Category Archives: Utilities

SB6682

SB6682 – Adds $0.03/kWh to the price of electricity from “electric vehicle charging stations.”
Prime Sponsor – Senator Fortunato (R; 31st District; Auburn)
Current status – Referred to the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Summary –
The bill would require an electric utility to add a surcharge of $0.03/kWh to the price of electricity at “electric charging stations” served by the utility, and to examine by the beginning of 2021 the technological feasibility of adding  the same surcharge to electricity used for residential chargers. (It defines an “electric charging station” by reference as “a public or private parking space that is served by charging equipment”, which seems as if it might include residential chargers, but the context makes it clear that it’s not intended to.)

HB2645

HB2648 – Tightens the solar PV module stewardship program in some small ways.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Smith (R; 10th District; Island County; Skagit & Snohomish)
Current status – Bill signed, but Section 2 – Study of recycling – vetoed by Governor.
In the House – (Passed)
Had a hearing in the House Committee on Environment and Energy January 27th at 3:30. Amended and passed out of committee February 4th; referred to Rules. Amended on the floor by the prime sponsor and passed by the House February 16th. House concurred with Senate amendments March 10th.

In the Senate – (Passed)
Referred to the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology. Had a hearing February 20th. Replaced by a striker and passed out of committee February 25th. Referred to Ways and Means; had a hearing there on February 28th. Passed out of committee March 2nd and referred to Rules. Passed by the Senate March 7th. Returned to the House for possible concurrence with Senate amendments.
Next step would be – Signature by the Governor.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Governor’s Veto
Governor Inslee signed the bill, but vetoed Section 2, which created a task force to report to the Legislature and make recommendations on potential methods for managing end-of-life photovoltaic modules, because of coronavirus budget concerns.

Comments – The bill only requires notifying retailers, distributors, and installers about violations of the requirement for an approved stewardship plan, but it only imposes potential fines on the manufacturer of the panels.

The amendment in the House committee narrows manufacturers’ obligation to provide takeback locations to regions in which their modules “were used.” It delays the implementation and enforcement of the act for a year, until dates in 2023. It requires the Department of Ecology to create a task force to report to the Legislature and make recommendations on potential methods for managing end-of-life photovoltaic modules, including ones from utility scale projects. It lists a number of issues the report must cover, and a number of required members for the task force, but Ecology can add more.

The floor amendment replaces the Ecology task force with a WSU work group, subject to appropriations.

The committee striker in the Senate delays the date for submitting a stewardship plan by 2.5 years, until July 1, 2022; delays the reporting requirement for manufacturers by an additional year, until 2024; and delays enforcement by six months, until July 1, 2023.

Summary –
It would expand the current legislation to cover ground mounted panels connected to the grid. It would cover modules manufactured for use in the state as well as those for sale; and include panels acquired through remote offerings such as sales outlets, catalogs, or the internet. It would prohibit distributors, retailers, and installers from selling panels that weren’t covered by an approved stewardship plan, not just manufacturers, and would require the Department of Ecology to send a warning ordering them to stop if the manufacturer had not submitted a plan and gotten it approved by Ecology within thirty days.

SB6578

SB6578 – Expedites a pumped storage project by designating them as projects of statewide significance.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Honeyford (R; 15th District; Eastern Yakima County)
Current status – Had a hearing in the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Water, Natural Resources & Parks February 4th. Substitute bill passed out of committee February 6th; referred to Rules. Failed to pass out of the Senate by cutoff; placed in the “X” file.
Next step would be – Dead bill…
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
HB2819 is a companion bill in the House.

Comments –
In 2012 SB6044 slightly expanded the powers of PUDs along the Columbia by authorizing them to sell water to privately owned utilities for use in pumped storage projects, and to sell power from such projects. FERC recently approved a permit authorizing a three year study for a 1,200 MW pumped storage project that National Grid wants to build in Goldendale, using water supplied by the Klickitat County PUD. According to that linked article, “The project would be on land owned by NSC Smelter at the former Columbia Gorge Aluminum smelter site, which is designated a Resource Conservation and Recovery Act contaminated site and subject to a cleanup effort being overseen by the Washington Department of Ecology. However, the department has said the pumped storage project will not hinder the cleanup process. … The commission also said the pumped-storage developer has shown its project boundary does not include any land subject to further cleanup activities. Still, FERC said the developer will have to show any future licensing for the project will not impede the cleanup.”

The substitute bill adds a requirement for consultation with affected tribes to the process for any project of statewide significance.

Summary –
The bill would make pumped storage projects using water rights approved by the legislature for that purpose developments of statewide significance, which require:
(1) Expedited permit processing for the design and construction of the project;
(2) Expedited environmental review processing;
(3) Expedited processing of requests for street, right-of-way, or easement vacations necessary for the construction of the project;
(4) Participation of local officials on the team assembled under the requirements of RCW 43.157.030(2)(b); and
(5) Such other actions or items as are deemed necessary by the office of regulatory assistance for the design and construction of the project.

HB2819

HB2819 – Expedites a pumped storage project by designating them as projects of statewide significance.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Mosbrucker (R; 14th District; Klickitat County)
Current status – Referred to the Governor for signature.
In the House – (Passed the House)
Had a hearing in the House Committee on Environment & Energy February 3rd. Passed out of committee February 4th; referred to Rules. Amended on the floor and passed by the House February 18th.

In the Senate – (Passed the Senate)
Referred to the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Water, Natural Resources & Parks; had a hearing and passed out of committee February 25th. Referred to Rules. Passed the Senate March 6th.
Next step would be – Signature by the Governor.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
SB6578 is a companion bill in the Senate.

Comments –
In 2012 SB6044 slightly expanded the powers of PUDs along the Columbia by authorizing them to sell water to privately owned utilities for use in pumped storage projects, and to sell power from such projects. FERC recently approved a  permit authorizing a three year study for a 1,200 MW pumped storage project that National Grid wants to build in Goldendale, using water supplied by the Klickitat County PUD. According to that linked article, “The project would be on land owned by NSC Smelter at the former Columbia Gorge Aluminum smelter site, which is designated a Resource Conservation and Recovery Act contaminated site and subject to a cleanup effort being overseen by the Washington Department of Ecology. However, the department has said the pumped storage project will not hinder the cleanup process. … The commission also said the pumped-storage developer has shown its project boundary does not include any land subject to further cleanup activities. Still, FERC said the developer will have to show any future licensing for the project will not impede the cleanup.”

The floor amendment changed current law to require counties and cities with development projects of statewide significance to create a plan for consultation with affected tribes as part of the approval process.

Summary –
The bill would make pumped storage projects using water rights approved by the legislature for that purpose developments of statewide significance, which require:
(1) Expedited permit processing for the design and construction of the project;
(2) Expedited environmental review processing;
(3) Expedited processing of requests for street, right-of-way, or easement vacations necessary for the construction of the project;
(4) Participation of local officials on the team assembled under the requirements of RCW 43.157.030(2)(b); and
(5) Such other actions or items as are deemed necessary by the office of regulatory assistance for the design and construction of the project.

HB2756

HB2756 – Requires utilities to let customers opt out of smart meter installations.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Shea (R, 4th District, Spokane Valley) (There’s no longer a legislative web page for him, since he’s been suspended from the Republican caucus.)
Current status – Referred to the House Committee on Environment and Energy.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Summary –
The bill requires utilities to provide an option allowing retail customer to opt out of having a smart meter installation on their premises. They must provide an opt-out form for customers on request, and may make the option available through a web page. They could assess a cost-based fee for the option, mitigated to the fullest extent possible so as not to create a disincentive for customers.

Utilities would be required to provide general information and notices about advanced metering infrastructure deployment and grid modernization efforts through bill inserts or on their web sites. They would also have to provide individualized customer notices, using methods like bill inserts, separate mailings, door hangers, or electronic notification. These would have to include an explanation of the infrastructure changes; the ratepayer benefits of advanced metering infrastructure and grid modernization; an estimated timeline for smart meter installations in the area; an explanation of opt-out options or where to find additional information; and company contact information for further inquiries.

SB6496

SB6496 – Authorizes public utilities to support shifting homes and buildings from fossil fuels to electricity if it’s in the public interest.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Lovelett (D; 40th District; San Juan Islands & Anacortes)
Current status – Hearing scheduled for January 29th in the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology has been cancelled.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
HB2586 is a companion bill in the House.

Comments –
Currently, these utilities can provide incentives or programs to support shifting if there’s a direct economic benefit for customers or for them.

Summary –
This bill authorizes municipal utilities and PUDs to fund incentives and programs to shift homes and buildings from fossil fuels to electricity if they have developed a beneficial electrification plan that would provide a net benefit to the utility or customers by improving the management of the grid, reducing customer costs, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, improving air quality, or providing other public interest benefits.

Plans can include consideration of multiple options for electrifying various energy uses; the impact of beneficial electrification on the utility’s load and whether demand response or other load management opportunities are operationally appropriate; an assessment of conservation measures to offset load impacts; system reliability and distribution system efficiencies; potential greenhouse gas emission reductions; potential indoor and outdoor air quality benefits; and the overall benefits and costs of planned action, including the cost of greenhouse gas emissions calculated according to a Federal estimate which works out to $62/metric ton this year. Plans have to prioritize allocating benefits to vulnerable populations in their service areas.

SB6430

SB6430 – Establishing a statewide industrial waste coordination program.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Brown (R; 8th District; TriCities)
Current status – Vetoed by the Governor.
In the Senate – (Passed the Senate)
Passed out of the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology January 22nd. Referred to Ways and Means; Had a hearing there February 10th at 10:00 AM. Passed out of Ways and Means February 11th. Referred to Rules; passed the Senate unanimously February 17th.

In the House – (Passed the House)
Referred to the House Committee on Environment and Energy; had a hearing February 24th. Passed out of committee February 27th; referred to Appropriations. Passed out of there and referred to Rules March 2nd. Passed the House March 6th.
Next step would be – To the Governor for signature.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Summary –
The bill would establish a statewide industrial waste coordination program to support and coordinate existing collaborations where underutilized resources of one company, such as waste, by-products, residues, energy, water, logistics, capacity, expertise, equipment, and materials are used by another company, and would support new opportunities for such industrial symbiosis projects.

The program would be administered by the Department of Commerce to provide expertise, technical assistance, and best practices to support local industrial symbiosis projects; it would be managed regionally, with a dedicated facilitator and technical and administrative support for each region.

The program would be required to develop inventories of current industrial waste innovation; generate a material flow data collection system to capture and manage data on resource availability and potential synergies provided voluntarily; establish guidance and best practices for emerging local industrial resource hubs; identify access to capital in order to fund projects; develop economic and environmental performance metrics for industrial or commercial hubs; host workshops and connect regional businesses, governments, utilities, research institutions, and other organizations to identify opportunities for resource collaboration; assist organizations throughout the life cycle of projects, from identification of opportunities to full implementation; develop economic cluster initiatives to spur growth and innovation; and make any additional recommendations to the legislature in order to incentivize and facilitate industrial symbiosis.

If funds were appropriated, the program would be authorized to establish a program offering competitive grants for researching, developing, and deploying local waste coordination projects. Grants could be used for existing industrial symbiosis efforts by public or private organizations; emerging opportunities including projects arising from the industrial waste coordination program established by the act, conceptual work by public utilities on redirecting their wastes to productive use, or existing inventories or project concepts involving converting specific biobased wastes to renewable natural gas; research on product development using a specific waste flow; feasibility studies to evaluate potential biobased resources; or feasibility studies for publicly owned utilities evaluating shifting to multiutility operations or potential symbiotic connections with other regional businesses. Grants would be limited to under $500,000, would require a one-to-one match from nonstate funds, would have to be distributed geographically, and would be awarded considering factors such as time to implementation and scale of expected economic or environmental benefits.

The bill extends the current legislation exempting some financial, commercial, and proprietary information from public disclosure to cover this program.

SB6352

SB6352 – Eliminates the option for expedited review of alternative energy resource facilities by the Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Warnick (R; 22nd District; Moses Lake)
Current status – Had a hearing in the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology January 22nd. Failed to make it out of committee by 2020 cutoff; dead bill.
Next step would be –
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Summary –
Currently, proposed energy facilities and alternative energy resource facilities may both apply to the Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council for an expedited review, and the Council may grant that if it finds that the environmental impact of the proposed facility is not significant or will be mitigated to a nonsignificant level under the State Environmental Policy Act’s standard, and the project is found to be consistent and in compliance with city, county, or regional land use plans or zoning ordinances after a hearing.

The bill would remove this option for alternative energy resource facilities, on the grounds, according to the findings, that an expedited review for these particular facilities “creates an unfair advantage for those facilities, which have the special privilege of being able to opt out of the local review process if the local review process reveals local concerns.”

HB2518

HB2518 – Minimizing leaks in natural gas pipelines.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Shewmake (D; 42nd District; Whatcom County) (Co-sponsors Ybarra, Boehnke, Tarleton, Mead, Fitzgibbon, Lekanoff, Ramel, Callan, Peterson, Slatter, Davis, Doglio, Pollet, and Cody)
Current status –
In the House – Passed
Amended and passed the House Committee on Environment & Energy January 30th. Referred to Appropriations; had a hearing there on February 10th. A 2nd substitute passed out of Appropriations February 11th. Referred to Rules. Amended on the floor by the prime sponsor and passed by the House February 16th.

In the Senate – Passed
Referred to the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology. Had a hearing February 20th; passed out of committee February 25th, and referred to Rules. Passed by the Senate March 5th.
Next step would be – Signature by the Governor.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
(A House bill analysis is available.)

Comments –
The substitute requires the UTC to provide conditions for the recovery of interim costs between rate cases. It removes the list of values required in cost-benefit analyses, and reduces some reporting requirements. It exempts proprietary data, trade secrets, and information that would adversely affect public safety from public disclosure.

The 2nd substitute no longer counts emissions from intentional releases or operational practices as leaks that have to be included in the annual reports to the UTC, but it still requires the Commission to estimate emissions associated with operational practices along with those from leaks, apparently by using information that’s already being reported, or by ordering additional information from the companies. The floor amendment in the House made some minor adjustments in details.

Summary –
Requires the Utilities and Transportation Commission to begin a proceeding to increase
the certainty that utilities will recover the costs associated with measures approved by the commission that they undertake to reduce hazardous leaks and fugitive emissions from their gas pipelines.

Gas companies can submit proposed projects and changes to operational procedures to reduce hazardous leaks and nonhazardous fugitive releases, ranked according to risk, severity, and complexity to the UTC. These proposals must include a cost-effectiveness analysis and propose one of several ways of calculating a cap for the annual expenditures that would be recoverable through a mechanism to be approved by the commission. The cost-effectiveness analysis has to include: The value of the leaked gas; the cost of greenhouse gas emissions associated with that, calculated in accordance with a Federal standard which currently works out to $65/metric ton; the value of the reduction in risk from gas leaks; and the cost of the measures. The proposal must also address the expected impact to ratepayers and other factors the commission may require.

Beginning July 1, 2020, each gas pipeline company has to submit a report to the UTC on
the environmental and economic performance of its system, including all known leaks from transmission and distribution pipelines, and from all components, including pumps, valves, pipes, and pneumatic devices. Reports must include a sizable list of items, including a plan for fixing leaks, plus any others the UTC requires. The Commission is to produce an estimate of pipeline leakage in 1990, and an annual report for Ecology based on this current data, including the total volume of leaked gas and its market value; the volume and value of leaks that have not been fixed and of those the company does not intend to fix; and a projected timeline of the expected reductions from the plans submitted by gas companies. ( The report is also to review of opportunities and obstacles to reducing gas leakage statewide, including workforce availability, infrastructure investments, permitting, technical and legal obstacles, and any other  information the Commission decides is relevant.)

The bill specifies that the emissions from pipelines reported to the UTC by gas companies are to be included in the Department of Commerce’s biannual estimate of the State’s current greenhouse gas emissions.

HB2586

HB2586 – Authorizes public utilities to support shifting homes and buildings from fossil fuels to electricity if it’s in the public interest.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Ramel (D; 40th District; San Juan Islands & Anacortes)
Current status – Had a hearing in  the House Committee on Environment and Energy January 27th. An amended substitute passed out of committee February 4th; referred to Rules. Failed to pass out of the House by cutoff.
Next step would be – Dead bill.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
SB6496 is a companion bill in the Senate,

Comments –
Currently, these utilities can provide incentives or programs to support shifting if there’s a direct economic benefit for customers or for them.

The substitute bill drops the original’s list of things a utility “may consider” in a plan. Instead it requires a plan to identify options and program schedules for electrifying various end-uses or other energy sources, and it specifies that a utility must determine that the sum of the benefits of a plan equals or exceeds the sum of its costs. It lists some benefits that may be included and some costs that must be. (It also says the utility may “differentiate the level of benefits and costs accrued to highly impacted communities and vulnerable populations” in this process; perhaps that implies it might proceed with a plan for that set of customers even if benefits didn’t exceed costs for all of its customer base…) It also simplifies the definition of beneficial electrification, but as I read the change, it doesn’t have practical implications.

The amendments require a utility to request the input of any natural gas company with customers in its service area on the development of a beneficial electrification plan, and require the cost analysis for a plan to demonstrate that the electricity serving the increased load will have a lower greenhouse gas emissions profile than direct use, highly efficient, gas.

Summary –
This bill authorizes municipal utilities and PUDs to fund incentives and programs to shift homes and buildings from fossil fuels to electricity if they have developed a beneficial electrification plan that would provide a net benefit to the utility or customers by improving the management of the grid, reducing customer costs, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, improving air quality, or providing other public interest benefits.

Plans can include consideration of multiple options for electrifying various energy uses; the impact of beneficial electrification on the utility’s load and whether demand response or other load management opportunities are operationally appropriate; an assessment of conservation measures to offset load impacts; system reliability and distribution system efficiencies; potential greenhouse gas emission reductions; potential indoor and outdoor air quality benefits; and the overall benefits and costs of planned action, including the cost of greenhouse gas emissions calculated according to a Federal estimate which works out to $62/metric ton this year. Plans have to prioritize allocating benefits to vulnerable populations in their service areas.

Shift Zero has a flyer about the bill.

HB2505

HB2505 – Revives B&O tax exemption for Bonneville funds utilities spend on low-income bill assistance or weatherization.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Robinson (D; 38th District; Everett and Marysville)
Current status – Referred to the House Committee on Finance.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
SB6172 is a companion bill in the Senate.

Comments –
A similar exemption was created by the Legislature in 2010 and expired in June 2015. In the 2018 session, Senator Hobb’s SB6323 proposed reviving it through 2029, but the bill died in the Ways and Means Committee. (At that point, the fiscal note estimated that the bill would reduce the general fund by $600,000 in the first biennium, and $1.2 million per biennium going forward.)

Summary –
The bill creates a permanent exemption from the B&O tax for funds utilities receive from the Bonneville Power Administration as credits against contracts or for energy conservation or demand-side management, provided that they use that money for bill assistance or weatherization for low-income customers, and that it’s an addition to what they would be spending in any case.

HB2495

HB2470 – Lets utilities use new solid waste to energy plants for some “carbon-neutral” power under the Clean Energy Transformation Act.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Shewmake (D; 42nd District; Whatcom County)
Current status – Referred to the House Committee on Environment and Energy.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Comments
The findings say that nine of the State’s thirteen landfills, including King County’s, are expected to run out of space and close by 2040, and that waste-to-energy in King County would save $4 billion to $7 billion over fifty years and have lower greenhouse gas emissions than shipping the waste to a landfill by train.

Summary –
Last year’s Clean Energy Transformation Act (the 100% Clean Electricity bill) allowed utilities to provide up to 20% of the requirement for greenhouse gas neutral power after 2030 in a number of ways, including using power from a waste-to-energy plant constructed before 1992. (This meant the plant in Spokane.) This bill allows them to use power from new plants, under the same conditions. (The Department of Ecology and the Department of Commerce have to do a life-cycle analysis that concludes this would provide a net reduction in greenhouse gas emissions compared to best practice management of the waste in the jurisdiction through any other available methods, including waste reduction, recycling, composting, and minimizing the use of a landfill. The plants also have be operated in compliance with federal laws and regulations and meet state air quality standards.)

It also allows a utility to get up to 10% of its power from a plant meeting these conditions after 2045, when the law says 100% of the State’s electricity is supposed to come from nonemitting electric generation and renewable resources.

HB2405

HB2405 – Authorizes counties to establish commercial property assessed clean energy financing programs.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Duerr (D; 1st District; Bothell)
Current status – Referred to the Governor for signature.
In the House – (Passed)
Amended by the sponsor in a minor way and passed out of the House Committee on Local Government January 24th. Referred to Appropriations; had a hearing there on Saturday February 8th. A 2nd substitute with major changes passed out of Appropriations February 11th; referred to Rules. Replaced on the floor with a striker by the prime sponsor and passed by the House February 18th. House concurred with the Senate amendments March 6th.

In the Senate – (Passed)
Referred to the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology; had a hearing February 25th. Replaced by a striker and voted out of committee February 27th; referred to Ways and Means. Had a hearing there on February 29th. Passed out of committee March 2nd, and referred to Rules. Passed by the Senate March 5th.
Next step would be – Signature by the Governor.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
SB6222 is an identical companion bill in the Senate.

Comments –
This bill reintroduces the most recent version of Representative Doglio’s HB1796, which she brought forward as a striker on the floor in the 2019 session, but which was never considered. (The striker shifted from authorizing municipalities to authorizing counties, and made a couple of further legal adjustments which are summarized by staff at the end of that version.

Property assessed clean energy financing programs make the repayment of a loan for an energy efficiency upgrade a lien on the property, which is repaid through the property tax billing process, and which stays as an obligation of the new owners if the building changes hands. Thirty states have established these programs. However, it isn’t clear that they’re legal in Washington, because our Constitution prohibits any gift of public funds to private parties.

ShiftZero, a coalition of green building organizations, has been promoting this idea, and has obtained a serious legal opinion which says that they would be legal if they were structured the way they are in Texas, because that relies entirely on private financing, rather than lending any state funds. (However, it isn’t clear whether the State using its property tax mechanism to implement a private loan and other details in this bill are constitutional here. Presumably, a court will settle those questions if the bill passes.) ShiftZero has a flyer about the bill.

The amendments in the House Local Government Committee added reducing or eliminating lead in water for drinking or cooking to the list of qualified projects, and would allow counties to narrow that list to focus on their climate action goals.

The 2nd substitute adopted in Appropriations removes allowing Commerce to establish a loan loss reserve/credit enhancement program, and removes a county’s responsibility to enforce delinquent assessments and C-PACER financing installment payments. (Presumably these steps help avoid the Constitutional issues. I think that means lenders would have to recover through a lien on the property if the borrower defaulted.) It also specifies that neither the state nor any county is required to use public funds to fund or repay the assessments authorized through a C-PACER program.

The House striker requires counties to establish a program, whether or not money’s appropriated for that, and limits them to doing that and recording the liens. It adds a list of items specifying  the details of Commerce’s responsibilities in administering the program, which are summarized by staff on the last page of the striker.

The changes in the Senate committee striker are summarized by staff on its last two pages. Among other things, it now bases the lien on the property owner entering into voluntary assessment agreement to repay the loan, lets Commerce contract out the administration of the program, lets it provide grants to counties to help them set up programs, and allows it to create a program guidebook including various standard legal forms which counties would be required to use.

Summary –
The bill authorizes counties to set up programs like this for energy efficiency, water conservation, renewable energy, and resiliency projects in agricultural, commercial, and industrial properties; and in multifamily properties with five or more units.

A county can impose fees on property owners who want to participate in order to pay for the reasonable costs of administering the program, provided the fees don’t exceed the municipality’s actual costs. It can contract with another county or entity to administer loans, or administer them in cooperation with other counties.

The Department of Commerce is also to set up or contract for the administration of a program to administer these loans, and a county could contract with Commerce to participate in that program. However, the county itself would remain responsible for collecting payments on a loan, and for foreclosing on the property if that became necessary.

If Commerce contracted with a third party to administer the statewide program, it would have to be done efficiently and transparently, including:

  • Making any services offered to property owners, such as estimating energy savings, overseeing project development, or evaluating alternative equipment installations, priced separately and open to purchase by the property owner from qualified third-party providers;
  • Making information about any properties joining the program available to all interested and qualifying third-party capital providers so the owners could receive impartial terms from them;
  • Disclosing any financial interest the administrator had in any of the services provided to property owners to the public;
  • Allowing financial underwriting and evaluation to be performed by capital providers, and;
  • Working in a collaborative process with capital providers and other stakeholders to develop a program guidebook and documents or forms.

If funding were appropriated, Commerce could set up a loan loss reserve or credit enhancement program to support financing of qualified projects.

Last session’s history
In 2019, a substitute bill passed out of the House Committee on Local Government. The various legal adjustments in the substitute are summarized on p. 6 of the House Bill Report. Representative Doglio introduced this striker on the floor, but it was never considered, and the bill was still in the house of origin by cutoff.

SB6222

SB6222 – Authorizes counties to establish commercial property assessed clean energy financing programs.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Lovelett (D; 22nd District; San Juan County, Whatcom, Skagit)
Current status – Had a hearing in the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology January 22nd. Failed to make it out of committee by 2020 cutoff; dead bill.
Next step would be –
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
HB2405 is an identical companion bill in the House.

Comments –
This bill reintroduces the most recent version of Representative Doglio’s HB1796, which she brought forward as striker on the floor in the 2019 session, but which was never considered. (The striker shifted from authorizing municipalities to authorizing counties, and made a couple of further legal adjustments which are summarized by staff at the end of that version. (The House bill is now under Representative Duerr’s sponsorship.)

Property assessed clean energy financing programs make the repayment of a loan for an energy efficiency upgrade a lien on the property, which is repaid through the property tax billing process, and which stays as an obligation of the new owners if the building changes hands. Thirty states have established these programs. However, it isn’t clear that they’re legal in Washington, because our Constitution prohibits any gift of public funds to private parties.

ShiftZero, a coalition of green building organizations, has been promoting this idea, and has obtained a serious legal opinion which says that they would be legal if they were structured the way they are in Texas, because that relies entirely on private financing, rather than lending any state funds. (However, it isn’t clear whether the State using its property tax mechanism to implement a private loan and other details in this bill are constitutional here. Presumably, a court will settle those questions if the bill passes.) ShiftZero has a flyer about the bill.

Summary –
The bill authorizes counties to set up programs like this for energy efficiency, water conservation, renewable energy, and resiliency projects in agricultural, commercial, and industrial properties; and in multifamily properties with five or more units.

A county can impose fees on property owners who want to participate in order to pay for the reasonable costs of administering the program, provided the fees don’t exceed the county’s actual costs. It can contract with another county or entity to administer loans, or administer them in cooperation with other counties.

The Department of Commerce is also to set up or contract for the administration of a program to administer these loans, and a county could contract with Commerce to participate in that program. However, the county itself would remain responsible for collecting payments on a loan, and for foreclosing on the property if that became necessary.

If Commerce contracted with a third party to administer the statewide program, it would have to be done efficiently and transparently, including:

  • Making any services offered to property owners, such as estimating energy savings, overseeing project development, or evaluating alternative equipment installations, priced separately and open to purchase by the property owner from qualified third-party providers;
  • Making information about any properties joining the program available to all interested and qualifying third-party capital providers so the owners could receive impartial terms from them;
  • Disclosing any financial interest the administrator had in any of the services provided to property owners to the public;
  • Allowing financial underwriting and evaluation to be performed by capital providers, and;
  • Working in a collaborative process with capital providers and other stakeholders to develop a program guidebook and documents or forms.

If funding were appropriated, Commerce could set up a loan loss reserve or credit enhancement program to support financing of qualified projects.

SB6223

SB6223 – Enhances opportunities to participate in community solar projects.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Lovelett (D; 40th District; San Juan County, Whatcom, Skagit)
Current status – Had a hearing in the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology, January 22nd. Failed to make it out of committee by 2020 cutoff; dead bill.
Next step would be –
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
(HB2248 is a companion bill in the House.)

Summary –
The bill extends the expiring community solar incentive program, retaining many of its provisions, but it would allow subscribers who invest in a project to get net metering payments from their share of it in the same way they would if the panels were on their own roofs. (With net metering, you get a credit at the retail rate on your bill each month for the electricity your share of the project produced, so it’s as if the utility was not charging you for that power, and you can carry that credit forward if you have a surplus and use it to reduce later bills. (The credits are only good until the end of each year, though, so you don’t want to subscribe for more power than you’ll use in that time.)

The bill would also extend the $0.10/kWh production incentive credit that the current program ended with to all the subscribers of projects that had at least 40% of their subscriptions from any combination of low-to-moderate-income households and low-to-moderate-income service providers like housing authorities and food banks. The incentives would last for eight years; subscribers could receive up to 50% of the cost of their share of the project from them. However, the bill would provide an additional $0.10/kWh incentive credit to the low-to-moderate-income households; they would also be eligible to get production incentives for up to 100% of their costs. (These are defined as customers with up to 115% of the household median in their area. Average household median income for the state is about $64,000, though it varies a lot.) (In addition, the bill would also allow utilities that created community solar projects to meet requirements for energy assistance to low-income households under the Clean Energy Transformation Act by not charging for or discounting part or all of the costs of those subscriptions; they could also retain the RECs associated with the production of power from these shares of a project.)

As I read the bill, service providers can subscribe to projects, but aren’t eligible for the additional incentive. One of these organizations has to certify the income status of each of the low-to-moderate income households subscribing, which sounds as if it may not be attractive to people in that category who aren’t currently depending on those services. Projects can’t be bigger than one thousand kilowatts; at least 40% of all the subscriptions have to be for less than twenty kilowatts; and no customer can subscribe to more than 40% of a project. (However, customers can subscribe to more than one project, but not for more than their total estimated annual usage, or for more capacity than 100 kW AC.)

Details –

The bill would stop certifying projects under the current incentive program at the end of June 2020. Projects could apply for precertification under the new program for six years, between the first of July 2020, and the end of June 2026. (They’d get another two years to complete them; but as I read the bill they wouldn’t be eligible for the incentives. The previous two sentences may not be right; I don’t think the bill’s current language is consistent about how the timetables for projects and incentives relate toward the end of the period.)

Utilities can currently receive annual tax credits (up to the greater of 1.5% of their 2014 sales or $250,000) for community solar production incentives if they choose to provide them; for projects under the new program that are certified by the end of June 2026, the bill increases that to the greater of 1.75% of sales or $300,000. Total incentives under the new program are capped at $20 million.

HB2379

HB2379 – Inventorying and incentivizing the reduction of potential greenhouse gas emissions from sulfur hexafluoride.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Smith (R; 10th District; Island County)
Current status – Had a hearing in the House Committee on Environment and Energy, January 16th. Failed to make it out of committee by 2020 cutoff; dead bill.
Next step would be –
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Comments –
Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) is roughly 22,800 times more potent than carbon dioxide at trapping heat over one hundred years and can remain in the atmosphere for up to 3,200 years. It’s used the standard insulator in electrical transmission and distribution equipment, and as a refrigerant and a fire suppressor. (It’s also been used to fill tennis balls…)

Summary –
The bill adds assessing the volume of sulfur hexaflouride in the state’s gas-insulated electrical equipment, and an estimate of the potential greenhouse gas emissions from it to Commerce’s biannual report to the Legislature. It adds utilities’ investments in any projects that reduce these emissions during the equipment’s useful life and when retired from service to the list of energy transformation projects they can count as offsets in providing “carbon-neutral” power during the period between 2030 and 2045 when that’s required by the Clean Energy Transformation Act.

SB6172

SB6172 – Revives B&O tax exemption for Bonneville funds utilities spend on low-income bill assistance or weatherization.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Braun (R; 20th District; Cowlitz & Lewis Counties)
Current status – Had a hearing in the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology January 28th. Passed out of committee February 6th, and referred to Ways and Means. Had a hearing there on February 20th; passed out of Ways and Means February 28th. Referred to Rules.
Next step would be – Action by the Rules Committee.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
HB2505 is a companion bill in the House.

Comments –
A similar exemption was created by the Legislature in 2010 and expired in June 2015. In the 2018 session, Senator Hobb’s SB6323 proposed reviving it through 2029, but the bill died in the Ways and Means Committee. (At that point, the fiscal note estimated that the bill would reduce the general fund by $600,000 in the first biennium, and $1.2 million per biennium going forward.)

Summary –
The bill creates a permanent exemption from the B&O tax for funds utilities receive from the Bonneville Power Administration as credits against contracts or for energy conservation or demand-side management, provided that they use that money for bill assistance or weatherization for low-income customers, and that it’s an addition to what they would be spending in any case.

SB6135

SB6135 – Adds more reporting on reliability to the 100% Clean Electricity Act.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Sheldon (D-Caucusing with Republicans; 35th District; Mason County) (Co-Sponsors Carlyle & Short)
Current status – Referred to the Governor for signature.
In the Senate – (Passed)
Had a hearing in the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy, and Technology January 21st. Substitute by the prime sponsor passed out of committee February 6th; referred to Rules. Passed the Senate unanimously February 17th.

In the House – (Passed)
Referred to the House Committee on Environment and Energy; had a hearing February 25th. Passed out of committee February 27th. Referred to Rules March 28th. Passed by the House March 6th.
Next step would be – Signature by the Governor.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Comments –
The substitute adds findings, and completely replaces the original required reporting on the system with a requirement for an annual meeting of stakeholders to discuss the current, short-term, and long-term adequacy of energy resources, and to address specific steps the utilities can take to coordinate planning. The meetings are to be convened by the Department of Commerce and the UTC, and they’re to provide a summary of each of them, including any specific action items, to the Governor and the Legislature.

Summary –
The original bill required a report from the Department of Commerce to the Legislature on system reliability by January 1, 2022, two years ahead of the first full report on the system in the original legislation, and provides for updates every four years after that. (That is, there will now be a full report at least every four years, and an update every four years, in between each of the full reports.)

In addition, the bill would have required Commerce to provide specific recommendations for legislative action if it should determine that risks to the reliability of the system have developed.

HB2248

HB2248 – Enhances opportunities to participate in community solar projects.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Doglio (D; 22nd District; Thurston County)
Current status – Vetoed by the Governor.
In the House –  (Passed the House)
Had a hearing in the House Committee on Environment and Energy January 16th. Replaced by a substitute, amended, and passed out of committee February 4th; referred to Appropriations. Had a hearing there February 10th; passed out of Appropriations February 11th. Referred to Rules; returned to Rules on February 26th. Replaced with a striker by the prime sponsor on the floor and passed out of the House February 27th. House concurred in Senate changes March 12th.

In the Senate – (Passed the Senate)
Referred to the Senate Committee on Ways and Means; had a hearing there on March 2nd. Replaced by a striker and voted out of committee March 9th. Referred to Rules. Passed by the Senate March 11th and returned to the House for consideration of concurrence in the changes.
Next step would be – Signature by the Governor.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
(SB6223 is a companion bill in the Senate.)

Comments –
There’s a staff summary of the changes on page 7 of the House Bill Report on the substitute.

Interestingly, Republican Representative DeBolt, from Lewis County, is a cosponsor of this bill. (Transalta plans to put a 180MW solar project on their reclaimed coal mine site near Centralia, in his district, to complement its nearby Skookumchuck wind project, and there’s now considerable local interest in developing other renewable energy projects.)

The amended House substitute provides participating utilities an additional credit against their  taxes each year of the larger of 0.0025% of their sales or $50,000.

There’s a staff summary of the changes made by the House striker on its last page. They include extending the enrollment period for the program by five years, to 2031; expanding potential subscribers to include tribal and public agencies serving low-income communities; creating a biennial cap of $5 million to spread the available funding out over time, distributed among utilities in proportion to their retail sales; and establishing a target cost of $3/watt for projects, which the WSU extension service administering the program can review and adjust each biennium. It also drops the net metering provisions.

There’s a staff summary of the changes made by the Senate Ways and Means striker on its last page. (It’s in the folder for the bill on the page with the committee materials for the meeting.) As I read the striker’s new language about compensation, on p. 19:
It limits the portion of the one-time initial payment for administrative costs to the startup costs for the qualifying subscribers rather than paying for all the costs of administering those memberships.
It now says that the other portion of the initial payment is “not to exceed” the cost of the proportion of the project providing benefits to qualifying subscribers rather than saying it’s to equal that.
It reintroduces net metering for community solar projects of up to 100 kWs behind the meter, but only for the customer being billed for that meter, rather than providing virtual net metering for all subscribers.
It says that “For all other community solar projects, compensation must be determined at a value set by the participating utility and paid to the administrator or subscribers according to the agreement between the project and the utility.”
It also requires the Energy Office to allocate the incentive funds among participating utilities in an equitable way, and clarifies a few other details.

Summary –
The bill extends the expiring community solar incentive program, retaining many of its provisions, but it would allow subscribers who invest in a project to get net metering payments from their share of it in the same way they would if the panels were on their own roofs. (With net metering, you get a credit at the retail rate on your bill each month for the electricity your share of the project produced, so it’s as if the utility was not charging you for that power, and you can carry that credit forward if you have a surplus and use it to reduce later bills. (The credits are only good until the end of each year, though, so you don’t want to subscribe for more power than you’ll use in that time.)

The bill would also extend the $0.10/kWh production incentive credit that the current program ended with to all the subscribers of projects that had at least 40% of their subscriptions from any combination of low-to-moderate-income households and low-to-moderate-income service providers like housing authorities and food banks. The incentives would last for eight years; subscribers could receive up to 50% of the cost of their share of the project from them. However, the bill would provide an additional $0.10/kWh incentive credit to the low-to-moderate-income households; they would also be eligible to get production incentives for up to 100% of their costs. (These are defined as customers with up to 115% of the household median in their area. Average household median income for the state is about $64,000, though it varies a lot.)  (In addition, the bill would also allow utilities that created community solar projects to meet requirements for energy assistance to low-income households under the Clean Energy Transformation Act by not charging for or discounting  part or all of the costs of those subscriptions; they could also retain the RECs associated with the production of power from these shares of a project.)

As I read the bill, service providers can subscribe to projects, but aren’t eligible for the additional incentive. One of these organizations has to certify the income status of each of the low-to-moderate income households subscribing, which sounds as if it may not be attractive to people in that category who aren’t currently depending on those services. Projects can’t be bigger than one thousand kilowatts; at least 40% of all the subscriptions have to be for less than twenty kilowatts; and no customer can subscribe to more than 40% of a project. (However, customers can subscribe to more than one project, but not for more than their total estimated annual usage, or for more capacity than 100 kW AC.)

Details –

The bill would stop certifying projects under the current incentive program at the end of June 2020. Projects could apply for precertification under the new program for six years, between the first of July 2020, and the end of June 2026. (They’d get another two years to complete them; but as I read the bill they wouldn’t be eligible for the incentives. The previous two sentences may not be right; I don’t think the bill’s current language is consistent about how the timetables for projects and incentives relate toward the end of the period.)

Utilities can currently receive annual tax credits (up to the greater of 1.5% of their 2014 sales or $250,000) for community solar production incentives if they choose to provide them; for projects under the new program that are certified by the end of June 2026, the bill increases that to the greater of 1.75% of sales or $300,000. Total incentives under the new program are capped at $20 million.

SB6019

SB6019 – Tax exemptions for waste to energy plants
Prime Sponsor – Senator Palumbo (D; 1st District; parts of Whatcom, Skagit, Snohomish & eastern King County)
Current status – Referred to Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology. Still in committee by 2019 cutoff; reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session. Failed to make it out of committee by 2020 cutoff; dead bill.
Next step would be –
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Summary –
Establishes various tax incentives, expiring in 2030, for new waste to energy plants built within a mile of an existing landfill, and for new manufacturing within five miles that uses the power from such a plant. (It also says that they have to be operating under Federal and State environmental laws and regulations, except that “permit actions to site an energy recovery facility may be exempt from compliance” with the State’s Environmental Policy Act.)

Details:

It exempts such plants from the B&O tax; exempts the sale of the power the plants produce from the public utility tax; and exempts the purchase of machinery, materials and equipment for them, and labor and services for their construction, from sales and use taxes.

It exempts the purchase of machinery, materials, and equipment for such manufacturing facilities, and labor and services for their construction, from sales and use taxes, provided that the new plant maintains at least twenty-five family living wage jobs for at least ten years.

SB5981

SB5981 – Creates a cap and trade system.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Carlyle (D; 36th District; Seattle)
Current status – Referred to Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology. Had a hearing March 21st. Still in committee by the 2019 cutoff; reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session. Scheduled for a hearing on a draft substitute, February 4th 2020 at 10:00 AM.
Next step would be – Action by the committee.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

2020 Substitute  –
The substitute delays any implementation of its provisions until a new act providing at least $2 billion per biennium in new transportation funding has been passed. It creates a fourth destination for the revenue, the Strategic Transportation Investment Account, though the draft leaves the division of funding between the four accounts open. This account must be used to provide cost-effective congestion relief, enhance all modes of mobility, assist highly impacted communities, and address the impacts of the transportation system on carbon pollution and other quality of life issues, including impacts to salmon. This funding can include projects to reduce congestion and improve air quality, including multimodal alternatives; ones to reduce carbon emissions from transportation including ones to accelerate the deployment of zero emission vehicles or deploy grid infrastructure for vehicle charging; and fish barrier correction projects.

The new version specifies that Ecology must allocate allowances to electric utilities between 2021 and 2035 covering their average annual emissions over each previous three year period, and that it’s to adopt rules “providing the method for distribution of no-cost allowances” to them between 2035 and 2050. (I assume this means the rules would gradually step down their allowances in some way to be determined in the future.) The substitute exempts emissions associated with electricity exported from the state. The State would actually get the allowances back immediately, auction them, and then give the proceeds to the utilities, to be used exclusively to minimize the bill’s impacts on customers.  Each utility would have to develop a plan, conforming to rules from the UTC or the Department of Commerce, with a portfolio of mechanisms for aiding customers, like weatherization, energy efficiency, electrification of heating in buildings, electric vehicle incentives, and infrastructure. At least half the money would now have to go to rate relief.

Natural gas suppliers would be covered by a similar scheme, but their starting allocation in 2022 is left open in the draft, and it would be required to step down annually between then and 2035 in proportion to the gas utilities’ share of the reductions needed to meet the State’s 2035 target. Their plans would have to give the highest priority to assisting low-income customers, and use at least twenty-five percent of the money for rate relief for residential customers.  Proceeds from the sale of allowances are used for investments to reduce emissions, including efficiency and renewable gas projects. The UTC is to provide for timely recovery for prudent and reasonable costs associated with complying with the act, and gas companies are prohibited from passing costs on to customers whose emissions are covered by its other provisions.

The substitute specifies that energy efficiency projects, carbon capture, and sequestration may be used to provide offsets. (It would no longer allow the aggregation of temporally separate offset activities.) It raises the limit on using offsets between 2024 and 2034 from 6% to 8%. The current bill requires certain percentages of offset projects to provide direct environmental benefits to the state. The substitute lets projects within the state count toward those requirements, and raises the required percentage between 2024 and 2034 from 50% to 90%. It says Ecology can restrict the use of offsets from areas and plants failing to meet air quality standards; eliminates the provisions allowing the use of up to an extra 5% of offsets from tribal lands; directs Ecology to keep the total quantity of allowances and offsets below the total of required compliance obligations “to the extent practicable,” and adds a regular review of the offset protocols.

The substitute drops the section prohibiting regional air quality agencies and other jurisdictions from directly regulating greenhouse gas emissions through a cap, charge, low-carbon fuel standard or clean fuels standard, or charge upon sale or use.  It adds some progressive requirements about standards that have to be met by parties receiving project contracts, and moves various dates forward a year.

Summary of the 2019 bill –
Raises the State’s targets for greenhouse gas reductions to match the Paris Accords’. Creates a state greenhouse gas emissions cap and trade program requiring allowances for each metric ton of emissions above a gradually decreasing cap. Allowances are sold at auction, and can be sold or traded within the state and in linked programs in other jurisdictions. Requires setting a floor and a ceiling on prices for allowances, and mechanisms for increasing or decreasing the allowances available to help keep prices within that range.

Details –
The cap is to be set and adjusted over time so that covered entities contribute their proportional share of the overall State reductions needed to meet the new targets.

Covered entities
You need allowances if your facility emits more than 25,000 metric tons/year of CO2 equivalents (on its own or when the emissions associated with your direct purchases of electricity are included); if the associated emissions from your generating electricity in the state, importing it, or supplying natural gas are above that level; or if you’re a supplier of other fuels like gasoline or diesel that would produce emissions above that level when combusted. You can also opt-in to the program if you’re responsible for emissions but aren’t required to participate (if, for example, you can make reductions cheaply and want to make money by selling the allowances you earn), or if you just want to trade in the market. Allowances can be banked and used in later years. There’s a penalty of $200 per allowance, adjusted for inflation starting in 2025, for failing to provide enough of them to cover your emissions in a given year, as well as a penalty of up to $10,000 for violations of the rules.

Offsets
Between 2021 and 2023 up to 8% of an entities’ obligations may be met with approved offset credits, provided at least 75% of those reduce emissions in the state; through 2034 up to 6% of them may be met with offsets if at least 50% of those reduce emissions in Washington. At any point another 5% may be met through offsets on tribal land in the US or a linked jurisdiction. (The bill may intend this to mean tribal land in the state, but it doesn’t say so.) The bill creates an advisory committee to provide guidance on rules to increase offset projects with other environmental benefits in the state while prioritizing projects that “benefit highly impacted communities, Indian tribes, and natural and working lands.”

Exemptions
The bill exempts biomass from various approved sources, all biofuels, aviation fuel, coal burned at the Transalta plant, marine fuel burned outside the state, vented or unintentional emissions, and military installations.

Between 2021 and 2035, it provides a gradually decreasing number of free allowances to energy-intensive trade exposed industries in eleven categories, and to any others the Department of Commerce may identify through quantitive criteria about their energy use and trade exposure. (However, the bill also says in Section 14(1) that they don’t have to start complying until 2023…) The number of free allowances is to decrease at the same rate needed for reductions in allowances for covered entities as a whole to result in meeting the targets; facilities with relatively lower emissions are to receive more allowances. (The Department’s to review the program every two years to see if it is avoiding significant leakage from the transfer of activities out of state, or awarding more free allowances than are necessary for that goal.)

If a 100% Clean Electricity bill passes, the bill requires the Department of Ecology to develop rules, in consultation with Commerce and the UTC, providing utilities with enough free allowances through 2035 to avoid the bill’s impacting rates or charges. It provides natural gas utilities free allowances for the gas sold to low-income customers, so the company does not have to pay to offset those emissions. (I think that the bill requires the value of those allowances to be spent funding measures to benefit low-income consumers such as weatherization, conservation, and help paying bills.)

Investments
The bill creates a climate oversight board with a lot of members, including representatives of the Governor, the Commissioner of Public Lands, the Auditor, four legislators, two tribal representatives, various stakeholders, and an indeterminate number of other experts. (It isn’t clear how some of these people are to be selected.) It’s responsible for ongoing review of the cap and trade system and the funding provided by it, but the bill doesn’t say what happens to any conclusions it draws from that review, or what if any power it has to affect what it “reviews”.

The bill creates an environmental and economic justice panel, appointed by the Governor. The panel’s to include two members representing union labor; two members representing tribal governments; and five other members, including at least one tribal leader and at least two nontribal leaders representing the interests of vulnerable populations residing in “highly impacted communities”. (Those communities are to be identified by the Department of Health, considering “vulnerable populations” and environmental hazards; including census tracts that are partly or wholly on tribal land; and building on a particular analysis already completed by the UW.) The panel’s to be co-chaired by a tribal leader and a representative of the interests of highly impacted communities. It’s to make recommendations on the plans for spending this revenue and their implementation, evaluate the funding levels, and analyze the policies to determine if they produce the intended improvements. The Department of Ecology is to consult with the panel and “accord substantial weight” to its recommendations in developing implementation plans for spending from each of the funds the bill sets up, and in developing biennial spending plans for each of them. It’s to update the identification of highly impacted areas every two years “under advisement from” the panel.

Any agency receiving funding from the system must consult with Indian tribes “on all decisions that may affect Indian tribes’ rights and interests in their tribal lands.” (Perhaps this only covers decisions implementing this bill, but it doesn’t seem to say that.) The process must be independent of any public participation process required by state law, or by a state agency, and regardless of whether the agency receives a request for consultation. No project that affects tribal lands can be funded without “meaningful consultation” with affected Indian tribes. Any project that “directly impacts” tribal lands must have written consent from the relevant tribal governments.

40% of the revenue goes to an energy transformation account, to be spent on projects and programs in Washington that provide additional reductions in carbon pollution. These include residential, industrial, construction, transportation, and agricultural investments in renewable energy, efficiency, conservation, sequestration, and carbon emissions reductions. They have to provide real, specific, quantifiable, additional, and verifiable reductions for periods of time to be determined by the Department, and meet high labor standards. They have to be ranked and sortable based on quantitative performance metrics, including the avoided cost of a ton of carbon dioxide, though the bill does not say they have to be selected on that basis, or provide any criteria for deciding which projects that meet the basic standards will be selected, beyond saying 10% of these funds have to be spent in highly impacted areas.

35% of the revenue goes to an energy transition account, to provide funding to assist low-income households with increased energy prices; to help provide clean energy and low-carbon housing, transportation options, and technologies to people with greater barriers to accessing those, and where pollution is concentrated; and to support displaced fossil fuel-related industry workers. Spending has to be prioritized to help with additional energy and transportation costs resulting from policies and programs to reduce fossil fuel use, and to assist displaced workers, but it can also be used “to reduce carbon pollution and reduce vulnerable population characteristics or environmental burdens in highly impacted communities.” Thus, the money can be spent in a very wide variety of ways, including direct financial assistance, social and health services programs, energy bill subsidies, efficiency and weatherization services, affordable transportation, affordable housing, and improved community services. The Department must develop a worker support program for bargaining unit and nonsupervisory fossil fuel industry workers who are affected by the transition away from fossil fuels to a clean energy economy, and may allocate additional funds to it if there’s an unexpected amount of dislocation.

25% of the revenue goes to a climate impacts resilience account. Expenditures from it are to prioritize funding and investments to benefit “highly impacted communities”. At least half of it’s to go to community preparedness and awareness “before, during, and after” wildfires; resources to help tribal communities deal with wildfires; relocating tribal communities impacted by flooding and sea level rise; and programs to increase awareness of and preparedness for impacts of climate change and to educate people about ways to reduce pollution. The remainder’s to be spent on “natural resources resilience and related purposes” including, but not limited to, funding for improving forest and natural lands’ health and resilience to climate change, including thinning and prescribed fire projects and wildland fire prevention; for reducing stormwater impacts; for reducing flooding risks; for improving the availability and reliability of water supplies for in-stream and out-of-stream uses; for fish barrier correction projects; for projects to prepare for sea level rise and restore habitats, including small forestland owner fish passage barrier projects; and for adapting to and remediating the impacts of ocean acidification.

Details –
There are provisions for entering into agreements linking the program and its auctions with other jurisdictions’. The bill requires creating an advisory committee to make recommendations about designing and implementing the system, and to report on its functioning every two years. It requires appointing an independent organization to monitor and report on the auctions and on secondary markets that buy and sell allowances. It requires creating an electronic system for handling allowances and the auctions, or sharing another jurisdiction’s.

It prohibits regional air quality agencies and local jurisdictions regulating greenhouse gas emissions through “a cap, charge, low-carbon fuel standard or clean fuels standard, or charge upon the sale or use”.

HB1226

HB1226 – Revising the Energy Independence Act (I-937)
Prime Sponsor – Representative DeBolt (R, 20th District, Chehalis)
Current status – Had a hearing before the House Environment & Energy Committee on January 21st. Amended and passed out of committee February 5th. Had a hearing in the House Committee on Finance February 14th. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be – Action by the committee.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
House Bill Analysis

Comments –
One amendment by the Environment and Energy Committee removed the sections that would basically have repealed the Energy Independence Act (I-937) if the State put a price of any sort on the carbon content of fuels or electricity. Another removed the provisions allowing utilities to meet their renewable energy requirements under the Act by using “clean energy resources” as well as the renewables the Act allows, and  making carbon reduction investments for at least as much as complying with the Act’s requirement would cost. The amended bill also added a tax break with an annual cap of $83 million for investments in forest fire risk reduction, allowing a lot of companies to get a credit for those on their B&O taxes, and allowing utilities to get a credit for them them on their public utility taxes.

Summary –
At this point, beginning in January 2020, utilities with over 25,000 customers will be required by Initiative 937 (the Energy Independence Act) to provide at least 15% of their retail sales from “eligible renewable resources,” which do not include nuclear power or power from the existing dams on the Columbia and other rivers (except for some new power from increased efficiency at those).

The bill expands the area in which renewable resources, and additional power produced by increases in efficiency at dams that utilities own, can be used to meet the requirement – from the Pacific Northwest to roughly the part of the country west of the Great Plains. In the same way, it expands the area in which the percentage of energy coming from biomass in a plant co-fired by that and fossil fuel can be used to meet the requirement.

Expanded eligible resources would now also include a utility’s share of any additional power produced from efficiency improvements at the old BPA dams and (for private utilities) the renewable energy credits associated with whatever hydroelectric power they get from BPA.

It goes on to create a new definition of “clean energy resources”, which includes any renewables, as well as any other resources that don’t emit CO2, like nuclear plants. Starting in 2020, a utility would meet the requirement if it got 100% of its load from these “clean energy resources”, and it made “carbon reduction investments in a dollar amount that is at least equal to the incremental cost of complying with the annual target.” (I think this means they only have to make the investments if they fall short of the target, which I don’t think will ever happen to the public utilities now that their old hydro allotments count under these new rules, but it might conceivably mean they have to spend enough money to meet the target, and then spend that much again on other investments that reduce carbon.) These investments could range from EV chargers, demand management, or storage, to forest health projects. (Removed by amendment in the House Environment and Energy Committee.)

Starting in 2029, utilities would also have to meet any new energy or capacity needs with “clean energy resources”. (This would not allow any new gas plants to provide occasional backup for variable renewables.) This includes procurements through new contracts; those would also have to specify the sources of the power. However, the governing bodies of utilities could waive these requirements if it was necessary for system reliability or if meeting them was going to raise power costs more than 5% above the “lowest reasonable cost resource”.)

In any case, they can continue to use, for as long as they want to or can:

  • Power purchased from the BPA;
  • Short-term spot market purchases;
  • Electricity from renewing or extending contracts in effect as of January 1, 2020, if that doesn’t lead to any expansion of the power or capacity provided;
  • Coal power from the Transalta plant;
  • Currently-owned generation resources and increased generation from those;
  • Power from increased efficiency from a utility-scale renewable resource or distributed energy resource (such as a combined heat and power plant), and,
  • Power required to maintain reliable service and comply with applicable standard of the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC). They are explicitly authorized to procure one or more gas plants if that’s needed to avoid “potential conflicts with or compromises to” their ability to meet NERC’s reliability standards.

The bill creates a number of tax exemptions, deductions and credits for industries, pipelines, and utilities.

The requirements of I-937 and the bill’s requirements for clean energy and capacity are all repealed if the Legislature puts a tax, fee, or other price (at any level) on the carbon content of fuels and electricity. [Removed by amendment in the House Environment and Energy Committee.]

Details –

Tax Breaks

The bill creates sales and use tax exemptions, to expire in 2029, for expenditures to reduce or offset the emissions at an energy intensive, trade-exposed facility; and for ones to reduce emissions from natural gas pipelines. It provides up to $50 million to provide public utility tax credits to refund the businesses that pay that (including railroads, transportation companies, water companies, gas distribution companies and others as well as gas and electric utilities) for the entire costs of projects to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, and a deduction from those taxes for the “cost of production of power from” any new renewable facilities built or installed between 2019 and 2028. (I think this probably means the a deduction for the additional lifetime levelized cost of power from the facility, rather than an annual deduction for the extra cost in each of those eight years, but I’m not sure.)

HB1862

HB1862 – Raises the cap on net metering
Prime Sponsor – Representative Mead (D; 44th District; Snohomish)
Current status – Referred to House Committee on Environment and Energy. Still in committee by 2019 cutoff. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
SSB5223 was originally an identical companion bill in the Senate, but it’s been amended in minor ways.

Comments –

Net metering credits customers generating some of their own power with fuel cells, combined heat and power systems, or renewable energy systems at the retail rate for the power that goes onto the grid from their systems when they aren’t using it. Thus, they pay for the power they used from the grid net, or minus, the surplus power they provided to it.

The changes made to the original SB5223 by amendments in the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology Committee are summarized on p. 3 of the Senate Bill Report.

Summary –

The bill requires utilities to offer net metering to more customers, increasing the current cap from 0.5% of a utility’s peak demand during 1996 to 4%. (At least, I think that’s what it does; the change it makes seems pretty ungainly. It amends “On January 1, 2014, the cumulative generating capacity available to net metering systems will equal 0.5% percent …” to read 4% instead.) Representative Morris’s HB1129 also does this, more smoothly, but it would change the current system in several other ways.

Details –

The bill requires utilities to use the surplus credits that they get each year from any net-metering systems that have generated more power than customers used to help low-income residential customers pay their bills. (HB1129 only allows them to do this.)

Requires the State Building Code Council to do a study and make changes in the code to encourage more use of renewable energy systems.

Requires the Department of Commerce to create a stakeholder work group and report by December 1, 2020 to the appropriate legislative committees on its recommendations about specific circumstances in which changes in compensation for net metering systems would be warranted, and what the policy should be for customer-generators in the same rate class. The work group has to consider reductions in utility income from different levels of net metering and whether there are any cost shifts to ratepayers associated with it, and must provide an inventory of other states’ net metering laws.

Like HB1129, the bill would make large utilities include the total number of kilowatt hours consumed during the most recent twelve months on all customers’ bills.

SB5747

SB5747 – Requires a report on ways to expand the use of solid waste-to-energy plants.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Fortunato (D; 31st District; Auburn)
Current status – Referred to Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology. Still in committee by 2019 cutoff; reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session. Failed to make it out of committee by 2020 cutoff; dead bill.
Next step would be –
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Summary –
Requires the Department of Ecology and the Utilities and Transportation Commission to submit a jointly prepared report to the Legislature by the end of 2019 examining opportunities, and making recommendations, for expanding the use of waste-to-energy plants in Washington.

HB1664 -2019

HB1664 – Advancing electric transportation.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Slatter (D; 48th District; Bellevue, Redmond, Kirkland) (By request of the Governor.)
Current status – Referred to the House Committee on Transportation. Still in committee by 2019 cutoff. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
SB5336 is an identical companion bill in the Senate.

Comments –
The bill only seems to provide specific provisions  for private utilities and municipal utilities, not the PUDs.

Summary –

Washington would join the other nine states that have adopted California’s zero emission vehicle standards. (Those currently require manufacturers to have about 2.5% of the cars they sell in a given state be free of tailpipe emissions, and establish a market for trading credits that manufacturers who sell more battery and fuel-cell cars than required can sell to those who don’t sell enough or decide it would be cheaper to buy credits than produce and sell the cars.)

The bill requires all utilities to engage in electrifying transportation, and specifically authorizes them to build and promote charging infrastructure (as well as to invest in making energy infrastructure in general more efficient). It removes the requirement that their chargers must be in places where cars will plug in for at least four hours if they want to earn a rate of return on the investment.

It authorizes cities with municipal utilities serving more than 400,000 customers to do as much as the Washington Constitution allows to provide financing to help customers electrify transportation, and to offer programs, services, and make investments to provide that, if that will benefit ratepayers and the city has adopted a plan for electrifying transportation.

Utilities regulated by the UTC can submit a plan for investing in chargers or providing other programs, services, or incentives to support electrifying transportation. (In fact, they now have to have a plan if they want earn an increased rate of return on EV infrastructure.) The plan may not “increase costs to customers in excess of one-quarter of one percent above the benefits of electric transportation to all customers” over the twenty years of a utility’s current integrated resource plan. The UTC can allow an addition to the rate of return of up to 2% for capital investments in chargers behind the customer’s meter, provided that won’t increase costs to ratepayers more than 0.25%.

The bill provides a sales tax exemption of up to $1,000 and a use tax exemption of up to $1,000 on the sale or lease of new or used fully electric cars, light trucks, and medium-duty passenger vehicles with a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of less than $45,000 for the base model. (If you buy the car at the end of the lease you can get the tax exemptions on that purchase as well as on the lease payments.) The exemption expires when the number of vehicles that have received the exemption reaches 10% of the number of cars, light trucks and medium-duty passenger vehicles in the state.

It funds the program with the vehicle registration fee for plug-in cars that go at least 30 miles on the battery and raises it from $100/year to $150. (That fee currently goes to the motor vehicle fund to be spent on highways.)

Details –
In reviewing a private utility’s electrification plan, the UTC has to consider multiple options for the electrification of transportation for all customer classes; its impact on loads, and whether demand response or opportunities for managing load are appropriate; system reliability and distribution system efficiencies; interoperability concerns, including the interaction of hardware and software systems in proposals; benefits and costs; and the overall customer experience.

The bill removes the current prohibition against adopting California’s zero emissions vehicle requirements, and no longer requires Ecology to have any changes in emissions rules reviewed by an advisory group of stakeholders.

SB5629

SB5308 – Promoting small modular nuclear reactors.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Brown (R; 8th District; Tri-Cities)
Current status – Had a hearing before the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology on February 6th. Still in committee by 2019 cutoff; reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session. Failed to make it out of committee by 2020 cutoff; dead bill.
Next step would be –
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Comments –
Though the bill removes the provision in RCW 82.85.020(1)(b) that limits the sales and use tax deferral to two projects a year, RCW 82.85.040 still says the department may not approve applications for more than two projects a year. (Maybe this is intended to mean that the Department can now approve an unlimited number of deferrals, but only two from a given applicant…)

Summary –

Small modular reactors (SMRs) under the bill have an output no greater than 300 MW, and are designed to be manufactured in a factory and transported to sites. The bill specifies that the clean energy technology innovation to be supported in the State’s clean energy strategy includes SMRs. It exempts their manufacture and sale, and the manufacture and sale of any components, from the tax on manufacturing (0.484 percent), the tax on wholesale sales (0.484 percent), the State tax on retail sales (0.471 percent), and any other business and occupation taxes. (They must develop an apprenticeship, training, or workforce development program in cooperation with a public institution of higher education to be eligible for the tax breaks.) The bill exempts these tax breaks from expiring after ten years.

It expands the current provisions for deferring the payment of state and local sales and use taxes on the first $10 million of the costs of constructing, expanding, or renovating the facilities of manufacturing businesses, removing the limitation of the deferral to two projects a year and the requirement that they be located on different sides of the state. (It also specifies that projects that utilize or produce small modular reactors or other green technologies are encouraged.) The bill converts the current pilot program for directing these deferred taxes into supporting workforce training for manufacturing businesses when they are repaid into a permanent one.

These deferred taxes are to be paid in equal parts over ten years, without any adjustment for inflation, beginning five years after the completion of a project. The bill would add four years to the lifespan of this tax break, which would now expire in 2030.

Details –
It declares that the Legislature intends to extend these tax exemptions if a review finds that the number of jobs in the SMR industry in the state has increased by at least 10%. (This should be an easy standard to meet, since there are almost none now.)

HB1642

HB1642 – Expands on-bill repayment programs for renewable energy and conservation projects.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Doglio (D; 22nd District; Olympia)
Current status – Referred to Rules 2 Consideration in 2019. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session. Failed to pass out of the House by cutoff.
Next step would be – Dead bill.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
There’s a House Bill Report on the substitute and a Fiscal Note.

2019 Legislative History
Had a hearing in the House Committee on Environment and Energy February 18th. Passed out of committee February 21st, weakened by an amendment. Referred to Rules; placed on 2nd Reading March 9th. Referred to Rules 2 Consideration March 21st. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.

Comments –
The National Resources Defense Council did a detailed brief five years ago about the issues in designing these programs. (Often, they require that the expected savings are sufficient to cover the loan payments, so the project is  “bill-neutral”, though HB1642 doesn’t.) It can also be complicated to figure out how to handle one of these  loans when the borrower leaves a utility’s service area, or sells the property, but that’s an issue that the lender, not the utility, needs to take into account.

The amended bill makes offering of on-bill repayment program an option for all utilities, rather than requiring large utilities to offer one, and makes a number of other changes through an amendment by the prime sponsor which are summarized at the end of this page.

Summary –
In these programs, a utility facilitates a customer’s repayment of a loan from a third party for a renewable energy or energy conservation project by adding the payments to the utility bills. HB 1642 requires utilities with over 25,000 customers to offer these loans to their customers, unless their energy conservation plan includes an on-bill or off-bill repayment program for energy conservation loans that they administer and they or a third party capital provider make. The bill lets these utilities count the energy savings from projects financed through the programs toward their requirements for conservation under the Energy Independence Act (I-937), as long as the projects meet the Act’s standard for cost-effectiveness.

The bill defines the capital providers for these loans as “non-profit lenders, community banks, or credit unions.” It also allows smaller utilities and retail electric co-ops to choose to offer on-bill repayment programs.

Details:

Up to 25% of one of these loans may fund measures that aren’t included in a utility’s conservation portfolio.

Utilities have to provide borrowers in these programs with any conservation incentives they’re eligible for, and must have a marketing and outreach program to publicize them.

They can recover their reasonable and prudent costs for publicizing the programs and for upgrading their billing systems to handle the payments. They’re not responsible for recovering the loan; any payments go toward meeting the utility’s part of the bill first.

SB5555

SB5555 – Excludes most solar systems from renewable energy tax incentives.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Ericksen (R; 42nd District; Bellingham)
Current status – Had a hearing before the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology February 6th. Still in committee by 2019 cutoff; reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session. Failed to make it out of committee by 2020 cutoff; dead bill.
Next step would be – Action by the committee.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Summary –

For a solar system to be eligible for renewable energy tax incentives, all of its components, including the solar cells, would have to be produced or manufactured in the United States, or in a facility that the Department of Ecology certified as meeting all the relevant Washington State environmental, health, and safety standards.

HB1597

HB1597 – Including methane leakage from natural gas facilities in emissions estimates and regulatory activity.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Pollet (D; 46th District; Northeast Seattle)
Current status – Had a hearing in the House Committee on Environment and Energy, February 12th at 3:30. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session
Next step would be – Action by the committee.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
The House Bill Analysis is available.

Summary –
Requires the Department of Ecology to develop a uniformly applicable estimate of methane emissions during the production, gathering, processing, transmission, storage, and distribution of natural gas in the state, and a rule to specify their global warming potential over a twenty year time frame. (The estimate is to be set at a level where there’s a 95% chance that actual emissions are not above it.)

The bill requires State agencies, cities, and local governments in general to use those estimates of upstream natural gas emissions in permitting, planning, and other regulatory processes, and specifically amends the laws about a number of State regulatory processes to require including them in emissions estimates.

Details:

Ecology must consult with the UTC, the Chair of the Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council, the Department of Natural Resources, and the Department of Commerce in developing this rule making process. It can require gas or electrical companies to submit information about the emissions for their existing or proposed gas facilities, but they can only be used in developing an estimate to apply uniformly to all gas emissions, not to particular companies’. Starting in 2024, Ecology must evaluate the accuracy of the estimate every three years; update it when needed; and report on it to the appropriate legislative committees, including recommendations for changing how widely it’s applied, if any.

The bill amends the Clean Air Act, the State’s targets for reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, reviews under the Environmental Policy Act of facilities or projects whose associated direct or indirect annual greenhouse gas emissions are reasonably expected to be over ten thousand tons a year, the provisions for carbon mitigation plans from power plants, environmental facilities site planning, the regulation of utilities by the UTC, and utilities’ integrated resource planning to require inclusion of upstream emissions from natural gas estimated in accordance with Ecology’s rule.

SB5347

SB5347 – Requires utility publicity for climate programs to display “discernible and quantifiable effects” of an individual’s participation on global emissions.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Ericksen (R, 42nd District, Whatcom County)
Current status – Had a hearing in the Senate Committee on Energy, Environment & Technology February 6th. Still in committee by 2019 cutoff; reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be – Action by the committee.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Summary –
Requires any utility publicity indicating that a benefit, program or service will help deal in any way with the problem of climate change to include a “detailed description of the discernable [sic] and quantifiable effects” it will have on global climate change, displayed in a way that “discloses the discernable [sic] and quantifiable effects on global climate change attributable to the average individual customer” using it.

Comments –
Don’t feed the troll…

SB5329

SB5329 – Updates Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council operations. (By request of the Site Evaluation Council.)
Prime Sponsor – Senator Nguyen (D, 34th District, White Center)
Current status – Referred to the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology. Passed out of the committee January 31st. Referred to Rules; placed on 2nd reading February 5th. Still in house of origin by 2019 cutoff; reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be – Action by the Rules Committee.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
HB1332 is an identical companion bill in the House.

Summary –
The bill adds some language about the State’s need to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels and increase its reliance on clean energy to the section of the code about its intentions, and says that the bill intends “to streamline application review for energy facilities that use alternative energy resources to meet the state’s energy goals.”

The Council would have its own staff, rather than relying on the UTC’s. The bill reduces its size, and would no longer add a member from an area where a project has been proposed during the time it’s reaching a decision about its recommendation to the Governor on that project. (Instead, there’s a member representing the Association of Washington Cities and one from the Washington State Association of Counties.) It adds a tribal representative.

After the environmental review of the project, the Council can hold a public hearing about whether or not genuine issues of fact on matters the council deems material to its recommendation exist. If it then decides there aren’t, and that the project is consistent and compliant with local land use requirements then it can skip the requirement for holding a formal adjudicative hearing under the Administrative Procedures Act, and proceed to make a recommendation.

Details –
The bill eliminates a member from DNR, and a number of optional memberships for various agencies, and it makes a number of small procedural changes expanding the Council’s discretion and powers.

HB1332

HB1332 – Updates Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council operations.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Wylie (D, 49th District, Vancouver) (By request of the Site Evaluation Council.)
Current status – Did not pass out of opposite house by fiscal cutoff; sent to the “X” file March 9th.
In the House (Passed)
Returned by Senate Rules to the House Rules Committee for third reading. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session; on third reading. Returned to 2nd reading, replaced with a striker which (unless I missed something)  was simply the text of the 2nd Engrossed version returned by the Senate, advanced to 3rd reading, and passed by the House.

In the Senate –
Referred to the Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology in the Senate. Had a hearing February 20th; passed out of committee February 25th. Referred to Rules.
Next step would be  – Dead bill…
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
SB5329 is an identical companion bill in the Senate.

2019 History
In the House (Passed)

Had a hearing before the House Committee on Environment & Energy January 28th. Substitute bill with minor changes passed out of committee February 14th. Referred to Rules for 2nd reading. Passed by the House with a floor amendment March 8th.

In the Senate
Referred to the Committee on Environment, Energy, & Technology. Had a hearing March 14th; a striker with some minor adjustments passed out of committee March 26th. Referred to the Rules Committee.

2019 Comments – The 2019 substitute bill removed the representative from the Association of Washington Cities, restored the temporary representative from an area in which a project is being considered, added a second tribal representative, and made some other minor changes. (The changes are summarized on pp. 5-6 of the Senate Bill Report.)
The floor amendment requires completing consultation with tribes before determining whether there are still unsettled questions about material facts.

The changes in the Senate striker are summarized on its last page.

Summary –
The bill adds some language about the State’s need to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels and increase its reliance on clean energy to the section of the code about its intentions, and says that the bill intends “to streamline application review for energy facilities that use alternative energy resources to meet the state’s energy goals.”

The Council would have its own staff, rather than relying on the UTC’s. The bill reduces its size, and would no longer add a member from an area where a project has been proposed during the time it’s reaching a decision about its recommendation to the Governor on that project. (Instead, there’s a member representing the Association of Washington Cities and one from the Washington State Association of Counties.) It adds a tribal representative.

After the environmental review of the project, the Council can hold a public hearing about whether or not genuine issues of fact on matters the council deems material to its recommendation exist. If it then decides there aren’t, and that the project is consistent and compliant with local land use requirements then it can skip the requirement for holding a formal adjudicative hearing under the Administrative Procedures Act, and proceed to make a recommendation.

Details –
The bill eliminates a member from DNR, and a number of optional memberships for various agencies, and it makes a number of small procedural changes expanding the Council’s discretion and powers.

HB1232

HB1232 – Lets utilities count old hydro as meeting I-937’s requirements for adding new renewables
Prime Sponsor – Representative Griffey (R, 35th District, Mason County)
Current status – Referred to Environment & Energy. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Summary –

The Energy Independence Act, approved by State voters in 2006 I-937, requires utilities with 25,000 or more customers to increase the percentage of renewable energy in their power supplies in three stages, reaching 20% by 2020. Power from existing hydroelectric facilities was excluded from the requirement, except for new additions to the supply of renewable power created by some improvements to the generating efficiency of existing dams.

The bill would allow utilities to count any hydroelectric power they sell, no matter how long it has been around, as meeting this requirement for adding new renewable energy.

SB5336

SB5336 – Advancing electric transportation.
Prime Sponsor – Senator Palumbo (D, 1st District, Snohomish County) (Requested by the Governor.)
Current status – Had a hearing in the Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology, February 12th. Significantly changed substitute bill passed out of committee February 20th. Referred to the Committee on Transportation, which passed a 2nd substitute with some further changes March 6th. Referred to Ways and Means. Had a hearing March 19th 2019. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be – Action by the committee.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.
HB1664 is an identical companion bill in the House.

Comments –
First substitute:
The changes in the first substitute bill are summarized on p. 5 of the Senate Bill Report. (However, the bill only expands existing commercial vehicle tax breaks; it doesn’t “add” them. The original didn’t “require” Ecology to adopt the ZEV standard; it removed the prohibition on doing that.)

The substitute leaves the prohibition on adopting the Zero Emission Vehicle Standard in place. The Department of Commerce is to create a program to provide, subject to funding, rebates between $1,250 and $5,000 for low and moderate income households in areas with high levels of air pollution that scrap a vehicle that’s more than ten years old and replace it with a new or used zero-emission vehicle. [My economist friends predict that this will raise the price of used ZEVs.]

It specifies that local sales and use taxes are included in the exemptions. It roughly doubles the B&O and public utility tax credits for clean alternative fuel commercial vehicles, raises the annual cap on these exemptions from six million to forty, and extends the exemption from 2021 to 2050. Rather than raising registration fees on EVs, it funds the first thirty-three million in repayments to the general fund for the commercial vehicle tax exemptions from the multi-modal transportation account and anything above that as well as the reimbursements for the sales and use tax exemptions from the forward flexible account (which seems to be some part of the motor vehicle fund).

It makes all utilities’ authorizations for investments in EV infrastructure dependent on their creation of approved electrification of transportation plans, and sets 2030 as the limit to how long private utilities can earn incentive rates of return on investments in electric vehicle infrastructure. (The original bill only seemed to provide specific provisions for private utilities and municipal utilities, not the PUDs.)

Second substitute:
The second substitute has the tax exemptions expire at a $100 million cap, rather than when they’ve been received by 10% of the registered vehicles, and simply caps the commercial vehicle exemptions at $33 million. It eliminates the rebate program for scrapping vehicles.

Summary of the original bill –

Washington would join the other nine states that have adopted California’s zero emission vehicle standards. (Those currently require manufacturers to have about 2.5% of the cars they sell in a given state be free of tailpipe emissions, and establish a market for trading credits that manufacturers who sell more battery and fuel-cell cars than required can sell to those who don’t sell enough or decide it would be cheaper to buy credits than produce and sell the cars.)

The bill requires all utilities to engage in electrifying transportation, and specifically authorizes them to build and promote charging infrastructure (as well as to invest in making energy infrastructure in general more efficient). It removes the requirement that their chargers must be in places where cars will plug in for at least four hours if they want to earn a rate of return on the investment.

It authorizes cities with municipal utilities serving more than 400,000 customers to do as much as the Washington Constitution allows to provide financing to help customers electrify transportation, and to offer programs, services, and make investments to provide that, if that will benefit ratepayers and the city has adopted a plan for electrifying transportation.

Utilities regulated by the UTC can submit a plan for investing in chargers or providing other programs, services, or incentives to support electrifying transportation. (In fact, they now have to have a plan if they want earn an increased rate of return on EV infrastructure.) The plan may not “increase costs to customers in excess of one-quarter of one percent above the benefits of electric transportation to all customers” over the twenty years of its current integrated resource plan. The UTC can allow an addition to the rate of return of up to 2% for capital investments in chargers behind the customer’s meter, provided that won’t increase costs to ratepayers more than 0.25%.

The bill provides a sales tax exemption of up to $1,000 and a use tax exemption of up to $1,000 on the sale or lease of new or used fully electric cars, light trucks, and medium-duty passenger vehicles with a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of less than $45,000 for the base model. (If you buy the car at the end of the lease you can get the tax exemptions on that purchase as well as on the lease payments.) The exemption expires when the number of vehicles that have received the exemption reaches 10% of the number of cars, light trucks and medium-duty passenger vehicles in the state.

It funds the program with the vehicle registration fee for plug-in cars that go at least 30 miles on the battery and raises it from $100/year to $150. (That fee currently goes to the motor vehicle fund to be spent on highways.)

Details –
In reviewing a private utility’s electrification plan, the UTC has to consider multiple options for the electrification of transportation for all customer classes; its impact on loads, and whether demand response or opportunities for managing load are appropriate; system reliability and distribution system efficiencies; interoperability concerns, including the interaction of hardware and software systems in proposals; benefits and costs; and the overall customer experience.

The bill removes the current prohibition against adopting California’s zero emissions vehicle requirements, and no longer requires Ecology to have any changes in emissions rules reviewed by an advisory group of stakeholders.

SB5280

HB5280 – Authorizes community solar gardens.
Prime Sponsor – Senator McCoy (D, 38th District, Snohomish County)
Current status – Had a hearing on a substitute bill in the Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology February 12th. Still in committee by 2019 cutoff; reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be –  Action by the committee.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Comments –
The substitute specifies that any project has to meet the current requirements for community solar projects in RCW 80.28.375. These cover registration with the WSU Energy program and bonding (if required). It now requires at least ten subscribers or one per ten kilowatts, rather than at least five subscribers none of whom could own more than 40% of the project.

Olympia Community Solar has a flyer about the original bill.

Summary –
Community solar gardens are utility scale projects, in which subscribers buy a share of the project and get credits for their share of the output on their utility bills. The bill says they’re intended to exist “outside of tax-related subsidy programs”, and that they “include community solar projects” as those are defined in the current law about tax incentives for renewable energy. (That program has reached its cap, and is not allowing new projects.) For twenty-five years, subscribers would get credits on their bills at the retail rate for their share of the project’s output.

The bill requires each private utility to submit a plan for operating them to the UTC by January 1, 2020, and requires public utilities to submit plans to the Department of Commerce.

Comments –
The bill doesn’t say much of anything about the requirements for creating one of the profit or non-profit corporation that can own these projects in addition to utilities. It doesn’t say anything about provisions for transferring a subscriber’s contract if they leave the service area, or about what happens to a contract if one of these subscriber organizations goes out of business.

Details –
Utility Plans
The UTC can approve, disapprove or modify a private utility’s plan, and the bill talks about “a plan approved by Commerce” (though it doesn’t seem to specify Commerce’s powers over public utilities’ plans in the same way.)

Plans must:

  • Reasonably allow for the creation, financing, and accessibility of community solar gardens;
  • Provide guidelines for including low-income customers as subscribers, and may allow a preference for community solar gardens that have low-income subscribers;
  • Establish uniform standards, fees, and processes for the interconnection of projects that allow the utility to recover reasonable interconnection costs for each one;
  • Be consistent with the public interest;
  • Identify the information that must be provided to customers to ensure fair disclosure of future costs and benefits of subscriptions;
  • Include a program implementation schedule;
  • Identify all proposed rules, fees, and charges;
  • Describe how the program will be promoted;
  • Describe the system for crediting each subscriber’s monthly bill; and,
  • Identify the preferred locations for solar gardens within a utility’s distribution system, if the utility has analyzed it and designated some that don’t unreasonably restrict solar gardens’ development.

Each utility has to maintain a public website with this information and information about each project in its service area.

Limits on projects
A project must have subscribers for all the electricity it generates, and they have to be in the utility’s service area. It has to have more than five subscribers, and none of them can subscribe for more than 40% of the project. At least 40% of the capacity has to be allocated to residential and small business customers with loads under 40kWs, and at least 10% of it has to be for customers who are eligible for the State’s low-income energy assistance plan.

Subscriptions have to be for at least one kilowatt, and (including any other distributed energy generation at the location) one can’t be for more than 120% of your annual yearly consumption “at the premises to which the subscription is attached.” (Apparently, you could have more than one subscription if you were a customer with more than one location.)

The project must be located on the utility’s distribution system, and within a preferred location on the system, if the utility’s plan identifies any.

Subscriber organizations
These are for-profit or non-profit organizations that own or operate one or more solar gardens. They own the renewable energy credits generated by their projects, and can sell them. They contract with subscribers who want to own a share of a project, but that doesn’t make them regulated as utilities. They’re responsible for making a monthly electronic report of each subscriber’s share of the output to the subscriber’s utility, so the utility can credit their bills.

They have to have a system for resolving any disputes with subscribers.

Regulations
The UTC and Commerce can coordinate in developing rules for these projects, and should have those for private and pubic utilities be the same, to the extent that that’s practical.

HB1128

HB1128 – Authorizes alternative forms of regulation for utilities.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Morris (D, 40th District, Mount Vernon)
Current status – Referred to the Committee on Environment & Energy.  Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.

Comments –
This bill’s provisions for a greenhouse gas planning adder and for alternative systems of utility regulation have been incorporated in the new substitute version of HB1211, though that sets the initial value of the adder higher and doesn’t make it depend on the imposition of carbon pricing.

Summary –
Authorizes the Utility and Transportation Commission to develop new systems for regulating electric and gas utilities to better achieve state policy goals, and allows a utility to submit a proposal for changing how it’s regulated to the Commission.

If the Legislature imposed “a tax, fee, or other monetary price on the carbon content of the sale or use of fossil fuels and electricity in the state,” the bill would require the use of an adder for the cost of carbon emissions by the UTC and utilities in conservation planning and in intermediate and long-term resource planning, under the current regulatory system or any alternative one. The adder would be the dollars per metric ton of greenhouse gases implied by the legislated price on carbon, or $40/tonne for 2018 (increasing by one and a quarter percent a year, apparently without an inflation adjustment) – whichever was larger.

Details –
The bill gives the UTC the authority to adopt any new forms of utility regulation that it determines are in the public interest, providing it considers, to the degree that it’s relevant, the extent to which each new system is expected to:

  • Align a utility’s regulatory incentives with the public interest;
  • Maintain and enhance its ability to provide safe, adequate, and efficient service;
  • Support prudent and efficient use of the electrical or natural gas system and utility operations;
  • Maintain and enhance overall electrical system reliability, security, and resilience;
  • Allow a company to support and participate in market transformation, enabling technologies without harming competition;
  • Allow a company to be financially indifferent about the ownership of the property providing service to its customers or the quantity of electricity or gas sold to them;
  • Reasonably protect customers, including low-income ones, from short and long-term risks;
  • Ensure an appropriate level of consumer protection;
  • Help achieve state emissions reduction goals;
  • Reduce or avoid adverse environmental impacts;
  • Provide the company with the opportunity to earn a reasonable rate of return on investment; and,
  • Provide for broad customer engagement to promote participation by a diversity of customers, particularly underserved communities or segments thereof, in programs to help achieve these goals.

The UTC may begin consideration of alternative forms of regulation on its own initiative. A utility may also petition the UTC to change the way it’s regulated, submitting a plan for an alternative form of regulation. That must be developed with customer and stakeholder input, and include a proposal for appropriate performance metrics (and enforcement or remedial steps in the event those are not met), a plan transitioning to the proposed system, and its proposed duration. It may include provisions for ensuring a reasonable rate of return on investment.

After notice and hearing, the UTC must accept, modify, or reject a utility proposal within eleven months, although it may extend the period for good cause. If the Commission authorizes some new form of regulation for a utility which has proposed a plan, the utility must accept or decline to adopt it within sixty days.

The Commission may waive other current regulatory requirements for a utility operating under a new form of regulation if it concludes that will facilitate its implementation, though it may not waive any legal rights established by the State’s laws about utilities (80.28 RCW) or regulations (80.04 RCW). It may waive different requirements for different companies or services, if it determines that’s in the public interest.

The Commission or any person can file a complaint claiming that a utility has not complied with the terms and conditions of its new form of regulation, but bears the burden of proving the allegations.

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HB1129

HB1129 – Requires utilities to provide net metering for more small systems, and allows them to offer it to as many large systems as they choose to.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Morris (D, 40th District, Mount Vernon)
Current status – Referred to the Committee on Environment & Energy. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Comments –
Net metering credits customers with fuel cells, combined heat and power systems, or renewable energy systems at the retail rate for power that goes onto the grid from their systems when they aren’t using it, so they pay for the power they used from the grid net, or minus, the surplus power they provided to it.

Summary –

The bill requires utilities to offer net metering to customers with small systems, no larger than 199kW, until their cumulative generative capacity equals 4% of the utility’s peak demand during 1996, reserving at least half of this allotment for residential customers producing renewable energy. (The current cap is 0.5% of 1996 peak demand.) They may offer an alternative to customers with small systems who are not enrolled in the current program when the cumulative generating capacity in that program reaches 2% of 1996 peak demand or after January 1, 2022, whichever comes first. (An alternative is not available to customers who are interconnected with net metering when the law takes effect, but is available if the property is sold or a new customer takes over the meter.)

The bill allows a utility to offer net metering to as many customers with larger systems as it chooses to, and to offer an alternative to those customers as soon as it has completed the distributed resources planning specified in the bill.

Details –
To offer an alternative, a utility must have gone through distributed energy resources planning of the sort specified by HB1126, or, if a process for that is not enacted by June 30th 2019, must accomplish the goals for such planning recommended in the report published on December 31, 2017, by the “commission on current practices in distributed
energy resources planning.”  (This means the Utility and Transportation Commission’s recent Report on Current Practices in Distributed Energy Resource Planning.)

Beginning in 2020, each utility must send the Department of Commerce a semi-annual report on their current net metering, including their peak demand in 1996 and how much more net metering they will be able to add before they reach the cap for small systems. If a utility has “exceeded the requirement” of subsection 2 (1) (a) of the bill, which says they shall offer net metering to customers with small systems until they reach the cap, then it must also report on whether it’s continuing to offer the net metering which isn’t capped to other customers and whether it has established a new cumulative capacity allocation for them.

Large utilities would have to include the total number of kilowatt hours consumed during the most recent twelve months on all customers’ bills.

HB1127

HB1127 – Allows utilities to electrify transportation infrastructure.
Prime Sponsor – Representative Morris (D, 40th District, Mount Vernon)
Current status – Referred to the Committee on Environment & Energy. Reintroduced and retained in present status for 2020 session.
Next step would be – Scheduling a hearing.
Legislative tracking page for the bill.

Summary –
Allows utilities to adopt transportation electrification plans if they determine that outreach and investment in electrification infrastructure is cost-effective in the context of acquiring new resources, considering system benefits and costs to ratepayers. (The bill says that system benefits for a utility exist “where financial, reliability, and quality benefits of the electrification of transportation are conferred equally among all ratepayers on the distribution system or among the utility’s resource generation portfolio.”) If they aren’t acquiring resources, they may determine it’s cost-effective considering those factors and “long-term contracted wholesale electricity supply that will result in a greater ratepayer benefit than the individual benefit from the program cost.” [I’m not sure what either section in quotes is supposed to mean…]

These plans may consider multiple options for transportation electrification across all customer classes; its anticipated impact on loads and whether load management opportunities including demand response, direct load control and dynamic pricing, are appropriate; system reliability and distribution system efficiencies; interoperability concerns, including those between hardware and software systems; and their customers’ overall experience.

Utilities that determine outreach and investment in such infrastructure is cost-effective may offer programs to electrify transportation infrastructure to their customers, including advertising to promote services, rebates and incentives they or others provide.

If specific funding for it is appropriated by June 30th, 2019, the Department of Commerce shall arrange for a study of the capital expenditures projected to be required by growth in distributed resources, including photovoltaic systems, electric vehicles, and any other customer-owned technologies likely to affect capital expenditures, including a low and high adoption scenario for each resource.