice any docket that had
2    been initiated to investigate such plan, and the plan and
3    the record related thereto shall not be the subject of any
4    further hearing, investigation, or proceeding of any kind.
5        (3) For those electric utilities that serve more than
6    500,000 retail customers in the State, this amendatory Act
7    of the 99th General Assembly preempts and supersedes any
8    orders entered by the Commission that approved such
9    utilities' energy efficiency and demand response plans for
10    the period commencing June 1, 2017 and ending May 31, 2020.
11    Any such orders shall be void, and the provisions of
12    paragraph (1) of this subsection (l) shall apply.
13(Source: P.A. 97-616, eff. 10-26-11; 97-841, eff. 7-20-12;
1498-90, eff. 7-15-13.)
 
15    (220 ILCS 5/8-103B new)
16    Sec. 8-103B. Energy efficiency and demand-response
17measures.
18    (a) It is the policy of the State that electric utilities
19are required to use cost-effective energy efficiency and
20demand-response measures to reduce delivery load. Requiring
21investment in cost-effective energy efficiency and
22demand-response measures will reduce direct and indirect costs
23to consumers by decreasing environmental impacts and by
24avoiding or delaying the need for new generation, transmission,
25and distribution infrastructure. It serves the public interest

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 168 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1to allow electric utilities to recover costs for reasonably and
2prudently incurred expenditures for energy efficiency and
3demand-response measures. As used in this Section,
4"cost-effective" means that the measures satisfy the total
5resource cost test. The low-income measures described in
6subsection (c) of this Section shall not be required to meet
7the total resource cost test. For purposes of this Section, the
8terms "energy-efficiency", "demand-response", "electric
9utility", and "total resource cost test" have the meanings set
10forth in the Illinois Power Agency Act. For purposes of this
11Section, the amount per kilowatthour means the total amount
12paid for electric service expressed on a per kilowatthour
13basis. For purposes of this Section, the total amount paid for
14electric service includes, without limitation, estimated
15amounts paid for supply, transmission, distribution,
16surcharges, and add-on taxes.
17    (a-5) This Section applies to electric utilities serving
18more than 500,000 retail customers in the State for those
19multi-year plans commencing after December 31, 2017.
20    (b) For purposes of this Section, electric utilities
21subject to this Section that serve more than 3,000,000 retail
22customers in the State shall be deemed to have achieved a
23cumulative persisting annual savings of 6.6%, or 5,777,692
24megawatt-hours (MWhs), from energy efficiency measures and
25programs implemented during the period beginning January 1,
262012 and ending December 31, 2017, which percent is based on

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 169 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1the deemed average weather normalized sales of electric power
2and energy during calendar years 2014, 2015, and 2016 of
388,000,000 MWhs. The 88,000,000 MWhs of deemed electric power
4and energy sales shall also serve as the baseline value for
5calculating the cumulative persisting annual savings in
6subsection (b-5). After 2017, the deemed value of cumulative
7persisting annual savings from energy efficiency measures and
8programs implemented during the period beginning January 1,
92012 and ending December 31, 2017, shall be reduced each year,
10as follows, and the applicable value shall be applied to and
11count toward the utility's achievement of the cumulative
12persisting annual savings goals set forth in subsection (b-5):
13        (1) 5.8%, or 5,071,018 MWhs, deemed cumulative
14    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
15    2018;
16        (2) 5.2%, or 4,553,371 MWhs, deemed cumulative
17    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
18    2019;
19        (3) 4.5%, or 3,998,012 MWhs, deemed cumulative
20    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
21    2020;
22        (4) 4.0%, or 3,533,219 MWhs, deemed cumulative
23    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
24    2021;
25        (5) 3.5%, or 3,108,290 MWhs, deemed cumulative
26    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 170 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    2022;
2        (6) 3.1%, or 2,738,689 MWhs, deemed cumulative
3    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
4    2023;
5        (7) 2.8%, or 2,463,055 MWhs, deemed cumulative
6    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
7    2024;
8        (8) 2.5%, or 2,221,716 MWhs, deemed cumulative
9    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
10    2025;
11        (9) 2.3%, or 2,017,109 MWhs, deemed cumulative
12    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
13    2026;
14        (10) 2.1%, or 1,822,754 MWhs, deemed cumulative
15    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
16    2027;
17        (11) 1.8%, or 1,624,769 MWhs, deemed cumulative
18    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
19    2028;
20        (12) 1.7%, or 1,460,039 MWhs, deemed cumulative
21    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
22    2029; and
23        (13) 1.5%, or 1,181,647 MWhs, deemed cumulative
24    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
25    2030.
26    For purposes of this Section, "cumulative persisting

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 171 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1annual savings" means the total electric energy savings in a
2given year from measures installed in that year or in previous
3years, but no earlier than January 1, 2012, that are still
4operational and providing savings in that year because the
5measures have not yet reached the end of their useful lives.
6    (b-5) Beginning in 2018, electric utilities subject to this
7Section that serve more than 3,000,000 retail customers in the
8State shall achieve the following cumulative persisting annual
9savings goals, as modified by subsection (f) of this Section
10and as compared to the deemed baseline of 88,000,000 MWhs of
11electric power and energy sales set forth in subsection (b),
12through the implementation of energy efficiency measures
13during the applicable year and in prior years, but no earlier
14than January 1, 2012:
15        (1) 8% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
16    year ending December 31, 2018;
17        (2) 9.5% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
18    year ending December 31, 2019;
19        (3) 11% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
20    year ending December 31, 2020;
21        (4) 12.5% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
22    year ending December 31, 2021;
23        (5) 14% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
24    year ending December 31, 2022;
25        (6) 15.5% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
26    year ending December 31, 2023;

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 172 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (7) 17% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
2    year ending December 31, 2024;
3        (8) 18.5% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
4    year ending December 31, 2025;
5        (9) 19.4% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
6    year ending December 31, 2026;
7        (10) 20.3% cumulative persisting annual savings for
8    the year ending December 31, 2027;
9        (11) 21.2% cumulative persisting annual savings for
10    the year ending December 31, 2028;
11        (12) 22.1% cumulative persisting annual savings for
12    the year ending December 31, 2029; and
13        (13) 23% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
14    year ending December 31, 2030.
15    (b-10) For purposes of this Section, electric utilities
16subject to this Section that serve less than 3,000,000 retail
17customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in the State
18shall be deemed to have achieved a cumulative persisting annual
19savings of 6.6%, or 2,435,400 MWhs, from energy efficiency
20measures and programs implemented during the period beginning
21January 1, 2012 and ending December 31, 2017, which is based on
22the deemed average weather normalized sales of electric power
23and energy during calendar years 2014, 2015, and 2016 of
2436,900,000 MWhs. The 36,900,000 MWhs of deemed electric power
25and energy sales shall also serve as the baseline value for
26calculating the cumulative persisting annual savings in

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 173 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1subsection (b-15). After 2017, the deemed value of cumulative
2persisting annual savings from energy efficiency measures and
3programs implemented during the period beginning January 1,
42012 and ending December 31, 2017, shall be reduced each year,
5as follows, and the applicable value shall be applied to and
6count toward the utility's achievement of the cumulative
7persisting annual savings goals set forth in subsection (b-15):
8        (1) 5.8%, or 2,140,200 MWhs, deemed cumulative
9    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
10    2018;
11        (2) 5.2%, or 1,918,800 MWhs, deemed cumulative
12    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
13    2019;
14        (3) 4.5%, or 1,660,500 MWhs, deemed cumulative
15    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
16    2020;
17        (4) 4.0%, or 1,476,000 MWhs, deemed cumulative
18    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
19    2021;
20        (5) 3.5%, or 1,291,500 MWhs, deemed cumulative
21    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
22    2022;
23        (6) 3.1%, or 1,143,900 MWhs, deemed cumulative
24    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
25    2023;
26        (7) 2.8%, or 1,033,200 MWhs, deemed cumulative

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 174 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
2    2024;
3        (8) 2.5%, or 922,500 MWhs, deemed cumulative
4    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
5    2025;
6        (9) 2.3%, or 848,700 MWhs, deemed cumulative
7    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
8    2026;
9        (10) 2.1%, or 774,900 MWhs, deemed cumulative
10    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
11    2027;
12        (11) 1.8%, or 664,200 MWhs, deemed cumulative
13    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
14    2028;
15        (12) 1.7%, or 627,300 MWhs, deemed cumulative
16    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
17    2029; and
18        (13) 1.5%, or 553,500 MWhs, deemed cumulative
19    persisting annual savings for the year ending December 31,
20    2030.
21    (b-15) Beginning in 2018, electric utilities subject to
22this Section that serve less than 3,000,000 retail customers
23but more than 500,000 retail customers in the State shall
24achieve the following cumulative persisting annual savings
25goals, as modified by subsection (b-20) and subsection (f) of
26this Section and as compared to the deemed baseline of

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 175 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

136,900,000 MWhs of electric power and energy sales set forth in
2subsection (b-10), through the implementation of energy
3efficiency measures during the applicable year and in prior
4years, but no earlier than January 1, 2012:
5        (1) 7.275% cumulative persisting annual savings for
6    the year ending December 31, 2018;
7        (2) 7.95% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
8    year ending December 31, 2019;
9        (3) 8.625% cumulative persisting annual savings for
10    the year ending December 31, 2020;
11        (4) 9.3% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
12    year ending December 31, 2021;
13        (5) 9.975% cumulative persisting annual savings for
14    the year ending December 31, 2022;
15        (6) 10.65% cumulative persisting annual savings for
16    the year ending December 31, 2023;
17        (7) 11.325% cumulative persisting annual savings for
18    the year ending December 31, 2024;
19        (8) 12% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
20    year ending December 31, 2025;
21        (9) 12.6% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
22    year ending December 31, 2026;
23        (10) 13.2% cumulative persisting annual savings for
24    the year ending December 31, 2027;
25        (11) 13.8% cumulative persisting annual savings for
26    the year ending December 31, 2028;

 

 

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1        (12) 14.4% cumulative persisting annual savings for
2    the year ending December 31, 2029; and
3        (13) 15% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
4    year ending December 31, 2030.
5    (b-20) Each electric utility subject to this Section may
6include cost-effective voltage optimization measures in its
7plans submitted under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section,
8and the costs incurred by a utility to implement the measures
9under a Commission-approved plan shall be recovered, at the
10utility's election, either through the automatic adjustment
11clause tariff approved under subsection (d) of this Section, an
12energy efficiency formula rate tariff approved under
13subsection (d) of this Section, or under the provisions of
14Article IX or Section 16-108.5 of this Act. For purposes of
15this Section, the measure life of voltage optimization measures
16shall be 15 years. The measure life period is independent of
17the depreciation rate of the voltage optimization assets
18deployed.
19    Within 270 days after the effective date of this amendatory
20Act of the 99th General Assembly, an electric utility that
21serves less than 3,000,000 retail customers but more than
22500,000 retail customers in the State shall file a plan with
23the Commission that identifies the cost-effective voltage
24optimization investment the electric utility plans to
25undertake through December 31, 2024. The Commission, after
26notice and hearing, shall approve or approve with modification

 

 

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1the plan within 120 days after the plan's filing and, in the
2order approving or approving with modification the plan, the
3Commission shall adjust the applicable cumulative persisting
4annual savings goals set forth in subsection (b-15) to reflect
5any amount of cost-effective energy savings approved by the
6Commission that is greater than or less than the following
7cumulative persisting annual savings values attributable to
8voltage optimization for the applicable year:
9        (1) 0.0% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
10    the year ending December 31, 2018;
11        (2) 0.17% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
12    the year ending December 31, 2019;
13        (3) 0.17% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
14    the year ending December 31, 2020;
15        (4) 0.33% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
16    the year ending December 31, 2021;
17        (5) 0.5% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
18    the year ending December 31, 2022;
19        (6) 0.67% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
20    the year ending December 31, 2023;
21        (7) 0.83% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
22    the year ending December 31, 2024; and
23        (8) 1.0% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
24    the year ending December 31, 2025.
25    (b-25) In the event an electric utility jointly offers an
26energy efficiency measure or program with a gas utility under

 

 

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1plans approved under this Section and Section 8-104 of this
2Act, the electric utility may continue offering the program,
3including the gas energy efficiency measures, in the event the
4gas utility discontinues funding the program. In that event,
5the energy savings value associated with such other fuels shall
6be converted to electric energy savings on an equivalent Btu
7basis for the premises. However, the electric utility shall
8prioritize programs for low-income residential customers to
9the extent practicable. An electric utility may recover the
10costs of offering the gas energy efficiency measures under this
11subsection (b-25).
12    An electric utility subject to this Section that serves
13less than 3,000,000 retail customers but more than 500,000
14retail customers in this State and that is affiliated with a
15gas utility that is subject to Section 8-104 of this Act may
16count the kilowatt-hour equivalent of all natural gas savings
17in excess of the gas utility's Commission-approved natural gas
18energy savings goals under that Section. Such electric utility
19may recover the costs of offering any dual fuel energy
20efficiency measures under this subsection (b-25).
21    For those energy efficiency measures or programs that save
22both electricity and other fuels but are not jointly offered
23with a gas utility under plans approved under this Section and
24Section 8-104 or not offered with an affiliated gas utility
25under paragraph (6) of subsection (f) of Section 8-104 of this
26Act, the electric utility may count savings of fuels other than

 

 

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1electricity toward the achievement of its annual savings goal,
2and the energy savings value associated with such other fuels
3shall be converted to electric energy savings on an equivalent
4Btu basis at the premises.
5    In no event shall more than 30% of each year's applicable
6annual incremental goal as defined in paragraph (7) of
7subsection (g) of this Section be met through savings of fuels
8other than electricity.
9    (c) Electric utilities shall be responsible for overseeing
10the design, development, and filing of energy efficiency plans
11with the Commission and may, as part of that implementation,
12outsource various aspects of program development and
13implementation. A minimum of 10%, for electric utilities that
14serve more than 3,000,000 retail customers in the State, and a
15minimum of 7%, for electric utilities that serve less than
163,000,000 retail customers more than 500,000 retail customers
17in the State, of the utility's entire portfolio funding level
18for a given year shall be used to procure cost-effective energy
19efficiency measures from units of local government, municipal
20corporations, school districts, public housing, and community
21college districts, provided that a minimum percentage of
22available funds shall be used to procure energy efficiency from
23public housing, which percentage shall be equal to public
24housing's share of public building energy consumption.
25    The utilities shall also implement energy efficiency
26measures targeted at low-income households, which, for

 

 

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1purposes of this Section, shall be defined as households at or
2below 80% of area median income, and expenditures to implement
3the measures shall be no less than $50,000,000 per year for
4electric utilities that serve more than 3,000,000 retail
5customers in the State and no less than $16,700,000 per year
6for electric utilities that serve less than 3,000,000 retail
7customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in the State.
8For the years commencing on January 1, 2018 and January 1,
92019, the energy savings attributable to such programs shall
10not be less than 29,239,766 kilowatt-hours per year for
11electric utilities that serve more than 3,000,000 retail
12customers in the State and not be less than 9,766,081
13kilowatt-hours per year for electric utilities that serve less
14than 3,000,000 retail customers but more than 500,000 retail
15customers in the State. For every 2-year period thereafter, the
16utility shall submit an informational filing to the Commission
1790 days prior to the beginning of the 2-year period that
18calculates the (i) cost per kilowatt-hour of energy savings to
19be achieved and (ii) the resulting incremental annual energy
20savings to be achieved each year, under the low-income programs
21during the applicable 2-year period.
22    Each electric utility shall assess opportunities to
23implement cost-effective energy efficiency measures and
24programs through a public housing authority or authorities
25located in its service territory. If such opportunities are
26identified, the utility shall propose such measures and

 

 

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1programs to address the opportunities. Expenditures to address
2such opportunities shall be credited toward the minimum
3procurement and expenditure requirements set forth in this
4subsection (c).
5    Implementation of energy efficiency measures and programs
6targeted at low-income households should be contracted, when it
7is practicable, to independent third parties that have
8demonstrated capabilities to serve such households, with a
9preference for not-for-profit entities and government agencies
10that have existing relationships with or experience serving
11low-income communities in the State.
12    Each electric utility shall develop and implement
13reporting procedures that address and assist in determining the
14amount of energy savings that can be applied to the low-income
15procurement and expenditure requirements set forth in this
16subsection (c).
17    The electric utilities shall also convene a low-income
18energy efficiency advisory committee to assist in the design
19and evaluation of the low-income energy efficiency programs.
20The committee shall be comprised of the electric utilities
21subject to the requirements of this Section, the gas utilities
22subject to the requirements of Section 8-104 of this Act, the
23utilities' low-income energy efficiency implementation
24contractors, and representatives of community-based
25organizations.
26    (d) A utility providing approved energy efficiency

 

 

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1measures and, if applicable, demand-response measures in the
2State shall be permitted to recover costs of those measures as
3follows, provided that nothing in this subsection (d) permits
4the double recovery of such costs from customers:
5        (1) The utility may recover its costs through an
6    automatic adjustment clause tariff filed with and approved
7    by the Commission. The tariff shall be established outside
8    the context of a general rate case. Each year the
9    Commission shall initiate a review to reconcile any amounts
10    collected with the actual costs and to determine the
11    required adjustment to the annual tariff factor to match
12    annual expenditures.
13        (2) A utility may recover its costs through an energy
14    efficiency formula rate approved by the Commission under a
15    filing under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section, which
16    shall specify the cost components that form the basis of
17    the rate charged to customers with sufficient specificity
18    to operate in a standardized manner and be updated annually
19    with transparent information that reflects the utility's
20    actual costs to be recovered during the applicable rate
21    year, which is the period beginning with the first billing
22    day of January and extending through the last billing day
23    of the following December. The energy efficiency formula
24    rate shall be implemented through a tariff filed with the
25    Commission under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section
26    that is consistent with the provisions of this paragraph

 

 

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1    (2) and that shall be applicable to all delivery services
2    customers. The Commission shall conduct an investigation
3    of the tariff in a manner consistent with the provisions of
4    this paragraph (2), subsections (f) and (g) of this
5    Section, and the provisions of Article IX of this Act to
6    the extent they do not conflict with this paragraph (2).
7    The energy efficiency formula rate approved by the
8    Commission shall remain in effect at the discretion of the
9    utility and shall do the following:
10            (A) Provide for the recovery of the utility's
11        actual costs incurred under this Section that are
12        prudently incurred and reasonable in amount consistent
13        with Commission practice and law. The sole fact that a
14        cost differs from that incurred in a prior calendar
15        year or that an investment is different from that made
16        in a prior calendar year shall not imply the imprudence
17        or unreasonableness of that cost or investment.
18            (B) Reflect the utility's actual year-end capital
19        structure for the applicable calendar year, excluding
20        goodwill, subject to a determination of prudence and
21        reasonableness consistent with Commission practice and
22        law.
23            (C) Include a cost of equity, which shall be
24        calculated as the sum of the following:
25                (i) the average for the applicable calendar
26            year of the monthly average yields of 30-year U.S.

 

 

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1            Treasury bonds published by the Board of Governors
2            of the Federal Reserve System in its weekly H.15
3            Statistical Release or successor publication; and
4                (ii) 580 basis points.
5            At such time as the Board of Governors of the
6        Federal Reserve System ceases to include the monthly
7        average yields of 30-year U.S. Treasury bonds in its
8        weekly H.15 Statistical Release or successor
9        publication, the monthly average yields of the U.S.
10        Treasury bonds then having the longest duration
11        published by the Board of Governors in its weekly H.15
12        Statistical Release or successor publication shall
13        instead be used for purposes of this paragraph (2).
14            (D) Permit and set forth protocols, subject to a
15        determination of prudence and reasonableness
16        consistent with Commission practice and law, for the
17        following:
18                (i) recovery of incentive compensation expense
19            that is based on the achievement of operational
20            metrics, including metrics related to budget
21            controls, outage duration and frequency, safety,
22            customer service, efficiency and productivity, and
23            environmental compliance; however, this protocol
24            shall not apply if such expense related to costs
25            incurred under this Section is recovered under
26            Article IX or Section 16-108.5 of this Act;

 

 

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1            incentive compensation expense that is based on
2            net income or an affiliate's earnings per share
3            shall not be recoverable under the energy
4            efficiency formula rate;
5                (ii) recovery of pension and other
6            post-employment benefits expense, provided that
7            such costs are supported by an actuarial study;
8            however, this protocol shall not apply if such
9            expense related to costs incurred under this
10            Section is recovered under Article IX or Section
11            16-108.5 of this Act;
12                (iii) recovery of existing regulatory assets
13            over the periods previously authorized by the
14            Commission;
15                (iv) as described in subsection (e),
16            amortization of costs incurred under this Section;
17            and
18                (v) projected, weather normalized billing
19            determinants for the applicable rate year.
20            (E) Provide for an annual reconciliation, as
21        described in paragraph (3) of this subsection (d), less
22        any deferred taxes related to the reconciliation, with
23        interest at an annual rate of return equal to the
24        utility's weighted average cost of capital, including
25        a revenue conversion factor calculated to recover or
26        refund all additional income taxes that may be payable

 

 

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1        or receivable as a result of that return, of the energy
2        efficiency revenue requirement reflected in rates for
3        each calendar year, beginning with the calendar year in
4        which the utility files its energy efficiency formula
5        rate tariff under this paragraph (2), with what the
6        revenue requirement would have been had the actual cost
7        information for the applicable calendar year been
8        available at the filing date.
9        The utility shall file, together with its tariff, the
10    projected costs to be incurred by the utility during the
11    rate year under the utility's multi-year plan approved
12    under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section, including,
13    but not limited to, the projected capital investment costs
14    and projected regulatory asset balances with
15    correspondingly updated depreciation and amortization
16    reserves and expense, that shall populate the energy
17    efficiency formula rate and set the initial rates under the
18    formula.
19        The Commission shall review the proposed tariff in
20    conjunction with its review of a proposed multi-year plan,
21    as specified in paragraph (5) of subsection (g) of this
22    Section. The review shall be based on the same evidentiary
23    standards, including, but not limited to, those concerning
24    the prudence and reasonableness of the costs incurred by
25    the utility, the Commission applies in a hearing to review
26    a filing for a general increase in rates under Article IX

 

 

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1    of this Act. The initial rates shall take effect beginning
2    with the January monthly billing period following the
3    Commission's approval.
4        The tariff's rate design and cost allocation across
5    customer classes shall be consistent with the utility's
6    automatic adjustment clause tariff in effect on the
7    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
8    Assembly; however, the Commission may revise the tariff's
9    rate design and cost allocation in subsequent proceedings
10    under paragraph (3) of this subsection (d).
11        If the energy efficiency formula rate is terminated,
12    the then current rates shall remain in effect until such
13    time as the energy efficiency costs are incorporated into
14    new rates that are set under this subsection (d) or Article
15    IX of this Act, subject to retroactive rate adjustment,
16    with interest, to reconcile rates charged with actual
17    costs.
18        (3) The provisions of this paragraph (3) shall only
19    apply to an electric utility that has elected to file an
20    energy efficiency formula rate under paragraph (2) of this
21    subsection (d). Subsequent to the Commission's issuance of
22    an order approving the utility's energy efficiency formula
23    rate structure and protocols, and initial rates under
24    paragraph (2) of this subsection (d), the utility shall
25    file, on or before June 1 of each year, with the Chief
26    Clerk of the Commission its updated cost inputs to the

 

 

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1    energy efficiency formula rate for the applicable rate year
2    and the corresponding new charges, as well as the
3    information described in paragraph (9) of subsection (g) of
4    this Section. Each such filing shall conform to the
5    following requirements and include the following
6    information:
7            (A) The inputs to the energy efficiency formula
8        rate for the applicable rate year shall be based on the
9        projected costs to be incurred by the utility during
10        the rate year under the utility's multi-year plan
11        approved under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section,
12        including, but not limited to, projected capital
13        investment costs and projected regulatory asset
14        balances with correspondingly updated depreciation and
15        amortization reserves and expense. The filing shall
16        also include a reconciliation of the energy efficiency
17        revenue requirement that was in effect for the prior
18        rate year (as set by the cost inputs for the prior rate
19        year) with the actual revenue requirement for the prior
20        rate year (determined using a year-end rate base) that
21        uses amounts reflected in the applicable FERC Form 1
22        that reports the actual costs for the prior rate year.
23        Any over-collection or under-collection indicated by
24        such reconciliation shall be reflected as a credit
25        against, or recovered as an additional charge to,
26        respectively, with interest calculated at a rate equal

 

 

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1        to the utility's weighted average cost of capital
2        approved by the Commission for the prior rate year, the
3        charges for the applicable rate year. Such
4        over-collection or under-collection shall be adjusted
5        to remove any deferred taxes related to the
6        reconciliation, for purposes of calculating interest
7        at an annual rate of return equal to the utility's
8        weighted average cost of capital approved by the
9        Commission for the prior rate year, including a revenue
10        conversion factor calculated to recover or refund all
11        additional income taxes that may be payable or
12        receivable as a result of that return. Each
13        reconciliation shall be certified by the participating
14        utility in the same manner that FERC Form 1 is
15        certified. The filing shall also include the charge or
16        credit, if any, resulting from the calculation
17        required by subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) of this
18        subsection (d).
19            Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
20        contrary, the intent of the reconciliation is to
21        ultimately reconcile both the revenue requirement
22        reflected in rates for each calendar year, beginning
23        with the calendar year in which the utility files its
24        energy efficiency formula rate tariff under paragraph
25        (2) of this subsection (d), with what the revenue
26        requirement determined using a year-end rate base for

 

 

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1        the applicable calendar year would have been had the
2        actual cost information for the applicable calendar
3        year been available at the filing date.
4            For purposes of this Section, "FERC Form 1" means
5        the Annual Report of Major Electric Utilities,
6        Licensees and Others that electric utilities are
7        required to file with the Federal Energy Regulatory
8        Commission under the Federal Power Act, Sections 3,
9        4(a), 304 and 209, modified as necessary to be
10        consistent with 83 Ill. Admin. Code Part 415 as of May
11        1, 2011. Nothing in this Section is intended to allow
12        costs that are not otherwise recoverable to be
13        recoverable by virtue of inclusion in FERC Form 1.
14            (B) The new charges shall take effect beginning on
15        the first billing day of the following January billing
16        period and remain in effect through the last billing
17        day of the next December billing period regardless of
18        whether the Commission enters upon a hearing under this
19        paragraph (3).
20            (C) The filing shall include relevant and
21        necessary data and documentation for the applicable
22        rate year. Normalization adjustments shall not be
23        required.
24        Within 45 days after the utility files its annual
25    update of cost inputs to the energy efficiency formula
26    rate, the Commission shall with reasonable notice,

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 191 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    initiate a proceeding concerning whether the projected
2    costs to be incurred by the utility and recovered during
3    the applicable rate year, and that are reflected in the
4    inputs to the energy efficiency formula rate, are
5    consistent with the utility's approved multi-year plan
6    under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section and whether
7    the costs incurred by the utility during the prior rate
8    year were prudent and reasonable. The Commission shall also
9    have the authority to investigate the information and data
10    described in paragraph (9) of subsection (g) of this
11    Section, including the proposed adjustment to the
12    utility's return on equity component of its weighted
13    average cost of capital. During the course of the
14    proceeding, each objection shall be stated with
15    particularity and evidence provided in support thereof,
16    after which the utility shall have the opportunity to rebut
17    the evidence. Discovery shall be allowed consistent with
18    the Commission's Rules of Practice, which Rules of Practice
19    shall be enforced by the Commission or the assigned hearing
20    examiner. The Commission shall apply the same evidentiary
21    standards, including, but not limited to, those concerning
22    the prudence and reasonableness of the costs incurred by
23    the utility, during the proceeding as it would apply in a
24    proceeding to review a filing for a general increase in
25    rates under Article IX of this Act. The Commission shall
26    not, however, have the authority in a proceeding under this

 

 

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1    paragraph (3) to consider or order any changes to the
2    structure or protocols of the energy efficiency formula
3    rate approved under paragraph (2) of this subsection (d).
4    In a proceeding under this paragraph (3), the Commission
5    shall enter its order no later than the earlier of 195 days
6    after the utility's filing of its annual update of cost
7    inputs to the energy efficiency formula rate or December
8    15. The utility's proposed return on equity calculation, as
9    described in paragraphs (7) through (9) of subsection (g)
10    of this Section, shall be deemed the final, approved
11    calculation on December 15 of the year in which it is filed
12    unless the Commission enters an order on or before December
13    15, after notice and hearing, that modifies such
14    calculation consistent with this Section. The Commission's
15    determinations of the prudence and reasonableness of the
16    costs incurred, and determination of such return on equity
17    calculation, for the applicable calendar year shall be
18    final upon entry of the Commission's order and shall not be
19    subject to reopening, reexamination, or collateral attack
20    in any other Commission proceeding, case, docket, order,
21    rule, or regulation; however, nothing in this paragraph (3)
22    shall prohibit a party from petitioning the Commission to
23    rehear or appeal to the courts the order under the
24    provisions of this Act.
25    (e) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act
26of the 99th General Assembly, a utility subject to the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 193 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1requirements of this Section may elect to defer, as a
2regulatory asset, the full amount of its expenditures incurred
3under this Section for each annual period, including, but not
4limited to, any expenditures incurred above the funding level
5set by subsection (f) of this Section for a given year. The
6total expenditures deferred as a regulatory asset in a given
7year shall be amortized and recovered over a period that is
8equal to the weighted average of the energy efficiency measure
9lives implemented for that year that are reflected in the
10regulatory asset. The unamortized balance shall be recognized
11as of December 31 for a given year. The utility shall also earn
12a return on the total of the unamortized balances of all of the
13energy efficiency regulatory assets, less any deferred taxes
14related to those unamortized balances, at an annual rate equal
15to the utility's weighted average cost of capital that
16includes, based on a year-end capital structure, the utility's
17actual cost of debt for the applicable calendar year and a cost
18of equity, which shall be calculated as the sum of the (i) the
19average for the applicable calendar year of the monthly average
20yields of 30-year U.S. Treasury bonds published by the Board of
21Governors of the Federal Reserve System in its weekly H.15
22Statistical Release or successor publication; and (ii) 580
23basis points, including a revenue conversion factor calculated
24to recover or refund all additional income taxes that may be
25payable or receivable as a result of that return. Capital
26investment costs, including, but not limited to, capital

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 194 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1investment costs associated with voltage optimization measures
2that are described in subsection (b-20) of this Section, shall
3be depreciated and recovered over their useful lives consistent
4with generally accepted accounting principles. The weighted
5average cost of capital shall be applied to the capital
6investment cost balance, less any accumulated depreciation and
7accumulated deferred income taxes, as of December 31 for a
8given year.
9    When an electric utility creates a regulatory asset under
10the provisions of this Section, the costs are recovered over a
11period during which customers also receive a benefit which is
12in the public interest. Accordingly, it is the intent of the
13General Assembly that an electric utility that elects to create
14a regulatory asset under the provisions of this Section shall
15recover all of the associated costs as set forth in this
16Section. After the Commission has approved the prudence and
17reasonableness of the costs that comprise the regulatory asset,
18the electric utility shall be permitted to recover all such
19costs, and the value and recoverability through rates of the
20associated regulatory asset shall not be limited, altered,
21impaired, or reduced.
22    (f) Beginning in 2017, each electric utility shall file an
23energy efficiency plan with the Commission to meet the energy
24efficiency standards for the next applicable multi-year period
25beginning January 1 of the year following the filing, according
26to the schedule set forth in paragraphs (1) through (3) of this

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 195 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1subsection (f). If a utility does not file such a plan on or
2before the applicable filing deadline for the plan, it shall
3face a penalty of $100,000 per day until the plan is filed.
4        (1) No later than 30 days after the effective date of
5    this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly or May 1,
6    2017, whichever is later, each electric utility shall file
7    a 4-year energy efficiency plan commencing on January 1,
8    2018 that is designed to achieve the cumulative persisting
9    annual savings goals specified in paragraphs (1) through
10    (4) of subsection (b-5) of this Section or in paragraphs
11    (1) through (4) of subsection (b-15) of this Section, as
12    applicable, through implementation of energy efficiency
13    measures.
14        (2) No later than March 1, 2021, each electric utility
15    shall file a 4-year energy efficiency plan commencing on
16    January 1, 2022 that is designed to achieve the cumulative
17    persisting annual savings goals specified in paragraphs
18    (5) through (8) of subsection (b-5) of this Section or in
19    paragraphs (5) through (8) of subsection (b-15) of this
20    Section, as applicable, through implementation of energy
21    efficiency measures; however, the goals may be reduced if
22    each of the following conditions are met: (A) the plan's
23    analysis and forecasts of the utility's ability to acquire
24    energy savings demonstrate that achievement of such goals
25    is not cost effective; and (B) the amount of energy savings
26    achieved by the utility as determined by the independent

 

 

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1    evaluator for the most recent year for which savings have
2    been evaluated preceding the plan filing was less than the
3    average annual amount of savings required to achieve the
4    goals for the applicable 4-year plan period. In no event
5    shall annual increases in cumulative persisting annual
6    savings goals during the applicable 4-year plan period be
7    reduced to amounts that are less than the maximum amount of
8    cumulative persisting annual savings that is forecast to be
9    cost-effectively achievable during the 4-year plan period.
10    The Commission shall review any proposed goal reduction as
11    part of its review and approval of the utility's proposed
12    plan.
13        (3) No later than March 1, 2025, each electric utility
14    shall file a 5-year energy efficiency plan commencing on
15    January 1, 2026 that is designed to achieve the cumulative
16    persisting annual savings goals specified in paragraphs
17    (9) through (13) of subsection (b-5) of this Section or in
18    paragraphs (9) through (13) of subsection (b-15) of this
19    Section, as applicable, through implementation of energy
20    efficiency measures; however, the goals may be reduced if
21    each of the following conditions are met: (A) the plan's
22    analysis and forecasts of the utility's ability to acquire
23    energy savings demonstrate that achievement of such goals
24    is not cost effective; and (B) the amount of energy savings
25    achieved by the utility as determined by the independent
26    evaluator for the most recent year for which savings have

 

 

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1    been evaluated preceding the plan filing was less than the
2    average annual amount of savings required to achieve the
3    goals for the applicable 5-year plan period. In no event
4    shall annual increases in cumulative persisting annual
5    savings goals during the applicable 5-year plan period be
6    reduced to amounts that are less than the maximum amount of
7    cumulative persisting annual savings that is forecast to be
8    cost-effectively achievable during the 5-year plan period.
9    The Commission shall review any proposed goal reduction as
10    part of its review and approval of the utility's proposed
11    plan.
12    Notwithstanding the cumulative persisting annual savings
13goals set forth in subsection (b-15) of this Section that are
14applicable to an electric utility that serves less than
153,000,000 retail customers but more than 500,000 retail
16customers in the State, each plan filed by such utility under
17this subsection (f) shall limit the funding level in each year
18to ensure that the revenue requirement associated with the
19energy efficiency cost recovery mechanism implemented under
20subsection (d) of this Section does not exceed 15% of such
21utility's delivery services revenue requirement, including any
22reconciliation balances associated with the delivery services
23revenue requirement, in effect on January 1 of the year the
24utility files its plan with the Commission. For purposes of
25this subsection (f), the revenue requirement associated with
26the energy efficiency cost recovery mechanism shall be the

 

 

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1energy efficiency revenue requirement approved by the
2Commission under paragraph (3) of subsection (d) of this
3Section, including any over-collection or under-collection
4indicated by a reconciliation of a prior year and any interest
5applied as a result of such over-collection or
6under-collection.
7    Each utility's plan shall set forth the utility's proposals
8to meet the energy efficiency standards identified in
9subsection (b-5) or (b-15), as applicable and as such standards
10may have been modified under this subsection (f), taking into
11account the unique circumstances of the utility's service
12territory. For those plans commencing on January 1, 2018, the
13Commission shall seek public comment on the utility's plan and
14shall issue an order approving or disapproving each plan no
15later than August 31, 2017. For those plans commencing after
16December 31, 2021, the Commission shall seek public comment on
17the utility's plan and shall issue an order approving or
18disapproving each plan within 6 months after its submission. If
19the Commission disapproves a plan, the Commission shall, within
2030 days, describe in detail the reasons for the disapproval and
21describe a path by which the utility may file a revised draft
22of the plan to address the Commission's concerns
23satisfactorily. If the utility does not refile with the
24Commission within 60 days, the utility shall be subject to
25penalties at a rate of $100,000 per day until the plan is
26filed. This process shall continue, and penalties shall accrue,

 

 

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1until the utility has successfully filed a portfolio of energy
2efficiency and demand-response measures. Penalties shall be
3deposited into the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund.
4    (g) In submitting proposed plans and funding levels under
5subsection (f) of this Section to meet the savings goals
6identified in subsection (b-5) or (b-15) of this Section, as
7applicable, the utility shall:
8        (1) Demonstrate that its proposed energy efficiency
9    measures will achieve the applicable requirements that are
10    identified in subsection (b-5) or (b-15) of this Section,
11    as modified by subsection (f) of this Section.
12        (2) Present specific proposals to implement new
13    building and appliance standards that have been placed into
14    effect.
15        (3) Demonstrate that its overall portfolio of
16    measures, not including low-income programs described in
17    subsection (c) of this Section, is cost-effective using the
18    total resource cost test or complies with paragraphs (1)
19    through (3) of subsection (f) of this Section and
20    represents a diverse cross-section of opportunities for
21    customers of all rate classes to participate in the
22    programs. Individual measures need not be cost effective.
23        (4) Present a third-party energy efficiency
24    implementation program subject to the following
25    requirements:
26            (A) beginning with the year commencing January 1,

 

 

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1        2019, electric utilities that serve more than
2        3,000,000 retail customers in the State shall fund
3        third-party energy efficiency programs in an amount
4        that is no less than $50,000,000 per year, and electric
5        utilities that serve less than 3,000,000 retail
6        customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in the
7        State shall fund third-party energy efficiency
8        programs in an amount that is no less than $16,700,000
9        per year;
10            (B) during 2018, the utility shall conduct a
11        solicitation process for purposes of requesting
12        proposals from third-party vendors for those
13        third-party energy efficiency programs to be offered
14        during one or more of the years commencing January 1,
15        2019, January 1, 2020, and January 1, 2021; for those
16        multi-year plans commencing on January 1, 2022 and
17        January 1, 2026, the utility shall conduct a
18        solicitation process during 2021 and 2025,
19        respectively, for purposes of requesting proposals
20        from third-party vendors for those third-party energy
21        efficiency programs to be offered during one or more
22        years of the respective multi-year plan period; for
23        each solicitation process, the utility shall identify
24        the sector, technology, or geographical area for which
25        it is seeking requests for proposals;
26            (C) the utility shall propose the bidder

 

 

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1        qualifications, performance measurement process, and
2        contract structure, which must include a performance
3        payment mechanism and general terms and conditions;
4        the proposed qualifications, process, and structure
5        shall be subject to Commission approval;
6            (D) the utility shall retain an independent third
7        party to score the proposals received through the
8        solicitation process described in this paragraph (4),
9        rank them according to their cost per lifetime
10        kilowatt-hours saved, and assemble the portfolio of
11        third-party programs; and
12            (E) for purposes of determining under paragraphs
13        (7) and (8) of this subsection (g) the amount of
14        cumulative persisting annual savings achieved by the
15        utility, the programs implemented by third parties
16        under this paragraph (4) shall be deemed to have
17        achieved 80% of their projected savings regardless of
18        the savings determined by the independent evaluator,
19        provided that the sum of the difference between
20        projected savings and savings determined by the
21        independent evaluator for all third-party programs
22        that achieved less than 80% of their projected savings
23        shall not exceed 10% of the utility's applicable annual
24        incremental goal, as defined by paragraph (7) or (8) of
25        this subsection (g); if the independent evaluator
26        determines that one or more programs achieved more than

 

 

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1        80% of their projected savings, such incremental
2        amount shall be credited to the utility's overall
3        energy savings for the applicable year.
4        The electric utility shall recover all costs
5    associated with Commission-approved, third-party
6    administered programs regardless of the success of those
7    programs.
8        (5) Include a proposed or revised cost-recovery tariff
9    mechanism, as provided for under subsection (d) of this
10    Section, to fund the proposed energy efficiency and
11    demand-response measures and to ensure the recovery of the
12    prudently and reasonably incurred costs of
13    Commission-approved programs.
14        (6) Provide for an annual independent evaluation of the
15    performance of the cost-effectiveness of the utility's
16    portfolio of measures, as well as a full review of the
17    multi-year plan results of the broader net program impacts
18    and, to the extent practical, for adjustment of the
19    measures on a going-forward basis as a result of the
20    evaluations. The resources dedicated to evaluation shall
21    not exceed 3% of portfolio resources in any given year.
22        (7) Through December 31, 2025, provide for an
23    adjustment to the return on equity component of the
24    utility's weighted average cost of capital calculated
25    under subsection (d) of this Section:
26            (A) If the independent evaluator determines that

 

 

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1        the utility achieved a cumulative persisting annual
2        savings that is less than the applicable annual
3        incremental goal, then the return on equity component
4        shall be reduced by a maximum of 200 basis points in
5        the event that the utility achieved no more than 75% of
6        such goal. If the utility achieved more than 75% of the
7        applicable annual incremental goal but less than 100%
8        of such goal, then the return on equity component shall
9        be reduced by 8 basis points for each percent by which
10        the utility failed to achieve the goal.
11            (B) If the independent evaluator determines that
12        the utility achieved a cumulative persisting annual
13        savings that is more than the applicable annual
14        incremental goal, then the return on equity component
15        shall be increased by a maximum of 200 basis points in
16        the event that the utility achieved at least 125% of
17        such goal. If the utility achieved more than 100% of
18        the applicable annual incremental goal but less than
19        125% of such goal, then the return on equity component
20        shall be increased by 8 basis points for each percent
21        by which the utility achieved above the goal. If the
22        applicable annual incremental goal was reduced under
23        paragraph (2) of subsection (f) of this Section, then
24        the following adjustments shall be made to the
25        calculations described in this subparagraph (B):
26                (i) the calculation for determining

 

 

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1            achievement that is at least 125% of the applicable
2            annual incremental goal shall use the unreduced
3            applicable annual incremental goal to set the
4            value; and
5                (ii) the calculation for determining
6            achievement that is less than 125% but more than
7            100% of the applicable annual incremental goal
8            shall use the reduced applicable annual
9            incremental goal to set the value for 100%
10            achievement of the goal and shall use the unreduced
11            goal to set the value for 125% achievement. The 8
12            basis point value shall also be modified, as
13            necessary, so that the 200 basis points are evenly
14            apportioned among each percentage point value
15            between 100% and 125% achievement.
16        For purposes of this Section, the term "applicable
17    annual incremental goal" means the difference between the
18    cumulative persisting annual savings goal for the calendar
19    year that is the subject of the independent evaluator's
20    determination and the cumulative persisting annual savings
21    goal for the immediately preceding calendar year, as such
22    goals are defined in subsections (b-5) and (b-15) of this
23    Section and as these goals may have been modified as
24    provided for under subsection (b-20) and paragraphs (2) and
25    (3) of subsection (f) of this Section. Under subsections
26    (b), (b-5), (b-10), and (b-15) of this Section, a utility

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 205 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    must first replace energy savings from measures that have
2    reached the end of their measure lives and would otherwise
3    have to be replaced to meet the applicable savings goals
4    identified in subsection (b-5) or (b-15) of this Section
5    before any progress towards achievement of its applicable
6    annual incremental goal may be counted.
7        (8) For the period January 1, 2026 through December 31,
8    2030, provide for an adjustment to the return on equity
9    component of the utility's weighted average cost of capital
10    calculated under subsection (d) of this Section:
11            (A) If the independent evaluator determines that
12        the utility achieved a cumulative persisting annual
13        savings that is less than the applicable annual
14        incremental goal, then the return on equity component
15        shall be reduced by a maximum of 200 basis points in
16        the event that the utility achieved no more than 66% of
17        such goal. If the utility achieved more than 66% of the
18        applicable annual incremental goal but less than 100%
19        of such goal, then the return on equity component shall
20        be reduced by 6 basis points for each percent by which
21        the utility failed to achieve the goal.
22            (B) If the independent evaluator determines that
23        the utility achieved a cumulative persisting annual
24        savings that is more than the applicable annual
25        incremental goal, then the return on equity component
26        shall be increased by a maximum of 200 basis points in

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 206 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        the event that the utility achieved at least 134% of
2        such goal. If the utility achieved more than 100% of
3        the applicable annual incremental goal but less than
4        134% of such goal, then the return on equity component
5        shall be increased by 6 basis points for each percent
6        by which the utility achieved above the goal. If the
7        applicable annual incremental goal was reduced under
8        paragraph (3) of subsection (f) of this Section, then
9        the following adjustments shall be made to the
10        calculations described in this subparagraph (B):
11                (i) the calculation for determining
12            achievement that is at least 134% of the applicable
13            annual incremental goal shall use the unreduced
14            applicable annual incremental goal to set the
15            value; and
16                (ii) the calculation for determining
17            achievement that is less than 134% but more than
18            100% of the applicable annual incremental goal
19            shall use the reduced applicable annual
20            incremental goal to set the value for 100%
21            achievement of the goal and shall use the unreduced
22            goal to set the value for 134% achievement. The 6
23            basis point value shall also be modified, as
24            necessary, so that the 200 basis points are evenly
25            apportioned among each percentage point value
26            between 100% and 134% achievement.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 207 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (9) The utility shall submit the energy savings data to
2    the independent evaluator no later than 30 days after the
3    close of the plan year. The independent evaluator shall
4    determine the cumulative persisting annual savings for a
5    given plan year no later than 120 days after the close of
6    the plan year. The utility shall submit an informational
7    filing to the Commission no later than 160 days after the
8    close of the plan year that attaches the independent
9    evaluator's final report identifying the cumulative
10    persisting annual savings for the year and calculates,
11    under paragraph (7) or (8) of this subsection (g), as
12    applicable, any resulting change to the utility's return on
13    equity component of the weighted average cost of capital
14    applicable to the next plan year beginning with the January
15    monthly billing period and extending through the December
16    monthly billing period. However, if the utility recovers
17    the costs incurred under this Section under paragraphs (2)
18    and (3) of subsection (d) of this Section, then the utility
19    shall not be required to submit such informational filing,
20    and shall instead submit the information that would
21    otherwise be included in the informational filing as part
22    of its filing under paragraph (3) of such subsection (d)
23    that is due on or before June 1 of each year.
24        For those utilities that must submit the informational
25    filing, the Commission may, on its own motion or by
26    petition, initiate an investigation of such filing,

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 208 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    provided, however, that the utility's proposed return on
2    equity calculation shall be deemed the final, approved
3    calculation on December 15 of the year in which it is filed
4    unless the Commission enters an order on or before December
5    15, after notice and hearing, that modifies such
6    calculation consistent with this Section.
7        The adjustments to the return on equity component
8    described in paragraphs (7) and (8) of this subsection (g)
9    shall be applied as described in such paragraphs through a
10    separate tariff mechanism, which shall be filed by the
11    utility under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section.
12        Notwithstanding the requirements of paragraphs (7)
13    through (9) of this subsection (g), if an electric utility
14    that serves less than 3,000,000 retail customers but more
15    than 500,000 retail customers in the State does not achieve
16    an applicable annual incremental goal, the utility shall
17    nevertheless be deemed to have achieved the applicable
18    annual incremental goal if the utility's revenue
19    requirement associated with the energy efficiency cost
20    recovery mechanism in effect during the year is more than
21    14.5% of the delivery services revenue requirement,
22    including any reconciliation balance associated with the
23    delivery services revenue requirement, in effect on
24    January 1 of the year the utility files its plan with the
25    Commission. In such event, no adjustment shall be made to
26    the utility's return on equity component of its weighted

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 209 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    average costs of capital.
2    (h) No more than 6% of energy efficiency and
3demand-response program revenue may be allocated for research,
4development, or pilot deployment of new equipment or measures.
5    (i) When practicable, electric utilities shall incorporate
6advanced metering infrastructure data into the planning,
7implementation, and evaluation of energy efficiency measures
8and programs, subject to the data privacy and confidentiality
9protections of applicable law.
10    (j) The independent evaluator shall follow the guidelines
11and use the savings set forth in Commission-approved energy
12efficiency policy manuals and technical reference manuals, as
13each may be updated from time to time. Until such time as
14measure life values for energy efficiency measures implemented
15for low-income households under subsection (c) of this Section
16are incorporated into such Commission-approved manuals, the
17low-income measures shall have the same measure life values
18that are established for same measures implemented in
19households that are not low-income households.
20    (k) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary,
21an electric utility subject to the requirements of this Section
22may file a tariff cancelling an automatic adjustment clause
23tariff in effect under this Section or Section 8-103, which
24shall take effect no later than one business day after the date
25such tariff is filed. Thereafter, the utility shall be
26authorized to defer and recover its expenditures incurred under

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 210 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1this Section through a new tariff authorized under subsection
2(d) of this Section or in the utility's next rate case under
3Article IX or Section 16-108.5 of this Act, with interest at an
4annual rate equal to the utility's weighted average cost of
5capital as approved by the Commission in such case. If the
6utility elects to file a new tariff under subsection (d) of
7this Section, the utility may file the tariff within 10 days
8after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th
9General Assembly, and the cost inputs to such tariff shall be
10based on the projected costs to be incurred by the utility
11during the calendar year in which the new tariff is filed and
12that were not recovered under the tariff that was cancelled as
13provided for in this subsection. Such costs shall include those
14incurred or to be incurred by the utility under its multi-year
15plan approved under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section,
16including, but not limited to, projected capital investment
17costs and projected regulatory asset balances with
18correspondingly updated depreciation and amortization reserves
19and expense. The Commission shall, after notice and hearing,
20approve, or approve with modification, such tariff and cost
21inputs no later than 75 days after the utility filed the
22tariff, provided that such approval, or approval with
23modification, shall be consistent with the provisions of this
24Section to the extent they do not conflict with this subsection
25(k). The tariff approved by the Commission shall take effect no
26later than 5 days after the Commission enters its order

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 211 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1approving the tariff.
2    No later than 60 days after the effective date of the
3tariff cancelling the utility's automatic adjustment clause
4tariff, the utility shall file a reconciliation that reconciles
5the moneys collected under its automatic adjustment clause
6tariff with the costs incurred during the period beginning June
71, 2016 and ending on the date that the electric utility's
8automatic adjustment clause tariff was cancelled. In the event
9the reconciliation reflects an under-collection, the utility
10shall recover the costs as specified in this subsection (k). If
11the reconciliation reflects an over-collection, the utility
12shall apply the amount of such over-collection as a one-time
13credit to retail customers' bills.
 
14    (220 ILCS 5/8-104)
15    Sec. 8-104. Natural gas energy efficiency programs.
16    (a) It is the policy of the State that natural gas
17utilities and the Department of Commerce and Economic
18Opportunity are required to use cost-effective energy
19efficiency to reduce direct and indirect costs to consumers. It
20serves the public interest to allow natural gas utilities to
21recover costs for reasonably and prudently incurred expenses
22for cost-effective energy efficiency measures.
23    (b) For purposes of this Section, "energy efficiency" means
24measures that reduce the amount of energy required to achieve a
25given end use. "Energy efficiency" also includes measures that

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 212 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1reduce the total Btus of electricity and natural gas needed to
2meet the end use or uses. "Cost-effective" means that the
3measures satisfy the total resource cost test which, for
4purposes of this Section, means a standard that is met if, for
5an investment in energy efficiency, the benefit-cost ratio is
6greater than one. The benefit-cost ratio is the ratio of the
7net present value of the total benefits of the measures to the
8net present value of the total costs as calculated over the
9lifetime of the measures. The total resource cost test compares
10the sum of avoided natural gas utility costs, representing the
11benefits that accrue to the system and the participant in the
12delivery of those efficiency measures, as well as other
13quantifiable societal benefits, including avoided electric
14utility costs, to the sum of all incremental costs of end use
15measures (including both utility and participant
16contributions), plus costs to administer, deliver, and
17evaluate each demand-side measure, to quantify the net savings
18obtained by substituting demand-side measures for supply
19resources. In calculating avoided costs, reasonable estimates
20shall be included for financial costs likely to be imposed by
21future regulation of emissions of greenhouse gases. The
22low-income programs described in item (4) of subsection (f) of
23this Section shall not be required to meet the total resource
24cost test.
25    (c) Natural gas utilities shall implement cost-effective
26energy efficiency measures to meet at least the following

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 213 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1natural gas savings requirements, which shall be based upon the
2total amount of gas delivered to retail customers, other than
3the customers described in subsection (m) of this Section,
4during calendar year 2009 multiplied by the applicable
5percentage. Natural gas utilities may comply with this Section
6by meeting the annual incremental savings goal in the
7applicable year or by showing that total cumulative annual
8savings within a multi-year 3-year planning period associated
9with measures implemented after May 31, 2011 were equal to the
10sum of each annual incremental savings requirement from the
11first day of the multi-year planning period May 31, 2011
12through the last day of the multi-year planning period end of
13the applicable year:
14        (1) 0.2% by May 31, 2012;
15        (2) an additional 0.4% by May 31, 2013, increasing
16    total savings to .6%;
17        (3) an additional 0.6% by May 31, 2014, increasing
18    total savings to 1.2%;
19        (4) an additional 0.8% by May 31, 2015, increasing
20    total savings to 2.0%;
21        (5) an additional 1% by May 31, 2016, increasing total
22    savings to 3.0%;
23        (6) an additional 1.2% by May 31, 2017, increasing
24    total savings to 4.2%;
25        (7) an additional 1.4% in the year commencing January
26    1, 2018 by May 31, 2018, increasing total savings to 5.6%;

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 214 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (8) an additional 1.5% in the year commencing January
2    1, 2019 by May 31, 2019, increasing total savings to 7.1%;
3    and
4        (9) an additional 1.5% in each 12-month period
5    thereafter.
6    (d) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsection (c) of
7this Section, a natural gas utility shall limit the amount of
8energy efficiency implemented in any multi-year 3-year
9reporting period established by subsection (f) of Section 8-104
10of this Act, by an amount necessary to limit the estimated
11average increase in the amounts paid by retail customers in
12connection with natural gas service to no more than 2% in the
13applicable multi-year 3-year reporting period. The energy
14savings requirements in subsection (c) of this Section may be
15reduced by the Commission for the subject plan, if the utility
16demonstrates by substantial evidence that it is highly unlikely
17that the requirements could be achieved without exceeding the
18applicable spending limits in any multi-year 3-year reporting
19period. No later than September 1, 2013, the Commission shall
20review the limitation on the amount of energy efficiency
21measures implemented pursuant to this Section and report to the
22General Assembly, in the report required by subsection (k) of
23this Section, its findings as to whether that limitation unduly
24constrains the procurement of energy efficiency measures.
25    (e) The provisions of this subsection (e) apply to those
26multi-year plans that commence prior to January 1, 2018 Natural

 

 

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1gas utilities shall be responsible for overseeing the design,
2development, and filing of their efficiency plans with the
3Commission. The utility shall utilize 75% of the available
4funding associated with energy efficiency programs approved by
5the Commission, and may outsource various aspects of program
6development and implementation. The remaining 25% of available
7funding shall be used by the Department of Commerce and
8Economic Opportunity to implement energy efficiency measures
9that achieve no less than 20% of the requirements of subsection
10(c) of this Section. Such measures shall be designed in
11conjunction with the utility and approved by the Commission.
12The Department may outsource development and implementation of
13energy efficiency measures. A minimum of 10% of the entire
14portfolio of cost-effective energy efficiency measures shall
15be procured from local government, municipal corporations,
16school districts, and community college districts. Five
17percent of the entire portfolio of cost-effective energy
18efficiency measures may be granted to local government and
19municipal corporations for market transformation initiatives.
20The Department shall coordinate the implementation of these
21measures and shall integrate delivery of natural gas efficiency
22programs with electric efficiency programs delivered pursuant
23to Section 8-103 of this Act, unless the Department can show
24that integration is not feasible.
25    The apportionment of the dollars to cover the costs to
26implement the Department's share of the portfolio of energy

 

 

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1efficiency measures shall be made to the Department once the
2Department has executed rebate agreements, grants, or
3contracts for energy efficiency measures and provided
4supporting documentation for those rebate agreements, grants,
5and contracts to the utility. The Department is authorized to
6adopt any rules necessary and prescribe procedures in order to
7ensure compliance by applicants in carrying out the purposes of
8rebate agreements for energy efficiency measures implemented
9by the Department made under this Section.
10    The details of the measures implemented by the Department
11shall be submitted by the Department to the Commission in
12connection with the utility's filing regarding the energy
13efficiency measures that the utility implements.
14    The portfolio of measures, administered by both the
15utilities and the Department, shall, in combination, be
16designed to achieve the annual energy savings requirements set
17forth in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
18subsection (d) of this Section.
19    The utility and the Department shall agree upon a
20reasonable portfolio of measures and determine the measurable
21corresponding percentage of the savings goals associated with
22measures implemented by the Department.
23    No utility shall be assessed a penalty under subsection (f)
24of this Section for failure to make a timely filing if that
25failure is the result of a lack of agreement with the
26Department with respect to the allocation of responsibilities

 

 

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1or related costs or target assignments. In that case, the
2Department and the utility shall file their respective plans
3with the Commission and the Commission shall determine an
4appropriate division of measures and programs that meets the
5requirements of this Section.
6    (e-5) The provisions of this subsection (e-5) shall be
7applicable to those multi-year plans that commence after
8December 31, 2017. Natural gas utilities shall be responsible
9for overseeing the design, development, and filing of their
10efficiency plans with the Commission and may outsource
11development and implementation of energy efficiency measures.
12A minimum of 10% of the entire portfolio of cost-effective
13energy efficiency measures shall be procured from local
14government, municipal corporations, school districts, and
15community college districts. Five percent of the entire
16portfolio of cost-effective energy efficiency measures may be
17granted to local government and municipal corporations for
18market transformation initiatives.
19    The utilities shall also present a portfolio of energy
20efficiency measures proportionate to the share of total annual
21utility revenues in Illinois from households at or below 150%
22of the poverty level. Such programs shall be targeted to
23households with incomes at or below 80% of area median income.
24    (e-10) A utility providing approved energy efficiency
25measures in this State shall be permitted to recover costs of
26those measures through an automatic adjustment clause tariff

 

 

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1filed with and approved by the Commission. The tariff shall be
2established outside the context of a general rate case and
3shall be applicable to the utility's customers other than the
4customers described in subsection (m) of this Section. Each
5year the Commission shall initiate a review to reconcile any
6amounts collected with the actual costs and to determine the
7required adjustment to the annual tariff factor to match annual
8expenditures.
9    (e-15) For those multi-year plans that commence prior to
10January 1, 2018, each Each utility shall include, in its
11recovery of costs, the costs estimated for both the utility's
12and the Department's implementation of energy efficiency
13measures. Costs collected by the utility for measures
14implemented by the Department shall be submitted to the
15Department pursuant to Section 605-323 of the Civil
16Administrative Code of Illinois, shall be deposited into the
17Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standards Fund, and shall be used
18by the Department solely for the purpose of implementing these
19measures. A utility shall not be required to advance any moneys
20to the Department but only to forward such funds as it has
21collected. The Department shall report to the Commission on an
22annual basis regarding the costs actually incurred by the
23Department in the implementation of the measures. Any changes
24to the costs of energy efficiency measures as a result of plan
25modifications shall be appropriately reflected in amounts
26recovered by the utility and turned over to the Department.

 

 

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1    The portfolio of measures, administered by both the
2utilities and the Department, shall, in combination, be
3designed to achieve the annual energy savings requirements set
4forth in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
5subsection (d) of this Section.
6    The utility and the Department shall agree upon a
7reasonable portfolio of measures and determine the measurable
8corresponding percentage of the savings goals associated with
9measures implemented by the Department.
10    No utility shall be assessed a penalty under subsection (f)
11of this Section for failure to make a timely filing if that
12failure is the result of a lack of agreement with the
13Department with respect to the allocation of responsibilities
14or related costs or target assignments. In that case, the
15Department and the utility shall file their respective plans
16with the Commission and the Commission shall determine an
17appropriate division of measures and programs that meets the
18requirements of this Section.
19    If the Department is unable to meet performance
20requirements for the portion of the portfolio implemented by
21the Department, then the utility and the Department shall
22jointly submit a modified filing to the Commission explaining
23the performance shortfall and recommending an appropriate
24course going forward, including any program modifications that
25may be appropriate in light of the evaluations conducted under
26item (8) of subsection (f) of this Section. In this case, the

 

 

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1utility obligation to collect the Department's costs and turn
2over those funds to the Department under this subsection (e)
3shall continue only if the Commission approves the
4modifications to the plan proposed by the Department.
5    (f) No later than October 1, 2010, each gas utility shall
6file an energy efficiency plan with the Commission to meet the
7energy efficiency standards through May 31, 2014. No later than
8October 1, 2013, each gas utility shall file an energy
9efficiency plan with the Commission to meet the energy
10efficiency standards through May 31, 2017. Beginning in 2017
11and every 4 Every 3 years thereafter, each utility shall file,
12no later than October 1, an energy efficiency plan with the
13Commission to meet the energy efficiency standards for the next
14applicable 4-year period beginning January 1 of the year
15following the filing. For those multi-year plans commencing on
16January 1, 2018, each utility shall file its proposed energy
17efficiency plan no later than 30 days after the effective date
18of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly or May 1,
192017, whichever is later. Beginning in 2021 and every 4 years
20thereafter, each utility shall file its energy efficiency plan
21no later than March 1. If a utility does not file such a plan on
22or before the applicable filing deadline for the plan by
23October 1 of the applicable year, then it shall face a penalty
24of $100,000 per day until the plan is filed.
25    Each utility's plan shall set forth the utility's proposals
26to meet the utility's portion of the energy efficiency

 

 

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1standards identified in subsection (c) of this Section, as
2modified by subsection (d) of this Section, taking into account
3the unique circumstances of the utility's service territory.
4For those plans commencing after December 31, 2021, the The
5Commission shall seek public comment on the utility's plan and
6shall issue an order approving or disapproving each plan within
76 months after its submission. For those plans commencing on
8January 1, 2018, the Commission shall seek public comment on
9the utility's plan and shall issue an order approving or
10disapproving each plan no later than August 31, 2017. If the
11Commission disapproves a plan, the Commission shall, within 30
12days, describe in detail the reasons for the disapproval and
13describe a path by which the utility may file a revised draft
14of the plan to address the Commission's concerns
15satisfactorily. If the utility does not refile with the
16Commission within 60 days after the disapproval, the utility
17shall be subject to penalties at a rate of $100,000 per day
18until the plan is filed. This process shall continue, and
19penalties shall accrue, until the utility has successfully
20filed a portfolio of energy efficiency measures. Penalties
21shall be deposited into the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund and
22the cost of any such penalties may not be recovered from
23ratepayers. In submitting proposed energy efficiency plans and
24funding levels to meet the savings goals adopted by this Act
25the utility shall:
26        (1) Demonstrate that its proposed energy efficiency

 

 

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1    measures will achieve the requirements that are identified
2    in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
3    subsection (d) of this Section.
4        (2) Present specific proposals to implement new
5    building and appliance standards that have been placed into
6    effect.
7        (3) Present estimates of the total amount paid for gas
8    service expressed on a per therm basis associated with the
9    proposed portfolio of measures designed to meet the
10    requirements that are identified in subsection (c) of this
11    Section, as modified by subsection (d) of this Section.
12        (4) For those multi-year plans that commence prior to
13    January 1, 2018, coordinate Coordinate with the Department
14    to present a portfolio of energy efficiency measures
15    proportionate to the share of total annual utility revenues
16    in Illinois from households at or below 150% of the poverty
17    level. Such programs shall be targeted to households with
18    incomes at or below 80% of area median income.
19        (5) Demonstrate that its overall portfolio of energy
20    efficiency measures, not including low-income programs
21    described in covered by item (4) of this subsection (f) and
22    subsection (e-5) of this Section, are cost-effective using
23    the total resource cost test and represent a diverse cross
24    section of opportunities for customers of all rate classes
25    to participate in the programs.
26        (6) Demonstrate that a gas utility affiliated with an

 

 

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1    electric utility that is required to comply with Section
2    8-103 or 8-103B of this Act has integrated gas and electric
3    efficiency measures into a single program that reduces
4    program or participant costs and appropriately allocates
5    costs to gas and electric ratepayers. For those multi-year
6    plans that commence prior to January 1, 2018, the The
7    Department shall integrate all gas and electric programs it
8    delivers in any such utilities' service territories,
9    unless the Department can show that integration is not
10    feasible or appropriate.
11        (7) Include a proposed cost recovery tariff mechanism
12    to fund the proposed energy efficiency measures and to
13    ensure the recovery of the prudently and reasonably
14    incurred costs of Commission-approved programs.
15        (8) Provide for quarterly status reports tracking
16    implementation of and expenditures for the utility's
17    portfolio of measures and, if applicable, the Department's
18    portfolio of measures, an annual independent review, and a
19    full independent evaluation of the multi-year 3-year
20    results of the performance and the cost-effectiveness of
21    the utility's and, if applicable, Department's portfolios
22    of measures and broader net program impacts and, to the
23    extent practical, for adjustment of the measures on a going
24    forward basis as a result of the evaluations. The resources
25    dedicated to evaluation shall not exceed 3% of portfolio
26    resources in any given multi-year 3-year period.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 224 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    (g) No more than 3% of expenditures on energy efficiency
2measures may be allocated for demonstration of breakthrough
3equipment and devices.
4    (h) Illinois natural gas utilities that are affiliated by
5virtue of a common parent company may, at the utilities'
6request, be considered a single natural gas utility for
7purposes of complying with this Section.
8    (i) If, after 3 years, a gas utility fails to meet the
9efficiency standard specified in subsection (c) of this Section
10as modified by subsection (d), then it shall make a
11contribution to the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program.
12The total liability for failure to meet the goal shall be
13assessed as follows:
14        (1) a large gas utility shall pay $600,000;
15        (2) a medium gas utility shall pay $400,000; and
16        (3) a small gas utility shall pay $200,000.
17    For purposes of this Section, (i) a "large gas utility" is
18a gas utility that on December 31, 2008, served more than
191,500,000 gas customers in Illinois; (ii) a "medium gas
20utility" is a gas utility that on December 31, 2008, served
21fewer than 1,500,000, but more than 500,000 gas customers in
22Illinois; and (iii) a "small gas utility" is a gas utility that
23on December 31, 2008, served fewer than 500,000 and more than
24100,000 gas customers in Illinois. The costs of this
25contribution may not be recovered from ratepayers.
26    If a gas utility fails to meet the efficiency standard

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 225 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1specified in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
2subsection (d) of this Section, in any 2 consecutive multi-year
33-year planning periods, then the responsibility for
4implementing the utility's energy efficiency measures shall be
5transferred to an independent program administrator selected
6by the Commission. Reasonable and prudent costs incurred by the
7independent program administrator to meet the efficiency
8standard specified in subsection (c) of this Section, as
9modified by subsection (d) of this Section, may be recovered
10from the customers of the affected gas utilities, other than
11customers described in subsection (m) of this Section. The
12utility shall provide the independent program administrator
13with all information and assistance necessary to perform the
14program administrator's duties including but not limited to
15customer, account, and energy usage data, and shall allow the
16program administrator to include inserts in customer bills. The
17utility may recover reasonable costs associated with any such
18assistance.
19    (j) No utility shall be deemed to have failed to meet the
20energy efficiency standards to the extent any such failure is
21due to a failure of the Department.
22    (k) Not later than January 1, 2012, the Commission shall
23develop and solicit public comment on a plan to foster
24statewide coordination and consistency between statutorily
25mandated natural gas and electric energy efficiency programs to
26reduce program or participant costs or to improve program

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 226 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1performance. Not later than September 1, 2013, the Commission
2shall issue a report to the General Assembly containing its
3findings and recommendations.
4    (l) This Section does not apply to a gas utility that on
5January 1, 2009, provided gas service to fewer than 100,000
6customers in Illinois.
7    (m) Subsections (a) through (k) of this Section do not
8apply to customers of a natural gas utility that have a North
9American Industry Classification System code number that is
1022111 or any such code number beginning with the digits 31, 32,
11or 33 and (i) annual usage in the aggregate of 4 million therms
12or more within the service territory of the affected gas
13utility or with aggregate usage of 8 million therms or more in
14this State and complying with the provisions of item (l) of
15this subsection (m); or (ii) using natural gas as feedstock and
16meeting the usage requirements described in item (i) of this
17subsection (m), to the extent such annual feedstock usage is
18greater than 60% of the customer's total annual usage of
19natural gas.
20        (1) Customers described in this subsection (m) of this
21    Section shall apply, on a form approved on or before
22    October 1, 2009 by the Department, to the Department to be
23    designated as a self-directing customer ("SDC") or as an
24    exempt customer using natural gas as a feedstock from which
25    other products are made, including, but not limited to,
26    feedstock for a hydrogen plant, on or before the 1st day of

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 227 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    February, 2010. Thereafter, application may be made not
2    less than 6 months before the filing date of the gas
3    utility energy efficiency plan described in subsection (f)
4    of this Section; however, a new customer that commences
5    taking service from a natural gas utility after February 1,
6    2010 may apply to become a SDC or exempt customer up to 30
7    days after beginning service. Customers described in this
8    subsection (m) that have not already been approved by the
9    Department may apply to be designated a self-directing
10    customer or exempt customer, on a form approved by the
11    Department, between September 1, 2013 and September 30,
12    2013. Customer applications that are approved by the
13    Department under this amendatory Act of the 98th General
14    Assembly shall be considered to be a self-directing
15    customer or exempt customer, as applicable, for the current
16    3-year planning period effective December 1, 2013. Such
17    application shall contain the following:
18            (A) the customer's certification that, at the time
19        of its application, it qualifies to be a SDC or exempt
20        customer described in this subsection (m) of this
21        Section;
22            (B) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
23        certification that it has established or will
24        establish by the beginning of the utility's multi-year
25        3-year planning period commencing subsequent to the
26        application, and will maintain for accounting

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 228 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        purposes, an energy efficiency reserve account and
2        that the customer will accrue funds in said account to
3        be held for the purpose of funding, in whole or in
4        part, energy efficiency measures of the customer's
5        choosing, which may include, but are not limited to,
6        projects involving combined heat and power systems
7        that use the same energy source both for the generation
8        of electrical or mechanical power and the production of
9        steam or another form of useful thermal energy or the
10        use of combustible gas produced from biomass, or both;
11            (C) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
12        certification that annual funding levels for the
13        energy efficiency reserve account will be equal to 2%
14        of the customer's cost of natural gas, composed of the
15        customer's commodity cost and the delivery service
16        charges paid to the gas utility, or $150,000, whichever
17        is less;
18            (D) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
19        certification that the required reserve account
20        balance will be capped at 3 years' worth of accruals
21        and that the customer may, at its option, make further
22        deposits to the account to the extent such deposit
23        would increase the reserve account balance above the
24        designated cap level;
25            (E) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
26        certification that by October 1 of each year, beginning

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 229 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        no sooner than October 1, 2012, the customer will
2        report to the Department information, for the 12-month
3        period ending May 31 of the same year, on all deposits
4        and reductions, if any, to the reserve account during
5        the reporting year, and to the extent deposits to the
6        reserve account in any year are in an amount less than
7        $150,000, the basis for such reduced deposits; reserve
8        account balances by month; a description of energy
9        efficiency measures undertaken by the customer and
10        paid for in whole or in part with funds from the
11        reserve account; an estimate of the energy saved, or to
12        be saved, by the measure; and that the report shall
13        include a verification by an officer or plant manager
14        of the customer or by a registered professional
15        engineer or certified energy efficiency trade
16        professional that the funds withdrawn from the reserve
17        account were used for the energy efficiency measures;
18            (F) in the case of an exempt customer, the
19        customer's certification of the level of gas usage as
20        feedstock in the customer's operation in a typical year
21        and that it will provide information establishing this
22        level, upon request of the Department;
23            (G) in the case of either an exempt customer or a
24        SDC, the customer's certification that it has provided
25        the gas utility or utilities serving the customer with
26        a copy of the application as filed with the Department;

 

 

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1            (H) in the case of either an exempt customer or a
2        SDC, certification of the natural gas utility or
3        utilities serving the customer in Illinois including
4        the natural gas utility accounts that are the subject
5        of the application; and
6            (I) in the case of either an exempt customer or a
7        SDC, a verification signed by a plant manager or an
8        authorized corporate officer attesting to the
9        truthfulness and accuracy of the information contained
10        in the application.
11        (2) The Department shall review the application to
12    determine that it contains the information described in
13    provisions (A) through (I) of item (1) of this subsection
14    (m), as applicable. The review shall be completed within 30
15    days after the date the application is filed with the
16    Department. Absent a determination by the Department
17    within the 30-day period, the applicant shall be considered
18    to be a SDC or exempt customer, as applicable, for all
19    subsequent multi-year 3-year planning periods, as of the
20    date of filing the application described in this subsection
21    (m). If the Department determines that the application does
22    not contain the applicable information described in
23    provisions (A) through (I) of item (1) of this subsection
24    (m), it shall notify the customer, in writing, of its
25    determination that the application does not contain the
26    required information and identify the information that is

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 231 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    missing, and the customer shall provide the missing
2    information within 15 working days after the date of
3    receipt of the Department's notification.
4        (3) The Department shall have the right to audit the
5    information provided in the customer's application and
6    annual reports to ensure continued compliance with the
7    requirements of this subsection. Based on the audit, if the
8    Department determines the customer is no longer in
9    compliance with the requirements of items (A) through (I)
10    of item (1) of this subsection (m), as applicable, the
11    Department shall notify the customer in writing of the
12    noncompliance. The customer shall have 30 days to establish
13    its compliance, and failing to do so, may have its status
14    as a SDC or exempt customer revoked by the Department. The
15    Department shall treat all information provided by any
16    customer seeking SDC status or exemption from the
17    provisions of this Section as strictly confidential.
18        (4) Upon request, or on its own motion, the Commission
19    may open an investigation, no more than once every 3 years
20    and not before October 1, 2014, to evaluate the
21    effectiveness of the self-directing program described in
22    this subsection (m).
23    Customers described in this subsection (m) that applied to
24the Department on January 3, 2013, were approved by the
25Department on February 13, 2013 to be a self-directing customer
26or exempt customer, and receive natural gas from a utility that

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 232 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1provides gas service to at least 500,000 retail customers in
2Illinois and electric service to at least 1,000,000 retail
3customers in Illinois shall be considered to be a
4self-directing customer or exempt customer, as applicable, for
5the current 3-year planning period effective December 1, 2013.
6    (n) The applicability of this Section to customers
7described in subsection (m) of this Section is conditioned on
8the existence of the SDC program. In no event will any
9provision of this Section apply to such customers after January
101, 2020.
11    (o) Utilities' 3-year energy efficiency plans approved by
12the Commission on or before the effective date of this
13amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly for the period June
141, 2014 through May 31, 2017 shall continue to be in force and
15effect through December 31, 2017 so that the energy efficiency
16programs set forth in those plans continue to be offered during
17the period June 1, 2017 through December 31, 2017. Each utility
18is authorized to increase, on a pro rata basis, the energy
19savings goals and budgets approved in its plan to reflect the
20additional 7 months of the plan's operation.
21(Source: P.A. 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-841, eff. 7-20-12;
2298-90, eff. 7-15-13; 98-225, eff. 8-9-13; 98-604, eff.
2312-17-13.)
 
24    (220 ILCS 5/8-512 new)
25    Sec. 8-512. Findings. It is the policy of this State to

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 233 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1promote cost-effective transmission system development that
2ensures reliability of the electric transmission system,
3lowers carbon emissions, minimizes long-term costs for
4consumers, and supports the energy policy goals of the State.
5    (a) The General Assembly finds that:
6        (1) Transmission planning, primarily for reliability
7    purposes, but also for economic and public policy reasons,
8    is conducted by regional transmission organizations in
9    which transmission-owning Illinois utilities and other
10    stakeholders are members.
11        (2) Order No. 1000 of the Federal Energy Regulatory
12    Commission requires regional transmission organizations to
13    plan for transmission system needs in light of State public
14    policy and to accept input from states during the
15    transmission system planning processes.
16        (3) The State of Illinois does not currently have a
17    comprehensive energy and environmental policy planning
18    process to identify transmission infrastructure that can
19    serve as a vital input into the Order No. 1000
20    inter-regional transmission organization planning process.
21        (4) This State is an electricity generation and power
22    transmission hub, and can leverage that position to invest
23    in infrastructure that enables new and existing Illinois
24    generators to meet the public policy goals of this State
25    and of interconnected states while cost effectively
26    supporting tens of thousands of jobs in this State.

 

 

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1        (5) States that are located to the geographic west of
2    this State have developed energy plans aimed at bolstering
3    their in-state clean power economy, which is driven by
4    wind, nuclear, hydro, and solar power plants. These states
5    have achieved their objectives by adopting policies that
6    support transmission projects and allow for the
7    transmission of electricity from those states to this
8    State. Because this State has not adopted similar policies,
9    the nation cannot readily access this State's low-cost,
10    clean power, and this State is hindered in its ability to
11    develop and support its low-carbon economy and keep energy
12    prices low in this State and interconnected states.
13        (6) Transmission system congestion within this State
14    and the regional transmission organizations serving this
15    State limits the ability of this State's existing and new
16    generation facilities that do not emit carbon dioxide,
17    including renewable energy resources and zero emission
18    facilities, to serve the public policy goals of this State
19    and other states, which constrains investment in this
20    State.
21        (7) Investment in infrastructure to support existing
22    and new zero emission generation facilities that do not
23    emit carbon dioxide, including renewable energy resources
24    and zero emission facilities, stimulates significant
25    economic development and job growth in the State, as well
26    as creates environmental and public health benefits in this

 

 

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1    State.
2        (8) Many diverse issues impact transmission system
3    development; for example, continued requests for
4    alternatives to traditional overhead transmission lines
5    for reasons other than technical necessity warrant
6    examination of whether and, if so, under what
7    circumstances, these requests should be considered and
8    approved. These requests are likely to accelerate as
9    investment in transmission infrastructure moves forward.
10    (b) Consistent with the findings identified in subsection
11(a) of this Section, the Commission shall prepare a Report. The
12Report shall include legislative and regulatory
13recommendations for addressing transmission system congestion
14within this State and the regional transmission organizations
15that serve this State, including the limitations of the
16existing transmission grid to meet the needs of existing and
17new generation facilities that do not emit carbon dioxide,
18including renewable energy resources and zero emission
19facilities, in an efficient and economical manner. To assist
20and support the Commission in the development of the Report,
21the Commission shall retain the services of technical and
22policy experts with relevant fields of expertise, solicit
23technical and policy analysis from the public, and provide for
24a 60-day open public comment period after publication of a
25draft report, which shall be published no later than 90 days
26after the comment period ends. The Report shall address, at a

 

 

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1minimum, the following:
2        (1) the reduction of transmission system congestion to
3    facilitate availability and development of generation
4    facilities that do not emit carbon dioxide, including
5    renewable energy resources and zero emission facilities in
6    this State;
7        (2) the reduction of carbon dioxide emissions as
8    described in the Environmental Protection Act;
9        (3) utilization of this State's position as an
10    electricity generation and power transmission hub to
11    create new investment in this State's energy resources; and
12        (4) the introduction and consideration of State
13    programs and policies, including implementation of
14    transmission projects, in regional transmission
15    organization plans and rules.
16    (c) The Report shall include, at a minimum, the following:
17        (1) An inventory of all statutory and regulatory public
18    policy goals adopted by the federal government and by
19    states served by regional transmission organizations of
20    which a transmission-owning Illinois public utility is a
21    member.
22        (2) An analysis of how the public policy goals
23    identified in paragraph (1) of this subsection (c) may
24    impact the need or opportunity for transmission system
25    investments in this State or between this State and those
26    states.

 

 

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1        (3) The Commission's planning criteria for
2    transmission investments that are designed to achieve
3    State energy and environmental policy goals.
4        (4) An analysis of the quantity of power and energy
5    generated and consumed in the State, including an inventory
6    of power and energy generated from facilities located in
7    this State that achieve carbon dioxide emissions rates
8    below State or federal standards, renewable energy
9    resources, or zero emission facilities.
10        (5) A review of the opportunities to export excess
11    power, energy or environmental attributes that are
12    generated in the State through transmission system
13    expansion, including power and energy generated from
14    existing and proposed generation facilities that do not
15    emit carbon dioxide, including renewable energy resources
16    and zero emission facilities, located or proposed to be
17    located in this State and other states served by the same
18    regional transmission organizations.
19        (6) An evaluation of possible transmission system
20    expansions designed to meet the policies identified
21    herein, including (A) how those system expansions would
22    impact the ability to export such excess power, energy, and
23    environmental attributes, and (B) an examination of the
24    costs and benefits of the system expansions, the extent to
25    which the system expansions would alleviate transmission
26    congestion in the region, whether the system expansion

 

 

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1    would alleviate transmission congestion in the region, and
2    whether those investments would provide regional benefits
3    to surrounding states, market benefits to regional
4    transmission organizations, and national benefits.
5        (7) Taking into account the requirements of federal law
6    and federal policies, a review of the regional transmission
7    organizations' cost recovery and cost allocation
8    mechanisms that could be utilized for the proposed
9    transmission system expansion, and the development of a
10    cost-effectiveness analysis that takes into account total
11    costs and benefits over time.
12        (8) The Commission's specific findings, based on
13    technical and policy analysis, regarding the transmission
14    system developments needed to cost-effectively achieve the
15    public policy goals identified in this Section and in the
16    Report.
17        (9) A review of any proposals to enhance the regional
18    and interregional system planning processes of regional
19    transmission organizations to overcome any barriers to
20    appropriate transmission system development and an
21    analysis of how those proposals could help achieve the
22    findings and recommendations of the proposed transmission
23    system expansions.
24        (10) The Commission's conclusions and proposed
25    recommendations based on its analysis.
26    (d) No later than December 15, 2018, the Commission shall

 

 

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1submit its final Report to the General Assembly and to each
2regional transmission organization that serves Illinois.
 
3    (220 ILCS 5/9-105 new)
4    Sec. 9-105. Average grid impact delivery services charge.
5    (a) Beginning with the January 2019 monthly billing period
6for an electric utility that serves more than 3,000,000 retail
7customers in the State and beginning with the January 2021
8monthly billing period for an electric utility that serves
93,000,000 or less retail customers but more than 500,000 retail
10customers in the State, such utility may recover its costs of
11providing delivery services to retail customers through a
12charge based on kilowatts of demand. A utility that elects to
13recover its costs as provided in this Section shall file its
14tariffs under Section 9-201 of this Act, provided that a
15participating utility as defined in Section 16-108.5 of this
16Act shall file such tariffs under subsection (e) of Section
1716-108.5.
18    (b) Tariffs filed by a utility under subsection (a) of this
19Section shall be subject to the following provisions:
20        (1) The categories of costs being recovered through
21    riders or automatic adjustment clause tariffs on the
22    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
23    Assembly and add-on taxes and other separately-stated
24    charges or adjustments may, at the utility's election,
25    continue to be recovered in the manner they are being

 

 

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1    collected, provided that nothing in this paragraph (1)
2    shall prohibit addition or elimination of a rider or an
3    automatic adjustment clause tariff or preclude the utility
4    from revising those riders or automatic adjustment clause
5    tariffs, under this Article IX or any applicable provisions
6    of this Act, regardless of whether such riders or automatic
7    adjustment clause tariffs assess charges on a
8    kilowatt-hour or kilowatt basis.
9        (2) Taxes assessed on a kilowatt-hour basis shall
10    continue to be recovered on a kilowatt-hour basis.
11        (3) The costs of providing delivery services to those
12    retail customers subject to the tariff that are not
13    recovered under paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection
14    (b) shall be recovered through a charge based on kilowatts
15    of demand, and the tariffs shall be designed to allocate
16    costs to the cost causer generally based on the demands
17    that customers place on the utility's systems.
18        (4) For purposes of this Section, the kilowatts of
19    demand for each residential customer of an electric utility
20    that serves more than 3,000,000 retail customers in the
21    State shall be calculated based on the average of the daily
22    maximum kilowatts delivered to the customer during a
23    30-minute interval occurring within each 12-hour period
24    beginning at 9 a.m. and ending at 9 p.m. Central Prevailing
25    Time on each non-holiday weekday during the monthly billing
26    period or periods for which the bill is rendered; the

 

 

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1    kilowatts of demand for each residential customer of an
2    electric utility that serves 3,000,000 or less retail
3    customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in the
4    State shall be calculated based on the average of the daily
5    maximum kilowatts delivered to the customer during a
6    60-minute interval occurring within each 12-hour period
7    beginning at 9 a.m. and ending at 9 p.m. Central Prevailing
8    Time on each non-holiday weekday during the monthly billing
9    period or periods for which the bill is rendered. For
10    purposes of this Section, 30-minute intervals shall begin
11    on the hour and 30 minutes past the hour and 60-minute
12    intervals shall begin on the hour. An electric utility may
13    elect to estimate retail customers' kilowatt demands if the
14    interval data necessary to determine such customers'
15    kilowatt demands is not available.
16    (c) An electric utility that elects to recover its costs of
17providing delivery services to retail customers under
18subsection (a) of this Section shall notify the Commission of
19its election to do so no later than 20 months before the tariff
20to recover such costs would take effect under this Section. An
21electric utility that makes such election shall also be subject
22to the following provisions, as applicable:
23        (1) If the utility elects to recover, under this
24    Section, its costs of providing delivery services to
25    residential retail customers, then the utility shall also
26    file a tariff that limits the amount of the delivery

 

 

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1    services revenue requirement that is allocated to be
2    recovered from such customers through the customer charge
3    to no more than 14% on average among residential retail
4    customers. The tariff shall take effect at the same time
5    the utility's tariff authorized by subsection (a) of this
6    Section takes effect.
7        (2) If the utility elects to recover, under this
8    Section, its costs of providing delivery services to
9    eligible retail customers, as defined by Section 16-111.5
10    of this Act, then the utility shall also offer a
11    market-based, time-of-use rate for eligible retail
12    customers that choose to take power and energy supply
13    service from the utility. The market-based, time-of-use
14    rate described in this Section is a fixed price rate. The
15    utility shall implement the requirements of this paragraph
16    (2) by filing a tariff with the Commission, which shall be
17    subject to the following provisions:
18            (A) The tariff shall include 3 time blocks: a peak
19        time block defined as 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. on non-holiday
20        weekdays, an off-peak time block defined as 6 p.m. to
21        10 p.m. on non-holiday weekdays, and a super-off-peak
22        time block defined as all other hours.
23            (B) The tariff shall create price ratios between
24        the blocks as follows: the super-off-peak time block
25        price shall be no less than zero but no greater than
26        one-half of the price of the off-peak time block price,

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 243 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        and the off-peak time block price shall be no greater
2        than one-half of the price of the peak time block
3        price.
4            (C) The Illinois Power Agency shall procure the
5        supply-related services necessary to offer the
6        market-based, time-of-use rate described in this
7        paragraph (2).
8            (D) Notwithstanding the requirements of Section
9        16-103.3 of this Act, the time-of-use rate shall
10        include the costs of electric capacity, costs of
11        transmission services, and charges for network
12        integration transmission service, transmission
13        enhancement, and locational reliability, as these
14        terms are defined in the PJM Interconnection Open
15        Access Transmission Tariff on March 1, 2016, within the
16        prices for each time block and seasonal block in which
17        the associated costs generally are incurred. In the
18        event the Open Access Transmission Tariff subsequently
19        renames those terms, the services reflected under
20        those terms shall continue to be included in the
21        time-of-use rate described in this paragraph (2).
22            (E) Adjustments to the charges set by the tariff
23        may be made on a semi-annual basis, as follows: each
24        May and November, the utility shall submit to the
25        Commission, through an informational filing, its
26        updated charges, and such charges shall take effect

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 244 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        beginning with the June monthly billing period and
2        December monthly billing period, respectively.
3            (F) The tariff shall include a purchased energy
4        adjustment to fully recover the supply costs for the
5        customers taking service under this tariff. A separate
6        reconciliation process shall be conducted for the
7        costs incurred and revenues received under the tariff
8        described in this paragraph (2).
9    Each electric utility subject to the requirements of this
10    paragraph (2) shall file a tariff to implement the
11    provisions of this paragraph in conjunction with the tariff
12    that the utility files to implement subsection (a) of
13    Section 9-105 of this Act. The tariff shall become
14    effective on the same date that the tariff implementing
15    subsection (a) of Section 9-105 of this Act becomes
16    effective.
17        (3) Beginning with the year in which a utility elects
18    to recover, under this Section, its costs of providing
19    delivery services to such eligible retail customers, a
20    utility that serves more than 3,000,000 retail customers in
21    the State shall spend $15,000,000 over 3 years, and a
22    utility that serves 3,000,000 or less retail customers but
23    more than 500,000 retail customers in the State shall spend
24    $6,000,000 over 3 years in customer education and outreach
25    efforts designed to inform eligible retail customers about
26    the rate design changes to be implemented under this

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 245 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    Section and to educate such customers regarding how to
2    respond to the new rate design. The investment shall be a
3    recoverable expense. At the time that a utility notifies
4    the Commission of its election under this subsection (c),
5    it shall also submit to the Commission, as an informational
6    filing, its plan regarding the customer education and
7    outreach efforts to be funded under this paragraph (3).
8    Within 30 days after the filing, the Commission shall
9    convene a workshop process during which interested
10    participants may discuss issues related to the plan.
11        (4) If the electric utility also has a
12    performance-based formula rate in effect under Section
13    16-108.5 of this Act, then the utility shall be permitted
14    to revise the formula rate and schedules to reduce the 50
15    basis point values to zero that would otherwise apply under
16    paragraph (5) of subsection (c) of Section 16-108.5 of this
17    Act. If the utility no longer has a performance-based
18    formula rate in effect under Section 16-108.5 of this Act,
19    then the utility shall be permitted to implement the
20    revenue balancing adjustment tariff described in Section
21    9-107 of this Act.
 
22    (220 ILCS 5/9-107 new)
23    Sec. 9-107. Revenue balancing adjustment tariff.
24    (a) In this Section:
25    "Reconciliation period" means a period beginning with the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 246 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1January monthly billing period and extending through the
2December monthly billing period.
3    "Rate case reconciliation revenue requirement" means the
4final distribution revenue requirement or requirements
5approved by the Commission in the utility's rate case or
6formula rate proceeding to set the rates initially applicable
7in the relevant reconciliation period after the conclusion of
8the period. In the event the Commission has approved more than
9one revenue requirement for the reconciliation period, the
10amount of rate case revenue under each approved revenue
11requirement shall be prorated based upon the number of days
12under which each revenue requirement was in effect.
13    (b) An electric utility that is authorized under paragraph
14(4) of subsection (c) of Section 9-105 of this Act to implement
15a revenue balancing adjustment tariff under this Section
16because the utility no longer has a performance-based formula
17rate in effect under Section 16-108.5 of this Act, may file the
18tariff for the purpose of preventing undercollections or
19overcollections of distribution revenues as compared to the
20revenue requirement or requirements approved by the Commission
21on which the rates giving rise to those revenues were based.
22The tariff shall calculate an annual adjustment that reflects
23any difference between the actual delivery service revenue
24billed for services provided during the relevant
25reconciliation period and the rate case reconciliation revenue
26requirement for the relevant reconciliation period and shall

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 247 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1set forth the reconciliation categories or classes, or a
2combination of both, in a manner determined at the utility's
3discretion.
4    (c) A utility that elects to file the tariff authorized by
5this Section shall file the tariff outside the context of a
6general rate case or formula rate proceeding, and the
7Commission shall, after notice and hearing, approve the tariff
8or approve with modification no later than 120 days after the
9utility files the tariff, and the tariff shall remain in effect
10at the discretion of the utility. The tariff shall also require
11that the electric utility submit an annual revenue balancing
12reconciliation report to the Commission reflecting the
13difference between the actual delivery service revenue and rate
14case revenue for the applicable reconciliation and identifying
15the charges or credits to be applied thereafter. The annual
16revenue balancing reconciliation report shall be filed with the
17Commission no later than March 20 of the year following a
18reconciliation period. The Commission may initiate a review of
19the revenue balancing reconciliation report each year to
20determine if any subsequent adjustment is necessary to align
21actual delivery service revenue and rate case revenue. In the
22event the Commission elects to initiate such review, the
23Commission shall, after notice and hearing, enter an order
24approving, or approving as modified, such revenue balancing
25reconciliation report no later than 120 days after the utility
26files its report with the Commission. If the Commission does

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 248 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1not initiate such review, the revenue balancing reconciliation
2report and the identified charges or credits shall be deemed
3accepted and approved 120 days after the utility files the
4report and shall not be subject to review in any other
5proceeding.
 
6    (220 ILCS 5/16-103.3 new)
7    Sec. 16-103.3. Unbundling of charges related to
8electricity supply and regional transmission organization
9services. Beginning with the January 2019 monthly billing
10period, an electric utility that provides electric service to
11more than 3,000,000 retail customers in the State shall
12restructure its retail electricity supply charges applicable
13to eligible retail customers, as defined by Section 16-111.5 of
14this Act, for whom the electric utility procures electric power
15and energy under Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act
16and Section 16-111.5 of this Act. The restructuring, which
17shall be implemented through a tariff filed with the
18Commission, shall allocate to these customers, and separately
19state, the following: the costs of electric capacity, costs of
20transmission services, and charges for network integration
21transmission service, transmission enhancement, and locational
22reliability, as these terms are defined in the PJM
23Interconnection Open Access Transmission Tariff on March 1,
242016. In the event the Open Access Transmission Tariff
25subsequently renames those terms, the services reflected under

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 249 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1those terms shall continue to be subject to the restructuring
2described in this Section.
3    It is the intent of this Section that eligible retail
4customers taking electricity supply service from an electric
5utility that provides electric service to more than 3,000,000
6retail customers in the State pay charges for the electricity
7supply and regional transmission organization-related services
8costs that generally reflect the manner in which the associated
9costs are incurred.
 
10    (220 ILCS 5/16-107)
11    Sec. 16-107. Real-time pricing.
12    (a) Each electric utility shall file, on or before May 1,
131998, a tariff or tariffs which allow nonresidential retail
14customers in the electric utility's service area to elect
15real-time pricing beginning October 1, 1998.
16    (b) Each electric utility shall file, on or before May 1,
172000, a tariff or tariffs which allow residential retail
18customers in the electric utility's service area to elect
19real-time pricing beginning October 1, 2000.
20    (b-5) Each electric utility shall file a tariff or tariffs
21allowing residential retail customers in the electric
22utility's service area to elect real-time pricing beginning
23January 2, 2007. The Commission may, after notice and hearing,
24approve the tariff or tariffs. A customer who elects real-time
25pricing shall remain on such rate for a minimum of 12 months.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 250 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1The Commission may, after notice and hearing, approve the
2tariff or tariffs, provided that the Commission finds that the
3potential for demand reductions will result in net economic
4benefits to all residential customers of the electric utility.
5In examining economic benefits from demand reductions, the
6Commission shall, at a minimum, consider the following:
7improvements to system reliability and power quality,
8reduction in wholesale market prices and price volatility,
9electric utility cost avoidance and reductions, market power
10mitigation, and other benefits of demand reductions, but only
11to the extent that the effects of reduced demand can be
12demonstrated to lower the cost of electricity delivered to
13residential customers. A tariff or tariffs approved pursuant to
14this subsection (b-5) shall, at a minimum, describe (i) the
15methodology for determining the market price of energy to be
16reflected in the real-time rate and (ii) the manner in which
17customers who elect real-time pricing will be provided with
18ready access to hourly market prices, including, but not
19limited to, day-ahead hourly energy prices. A customer who
20elects real-time pricing under a tariff approved under this
21subsection (b-5) and thereafter terminates the election shall
22not return to taking service under the tariff for a period of
2312 months following the date on which the customer terminated
24real-time pricing. However, this limitation shall cease to
25apply on such date that the provision of electric power and
26energy is declared competitive under Section 16-113 of this Act

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 251 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1for the customer group or groups to which this subsection (b-5)
2applies.
3    A proceeding under this subsection (b-5) may not exceed 120
4days in length.
5    (b-10) Each electric utility providing real-time pricing
6pursuant to subsection (b-5) shall install a meter capable of
7recording hourly interval energy use at the service location of
8each customer that elects real-time pricing pursuant to this
9subsection.
10    (b-15) If the Commission issues an order pursuant to
11subsection (b-5), the affected electric utility shall contract
12with an entity not affiliated with the electric utility to
13serve as a program administrator to develop and implement a
14program to provide consumer outreach, enrollment, and
15education concerning real-time pricing and to establish and
16administer an information system and technical and other
17customer assistance that is necessary to enable customers to
18manage electricity use. The program administrator: (i) shall be
19selected and compensated by the electric utility, subject to
20Commission approval; (ii) shall have demonstrated technical
21and managerial competence in the development and
22administration of demand management programs; and (iii) may
23develop and implement risk management, energy efficiency, and
24other services related to energy use management for which the
25program administrator shall be compensated by participants in
26the program receiving such services. The electric utility shall

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 252 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1provide the program administrator with all information and
2assistance necessary to perform the program administrator's
3duties, including, but not limited to, customer, account, and
4energy use data. The electric utility shall permit the program
5administrator to include inserts in residential customer bills
62 times per year to assist with customer outreach and
7enrollment.
8    The program administrator shall submit an annual report to
9the electric utility no later than April 1 of each year
10describing the operation and results of the program, including
11information concerning the number and types of customers using
12real-time pricing, changes in customers' energy use patterns,
13an assessment of the value of the program to both participants
14and non-participants, and recommendations concerning
15modification of the program and the tariff or tariffs filed
16under subsection (b-5). This report shall be filed by the
17electric utility with the Commission within 30 days of receipt
18and shall be available to the public on the Commission's web
19site.
20    (b-20) The Commission shall monitor the performance of
21programs established pursuant to subsection (b-15) and shall
22order the termination or modification of a program if it
23determines that the program is not, after a reasonable period
24of time for development not to exceed 4 years, resulting in net
25benefits to the residential customers of the electric utility.
26    (b-25) An electric utility shall be entitled to recover

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 253 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1reasonable costs incurred in complying with this Section,
2provided that recovery of the costs is fairly apportioned among
3its residential customers as provided in this subsection
4(b-25). The electric utility may apportion greater costs on the
5residential customers who elect real-time pricing, but may also
6impose some of the costs of real-time pricing on customers who
7do not elect real-time pricing, provided that the Commission
8determines that the cost savings resulting from real-time
9pricing will exceed the costs imposed on customers for
10maintaining the program.
11    (c) The electric utility's tariff or tariffs filed pursuant
12to this Section shall be subject to Article IX.
13    (d) This Section does not apply to any electric utility
14providing service to 100,000 or fewer customers.
15(Source: P.A. 94-977, eff. 6-30-06.)
 
16    (220 ILCS 5/16-107.5)
17    Sec. 16-107.5. Net electricity metering.
18    (a) The Legislature finds and declares that a program to
19provide net electricity metering, as defined in this Section,
20for eligible customers can encourage private investment in
21renewable energy resources, stimulate economic growth, enhance
22the continued diversification of Illinois' energy resource
23mix, and protect the Illinois environment.
24    (b) As used in this Section, (i) "community renewable
25generation project" shall have the meaning set forth in Section

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 254 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

11-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act; (ii) "eligible customer"
2means a retail customer that owns or operates a solar, wind, or
3other eligible renewable electrical generating facility with a
4rated capacity of not more than 2,000 kilowatts that is located
5on the customer's premises and is intended primarily to offset
6the customer's own electrical requirements; (iii) (ii)
7"electricity provider" means an electric utility or
8alternative retail electric supplier; (iv) (iii) "eligible
9renewable electrical generating facility" means a generator
10that is interconnected under rules adopted by the Commission
11and is powered by solar electric energy, wind, dedicated crops
12grown for electricity generation, agricultural residues,
13untreated and unadulterated wood waste, landscape trimmings,
14livestock manure, anaerobic digestion of livestock or food
15processing waste, fuel cells or microturbines powered by
16renewable fuels, or hydroelectric energy; (v) and (iv) "net
17electricity metering" (or "net metering") means the
18measurement, during the billing period applicable to an
19eligible customer, of the net amount of electricity supplied by
20an electricity provider to the customer's premises or provided
21to the electricity provider by the customer or subscriber; (vi)
22"subscriber" shall have the meaning as set forth in Section
231-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act; and (vii) "subscription"
24shall have the meaning set forth in Section 1-10 of the
25Illinois Power Agency Act.
26    (c) A net metering facility shall be equipped with metering

 

 

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1equipment that can measure the flow of electricity in both
2directions at the same rate.
3        (1) For eligible customers whose electric service has
4    not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
5    this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery
6    service is provided and measured on a kilowatt-hour basis
7    and electric supply service is not provided based on hourly
8    or time of use pricing, this shall typically be
9    accomplished through use of a single, bi-directional
10    meter. If the eligible customer's existing electric
11    revenue meter does not meet this requirement, the
12    electricity provider shall arrange for the local electric
13    utility or a meter service provider to install and maintain
14    a new revenue meter at the electricity provider's expense.
15        (2) For eligible customers whose electric service has
16    not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
17    this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery
18    service is provided and measured on a kilowatt demand basis
19    and electric supply service is not provided based on hourly
20    pricing, this shall typically be accomplished through use
21    of a dual channel meter capable of measuring the flow of
22    electricity both into and out of the customer's facility at
23    the same rate and ratio. If such customer's existing
24    electric revenue meter does not meet this requirement, then
25    the electricity provider shall arrange for the local
26    electric utility or a meter service provider to install and

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 256 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    maintain a new revenue meter at the electricity provider's
2    expense, which may be the smart meter described by
3    subsection (b) of Section 16-108.5 of this Act.
4        (3) For all other eligible customers, until such time
5    as the local electric utility installs a smart meter, as
6    described by subsection (b) of Section 16-108.5 of this
7    Act, the electricity provider may arrange for the local
8    electric utility or a meter service provider to install and
9    maintain metering equipment capable of measuring the flow
10    of electricity both into and out of the customer's facility
11    at the same rate and ratio, typically through the use of a
12    dual channel meter. If the eligible customer's existing
13    electric revenue meter does not meet this requirement, then
14    the costs of installing such equipment shall be paid for by
15    the customer.
16    (d) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
17credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
18or provided by eligible customers whose electric service has
19not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
20this the Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery
21service is provided and measured on a kilowatt-hour basis and
22electric supply service is not provided based on hourly or time
23of use pricing in the following manner:
24        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
25    during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
26    produced by the customer, the electricity provider shall

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 257 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    charge the customer for the net electricity supplied to and
2    used by the customer as provided in subsection (e-5) of
3    this Section.
4        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a customer
5    during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
6    used by the customer during that billing period, the
7    electricity provider supplying that customer shall apply a
8    1:1 kilowatt-hour credit to a subsequent bill for service
9    to the customer for the net electricity supplied to the
10    electricity provider. The electricity provider shall
11    continue to carry over any excess kilowatt-hour credits
12    earned and apply those credits to subsequent billing
13    periods to offset any customer-generator consumption in
14    those billing periods until all credits are used or until
15    the end of the annualized period.
16        (3) At the end of the year or annualized over the
17    period that service is supplied by means of net metering,
18    or in the event that the retail customer terminates service
19    with the electricity provider prior to the end of the year
20    or the annualized period, any remaining credits in the
21    customer's account shall expire.
22    (d-5) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
23credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
24or provided by eligible customers whose electric service has
25not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
26this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery service

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 258 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1is provided and measured on a kilowatt-hour basis and electric
2supply service is provided based on hourly or time of use
3pricing in the following manner:
4        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
5    during any hourly or time of use period exceeds the amount
6    of electricity produced by the customer, the electricity
7    provider shall charge the customer for the net electricity
8    supplied to and used by the customer according to the terms
9    of the contract or tariff to which the same customer would
10    be assigned to or be eligible for if the customer was not a
11    net metering customer.
12        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a customer
13    during any hourly or time of use period exceeds the amount
14    of electricity used by the customer during that hourly
15    period, the energy provider shall apply a credit for the
16    net kilowatt-hours produced in such period. The credit
17    shall consist of an energy credit and a delivery service
18    credit. The energy credit shall be valued at the same price
19    per kilowatt-hour as the electric service provider would
20    charge for kilowatt-hour energy sales during that same
21    hourly or time of use period. The delivery credit shall be
22    equal to the net kilowatt-hours produced in such hourly or
23    time of use period times a credit that reflects all
24    kilowatt-hour based charges in the customer's electric
25    service rate, excluding energy charges.
26    (e) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or

 

 

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1credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
2whose electric service has not been declared competitive
3pursuant to Section 16-113 of this Act as of July 1, 2011 and
4whose electric delivery service is provided and measured on a
5kilowatt demand basis and electric supply service is not
6provided based on hourly or time of use pricing in the
7following manner:
8        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
9    during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
10    produced by the customer, then the electricity provider
11    shall charge the customer for the net electricity supplied
12    to and used by the customer as provided in subsection (e-5)
13    of this Section. The customer shall remain responsible for
14    all taxes, fees, and utility delivery charges that would
15    otherwise be applicable to the net amount of electricity
16    used by the customer.
17        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a customer
18    during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
19    used by the customer during that billing period, then the
20    electricity provider supplying that customer shall apply a
21    1:1 kilowatt-hour credit that reflects the kilowatt-hour
22    based charges in the customer's electric service rate to a
23    subsequent bill for service to the customer for the net
24    electricity supplied to the electricity provider. The
25    electricity provider shall continue to carry over any
26    excess kilowatt-hour credits earned and apply those

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 260 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    credits to subsequent billing periods to offset any
2    customer-generator consumption in those billing periods
3    until all credits are used or until the end of the
4    annualized period.
5        (3) At the end of the year or annualized over the
6    period that service is supplied by means of net metering,
7    or in the event that the retail customer terminates service
8    with the electricity provider prior to the end of the year
9    or the annualized period, any remaining credits in the
10    customer's account shall expire.
11    (e-5) An electricity provider shall provide electric
12service to eligible customers who utilize net metering at
13non-discriminatory rates that are identical, with respect to
14rate structure, retail rate components, and any monthly
15charges, to the rates that the customer would be charged if not
16a net metering customer. An electricity provider shall not
17charge net metering customers any fee or charge or require
18additional equipment, insurance, or any other requirements not
19specifically authorized by interconnection standards
20authorized by the Commission, unless the fee, charge, or other
21requirement would apply to other similarly situated customers
22who are not net metering customers. The customer will remain
23responsible for all taxes, fees, and utility delivery charges
24that would otherwise be applicable to the net amount of
25electricity used by the customer. Subsections (c) through (e)
26of this Section shall not be construed to prevent an

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 261 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1arms-length agreement between an electricity provider and an
2eligible customer that sets forth different prices, terms, and
3conditions for the provision of net metering service,
4including, but not limited to, the provision of the appropriate
5metering equipment for non-residential customers.
6    (f) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsections (c)
7through (e-5) of this Section, an electricity provider must
8require dual-channel metering for customers operating eligible
9renewable electrical generating facilities with a nameplate
10rating up to 2,000 kilowatts and to whom the provisions of
11neither subsection (d), (d-5), nor (e) of this Section apply.
12In such cases, electricity charges and credits shall be
13determined as follows:
14        (1) The electricity provider shall assess and the
15    customer remains responsible for all taxes, fees, and
16    utility delivery charges that would otherwise be
17    applicable to the gross amount of kilowatt-hours supplied
18    to the eligible customer by the electricity provider.
19        (2) Each month that service is supplied by means of
20    dual-channel metering, the electricity provider shall
21    compensate the eligible customer for any excess
22    kilowatt-hour credits at the electricity provider's
23    avoided cost of electricity supply over the monthly period
24    or as otherwise specified by the terms of a power-purchase
25    agreement negotiated between the customer and electricity
26    provider.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 262 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (3) For all eligible net metering customers taking
2    service from an electricity provider under contracts or
3    tariffs employing hourly or time of use rates, any monthly
4    consumption of electricity shall be calculated according
5    to the terms of the contract or tariff to which the same
6    customer would be assigned to or be eligible for if the
7    customer was not a net metering customer. When those same
8    customer-generators are net generators during any discrete
9    hourly or time of use period, the net kilowatt-hours
10    produced shall be valued at the same price per
11    kilowatt-hour as the electric service provider would
12    charge for retail kilowatt-hour sales during that same time
13    of use period.
14    (g) For purposes of federal and State laws providing
15renewable energy credits or greenhouse gas credits, the
16eligible customer shall be treated as owning and having title
17to the renewable energy attributes, renewable energy credits,
18and greenhouse gas emission credits related to any electricity
19produced by the qualified generating unit. The electricity
20provider may not condition participation in a net metering
21program on the signing over of a customer's renewable energy
22credits; provided, however, this subsection (g) shall not be
23construed to prevent an arms-length agreement between an
24electricity provider and an eligible customer that sets forth
25the ownership or title of the credits.
26    (h) Within 120 days after the effective date of this

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 263 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, the Commission
2shall establish standards for net metering and, if the
3Commission has not already acted on its own initiative,
4standards for the interconnection of eligible renewable
5generating equipment to the utility system. The
6interconnection standards shall address any procedural
7barriers, delays, and administrative costs associated with the
8interconnection of customer-generation while ensuring the
9safety and reliability of the units and the electric utility
10system. The Commission shall consider the Institute of
11Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Standard 1547 and
12the issues of (i) reasonable and fair fees and costs, (ii)
13clear timelines for major milestones in the interconnection
14process, (iii) nondiscriminatory terms of agreement, and (iv)
15any best practices for interconnection of distributed
16generation.
17    (i) All electricity providers shall begin to offer net
18metering no later than April 1, 2008. However, this Section
19shall not apply to an electric utility, or the customers to
20which such utility provides delivery services, beginning on the
21date that the utility's tariff to recover its delivery services
22costs under subsection (a) of Section 9-105 of this Act takes
23effect, if any. Retail customers that are receiving net
24metering service under this Section at such time as this
25Section ceases to apply to the electric utility shall be
26entitled to continue the service under subsections (c) and (e)

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 264 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1of Section 16-107.7 of this Act.
2    (j) (Blank). An electricity provider shall provide net
3metering to eligible customers until the load of its net
4metering customers equals 5% of the total peak demand supplied
5by that electricity provider during the previous year.
6Electricity providers are authorized to offer net metering
7beyond the 5% level if they so choose.
8    (k) Each electricity provider shall maintain records and
9report annually to the Commission the total number of net
10metering customers served by the provider, as well as the type,
11capacity, and energy sources of the generating systems used by
12the net metering customers. Nothing in this Section shall limit
13the ability of an electricity provider to request the redaction
14of information deemed by the Commission to be confidential
15business information. Each electricity provider shall notify
16the Commission when the total generating capacity of its net
17metering customers is equal to or in excess of the 5% cap
18specified in subsection (j) of this Section.
19    (l) Notwithstanding the definition of "eligible customer"
20in item (ii) (i) of subsection (b) of this Section, each
21electricity provider shall consider whether to allow meter
22aggregation for the purposes of net metering as set forth in
23this subsection (l) and for the following projects on:
24        (1) properties owned or leased by multiple customers
25    that contribute to the operation of an eligible renewable
26    electrical generating facility through an ownership or

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 265 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    leasehold interest of at least 200 watts in such facility,
2    such as a community-owned wind project, a community-owned
3    biomass project, a community-owned solar project, or a
4    community methane digester processing livestock waste from
5    multiple sources, provided that the facility is also
6    located within the utility's service territory; and
7        (2) individual units, apartments, or properties
8    located in a single building that are owned or leased by
9    multiple customers and collectively served by a common
10    eligible renewable electrical generating facility, such as
11    an office or apartment building, a shopping center or strip
12    mall served by photovoltaic panels on the roof; and .
13        (3) subscriptions to community renewable generation
14    projects.
15        In addition, the nameplate capacity of the eligible
16    renewable electric generating facility that serves the
17    demand of the properties, units, or apartments identified
18    in paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection (l) shall not
19    exceed 2,000 kilowatts in nameplate capacity in total. Any
20    eligible renewable electrical generating facility or
21    community renewable generation project that is powered by
22    photovoltaic electric energy and installed after the
23    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
24    Assembly must be installed by a qualified person in
25    compliance with the requirements of Section 16-128A of the
26    Public Utilities Act and any rules or regulations adopted

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 266 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    thereunder.
2    For the purposes of facilitating net metering, the owner or
3operator of the eligible renewable electrical generating
4facility or community renewable generation project shall be
5responsible for determining the amount of the credit that each
6customer or subscriber participating in a project under this
7subsection (l) is to receive in the following manner: this
8subsection (l), "meter aggregation" means the combination of
9reading and billing on a pro rata basis for the types of
10eligible customers described in this Section.
11        (A) The owner or operator shall, on a monthly basis,
12    provide to the electric utility the kilowatthours of
13    generation attributable to each of the utility's retail
14    customers and subscribers participating in projects under
15    this subsection (l) in accordance with the customer's or
16    subscriber's share of the eligible renewable electric
17    generating facility's or community renewable generation
18    project's output of power and energy for such month. The
19    owner or operator shall electronically transmit such
20    calculations and associated documentation to the electric
21    utility, in a format or method set forth in the applicable
22    tariff, on a monthly basis so that the electric utility can
23    reflect the monetary credits on customers' and
24    subscribers' electric utility bills. The electric utility
25    shall be permitted to revise its tariffs to implement the
26    provisions of this amendatory Act of the 99th General

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 267 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    Assembly. The owner or operator shall separately provide
2    the electric utility with the documentation detailing the
3    calculations supporting the credit in the manner set forth
4    in the applicable tariff.
5        (B) For those participating customers and subscribers
6    who receive their energy supply from an alternative retail
7    electric supplier, the electric utility shall remit to the
8    applicable alternative retail electric supplier the
9    information provided under subparagraph (A) of this
10    paragraph (3) for such customers and subscribers in a
11    manner set forth in such alternative retail electric
12    supplier's net metering program, or as otherwise agreed
13    between the utility and the alternative retail electric
14    supplier. The alternative retail electric supplier shall
15    then submit to the utility the amount of the charges for
16    power and energy to be applied to such customers and
17    subscribers, including the amount of the credit associated
18    with net metering.
19        (C) A participating customer or subscriber may provide
20    authorization as required by applicable law that directs
21    the electric utility to submit information to the owner or
22    operator of the eligible renewable electrical generating
23    facility or community renewable generation project to
24    which the customer or subscriber has an ownership or
25    leasehold interest or a subscription. Such information
26    shall be limited to the components of the net metering

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 268 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    credit calculated under this subsection (l), including the
2    bill credit rate, total kilowatthours, and total monetary
3    credit value applied to the customer's or subscriber's bill
4    for the monthly billing period.
5    (l-5) Within 90 days after the effective date of this
6amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, each electric
7utility subject to this Section shall file a tariff to
8implement the provisions of subsection (l) of this Section,
9which shall, consistent with the provisions of subsection (l),
10describe the terms and conditions under which owners or
11operators of qualifying properties, units, or apartments may
12participate in net metering. The Commission shall approve, or
13approve with modification, the tariff within 120 days after the
14effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
15Assembly.
16    (m) Nothing in this Section shall affect the right of an
17electricity provider to continue to provide, or the right of a
18retail customer to continue to receive service pursuant to a
19contract for electric service between the electricity provider
20and the retail customer in accordance with the prices, terms,
21and conditions provided for in that contract. Either the
22electricity provider or the customer may require compliance
23with the prices, terms, and conditions of the contract.
24(Source: P.A. 97-616, eff. 10-26-11; 97-646, eff. 12-30-11;
2597-824, eff. 7-18-12.)
 

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 269 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    (220 ILCS 5/16-107.6 new)
2    Sec. 16-107.6. Net electricity metering.
3    (a) This Section shall apply to an electric utility, and
4the customers to which the utility provides delivery services,
5beginning on the date that the utility's tariff to recover its
6delivery services costs through an average grid impact rate
7under subsection (a) of Section 9-105 of this Act takes effect,
8if any. A retail customer that is receiving net metering
9service under Section 16-107.5 of this Act at the time this
10Section applies to such electric utility, shall be entitled to
11continue such service under subsections (c) and (e) of Section
1216-107.7 of this Act.
13    (b) As used in this Section:
14    "Community renewable generation project" shall have the
15meaning set forth in Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power Agency
16Act.
17    "Eligible customer" means a retail customer that owns or
18operates a solar, wind, or other eligible renewable electrical
19generating facility with a rated capacity of not more than
202,000 kilowatts that is located on the customer's premises and
21is intended to offset the customer's own electrical
22requirements.
23    "Electricity provider" means an electric utility or
24alternative retail electric supplier.
25    "Eligible renewable electrical generating facility" means
26a generator that is interconnected under rules adopted by the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 270 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1Commission and is powered by solar electric energy, wind,
2dedicated crops grown for electricity generation, agricultural
3residues, untreated and unadulterated wood waste, landscape
4trimmings, livestock manure, anaerobic digestion of livestock
5or food processing waste, fuel cells or microturbines powered
6by renewable fuels, or hydroelectric energy.
7    "Net electricity metering" or "net metering" means the
8measurement, during the billing period applicable to an
9eligible customer, of the net amount of electricity supplied by
10an electricity provider to the customer's premises or provided
11to the electricity provider by the customer.
12    "Subscriber" shall have the meaning as set forth in Section
131-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act.
14    "Subscription" shall have the meaning as set forth in
15Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act.
16    (c) A net metering facility shall be equipped with metering
17equipment that can measure the flow of electricity in both
18directions at the same rate. The electricity provider may
19arrange for the local electric utility or a meter service
20provider to install and maintain metering equipment capable of
21measuring the flow of electricity both into and out of the
22eligible customer's facility at the same rate and ratio,
23typically through the use of a dual channel meter, which may be
24the smart meter described by subsection (b) of Section 16-108.5
25of this Act.
26    (d) An electricity provider shall charge or credit for the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 271 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1net electricity supplied to eligible customers whose electric
2delivery service is provided and measured on a kilowatt demand
3basis and electric supply service is not provided based on
4hourly or time of use pricing in the following manner:
5        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
6    during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
7    produced by the customer, then the electricity provider
8    shall charge the customer for the net kilowatt-hour based
9    electricity charges reflected in the customer's electric
10    service rate supplied to and used by the customer as
11    provided in subsection (f) of this Section.
12        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a customer
13    during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
14    used by the customer during that billing period, then the
15    electricity provider supplying that customer shall apply a
16    1:1 kilowatt-hour credit that reflects the kilowatt-hour
17    based charges in the customer's electric service rate to a
18    subsequent bill for service to the customer for the net
19    electricity supplied to the electricity provider. The
20    electricity provider shall continue to carry over any
21    excess kilowatt-hour credits earned and apply those
22    credits to subsequent billing periods to offset any
23    customer-generator consumption in those billing periods
24    until all credits are used or until the end of the
25    annualized period.
26        (3) At the end of the year or annualized over the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 272 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    period that service is supplied by means of net metering,
2    or in the event that the retail customer terminates service
3    with the electricity provider prior to the end of the year
4    or the annualized period, any remaining credits in the
5    customer's account shall expire.
6    (e) An electricity provider shall charge or credit for the
7net electricity supplied to eligible customers whose electric
8delivery service is provided and measured on a kilowatt-demand
9basis and electric supply service is provided based on hourly
10or time of use pricing in the following manner:
11        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
12    during any hourly or time-of-use period exceeds the amount
13    of electricity produced by the customer, then the
14    electricity provider shall charge the customer for the net
15    electricity supplied to and used by the customer as
16    provided in subsection (f) of this Section.
17        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a customer
18    during any hourly or time of use period exceeds the amount
19    of electricity used by the customer during that hourly or
20    time of use period, the energy provider shall calculate an
21    energy credit for the net kilowatt-hours produced in such
22    period. The value of the energy credit shall be calculated
23    using the same price per kilowatt-hour as the electric
24    service provider would charge for kilowatt-hour energy
25    sales during that same hourly or time of use period.
26    (f) An electricity provider shall provide electric service

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 273 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1to eligible customers who utilize net metering at
2non-discriminatory rates that are identical, with respect to
3rate structure, retail rate components, and any monthly
4charges, to the rates that the customer would be charged if not
5a net metering customer. An electricity provider shall charge
6the customer for the net electricity supplied to and used by
7the customer according to the terms of the contract or tariff
8to which the same customer would be assigned or be eligible for
9if the customer was not a net metering customer. An electricity
10provider shall not charge net metering customers any fee or
11charge or require additional equipment, insurance, or any other
12requirements not specifically authorized by interconnection
13standards authorized by the Commission, unless the fee, charge,
14or other requirement would apply to other similarly situated
15customers who are not net metering customers. The customer
16remains responsible for the gross amount of delivery services
17charges and supply-related charges that are kilowatt based, as
18well as all taxes and fees related to such charges. The
19customer also remains responsible for all taxes and fees that
20would otherwise be applicable to the net amount of electricity
21used by the customer. Subsections (d) and (e) of this Section
22shall not be construed to prevent an arms-length agreement
23between an electricity provider and an eligible customer that
24sets forth different prices, terms, and conditions for the
25provision of net metering service, including, but not limited
26to, the provision of the appropriate metering equipment for

 

 

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1non-residential customers. Nothing in this subsection (f)
2shall be interpreted to mandate that a utility that is only
3required to provide delivery services to a given customer must
4also sell electricity to such customer.
5    (g) For purposes of federal and State laws providing
6renewable energy credits or greenhouse gas credits, an
7electricity provider shall not, by virtue of providing net
8metering, be treated as owning and having title to the
9renewable energy attributes, renewable energy credits, and
10greenhouse gas emission credits related to any electricity
11produced by the qualified facility. The electric utility may
12not condition participation in a net metering program on the
13signing over of a customer's renewable energy credits;
14provided, however, this subsection (g) shall not be construed
15to prevent an arms-length agreement between an electricity
16provider and an eligible customer that sets forth the ownership
17or title of the credits.
18    (h) Each electricity provider shall maintain records and
19report annually to the Commission the total number of net
20metering customers served by the electricity provider, as well
21as the type, capacity, and energy sources of the generating
22systems used by the net metering customers. Nothing in this
23Section shall limit the ability of an electricity provider to
24request the redaction of confidential business information.
25    (i) Notwithstanding the definition of "eligible customer"
26in subsection (b) of this Section, each electricity provider

 

 

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1shall allow net metering as set forth in this subsection (i)
2and for the following projects:
3        (1) properties owned or leased by multiple customers
4    that contribute to the operation of an eligible renewable
5    electrical generating facility through an ownership or
6    leasehold interest of at least 200 watts in such facility,
7    such as a community-owned wind project, a community-owned
8    biomass project, a community-owned solar project, or a
9    community methane digester processing livestock waste from
10    multiple sources, provided that the facility is also
11    located within the utility's service territory;
12        (2) individual units, apartments, or properties
13    located in a single building that are owned or leased by
14    multiple customers and collectively served by a common
15    eligible renewable electrical generating facility, such as
16    an office or apartment building, a shopping center or strip
17    mall served by photovoltaic panels on the roof; and
18        (3) subscriptions to community renewable generation
19    projects.
20        In addition, the nameplate capacity of the eligible
21    renewable electrical generating facility that serves the
22    demand of the properties, units, or apartments identified
23    in paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection (i) shall not
24    exceed 2,000 kilowatts in nameplate capacity in total. Any
25    eligible renewable electrical generating facility or
26    community renewable generation project that is powered by

 

 

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1    photovoltaic electric energy and installed after the
2    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
3    Assembly must be installed by a qualified person in
4    compliance with the requirements of Section 16-128A of the
5    Public Utilities Act and any rules or regulations adopted
6    thereunder.
7        For the purposes of this subsection (i), "net metering"
8    means the combination of reading and billing on a pro rata
9    basis for the types of customers and subscribers described
10    in this subsection (i). For purposes of facilitating such
11    reading and billing, the owner or operator of the eligible
12    renewable electrical generating facility or community
13    renewable generation project shall be responsible for
14    determining the amount of the credit that each customer or
15    subscriber participating in a project under this
16    subsection (i) is to receive in the following manner:
17            (A) The owner or operator shall, on a monthly
18        basis, provide to the electric utility the
19        kilowatthours of generation attributable to each of
20        the utility's retail customers and subscribers
21        participating in projects under this subsection (i) in
22        accordance with the customer's or subscriber's share
23        of the eligible renewable electric generating
24        facility's or community renewable generation project's
25        output of power and energy for such month. The owner or
26        operator shall electronically transmit such

 

 

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1        calculations and associated documentation to the
2        electric utility, in a format or method set forth in
3        the applicable tariff, on a monthly basis so that the
4        electric utility can reflect the monetary credits on
5        customers' and subscribers' electric utility bills.
6        The electric utility shall be permitted to revise its
7        tariffs to implement the provisions of this amendatory
8        Act of the 99th General Assembly. The owner or operator
9        shall separately provide the electric utility with the
10        documentation detailing the calculations supporting
11        the credit in the manner set forth in the applicable
12        tariff.
13            (B) For those participating customers and
14        subscribers who receive their energy supply from an
15        alternative retail electric supplier, the electric
16        utility shall remit to the applicable alternative
17        retail electric supplier the information provided
18        under subparagraph (A) of this paragraph (2) for such
19        customers and subscribers in a manner set forth in such
20        alternative retail electric supplier's net metering
21        program, or as otherwise agreed between the utility and
22        the alternative retail electric supplier. The
23        alternative retail electric supplier shall then submit
24        to the utility the amount of the charges for power and
25        energy to be applied to such customers and subscribers,
26        including the amount of the credit associated with net

 

 

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1        metering.
2            (C) A participating customer or subscriber may
3        provide authorization as required by applicable law
4        that directs the electric utility to submit
5        information to the owner or operator of the eligible
6        renewable electrical generating facility or community
7        renewable generation project to which the customer or
8        subscriber has an ownership or leasehold interest or a
9        subscription. Such information shall be limited to the
10        components of the net metering credit calculated under
11        this subsection (i), including the bill credit rate,
12        total kilowatthours, and total monetary credit value
13        applied to the customer's or subscriber's bill for the
14        monthly billing period.
15    (j) Each electric utility subject to this Section shall
16file a tariff to implement the provisions of subsection (i) of
17this Section in conjunction with the tariff that the utility
18files to implement subsection (a) of Section 9-105 of this Act,
19which shall, consistent with the provisions of such subsection,
20describe the terms and conditions under which owners or
21operators of qualifying properties, units, or apartments may
22participate in net metering. The tariff approved under this
23subsection shall become effective on the same date that the
24tariff implementing subsection (a) of Section 9-105 of this Act
25becomes effective.
26    (k) Nothing in this Section shall affect the right of an

 

 

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1electricity provider to continue to provide, or the right of a
2retail customer to continue to receive service under a contract
3for electric service between the electricity provider and the
4retail customer in accordance with the prices, terms, and
5conditions provided for in that contract. Either the
6electricity provider or the customer may require compliance
7with the prices, terms, and conditions of the contract.
 
8    (220 ILCS 5/16-107.7 new)
9    Sec. 16-107.7. Distributed generation rebate.
10    (a) In this Section:
11    "Smart inverter" means a device that converts direct
12current into alternating current and can autonomously
13contribute to grid support during excursions from normal
14operating voltage and frequency conditions by providing each of
15the following: dynamic reactive and real power support, voltage
16and frequency ride-through, ramp rate controls, communication
17systems with ability to accept external commands, and other
18functions from the electric utility.
19    "Threshold date" means:
20        (1) For distributed generation that is located in the
21    service territory of an electric utility that serves more
22    than 3,000,000 retail customers in the State, the date on
23    which the combined nameplate capacity of such distributed
24    generation located in such service territory that is
25    enrolled in the rebate programs implemented under this

 

 

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1    Section reaches 5% of eligible retail customer network
2    service peak load as of June 1, 2016; and
3        (2) For distributed generation that is located in the
4    service territory of an electric utility that serves
5    3,000,000 or less retail customers in the State, the date
6    on which the combined nameplate capacity of distributed
7    generation located in such service territory that is
8    enrolled the rebate programs implemented under this
9    Section reaches 5% of eligible retail customer network
10    service peak load as of June 1, 2016.
11    (b) An electric utility that serves more than 200,000
12customers in the State may file a petition with the Commission
13requesting approval of the utility's tariff to provide a rebate
14to a retail customer who owns or operates distributed
15generation that meets the following criteria:
16        (1) has a nameplate generating capacity no greater than
17    2,000 kilowatts and is designed not to exceed the peak load
18    of the customer's premises;
19        (2) is located on the customer's premises, for the
20    customer's own use, and not for commercial use or sales,
21    including, but not limited to, wholesale sales of electric
22    power and energy;
23        (3) is located in the electric utility's service
24    territory; and
25        (4) is interconnected under rules adopted by the
26    Commission by means of the inverter or smart inverter

 

 

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1    required by this Section, as applicable.
2    In addition, any new photovoltaic distributed generation
3that is installed after the effective date of this amendatory
4Act of the 99th General Assembly must be installed by a
5qualified person, as defined by subsection (i) of Section 1-56
6of the Illinois Power Agency Act.
7    The tariff shall provide that the utility shall be
8permitted to operate and control the smart inverter associated
9with the distributed generation that is the subject of the
10rebate for the purpose of preserving reliability during
11distribution system reliability events and shall address the
12terms and conditions of the operation and the compensation
13associated with the operation. Nothing in this Section shall
14negate or supersede Institute of Electrical and Electronics
15Engineers interconnection requirements or standards or other
16similar standards or requirements. The tariff shall also
17provide for additional uses of the smart inverter that shall be
18separately compensated and which may include, but are not
19limited to, voltage and VAR support, regulation, and other grid
20services. As part of the proceeding described in subsection (e)
21of this Section, the Commission shall review and determine
22whether smart inverters can provide any additional uses or
23services. If the Commission determines that an additional use
24or service would be beneficial, the Commission shall determine
25the terms and conditions of the operation and how the use or
26service should be separately compensated.

 

 

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1    If an electric utility elects to recover its costs of
2providing delivery services to retail customers under
3subsection (a) of Section 9-105 of this Act, it shall be
4required to file the proposed tariffs described in this
5Section. Such tariff or tariffs, as applicable, shall be filed
6with the tariffs filed to implement subsection (a) of Section
79-105 of this Act, and shall become effective upon the same
8date that the tariffs filed to implement subsection (a) of
9Section 9-105 become effective.
10    (c) The proposed tariff authorized by subsection (b) of
11this Section shall include the following participation terms
12and formulae to calculate the value of the rebates to be
13applied under this Section for distributed generation that
14satisfies the criteria set forth in subsection (b) of this
15Section:
16        (1) Until the earlier of the threshold date or December
17    31, 2021:
18            (A) Retail customers may, as applicable, make the
19        following elections:
20                (i) Residential customers that are taking
21            service under a net metering program offered by an
22            electricity provider under the terms of Section
23            16-107.5 of this Act on the effective date of this
24            amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly may
25            elect to either continue to take such service under
26            the terms of such program as in effect on such

 

 

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1            effective date for the useful life of the
2            customer's eligible renewable electric generating
3            facility as defined in such Section, or file an
4            application to receive a rebate under the terms of
5            this Section, provided that such application must
6            be submitted within 6 months after the effective
7            date of the tariff approved under subsection (d) of
8            this Section and the inverter associated with such
9            customer's distributed generation need not be a
10            smart inverter.
11                (ii) Residential customers that begin taking
12            service under a net metering program offered by an
13            electricity provider under the terms of Section
14            16-107.5 of this Act after the effective date of
15            this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly
16            may elect to either continue to take such service
17            under the terms of such program as in effect on
18            such effective date until December 31, 2021, or
19            file an application to receive a rebate under the
20            terms of this Section, provided, however, that the
21            inverter associated with the customer's
22            distributed generation must be a smart inverter.
23                (iii) Non-residential customers that are
24            taking service under a net metering program
25            offered by an electricity provider under the terms
26            of Section 16-107.5 of this Act on the effective

 

 

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1            date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
2            Assembly may apply for a rebate as provided for in
3            this Section, provided that the inverter
4            associated with such customer's distributed
5            generation need not be a smart inverter.
6                (iv) Non-residential customers that begin
7            taking service under a net metering program
8            offered by an electricity provider under the terms
9            of Section 16-107.5 of this Act after the effective
10            date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
11            Assembly may apply for a rebate as provided for in
12            this Section; however, the inverter associated
13            with the customer's distributed generation must be
14            a smart inverter.
15        Upon approval of a rebate application submitted under
16        items (i) or (ii) of this subparagraph (A), the retail
17        customer shall no longer be entitled to receive any
18        delivery service credits for the excess electricity
19        generated by its facility.
20            (B) The value of the rebates shall be:
21                (i) $1,000 per kilowatt of nameplate
22            generating capacity, measured as nominal DC power
23            output, of a residential customer's distributed
24            generation; and
25                (ii) $500 per kilowatt of nameplate generating
26            capacity, measured as nominal DC power output, of a

 

 

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1            non-residential customer's distributed generation.
2        (2) After the threshold date but until no later than
3    December 31, 2021:
4            (A) Retail customers may, as applicable, make the
5        following elections:
6                (i) Residential customers that begin taking
7            service under a net metering program offered by an
8            electricity provider under the terms of Section
9            16-107.5 of this Act after the threshold date may
10            elect to either continue to take such service under
11            the terms of such program until December 31, 2021
12            or, within 6 months after the date of the
13            customer's first bill that reflects net metering,
14            file an application to receive a rebate pursuant to
15            the terms of this Section, provided, however, that
16            the inverter associated with such customer's
17            distributed generation must be a smart inverter.
18            Upon approval of such application, the retail
19            customer shall no longer be entitled to receive any
20            delivery service credits for the excess
21            electricity generated by its facility.
22                (ii) Non-residential customers that begin
23            taking service under a net metering program
24            offered by an electricity provider under the terms
25            of Section 16-107.5 of this Act after the threshold
26            date may apply for a rebate as provided for in this

 

 

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1            Section; however, the inverter associated with the
2            customer's distributed generation must be a smart
3            inverter.
4            (B) The value of the rebates shall be:
5                (i) $750 per kilowatt of nameplate generating
6            capacity, measured as nominal DC power output, of a
7            residential customer's distributed generation; and
8                (ii) $375 per kilowatt of nameplate generating
9            capacity, measured as nominal DC power output, of a
10            non-residential customer's distributed generation.
11        (3) The value of the rebates identified in this
12    subsection (c) shall be adjusted in proportion to the
13    actual nameplate capacity of the distributed generation
14    that is the subject of a rebate application submitted under
15    this Section.
16    (d) The Commission shall review the proposed tariff
17submitted under subsections (b) and (c) of this Section and may
18make changes to the tariff that are consistent with this
19Section and with the Commission's authority under Article IX of
20this Act, subject to notice and hearing. Following notice and
21hearing, the Commission shall issue an order approving, or
22approving with modification, such tariff no later than 240 days
23after the utility files its tariff.
24    (e) No later than June 1, 2021, the Commission shall open
25an investigation into an annual process and formula for
26calculating the value of rebates for the retail customers

 

 

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1described in subsection (b) of this Section that submit rebate
2applications after December 31, 2021 for an electric utility
3that elected, or was required, to file a tariff pursuant to
4this Section. The investigation shall include diverse sets of
5stakeholders, calculations based on best practices for valuing
6distributed energy resource benefits to the grid, and
7assessments of present and future technological capabilities
8of distributed energy resources. The value of such rebates
9shall be cost-based and reflect the value of the distributed
10generation to the distribution system at the location at which
11it is interconnected, taking into account the geographic,
12time-based, and performance-based benefits, as well as
13technological capabilities and present and future grid needs;
14provided, however, that retail customers who submit rebate
15applications after December 31, 2021, including all retail
16customers who are taking net metering and whose delivery
17service credits will terminate after December 31, 2021, shall
18receive the rebate provided for by this Section that is in
19effect at the time the application is submitted less the total
20amount of delivery service credits that the retail customer has
21received under any net metering program. The retail customer
22shall then no longer be entitled to receive any delivery
23service credits for the electricity generated by its facility.
24    No later than 10 days after the Commission enters its final
25order under this subsection (e), the utility shall file its
26tariff or tariffs in compliance with the order, and the

 

 

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1Commission shall approve, or approve with modification, the
2tariff or tariffs within 45 days after the utility's filing. If
3a tariff as described in this subsection (e) is not approved by
4December 31, 2021, the value of the rebate shall remain at the
5value established in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) of
6subsection (c) of this Section until the tariff is approved.
7    (f) Notwithstanding any provision of this Act to the
8contrary, the owner, developer, or customer of a generation
9facility that is part of a meter aggregation program provided
10under subsection (i) of Section 16-107.6 of this Act shall also
11be eligible to apply for the rebate described in subsections
12(b) and (c) of this Section. A customer of the generation
13facility may apply for a rebate only if the owner or developer
14has not already submitted an application, and may be allowed an
15amount as described in subsection (c) or (e) of this Section
16applicable to such customer on the date that the application is
17submitted. If the owner or developer submits the application,
18the amount of the rebate shall be in proportion to the mix of
19customers that subscribe to the output of the facility on the
20date that an application for the rebate is submitted, less any
21rebates that have been applied for or provided to customers of
22the generation facility. An application for a rebate for a
23portion of a project described in this subsection (d) may be
24submitted at or after the time that a related request for net
25metering is made.
26    (g) No later than 180 days after the utility receives an

 

 

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1application for a rebate under its tariff approved under
2subsection (d) or (e) of this Section, the utility shall issue
3a rebate to the applicant under the terms of the tariff. In the
4event the application is incomplete or the utility is otherwise
5unable to calculate the payment based on the information
6provided by the owner, the utility shall issue the payment no
7later than 180 days after the application is complete or all
8requested information is received.
9    (h) An electric utility shall recover from its retail
10customers all of the costs of the rebates made under a tariff
11or tariffs placed into effect under this Section, including,
12but not limited to, the value of the rebates and all costs
13incurred by the utility to comply with and implement this
14Section, consistent with the following provisions:
15        (1) The utility shall defer the full amount of its
16    costs incurred under this Section as a regulatory asset.
17    The total costs deferred as a regulatory asset shall be
18    amortized over a 15-year period. The unamortized balance
19    shall be recognized as of December 31 for a given year. The
20    utility shall also earn a return on the total of the
21    unamortized balance of the regulatory assets, less any
22    deferred taxes related to the unamortized balance, at an
23    annual rate equal to the utility's weighted average cost of
24    capital that includes, based on a year-end capital
25    structure, the utility's actual cost of debt for the
26    applicable calendar year and a cost of equity, which shall

 

 

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1    be calculated as the sum of (i) the average for the
2    applicable calendar year of the monthly average yields of
3    30-year U.S. Treasury bonds published by the Board of
4    Governors of the Federal Reserve System in its weekly H.15
5    Statistical Release or successor publication; and (ii) 580
6    basis points, including a revenue conversion factor
7    calculated to recover or refund all additional income taxes
8    that may be payable or receivable as a result of that
9    return.
10        When an electric utility creates a regulatory asset
11    under the provisions of this Section, the costs are
12    recovered over a period during which customers also receive
13    a benefit, which is in the public interest. Accordingly, it
14    is the intent of the General Assembly that an electric
15    utility that elects to create a regulatory asset under the
16    provisions of this Section shall recover all of the
17    associated costs, including, but not limited to, its cost
18    of capital as set forth in this Section. After the
19    Commission has approved the prudence and reasonableness of
20    the costs that comprise the regulatory asset, the electric
21    utility shall be permitted to recover all such costs, and
22    the value and recoverability through rates of the
23    associated regulatory asset shall not be limited, altered,
24    impaired, or reduced.
25        (2) The utility, at its election, may recover all of
26    the costs it incurs under this Section as part of a filing

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 291 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    for a general increase in rates under Article IX of this
2    Act, as part of an annual filing to update a
3    performance-based formula rate under subsection (d) of
4    Section 16-108.5 of this Act, or through an automatic
5    adjustment clause tariff, provided that nothing in this
6    paragraph (2) permits the double recovery of such costs
7    from customers. If the utility elects to recover the costs
8    it incurs under this Section through an automatic
9    adjustment clause tariff, the utility may file its proposed
10    tariff together with the tariff it files under subsection
11    (b) of this Section or at a later time. The proposed tariff
12    shall provide for an annual reconciliation, less any
13    deferred taxes related to the reconciliation, with
14    interest at an annual rate of return equal to the utility's
15    weighted average cost of capital as calculated under
16    paragraph (1) of this subsection (h), including a revenue
17    conversion factor calculated to recover or refund all
18    additional income taxes that may be payable or receivable
19    as a result of that return, of the revenue requirement
20    reflected in rates for each calendar year, beginning with
21    the calendar year in which the utility files its automatic
22    adjustment clause tariff under this subsection (h), with
23    what the revenue requirement would have been had the actual
24    cost information for the applicable calendar year been
25    available at the filing date. The Commission shall review
26    the proposed tariff and may make changes to the tariff that

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 292 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    are consistent with this Section and with the Commission's
2    authority under Article IX of this Act, subject to notice
3    and hearing. Following notice and hearing, the Commission
4    shall issue an order approving, or approving with
5    modification, such tariff no later than 240 days after the
6    utility files its tariff.
7    (i) Within 180 days after the effective date of this
8amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, each electric
9utility with net metering customers on such effective date
10shall provide notice of the availability of rebates under this
11Section. Subsequent to the effective date, any entity that
12offers in the State, for sale or lease, distributed generation
13and estimates the dollar saving attributable to such
14distributed generation shall provide estimates based on both
15delivery service credits and the rebates available under this
16Section.
 
17    (220 ILCS 5/16-108)
18    Sec. 16-108. Recovery of costs associated with the
19provision of delivery and other services.
20    (a) An electric utility shall file a delivery services
21tariff with the Commission at least 210 days prior to the date
22that it is required to begin offering such services pursuant to
23this Act. An electric utility shall provide the components of
24delivery services that are subject to the jurisdiction of the
25Federal Energy Regulatory Commission at the same prices, terms

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 293 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1and conditions set forth in its applicable tariff as approved
2or allowed into effect by that Commission. The Commission shall
3otherwise have the authority pursuant to Article IX to review,
4approve, and modify the prices, terms and conditions of those
5components of delivery services not subject to the jurisdiction
6of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, including the
7authority to determine the extent to which such delivery
8services should be offered on an unbundled basis. In making any
9such determination the Commission shall consider, at a minimum,
10the effect of additional unbundling on (i) the objective of
11just and reasonable rates, (ii) electric utility employees, and
12(iii) the development of competitive markets for electric
13energy services in Illinois.
14    (b) The Commission shall enter an order approving, or
15approving as modified, the delivery services tariff no later
16than 30 days prior to the date on which the electric utility
17must commence offering such services. The Commission may
18subsequently modify such tariff pursuant to this Act.
19    (c) The electric utility's tariffs shall define the classes
20of its customers for purposes of delivery services charges.
21Delivery services shall be priced and made available to all
22retail customers electing delivery services in each such class
23on a nondiscriminatory basis regardless of whether the retail
24customer chooses the electric utility, an affiliate of the
25electric utility, or another entity as its supplier of electric
26power and energy. Charges for delivery services shall be cost

 

 

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1based, and shall allow the electric utility to recover the
2costs of providing delivery services through its charges to its
3delivery service customers that use the facilities and services
4associated with such costs. Such costs shall include the costs
5of owning, operating and maintaining transmission and
6distribution facilities. The Commission shall also be
7authorized to consider whether, and if so to what extent, the
8following costs are appropriately included in the electric
9utility's delivery services rates: (i) the costs of that
10portion of generation facilities used for the production and
11absorption of reactive power in order that retail customers
12located in the electric utility's service area can receive
13electric power and energy from suppliers other than the
14electric utility, and (ii) the costs associated with the use
15and redispatch of generation facilities to mitigate
16constraints on the transmission or distribution system in order
17that retail customers located in the electric utility's service
18area can receive electric power and energy from suppliers other
19than the electric utility. Nothing in this subsection shall be
20construed as directing the Commission to allocate any of the
21costs described in (i) or (ii) that are found to be
22appropriately included in the electric utility's delivery
23services rates to any particular customer group or geographic
24area in setting delivery services rates.
25    (d) The Commission shall establish charges, terms and
26conditions for delivery services that are just and reasonable

 

 

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1and shall take into account customer impacts when establishing
2such charges. In establishing charges, terms and conditions for
3delivery services, the Commission shall take into account
4voltage level differences. A retail customer shall have the
5option to request to purchase electric service at any delivery
6service voltage reasonably and technically feasible from the
7electric facilities serving that customer's premises provided
8that there are no significant adverse impacts upon system
9reliability or system efficiency. A retail customer shall also
10have the option to request to purchase electric service at any
11point of delivery that is reasonably and technically feasible
12provided that there are no significant adverse impacts on
13system reliability or efficiency. Such requests shall not be
14unreasonably denied.
15    (e) Electric utilities shall recover the costs of
16installing, operating or maintaining facilities for the
17particular benefit of one or more delivery services customers,
18including without limitation any costs incurred in complying
19with a customer's request to be served at a different voltage
20level, directly from the retail customer or customers for whose
21benefit the costs were incurred, to the extent such costs are
22not recovered through the charges referred to in subsections
23(c) and (d) of this Section.
24    (f) An electric utility shall be entitled but not required
25to implement transition charges in conjunction with the
26offering of delivery services pursuant to Section 16-104. If an

 

 

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1electric utility implements transition charges, it shall
2implement such charges for all delivery services customers and
3for all customers described in subsection (h), but shall not
4implement transition charges for power and energy that a retail
5customer takes from cogeneration or self-generation facilities
6located on that retail customer's premises, if such facilities
7meet the following criteria:
8        (i) the cogeneration or self-generation facilities
9    serve a single retail customer and are located on that
10    retail customer's premises (for purposes of this
11    subparagraph and subparagraph (ii), an industrial or
12    manufacturing retail customer and a third party contractor
13    that is served by such industrial or manufacturing customer
14    through such retail customer's own electrical distribution
15    facilities under the circumstances described in subsection
16    (vi) of the definition of "alternative retail electric
17    supplier" set forth in Section 16-102, shall be considered
18    a single retail customer);
19        (ii) the cogeneration or self-generation facilities
20    either (A) are sized pursuant to generally accepted
21    engineering standards for the retail customer's electrical
22    load at that premises (taking into account standby or other
23    reliability considerations related to that retail
24    customer's operations at that site) or (B) if the facility
25    is a cogeneration facility located on the retail customer's
26    premises, the retail customer is the thermal host for that

 

 

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1    facility and the facility has been designed to meet that
2    retail customer's thermal energy requirements resulting in
3    electrical output beyond that retail customer's electrical
4    demand at that premises, comply with the operating and
5    efficiency standards applicable to "qualifying facilities"
6    specified in title 18 Code of Federal Regulations Section
7    292.205 as in effect on the effective date of this
8    amendatory Act of 1999;
9        (iii) the retail customer on whose premises the
10    facilities are located either has an exclusive right to
11    receive, and corresponding obligation to pay for, all of
12    the electrical capacity of the facility, or in the case of
13    a cogeneration facility that has been designed to meet the
14    retail customer's thermal energy requirements at that
15    premises, an identified amount of the electrical capacity
16    of the facility, over a minimum 5-year period; and
17        (iv) if the cogeneration facility is sized for the
18    retail customer's thermal load at that premises but exceeds
19    the electrical load, any sales of excess power or energy
20    are made only at wholesale, are subject to the jurisdiction
21    of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and are not
22    for the purpose of circumventing the provisions of this
23    subsection (f).
24If a generation facility located at a retail customer's
25premises does not meet the above criteria, an electric utility
26implementing transition charges shall implement a transition

 

 

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1charge until December 31, 2006 for any power and energy taken
2by such retail customer from such facility as if such power and
3energy had been delivered by the electric utility. Provided,
4however, that an industrial retail customer that is taking
5power from a generation facility that does not meet the above
6criteria but that is located on such customer's premises will
7not be subject to a transition charge for the power and energy
8taken by such retail customer from such generation facility if
9the facility does not serve any other retail customer and
10either was installed on behalf of the customer and for its own
11use prior to January 1, 1997, or is both predominantly fueled
12by byproducts of such customer's manufacturing process at such
13premises and sells or offers an average of 300 megawatts or
14more of electricity produced from such generation facility into
15the wholesale market. Such charges shall be calculated as
16provided in Section 16-102, and shall be collected on each
17kilowatt-hour delivered under a delivery services tariff to a
18retail customer from the date the customer first takes delivery
19services until December 31, 2006 except as provided in
20subsection (h) of this Section. Provided, however, that an
21electric utility, other than an electric utility providing
22service to at least 1,000,000 customers in this State on
23January 1, 1999, shall be entitled to petition for entry of an
24order by the Commission authorizing the electric utility to
25implement transition charges for an additional period ending no
26later than December 31, 2008. The electric utility shall file

 

 

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1its petition with supporting evidence no earlier than 16
2months, and no later than 12 months, prior to December 31,
32006. The Commission shall hold a hearing on the electric
4utility's petition and shall enter its order no later than 8
5months after the petition is filed. The Commission shall
6determine whether and to what extent the electric utility shall
7be authorized to implement transition charges for an additional
8period. The Commission may authorize the electric utility to
9implement transition charges for some or all of the additional
10period, and shall determine the mitigation factors to be used
11in implementing such transition charges; provided, that the
12Commission shall not authorize mitigation factors less than
13110% of those in effect during the 12 months ended December 31,
142006. In making its determination, the Commission shall
15consider the following factors: the necessity to implement
16transition charges for an additional period in order to
17maintain the financial integrity of the electric utility; the
18prudence of the electric utility's actions in reducing its
19costs since the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997;
20the ability of the electric utility to provide safe, adequate
21and reliable service to retail customers in its service area;
22and the impact on competition of allowing the electric utility
23to implement transition charges for the additional period.
24    (g) The electric utility shall file tariffs that establish
25the transition charges to be paid by each class of customers to
26the electric utility in conjunction with the provision of

 

 

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1delivery services. The electric utility's tariffs shall define
2the classes of its customers for purposes of calculating
3transition charges. The electric utility's tariffs shall
4provide for the calculation of transition charges on a
5customer-specific basis for any retail customer whose average
6monthly maximum electrical demand on the electric utility's
7system during the 6 months with the customer's highest monthly
8maximum electrical demands equals or exceeds 3.0 megawatts for
9electric utilities having more than 1,000,000 customers, and
10for other electric utilities for any customer that has an
11average monthly maximum electrical demand on the electric
12utility's system of one megawatt or more, and (A) for which
13there exists data on the customer's usage during the 3 years
14preceding the date that the customer became eligible to take
15delivery services, or (B) for which there does not exist data
16on the customer's usage during the 3 years preceding the date
17that the customer became eligible to take delivery services, if
18in the electric utility's reasonable judgment there exists
19comparable usage information or a sufficient basis to develop
20such information, and further provided that the electric
21utility can require customers for which an individual
22calculation is made to sign contracts that set forth the
23transition charges to be paid by the customer to the electric
24utility pursuant to the tariff.
25    (h) An electric utility shall also be entitled to file
26tariffs that allow it to collect transition charges from retail

 

 

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1customers in the electric utility's service area that do not
2take delivery services but that take electric power or energy
3from an alternative retail electric supplier or from an
4electric utility other than the electric utility in whose
5service area the customer is located. Such charges shall be
6calculated, in accordance with the definition of transition
7charges in Section 16-102, for the period of time that the
8customer would be obligated to pay transition charges if it
9were taking delivery services, except that no deduction for
10delivery services revenues shall be made in such calculation,
11and usage data from the customer's class shall be used where
12historical usage data is not available for the individual
13customer. The customer shall be obligated to pay such charges
14on a lump sum basis on or before the date on which the customer
15commences to take service from the alternative retail electric
16supplier or other electric utility, provided, that the electric
17utility in whose service area the customer is located shall
18offer the customer the option of signing a contract pursuant to
19which the customer pays such charges ratably over the period in
20which the charges would otherwise have applied.
21    (i) An electric utility shall be entitled to add to the
22bills of delivery services customers charges pursuant to
23Sections 9-221, 9-222 (except as provided in Section 9-222.1),
24and Section 16-114 of this Act, Section 5-5 of the Electricity
25Infrastructure Maintenance Fee Law, Section 6-5 of the
26Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency, and Coal Resources

 

 

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1Development Law of 1997, and Section 13 of the Energy
2Assistance Act.
3    (j) If a retail customer that obtains electric power and
4energy from cogeneration or self-generation facilities
5installed for its own use on or before January 1, 1997,
6subsequently takes service from an alternative retail electric
7supplier or an electric utility other than the electric utility
8in whose service area the customer is located for any portion
9of the customer's electric power and energy requirements
10formerly obtained from those facilities (including that amount
11purchased from the utility in lieu of such generation and not
12as standby power purchases, under a cogeneration displacement
13tariff in effect as of the effective date of this amendatory
14Act of 1997), the transition charges otherwise applicable
15pursuant to subsections (f), (g), or (h) of this Section shall
16not be applicable in any year to that portion of the customer's
17electric power and energy requirements formerly obtained from
18those facilities, provided, that for purposes of this
19subsection (j), such portion shall not exceed the average
20number of kilowatt-hours per year obtained from the
21cogeneration or self-generation facilities during the 3 years
22prior to the date on which the customer became eligible for
23delivery services, except as provided in subsection (f) of
24Section 16-110.
25    (k) The electric utility shall be entitled to recover
26through tariffed charges all of the costs associated with the

 

 

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1purchase of zero emission credits from zero emission facilities
2to meet the requirements of subsection (d-5) of Section 1-75 of
3the Illinois Power Agency Act. Such costs shall include the
4costs of procuring the zero emission credits, as well as the
5reasonable costs that the utility incurs as part of the
6procurement processes and to implement and comply with plans
7and processes approved by the Commission under such subsection
8(d-5). The costs shall be allocated across all retail customers
9through a single, uniform cents per kilowatt-hour charge
10applicable to all retail customers, which shall appear as a
11separate line item on each customer's bill. Beginning June 1,
122017, the electric utility shall be entitled to recover through
13tariffed charges all of the costs associated with the purchase
14of renewable energy resources to meet the renewable energy
15resource standards of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the
16Illinois Power Agency Act, under procurement plans as approved
17in accordance with that Section and Section 16-111.5 of this
18Act. Such costs shall include the costs of procuring the
19renewable energy resources, as well as the reasonable costs
20that the utility incurs as part of the procurement processes
21and to implement and comply with plans and processes approved
22by the Commission under such Sections. The costs associated
23with the purchase of renewable energy resources shall be
24allocated across all retail customers in proportion to the
25amount of renewable energy resources the utility procures for
26such customers through a single, uniform cents per

 

 

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1kilowatt-hour charge applicable to such retail customers,
2which shall appear as a separate line item on each such
3customer's bill.
4    Notwithstanding whether the Commission has approved the
5initial long-term renewable resources procurement plan as of
6June 1, 2017, an electric utility shall place new tariffed
7charges into effect beginning with the June 2017 monthly
8billing period to begin recovering the costs of procuring
9renewable energy resources, as those charges are calculated
10under the limitations described in subparagraph (E) of
11paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois
12Power Agency Act. For the delivery years commencing June 1,
132017, June 1, 2018, and June 1, 2019, the electric utility
14shall deposit into an interest bearing account of a financial
15institution the monies collected under the tariffed charges.
16Any interest earned shall be credited back to retail customers
17under the reconciliation proceeding provided for in this
18subsection (k), provided that the electric utility shall first
19be reimbursed from the interest for the administrative costs
20that it incurs to administer and manage the account. Any taxes
21due on the funds in the account, or interest earned on it, will
22be paid from the account or, if insufficient monies are
23available in the account, from the monies collected under the
24tariffed charges to recover the costs of procuring renewable
25energy resources.
26    The electric utility shall be entitled to recover all of

 

 

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1the costs identified in this subsection (k) through an
2automatic adjustment clause tariff applicable to all of the
3utility's retail customers that allows the electric utility to
4adjust its tariffed charges consistent with this subsection
5(k). The determination as to whether any excess funds were
6collected during a given delivery year, and the crediting of
7any excess funds back to retail customers, shall not be made
8until after the close of the delivery year, which will ensure
9that the maximum amount of funds is available to implement the
10approved long-term renewable resources procurement plan during
11a given delivery year. The electric utility's collections under
12such an automatic adjustment clause tariff shall be subject to
13annual review, reconciliation, and true-up against actual
14costs by the Commission under a procedure that shall be
15specified in the electric utility's automatic adjustment
16clause tariff and that shall be approved by the Commission in
17connection with its approval of such tariff. The procedure
18shall provide that any difference between the electric
19utility's collection under the automatic adjustment charge for
20an annual period and the electric utility's actual costs of
21renewable energy resources and zero emission credits from zero
22emission facilities for that same annual period shall be
23refunded to or collected from, as applicable, the electric
24utility's retail customers in subsequent periods.
25    Nothing in this subsection (k) is intended to affect,
26limit, or change the right of the electric utility to recover

 

 

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1the costs associated with the procurement of renewable energy
2resources for periods commencing before, on, or after June 1,
32017, as otherwise provided in the Illinois Power Agency Act.
4    Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, the Commission
5shall not conduct an annual review, reconciliation, and true-up
6associated with renewable energy resources' collections and
7costs for the delivery years commencing June 1, 2017, June 1,
82018, June 1, 2019, and June 1, 2020, and shall instead conduct
9a single review, reconciliation, and true-up associated with
10renewable energy resources' collections and costs for the
114-year period beginning June 1, 2017 and ending May 31, 2021,
12provided that the review, reconciliation, and true-up shall not
13be initiated until after August 31, 2021. During the 4-year
14period, the utility shall be permitted to collect and retain
15funds under this subsection (k) and to purchase renewable
16energy resources under an approved long-term renewable
17resources procurement plan using those funds regardless of the
18delivery year in which the funds were collected during the
194-year period.
20    If the amount of funds collected during the delivery year
21commencing June 1, 2017, exceeds the costs incurred during that
22delivery year, then up to half of this excess amount, as
23calculated on June 1, 2018, may be used to fund the programs
24under subsection (b) of Section 1-56 of the Illinois Power
25Agency Act in the same proportion the programs are funded under
26that subsection (b). However, any amount identified under this

 

 

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1subsection (k) to fund programs under subsection (b) of Section
21-56 of the Illinois Power Agency Act shall be reduced if it
3exceeds the funding shortfall. For purposes of this Section,
4"funding shortfall" means the difference between $200,000,000
5and the amount appropriated by the General Assembly to the
6Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources Fund during
7the period that commences on the effective date of this
8amendatory act of the 99th General Assembly and ends on August
91, 2018.
10    If the amount of funds collected during the delivery year
11commencing June 1, 2018, exceeds the costs incurred during that
12delivery year, then up to half of this excess amount, as
13calculated on June 1, 2019, may be used to fund the programs
14under subsection (b) of Section 1-56 of the Illinois Power
15Agency Act in the same proportion the programs are funded under
16that subsection (b). However, any amount identified under this
17subsection (k) to fund programs under subsection (b) of Section
181-56 of the Illinois Power Agency Act shall be reduced if it
19exceeds the funding shortfall.
20    If the amount of funds collected during the delivery year
21commencing June 1, 2019, exceeds the costs incurred during that
22delivery year, then up to half of this excess amount, as
23calculated on June 1, 2020, may be used to fund the programs
24under subsection (b) of Section 1-56 of the Illinois Power
25Agency Act in the same proportion the programs are funded under
26that subsection (b). However, any amount identified under this

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 308 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1subsection (k) to fund programs under subsection (b) of Section
21-56 of the Illinois Power Agency Act shall be reduced if it
3exceeds the funding shortfall.
4    The funding available under this subsection (k), if any,
5for the programs described under subsection (b) of Section 1-56
6of the Illinois Power Agency Act shall not reduce the amount of
7funding for the programs described in subparagraph (O) of
8paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois
9Power Agency Act. If funding is available under this subsection
10(k) for programs described under subsection (b) of Section 1-56
11of the Illinois Power Agency Act, then the long-term renewable
12resources plan shall provide for the Agency to procure
13contracts in an amount that does not exceed the funding, and
14the contracts approved by the Commission shall be executed by
15the applicable utility or utilities.
16    (l) A utility that has terminated any contract executed
17under subsection (d-5) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
18Agency Act shall be entitled to recover any remaining balance
19associated with the purchase of zero emission credits prior to
20such termination, and such utility shall also apply a credit to
21its retail customer bills in the event of any over-collection.
22(Source: P.A. 91-50, eff. 6-30-99; 92-690, eff. 7-18-02.)
 
23    (220 ILCS 5/16-108.9 new)
24    Sec. 16-108.9. Microgrid pilot.
25    (a) The General Assembly finds that the electric industry

 

 

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1is undergoing rapid transformation, including fundamental
2changes regarding how electricity is generated, procured, and
3delivered and how customers are choosing to participate in the
4supply and delivery of electricity to and from the electric
5grid. Building upon the State's goals to increase the
6procurement of electricity from renewable energy resources and
7distributed generation, the General Assembly finds that it is
8now necessary to study how the electric grid could be enhanced
9through reliance on the diverse supply options being connected
10to the grid by traditional suppliers and new market
11participants, such as the utility's customers. Specifically,
12the General Assembly finds that these developments present
13unprecedented opportunities to strengthen the resilience and
14security of the electric grid, particularly with respect to the
15grid's support of the State's critical infrastructure
16dedicated to public safety and health purposes. The General
17Assembly therefore finds that it is beneficial to undertake the
18microgrid pilot described in this Section to explore a variety
19of objectives, including, but not limited to, (i) alternatives
20to upgrading the conventional electric grid, (ii) ways to
21improve electric grid resiliency, security, and outage
22management for critical facilities and customers and thus
23reduce the frequency, duration, and cost of major outages,
24(iii) how to improve the safety and security of critical
25electric infrastructure, including cyber security, for the
26benefit of the public, (iv) innovative approaches to

 

 

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1facilitating high penetration levels of distributed energy
2resources and new distributed energy technologies, and (v) the
3opportunity for new technology business models, customer
4awareness, smart city and community of the future applications,
5network communication capabilities, energy efficiency and
6demand management efforts, and other energy consumer-based and
7utility approaches.
8    (b) An electric utility serving more than 3,000,000 retail
9customers in Illinois may invest an estimated $250,000,000 to
10develop, construct, and install up to 5 microgrids in its
11service territory over a 5-year period that commences upon the
12date of the Commission's approval of the plan, or approval of
13the plan on rehearing, whichever is later, submitted under
14subsection (d) of this Section. Notwithstanding such
15investment amount, a utility that elects to undertake the
16investment described in this subsection (b) shall also be
17authorized to study, operate, and maintain such microgrids.
18    An electric utility serving 3,000,000 or less retail
19customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in Illinois
20may invest a maximum of $60,000,000 to develop, construct, and
21install one or more microgrids in its service territory over a
225-year period that commences upon the date of the Commission's
23approval of the plan, or approval of the plan on rehearing,
24whichever is later, submitted under subsection (d) of this
25Section. Notwithstanding such investment amount, a utility
26that elects to undertake the investment described in this

 

 

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1subsection (b) shall also be authorized to study, operate, and
2maintain such microgrids.
3    For purposes of this Section, "microgrid" means a group of
4interconnected loads and distributed energy resources with
5clearly defined electrical boundaries that acts as a single
6controllable entity with respect to the grid and can connect
7and disconnect from the grid to enable it to operate in both
8grid-connected or island modes.
9        (1) The locations selected to be served by the
10    microgrids shall include critical public health and safety
11    facilities and critical infrastructure and transportation
12    facilities that provide opportunities to study the
13    operation and benefits of the microgrid. Facilities and
14    locations may include, but are not limited to, the
15    following: military; fire fighting; police; aviation;
16    medical and health; HazMat; civil defense and public safety
17    warning services; communications; radiological, chemical
18    and other special weapons defense; water pumping and
19    treatment facilities; and energy delivery. Nothing in this
20    Section shall be interpreted to limit the utility's ability
21    to coordinate with governmental agencies regarding the
22    selection of locations and facilities to be served.
23    Consistent with the provisions of this paragraph (1), an
24    electric utility serving more than 3,000,000 retail
25    customers in Illinois that elects to undertake the
26    investment described in this Section may develop,

 

 

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1    construct, operate, maintain, and study microgrids located
2    at or within the following sites in its service territory:
3            (A) the Bronzeville community of Chicago, whose
4        boundaries are approximately Cermak Road to the north,
5        Washington Park to the south, Federal Street to the
6        west, and Lake Michigan to the east;
7            (B) the Illinois Medical District as defined by
8        Section 1 of the Illinois Medical District Act;
9            (C) an airport, as that term is defined by the
10        Illinois Aeronautics Act, that is located in Winnebago
11        County;
12            (D) a county emergency and disaster services
13        facility; and
14            (E) the water pumping and treatment facilities
15        located in the city of Chicago Heights.
16        If one or more of the sites approved by the Commission
17    under subsection (d) of this Section becomes unsuitable or
18    unavailable to accommodate a microgrid project, the
19    electric utility may select an alternative site or sites
20    consistent with the provisions of this paragraph (1). If
21    the utility selects an alternative site or sites, the
22    utility shall submit an amended plan to the Commission that
23    identifies the alternative site or sites within 90 days
24    after such selection.
25        (2) Notwithstanding any law, rule, or order to the
26    contrary, an electric utility that undertakes the

 

 

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1    investment authorized by this subsection (b):
2            (A) shall study electric generating plant and
3        facilities and electric storage plant and facilities
4        that are part of the microgrids, which may include, but
5        shall not be limited to, the construction,
6        installation, leasing, or ownership of the following
7        technologies: (i) solar photovoltaic facilities; (ii)
8        fuel cells; (iii) natural gas generation, including
9        generation that utilizes combined heat and power; (iv)
10        an electricity storage plant and facilities; (v)
11        geothermal technologies; and (vi) wind turbines;
12        however, if the electric generating plant and
13        facilities or electric storage plant and facilities
14        are powered by new fossil-fueled generation that does
15        not utilize combined heat and power, then the electric
16        utility shall only be permitted to lease, and not own,
17        those facilities;
18            (B) shall be permitted to use the plant or
19        facilities described in subparagraph (A) of this
20        paragraph (2) as follows: (i) for distribution system
21        purposes, (ii) as a source of power, energy, and
22        ancillary services for retail customers located within
23        the boundaries of the microgrid during interruptions
24        of services on the distribution system serving the
25        microgrid or such customers, provided that the use of
26        the plant and facilities during these periods and the

 

 

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1        delivery of electric power and energy that they produce
2        shall be considered and treated as a distribution
3        system reliability function and not as a retail sale of
4        power, and (iii) for sales of energy, power, heat,
5        steam, ancillary services, and other related products
6        and services into any available markets, including,
7        but not limited to, wholesale markets, provided that
8        such sales do not compromise operation of the
9        microgrid; a utility's decision to make or refrain from
10        making such sales in order to maintain the integrity of
11        the microgrid shall not be an unreasonable or imprudent
12        decision;
13            (C) may upgrade the delivery facilities in and
14        supporting the areas served by and in the vicinity of
15        the microgrid, including, but not limited to,
16        constructing, installing, operating, and maintaining
17        (i) multiple feeders to provide service within and to
18        the microgrid, (ii) distribution automation and other
19        smart grid facilities, which shall be incremental to
20        the investment amounts set forth in Section 16-108.5 of
21        this Act, and (iii) placing underground distribution
22        facilities within and providing service to the
23        microgrid; and
24            (D) shall not be required to obtain any
25        certificates of public convenience and necessity under
26        Section 8-406 of this Act or any approvals under

 

 

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1        Sections 9-212, 9-213, or 16-111.5 of this Act, for
2        facilities and projects associated with the microgrid
3        investment under this Section.
4    (c) An electric utility that elects to undertake the
5investment described in subsection (b) of this Section may, at
6its election, recover the actual costs of such investment
7through an automatic adjustment clause tariff or through a
8delivery services charge regardless of how the costs are
9classified on the utility's books and records of account,
10provided that nothing in this subsection (c) permits the double
11recovery of such costs from customers. Regardless of which cost
12recovery mechanism the electric utility elects, the utility
13shall earn a return on the balance of the related plant
14investment as of December 31 for a given year, less any related
15accumulated depreciation and any related deferred taxes, at an
16annual rate equal to the utility's weighted average cost of
17capital that includes, based on a year-end capital structure,
18the utility's actual cost of debt for the applicable calendar
19year and a cost of equity, which shall be calculated as the sum
20of the (i) the average for the applicable calendar year of the
21monthly average yields of 30-year U.S. Treasury bonds published
22by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System in its
23weekly H.15 Statistical Release or successor publication and
24(ii) 580 basis points, including a revenue conversion factor
25calculated to recover or refund all additional income taxes
26that may be payable or receivable as a result of that return.

 

 

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1    If the utility elects to file an automatic adjustment
2clause tariff, the tariff may be filed and established outside
3the context of a general rate case filing or a filing under
4subsection (c) or (d) of Section 16-108.5 of this Act. The
5tariff shall provide that the utility shall file a petition
6with the Commission annually seeking initiation of an annual
7review to reconcile all amounts collected with the actual costs
8incurred in the prior period. The Commission shall review and,
9after notice and hearing, by order approve or approve with
10modification the proposed tariff no later than 180 days after
11the filing of the tariff. A utility may elect to reflect the
12charges recovered through the tariff as a separate line item on
13customers' bills, but shall not be required to do so. A tariff
14approved and placed into effect under this Section shall remain
15in effect at the discretion of the utility, and the utility may
16elect to withdraw the tariff at any time. At such time as the
17tariff ceases to be in effect, the utility shall recover its
18costs incurred under this Section through a delivery services
19charge regardless of how the costs are categorized or
20classified on the utility's books and records of account.
21    An electric utility that elects to undertake the investment
22described in subsection (b) of this Section shall also recover
23the actual costs it incurs to study, operate, and maintain the
24microgrid projects under this Section and may, at its election,
25recover such costs through an automatic adjustment clause
26tariff placed into effect under this Section, if applicable, or

 

 

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1through its delivery services charges.
2    (d) If an electric utility elects to undertake the
3investment authorized by subsection (b) of this Section, then
4the utility shall submit to the Commission the utility's plan
5for developing, constructing, operating, and analyzing each
6microgrid site in its service territory for the 5-year period
7commencing upon the plan's approval, or approval of the plan on
8rehearing, whichever is later. Such plan shall describe:
9        (1) the utility's current projections for scope,
10    microgrid locations and boundaries, schedule,
11    expenditures, and staffing;
12        (2) the utility's projections regarding the sale into
13    wholesale markets of power generated under the plant or
14    facilities described in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2)
15    of subsection (b) of this Section, including how such sales
16    will be executed and revenues applied to offset the costs
17    of the microgrid pilot by reducing the amount of costs that
18    the utility would otherwise recover from retail customers;
19        (3) the utility's projections, if any, regarding the
20    sale of renewable energy credits generated by the plant or
21    facilities described in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2)
22    of subsection (b) of this Section, including how any of
23    those sales will be executed and revenues applied to offset
24    the costs of the microgrid pilot by reducing the amount of
25    costs that the utility would otherwise recover from retail
26    customers;

 

 

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1        (4) how the utility will work with stakeholders,
2    including residents of communities in which a microgrid
3    pilot is proposed, to ensure the pilot's goals are being
4    met;
5        (5) any utility services, rates, programs, or other
6    offerings which are being tested;
7        (6) the criteria, including specific performance
8    metrics, for evaluating the extent to which the microgrids
9    developed under this Section achieved the objectives set
10    out in subsection (a) of this Section; and
11        (7) the proposed independent evaluation of the plan and
12    the final evaluation shall be submitted in conjunction with
13    the utility's final report.
14    Within 120 days after the utility files its plan under this
15subsection (d), the Commission shall review and, after notice
16and hearing, enter an order approving the plan if it finds that
17the plan conforms to the requirements of this Section or, if
18the Commission finds that the plan does not conform to the
19requirements of this Section, the Commission must enter an
20order describing in detail the reasons for not approving the
21plan. The utility may resubmit its plan to address the
22Commission's concerns, and the Commission shall expeditiously
23review and by order approve the revised plan if it finds that
24the plan conforms to the requirements of this Section, provided
25that such order shall be entered no later than 90 days after
26the utility resubmits its plan.

 

 

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1    No later than 90 days after the close of each plan year,
2the utility shall submit a report to the Commission that
3includes any updates to the plan, a schedule for the
4development of any proposed microgrids for the next plan year,
5the expenditures made for the prior plan year and cumulatively,
6an evaluation of the extent to which the objectives of this
7microgrid pilot are being achieved, and the number of full-time
8equivalent jobs created for the prior plan year and
9cumulatively. Within 60 days after the utility files its annual
10report, the Commission may enter into an investigation of the
11report. If the Commission commences an investigation, it must,
12after notice and hearing, enter an order approving the report
13or approving the report with modification necessary to bring it
14into compliance with this Section no later than 180 days after
15the utility files such report. If the Commission does not
16initiate an investigation within 60 days after the utility
17files its annual report, then the filing shall be deemed
18accepted by the Commission.
19    The utility may continue operating, maintaining, and
20studying the microgrids developed and constructed under this
21Section following the end of the 5-year plan period, and the
22costs incurred by the utility regarding such continued
23operation, maintenance and studying and to comply with the
24requirements of this Section shall continue to be recoverable
25following the end of the 5-year plan period through the
26automatic adjustment clause tariff authorized by this Section

 

 

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1or other cost recovery mechanism elected by the utility.
2However, any generating or storage facility that becomes
3inoperable after the initial 5-year period may not be replaced
4without the approval of the Commission unless the facility will
5be used solely for the purposes described in subparagraph (B)
6of paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of this Section.
7    To the extent feasible and consistent with State and
8federal law, the investments made under this Section should
9provide employment opportunities for all segments of the
10population and workforce, including minority-owned and
11female-owned business enterprises, and shall not, consistent
12with State and federal law, discriminate based on race or
13socioeconomic status.
14    (e) No later than 365 days following the end of the 5-year
15plan period, the electric utility shall submit its final report
16to the Commission evaluating the extent to which the objectives
17of this microgrid pilot have been achieved, reporting on its
18performance under the metrics established in the plan, and
19proposing any additional study or action required to continue
20the further development of microgrids in the electric utility's
21service territory. Thereafter, the Commission shall convene a
22workshop or workshops to discuss the results of the evaluation
23reflected in the final report. In addition, an electric utility
24that serves more than 3,000,000 retail customers in the State
25shall demonstrate, on average, that each microgrid project
26created, in total, 50 full-time equivalent jobs in Illinois

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 321 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1during the 5-year period. The jobs shall include direct jobs,
2contractor positions, and induced jobs. If the Commission
3enters an order finding, after notice and hearing, that the
4utility did not satisfy its job commitment described in this
5subsection (e) for reasons that are reasonably within its
6control, then the Commission shall also determine, after
7consideration of the evidence, including, but not limited to,
8evidence submitted by the Department of Commerce and Economic
9Opportunity and the utility, the deficiency in the number of
10full-time equivalent jobs due to such failure. The Commission
11shall notify the Department of any proceeding that is initiated
12under this subsection (e). For each full-time equivalent job
13deficiency that the Commission finds as set forth in this
14subsection (e), the utility shall, within 30 days after the
15entry of the Commission's order, pay $6,000 to a fund for
16training grants administered under Section 605-800 of the
17Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity Law, which
18shall not be a recoverable expense.
19    In addition, an electric utility that serves 3,000,000 or
20less retail customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in
21the State shall demonstrate that it created an average of 50
22full-time equivalent jobs in Illinois during the construction
23of the microgrids. The jobs shall include direct jobs and
24contractor positions. If the Commission enters an order
25finding, after notice and hearing, that the utility did not
26satisfy its job commitment described in this subsection (e) for

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 322 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1reasons that are reasonably within its control, then the
2Commission shall also determine, after consideration of the
3evidence, including, but not limited to, evidence submitted by
4the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and the
5utility, the deficiency in the number of full-time equivalent
6jobs due to such failure. The Commission shall notify the
7Department of any proceeding that is initiated under this
8subsection (e). For each full-time equivalent job deficiency
9that the Commission finds as set forth in this subsection (e),
10the utility shall, within 30 days after the entry of the
11Commission's order, pay $6,000 to a fund for training grants
12administered under Section 605-800 of the Department of
13Commerce and Economic Opportunity Law of the Civil
14Administrative Code of Illinois, which shall not be a
15recoverable expense.
16    No later than 365 days following the date on which the
17utility submits its final report under this subsection (e), the
18Commission shall submit a report to the General Assembly
19evaluating the extent to which the objectives of the microgrid
20pilot have been achieved, reporting on the utility's
21performance under the metrics established in its plan, and
22proposing any additional study or action required to continue
23the further development of microgrids in the utility's service
24territory.
25    (f) In no event, absent General Assembly approval, shall
26the capital investment costs incurred by an electric utility

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 323 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1under this Section and the amounts paid by an electric utility
2under paragraph (5) of subsection (i) of this Section exceed
3$300,000,000 for a utility that serves more than 3,000,000
4retail customers in the State. If the utility's updated cost
5estimates for implementing its plan exceed the limitation
6imposed by this subsection (f), then it shall submit a report
7to the Commission that identifies the increased costs and
8explains the reason or reasons for the increased costs no later
9than the year in which the utility estimates it will exceed the
10limitation. The Commission shall review the report and shall,
11within 90 days after the utility files the report, report to
12the General Assembly its findings regarding the utility's
13report. If the General Assembly does not amend the limitation
14imposed by this subsection (f), then the utility may modify its
15plan so as not to exceed the limitation imposed by this
16subsection (f) and may propose corresponding changes in its
17plan, and the Commission may modify the metrics established
18under this Section accordingly.
19    (g) All facilities and equipment installed under this
20Section shall be considered and functionalized for ratemaking
21purposes as distribution facilities and equipment for purposes
22of Articles IX and XVI of this Act, and the expense of
23operating, maintaining, and studying such facilities shall be
24considered and functionalized for ratemaking purposes as
25distribution expense regardless of how the facilities,
26equipment, and costs are categorized or classified on the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 324 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1utility's books and records of account.
2    (h) Nothing in this Section is intended to limit or expand
3the ability of any other entity to develop, construct, or
4install a microgrid. In addition, nothing in this Section is
5intended to limit, expand, or alter otherwise applicable
6interconnection requirements.
7    (i) An electric utility serving more than 3,000,000 retail
8customers in Illinois that elects to undertake the investment
9described in subsection (b) of this Section may implement a
105-year innovation accelerator program, which shall facilitate
11the testing of programs, technologies, business models, and
12other activities related to enhancing the reliability and
13efficiency of the electric grid, enabling the management of
14energy use and demand, and demonstrating the potential benefits
15to customers of new applications or tools for energy
16management, which shall be subject to the following
17requirements:
18        (1) The program shall be comprised of 3 key components:
19            (A) An Innovation Center, which shall be located
20        within the site described in subparagraph (A) of
21        paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of this Section; the
22        costs of the facility may not exceed $20,000,000.
23            (B) An Innovation Accelerator Test Bed, which
24        shall be located within the site described in
25        subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of
26        this Section.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 325 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            (C) Funding of projects located at the sites
2        described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of this
3        paragraph (1), unless otherwise approved by the
4        utility and Council as set forth in paragraph (4) of
5        this subsection (i), and approved under this
6        subsection (i); the funding shall not exceed
7        $2,500,000 per year over a 5-year period; the funding
8        may be used for smart city and community of the future
9        projects, programs, technologies, and services that
10        enable customers to more efficiently and directly
11        manage their energy use and demand; and no single
12        project, including costs related to utility
13        interconnection, shall receive funding in excess of
14        $500,000.
15        (2) A utility that elects to undertake the program
16    described in this subsection (i) shall notify the
17    Commission of its election, and the date on which the
18    5-year program will commence, in the annual report
19    submitted under subsection (d) of this Section that
20    precedes the date on which the program will commence.
21        (3) Within 90 days after the utility provides notice
22    under paragraph (2) of this subsection (i), the Innovation
23    Accelerator Advisory Council shall be established to
24    assist in the establishment of award criteria and review of
25    projects located at sites described in subparagraphs (A)
26    and (B) of paragraph (1) of this subsection (i) and

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 326 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    approved under this subsection (i). The Council shall
2    consist of up to 8 total voting members with each member
3    possessing either technical, business or consumer
4    expertise in electric grid issues, 3 of whom may be
5    appointed by the Governor, one of whom may be appointed by
6    the Speaker of the House, one of whom may be appointed by
7    the Minority Leader of the House, one of whom may be
8    appointed by the President of the Senate, one of whom may
9    be appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate, and one
10    of whom may be selected by the utility that provided such
11    notice, provided that any nomination of voting members by
12    the persons listed in this paragraph (3) shall be made
13    within 90 days after the effective date of this amendatory
14    Act of the 99th General Assembly. A voting member may not
15    be a member of the General Assembly. If a voting member is
16    nominated by any of the persons listed in this paragraph
17    (3) within the 90-day period, then such voting member shall
18    be eligible to participate on the Council. If the Governor
19    appoints 3 voting members to the Council, then: (i) at
20    least one must represent a non-profit membership
21    organization whose mission is to cultivate innovation and
22    technology-based economic development in this State by
23    fostering public-private partnerships to develop and
24    execute research and development projects, advocating for
25    funding for research and development initiatives, and
26    collaborating with public and private partners to attract

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 327 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    and retain research and development resources and talent in
2    Illinois; and (ii) at least one must represent a non-profit
3    public body corporate and politic created by law that has a
4    duty to represent and protect residential utility
5    consumers in this State.
6        The Governor shall designate one of the members of the
7    Council to serve as chairman, and that person shall serve
8    as the chairman at the pleasure of the Governor. The
9    members shall not be compensated for serving on the
10    Council.
11        (4) The utility, in conjunction with the Innovation
12    Accelerator Advisory Council, shall establish the
13    application criteria, processes, and procedures applicable
14    to the use of the Innovation Center and Innovation
15    Accelerator Test Bed and disbursement of the annual funding
16    available under the program. The criteria shall be
17    consistent with the goal of offering the program to
18    qualified entities seeking to test commercially viable
19    programs, technologies, business models, and other
20    grid-related activities, especially those likely to
21    support the economic development goals of this State.
22    Projects shall be located at or within the sites described
23    in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (1) of this
24    subsection (i), unless the utility and Council approve a
25    project that is located outside of these sites or that is a
26    technology that is not site specific, provided that the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 328 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    projects are interconnected at the distribution system
2    level of the utility. The utility shall retain control of
3    its grid and operations, and may reject any proposal that
4    threatens its reliability, safety, security, or
5    operations.
6        (5) The trust or foundation established under Section
7    16-108.7 of this Act shall conduct marketing and
8    promotional activities on behalf of the program described
9    in this subsection (i), consistent with the criteria,
10    processes, and procedures established in paragraph (4) of
11    this subsection (i), and all applications described in
12    paragraph (4) of this subsection (i) shall be submitted to
13    the trust or foundation. The trust or foundation shall
14    analyze the applications consistent with this subsection
15    (i) and the criteria, processes, and procedures
16    established under paragraph (4) of this subsection (i).
17    Following its review, the trust or foundation shall
18    recommend to the Council whether an application should be
19    approved. Once approved, the trust or foundation may
20    provide mentoring and advisory services to any projects
21    approved by the Council. The trust or foundation shall be
22    permitted to remit to the Council, on a monthly basis,
23    invoices for the work performed under this paragraph (5);
24    however, the amount of those invoices shall not exceed
25    $600,000 per year. The Council shall review each invoice
26    and, if approved, the utility shall pay the invoice, which

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 329 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    amounts shall be fully recoverable by the utility. Expenses
2    incurred by the trust or foundation under this subsection
3    (i) shall not be deemed administrative expenses within the
4    meaning of paragraph (7) of subsection (c) of Section
5    16-108.7 of this Act.
6        If the trust or foundation established under Section
7    16-108.7 of this Act is unable to perform the services
8    described in this paragraph (5), the Council shall direct
9    that the utility retain a third-party consultant to perform
10    the services, subject to the same payment limitations and
11    procedures described in this paragraph (5).
12        (6) The utility shall be entitled to recover all
13    prudent and reasonable costs incurred under this
14    subsection (i), and may elect to recover those costs
15    through one or more of the cost recovery mechanisms
16    authorized by this Section.
 
17    (220 ILCS 5/16-108.10 new)
18    Sec. 16-108.10. Energy low-income and support program.
19Beginning in 2017, without obtaining any approvals from the
20Commission or any other agency, regardless of whether any such
21approval would otherwise be required, a participating utility
22that is not a combination utility, as defined by Section
2316-108.5 of this Act, shall contribute $10,000,000 per year for
245 years to the energy low-income and support program, which is
25intended to fund customer assistance programs with the primary

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 330 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1purpose being avoidance of imminent disconnection and
2reconnecting customers who have been disconnected for
3non-payment. Such programs may include:
4        (1) a residential hardship program that may partner
5    with community-based organizations, including senior
6    citizen organizations, and provides grants to low-income
7    residential customers, including low-income senior
8    citizens, who demonstrate a hardship;
9        (2) a program that provides grants and other bill
10    payment concessions to disabled veterans who demonstrate a
11    hardship and members of the armed services or reserve
12    forces of the United States or members of the Illinois
13    National Guard who are on active duty under an executive
14    order of the President of the United States, an act of the
15    Congress of the United States, or an order of the Governor
16    and who demonstrate a hardship;
17        (3) a budget assistance program that provides tools and
18    education to low-income senior citizens to assist them with
19    obtaining information regarding energy usage and effective
20    means of managing energy costs;
21        (4) a non-residential special hardship program that
22    provides grants to non-residential customers, such as
23    small businesses and non-profit organizations, that
24    demonstrate a hardship, including those providing services
25    to senior citizen and low-income customers; and
26        (5) a performance-based assistance program that

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 331 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    provides grants to encourage residential customers to make
2    on-time payments by matching a portion of the customer's
3    payments or providing credits towards arrearages.
4    The payments made by a participating utility under this
5Section shall not be a recoverable expense. A participating
6utility may elect to fund either new or existing customer
7assistance programs, including, but not limited to, those that
8are administered by the utility.
9    Programs that use funds that are provided by an electric
10utility to reduce utility bills may be implemented through
11tariffs that are filed with and reviewed by the Commission. If
12a utility elects to file tariffs with the Commission to
13implement all or a portion of the programs, those tariffs
14shall, regardless of the date actually filed, be deemed
15accepted and approved and shall become effective on the first
16business day after they are filed. The electric utilities whose
17customers benefit from the funds that are disbursed as
18contemplated in this Section shall file annual reports
19documenting the disbursement of those funds with the
20Commission. The Commission may audit disbursement of the funds
21to ensure they were disbursed consistently with this Section.
22    If the Commission finds that a participating utility is no
23longer eligible to update the performance-based formula rate
24tariff under subsection (d) of Section 16-108.5 of this Act or
25the performance-based formula rate is otherwise terminated,
26then the participating utility's obligations under this

 

 

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1Section shall immediately terminate.
 
2    (220 ILCS 5/16-111.5)
3    Sec. 16-111.5. Provisions relating to procurement.
4    (a) An electric utility that on December 31, 2005 served at
5least 100,000 customers in Illinois shall procure power and
6energy for its eligible retail customers in accordance with the
7applicable provisions set forth in Section 1-75 of the Illinois
8Power Agency Act and this Section. Beginning with the delivery
9year commencing on June 1, 2017, such electric utility shall
10also procure zero emission credits from zero emission
11facilities for all retail customers in its service territory in
12accordance with the applicable provisions set forth in Section
131-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, and, for years beginning
14on or after June 1, 2017, the utility shall procure renewable
15energy resources for all of its retail customers in accordance
16with the applicable provisions set forth in Section 1-75 of the
17Illinois Power Agency Act and this Section. A small
18multi-jurisdictional electric utility that on December 31,
192005 served less than 100,000 customers in Illinois may elect
20to procure power and energy for all or a portion of its
21eligible Illinois retail customers in accordance with the
22applicable provisions set forth in this Section and Section
231-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. This Section shall not
24apply to a small multi-jurisdictional utility until such time
25as a small multi-jurisdictional utility requests the Illinois

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 333 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1Power Agency to prepare a procurement plan for its eligible
2retail customers. "Eligible retail customers" for the purposes
3of this Section means those retail customers that purchase
4power and energy from the electric utility under fixed-price
5bundled service tariffs, other than those retail customers
6whose service is declared or deemed competitive under Section
716-113 and those other customer groups specified in this
8Section, including self-generating customers, customers
9electing hourly pricing, or those customers who are otherwise
10ineligible for fixed-price bundled tariff service. For those
11Those customers that are excluded from the definition of
12"eligible retail customers" shall not be included in the
13procurement plan's electric supply service plan load
14requirements, and the utility shall procure any supply
15requirements, including capacity, ancillary services, and
16hourly priced energy, in the applicable markets as needed to
17serve those customers, provided that the utility may include in
18its procurement plan load requirements for the load that is
19associated with those retail customers whose service has been
20declared or deemed competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
21this Act to the extent that those customers are purchasing
22power and energy during one of the transition periods
23identified in subsection (b) of Section 16-113 of this Act. The
24utility shall include in its procurement plan load requirements
25the load associated with those retail customers that are taking
26service under the tariff approved under paragraph (2) of

 

 

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1subsection (c) of Section 9-105 of this Act.
2    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act or the
3Illinois Power Agency Act, each electric utility that serves
4less than 3,000,000 retail customers but more than 500,000
5retail customers in this State shall, beginning with the
6delivery year commencing June 1, 2018, procure capacity for all
7of its retail customers located in the Applicable Local
8Resource Zone of the Midcontinent Independent System Operator,
9Inc., or its successor, in accordance with subsection (k) of
10this Section. Prior to each Planning Resource Auction of the
11Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., or its
12successor, each such electric utility shall make timely
13notification and submission to the Midcontinent Independent
14System Operator, Inc., or its successor, pursuant to the open
15access transmission and energy markets tariff of the
16Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc. or its
17successor, of a Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan, or a successor
18capacity procurement mechanism, by which the electric utility
19will procure or has procured its Resource Adequacy Requirement
20(including its share of the Planning Reserve Margin Requirement
21for the Applicable Local Resource Zone) through (i) capacity
22resources procured under subsection (k) of this Section, (ii)
23Qualifying Preexisting Capacity as defined and specified in
24subsection (k) of this Section, and (iii) if applicable, the
25Planning Resource Auction. For purposes of this Act, the terms
26"Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan", "Load Serving Entity", "Local

 

 

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1Clearing Requirement", "Local Resource Zone", "Planning
2Resource Auction", "Planning Resources", "Planning Reserve
3Margin Requirement", and "Resource Adequacy Requirement" shall
4have the meanings set forth in the open access transmission and
5energy markets tariff of the Midcontinent Independent System
6Operator, Inc., or its successor, as that tariff may be updated
7from time to time, and the term "Applicable Local Resource
8Zone" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 1-75 of the
9Illinois Power Agency Act.
10    (b) A procurement plan shall be prepared for each electric
11utility consistent with the applicable requirements of the
12Illinois Power Agency Act and this Section. For purposes of
13this Section, Illinois electric utilities that are affiliated
14by virtue of a common parent company are considered to be a
15single electric utility. Small multi-jurisdictional utilities
16may request a procurement plan for a portion of or all of its
17Illinois load. Each procurement plan shall analyze the
18projected balance of supply and demand for those retail
19customers to be included in the plan's electric supply service
20requirements eligible retail customers over a 5-year period,
21with the first planning year beginning on June 1 of the year
22following the year in which the plan is filed. The plan shall
23specifically identify the wholesale products to be procured
24following plan approval, and shall follow all the requirements
25set forth in the Public Utilities Act and all applicable State
26and federal laws, statutes, rules, or regulations, as well as

 

 

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1Commission orders. Nothing in this Section precludes
2consideration of contracts longer than 5 years and related
3forecast data. Unless specified otherwise in this Section, in
4the procurement plan or in the implementing tariff, any
5procurement occurring in accordance with this plan shall be
6competitively bid through a request for proposals process.
7Approval and implementation of the procurement plan shall be
8subject to review and approval by the Commission according to
9the provisions set forth in this Section. A procurement plan
10shall include each of the following components:
11        (1) Hourly load analysis. This analysis shall include:
12            (i) multi-year historical analysis of hourly
13        loads;
14            (ii) switching trends and competitive retail
15        market analysis;
16            (iii) known or projected changes to future loads;
17        and
18            (iv) growth forecasts by customer class.
19        (2) Analysis of the impact of any demand side and
20    renewable energy initiatives. This analysis shall include:
21            (i) the impact of demand response programs and
22        energy efficiency programs, both current and
23        projected; for small multi-jurisdictional utilities,
24        the impact of demand response and energy efficiency
25        programs approved pursuant to Section 8-408 of this
26        Act, both current and projected; and

 

 

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1            (ii) supply side needs that are projected to be
2        offset by purchases of renewable energy resources, if
3        any.
4        (3) A plan for meeting the expected load requirements
5    that will not be met through preexisting contracts. This
6    plan shall include:
7            (i) definitions of the different Illinois retail
8        customer classes for which supply is being purchased;
9            (ii) the proposed mix of demand-response products
10        for which contracts will be executed during the next
11        year. For small multi-jurisdictional electric
12        utilities that on December 31, 2005 served fewer than
13        100,000 customers in Illinois, these shall be defined
14        as demand-response products offered in an energy
15        efficiency plan approved pursuant to Section 8-408 of
16        this Act. Except as provided otherwise in this Section
17        or Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, the
18        The cost-effective demand-response measures shall be
19        procured whenever the cost is lower than procuring
20        comparable capacity products, provided that such
21        products shall:
22                (A) be procured by a demand-response provider
23            from those eligible retail customers included in
24            the plan's electric supply service requirements;
25                (B) at least satisfy the demand-response
26            requirements of the regional transmission

 

 

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1            organization market in which the utility's service
2            territory is located, including, but not limited
3            to, any applicable capacity or dispatch
4            requirements;
5                (C) provide for customers' participation in
6            the stream of benefits produced by the
7            demand-response products;
8                (D) provide for reimbursement by the
9            demand-response provider of the utility for any
10            costs incurred as a result of the failure of the
11            supplier of such products to perform its
12            obligations thereunder; and
13                (E) meet the same credit requirements as apply
14            to suppliers of capacity, in the applicable
15            regional transmission organization market;
16            (iii) monthly forecasted system supply
17        requirements, including expected minimum, maximum, and
18        average values for the planning period;
19            (iv) the proposed mix and selection of standard
20        wholesale products for which contracts will be
21        executed during the next year, separately or in
22        combination, to meet that portion of its load
23        requirements not met through pre-existing contracts,
24        including but not limited to monthly 5 x 16 peak period
25        block energy, monthly off-peak wrap energy, monthly 7 x
26        24 energy, annual 5 x 16 energy, annual off-peak wrap

 

 

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1        energy, annual 7 x 24 energy, monthly capacity, annual
2        capacity, peak load capacity obligations, capacity
3        purchase plan, and ancillary services, as applicable;
4            (v) proposed term structures for each wholesale
5        product type included in the proposed procurement plan
6        portfolio of products; and
7            (vi) an assessment of the price risk, load
8        uncertainty, and other factors that are associated
9        with the proposed procurement plan; this assessment,
10        to the extent possible, shall include an analysis of
11        the following factors: contract terms, time frames for
12        securing products or services, fuel costs, weather
13        patterns, transmission costs, market conditions, and
14        the governmental regulatory environment; the proposed
15        procurement plan shall also identify alternatives for
16        those portfolio measures that are identified as having
17        significant price risk.
18        (4) Proposed procedures for balancing loads. The
19    procurement plan shall include, for load requirements
20    included in the procurement plan, the process for (i)
21    hourly balancing of supply and demand and (ii) the criteria
22    for portfolio re-balancing in the event of significant
23    shifts in load.
24        (5) Long-Term Renewable Resources Procurement Plan.
25    Beginning with the planning process to develop a plan or
26    plans for delivery starting in the 2017 delivery year, the

 

 

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1    Agency shall prepare a long-term renewable resources
2    procurement plan for the procurement of renewable energy
3    credits under Sections 1-56 and 1-75 of the Illinois Power
4    Agency Act.
5            (i) The initial long-term renewable resources
6        procurement plan and all subsequent revisions shall be
7        subject to review and approval by the Commission. For
8        the purposes of this Section, "delivery year" has the
9        same meaning as in Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power
10        Agency Act. For purposes of this Section, "Agency"
11        shall mean the Illinois Power Agency.
12            (ii) The long-term renewable resources planning
13        process shall be conducted as follows:
14                (A) Electric utilities shall provide a range
15            of load forecasts to the Illinois Power Agency
16            within 45 days of the Agency's request for
17            forecasts, which request shall specify the length
18            and conditions for the forecasts including, but
19            not limited to, the quantity of distributed
20            generation expected to be interconnected for each
21            year.
22                (B) The Agency shall publish for comment the
23            initial long-term renewable resources procurement
24            plan no later than 120 days after the effective
25            date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
26            Assembly and shall review, and may revise, the plan

 

 

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1            at least every 2 years thereafter. To the extent
2            practicable, the Agency shall review and propose
3            any revisions to the long-term renewable energy
4            resources procurement plan in conjunction with the
5            Agency's other planning and approval processes
6            conducted under this Section. The initial
7            long-term renewable resources procurement plan
8            shall:
9                    (aa) Identify the procurement programs and
10                competitive procurement events consistent with
11                the applicable requirements of the Illinois
12                Power Agency Act and shall be designed to
13                achieve the goals set forth in subsection (c)
14                of Section 1-75 of that Act.
15                    (bb) Include a schedule for procurements
16                for renewable energy credits from
17                utility-scale wind projects, utility-scale
18                solar projects, and brownfield site
19                photovoltaic projects consistent with
20                subparagraph (G) of paragraph (1) of
21                subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois
22                Power Agency Act.
23                    (cc) Identify the process whereby the
24                Agency will submit to the Commission for review
25                and approval the proposed contracts to
26                implement the programs required by such plan.

 

 

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1                Copies of the initial long-term renewable
2            resources procurement plan and all subsequent
3            revisions shall be posted and made publicly
4            available on the Agency's and Commission's
5            websites, and copies shall also be provided to each
6            affected electric utility. An affected utility and
7            other interested parties shall have 45 days
8            following the date of posting to provide comment to
9            the Agency on the initial long-term renewable
10            resources procurement plan and all subsequent
11            revisions. All comments submitted to the Agency
12            shall be specific, supported by data or other
13            detailed analyses, and, if objecting to all or a
14            portion of the procurement plan, accompanied by
15            specific alternative wording or proposals. All
16            comments shall be posted on the Agency's and
17            Commission's websites. During this 45-day comment
18            period, the Agency shall hold at least one public
19            hearing within each utility's service area for the
20            purpose of receiving public comment. Within 21
21            days following the end of the 45-day review period,
22            the Agency may revise the long-term renewable
23            resources procurement plan based on the comments
24            received and shall file the plan with the
25            Commission for review and approval.
26                (C) Within 14 days after the filing of the

 

 

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1            initial long-term renewable resources procurement
2            plan or any subsequent revisions, any person
3            objecting to the plan may file an objection with
4            the Commission. Within 21 days after the filing of
5            the plan, the Commission shall determine whether a
6            hearing is necessary. The Commission shall enter
7            its order confirming or modifying the initial
8            long-term renewable resources procurement plan or
9            any subsequent revisions within 120 days after the
10            filing of the plan by the Illinois Power Agency.
11                (D) The Commission shall approve the initial
12            long-term renewable resources procurement plan and
13            any subsequent revisions, including expressly the
14            forecast used in the plan and taking into account
15            that funding will be limited to the amount of
16            revenues actually collected by the utilities, if
17            the Commission determines that the plan will
18            reasonably and prudently accomplish the
19            requirements of Section 1-56 and subsection (c) of
20            Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. The
21            Commission shall also approve the process for the
22            submission, review, and approval of the proposed
23            contracts to procure renewable energy credits or
24            implement the programs authorized by the
25            Commission pursuant to a long-term renewable
26            resources procurement plan approved under this

 

 

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1            Section.
2            (iii) The Agency or third parties contracted by the
3        Agency shall implement all programs authorized by the
4        Commission in an approved long-term renewable
5        resources procurement plan without further review and
6        approval by the Commission. Third parties shall not
7        begin implementing any programs or receive any payment
8        under this Section until the Commission has approved
9        the contract or contracts under the process authorized
10        by the Commission in item (D) of subparagraph (ii) of
11        paragraph (5) of this subsection (b) and the third
12        party and the Agency or utility, as applicable, have
13        executed the contract. For those renewable energy
14        credits subject to procurement through a competitive
15        bid process under the plan or under the initial forward
16        procurements for wind and solar resources described in
17        subparagraph (G) of paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of
18        Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, the
19        Agency shall follow the procurement process specified
20        in the provisions relating to electricity procurement
21        in subsections (e) through (i) of this Section.
22            (iv) An electric utility shall recover its costs
23        associated with the procurement of renewable energy
24        credits under this Section through an automatic
25        adjustment clause tariff under subsection (k) of
26        Section 16-108 of this Act. A utility shall not be

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 345 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        required to advance any payment or pay any amounts
2        under this Section that exceed the actual amount of
3        revenues collected by the utility under paragraph (6)
4        of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
5        Agency Act and subsection (k) of Section 16-108 of this
6        Act, and contracts executed under this Section shall
7        expressly incorporate this limitation.
8            (v) For the public interest, safety, and welfare,
9        the Agency and the Commission may adopt rules to carry
10        out the provisions of this Section on an emergency
11        basis immediately following the effective date of this
12        amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly.
13            (vi) On or before July 1 of each year, the
14        Commission shall hold an informal hearing for the
15        purpose of receiving comments on the prior year's
16        procurement process and any recommendations for
17        change.
18    (c) The procurement process set forth in Section 1-75 of
19the Illinois Power Agency Act and subsection (e) of this
20Section shall be administered by a procurement administrator
21and monitored by a procurement monitor.
22        (1) Except as provided otherwise in this Section or
23    Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, the The
24    procurement administrator shall:
25            (i) design the final procurement process in
26        accordance with Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 346 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        Agency Act and subsection (e) of this Section following
2        Commission approval of the procurement plan;
3            (ii) develop benchmarks in accordance with
4        subsection (e)(3) to be used to evaluate bids; these
5        benchmarks shall be submitted to the Commission for
6        review and approval on a confidential basis prior to
7        the procurement event;
8            (iii) serve as the interface between the electric
9        utility and suppliers;
10            (iv) manage the bidder pre-qualification and
11        registration process;
12            (v) obtain the electric utilities' agreement to
13        the final form of all supply contracts and credit
14        collateral agreements;
15            (vi) administer the request for proposals process;
16            (vii) have the discretion to negotiate to
17        determine whether bidders are willing to lower the
18        price of bids that meet the benchmarks approved by the
19        Commission; any post-bid negotiations with bidders
20        shall be limited to price only and shall be completed
21        within 24 hours after opening the sealed bids and shall
22        be conducted in a fair and unbiased manner; in
23        conducting the negotiations, there shall be no
24        disclosure of any information derived from proposals
25        submitted by competing bidders; if information is
26        disclosed to any bidder, it shall be provided to all

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 347 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        competing bidders;
2            (viii) maintain confidentiality of supplier and
3        bidding information in a manner consistent with all
4        applicable laws, rules, regulations, and tariffs;
5            (ix) submit a confidential report to the
6        Commission recommending acceptance or rejection of
7        bids;
8            (x) notify the utility of contract counterparties
9        and contract specifics; and
10            (xi) administer related contingency procurement
11        events.
12        (2) The procurement monitor, who shall be retained by
13    the Commission, shall:
14            (i) monitor interactions among the procurement
15        administrator, suppliers, and utility;
16            (ii) monitor and report to the Commission on the
17        progress of the procurement process;
18            (iii) provide an independent confidential report
19        to the Commission regarding the results of the
20        procurement event;
21            (iv) assess compliance with the procurement plans
22        approved by the Commission for each utility that on
23        December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at a
24        least 100,000 customers in Illinois and for each small
25        multi-jurisdictional utility that on December 31, 2005
26        served less than 100,000 customers in Illinois;

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 348 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            (v) preserve the confidentiality of supplier and
2        bidding information in a manner consistent with all
3        applicable laws, rules, regulations, and tariffs;
4            (vi) provide expert advice to the Commission and
5        consult with the procurement administrator regarding
6        issues related to procurement process design, rules,
7        protocols, and policy-related matters; and
8            (vii) consult with the procurement administrator
9        regarding the development and use of benchmark
10        criteria, standard form contracts, credit policies,
11        and bid documents.
12    (d) Except as otherwise provided in this Section or Section
131-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act subsection (j), the
14planning process shall be conducted as follows:
15        (1) Beginning in 2008, each Illinois utility procuring
16    power pursuant to this Section shall annually provide a
17    range of load forecasts to the Illinois Power Agency by
18    July 15 of each year, or such other date as may be required
19    by the Commission or Agency. The load forecasts shall cover
20    the 5-year procurement planning period for the next
21    procurement plan and shall include hourly data
22    representing a high-load, low-load, and expected-load
23    scenario for the load of those the eligible retail
24    customers included in the plan's electric supply service
25    requirements. The utility shall provide supporting data
26    and assumptions for each of the scenarios.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 349 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (2) Beginning in 2008, the Illinois Power Agency shall
2    prepare a procurement plan by August 15th of each year, or
3    such other date as may be required by the Commission. The
4    procurement plan shall identify the portfolio of
5    demand-response and power and energy products to be
6    procured. Cost-effective demand-response measures shall be
7    procured as set forth in item (iii) of subsection (b) of
8    this Section. Copies of the procurement plan shall be
9    posted and made publicly available on the Agency's and
10    Commission's websites, and copies shall also be provided to
11    each affected electric utility. An affected utility shall
12    have 30 days following the date of posting to provide
13    comment to the Agency on the procurement plan. Other
14    interested entities also may comment on the procurement
15    plan. All comments submitted to the Agency shall be
16    specific, supported by data or other detailed analyses,
17    and, if objecting to all or a portion of the procurement
18    plan, accompanied by specific alternative wording or
19    proposals. All comments shall be posted on the Agency's and
20    Commission's websites. During this 30-day comment period,
21    the Agency shall hold at least one public hearing within
22    each utility's service area for the purpose of receiving
23    public comment on the procurement plan. Within 14 days
24    following the end of the 30-day review period, the Agency
25    shall revise the procurement plan as necessary based on the
26    comments received and file the procurement plan with the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 350 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    Commission and post the procurement plan on the websites.
2        (3) Within 5 days after the filing of the procurement
3    plan, any person objecting to the procurement plan shall
4    file an objection with the Commission. Within 10 days after
5    the filing, the Commission shall determine whether a
6    hearing is necessary. The Commission shall enter its order
7    confirming or modifying the procurement plan within 90 days
8    after the filing of the procurement plan by the Illinois
9    Power Agency.
10        (4) The Commission shall approve the procurement plan,
11    including expressly the forecast used in the procurement
12    plan, if the Commission determines that it will ensure
13    adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and
14    environmentally sustainable electric service at the lowest
15    total cost over time, taking into account any benefits of
16    price stability.
17    (e) Except as provided otherwise in this Section or Section
181-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, the The procurement
19process shall include each of the following components:
20        (1) Solicitation, pre-qualification, and registration
21    of bidders. The procurement administrator shall
22    disseminate information to potential bidders to promote a
23    procurement event, notify potential bidders that the
24    procurement administrator may enter into a post-bid price
25    negotiation with bidders that meet the applicable
26    benchmarks, provide supply requirements, and otherwise

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 351 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    explain the competitive procurement process. In addition
2    to such other publication as the procurement administrator
3    determines is appropriate, this information shall be
4    posted on the Illinois Power Agency's and the Commission's
5    websites. The procurement administrator shall also
6    administer the prequalification process, including
7    evaluation of credit worthiness, compliance with
8    procurement rules, and agreement to the standard form
9    contract developed pursuant to paragraph (2) of this
10    subsection (e). The procurement administrator shall then
11    identify and register bidders to participate in the
12    procurement event.
13        (2) Standard contract forms and credit terms and
14    instruments. The procurement administrator, in
15    consultation with the utilities, the Commission, and other
16    interested parties and subject to Commission oversight,
17    shall develop and provide standard contract forms for the
18    supplier contracts that meet generally accepted industry
19    practices. Standard credit terms and instruments that meet
20    generally accepted industry practices shall be similarly
21    developed. The procurement administrator shall make
22    available to the Commission all written comments it
23    receives on the contract forms, credit terms, or
24    instruments. If the procurement administrator cannot reach
25    agreement with the applicable electric utility as to the
26    contract terms and conditions, the procurement

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 352 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    administrator must notify the Commission of any disputed
2    terms and the Commission shall resolve the dispute. The
3    terms of the contracts shall not be subject to negotiation
4    by winning bidders, and the bidders must agree to the terms
5    of the contract in advance so that winning bids are
6    selected solely on the basis of price.
7        (3) Establishment of a market-based price benchmark.
8    As part of the development of the procurement process, the
9    procurement administrator, in consultation with the
10    Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement
11    monitor, shall establish benchmarks for evaluating the
12    final prices in the contracts for each of the products that
13    will be procured through the procurement process. The
14    benchmarks shall be based on price data for similar
15    products for the same delivery period and same delivery
16    hub, or other delivery hubs after adjusting for that
17    difference. The price benchmarks may also be adjusted to
18    take into account differences between the information
19    reflected in the underlying data sources and the specific
20    products and procurement process being used to procure
21    power for the Illinois utilities. The benchmarks shall be
22    confidential but shall be provided to, and will be subject
23    to Commission review and approval, prior to a procurement
24    event.
25        (4) Request for proposals competitive procurement
26    process. The procurement administrator shall design and

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 353 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    issue a request for proposals to supply electricity in
2    accordance with each utility's procurement plan, as
3    approved by the Commission. The request for proposals shall
4    set forth a procedure for sealed, binding commitment
5    bidding with pay-as-bid settlement, and provision for
6    selection of bids on the basis of price.
7        (5) A plan for implementing contingencies in the event
8    of supplier default or failure of the procurement process
9    to fully meet the expected load requirement due to
10    insufficient supplier participation, Commission rejection
11    of results, or any other cause.
12            (i) Event of supplier default: In the event of
13        supplier default, the utility shall review the
14        contract of the defaulting supplier to determine if the
15        amount of supply is 200 megawatts or greater, and if
16        there are more than 60 days remaining of the contract
17        term. If both of these conditions are met, and the
18        default results in termination of the contract, the
19        utility shall immediately notify the Illinois Power
20        Agency that a request for proposals must be issued to
21        procure replacement power, and the procurement
22        administrator shall run an additional procurement
23        event. If the contracted supply of the defaulting
24        supplier is less than 200 megawatts or there are less
25        than 60 days remaining of the contract term, the
26        utility shall procure power and energy from the

 

 

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1        applicable regional transmission organization market,
2        including ancillary services, capacity, and day-ahead
3        or real time energy, or both, for the duration of the
4        contract term to replace the contracted supply;
5        provided, however, that if a needed product is not
6        available through the regional transmission
7        organization market it shall be purchased from the
8        wholesale market.
9            (ii) Failure of the procurement process to fully
10        meet the expected load requirement: If the procurement
11        process fails to fully meet the expected load
12        requirement due to insufficient supplier participation
13        or due to a Commission rejection of the procurement
14        results, the procurement administrator, the
15        procurement monitor, and the Commission staff shall
16        meet within 10 days to analyze potential causes of low
17        supplier interest or causes for the Commission
18        decision. If changes are identified that would likely
19        result in increased supplier participation, or that
20        would address concerns causing the Commission to
21        reject the results of the prior procurement event, the
22        procurement administrator may implement those changes
23        and rerun the request for proposals process according
24        to a schedule determined by those parties and
25        consistent with Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
26        Agency Act and this subsection. In any event, a new

 

 

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1        request for proposals process shall be implemented by
2        the procurement administrator within 90 days after the
3        determination that the procurement process has failed
4        to fully meet the expected load requirement.
5            (iii) In all cases where there is insufficient
6        supply provided under contracts awarded through the
7        procurement process to fully meet the electric
8        utility's load requirement, the utility shall meet the
9        load requirement by procuring power and energy from the
10        applicable regional transmission organization market,
11        including ancillary services, capacity, and day-ahead
12        or real time energy, or both; provided, however, that
13        if a needed product is not available through the
14        regional transmission organization market it shall be
15        purchased from the wholesale market.
16        (6) The procurement process described in this
17    subsection is exempt from the requirements of the Illinois
18    Procurement Code, pursuant to Section 20-10 of that Code.
19    (f) Within 2 business days after opening the sealed bids,
20the procurement administrator shall submit a confidential
21report to the Commission. The report shall contain the results
22of the bidding for each of the products along with the
23procurement administrator's recommendation for the acceptance
24and rejection of bids based on the price benchmark criteria ,
25if applicable to the procurement, and other factors observed in
26the process, including those specified in this Section or

 

 

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1Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. The procurement
2monitor also shall submit a confidential report to the
3Commission within 2 business days after opening the sealed
4bids. The report shall contain the procurement monitor's
5assessment of bidder behavior in the process as well as an
6assessment of the procurement administrator's compliance with
7the procurement process and rules. The Commission shall review
8the confidential reports submitted by the procurement
9administrator and procurement monitor, and shall accept or
10reject the recommendations of the procurement administrator
11within 2 business days after receipt of the reports.
12    (g) Within 3 business days after the Commission decision
13approving the results of a procurement event, the utility shall
14enter into binding contractual arrangements with the winning
15suppliers using the standard form contracts; except that the
16utility shall not be required either directly or indirectly to
17execute the contracts if a tariff that is consistent with
18subsection (l) of this Section has not been approved and placed
19into effect for that utility.
20    (h) The names of the successful bidders and the load
21weighted average of the winning bid prices for each contract
22type and for each contract term shall be made available to the
23public at the time of Commission approval of a procurement
24event. The Commission, the procurement monitor, the
25procurement administrator, the Illinois Power Agency, and all
26participants in the procurement process shall maintain the

 

 

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1confidentiality of all other supplier and bidding information
2in a manner consistent with all applicable laws, rules,
3regulations, and tariffs. Confidential information, including
4the confidential reports submitted by the procurement
5administrator and procurement monitor pursuant to subsection
6(f) of this Section, shall not be made publicly available and
7shall not be discoverable by any party in any proceeding,
8absent a compelling demonstration of need, nor shall those
9reports be admissible in any proceeding other than one for law
10enforcement purposes.
11    (i) Within 2 business days after a Commission decision
12approving the results of a procurement event or such other date
13as may be required by the Commission from time to time, the
14utility shall file for informational purposes with the
15Commission its actual or estimated retail supply charges, as
16applicable, by customer supply group reflecting the costs
17associated with the procurement and computed in accordance with
18the tariffs filed pursuant to subsection (l) of this Section
19and approved by the Commission.
20    (j) Within 60 days following August 28, 2007 (the effective
21date of Public Act 95-481) this amendatory Act, each electric
22utility that on December 31, 2005 provided electric service to
23at least 100,000 customers in Illinois shall prepare and file
24with the Commission an initial procurement plan, which shall
25conform in all material respects to the requirements of the
26procurement plan set forth in subsection (b); provided,

 

 

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1however, that the Illinois Power Agency Act shall not apply to
2the initial procurement plan prepared pursuant to this
3subsection. The initial procurement plan shall identify the
4portfolio of power and energy products to be procured and
5delivered for the period June 2008 through May 2009, and shall
6identify the proposed procurement administrator, who shall
7have the same experience and expertise as is required of a
8procurement administrator hired pursuant to Section 1-75 of the
9Illinois Power Agency Act. Copies of the procurement plan shall
10be posted and made publicly available on the Commission's
11website. The initial procurement plan may include contracts for
12renewable resources that extend beyond May 2009.
13        (i) Within 14 days following filing of the initial
14    procurement plan, any person may file a detailed objection
15    with the Commission contesting the procurement plan
16    submitted by the electric utility. All objections to the
17    electric utility's plan shall be specific, supported by
18    data or other detailed analyses. The electric utility may
19    file a response to any objections to its procurement plan
20    within 7 days after the date objections are due to be
21    filed. Within 7 days after the date the utility's response
22    is due, the Commission shall determine whether a hearing is
23    necessary. If it determines that a hearing is necessary, it
24    shall require the hearing to be completed and issue an
25    order on the procurement plan within 60 days after the
26    filing of the procurement plan by the electric utility.

 

 

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1        (ii) The order shall approve or modify the procurement
2    plan, approve an independent procurement administrator,
3    and approve or modify the electric utility's tariffs that
4    are proposed with the initial procurement plan. The
5    Commission shall approve the procurement plan if the
6    Commission determines that it will ensure adequate,
7    reliable, affordable, efficient, and environmentally
8    sustainable electric service at the lowest total cost over
9    time, taking into account any benefits of price stability.
10    (k)(1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the
11Illinois Power Agency shall also include in its procurement
12plans and processes the procurement of capacity to satisfy the
13Planning Reserve Margin Requirements attributable to the
14electric load of all of the retail customers of electric
15utilities that serve less than 3,000,000 retail customers but
16more than 500,000 retail customers in this State and that are
17located in the Applicable Local Resource Zone. Capacity
18procured under this subsection (k) shall not include capacity
19for the load associated with customers served by a municipal
20utility or an electric cooperative. The capacity shall be
21procured pursuant to a competitive procurement event, the
22results of which shall be subject to approval by the
23Commission, and the electric utility shall be the counterparty
24to the contracts for the capacity procured. To the extent that
25any provisions of this Section or the Illinois Power Agency Act
26do not conflict with, and are otherwise applicable to, this

 

 

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1subsection (k), those provisions shall apply to the procurement
2event.
3        (2) For the delivery year commencing June 1, 2018, and
4    notwithstanding whether a procurement event is otherwise
5    conducted under this Section, the Illinois Power Agency
6    shall conduct a procurement process to procure capacity for
7    the full Planning Reserve Margin Requirement of the
8    Applicable Local Resource Zone, through contracts that are
9    four years in duration, subject to the following:
10            (A) the amount of capacity to be procured under
11        this paragraph (2) shall be reduced by the amount of
12        any Qualifying Preexisting Capacity and to the extent
13        necessary to ensure that the procurement does not
14        exceed the applicable Planning Reserve Margin
15        Requirements for the delivery year commencing June 1,
16        2018; and
17            (B) The procurement required by this paragraph (2)
18        shall be subject to the requirements of this subsection
19        (k) to the extent that the provisions of this
20        subsection (k) do not conflict with this paragraph (2).
21        For purposes of this Section, "Qualifying Preexisting
22    Capacity" means capacity purchased prior to January 1,
23    2018, to serve retail customers of a Load Serving Entity
24    subject to the requirements of this subsection (k) that the
25    Load Serving Entity elects to use to offset its capacity
26    obligations, provided that Qualifying Preexisting Capacity

 

 

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1    shall not offset capacity requirements under this
2    subsection (k) after May 31, 2022. A Load Serving Entity
3    electing to offset its capacity requirements with
4    Qualifying Preexisting Capacity shall notify the Illinois
5    Power Agency of its election no later than 90 days prior to
6    the scheduled date for the capacity procurement event
7    required by this paragraph (2).
8        (3) For the delivery years commencing June 1, 2019,
9    June 1, 2020, and June 1, 2021, the Illinois Power Agency
10    shall conduct procurement processes to procure capacity
11    equal to, in combination with capacity previously procured
12    under this subsection (k) and Qualifying Preexisting
13    Capacity, the full Planning Reserve Margin Requirement of
14    the Applicable Local Resource Zone, for those delivery
15    years.
16        (4) For the delivery years commencing June 1, 2022, and
17    each June 1 thereafter, the Illinois Power Agency shall
18    develop capacity procurement plans and processes based on a
19    20 year planning horizon, and shall procure capacity
20    sufficient to meet the Planning Reserve Margin Requirement
21    of the Applicable Local Resource Zone, provided, that the
22    majority of capacity procured for each delivery year shall
23    be pursuant to contracts with terms of 4 to 6 years, the
24    maximum contract length shall be 10 years, and the Illinois
25    Power Agency may procure capacity pursuant to 1 year
26    contracts as necessary; and provided further, that the

 

 

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1    contracts for capacity shall conform to any minimum
2    contract length and locational requirements established by
3    the Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., or its
4    successor's, open access transmission and energy markets
5    tariff, as that tariff may be updated from time to time,
6    for a Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan or successor mechanism.
7        (5) An electric generating unit or resource may only
8    participate in a procurement event under this subsection
9    (k) if it meets the following criteria:
10            (A) The electric generating unit or resource is
11        located in the Applicable Local Resource Zone of the
12        Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., or its
13        successor, or has firm transmission rights or an
14        equivalent transmission service into the Applicable
15        Local Resource Zone of the Midcontinent Independent
16        System Operator, Inc., or its successor.
17            (B) Demand response resources, energy efficiency
18        resources, and renewable generation resources may
19        participate in the procurement events held under this
20        subsection (k) if and to the extent the resource
21        demonstrates that it satisfies the requirements of the
22        open access transmission and energy markets tariff of
23        the Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., or
24        its successor, to be designated as a capacity resource
25        in a Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan or successor
26        mechanism; provided that, utility-scale wind and

 

 

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1        photovoltaic generating facilities may not bid to
2        supply capacity that exceeds the generating facility's
3        effective load carrying capability, as defined and
4        calculated by the Midcontinent Independent System
5        Operator, Inc., or its successor.
6            (C) The electric generating unit or resource is not
7        owned by a municipal utility; an electric cooperative;
8        or a group, association, or consortium of municipal
9        utilities or electric cooperatives.
10            (D) The owner of the electric generating unit or
11        resource must commit to pay any fees assessed by the
12        Illinois Power Agency to recover the Agency's costs of
13        conducting the procurement events and any related
14        activities under this subsection (k).
15            (E) The electric generating unit or resource
16        satisfies all of the requirements that are necessary to
17        be designated as a Zonal Resource Credit or other
18        Planning Resource in a Load Serving Entity's Fixed
19        Resource Adequacy Plan, or a successor mechanism, as
20        those requirements are defined in the Midcontinent
21        Independent System Operator, Inc., or its successor's,
22        open access transmission and energy markets tariff, as
23        that tariff may be updated from time to time.
24        (6) An electric generating unit or resource may only
25    participate in procurement events conducted under
26    paragraphs (2) and (3) of this subsection (k) if it meets

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 364 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    the criteria specified in paragraph (5) of this subsection
2    (k) and the following additional criteria:
3            (A) The capital or operating costs of the electric
4        generating unit or resource are not being recovered
5        through rates regulated by this State or any other
6        state or states.
7            (B) If the electric generating unit or resource
8        utilizes a solid fuel, the generating unit or resource
9        must be capable of maintaining, and must submit a plan
10        demonstrating how it will maintain, at the site of the
11        unit or resource, an average inventory of fuel for the
12        12-month period of each delivery year that is equal to
13        or greater than the inventory needed for 30 days of
14        operation based on normal monthly fuel consumption.
15        The fuel inventory plan may be submitted on a
16        confidential basis and shall be treated and maintained
17        by the Illinois Power Agency, the procurement
18        administrator, and the Commission as confidential and
19        proprietary and exempt from disclosure under
20        subparagraphs (a) and (g) of paragraph (1) of Section 7
21        of the Freedom of Information Act.
22            (C) If the electric generating unit or resource
23        utilizes natural gas as a fuel, the owner of the
24        generating unit or resource must submit a fuel firming
25        plan demonstrating how it will obtain and maintain,
26        through natural gas supply contracts or pipeline

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 365 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        transportation contracts, natural gas supplies
2        sufficient to meet its obligations under the capacity
3        contract. The fuel firming plan may be submitted on a
4        confidential basis and shall be treated and maintained
5        by the Illinois Power Agency, the procurement
6        administrator, and the Commission as confidential and
7        proprietary and exempt from disclosure under
8        subparagraphs (a) and (g) of paragraph (1) of Section 7
9        of the Freedom of Information Act.
10            (D) The generating unit must have achieved an
11        average monthly equivalent availability factor of 75%
12        or greater for the 36 month period ended December 31
13        preceding the procurement event.
14            (E) The owner of the electric generating unit or
15        resource is registered with the North American
16        Electric Reliability Corporation as the generator
17        owner for the unit or resource and is subject to the
18        North American Electric Reliability Corporation's
19        mandatory reliability standards that were adopted in
20        accordance with Section 215(d) of the Federal Power Act
21        and that are applicable to owners of a generating unit
22        or resource. This requirement is satisfied if the owner
23        of the generating unit or resource is a party to a
24        joint registration organization filing with the North
25        American Electric Reliability Corporation pursuant to
26        which another entity has assumed responsibility for

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 366 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        compliance with the applicable reliability standards.
2            (F) The operator of the electric generating unit or
3        resource is registered with the North American
4        Electric Reliability Corporation as the generator
5        operator for the unit or resource and is subject to the
6        North American Electric Reliability Corporation's
7        mandatory reliability standards that were adopted in
8        accordance with Section 215(d) of the Federal Power Act
9        and that are applicable to operators of a generating
10        unit or resource.
11        (7) Bids submitted by an electric generating unit or
12    resource pursuant to the procurement events conducted
13    under paragraph (2) of this subsection (k) shall be subject
14    to a bid cap equal to the clearing price in the capacity
15    procurement event conducted by the Illinois Power Agency in
16    2017 for capacity to meet the capacity requirements of the
17    eligible retail customers of the electric utility serving
18    the Applicable Local Resource Zone, plus 10%. Bids that do
19    not exceed the bid cap shall not require supporting data.
20    Bids may exceed the bid cap, provided that each such bid
21    complies with the requirements of subparagraphs (A) and (B)
22    of this paragraph (7).
23            (A) Bids that exceed the bid cap shall be
24        accompanied by data, which shall include cost
25        projections, expressed on a per megawatt-hour basis
26        over the term for which capacity is being bid, that

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 367 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        address the following: operation and maintenance
2        expenses; fully allocated overhead costs (which, for
3        nuclear units, shall be allocated using the
4        methodology developed by the Institute for Nuclear
5        Power Operations); fuel expenditures; non-fuel capital
6        expenditures; spent fuel expenditures and asset
7        retirement obligations, if applicable; a return on
8        working capital; and any other costs necessary for
9        continued operations, provided that for purposes of
10        this paragraph (7), "necessary" means that the costs
11        could reasonably be avoided only by ceasing operations
12        of the electric generating unit or resource. In
13        addition, the electric generating unit or resource
14        shall adjust those cost projections to reflect
15        operational risks that include, but are not limited to,
16        operational cost risk, which is the risk that operating
17        costs will be higher than reasonably anticipated, and
18        capacity factor risk, which is the risk that per
19        megawatthour costs will be higher than anticipated
20        because of a lower than expected capacity factor. The
21        electric generating unit or resource shall further
22        adjust the cost projections by a per megawatthour
23        facility adjustment to reflect market risks that
24        include, but are not limited to, liquidated damages
25        risk, which is the risk of a forced outage and the
26        associated costs of covering contractual obligations;

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 368 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        volatility risk, which is the risk that output from the
2        electric generating unit or resource may not be able to
3        be sold at the same forward prices used as set forth in
4        subparagraph (B) of this paragraph (7); and basis risk,
5        which is the risk that the difference between the nodal
6        energy price for the electric generating unit or
7        resource and the associated zone-wide energy price
8        will exceed the values calculated as set forth in
9        subparagraph (B) of this paragraph (7).
10            (B) Bids that exceed the bid cap shall also include
11        an estimate of energy revenue, which shall be
12        calculated using the following computations:
13                (i) Projected energy prices: the electric
14            generating unit or resource shall calculate
15            projected energy prices for the term for which
16            capacity is being bid based on actual forward
17            market prices as published by the Intercontinental
18            Exchange, which shall be calculated as the average
19            forward market energy price at the PJM
20            Interconnection, LLC Northern Illinois Hub for all
21            trade dates during the immediately preceding
22            12-month period that began on March 1 and ended
23            February 28 and adjusted by the electric
24            generating unit or resource to reflect the
25            historic basis price difference between the
26            Northern Illinois Hub and the average day ahead

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 369 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1            price for energy during that period at the
2            generating facility bus.
3                (ii) Projected capacity factor: for the term
4            for which capacity is being bid, the electric
5            generating unit or resource shall estimate the
6            generation output from the unit.
7        (8) (A) The Illinois Power Agency's selection of
8    winning bids in capacity procurement events conducted
9    under this subsection (k) shall be based on the total cost
10    of the selected capacity and on environmental, reliability
11    and resource adequacy criteria deemed appropriate by the
12    Illinois Power Agency and set forth in a procurement plan
13    that is approved by the Commission. Contracts for capacity
14    shall be awarded on a pay-as-bid basis, subject to any
15    applicable adjustment to the bid price as provided for in
16    this paragraph (8). For each procurement event, the
17    procurement administrator, in consultation with the
18    Commission staff, Illinois Power Agency staff, and the
19    procurement monitor, shall establish confidential
20    market-based benchmarks for evaluating the final prices in
21    the contracts for the capacity that will be procured. The
22    benchmarks shall be based on market prices for capacity.
23    The Illinois Power Agency shall not be required to select
24    capacity from electric generating units or resources that
25    satisfy the criteria set forth in paragraph (5) of this
26    subsection (K) and, if applicable, paragraph (6) of this

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 370 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    subsection (k), but whose bids exceed the benchmarks
2    established under this paragraph (8); provided that, the
3    Illinois Power Agency shall have the authority to accept
4    contract prices that exceed the applicable benchmark if the
5    Illinois Power Agency determines that selection of the
6    electric generating unit or resource is warranted based on
7    additional environmental, reliability, or resource
8    adequacy benefits provided by the procurement of contracts
9    for capacity from such generating units or resources. When
10    evaluating a bid that exceeds the applicable benchmark, the
11    Illinois Power Agency shall deduct the value of any avoided
12    greenhouse gas emissions, but only if the following
13    requirements are satisfied: the electric generating unit
14    or resource will not receive renewable energy credits, zero
15    emission credits, or carbon emission credits under Section
16    1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act; no other national,
17    regional, state, or other program or standard has been
18    implemented under which the electric generating unit or
19    resource could be compensated for the zero-carbon
20    attributes of the unit or resource similar to the renewable
21    portfolio standard, clean coal portfolio standard, or zero
22    emission standard set forth in Section 1-75 of the Illinois
23    Power Agency Act; and neither the capital nor operating
24    costs of the electric generating unit or resource are being
25    recovered through rates regulated by this State or any
26    other state or states. The value of avoided greenhouse gas

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 371 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    emissions shall be measured as the product of the
2    generating unit's or resource's output multiplied by the
3    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency eGrid subregion
4    carbon dioxide emission rate and the U.S. Interagency
5    Working Group on Social Cost of Carbon's price in the
6    August 2016 Technical Update using a 3% discount rate,
7    adjusted for inflation for each year of the program. The
8    Illinois Power Agency shall have authority to negotiate
9    with bidders for lower contract prices for capacity from
10    electric generating units or resources than the bid
11    submitted for the electric generating unit or resource.
12            (B) For any delivery year for which capacity
13        resources are procured in procurement events conducted
14        under this subsection (k), 70% of the required capacity
15        shall be procured from generating units or resources
16        that are physically located in the Applicable Local
17        Resource Zone. The mix of capacity resources selected
18        in any procurement event conducted under this
19        subsection (k) must include sufficient qualified Zonal
20        Resource Credits in the Applicable Local Resource Zone
21        to satisfy the Planning Reserve Margin Requirements of
22        the open access transmission and energy markets tariff
23        of the Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc.,
24        or its successor, and must otherwise be consistent with
25        the Planning Reserve Margin Requirements for capacity
26        established by the Midcontinent Independent System

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 372 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        Operator, Inc., or its successor. Provided, that if
2        application of the benchmarks as provided for in
3        subparagraph (B) of this paragraph (8) precludes the
4        procurement of sufficient capacity to satisfy the
5        Planning Reserve Margin Requirements for the
6        applicable delivery year, the remaining capacity
7        obligation shall be procured in the Planning Resource
8        Auction held by the Midcontinent Independent System
9        Operator, Inc., or its successor.
10            (C) Upon the results of a procurement event
11        conducted under this subsection (k) being approved by
12        the Commission, the electric utility shall enter into
13        binding contractual arrangements with the winning
14        suppliers.
15            (D) The capacity procurement contracts shall
16        include the following performance assurance
17        requirements:
18                (i) The electric generating unit or resource
19            shall continue to operate for the duration of the
20            contract term, subject to typical industry force
21            majeure conditions which shall be set forth in the
22            capacity contract.
23                (ii) If, during a calendar month, the electric
24            generating unit or resource is generating at less
25            than its maximum contracted capacity during a
26            North American Electric Reliability Corporation

 

 

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1            EEA1, EEA2, or EEA3 event, as defined and
2            determined by the North American Electric
3            Reliability Corporation, then the payments due to
4            the owner of the generating unit under the contract
5            or contracts for that month will be reduced by
6            $1,000 per megawatthour during the duration of the
7            event during that month, but not to less than zero,
8            for the difference between the actual generation
9            level of the unit or resource and the generation
10            level requested from the unit or resource by the
11            Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., or
12            its successor; provided that, there shall be no
13            reduction in payments if and to the extent that the
14            reduced generation of the unit or resource is due
15            to a planned maintenance outage, a transmission
16            system outage or curtailment that reduces the
17            amount of generation the unit or resource can
18            deliver into the transmission system, or, as
19            specified in the capacity contract, any other
20            commonly recognized force majeure event.
21            (E) Contracts for capacity from electric
22        generating units or other resources located outside of
23        the Applicable Local Resource Zone shall contain the
24        following provisions:
25                (i) If the clearing price in the Planning
26            Resource Auction of the Midcontinent Independent

 

 

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1            System Operator, Inc., or its successor, for the
2            Applicable Local Resource Zone is greater than the
3            clearing price of the source Local Resource Zone of
4            the electric generating unit or resource, then the
5            payment due to the electric generating unit or
6            resource will be reduced by the difference in the
7            clearing prices between the two Local Resource
8            Zones multiplied by the quantity of capacity
9            contracted.
10                (ii) If the clearing price in the Planning
11            Resource Auction of the Midcontinent Independent
12            System Operator, Inc., or its successor, for the
13            Applicable Local Resource Zone is less than the
14            clearing price of the source Local Resource Zone of
15            the electric generating unit or resource, then the
16            payment due to the electric generating unit or
17            resource will be increased by the difference in the
18            clearing prices between the two Local Resource
19            Zones multiplied by the quantity of capacity
20            contracted.
21        (9) The capacity procurement plans described in this
22    subsection (k) and approved by the Commission shall address
23    load forecasting, billing, and settlement as follows:
24            (A) The plan shall identify whether the
25        Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc. or the
26        electric utility for which the capacity is being

 

 

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1        procured shall serve as the administrator for billing
2        and settlement purposes. The Midcontinent Independent
3        System Operator, Inc., or its successor, shall be given
4        the right of first refusal to serve as the
5        administrator for billing and settlement purposes. The
6        administrator for billing and settlement purposes
7        shall perform its role in a competitively neutral
8        manner among all Load Serving Entities.
9            (B) Electric utilities subject to the requirements
10        of this subsection (k) shall forecast the capacity
11        requirements to be covered by the procurement, taking
12        into account Qualifying Preexisting Capacity.
13            (C) Each Load Serving Entity shall provide to the
14        electric utility or the administrator for billing and
15        settlement purposes, as applicable, information needed
16        by the electric utility or administrator to perform its
17        responsibilities under this paragraph (9), including
18        information on (i) the Load Serving Entity's
19        Qualifying Preexisting Capacity, if any; and (ii) the
20        Load Serving Entity's projected load of retail
21        customers in the Applicable Local Resource Zone for the
22        period or periods to be covered by the procurement.
23        This information shall be provided, and shall be
24        maintained by the electric utility or the
25        administrator, as applicable, on a confidential basis,
26        including maintaining the information so that it

 

 

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1        cannot be accessed by personnel of the electric utility
2        or administrator responsible for wholesale or retail
3        power marketing or sales.
4            (D) The administrator for billing and settlement
5        purposes shall apportion the total procured capacity
6        among each of the Load Serving Entities in accordance
7        with the sum of their respective loads as measured by
8        the individual peak load contributions of the retail
9        customers they serve in the Applicable Local Resource
10        Zone, taking into account the portion of each Load
11        Serving Entity's capacity requirements for the load of
12        retail customers it serves in the Applicable Local
13        Resource Zone that will be met by Qualifying
14        Preexisting Capacity and reducing the amount otherwise
15        to be apportioned to the Load Serving Entity by that
16        portion. The administrator for billing and settlement
17        purposes shall bill each Load Serving Entity daily for
18        its apportioned share of the purchased capacity, using
19        the weighted average of the capacity prices specified
20        in the capacity contracts. The procurement plan shall
21        provide for the transfer of revenues collected from
22        each Load Serving Entity to the electric utility that
23        is the counterparty to the capacity contracts entered
24        into as a result of the procurement. Nothing in this
25        subsection (k) shall impair the ability of the Load
26        Serving Entity to allocate, bill, and collect the

 

 

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1        capacity costs billed to it under this subparagraph (D)
2        in the manner of its own choosing from the retail
3        customers it serves.
4        (10) Nothing in this subsection (k) is intended to
5    preclude the Illinois Power Agency or Commission from
6    conducting the procurement events and processes described
7    in this subsection (k) in conjunction with other
8    procurement plans and processes described in this Section
9    or Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, to the
10    extent the Agency and Commission find that approach is
11    appropriate and practicable.
12        (11) It is the intent of this subsection (k) that the
13    Illinois Power Agency's and the Commission's
14    implementation of this subsection (k), including, but not
15    limited to, the timing and number of procurement events and
16    the duration of contracts, shall conform, at a minimum, to
17    any applicable requirements of the open access
18    transmission and energy markets tariff of the Midcontinent
19    Independent System Operator, Inc., or its successor, as
20    that tariff may be changed, replaced, or superseded from
21    time to time, that are necessary for Load Serving Entities
22    to exercise and implement the Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan
23    capacity procurement option, or a successor capacity
24    procurement mechanism. Notwithstanding anything to the
25    contrary, the Illinois Power Agency and the Commission
26    shall have the authority to take all steps necessary to

 

 

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1    implement this subsection (k) consistent with applicable
2    federal tariffs, and as those tariffs may be changed,
3    replaced, or superseded from time to time, to procure
4    capacity for the electric load of retail customers of
5    electric utilities subject to the requirements of this
6    subsection (k). In order to promote price stability for
7    residential and small commercial customers during the
8    transition to competition in Illinois, and notwithstanding
9    any other provision of this Act, each electric utility
10    subject to this Section shall enter into one or more
11    multi-year financial swap contracts that become effective
12    on the effective date of this amendatory Act. These
13    contracts may be executed with generators and power
14    marketers, including affiliated interests of the electric
15    utility. These contracts shall be for a term of no more
16    than 5 years and shall, for each respective utility or for
17    any Illinois electric utilities that are affiliated by
18    virtue of a common parent company and that are thereby
19    considered a single electric utility for purposes of this
20    subsection (k), not exceed in the aggregate 3,000 megawatts
21    for any hour of the year. The contracts shall be financial
22    contracts and not energy sales contracts. The contracts
23    shall be executed as transactions under a negotiated master
24    agreement based on the form of master agreement for
25    financial swap contracts sponsored by the International
26    Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. and shall be

 

 

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1    considered pre-existing contracts in the utilities'
2    procurement plans for residential and small commercial
3    customers. Costs incurred pursuant to a contract
4    authorized by this subsection (k) shall be deemed prudently
5    incurred and reasonable in amount and the electric utility
6    shall be entitled to full cost recovery pursuant to the
7    tariffs filed with the Commission.
8    (k-5) (Blank). In order to promote price stability for
9residential and small commercial customers during the
10infrastructure investment program described in subsection (b)
11of Section 16-108.5 of this Act, and notwithstanding any other
12provision of this Act or the Illinois Power Agency Act, for
13each electric utility that serves more than one million retail
14customers in Illinois, the Illinois Power Agency shall conduct
15a procurement event within 120 days after October 26, 2011 (the
16effective date of Public Act 97-616) and may procure contracts
17for energy and renewable energy credits for the period June 1,
182013 through December 31, 2017 that satisfy the requirements of
19this subsection (k-5), including the benchmarks described in
20this subsection. These contracts shall be entered into as the
21result of a competitive procurement event, and, to the extent
22that any provisions of this Section or the Illinois Power
23Agency Act do not conflict with this subsection (k-5), such
24provisions shall apply to the procurement event. The energy
25contracts shall be for 24 hour by 7 day supply over a term that
26runs from the first delivery year through December 31, 2017.

 

 

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1For a utility that serves over 2 million customers, the energy
2contracts shall be multi-year with pricing escalating at 2.5%
3per annum. The energy contracts may be designed as financial
4swaps or may require physical delivery.
5    Within 30 days of October 26, 2011 (the effective date of
6Public Act 97-616), each such utility shall submit to the
7Agency updated load forecasts for the period June 1, 2013
8through December 31, 2017. The megawatt volume of the contracts
9shall be based on the updated load forecasts of the minimum
10monthly on-peak or off-peak average load requirements shown in
11the forecasts, taking into account any existing energy
12contracts in effect as well as the expected migration of the
13utility's customers to alternative retail electric suppliers.
14The renewable energy credit volume shall be based on the number
15of credits that would satisfy the requirements of subsection
16(c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, subject
17to the rate impact caps and other provisions of subsection (c)
18of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. The
19evaluation of contract bids in the competitive procurement
20events for energy and for renewable energy credits shall
21incorporate price benchmarks set collaboratively by the
22Agency, the procurement administrator, the staff of the
23Commission, and the procurement monitor. If the contracts are
24swap contracts, then they shall be executed as transactions
25under a negotiated master agreement based on the form of master
26agreement for financial swap contracts sponsored by the

 

 

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1International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Costs
2incurred pursuant to a contract authorized by this subsection
3(k-5) shall be deemed prudently incurred and reasonable in
4amount and the electric utility shall be entitled to full cost
5recovery pursuant to the tariffs filed with the Commission.
6    The cost of administering the procurement event described
7in this subsection (k-5) shall be paid by the winning supplier
8or suppliers to the procurement administrator through a
9supplier fee. In the event that there is no winning supplier
10for a particular utility, such utility will pay the procurement
11administrator for the costs associated with the procurement
12event, and those costs shall not be a recoverable expense.
13Nothing in this subsection (k-5) is intended to alter the
14recovery of costs for any other procurement event.
15    (l) An electric utility shall recover its costs incurred
16under this Section, including, but not limited to, its
17allocated share of costs for capacity procured under subsection
18(k) of this Section, and the costs of procuring power and
19energy demand-response resources under this Section. The
20utility shall file with the initial procurement plan its
21proposed tariffs through which its costs of procuring power
22that are incurred pursuant to a Commission-approved
23procurement plan and those other costs identified in this
24subsection (l), will be recovered. The tariffs shall include a
25formula rate or charge designed to pass through both the costs
26incurred by the utility in procuring a supply of electric power

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 382 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1and energy for the applicable customer classes with no mark-up
2or return on the price paid by the utility for that supply,
3plus any just and reasonable costs that the utility incurs in
4arranging and providing for the supply of electric power and
5energy. The formula rate or charge shall also contain
6provisions that ensure that its application does not result in
7over or under recovery due to changes in customer usage and
8demand patterns, and that provide for the correction, on at
9least an annual basis, of any accounting errors that may occur.
10A utility shall recover through the tariff all reasonable costs
11incurred to implement or comply with any procurement plan that
12is developed and put into effect pursuant to Section 1-75 of
13the Illinois Power Agency Act and this Section, including any
14fees assessed by the Illinois Power Agency, costs associated
15with load balancing, and contingency plan costs. The electric
16utility shall also recover its full costs of procuring electric
17supply for which it contracted before the effective date of
18this Section in conjunction with the provision of full
19requirements service under fixed-price bundled service tariffs
20subsequent to December 31, 2006. All such costs shall be deemed
21to have been prudently incurred. The pass-through tariffs that
22are filed and approved pursuant to this Section shall not be
23subject to review under, or in any way limited by, Section
2416-111(i) of this Act. All of the costs incurred by the
25electric utility associated with the purchase of zero emission
26credits in accordance with subsection (d-5) of Section 1-75 of

 

 

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1the Illinois Power Agency Act and, beginning June 1, 2017, all
2of the costs incurred by the electric utility associated with
3the purchase of renewable energy resources in accordance with
4Sections 1-56 and 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, shall
5be recovered through the electric utility's tariffed charges
6applicable to all of its retail customers, as specified in
7subsection (k) of Section 16-108 of this Act, and shall not be
8recovered through the electric utility's tariffed charges for
9electric power and energy supply to its eligible retail
10customers.
11    (m) The Commission has the authority to adopt rules to
12carry out the provisions of this Section. For the public
13interest, safety, and welfare, the Commission also has
14authority to adopt rules to carry out the provisions of this
15Section on an emergency basis immediately following August 28,
162007 (the effective date of Public Act 95-481) this amendatory
17Act.
18    (n) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, any
19affiliated electric utilities that submit a single procurement
20plan covering their combined needs may procure for those
21combined needs in conjunction with that plan, and may enter
22jointly into power supply contracts, purchases, and other
23procurement arrangements, and allocate capacity and energy and
24cost responsibility therefor among themselves in proportion to
25their requirements.
26    (o) On or before June 1 of each year, the Commission shall

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 384 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1hold an informal hearing for the purpose of receiving comments
2on the prior year's procurement process and any recommendations
3for change.
4    (p) An electric utility subject to this Section may propose
5to invest, lease, own, or operate an electric generation
6facility as part of its procurement plan, provided the utility
7demonstrates that such facility is the least-cost option to
8provide electric service to those eligible retail customers
9included in the plan's electric supply service requirements. If
10the facility is shown to be the least-cost option and is
11included in a procurement plan prepared in accordance with
12Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and this Section,
13then the electric utility shall make a filing pursuant to
14Section 8-406 of this Act, and may request of the Commission
15any statutory relief required thereunder. If the Commission
16grants all of the necessary approvals for the proposed
17facility, such supply shall thereafter be considered as a
18pre-existing contract under subsection (b) of this Section. The
19Commission shall in any order approving a proposal under this
20subsection specify how the utility will recover the prudently
21incurred costs of investing in, leasing, owning, or operating
22such generation facility through just and reasonable rates
23charged to those eligible retail customers included in the
24plan's electric supply service requirements. Cost recovery for
25facilities included in the utility's procurement plan pursuant
26to this subsection shall not be subject to review under or in

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 385 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1any way limited by the provisions of Section 16-111(i) of this
2Act. Nothing in this Section is intended to prohibit a utility
3from filing for a fuel adjustment clause as is otherwise
4permitted under Section 9-220 of this Act.
5    (q) If the Illinois Power Agency filed with the Commission,
6under Section 16-111.5 of this Act, its proposed procurement
7plan for the period commencing June 1, 2017, and the Commission
8has not yet entered its final order approving the plan on or
9before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th
10General Assembly, then the Illinois Power Agency shall file a
11notice of withdrawal with the Commission, after the effective
12date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, to
13withdraw the proposed procurement of renewable energy
14resources to be approved under the plan, other than the
15procurement of renewable energy credits from distributed
16renewable energy generation devices using funds previously
17collected from electric utilities' retail customers that take
18service pursuant to electric utilities' hourly pricing tariff
19or tariffs. Upon receipt of the notice, the Commission shall
20enter an order that approves the withdrawal of the proposed
21procurement of renewable energy resources from the plan. The
22initially proposed procurement of renewable energy resources
23shall not be approved or be the subject of any further hearing,
24investigation, proceeding, or order of any kind.
25    This amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly preempts
26and supersedes any order entered by the Commission that

 

 

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1approved the Illinois Power Agency's procurement plan for the
2period commencing June 1, 2017, to the extent it is
3inconsistent with the provisions of this amendatory Act of the
499th General Assembly. To the extent any previously entered
5order approved the procurement of renewable energy resources,
6the portion of that order approving the procurement shall be
7void, other than the procurement of renewable energy credits
8from distributed renewable energy generation devices using
9funds previously collected from electric utilities' retail
10customers that take service under electric utilities' hourly
11pricing tariff or tariffs.
12(Source: P.A. 97-325, eff. 8-12-11; 97-616, eff. 10-26-11;
1397-813, eff. 7-13-12; revised 9-14-16.)
 
14    (220 ILCS 5/16-111.5B)
15    Sec. 16-111.5B. Provisions relating to energy efficiency
16procurement.
17    (a) Procurement Beginning in 2012, procurement plans
18prepared and filed pursuant to Section 16-111.5 of this Act
19during the years 2012 through 2015 shall be subject to the
20following additional requirements:
21        (1) The analysis included pursuant to paragraph (2) of
22    subsection (b) of Section 16-111.5 shall also include the
23    impact of energy efficiency building codes or appliance
24    standards, both current and projected.
25        (2) The procurement plan components described in

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 387 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    subsection (b) of Section 16-111.5 shall also include an
2    assessment of opportunities to expand the programs
3    promoting energy efficiency measures that have been
4    offered under plans approved pursuant to Section 8-103 of
5    this Act or to implement additional cost-effective energy
6    efficiency programs or measures.
7        (3) In addition to the information provided pursuant to
8    paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of this
9    Act, each Illinois utility procuring power pursuant to that
10    Section shall annually provide to the Illinois Power Agency
11    by July 15 of each year, or such other date as may be
12    required by the Commission or Agency, an assessment of
13    cost-effective energy efficiency programs or measures that
14    could be included in the procurement plan. The assessment
15    shall include the following:
16            (A) A comprehensive energy efficiency potential
17        study for the utility's service territory that was
18        completed within the past 3 years.
19            (B) Beginning in 2014, the most recent analysis
20        submitted pursuant to Section 8-103A of this Act and
21        approved by the Commission under subsection (f) of
22        Section 8-103 of this Act.
23            (C) Identification of new or expanded
24        cost-effective energy efficiency programs or measures
25        that are incremental to those included in energy
26        efficiency and demand-response plans approved by the

 

 

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1        Commission pursuant to Section 8-103 of this Act and
2        that would be offered to all retail customers whose
3        electric service has not been declared competitive
4        under Section 16-113 of this Act and who are eligible
5        to purchase power and energy from the utility under
6        fixed-price bundled service tariffs, regardless of
7        whether such customers actually do purchase such power
8        and energy from the utility.
9            (D) Analysis showing that the new or expanded
10        cost-effective energy efficiency programs or measures
11        would lead to a reduction in the overall cost of
12        electric service.
13            (E) Analysis of how the cost of procuring
14        additional cost-effective energy efficiency measures
15        compares over the life of the measures to the
16        prevailing cost of comparable supply.
17            (F) An energy savings goal, expressed in
18        megawatt-hours, for the year in which the measures will
19        be implemented.
20            (G) For each expanded or new program, the estimated
21        amount that the program may reduce the agency's need to
22        procure supply.
23        In preparing such assessments, a utility shall conduct
24    an annual solicitation process for purposes of requesting
25    proposals from third-party vendors, the results of which
26    shall be provided to the Agency as part of the assessment,

 

 

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1    including documentation of all bids received. The utility
2    shall develop requests for proposals consistent with the
3    manner in which it develops requests for proposals under
4    plans approved pursuant to Section 8-103 of this Act, which
5    considers input from the Agency and interested
6    stakeholders.
7        (4) The Illinois Power Agency shall include in the
8    procurement plan prepared pursuant to paragraph (2) of
9    subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of this Act energy
10    efficiency programs and measures it determines are
11    cost-effective and the associated annual energy savings
12    goal included in the annual solicitation process and
13    assessment submitted pursuant to paragraph (3) of this
14    subsection (a).
15        (5) Pursuant to paragraph (4) of subsection (d) of
16    Section 16-111.5 of this Act, the Commission shall also
17    approve the energy efficiency programs and measures
18    included in the procurement plan, including the annual
19    energy savings goal, if the Commission determines they
20    fully capture the potential for all achievable
21    cost-effective savings, to the extent practicable, and
22    otherwise satisfy the requirements of Section 8-103 of this
23    Act.
24        In the event the Commission approves the procurement of
25    additional energy efficiency, it shall reduce the amount of
26    power to be procured under the procurement plan to reflect

 

 

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1    the additional energy efficiency and shall direct the
2    utility to undertake the procurement of such energy
3    efficiency, which shall not be subject to the requirements
4    of subsection (e) of Section 16-111.5 of this Act. The
5    utility shall consider input from the Agency and interested
6    stakeholders on the procurement and administration
7    process. The requirements set forth in paragraphs (1)
8    through (5) of this subsection (a) shall terminate after
9    the filing of the procurement plan in 2015, and no energy
10    efficiency shall be procured by the Agency thereafter.
11    Energy efficiency programs approved previously under this
12    Section shall terminate no later than December 31, 2017.
13        (6) An electric utility shall recover its costs
14    incurred under this Section related to the implementation
15    of energy efficiency programs and measures approved by the
16    Commission in its order approving the procurement plan
17    under Section 16-111.5 of this Act, including, but not
18    limited to, all costs associated with complying with this
19    Section and all start-up and administrative costs and the
20    costs for any evaluation, measurement, and verification of
21    the measures, from all retail customers whose electric
22    service has not been declared competitive under Section
23    16-113 of this Act and who are eligible to purchase power
24    and energy from the utility under fixed-price bundled
25    service tariffs, regardless of whether such customers
26    actually do purchase such power and energy from the utility

 

 

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1    through the automatic adjustment clause tariff established
2    pursuant to Section 8-103 of this Act, provided, however,
3    that the limitations described in subsection (d) of that
4    Section shall not apply to the costs incurred pursuant to
5    this Section or Section 16-111.7 of this Act.
6    (b) For purposes of this Section, the term "energy
7efficiency" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 1-10 of
8the Illinois Power Agency Act, and the term "cost-effective"
9shall have the meaning set forth in subsection (a) of Section
108-103 of this Act.
11    (c) The changes to this Section made by this amendatory Act
12of the 99th General Assembly shall not interfere with existing
13contracts executed under a Commission order entered under this
14Section.
15    (d)(1) For those electric utilities subject to the
16requirements of Section 8-103B of this Act, the contracts
17governing the energy efficiency programs and measures approved
18by the Commission in its order approving the procurement plan
19for the period June 1, 2016 through May 31, 2017 may be
20extended through December 31, 2017 so that the energy
21efficiency programs subject to such contracts and approved in
22such plan continue to be offered during the period June 1, 2017
23through December 31, 2017. Each such utility is authorized to
24increase, on a pro rata basis, the energy savings goals and
25budgets approved under this Section to reflect the additional 7
26months of implementation of the energy efficiency programs and

 

 

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1measures.
2        (2) If the Illinois Power Agency filed with the
3    Commission, under Section 16-111.5 of this Act, its
4    proposed procurement plan for the period commencing June 1,
5    2017, and the Commission has not yet entered its final
6    order approving such plan on or before the effective date
7    of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, then
8    the Illinois Power Agency shall file a notice of withdrawal
9    with the Commission to withdraw the proposed energy
10    efficiency programs to be approved under such plan. Upon
11    receipt of such notice, the Commission shall enter an order
12    that approves the withdrawal of all proposed energy
13    efficiency programs from the plan. The initially proposed
14    energy efficiency programs shall not be approved or be the
15    subject of any further hearing, investigation, proceeding,
16    or order of any kind.
17        (3) This amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly
18    preempts and supersedes any order entered by the Commission
19    that approved the Illinois Power Agency's procurement plan
20    for the period commencing June 1, 2017, to the extent
21    inconsistent with the provisions of this amendatory Act of
22    the 99th General Assembly. To the extent any such
23    previously entered order approved energy efficiency
24    programs under this Section, the portion of such order
25    approving such programs shall be void, and the provisions
26    of paragraph (1) of this subsection (d) shall apply.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 393 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1(Source: P.A. 97-616, eff. 10-26-11; 97-824, eff. 7-18-12.)
 
2    (220 ILCS 5/16-111.7)
3    Sec. 16-111.7. On-bill financing program; electric
4utilities.
5    (a) The Illinois General Assembly finds that Illinois homes
6and businesses have the potential to save energy through
7conservation and cost-effective energy efficiency measures.
8Programs created pursuant to this Section will allow utility
9customers to purchase cost-effective energy efficiency
10measures, including measures set forth in a
11Commission-approved energy efficiency and demand-response plan
12under Section 8-103 or 8-103B of this Act, with no required
13initial upfront payment, and to pay the cost of those products
14and services over time on their utility bill.
15    (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, an
16electric utility serving more than 100,000 customers on January
171, 2009 shall offer a Commission-approved on-bill financing
18program ("program") that allows its eligible retail customers,
19as that term is defined in Section 16-111.5 of this Act, who
20own a residential single family home, duplex, or other
21residential building with 4 or less units, or condominium at
22which the electric service is being provided (i) to borrow
23funds from a third party lender in order to purchase electric
24energy efficiency measures approved under the program for
25installation in such home or condominium without any required

 

 

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1upfront payment and (ii) to pay back such funds over time
2through the electric utility's bill. Based upon the process
3described in subsection (b-5) of this Section, small commercial
4customers who own the premises at which electric service is
5being provided may be included in such program. After receiving
6a request from an electric utility for approval of a proposed
7program and tariffs pursuant to this Section, the Commission
8shall render its decision within 120 days. If no decision is
9rendered within 120 days, then the request shall be deemed to
10be approved.
11    Beginning no later than December 31, 2013, an electric
12utility subject to this subsection (b) shall also offer its
13program to eligible retail customers that own multifamily
14residential or mixed-use buildings with no more than 50
15residential units, provided, however, that such customers must
16either be a residential customer or small commercial customer
17and may not use the program in such a way that repayment of the
18cost of energy efficiency measures is made through tenants'
19utility bills. An electric utility may impose a per site loan
20limit not to exceed $150,000. The program, and loans issued
21thereunder, shall only be offered to customers of the utility
22that meet the requirements of this Section and that also have
23an electric service account at the premises where the energy
24efficiency measures being financed shall be installed.
25Beginning no later than 2 years after the effective date of
26this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, the 50

 

 

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1residential unit limitation described in this paragraph shall
2no longer apply, and the utility shall replace the per site
3loan limit of $150,000 with a loan limit that correlates to a
4maximum monthly payment that does not exceed 50% of the
5customer's average utility bill over the prior 12-month period.
6    Beginning no later than 2 years after the effective date of
7this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, an electric
8utility subject to this subsection (b) shall also offer its
9program to eligible retail customers that are Unit Owners'
10Associations, as defined in subsection (o) of Section 2 of the
11Condominium Property Act, or Master Associations, as defined in
12subsection (u) of the Condominium Property Act. However, such
13customers must either be residential customers or small
14commercial customers and may not use the program in such a way
15that repayment of the cost of energy efficiency measures is
16made through unit owners' utility bills. The program and loans
17issued under the program shall only be offered to customers of
18the utility that meet the requirements of this Section and that
19also have an electric service account at the premises where the
20energy efficiency measures being financed shall be installed.
21    For purposes of this Section, "small commercial customer"
22means, for an electric utility serving more than 3,000,000
23retail customers, those customers having peak demand of less
24than 100 kilowatts, and, for an electric utility serving less
25than 3,000,000 retail customers, those customers having peak
26demand of less than 150 kilowatts; provided, however, that in

 

 

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1the event the Commission, after the effective date of this
2amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, approves changes
3to a utility's tariffs that reflects new or revised demand
4criteria for the utility's customer rate classifications, then
5the utility may file a petition with the Commission to revise
6the applicable definition of a small commercial customer to
7reflect the new or revised demand criteria for the purposes of
8this Section. After notice and hearing, the Commission shall
9enter an order approving, or approving with modification, the
10revised definition within 60 days after the utility files the
11petition.
12    (b-5) Within 30 days after the effective date of this
13amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the Commission
14shall convene a workshop process during which interested
15participants may discuss issues related to the program,
16including program design, eligible electric energy efficiency
17measures, vendor qualifications, and a methodology for
18ensuring ongoing compliance with such qualifications,
19financing, sample documents such as request for proposals,
20contracts and agreements, dispute resolution, pre-installment
21and post-installment verification, and evaluation. The
22workshop process shall be completed within 150 days after the
23effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General
24Assembly.
25    (c) Not later than 60 days following completion of the
26workshop process described in subsection (b-5) of this Section,

 

 

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1each electric utility subject to subsection (b) of this Section
2shall submit a proposed program to the Commission that contains
3the following components:
4        (1) A list of recommended electric energy efficiency
5    measures that will be eligible for on-bill financing. An
6    eligible electric energy efficiency measure ("measure")
7    shall be a product or service for which one or more of the
8    following is true:
9            (A) (blank);
10            (B) the projected electricity savings (determined
11        by rates in effect at the time of purchase) are
12        sufficient to cover the costs of implementing the
13        measures, including finance charges and any program
14        fees not recovered pursuant to subsection (f) of this
15        Section; or
16            (C) the product or service is included in a
17        Commission-approved energy efficiency and
18        demand-response plan under Section 8-103 or 8-103B of
19        this Act.
20        (1.5) Beginning no later than 2 years after the
21    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
22    Assembly, an eligible electric energy efficiency measure
23    (measure) shall be a product or service that qualifies
24    under subparagraph (B) or (C) of paragraph (1) of this
25    subsection (c) or for which one or more of the following is
26    true:

 

 

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1            (A) a building energy assessment, performed by an
2        energy auditor who is certified by the Building
3        Performance Institute or who holds a similar
4        certification, has recommended the product or service
5        as likely to be cost effective over the course of its
6        installed life for the building in which the measure is
7        to be installed; or
8            (B) the product or service is necessary to safely
9        or correctly install to code or industry standard an
10        efficiency measure, including, but not limited to,
11        installation work; changes needed to plumbing or
12        electrical connections; upgrades to wiring or
13        fixtures; removal of hazardous materials; correction
14        of leaks; changes to thermostats, controls, or similar
15        devices; and changes to venting or exhaust
16        necessitated by the measure. However, the costs of the
17        product or service described in this subparagraph (B)
18        shall not exceed 25% of the total cost of installing
19        the measure.
20        (2) The electric utility shall issue a request for
21    proposals ("RFP") to lenders for purposes of providing
22    financing to participants to pay for approved measures. The
23    RFP criteria shall include, but not be limited to, the
24    interest rate, origination fees, and credit terms. The
25    utility shall select the winning bidders based on its
26    evaluation of these criteria, with a preference for those

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 399 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    bids containing the rates, fees, and terms most favorable
2    to participants;
3        (3) The utility shall work with the lenders selected
4    pursuant to the RFP process, and with vendors, to establish
5    the terms and processes pursuant to which a participant can
6    purchase eligible electric energy efficiency measures
7    using the financing obtained from the lender. The vendor
8    shall explain and offer the approved financing packaging to
9    those customers identified in subsection (b) of this
10    Section and shall assist customers in applying for
11    financing. As part of the process, vendors shall also
12    provide to participants information about any other
13    incentives that may be available for the measures.
14        (4) The lender shall conduct credit checks or undertake
15    other appropriate measures to limit credit risk, and shall
16    review and approve or deny financing applications
17    submitted by customers identified in subsection (b) of this
18    Section. Following the lender's approval of financing and
19    the participant's purchase of the measure or measures, the
20    lender shall forward payment information to the electric
21    utility, and the utility shall add as a separate line item
22    on the participant's utility bill a charge showing the
23    amount due under the program each month.
24        (5) A loan issued to a participant pursuant to the
25    program shall be the sole responsibility of the
26    participant, and any dispute that may arise concerning the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 400 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    loan's terms, conditions, or charges shall be resolved
2    between the participant and lender. Upon transfer of the
3    property title for the premises at which the participant
4    receives electric service from the utility or the
5    participant's request to terminate service at such
6    premises, the participant shall pay in full its electric
7    utility bill, including all amounts due under the program,
8    provided that this obligation may be modified as provided
9    in subsection (g) of this Section. Amounts due under the
10    program shall be deemed amounts owed for residential and,
11    as appropriate, small commercial electric service.
12        (6) The electric utility shall remit payment in full to
13    the lender each month on behalf of the participant. In the
14    event a participant defaults on payment of its electric
15    utility bill, the electric utility shall continue to remit
16    all payments due under the program to the lender, and the
17    utility shall be entitled to recover all costs related to a
18    participant's nonpayment through the automatic adjustment
19    clause tariff established pursuant to Section 16-111.8 of
20    this Act. In addition, the electric utility shall retain a
21    security interest in the measure or measures purchased
22    under the program, and the utility retains its right to
23    disconnect a participant that defaults on the payment of
24    its utility bill.
25        (7) The total outstanding amount financed under the
26    program in this subsection and subsection (c-5) of this

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 401 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    Section shall not exceed $2.5 million for an electric
2    utility or electric utilities under a single holding
3    company, provided that the electric utility or electric
4    utilities may petition the Commission for an increase in
5    such amount. Beginning after the effective date of this
6    amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, the total
7    maximum outstanding amount financed under the program in
8    this subsection and subsections (c-5) and (c-10) of this
9    Section shall increase by $5,000,000 per year until such
10    time as the total maximum outstanding amount financed
11    reaches $20,000,000. For purposes of this Section,
12    "maximum outstanding amount financed" means the sum of all
13    principal that has been loaned and not yet repaid.
14    (c-5) Within 120 days after the effective date of this
15amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, each electric
16utility subject to the requirements of this Section shall
17submit an informational filing to the Commission that describes
18its plan for implementing the provisions of this amendatory Act
19of the 98th General Assembly on or before December 31, 2013.
20Such filing shall also describe how the electric utility shall
21coordinate its program with any gas utility or utilities that
22provide gas service to buildings within the electric utility's
23service territory so that it is practical and feasible for the
24owner of a multifamily building to make a single application to
25access loans for both gas and electric energy efficiency
26measures in any individual building.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 402 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    (c-10) No later than 365 days after the effective date of
2this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, each electric
3utility subject to the requirements of this Section shall
4submit an informational filing to the Commission that describes
5its plan for implementing the provisions of this amendatory Act
6of the 99th General Assembly that were incorporated into this
7Section. Such filing shall also include the criteria to be used
8by the program for determining if measures to be financed are
9eligible electric energy efficiency measures, as defined by
10paragraph (1.5) of subsection (c) of this Section.
11    (d) A program approved by the Commission shall also include
12the following criteria and guidelines for such program:
13        (1) guidelines for financing of measures installed
14    under a program, including, but not limited to, RFP
15    criteria and limits on both individual loan amounts and the
16    duration of the loans;
17        (2) criteria and standards for identifying and
18    approving measures;
19        (3) qualifications of vendors that will market or
20    install measures, as well as a methodology for ensuring
21    ongoing compliance with such qualifications;
22        (4) sample contracts and agreements necessary to
23    implement the measures and program; and
24        (5) the types of data and information that utilities
25    and vendors participating in the program shall collect for
26    purposes of preparing the reports required under

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 403 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    subsection (g) of this Section.
2    (e) The proposed program submitted by each electric utility
3shall be consistent with the provisions of this Section that
4define operational, financial and billing arrangements between
5and among program participants, vendors, lenders, and the
6electric utility.
7    (f) An electric utility shall recover all of the prudently
8incurred costs of offering a program approved by the Commission
9pursuant to this Section, including, but not limited to, all
10start-up and administrative costs and the costs for program
11evaluation. All prudently incurred costs under this Section
12shall be recovered from the residential and small commercial
13retail customer classes eligible to participate in the program
14through the automatic adjustment clause tariff established
15pursuant to Section 8-103 or 8-103B of this Act.
16    (g) An independent evaluation of a program shall be
17conducted after 3 years of the program's operation. The
18electric utility shall retain an independent evaluator who
19shall evaluate the effects of the measures installed under the
20program and the overall operation of the program, including,
21but not limited to, customer eligibility criteria and whether
22the payment obligation for permanent electric energy
23efficiency measures that will continue to provide benefits of
24energy savings should attach to the meter location. As part of
25the evaluation process, the evaluator shall also solicit
26feedback from participants and interested stakeholders. The

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 404 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1evaluator shall issue a report to the Commission on its
2findings no later than 4 years after the date on which the
3program commenced, and the Commission shall issue a report to
4the Governor and General Assembly including a summary of the
5information described in this Section as well as its
6recommendations as to whether the program should be
7discontinued, continued with modification or modifications or
8continued without modification, provided that any recommended
9modifications shall only apply prospectively and to measures
10not yet installed or financed.
11    (h) An electric utility offering a Commission-approved
12program pursuant to this Section shall not be required to
13comply with any other statute, order, rule, or regulation of
14this State that may relate to the offering of such program,
15provided that nothing in this Section is intended to limit the
16electric utility's obligation to comply with this Act and the
17Commission's orders, rules, and regulations, including Part
18280 of Title 83 of the Illinois Administrative Code.
19    (i) The source of a utility customer's electric supply
20shall not disqualify a customer from participation in the
21utility's on-bill financing program. Customers of alternative
22retail electric suppliers may participate in the program under
23the same terms and conditions applicable to the utility's
24supply customers.
25(Source: P.A. 97-616, eff. 10-26-11; 98-586, eff. 8-27-13.)
 

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 405 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    (220 ILCS 5/16-115A)
2    Sec. 16-115A. Obligations of alternative retail electric
3suppliers.
4    (a) An alternative retail electric supplier shall:
5        (i) comply with the requirements imposed on public
6    utilities by Sections 8-201 through 8-207, 8-301, 8-505 and
7    8-507 of this Act, to the extent that these Sections have
8    application to the services being offered by the
9    alternative retail electric supplier; and
10        (ii) continue to comply with the requirements for
11    certification stated in subsection (d) of Section 16-115.
12    (b) An alternative retail electric supplier shall obtain
13verifiable authorization from a customer, in a form or manner
14approved by the Commission consistent with Section 2EE of the
15Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, before the
16customer is switched from another supplier.
17    (c) No alternative retail electric supplier, or electric
18utility other than the electric utility in whose service area a
19customer is located, shall (i) enter into or employ any
20arrangements which have the effect of preventing a retail
21customer with a maximum electrical demand of less than one
22megawatt from having access to the services of the electric
23utility in whose service area the customer is located or (ii)
24charge retail customers for such access. This subsection shall
25not be construed to prevent an arms-length agreement between a
26supplier and a retail customer that sets a term of service,

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 406 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1notice period for terminating service and provisions governing
2early termination through a tariff or contract as allowed by
3Section 16-119.
4    (d) An alternative retail electric supplier that is
5certified to serve residential or small commercial retail
6customers shall not:
7        (1) deny service to a customer or group of customers
8    nor establish any differences as to prices, terms,
9    conditions, services, products, facilities, or in any
10    other respect, whereby such denial or differences are based
11    upon race, gender or income.
12        (2) deny service to a customer or group of customers
13    based on locality nor establish any unreasonable
14    difference as to prices, terms, conditions, services,
15    products, or facilities as between localities.
16    (e) An alternative retail electric supplier shall comply
17with the following requirements with respect to the marketing,
18offering and provision of products or services to residential
19and small commercial retail customers:
20        (i) Any marketing materials which make statements
21    concerning prices, terms and conditions of service shall
22    contain information that adequately discloses the prices,
23    terms and conditions of the products or services that the
24    alternative retail electric supplier is offering or
25    selling to the customer.
26        (ii) Before any customer is switched from another

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 407 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    supplier, the alternative retail electric supplier shall
2    give the customer written information that adequately
3    discloses, in plain language, the prices, terms and
4    conditions of the products and services being offered and
5    sold to the customer.
6        (iii) An alternative retail electric supplier shall
7    provide documentation to the Commission and to customers
8    that substantiates any claims made by the alternative
9    retail electric supplier regarding the technologies and
10    fuel types used to generate the electricity offered or sold
11    to customers.
12        (iv) The alternative retail electric supplier shall
13    provide to the customer (1) itemized billing statements
14    that describe the products and services provided to the
15    customer and their prices, and (2) an additional statement,
16    at least annually, that adequately discloses the average
17    monthly prices, and the terms and conditions, of the
18    products and services sold to the customer.
19    (f) An alternative retail electric supplier may limit the
20overall size or availability of a service offering by
21specifying one or more of the following: a maximum number of
22customers, maximum amount of electric load to be served, time
23period during which the offering will be available, or other
24comparable limitation, but not including the geographic
25locations of customers within the area which the alternative
26retail electric supplier is certificated to serve. The

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 408 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1alternative retail electric supplier shall file the terms and
2conditions of such service offering including the applicable
3limitations with the Commission prior to making the service
4offering available to customers.
5    (g) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as
6preventing an alternative retail electric supplier, which is an
7affiliate of, or which contracts with, (i) an industry or trade
8organization or association, (ii) a membership organization or
9association that exists for a purpose other than the purchase
10of electricity, or (iii) another organization that meets
11criteria established in a rule adopted by the Commission, from
12offering through the organization or association services at
13prices, terms and conditions that are available solely to the
14members of the organization or association.
15    (h) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Act or
16the Illinois Power Agency Act, alternative retail electric
17suppliers shall not be permitted, beginning with the delivery
18year commencing June 1, 2018, to procure capacity, other than
19Qualifying Preexisting Capacity as defined in Section 16-111.5
20of this Act and capacity procured through the processes
21specified in subsection (k) of Section 16-111.5, required to
22serve retail customers that are located in the Applicable Local
23Resource Zone of the Midcontinent Independent System Operator,
24Inc., or its successor, that are retail customers of an
25electric utility that serves less than 3,000,000 retail
26customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in this State,

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 409 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1and whose capacity is procured in procurement events conducted
2by the Illinois Power Agency under subsection (k) of Section
316-111.5 of this Act. Alternative retail electric suppliers
4shall take those actions that are necessary to participate in
5the Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan capacity procurement option,
6or a successor capacity procurement mechanism, under the open
7access transmission and energy markets tariff of Midcontinent
8Independent System Operator, Inc., or its successor, and as
9implemented under subsection (k) of Section 16-111.5 of this
10Act. Each alternative retail electric supplier shall certify
11its compliance with this subsection (h) in its annual reports
12to the Commission.
13(Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 12-16-97.)
 
14    (220 ILCS 5/16-115D)
15    Sec. 16-115D. Renewable portfolio standard for alternative
16retail electric suppliers and electric utilities operating
17outside their service territories.
18    (a) An alternative retail electric supplier shall be
19responsible for procuring cost-effective renewable energy
20resources as required under item (5) of subsection (d) of
21Section 16-115 of this Act as outlined herein:
22        (1) The definition of renewable energy resources
23    contained in Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act
24    applies to all renewable energy resources required to be
25    procured by alternative retail electric suppliers.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 410 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (2) Through May 31, 2017, the The quantity of renewable
2    energy resources shall be measured as a percentage of the
3    actual amount of metered electricity (megawatt-hours)
4    delivered by the alternative retail electric supplier to
5    Illinois retail customers during the 12-month period June 1
6    through May 31, commencing June 1, 2009, and the comparable
7    12-month period in each year thereafter except as provided
8    in item (6) of this subsection (a).
9        (3) Through May 31, 2017, the The quantity of renewable
10    energy resources shall be in amounts at least equal to the
11    annual percentages set forth in item (1) of subsection (c)
12    of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. At least
13    60% of the renewable energy resources procured pursuant to
14    items (1) and through (3) of subsection (b) of this Section
15    shall come from wind generation and, starting June 1, 2015,
16    at least 6% of the renewable energy resources procured
17    pursuant to items (1) and through (3) of subsection (b) of
18    this Section shall come from solar photovoltaics. If, in
19    any given year, an alternative retail electric supplier
20    does not purchase at least these levels of renewable energy
21    resources, then the alternative retail electric supplier
22    shall make alternative compliance payments, as described
23    in subsection (d) of this Section.
24        (3.5) For the delivery year commencing June 1, 2017,
25    the quantity of renewable energy resources shall be at
26    least 13.0% of the uncovered amount of metered electricity

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 411 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    (megawatt-hours) delivered by the alternative retail
2    electric supplier to Illinois retail customers during the
3    delivery year, which uncovered amount shall equal 50% of
4    such metered electricity delivered by the alternative
5    retail electric supplier. For the delivery year commencing
6    June 1, 2018, the quantity of renewable energy resources
7    shall be at least 14.5% of the uncovered amount of metered
8    electricity (megawatt-hours) delivered by the alternative
9    retail electric supplier to Illinois retail customers
10    during the delivery year, which uncovered amount shall
11    equal 25% of such metered electricity delivered by the
12    alternative retail electric supplier. At least 32% of the
13    renewable energy resources procured by the alternative
14    retail electric supplier for its uncovered portion under
15    this paragraph (3.5) shall come from wind or photovoltaic
16    generation. The renewable energy resources procured under
17    this paragraph (3.5) shall not include any resources from a
18    facility whose costs were being recovered through rates
19    regulated by any state or states on or after January 1,
20    2017.
21        (4) The quantity and source of renewable energy
22    resources shall be independently verified through the PJM
23    Environmental Information System Generation Attribute
24    Tracking System (PJM-GATS) or the Midwest Renewable Energy
25    Tracking System (M-RETS), which shall document the
26    location of generation, resource type, month, and year of

 

 

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1    generation for all qualifying renewable energy resources
2    that an alternative retail electric supplier uses to comply
3    with this Section. No later than June 1, 2009, the Illinois
4    Power Agency shall provide PJM-GATS, M-RETS, and
5    alternative retail electric suppliers with all information
6    necessary to identify resources located in Illinois,
7    within states that adjoin Illinois or within portions of
8    the PJM and MISO footprint in the United States that
9    qualify under the definition of renewable energy resources
10    in Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act for
11    compliance with this Section 16-115D. Alternative retail
12    electric suppliers shall not be subject to the requirements
13    in item (3) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the
14    Illinois Power Agency Act.
15        (5) All renewable energy credits used to comply with
16    this Section shall be permanently retired.
17        (6) The required procurement of renewable energy
18    resources by an alternative retail electric supplier shall
19    apply to all metered electricity delivered to Illinois
20    retail customers by the alternative retail electric
21    supplier pursuant to contracts executed or extended after
22    March 15, 2009.
23    (b) Compliance obligations.
24        (1) Through May 31, 2017, an An alternative retail
25    electric supplier shall comply with the renewable energy
26    portfolio standards by making an alternative compliance

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 413 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    payment, as described in subsection (d) of this Section, to
2    cover at least one-half of the alternative retail electric
3    supplier's compliance obligation for the period prior to
4    June 1, 2017.
5        (2) For the delivery years beginning June 1, 2017 and
6    June 1, 2018, an alternative retail electric supplier need
7    not make any alternative compliance payment to meet any
8    portion of its compliance obligation, as set forth in
9    paragraph (3.5) of subsection (a) of this Section.
10        (3) An alternative retail electric supplier shall use
11    and any one or combination of the following means to cover
12    the remainder of the alternative retail electric
13    supplier's compliance obligation, as set forth in
14    paragraphs (3) and (3.5) of subsection (a) of this Section,
15    not covered by an alternative compliance payment made under
16    paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection (b) of this
17    Section:
18            (A) (1) Generating electricity using renewable
19        energy resources identified pursuant to item (4) of
20        subsection (a) of this Section.
21            (B) (2) Purchasing electricity generated using
22        renewable energy resources identified pursuant to item
23        (4) of subsection (a) of this Section through an energy
24        contract.
25            (C) (3) Purchasing renewable energy credits from
26        renewable energy resources identified pursuant to item

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 414 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1        (4) of subsection (a) of this Section.
2            (D) (4) Making an alternative compliance payment
3        as described in subsection (d) of this Section.
4    (c) Use of renewable energy credits.
5        (1) Renewable energy credits that are not used by an
6    alternative retail electric supplier to comply with a
7    renewable portfolio standard in a compliance year may be
8    banked and carried forward up to 2 12-month compliance
9    periods after the compliance period in which the credit was
10    generated for the purpose of complying with a renewable
11    portfolio standard in those 2 subsequent compliance
12    periods. For the 2009-2010 and 2010-2011 compliance
13    periods, an alternative retail electric supplier may use
14    renewable credits generated after December 31, 2008 and
15    before June 1, 2009 to comply with this Section.
16        (2) An alternative retail electric supplier is
17    responsible for demonstrating that a renewable energy
18    credit used to comply with a renewable portfolio standard
19    is derived from a renewable energy resource and that the
20    alternative retail electric supplier has not used, traded,
21    sold, or otherwise transferred the credit.
22        (3) The same renewable energy credit may be used by an
23    alternative retail electric supplier to comply with a
24    federal renewable portfolio standard and a renewable
25    portfolio standard established under this Act. An
26    alternative retail electric supplier that uses a renewable

 

 

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1    energy credit to comply with a renewable portfolio standard
2    imposed by any other state may not use the same credit to
3    comply with a renewable portfolio standard established
4    under this Act.
5    (d) Alternative compliance payments.
6        (1) The Commission shall establish and post on its
7    website, within 5 business days after entering an order
8    approving a procurement plan pursuant to Section 1-75 of
9    the Illinois Power Agency Act, maximum alternative
10    compliance payment rates, expressed on a per kilowatt-hour
11    basis, that will be applicable in the first compliance
12    period following the plan approval. A separate maximum
13    alternative compliance payment rate shall be established
14    for the service territory of each electric utility that is
15    subject to subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois
16    Power Agency Act. Each maximum alternative compliance
17    payment rate shall be equal to the maximum allowable annual
18    estimated average net increase due to the costs of the
19    utility's purchase of renewable energy resources included
20    in the amounts paid by eligible retail customers in
21    connection with electric service, as described in item (2)
22    of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
23    Agency Act for the compliance period, and as established in
24    the approved procurement plan. Following each procurement
25    event through which renewable energy resources are
26    purchased for one or more of these utilities for the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 416 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    compliance period, the Commission shall establish and post
2    on its website estimates of the alternative compliance
3    payment rates, expressed on a per kilowatt-hour basis, that
4    shall apply for that compliance period. Posting of the
5    estimates shall occur no later than 10 business days
6    following the procurement event, however, the Commission
7    shall not be required to establish and post such estimates
8    more often than once per calendar month. By July 1 of each
9    year, the Commission shall establish and post on its
10    website the actual alternative compliance payment rates
11    for the preceding compliance year. For compliance years
12    beginning prior to June 1, 2014, each alternative
13    compliance payment rate shall be equal to the total amount
14    of dollars that the utility contracted to spend on
15    renewable resources, excepting the additional incremental
16    cost attributable to solar resources, for the compliance
17    period divided by the forecasted load of eligible retail
18    customers, at the customers' meters, as previously
19    established in the Commission-approved procurement plan
20    for that compliance year. For compliance years commencing
21    on or after June 1, 2014, each alternative compliance
22    payment rate shall be equal to the total amount of dollars
23    that the utility contracted to spend on all renewable
24    resources for the compliance period divided by the
25    forecasted load of eligible retail customers for which the
26    utility is procuring renewable energy resources in a given

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 417 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    delivery year, at the customers' meters, as previously
2    established in the Commission-approved procurement plan
3    for that compliance year. The actual alternative
4    compliance payment rates may not exceed the maximum
5    alternative compliance payment rates established for the
6    compliance period. For purposes of this subsection (d), the
7    term "eligible retail customers" has the same meaning as
8    found in Section 16-111.5 of this Act.
9        (2) In any given compliance year, an alternative retail
10    electric supplier may elect to use alternative compliance
11    payments to comply with all or a part of the applicable
12    renewable portfolio standard. In the event that an
13    alternative retail electric supplier elects to make
14    alternative compliance payments to comply with all or a
15    part of the applicable renewable portfolio standard, such
16    payments shall be made by September 1, 2010 for the period
17    of June 1, 2009 to May 1, 2010 and by September 1 of each
18    year thereafter for the subsequent compliance period, in
19    the manner and form as determined by the Commission. Any
20    election by an alternative retail electric supplier to use
21    alternative compliance payments is subject to review by the
22    Commission under subsection (e) of this Section.
23        (3) An alternative retail electric supplier's
24    alternative compliance payments shall be computed
25    separately for each electric utility's service territory
26    within which the alternative retail electric supplier

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 418 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    provided retail service during the compliance period,
2    provided that the electric utility was subject to
3    subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
4    Act. For each service territory, the alternative retail
5    electric supplier's alternative compliance payment shall
6    be equal to (i) the actual alternative compliance payment
7    rate established in item (1) of this subsection (d),
8    multiplied by (ii) the actual amount of metered electricity
9    delivered by the alternative retail electric supplier to
10    retail customers for which the supplier has a compliance
11    obligation within the service territory during the
12    compliance period, multiplied by (iii) the result of one
13    minus the ratios of the quantity of renewable energy
14    resources used by the alternative retail electric supplier
15    to comply with the requirements of this Section within the
16    service territory to the product of the percentage of
17    renewable energy resources required under item (3) or (3.5)
18    of subsection (a) of this Section and the actual amount of
19    metered electricity delivered by the alternative retail
20    electrical electric supplier to retail customers for which
21    the supplier has a compliance obligation within the service
22    territory during the compliance period.
23        (4) Through May 31, 2017, all All alternative
24    compliance payments by alternative retail electric
25    suppliers shall be deposited in the Illinois Power Agency
26    Renewable Energy Resources Fund and used to purchase

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 419 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    renewable energy credits, in accordance with Section 1-56
2    of the Illinois Power Agency Act. Beginning April 1, 2012
3    and by April 1 of each year thereafter, the Illinois Power
4    Agency shall submit an annual report to the General
5    Assembly, the Commission, and alternative retail electric
6    suppliers that shall include, but not be limited to:
7            (A) the total amount of alternative compliance
8        payments received in aggregate from alternative retail
9        electric suppliers by planning year for all previous
10        planning years in which the alternative compliance
11        payment was in effect;
12            (B) the amount of those payments utilized to
13        purchased renewable energy credits itemized by the
14        date of each procurement in which the payments were
15        utilized; and
16            (C) the unused and remaining balance in the Agency
17        Renewable Energy Resources Fund attributable to those
18        payments.
19        (4.5) Beginning with the delivery year commencing June
20    1, 2017, all alternative compliance payments by
21    alternative retail electric suppliers shall be remitted to
22    the applicable electric utility. To facilitate this
23    remittance, each electric utility shall file a tariff with
24    the Commission no later than 30 days following the
25    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
26    Assembly, which the Commission shall approve, after notice

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 420 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    and hearing, no later than 45 days after its filing. The
2    Illinois Power Agency shall use such payments to increase
3    the amount of renewable energy resources otherwise to be
4    procured under subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the
5    Illinois Power Agency Act.
6        (5) The Commission, in consultation with the Illinois
7    Power Agency, shall establish a process or proceeding to
8    consider the impact of a federal renewable portfolio
9    standard, if enacted, on the operation of the alternative
10    compliance mechanism, which shall include, but not be
11    limited to, developing, to the extent permitted by the
12    applicable federal statute, an appropriate methodology to
13    apportion renewable energy credits retired as a result of
14    alternative compliance payments made in accordance with
15    this Section. The Commission shall commence any such
16    process or proceeding within 35 days after enactment of a
17    federal renewable portfolio standard.
18    (e) Each alternative retail electric supplier shall, by
19September 1, 2010 and by September 1 of each year thereafter,
20prepare and submit to the Commission a report, in a format to
21be specified by the Commission on or before December 31, 2009,
22that provides information certifying compliance by the
23alternative retail electric supplier with this Section,
24including copies of all PJM-GATS and M-RETS reports, and
25documentation relating to banking, retiring renewable energy
26credits, and any other information that the Commission

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 421 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1determines necessary to ensure compliance with this Section.
2    An alternative retail electric supplier may file
3commercially or financially sensitive information or trade
4secrets with the Commission as provided under the rules of the
5Commission. To be filed confidentially, the information shall
6be accompanied by an affidavit that sets forth both the reasons
7for the confidentiality and a public synopsis of the
8information.
9    (f) The Commission may initiate a contested case to review
10allegations that the alternative retail electric supplier has
11violated this Section, including an order issued or rule
12promulgated under this Section. In any such proceeding, the
13alternative retail electric supplier shall have the burden of
14proof. If the Commission finds, after notice and hearing, that
15an alternative retail electric supplier has violated this
16Section, then the Commission shall issue an order requiring the
17alternative retail electric supplier to:
18        (1) immediately comply with this Section; and
19        (2) if the violation involves a failure to procure the
20    requisite quantity of renewable energy resources or pay the
21    applicable alternative compliance payment by the annual
22    deadline, the Commission shall require the alternative
23    retail electric supplier to double the applicable
24    alternative compliance payment that would otherwise be
25    required to bring the alternative retail electric supplier
26    into compliance with this Section.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 422 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    If an alternative retail electric supplier fails to comply
2with the renewable energy resource portfolio requirement in
3this Section more than once in a 5-year period, then the
4Commission shall revoke the alternative electric supplier's
5certificate of service authority. The Commission shall not
6accept an application for a certificate of service authority
7from an alternative retail electric supplier that has lost
8certification under this subsection (f), or any corporate
9affiliate thereof, for at least one year after the date of
10revocation.
11    (g) All of the provisions of this Section apply to electric
12utilities operating outside their service area except under
13item (2) of subsection (a) of this Section the quantity of
14renewable energy resources shall be measured as a percentage of
15the actual amount of electricity (megawatt-hours) supplied in
16the State outside of the utility's service territory during the
1712-month period June 1 through May 31, commencing June 1, 2009,
18and the comparable 12-month period in each year thereafter
19except as provided in item (6) of subsection (a) of this
20Section.
21    If any such utility fails to procure the requisite quantity
22of renewable energy resources by the annual deadline, then the
23Commission shall require the utility to double the alternative
24compliance payment that would otherwise be required to bring
25the utility into compliance with this Section.
26    If any such utility fails to comply with the renewable

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 423 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1energy resource portfolio requirement in this Section more than
2once in a 5-year period, then the Commission shall order the
3utility to cease all sales outside of the utility's service
4territory for a period of at least one year.
5    (h) The provisions of this Section and the provisions of
6subsection (d) of Section 16-115 of this Act relating to
7procurement of renewable energy resources shall not apply to an
8alternative retail electric supplier that operates a combined
9heat and power system in this State or that has a corporate
10affiliate that operates such a combined heat and power system
11in this State that supplies electricity primarily to or for the
12benefit of: (i) facilities owned by the supplier, its
13subsidiary, or other corporate affiliate; (ii) facilities
14electrically integrated with the electrical system of
15facilities owned by the supplier, its subsidiary, or other
16corporate affiliate; or (iii) facilities that are adjacent to
17the site on which the combined heat and power system is
18located.
19    (i) The obligations of alternative retail electric
20suppliers and electric utilities operating outside their
21service territories to procure renewable energy resources,
22make alternative compliance payments, and file annual reports,
23and the obligations of the Commission to determine and post
24alternative compliance payment rates, shall terminate after
25May 31, 2019, provided that alternative retail electric
26suppliers and electric utilities operating outside their

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 424 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1service territories shall be obligated to make all alternative
2compliance payments that they were obligated to pay for periods
3through and including May 31, 2019, but were not paid as of
4that date. The Commission shall continue to enforce the payment
5of unpaid alternative compliance payments in accordance with
6subsections (f) and (g) of this Section. All alternative
7compliance payments made after May 31, 2016 shall be remitted
8to the applicable electric utility and used to purchase
9renewable energy credits, in accordance with Section 1-75 of
10the Illinois Power Agency Act.
11(Source: P.A. 96-33, eff. 7-10-09; 96-159, eff. 8-10-09;
1296-1437, eff. 8-17-10; 97-658, eff. 1-13-12.)
 
13    (220 ILCS 5/16-119A)
14    Sec. 16-119A. Functional separation.
15    (a) Within 90 days after the effective date of this
16amendatory Act of 1997, the Commission shall open a rulemaking
17proceeding to establish standards of conduct for every electric
18utility described in subsection (b). To create efficient
19competition between suppliers of generating services and
20sellers of such services at retail and wholesale, the rules
21shall allow all customers of a public utility that distributes
22electric power and energy to purchase electric power and energy
23from the supplier of their choice in accordance with the
24provisions of Section 16-104. In addition, the rules shall
25address relations between providers of any 2 services described

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 425 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1in subsection (b) to prevent undue discrimination and promote
2efficient competition. Provided, however, that a proposed rule
3shall not be published prior to May 15, 1999.
4    (b) The Commission shall also have the authority to
5investigate the need for, and adopt rules requiring, functional
6separation between the generation services and the delivery
7services of those electric utilities whose principal service
8area is in Illinois as necessary to meet the objective of
9creating efficient competition between suppliers of generating
10services and sellers of such services at retail and wholesale.
11After January 1, 2003, the Commission shall also have the
12authority to investigate the need for, and adopt rules
13requiring, functional separation between an electric utility's
14competitive and non-competitive services.
15    (b-5) If there is a change in ownership of a majority of
16the voting capital stock of an electric utility or the
17ownership or control of any entity that owns or controls a
18majority of the voting capital stock of an electric utility,
19the electric utility shall have the right to file with the
20Commission a new plan. The newly filed plan shall supersede any
21plan previously approved by the Commission pursuant to this
22Section for that electric utility, subject to Commission
23approval. This subsection only applies to the extent that the
24Commission rules for the functional separation of delivery
25services and generation services provide an electric utility
26with the ability to select from 2 or more options to comply

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 426 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1with this Section. The electric utility may file its revised
2plan with the Commission up to one calendar year after the
3conclusion of the sale, purchase, or any other transfer of
4ownership described in this subsection. In all other respects,
5an electric utility must comply with the Commission rules in
6effect under this Section. The Commission may promulgate rules
7to implement this subsection. This subsection shall have no
8legal effect after January 1, 2005.
9    (c) In establishing or considering the need for rules under
10subsections (a) and (b), the Commission shall take into account
11the effects on the cost and reliability of service and the
12obligation of the utility to provide bundled service under this
13Act. The Commission shall adopt rules that are a cost effective
14means to ensure compliance with this Section.
15    (d) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as imposing
16any requirements or obligations that are in conflict with
17federal law.
18    (e) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, an electric
19utility may market and promote the services, rates and programs
20authorized by Sections 9-105, 16-107, and 16-108.6 of this Act.
21(Source: P.A. 92-756, eff. 8-2-02.)
 
22    (220 ILCS 5/16-127)
23    Sec. 16-127. Environmental disclosure.
24    (a) Effective January 1, 2013, every electric utility and
25alternative retail electric supplier shall provide the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 427 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1following information, to the maximum extent practicable, to
2its customers on a quarterly basis:
3        (i) the known sources of electricity supplied,
4    broken-out by percentages, of biomass power, coal-fired
5    power, hydro power, natural gas-fired power, nuclear
6    power, oil-fired power, solar power, wind power and other
7    resources, respectively;
8        (ii) a pie chart pie-chart that graphically depicts the
9    percentages of the sources of the electricity supplied as
10    set forth in subparagraph (i) of this subsection; and
11        (iii) a pie chart pie-chart that graphically depicts
12    the quantity of renewable energy resources procured
13    pursuant to Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act
14    as a percentage of electricity supplied to serve eligible
15    retail customers as defined in Section 16-111.5(a) of this
16    Act; and .
17        (iv) after May, 31, 2017, a pie chart that graphically
18    depicts the quantity of zero emission credits from zero
19    emission facilities procured under Section 1-75 of the
20    Illinois Power Agency Act as a percentage of the actual
21    load of retail customers within its service area.
22    (b) In addition, every electric utility and alternative
23retail electric supplier shall provide, to the maximum extent
24practicable, to its customers on a quarterly basis, a
25standardized chart in a format to be determined by the
26Commission in a rule following notice and hearings which

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 428 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1provides the amounts of carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides and
2sulfur dioxide emissions and nuclear waste attributable to the
3known sources of electricity supplied as set forth in
4subparagraph (i) of subsection (a) of this Section.
5    (c) The electric utilities and alternative retail electric
6suppliers may provide their customers with such other
7information as they believe relevant to the information
8required in subsections (a) and (b) of this Section. All of the
9information required in subsections (a) and (b) of this Section
10shall be made available by the electric utilities or
11alternative retail electric suppliers either in an electronic
12medium, such as on a website or by electronic mail, or through
13the U.S. Postal Service.
14    (d) For the purposes of subsection (a) of this Section,
15"biomass" means dedicated crops grown for energy production and
16organic wastes.
17    (e) All of the information provided in subsections (a) and
18(b) of this Section shall be presented to the Commission for
19inclusion in its World Wide Web Site.
20(Source: P.A. 97-1092, eff. 1-1-13.)
 
21    Section 20. The Energy Assistance Act is amended by
22changing Sections 13 and 18 as follows:
 
23    (305 ILCS 20/13)
24    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2018)

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 429 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    Sec. 13. Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund.
2    (a) The Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund is
3hereby created as a special fund in the State Treasury. The
4Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund is authorized
5to receive moneys from voluntary donations from individuals,
6foundations, corporations, and other sources, moneys received
7pursuant to Section 17, and, by statutory deposit, the moneys
8collected pursuant to this Section. The Fund is also authorized
9to receive voluntary donations from individuals, foundations,
10corporations, and other sources, as well as contributions made
11in accordance with Section 507MM of the Illinois Income Tax
12Act. Subject to appropriation, the Department shall use moneys
13from the Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund for
14payments to electric or gas public utilities, municipal
15electric or gas utilities, and electric cooperatives on behalf
16of their customers who are participants in the program
17authorized by Sections 4 and 18 of this Act, for the provision
18of weatherization services and for administration of the
19Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund. The yearly
20expenditures for weatherization may not exceed 10% of the
21amount collected during the year pursuant to this Section. The
22yearly administrative expenses of the Supplemental Low-Income
23Energy Assistance Fund may not exceed 10% of the amount
24collected during that year pursuant to this Section, except
25when unspent funds from the Supplemental Low-Income Energy
26Assistance Fund are reallocated from a previous year; any

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 430 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1unspent balance of the 10% administrative allowance may be
2utilized for administrative expenses in the year they are
3reallocated.
4    (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 16-111 of the
5Public Utilities Act but subject to subsection (k) of this
6Section, each public utility, electric cooperative, as defined
7in Section 3.4 of the Electric Supplier Act, and municipal
8utility, as referenced in Section 3-105 of the Public Utilities
9Act, that is engaged in the delivery of electricity or the
10distribution of natural gas within the State of Illinois shall,
11effective January 1, 1998, assess each of its customer accounts
12a monthly Energy Assistance Charge for the Supplemental
13Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund. The delivering public
14utility, municipal electric or gas utility, or electric or gas
15cooperative for a self-assessing purchaser remains subject to
16the collection of the fee imposed by this Section. The monthly
17charge shall be as follows:
18        (1) $0.48 per month on each account for residential
19    electric service; provided that beginning January 1, 2019,
20    the monthly charge for residential electric service shall
21    change to $0.72 for a period of 5 years; after the 5-year
22    period, the charge shall be reduced to $0.48 per month;
23        (2) $0.48 per month on each account for residential gas
24    service;
25        (3) $4.80 per month on each account for non-residential
26    electric service which had less than 10 megawatts of peak

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 431 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    demand during the previous calendar year;
2        (4) $4.80 per month on each account for non-residential
3    gas service which had distributed to it less than 4,000,000
4    therms of gas during the previous calendar year;
5        (5) $360 per month on each account for non-residential
6    electric service which had 10 megawatts or greater of peak
7    demand during the previous calendar year; and
8        (6) $360 per month on each account for non-residential
9    gas service which had 4,000,000 or more therms of gas
10    distributed to it during the previous calendar year.
11    The incremental change to such charges imposed by this
12amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly shall not (i) be
13used for any purpose other than to directly assist customers
14and (ii) be applicable to utilities serving less than 100,000
15customers in Illinois on January 1, 2009. Moreover, the
16incremental change to such charges imposed by this amendatory
17Act of the 99th General Assembly is intended to assist
18low-income customers, including, but not limited to, those who
19may have their monthly electric bills increase because of a
20transition to average grid impact rates under Section 9-105 of
21the Public Utilities Act, and such incremental change shall not
22(i) be used for any purpose other than to fund the Percentage
23of Income Payment Plan program, Arrearage Reduction program,
24and Supplemental Arrearage Reduction program under Section 18
25of this Act or (ii) be applicable to utilities serving less
26than 100,000 customers in Illinois on January 1, 2009.

 

 

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1    In addition, electric and gas utilities have committed, and
2shall contribute, a one-time payment of $22 million to the
3Fund, within 10 days after the effective date of the tariffs
4established pursuant to Sections 16-111.8 and 19-145 of the
5Public Utilities Act to be used for the Department's cost of
6implementing the programs described in Section 18 of this
7amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the Arrearage
8Reduction Program described in Section 18, and the programs
9described in Section 8-105 of the Public Utilities Act. If a
10utility elects not to file a rider within 90 days after the
11effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General
12Assembly, then the contribution from such utility shall be made
13no later than February 1, 2010.
14    (c) For purposes of this Section:
15        (1) "residential electric service" means electric
16    utility service for household purposes delivered to a
17    dwelling of 2 or fewer units which is billed under a
18    residential rate, or electric utility service for
19    household purposes delivered to a dwelling unit or units
20    which is billed under a residential rate and is registered
21    by a separate meter for each dwelling unit;
22        (2) "residential gas service" means gas utility
23    service for household purposes distributed to a dwelling of
24    2 or fewer units which is billed under a residential rate,
25    or gas utility service for household purposes distributed
26    to a dwelling unit or units which is billed under a

 

 

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1    residential rate and is registered by a separate meter for
2    each dwelling unit;
3        (3) "non-residential electric service" means electric
4    utility service which is not residential electric service;
5    and
6        (4) "non-residential gas service" means gas utility
7    service which is not residential gas service.
8    (d) Within 30 days after the effective date of this
9amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, each public
10utility engaged in the delivery of electricity or the
11distribution of natural gas shall file with the Illinois
12Commerce Commission tariffs incorporating the Energy
13Assistance Charge in other charges stated in such tariffs,
14which shall become effective no later than the beginning of the
15first billing cycle following such filing.
16    (e) The Energy Assistance Charge assessed by electric and
17gas public utilities shall be considered a charge for public
18utility service.
19    (f) By the 20th day of the month following the month in
20which the charges imposed by the Section were collected, each
21public utility, municipal utility, and electric cooperative
22shall remit to the Department of Revenue all moneys received as
23payment of the Energy Assistance Charge on a return prescribed
24and furnished by the Department of Revenue showing such
25information as the Department of Revenue may reasonably
26require; provided, however, that a utility offering an

 

 

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1Arrearage Reduction Program or Supplemental Arrearage
2Reduction Program pursuant to Section 18 of this Act shall be
3entitled to net those amounts necessary to fund and recover the
4costs of such Programs Program as authorized by that Section
5that is no more than the incremental changes change in such
6Energy Assistance Charge authorized by Public Act 96-33 and
7this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly this
8amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. If a customer
9makes a partial payment, a public utility, municipal utility,
10or electric cooperative may elect either: (i) to apply such
11partial payments first to amounts owed to the utility or
12cooperative for its services and then to payment for the Energy
13Assistance Charge or (ii) to apply such partial payments on a
14pro-rata basis between amounts owed to the utility or
15cooperative for its services and to payment for the Energy
16Assistance Charge.
17    (g) The Department of Revenue shall deposit into the
18Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund all moneys
19remitted to it in accordance with subsection (f) of this
20Section; provided, however, that the amounts remitted by each
21utility shall be used to provide assistance to that utility's
22customers. The utilities shall coordinate with the Department
23to establish an equitable and practical methodology for
24implementing this subsection (g) beginning with the 2010
25program year.
26    (h) On or before December 31, 2002, the Department shall

 

 

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1prepare a report for the General Assembly on the expenditure of
2funds appropriated from the Low-Income Energy Assistance Block
3Grant Fund for the program authorized under Section 4 of this
4Act.
5    (i) The Department of Revenue may establish such rules as
6it deems necessary to implement this Section.
7    (j) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity may
8establish such rules as it deems necessary to implement this
9Section.
10    (k) The charges imposed by this Section shall only apply to
11customers of municipal electric or gas utilities and electric
12or gas cooperatives if the municipal electric or gas utility or
13electric or gas cooperative makes an affirmative decision to
14impose the charge. If a municipal electric or gas utility or an
15electric cooperative makes an affirmative decision to impose
16the charge provided by this Section, the municipal electric or
17gas utility or electric cooperative shall inform the Department
18of Revenue in writing of such decision when it begins to impose
19the charge. If a municipal electric or gas utility or electric
20or gas cooperative does not assess this charge, the Department
21may not use funds from the Supplemental Low-Income Energy
22Assistance Fund to provide benefits to its customers under the
23program authorized by Section 4 of this Act.
24    In its use of federal funds under this Act, the Department
25may not cause a disproportionate share of those federal funds
26to benefit customers of systems which do not assess the charge

 

 

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1provided by this Section.
2    This Section is repealed on January 1, 2025 effective
3December 31, 2018 unless renewed by action of the General
4Assembly. The General Assembly shall consider the results of
5the evaluations described in Section 8 in its deliberations.
6(Source: P.A. 98-429, eff. 8-16-13; 99-457, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
7    (305 ILCS 20/18)
8    Sec. 18. Financial assistance; payment plans.
9    (a) The Percentage of Income Payment Plan (PIPP or PIP
10Plan) is hereby created as a mandatory bill payment assistance
11program for low-income residential customers of utilities
12serving more than 100,000 retail customers as of January 1,
132009. The PIP Plan will:
14        (1) bring participants' gas and electric bills into the
15    range of affordability;
16        (2) provide incentives for participants to make timely
17    payments;
18        (3) encourage participants to reduce usage and
19    participate in conservation and energy efficiency measures
20    that reduce the customer's bill and payment requirements;
21    and
22        (4) identify participants whose homes are most in need
23    of weatherization.
24    (b) For purposes of this Section:
25        (1) "LIHEAP" means the energy assistance program

 

 

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1    established under the Illinois Energy Assistance Act and
2    the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Act of 1981.
3        (2) "Plan participant" is an eligible participant who
4    is also eligible for the PIPP and who will receive either a
5    percentage of income payment credit under the PIPP criteria
6    set forth in this Act or a benefit pursuant to Section 4 of
7    this Act. Plan participants are a subset of eligible
8    participants.
9        (3) "Pre-program arrears" means the amount a plan
10    participant owes for gas or electric service at the time
11    the participant is determined to be eligible for the PIPP
12    or the program set forth in Section 4 of this Act.
13        (4) "Eligible participant" means any person who has
14    applied for, been accepted and is receiving residential
15    service from a gas or electric utility and who is also
16    eligible for LIHEAP.
17    (c) The PIP Plan shall be administered as follows:
18        (1) The Department shall coordinate with Local
19    Administrative Agencies (LAAs), to determine eligibility
20    for the Illinois Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program
21    (LIHEAP) pursuant to the Energy Assistance Act, provided
22    that eligible income shall be no more than 150% of the
23    poverty level. Applicants will be screened to determine
24    whether the applicant's projected payments for electric
25    service or natural gas service over a 12-month period
26    exceed the criteria established in this Section. To

 

 

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1    maintain the financial integrity of the program, the
2    Department may limit eligibility to households with income
3    below 125% of the poverty level.
4        (2) The Department shall establish the percentage of
5    income formula to determine the amount of a monthly credit,
6    not to exceed $150 per month per household, not to exceed
7    $1,800 annually, that will be applied to PIP Plan
8    participants' utility bills based on the portion of the
9    bill that is the responsibility of the participant provided
10    that the percentage shall be no more than a total of 6% of
11    the relevant income for gas and electric utility bills
12    combined, but in any event no less than $10 per month,
13    unless the household does not pay directly for heat, in
14    which case its payment shall be 2.4% of income but in any
15    event no less than $5 per month. The Department may
16    establish a minimum credit amount based on the cost of
17    administering the program and may deny credits to otherwise
18    eligible participants if the cost of administering the
19    credit exceeds the actual amount of any monthly credit to a
20    participant. If the participant takes both gas and electric
21    service, 66.67% of the credit shall be allocated to the
22    entity that provides the participant's primary energy
23    supply for heating. Each participant shall enter into a
24    levelized payment plan for, as applicable, gas and electric
25    service and such plans shall be implemented by the utility
26    so that a participant's usage and required payments are

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 439 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    reviewed and adjusted regularly, but no more frequently
2    than quarterly. Nothing in this Section is intended to
3    prohibit a customer, who is otherwise eligible for LIHEAP,
4    from participating in the program described in Section 4 of
5    this Act. Eligible participants who receive such a benefit
6    shall be considered plan participants and shall be eligible
7    to participate in the Arrearage Reduction Program
8    described in item (5) of this subsection (c).
9        (3) The Department shall remit, through the LAAs, to
10    the utility or participating alternative supplier that
11    portion of the plan participant's bill that is not the
12    responsibility of the participant. In the event that the
13    Department fails to timely remit payment to the utility,
14    the utility shall be entitled to recover all costs related
15    to such nonpayment through the automatic adjustment clause
16    tariffs established pursuant to Section 16-111.8 and
17    Section 19-145 of the Public Utilities Act. For purposes of
18    this item (3) of this subsection (c), payment is due on the
19    date specified on the participant's bill. The Department,
20    the Department of Revenue and LAAs shall adopt processes
21    that provide for the timely payment required by this item
22    (3) of this subsection (c).
23        (4) A plan participant is responsible for all actual
24    charges for utility service in excess of the PIPP credit.
25    Pre-program arrears that are included in the Arrearage
26    Reduction Program described in item (5) of this subsection

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 440 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    (c) shall not be included in the calculation of the
2    levelized payment plan. Emergency or crisis assistance
3    payments shall not affect the amount of any PIPP credit to
4    which a participant is entitled.
5        (5) Electric and gas utilities subject to this Section
6    shall implement an Arrearage Reduction Program (ARP) for
7    plan participants as follows: for each month that a plan
8    participant timely pays his or her utility bill, the
9    utility shall apply a credit to a portion of the
10    participant's pre-program arrears, if any, equal to
11    one-twelfth of such arrearage provided that the total
12    amount of arrearage credits shall equal no more than $1,000
13    annually for each participant for gas and no more than
14    $1,000 annually for each participant for electricity. In
15    the third year of the PIPP, the Department, in consultation
16    with the Policy Advisory Council established pursuant to
17    Section 5 of this Act, shall determine by rule an
18    appropriate per participant total cap on such amounts, if
19    any. Those plan participants participating in the ARP shall
20    not be subject to the imposition of any additional late
21    payment fees on pre-program arrears covered by the ARP. In
22    all other respects, the utility shall bill and collect the
23    monthly bill of a plan participant pursuant to the same
24    rules, regulations, programs and policies as applicable to
25    residential customers generally. Participation in the
26    Arrearage Reduction Program shall be limited to the maximum

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 441 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    amount of funds available as set forth in subsection (f) of
2    Section 13 of this Act. In the event any donated funds
3    under Section 13 of this Act are specifically designated
4    for the purpose of funding the ARP, the Department shall
5    remit such amounts to the utilities upon verification that
6    such funds are needed to fund the ARP. Nothing in this
7    Section shall preclude a utility from continuing to
8    implement, and apply credits under, an ARP in the event
9    that the PIPP or LIHEAP is suspended due to lack of funding
10    such that the plan participant does not receive a benefit
11    under either the PIPP or LIHEAP.
12        (5.5) In addition to the ARP described in paragraph (5)
13    of this subsection (c), utilities may also implement a
14    Supplemental Arrearage Reduction Program (SARP) for
15    eligible participants who are not able to become plan
16    participants due to PIPP timing or funding constraints. If
17    a utility elects to implement a SARP, it shall be
18    administered as follows: for each month that a SARP
19    participant timely pays his or her utility bill, the
20    utility shall apply a credit to a portion of the
21    participant's pre-program arrears, if any, equal to
22    one-twelfth of such arrearage, provided that the utility
23    may limit the total amount of arrearage credits to no more
24    than $1,000 annually for each participant for gas and no
25    more than $1,000 annually for each participant for
26    electricity. SARP participants shall not be subject to the

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 442 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    imposition of any additional late payment fees on
2    pre-program arrears covered by the SARP. In all other
3    respects, the utility shall bill and collect the monthly
4    bill of a SARP participant under the same rules,
5    regulations, programs, and policies as applicable to
6    residential customers generally. Participation in the SARP
7    shall be limited to the maximum amount of funds available
8    as set forth in subsection (f) of Section 13 of this Act.
9    In the event any donated funds under Section 13 of this Act
10    are specifically designated for the purpose of funding the
11    SARP, the Department shall remit such amounts to the
12    utilities upon verification that such funds are needed to
13    fund the SARP.
14        (6) The Department may terminate a plan participant's
15    eligibility for the PIP Plan upon notification by the
16    utility that the participant's monthly utility payment is
17    more than 45 days past due.
18        (7) The Department, in consultation with the Policy
19    Advisory Council, may adjust the number of PIP Plan
20    participants annually, if necessary, to match the
21    availability of funds from LIHEAP. Any plan participant who
22    qualifies for a PIPP credit under a utility's PIPP shall be
23    entitled to participate in and receive a credit under such
24    utility's ARP for so long as such utility has ARP funds
25    available, regardless of whether the customer's
26    participation under another utility's PIPP or ARP has been

 

 

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1    curtailed or limited because of a lack of funds.
2        (8) The Department shall fully implement the PIPP at
3    the earliest possible date it is able to effectively
4    administer the PIPP. Within 90 days of the effective date
5    of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the
6    Department shall, in consultation with utility companies,
7    participating alternative suppliers, LAAs and the Illinois
8    Commerce Commission (Commission), issue a detailed
9    implementation plan which shall include detailed testing
10    protocols and analysis of the capacity for implementation
11    by the LAAs and utilities. Such consultation process also
12    shall address how to implement the PIPP in the most
13    cost-effective and timely manner, and shall identify
14    opportunities for relying on the expertise of utilities,
15    LAAs and the Commission. Following the implementation of
16    the testing protocols, the Department shall issue a written
17    report on the feasibility of full or gradual
18    implementation. The PIPP shall be fully implemented by
19    September 1, 2011, but may be phased in prior to that date.
20        (9) As part of the screening process established under
21    item (1) of this subsection (c), the Department and LAAs
22    shall assess whether any energy efficiency or demand
23    response measures are available to the plan participant at
24    no cost, and if so, the participant shall enroll in any
25    such program for which he or she is eligible. The LAAs
26    shall assist the participant in the applicable enrollment

 

 

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1    or application process.
2        (10) Each alternative retail electric and gas supplier
3    serving residential customers shall elect whether to
4    participate in the PIPP or ARP described in this Section.
5    Any such supplier electing to participate in the PIPP shall
6    provide to the Department such information as the
7    Department may require, including, without limitation,
8    information sufficient for the Department to determine the
9    proportionate allocation of credits between the
10    alternative supplier and the utility. If a utility in whose
11    service territory an alternative supplier serves customers
12    contributes money to the ARP fund which is not recovered
13    from ratepayers, then an alternative supplier which
14    participates in ARP in that utility's service territory
15    shall also contribute to the ARP fund in an amount that is
16    commensurate with the number of alternative supplier
17    customers who elect to participate in the program.
18    (d) The Department, in consultation with the Policy
19Advisory Council, shall develop and implement a program to
20educate customers about the PIP Plan and about their rights and
21responsibilities under the percentage of income component. The
22Department, in consultation with the Policy Advisory Council,
23shall establish a process that LAAs shall use to contact
24customers in jeopardy of losing eligibility due to late
25payments. The Department shall ensure that LAAs are adequately
26funded to perform all necessary educational tasks.

 

 

09900SB2814ham002- 445 -LRB099 19990 RJF 51572 a

1    (e) The PIPP shall be administered in a manner which
2ensures that credits to plan participants will not be counted
3as income or as a resource in other means-tested assistance
4programs for low-income households or otherwise result in the
5loss of federal or State assistance dollars for low-income
6households.
7    (f) In order to ensure that implementation costs are
8minimized, the Department and utilities shall work together to
9identify cost-effective ways to transfer information
10electronically and to employ available protocols that will
11minimize their respective administrative costs as follows:
12        (1) The Commission may require utilities to provide
13    such information on customer usage and billing and payment
14    information as required by the Department to implement the
15    PIP Plan and to provide written notices and communications
16    to plan participants.
17        (2) Each utility and participating alternative
18    supplier shall file annual reports with the Department and
19    the Commission that cumulatively summarize and update
20    program information as required by the Commission's rules.
21    The reports shall track implementation costs and contain
22    such information as is necessary to evaluate the success of
23    the PIPP.
24        (3) The Department and the Commission shall have the
25    authority to promulgate rules and regulations necessary to
26    execute and administer the provisions of this Section.

 

 

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1    (g) Each utility shall be entitled to recover reasonable
2administrative and operational costs incurred to comply with
3this Section from the Supplemental Low Income Energy Assistance
4Fund. The utility may net such costs against monies it would
5otherwise remit to the Funds, and each utility shall include in
6the annual report required under subsection (f) of this Section
7an accounting for the funds collected.
8(Source: P.A. 96-33, eff. 7-10-09.)
 
9    Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are
10severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
11    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
12becoming law.".