Florida 2025 2025 Regular Session

Florida Senate Bill S1574 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 03/31/2025

                    The Florida Senate 
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT 
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.) 
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Regulated Industries  
 
BILL: SB 1574 
INTRODUCER:  Senator DiCeglie 
SUBJECT:  Energy Infrastructure Investment 
DATE: March 31, 2025 
 
 ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR  REFERENCE  	ACTION 
1. Schrader Imhof RI Pre-meeting 
2.     AEG   
3.     FP  
 
I. Summary: 
SB 1574 amends s. 366.075, F.S., relating to Florida’s experimental and transitional utility rates. 
The bill authorizes the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) to establish an experimental 
mechanism to facilitate energy infrastructure investment in renewable natural gas (RNG). 
II. Present Situation: 
Florida Public Service Commission  
The Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) is an arm of the legislative branch of 
government.
1
 The role of the PSC is to ensure Florida’s consumers receive utility services, 
including electric, natural gas, telephone, water, and wastewater, in a safe and reliable manner 
and at fair prices.
2
 In order to do so, the PSC exercises authority over utilities in one or more of 
the following areas: rate base or economic regulation; competitive market oversight; and 
monitoring of safety, reliability, and service issues.
3
  
 
Electric and Gas Utilities 
The PSC monitors the safety and reliability of the electric power grid
4
 and may order the 
addition or repair of infrastructure as necessary.
5
 The PSC has broad jurisdiction over the rates 
and service of investor-owned electric and gas utilities
6
 (called “public utilities” under 
 
1
 Section 350.001, F.S. 
2
 See Florida Public Service Commission, Florida Public Service Commission Homepage, http://www.psc.state.fl.us (last 
visited Mar. 27, 2025). 
3
 Florida Public Service Commission, About the PSC, https://www.psc.state.fl.us/about (last visited Mar. 27, 2025). 
4
 Section 366.04(5) and (6), F.S. 
5
 Section 366.05(1) and (8), F.S. 
6
 Section 366.05, F.S. 
REVISED:   BILL: SB 1574   	Page 2 
 
ch. 366, F.S.).
7
 However, the PSC does not fully regulate municipal electric utilities (utilities 
owned or operated on behalf of a municipality) or rural electric cooperatives. The PSC does have 
jurisdiction over these types of utilities with regard to rate structure, territorial boundaries, and 
bulk power supply operations and planning.
8
 Municipally-owned utility rates and revenues are 
regulated by their respective local governments or local utility boards. Rates and revenues for a 
cooperative utility are regulated by its governing body elected by the cooperative’s membership. 
 
PSC Setting of Public Utility Rates and Other Charges 
Section 366.041, F.S., establishes the considerations the PSC must apply in fixing just, 
reasonable, and compensatory rates: 
 
the [PSC] is authorized to give consideration, among other things, to the efficiency, 
sufficiency, and adequacy of the facilities provided and the services rendered; the cost 
of providing such service and the value of such service to the public; the ability of the 
utility to improve such service and facilities; and energy conservation and the efficient 
use of alternative energy resources; provided that no public utility shall be denied a 
reasonable rate of return upon its rate base 
 
Section 366.06, F.S., establishes the PSC’s authority to establish and implement procedures for 
the fixing of and changing public utility rates. Under this section, all applications made by public 
utilities for changes in rates must be in writing with the PSC under the PSC’s established rules 
and regulations.
9
 Section 366.06(2), F.S., requires the PSC to hold a public hearing whenever it 
finds, upon request made, or upon its own motion, one or more of the following: 
 
• That the rates demanded, charged, or collected by any public utility for public utility service, 
or that the rules, regulations, or practices of any public utility affecting such rates, are unjust, 
unreasonable, unjustly discriminatory, or in violation of law; 
• That such rates are insufficient to yield reasonable compensation for the services rendered;  
• That such rates yield excessive compensation for services rendered; or  
• That such service is inadequate or cannot be obtained. 
 
During such a hearing, the PSC must determine just and reasonable rates to be thereafter charged 
for such service, and promulgate rules and regulations affecting equipment, facilities, and service 
to be thereafter installed, furnished, and used. 
 
The PSC establishes separate rates and charges for various components of a public utility’s cost 
of providing service to its customers. These are established through various proceedings which 
include: 
• Base rate proceedings (also known as rate cases); 
• Cost recovery clauses; 
• Infrastructure surcharges; 
 
7
 Section 366.02(8), F.S. 
8
 Florida Public Service Commission, About the PSC, supra note 3. 
9
 Section 366.06(1), F.S.  BILL: SB 1574   	Page 3 
 
• Interim charges.
10
 
 
Experimental and Transitional Rates 
Section 366.075, F.S., authorizes the PSC to approve experimental or transitional rates for the 
purpose of encouraging energy conservation or efficiency. This provision is used by the PSC to 
allow electric and natural gas utilities under its rate-regulatory jurisdiction to conduct limited 
scope pilot programs. 
 
Such rates must be limited in geographic area and be for a limited period of time. The PSC may 
approve the area used in testing experimental rates and must specify in the order setting those 
rates the area that will be affected by those rates. The PSC can extend this time period “if it 
determines that further testing is necessary to fully evaluate the effectiveness of such 
experimental rates.” 
 
Renewable Energy 
Section 366.91, F.S., establishes a number of renewable policies for the state. The purpose of 
these policies, as established in this section, states it is in the public interest to promote the 
development of renewable energy resources in this state.
11
 Further, the statute is intended to 
encourage fuel diversification to meet Florida’s growing dependency on natural gas for electric 
production, minimize the volatility of fuel costs, encourage investment within the state, improve 
environmental conditions, and make Florida a leader in new and innovative technologies.
12
 
 
The section defines “renewable energy” as: 
 
[E]electrical energy produced from a method that uses one or more of the 
following fuels or energy sources: hydrogen produced or resulting from 
sources other than fossil fuels, biomass, solar energy, geothermal energy, 
wind energy, ocean energy, and hydroelectric power. The term includes 
the alternative energy resource, waste heat, from sulfuric acid 
manufacturing operations and electrical energy produced using pipeline-
quality synthetic gas produced from waste petroleum coke with carbon 
capture and sequestration.
13
 
 
Renewable Natural Gas 
Natural gas is a fossil energy source which forms beneath the earth’s surface. Natural gas 
contains many different compounds, the largest of which is methane. Conventional natural gas is 
primarily extracted from subsurface porous rock reservoirs via gas and oil well drilling and 
 
10
 Florida Public Service Commission, 2025 Agency Legislative Bill Analysis for SB 354, (Feb. 28, 2025). 
11
 Section 366.91(1), F.S 
12
 Id. 
13
 Section 366.91(2)(e), F.S.  BILL: SB 1574   	Page 4 
 
hydraulic fracturing, commonly referred to as “fracking.”
 14
 RNG refers to biogas that has been 
upgraded to use in place of fossil fuel natural gas (i.e. conventional natural gas).
15
 
 
Section 366.91, F.S., identifies sources for producing RNG as a potential source of renewable 
energy.
16
 The section specifically defines renewable natural gas as anaerobically generated 
biogas,
17
 landfill gas, or wastewater treatment gas refined to a methane content of 90 percent or 
greater. Under the definition, such gas may be used as a transportation fuel or for electric 
generation, or is of a quality capable of being injected into a natural gas pipeline. 
 
Biogas used to produce RNG comes from various sources, including municipal solid waste 
landfills, digesters at water resource recovery facilities, livestock farms, food production 
facilities, and organic waste management operations.
18
 Raw biogas has a methane content 
between 45 and 65 percent.
19
 Once biogas is captured, it is treated in a process called 
conditioning or upgrading, which involves the removal of water, carbon dioxide, hydrogen 
sulfide, and other trace elements. After this process, the nitrogen and oxygen content is reduced 
and the RNG has a methane content comparable to natural gas and is thus a suitable energy 
source in applications that require pipeline-quality gas, such as vehicle applications.
20
  
 
RNG that meets certain standards qualifies as an advanced biofuel under the Federal Renewable 
Fuel Standard Program.
21
 This program was enacted by the United States Congress in order to 
reduce greenhouse gas emissions by reducing reliance on imported oil and expanding the 
nation’s renewable fuels sector.
22
  
 
Nationally as of September 2023, there were 580 landfill gas facilities in operation and 
530 anaerobic digester systems operating at commercial livestock farms in the United States.
23
 
Of the more than 16,000 wastewater treatment plants in operation in the United States, 
 
14
 United States Energy Information Administration, Natural gas explained, Oct. 10, 2024, available at 
https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/natural-gas/ (last visited Mar. 27, 2025) 
15
 Environmental Protection Agency, Landfill Methane Outreach Program (LMOP): Renewable Natural Gas, available at 
https://www.epa.gov/lmop/renewable-natural-gas (last visited Mar. 27, 2025). 
16
 Section 366.91(2)(e), F.S., defines “renewable energy,” in part, as energy produced from biomass. 
Section 366.91(2)(b), F.S., defines “biomass” in part, as “a power source that is comprised of, but not limited to, combustible 
residues or gases from…waste, byproducts, or products from agricultural and orchard crops, waste or coproducts from 
livestock and poultry operations, waste or byproducts from food processing, urban wood waste, municipal solid waste, 
municipal liquid waste treatment operations, and landfill gas.” RNG would be such a combustible gas. 
17
 Section 366.91(2)(a) defines “biogas” as a mixture of gases produced by the biological decomposition of organic materials 
which is largely comprised of carbon dioxide, hydrocarbons, and methane gas. 
18
 Environmental Protection Agency, supra note 15. 
19
 Id. 
20
 United States Department of Energy, Renewable Natural Gas Production, available at 
https://afdc.energy.gov/fuels/natural_gas_renewable.html (last visited Mar. 27, 2025). 
21
 United States Department of Energy, Renewable Fuel Standard, available at 
https://afdc.energy.gov/laws/RFS#:~:text=The%20Renewable%20Fuel%20Standard%20(RFS,Act%20of%202007%20(EIS
A) (last visited Mar. 27, 2025).  
22
 Environmental Protection Agency, Renewable Fuel Standard Program, available at https://www.epa.gov/renewable-fuel-
standard-program (last visited Mar. 27, 2025). 
23
 United States Department of Energy, supra note 20, and American Biogas Council, Biogas Market Snapshot, 
https://americanbiogascouncil.org/biogas-market-snapshot/ (last visited Mar. 27, 2025).  BILL: SB 1574   	Page 5 
 
approximately 1,200 have anaerobic digesters on site, and 860 of those have the equipment to 
use their biogas on site.
24
 
 
Florida Power and Light (FPL) Woodford Decision 
In Citizens of State v. Graham, 191 So. 3d 897 (Fla. 2016), the Florida Supreme Court found the 
PSC lacked statutory authority to approve cost recovery for FPL investment in a natural gas 
production facility in the Woodford Shale Gas Region in Oklahoma (Woodford Project). The 
Woodford Project involved exploration and production of natural gas and not the purchase of 
actual fuel—something that would generally be within the types of activities an electric utility 
would engage in. The Supreme Court cited to s. 366.02(2), F.S. (2014), which defines an 
“electric utility” as “any municipal electric utility, investor-owned electric utility, or rural electric 
cooperative which owns, maintains, or operates an electric generation, transmission, or 
distribution system within the state,” and found that the Woodford Project activities did not fall 
within this definition.
25
  
 
However, in making its decision, the Supreme Court noted the following: 
 
This may be a good idea, but whether advance cost recovery of 
speculative capital investments in gas exploration and production by an 
electric utility is in the public interest is a policy determination that must 
be made by the Legislature. For example, in contrast to natural gas 
exploration and production, the Legislature has authorized the PSC to 
approve cost recovery for capital investments in nuclear power plants and 
energy efficient and renewable energy power sources. See ss. 366.8255; 
366.92; 366.93, Fla. Stat. (2014). Without statutory authorization from the 
Legislature, the recovery of FPL's costs and capital investment in the 
Woodford Project through the fuel clause is overreach.
26
 
 
Thus, while the Supreme Court determined that the PSC could not approve cost recovery for 
capital electric utility investments in natural gas production, it indicated that the Legislature has 
the authority to allow for such if it chose to do so.
27
 
 
Biogas in Florida 
According to the American Biogas Council, Florida has 70 operational biogas systems:  
• 40 wastewater systems; 
• 21 landfills;  
• Five food waste systems; and  
• Four manure processing locations.
28
 
 
 
24
 Id. 
25
 Citizens of State v. Graham, 191 So. 3d 897, 901-2 (Fla. 2016). 
26
 Id. at 902. 
27
 Florida Public Service Commission, Bill Analysis for SB 1162 (Mar. 14, 2023) (on file with the Senate Regulated 
Industries Committee). 
28
 American Biogas Council at https://americanbiogascouncil.org/resources/state-profiles/florida/ (last visited Mar. 27, 2025).   BILL: SB 1574   	Page 6 
 
Storm Protection Plans 
Section 366.96 (ch. 2019-158, Laws of Fla.), F.S., requires public electric utilities to file with the 
PSC “a transmission and distribution storm protection plan (SPP) that covers the immediate 10-
year planning period. Each plan must explain the systematic approach the utility will follow to 
achieve the objectives of reducing restoration costs and outage times associated with extreme 
weather events and enhancing reliability.”
29
 Public electric utilities file, for PSC-review and 
approval, an updated SPP every three years.
30
 In its review of SPPs, s. 366.96(4), F.S., requires 
the PSC to consider: 
• The extent to which the SPP is expected to reduce restoration costs and outage times 
associated with extreme weather events and enhance reliability, including whether the SPP 
prioritizes areas of lower reliability performance; 
• The extent to which storm protection of transmission and distribution infrastructure is 
feasible, reasonable, or practical in certain areas of the utility’s service territory, including, 
but not limited to, flood zones and rural areas; 
• The estimated costs and benefits of the SPP to the utility and its customers of making the 
improvements proposed in the plan; and 
• The estimated annual rate impact resulting from implementation of the SPP during the first 
three years addressed in the plan. 
 
Section 366.96(7), F.S., also includes an annual cost-recovery clause mechanism that allows 
these utilities to recover transmission and distribution SPP costs through a charge separate and 
apart from that utility’s base rates. This annual recovery is called the SPP cost recovery clause 
(SPPCRC) docket. Once a utility’s SPP has been approved, the utility may proceed with 
implementing the plan. Once the PSC determines that SPP costs were prudently incurred (and 
actions taken to implement the approved SPP cannot be taken as evidence of imprudence), SPP 
implementation costs are not subject to disallowance or further prudence review except for fraud, 
perjury, or intentional withholding of key information by the public utility. 
 
A public utility may recover SPP capital expenditures by recovering the annual depreciation on 
the cost, calculated at the public utility’s current approved depreciation rates, and a return on the 
undepreciated balance of the costs calculated at the public utility’s weighted average cost of 
capital using the last approved return on equity.
31
 
 
Florida Supreme Court Interpretation of s. 366.96, F.S.: Citizens of the State of Florida 
v. Andrew Giles Fay 
In 2022, the PSC approved proposals from Florida’s four public electric utilities for their SPPs 
for the 2022-2032 period.
32
 Florida’s Office of Public Counsel (OPC)
33
 challenged the PSC 
 
29
 Section 366.96(3), F.S. 
30
 Section 366.96(6), F.S. 
31
 Section 366.96(9), F.S. 
32
 Citizens of State v. Fay, 396 So. 3d 549, 553 (Fla. 2024). 
33
 The Public Counsel, appointed by the Florida Senate and House of Representatives Joint Committee on Public Counsel 
Oversight, represents the general public in proceedings before the PSC and before counties that regulate water and 
wastewater utilities. Sections 350.61 and 350.611, F.S.  BILL: SB 1574   	Page 7 
 
orders at the Florida Supreme Court.
34
 The OPC argued that the PSC erred in its interpretation of 
the statute and impaired the fairness of the proceedings below by granting the utilities’ motions 
to strike portions of expert testimony on whether SPP costs were prudent.
35
 The OPC asserted 
that the PSC erred in its decision by: 
• Determining that the PSC was not required to conduct a prudence review of the public 
utilities’ proposed program and project investments in SPPs; and 
• Misinterpreting the PSC’s SPP Rule and refusing to require FPL and Florida Public Utilities 
Company (FPUC) to provide an estimate of the reduction in outage times and restoration 
costs that would result from their proposed SPPs, or a comparison of the estimated costs and 
benefits of their proposed SPPs, both of which were required by the PSC’s SPP Rule.
36
 
 
In its opinion in the case, issued on November 14, 2024, the Florida Supreme Court found that 
the PSC had correctly reviewed and approved the utilities’ SPP proposals after the PSC 
concluded that the proposed SPPs were in the public interest. Also, that the PSC did not abuse its 
discretion in striking the expert testimony at issue.
37
 In making this finding, the Supreme Court 
found that approval of SPPs only requires that the PSC find that the project is in the public 
interest. The PSC does not need to find that the benefits of a proposed SPP outweigh its costs
38
 
and the PSC’s review of a proposed SPP is not based on the prudency of the SPP.
39
 However, an 
estimated cost/benefit analysis is still part of the four factors the PSC is to consider when 
approving an SPP.
40
 A prudency review is only required when a utility seeks to recover for 
actual expenditures in implementing an SPP (as part of the SPPCRC docket).
41
 
 
This review of prudency with the SPPCRC is distinct from the PSC’s normal rate setting 
procedure. Rather, the Supreme Court found, in interpreting s. 366.96(7), F.S., that if, “any costs 
ultimately incurred [by the utility] exceed the relevant component of forecasted benefit [as 
proposed in the SPP and approved by the PSC], that deficiency will not constitute evidence of 
imprudence by the utility.”
42
 
III. Effect of Proposed Changes: 
Section 1 amends s. 366.075, F.S., to authorize the PSC to establish an experimental mechanism 
to facilitate energy infrastructure investment in gas using the administrative proceeding structure 
created for storm protection plans and cost recovery in ss. 366.96, (7) and (8), F.S. As used in the 
section, “gas” means anaerobically generated biogas, landfill gas, or wastewater treatment gas 
refined to a methane content of 90 percent or greater which may be used as a transportation fuel 
or for pipeline distribution. 
 
 
34
 Actions seeking judicial review of PSC decisions regarding rates or service of utilities providing electric or gas service are 
brought directly to the Florida Supreme Court under s. 366.10, F.S. 
35
 Citizens, supra note 32, at 560.  
36
 Id at 554. 
37
 Id at 560-61. 
38
 Id at 555. 
39
 Id at 558. 
40
 Id at 557-60. 
41
 Id at 556-57. 
42
 Id at 556.  BILL: SB 1574   	Page 8 
 
In establishing this mechanism, the PSC is to consider the intent provided in s. 366.91(1), F.S., 
for renewable energy.
43
 The gas infrastructure investment may include only such investments 
that collect, prepare, clean, process, transport, or inject gas as a transportation fuel or for pipeline 
distribution. 
 
The section provides that the PSC has the discretion to determine whether to use an annual 
proceeding to conduct such an experimental mechanism. The section also requires the PSC to 
propose a rule for adoption as soon as practicable, but not later than January 1, 2026. 
 
Section 2 provides an effective date of July 1, 2025. 
 
IV. Constitutional Issues: 
A. Municipality/County Mandates Restrictions: 
None. 
B. Public Records/Open Meetings Issues: 
None. 
C. Trust Funds Restrictions: 
None. 
D. State Tax or Fee Increases: 
None. 
E. Other Constitutional Issues: 
None. 
V. Fiscal Impact Statement: 
A. Tax/Fee Issues: 
None. 
B. Private Sector Impact: 
Public utilities will likely expand their use and sale of RNG, the costs of which will be 
authorized to be passed through to the utilities’ customers. In addition, if the production 
 
43
 Section 366.91(1), F.S., provides that the “Legislature finds that it is in the public interest to promote the development of 
renewable energy resources in this state. Renewable energy resources have the potential to help diversify fuel types to meet 
Florida’s growing dependency on natural gas for electric production, minimize the volatility of fuel costs, encourage 
investment within the state, improve environmental conditions, and make Florida a leader in new and innovative 
technologies.”  BILL: SB 1574   	Page 9 
 
of RNG increases in response to the experimental mechanism authorized in the bill, 
operators of farming operations that have the potential to generate RNG may see a 
revenue increase as a result of increased RNG capture and production. 
C. Government Sector Impact: 
The bill expands the responsibilities of the PSC. Though the PSC has not provided an 
analysis of this version of the bill, a similar provision is included in CS/SB 1624 from the 
2024 Legislative session. In the PSC’s analysis of the provision in that bill, the PSC 
stated that the workload may be handled with its existing level of full-time equivalent 
positions authorized for fiscal year 2023-2024.
44
 
VI. Technical Deficiencies: 
None. 
VII. Related Issues: 
None. 
VIII. Statutes Affected: 
This bill substantially amends section 366.075 of the Florida Statutes.  
IX. Additional Information: 
A. Committee Substitute – Statement of Changes: 
(Summarizing differences between the Committee Substitute and the prior version of the bill.) 
None. 
B. Amendments: 
None. 
This Senate Bill Analysis does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill’s introducer or the Florida Senate. 
 
44
 Florida Public Service Commission, Bill Analysis for CS/SB 1624, pg. 8, Feb. 9. 2024 (on file with the Senate Regulated 
Industries Committee).