California 2019-2020 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB383 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 383Introduced by Assembly Members Mayes and FriedmanFebruary 05, 2019An act to add Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) to the Public Resources Code, relating to energy.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 383, as amended, Mayes. Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.Existing law establishes various state programs pertaining to energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy conservation, weatherization, energy storage, distributed generation, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.This bill would establish the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office under the direction of the Treasurer, to coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies, as defined, that advance environmental protection goals; make program information clear and accessible for market participants; and partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment into clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals. The bill would specify functions that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse is to perform with respect to cross-agency coordination, partnering with market actors, and partnering with capital providers.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has established aggressive targets to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, increase the use of renewable energy resources, and improve energy efficiency.(b) Since disadvantaged and low-income communities are often disproportionately affected by pollution, California has made commitments to invest in disadvantaged communities to make an equitable transition to a low-carbon economy.(c) To meet these targets, billions of dollars must be invested in the deployment of a broad set of energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including the generation of electricity from renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy storage, microgrids, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.(d) This investment capital will necessarily come from the private sector, with public funds used as needed to spark market activity.(e) There is also a need to integrate investments in energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals with other kinds of infrastructure investment that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.(f) The state has already devoted significant public resources, in the form of both subsidies and financing, to enable this deployment, with programs operated by numerous agencies.(g) However, not all of these public resources are used to maximum efficiency, and they are not closely coordinated with one another.(h) In addition, private sector participants may be unable to identify public resources that are available because of the complexity of existing programs and because the administration and oversight of existing programs is scattered across governmental entities.SEC. 2. Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b)Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code).(c)(b) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d)(c) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e)(d) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f)(e) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g)(f) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
1+Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 383Introduced by Assembly Members Mayes and FriedmanFebruary 05, 2019An act to add Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) to the Public Resources Code, relating to energy.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 383, as amended, Mayes. Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.Existing law establishes various state programs pertaining to energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy conservation, weatherization, energy storage, distributed generation, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.This bill would establish the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office under the direction of the Treasurer, to coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies technologies, as defined, that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, goals; make program information clear and accessible for market participants, participants; and partnering partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and partner with other market actors to catalyze more private investment into clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals. The bill would specify functions that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse is to perform with respect to cross-agency coordination, partnering with market actors, and partnering with capital providers.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has established aggressive targets to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, increase the use of renewable energy resources, and improve energy efficiency.(b) Since disadvantaged and low-income communities are often disproportionately affected by pollution, California has made commitments to invest in disadvantaged communities to make an equitable transition to a low-carbon economy.(c) To meet these targets, billions of dollars must be invested in the deployment of a broad set of energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including the generation of electricity from renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy storage, microgrids, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.(d) This investment capital will necessarily come from the private sector, with public funds used as needed to spark market activity.(e) There is also a need to integrate investments in energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals with other kinds of infrastructure investment that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.(f) The state has already devoted significant public resources, in the form of both subsidies and financing, to enable this deployment, with programs operated by numerous agencies.(g) However, not all of these public resources are used to maximum efficiency, and they are not closely coordinated with one another.(h) In addition, private sector participants may be unable to identify public resources that are available because of the complexity of existing programs and because the administration and oversight of existing programs is scattered across governmental entities.SEC. 2. Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b) Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code), except for a facility that uses biomass, which is a clean energy technology facility only if the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, in consultation with the State Air Resources Board, determines that its use does not impair the states ability to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards. Code).(c) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emission emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(3)Support investment by directly facilitating transactions where a capital provider is able to provide financing to a market actor who in turn finances a large portfolio of underlying projects. The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse may work with a market actor to prepare a request for capital so that it meets the needs and conditions of the capital provider while integrating available public resources.(f)The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall first seek to address commercial building efficiency as a priority market sector.(g)(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(h)(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(i)(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
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3- Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 383Introduced by Assembly Members Mayes and FriedmanFebruary 05, 2019An act to add Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) to the Public Resources Code, relating to energy.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 383, as amended, Mayes. Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.Existing law establishes various state programs pertaining to energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy conservation, weatherization, energy storage, distributed generation, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.This bill would establish the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office under the direction of the Treasurer, to coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies, as defined, that advance environmental protection goals; make program information clear and accessible for market participants; and partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment into clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals. The bill would specify functions that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse is to perform with respect to cross-agency coordination, partnering with market actors, and partnering with capital providers.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 383Introduced by Assembly Members Mayes and FriedmanFebruary 05, 2019An act to add Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) to the Public Resources Code, relating to energy.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 383, as amended, Mayes. Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.Existing law establishes various state programs pertaining to energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy conservation, weatherization, energy storage, distributed generation, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.This bill would establish the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office under the direction of the Treasurer, to coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies technologies, as defined, that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, goals; make program information clear and accessible for market participants, participants; and partnering partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and partner with other market actors to catalyze more private investment into clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals. The bill would specify functions that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse is to perform with respect to cross-agency coordination, partnering with market actors, and partnering with capital providers.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
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5- Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2019
5+ Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2019
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7-Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019
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109 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION
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1211 Assembly Bill No. 383
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1413 Introduced by Assembly Members Mayes and FriedmanFebruary 05, 2019
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1615 Introduced by Assembly Members Mayes and Friedman
1716 February 05, 2019
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1918 An act to add Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) to the Public Resources Code, relating to energy.
2019
2120 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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2322 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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2524 AB 383, as amended, Mayes. Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
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27-Existing law establishes various state programs pertaining to energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy conservation, weatherization, energy storage, distributed generation, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.This bill would establish the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office under the direction of the Treasurer, to coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies, as defined, that advance environmental protection goals; make program information clear and accessible for market participants; and partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment into clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals. The bill would specify functions that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse is to perform with respect to cross-agency coordination, partnering with market actors, and partnering with capital providers.
26+Existing law establishes various state programs pertaining to energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy conservation, weatherization, energy storage, distributed generation, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.This bill would establish the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office under the direction of the Treasurer, to coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies technologies, as defined, that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, goals; make program information clear and accessible for market participants, participants; and partnering partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and partner with other market actors to catalyze more private investment into clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals. The bill would specify functions that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse is to perform with respect to cross-agency coordination, partnering with market actors, and partnering with capital providers.
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2928 Existing law establishes various state programs pertaining to energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy conservation, weatherization, energy storage, distributed generation, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.
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31-This bill would establish the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office under the direction of the Treasurer, to coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies, as defined, that advance environmental protection goals; make program information clear and accessible for market participants; and partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment into clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals. The bill would specify functions that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse is to perform with respect to cross-agency coordination, partnering with market actors, and partnering with capital providers.
30+This bill would establish the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office under the direction of the Treasurer, to coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies technologies, as defined, that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, goals; make program information clear and accessible for market participants, participants; and partnering partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and partner with other market actors to catalyze more private investment into clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals. The bill would specify functions that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse is to perform with respect to cross-agency coordination, partnering with market actors, and partnering with capital providers.
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3332 ## Digest Key
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37-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has established aggressive targets to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, increase the use of renewable energy resources, and improve energy efficiency.(b) Since disadvantaged and low-income communities are often disproportionately affected by pollution, California has made commitments to invest in disadvantaged communities to make an equitable transition to a low-carbon economy.(c) To meet these targets, billions of dollars must be invested in the deployment of a broad set of energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including the generation of electricity from renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy storage, microgrids, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.(d) This investment capital will necessarily come from the private sector, with public funds used as needed to spark market activity.(e) There is also a need to integrate investments in energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals with other kinds of infrastructure investment that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.(f) The state has already devoted significant public resources, in the form of both subsidies and financing, to enable this deployment, with programs operated by numerous agencies.(g) However, not all of these public resources are used to maximum efficiency, and they are not closely coordinated with one another.(h) In addition, private sector participants may be unable to identify public resources that are available because of the complexity of existing programs and because the administration and oversight of existing programs is scattered across governmental entities.SEC. 2. Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b)Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code).(c)(b) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d)(c) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e)(d) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f)(e) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g)(f) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
36+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has established aggressive targets to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, increase the use of renewable energy resources, and improve energy efficiency.(b) Since disadvantaged and low-income communities are often disproportionately affected by pollution, California has made commitments to invest in disadvantaged communities to make an equitable transition to a low-carbon economy.(c) To meet these targets, billions of dollars must be invested in the deployment of a broad set of energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including the generation of electricity from renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy storage, microgrids, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.(d) This investment capital will necessarily come from the private sector, with public funds used as needed to spark market activity.(e) There is also a need to integrate investments in energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals with other kinds of infrastructure investment that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.(f) The state has already devoted significant public resources, in the form of both subsidies and financing, to enable this deployment, with programs operated by numerous agencies.(g) However, not all of these public resources are used to maximum efficiency, and they are not closely coordinated with one another.(h) In addition, private sector participants may be unable to identify public resources that are available because of the complexity of existing programs and because the administration and oversight of existing programs is scattered across governmental entities.SEC. 2. Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b) Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code), except for a facility that uses biomass, which is a clean energy technology facility only if the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, in consultation with the State Air Resources Board, determines that its use does not impair the states ability to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards. Code).(c) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emission emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(3)Support investment by directly facilitating transactions where a capital provider is able to provide financing to a market actor who in turn finances a large portfolio of underlying projects. The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse may work with a market actor to prepare a request for capital so that it meets the needs and conditions of the capital provider while integrating available public resources.(f)The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall first seek to address commercial building efficiency as a priority market sector.(g)(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(h)(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(i)(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
3837
3938 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4039
4140 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4241
4342 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has established aggressive targets to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, increase the use of renewable energy resources, and improve energy efficiency.(b) Since disadvantaged and low-income communities are often disproportionately affected by pollution, California has made commitments to invest in disadvantaged communities to make an equitable transition to a low-carbon economy.(c) To meet these targets, billions of dollars must be invested in the deployment of a broad set of energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including the generation of electricity from renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy storage, microgrids, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.(d) This investment capital will necessarily come from the private sector, with public funds used as needed to spark market activity.(e) There is also a need to integrate investments in energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals with other kinds of infrastructure investment that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.(f) The state has already devoted significant public resources, in the form of both subsidies and financing, to enable this deployment, with programs operated by numerous agencies.(g) However, not all of these public resources are used to maximum efficiency, and they are not closely coordinated with one another.(h) In addition, private sector participants may be unable to identify public resources that are available because of the complexity of existing programs and because the administration and oversight of existing programs is scattered across governmental entities.
4443
4544 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has established aggressive targets to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, increase the use of renewable energy resources, and improve energy efficiency.(b) Since disadvantaged and low-income communities are often disproportionately affected by pollution, California has made commitments to invest in disadvantaged communities to make an equitable transition to a low-carbon economy.(c) To meet these targets, billions of dollars must be invested in the deployment of a broad set of energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including the generation of electricity from renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy storage, microgrids, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.(d) This investment capital will necessarily come from the private sector, with public funds used as needed to spark market activity.(e) There is also a need to integrate investments in energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals with other kinds of infrastructure investment that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.(f) The state has already devoted significant public resources, in the form of both subsidies and financing, to enable this deployment, with programs operated by numerous agencies.(g) However, not all of these public resources are used to maximum efficiency, and they are not closely coordinated with one another.(h) In addition, private sector participants may be unable to identify public resources that are available because of the complexity of existing programs and because the administration and oversight of existing programs is scattered across governmental entities.
4645
4746 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
4847
4948 ### SECTION 1.
5049
5150 (a) California has established aggressive targets to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, increase the use of renewable energy resources, and improve energy efficiency.
5251
5352 (b) Since disadvantaged and low-income communities are often disproportionately affected by pollution, California has made commitments to invest in disadvantaged communities to make an equitable transition to a low-carbon economy.
5453
5554 (c) To meet these targets, billions of dollars must be invested in the deployment of a broad set of energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals, including the generation of electricity from renewable energy resources, energy efficiency, energy storage, microgrids, and transportation electrification and other low-emission transportation technologies.
5655
5756 (d) This investment capital will necessarily come from the private sector, with public funds used as needed to spark market activity.
5857
5958 (e) There is also a need to integrate investments in energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals with other kinds of infrastructure investment that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.
6059
6160 (f) The state has already devoted significant public resources, in the form of both subsidies and financing, to enable this deployment, with programs operated by numerous agencies.
6261
6362 (g) However, not all of these public resources are used to maximum efficiency, and they are not closely coordinated with one another.
6463
6564 (h) In addition, private sector participants may be unable to identify public resources that are available because of the complexity of existing programs and because the administration and oversight of existing programs is scattered across governmental entities.
6665
67-SEC. 2. Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b)Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code).(c)(b) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d)(c) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e)(d) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f)(e) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g)(f) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
66+SEC. 2. Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b) Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code), except for a facility that uses biomass, which is a clean energy technology facility only if the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, in consultation with the State Air Resources Board, determines that its use does not impair the states ability to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards. Code).(c) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emission emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(3)Support investment by directly facilitating transactions where a capital provider is able to provide financing to a market actor who in turn finances a large portfolio of underlying projects. The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse may work with a market actor to prepare a request for capital so that it meets the needs and conditions of the capital provider while integrating available public resources.(f)The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall first seek to address commercial building efficiency as a priority market sector.(g)(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(h)(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(i)(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
6867
6968 SEC. 2. Division 16.2 (commencing with Section 26100) is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:
7069
7170 ### SEC. 2.
7271
73-DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b)Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code).(c)(b) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d)(c) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e)(d) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f)(e) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g)(f) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
72+DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b) Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code), except for a facility that uses biomass, which is a clean energy technology facility only if the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, in consultation with the State Air Resources Board, determines that its use does not impair the states ability to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards. Code).(c) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emission emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(3)Support investment by directly facilitating transactions where a capital provider is able to provide financing to a market actor who in turn finances a large portfolio of underlying projects. The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse may work with a market actor to prepare a request for capital so that it meets the needs and conditions of the capital provider while integrating available public resources.(f)The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall first seek to address commercial building efficiency as a priority market sector.(g)(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(h)(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(i)(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
7473
75-DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b)Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code).(c)(b) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d)(c) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e)(d) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f)(e) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g)(f) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
74+DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b) Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code), except for a facility that uses biomass, which is a clean energy technology facility only if the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, in consultation with the State Air Resources Board, determines that its use does not impair the states ability to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards. Code).(c) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emission emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(3)Support investment by directly facilitating transactions where a capital provider is able to provide financing to a market actor who in turn finances a large portfolio of underlying projects. The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse may work with a market actor to prepare a request for capital so that it meets the needs and conditions of the capital provider while integrating available public resources.(f)The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall first seek to address commercial building efficiency as a priority market sector.(g)(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(h)(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(i)(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
7675
7776 DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE
7877
7978 DIVISION 16.2. CLEAN ENERGY FINANCING CLEARINGHOUSE
8079
81-26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b)Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code).(c)(b) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d)(c) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e)(d) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f)(e) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g)(f) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).
80+26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:(a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.(b) Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code), except for a facility that uses biomass, which is a clean energy technology facility only if the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, in consultation with the State Air Resources Board, determines that its use does not impair the states ability to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards. Code).(c) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(d) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.(e) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.(f) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.(g) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emission emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).
8281
8382
8483
8584 26100. For purposes of this division, clean energy technology includes all of the following:
8685
8786 (a) Energy efficiency measures, including, but not limited to, weatherization, energy conservation, energy savings, insulation, and demand reduction.
8887
89-(b)Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code).
88+(b) Eligible renewable energy resources pursuant to the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program (Article 16 (commencing with Section 399.11) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code), except for a facility that uses biomass, which is a clean energy technology facility only if the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, in consultation with the State Air Resources Board, determines that its use does not impair the states ability to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards. Code).
9089
90+(c) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.
9191
92+(d) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.
9293
93-(c)
94+(e) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.
9495
96+(f) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.
9597
98+(g) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emission emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).
9699
97-(b) An energy storage system, as defined in Section 2835 of the Public Utilities Code, used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.
98-
99-(d)
100-
101-
102-
103-(c) Electrical demand response measures used to ensure reliability and integrate electricity from intermittent eligible renewable energy resources.
104-
105-(e)
106-
107-
108-
109-(d) No- and low-carbon electrical generation technologies, including fuel cells.
110-
111-(f)
112-
113-
114-
115-(e) Advanced vehicle technology, including plug-in and hybrid electric light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.
116-
117-(g)
118-
119-
120-
121-(f) Other technologies and measures that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse determines are important to utilize to maintain or reach federal and state ambient air quality standards, to meet the states goals for reducing emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code), or to meet the states goals for increasing energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy pursuant to the Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 (Chapter 547 of the Statutes of 2015).
122-
123-26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
100+26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:(1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.(2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.(3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.(b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.(c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:(1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.(3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.(d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:(1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.(2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.(3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.(B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.(4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.(5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.(6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.(e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:(1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.(2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.(3)Support investment by directly facilitating transactions where a capital provider is able to provide financing to a market actor who in turn finances a large portfolio of underlying projects. The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse may work with a market actor to prepare a request for capital so that it meets the needs and conditions of the capital provider while integrating available public resources.(f)The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall first seek to address commercial building efficiency as a priority market sector.(g)(f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.(h)(g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.(i)(h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.
124101
125102
126103
127104 26105. (a) There is hereby created, under the direction of the Treasurer, the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse, a new office for the following purposes:
128105
129106 (1) To coordinate all government programs that invest capital in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection goals to enable them to achieve their individual missions.
130107
131108 (2) To make information on these programs clear and accessible for market participants.
132109
133110 (3) To partner with capital providers, investors, project developers, technology companies, and other market actors to catalyze more private investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals, leveraging more private investment per public dollar used.
134111
135112 (b) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall consult and coordinate with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, the Treasurer, the Public Utilities Commission, and other relevant governmental entities to achieve the purposes and functions described in this section.
136113
137114 (c) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to cross-agency coordination:
138115
139116 (1) Create a central information resource that is both internal and external facing, so that market actors and government entities are fully aware of all the public resources and funding available for the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.
140117
141118 (2) Proactively identify areas of overlap or adjacency from existing public programs and facilitate coordination so that public funds are used at maximum effectiveness within a given clean energy technology project or market.
142119
143120 (3) Ensure that all programs meant to support the adoption of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals are made accessible to, and are well-integrated into program offerings available to, low-income and disadvantaged communities.
144121
145122 (d) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with market actors:
146123
147124 (1) Work with developers, technology companies, and large wholesale environmentally friendly clean energy technology deployment firms to help them identify existing public resources that can be brought to bear in their relevant markets or projects.
148125
149126 (2) Work with those market actors to increase the pipeline of investable, environmentally friendly clean energy technology projects for California.
150127
151128 (3) (A) Work with those market actors to support the growth of women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises.
152129
153130 (B) For purposes of this paragraph, women business enterprise, minority business enterprise, disabled veteran business enterprise, and LGBT business enterprise have the same meaning as defined in Section 8282 of the Public Utilities Code.
154131
155132 (4) Ensure that developers serving low- to moderate-income communities first access all available subsidies and rebates before selling environmentally friendly clean energy technology services or financing so that households receive maximum potential benefit.
156133
157134 (5) Solicit proposals from market actors for innovative business models and solutions to increase the deployment of clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals that rely on public resources, so that the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse acts as a facilitator between public agencies and the private sector to construct a cost-effective and marketable energy finance solution. These business models and solutions may include, but are not limited to, novel approaches to deploy community solar, low-income-focused clean energy technologies, distributed energy storage solutions, and other novel combinations of technology, financing, and public and private resources.
158135
159136 (6) Develop, to the extent feasible, materials in multiple languages to facilitate growth in the activity of market actors that may be focused on non-English-speaking market segments.
160137
161138 (e) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall perform the following functions with respect to partnering with capital providers:
162139
163140 (1) Work with large institutional or wholesale capital providers to find efficient and innovative paths and structures for investment in clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals in the state by working in coordination with other state agencies and public resources.
164141
165142 (2) Direct potential investors to appropriate governmental entities and programs so that those governmental entities or programs may work together to deploy public and private capital for clean energy technologies that advance environmental protection and environmental justice goals.
166143
144+(3)Support investment by directly facilitating transactions where a capital provider is able to provide financing to a market actor who in turn finances a large portfolio of underlying projects. The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse may work with a market actor to prepare a request for capital so that it meets the needs and conditions of the capital provider while integrating available public resources.
145+
146+
147+
148+(f)The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall first seek to address commercial building efficiency as a priority market sector.
149+
150+
151+
152+(g)
153+
154+
155+
167156 (f) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall have a dedicated staff of professionals that have the technical, financial, and energy industry skills required to perform its functions.
168157
158+(h)
159+
160+
161+
169162 (g) The Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse shall work closely with markets and operate in a flexible manner to bridge any gap that exists between public resources and programs and the needs of the private sector.
163+
164+(i)
165+
166+
170167
171168 (h) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide a reliable source of funding for the Clean Energy Financing Clearinghouse.