Hawaii 2022 Regular Session

Hawaii House Bill HB327 Compare Versions

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1-HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 327 THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021 H.D. 2 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
1+HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 327 THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021 H.D. 1 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
22
33 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 327
4-THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021 H.D. 2
4+THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021 H.D. 1
55 STATE OF HAWAII
66
77 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
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99 H.B. NO.
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1111 327
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1313 THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021
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15-H.D. 2
15+H.D. 1
1616
1717 STATE OF HAWAII
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2020
2121
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2424
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2626
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3131 A BILL FOR AN ACT
3232
3333
3434
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3636
3737 RELATING TO GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS.
3838
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4343 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
4444
4545
4646
47- SECTION 1. The legislature finds that there is a need for a holistic plan of action for Hawaii regarding policy, technology, funding, and facilitation of public and private actions on climate change mitigation. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2018 report concludes that Hawaii has less than fifteen years to address permanent climate change and sea level rise and their associated high level of disruption to the islands of Hawaii. The legislature has established requirements to: (1) Reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the state economy to 1990 levels; establish a greenhouse gas emissions reduction task force, now repealed; and create a year 2020 statewide framework of action pursuant to Act 234, Session Laws of Hawaii 2007; (2) Sequester greenhouse gases with carbon offsets on state lands and require a plan to evaluate the feasibility and implications of establishing a carbon offset program for Hawaii; (3) Consider greenhouse gas impacts in government decisions and orders, such as environmental assessments, environmental impact statements, and decisions from the public utilities commission; (4) Establish the Hawaii climate change mitigation and adaptation commission; (5) Achieve a net-zero greenhouse gas emissions economy by 2050; (6) Establish a one hundred per cent renewable electricity portfolio standard by 2045; and (7) Resolve to integrate food, fuel, and waste reduction and re-use activities toward greater economic viability and environmental sustainability highlighted in S.C.R. No. 121, Regular Session of 2017. However, up to this point, these requirements and goals have been focused on the electricity and ground transportation sectors and on group and point sources of greenhouse emissions. These requirements do not regard the emissions from other forms of transportation or other major economic drivers. The legislature further finds that the Hawaii Aviation and Climate Action Summit held in December 2019 issued the following findings: (1) Nearly a third of the energy consumed in the State is for jet fuel, a higher proportion of energy consumption than for any other energy sector; (2) Over one-third of the flights are to and from international destinations; (3) International flights to and from Hawaii will start to come under the mandate established by the International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation to reduce their aviation greenhouse gas emission to fifty per cent below 2005 levels by 2050; (4) Transportation is the single largest producer of greenhouse gas emissions in Hawaii; (5) Renewable fuels must be part of a balanced portfolio and state action plan to effect certified greenhouse gas reduction in the near term, in addition to carbon offsets; (6) Sustainable aviation fuels have been demonstrated at commercial scale in the continental United States and can be manufactured in six different American Society for Testing Manuals approved and Federal Aviation Administration certified ways from agricultural, animal, municipal, and construction wastes as well as purpose-grown crops and forest materials; (7) The International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation mandate is a significant requirement on airlines serving Hawaii, for which the State should establish a task force and "flight plan" to map out public and private actions to cost-effectively reduce greenhouse gas emissions; (8) The International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation, United States' federal Renewable Fuel Standard, State of California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard, and State of Oregon's Clean Fuels Program are all market-based measures to quantify, incentivize, and monetize industry action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by the transportation sector. These measures are also flexible and effective ways to quantify and monetize the benefits of renewable fuels, carbon offsets, hydrogen and fuel cells, and transportation electrification based upon lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions performance; and (9) Market-based policy measures more directly stimulate innovation, economic growth, and meaningful behavioral change than the state-level policies Hawaii has in place today (barrel tax, carbon tax, environmental permitting and impact statements, and incentives which require annual appropriation). The federal Renewable Fuel Standard that Hawaii opted in to has directly led to a reduction of greenhouse gas in the ground transportation sector by thousands of barrels per day. California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard has reduced greenhouse gases emissions in California over fifty million metric tons through just second quarter of 2019. Seventy-five per cent of venture capital investment in clean transportation in the United States has been directed to California. California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard has also helped investors to justify one hundred and three hundred dollar million investments to build new renewable fuel production plants. Low-Carbon Fuel Standard-stimulated economic development currently at over three hundred companies and twenty thousand workers and decreased greenhouse gas emissions per gross domestic product by forty per cent. Therefore, the legislature concludes that the development of sustainable aviation fuel capability in Hawaii continues to exercise leadership in global greenhouse gas emission reduction actions and also has the potential to reduce dependence on foreign sources of fossil fuels, promote economic development, increase the limited options for waste disposal and re-use, facilitate invasive species removal and landscape restoration, and overall improve environmental sustainability in Hawaii. The purpose of this Act is to establish a task force to develop a state action plan to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions generated by international air transportation from Hawaii. SECTION 2. (a) There is established a sustainable aviation fuel task force within the department of business, economic development, and tourism's Hawaii state energy office for administrative purposes. The purpose of the sustainable aviation fuel task force is to: (1) Prepare a work plan and regulatory scheme for implementing the maximum practically and technically feasible and cost-effective reductions in greenhouse gas emissions from transportation sources or categories of sources of greenhouse gases to help commercial airlines serving Hawaii meet the mandate set for international commercial aviation by the International Civil Aviation Organization, specifically the Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation to reduce aviation greenhouse gas emission to fifty per cent below 2005 levels by 2050; (2) Further the development of sustainable aviation fuel as a productive industry in Hawaii, using as a foundation the results from the Hawaii Aviation and Climate Action Summit held in December 2019 and the best practices shared by the federal Aviation Administration's Aviation Sustainability Center and Commercial Aviation Alternative Fuel Initiative; (3) Facilitate communication and coordination among sustainable aviation fuel stakeholders; (4) Provide a forum for discussion and problem-solving regarding potential and current barriers related to technology development, production, distribution, supply chain development, and commercialization of sustainable aviation fuel; (5) Provide recommendations to the legislature on potential legislation that will facilitate the technology development, production, distribution, and commercialization of sustainable aviation fuel; facilitate and streamline the permitting process for new facilities and the expansion of existing facilities; and provide access to low-cost financing through the issuance of revenue bonds and matching funds through the Hawaii technology development corporation; and (6) Evaluate the prospect of Hawaii joining the Pacific Coast Collaborative of the states of California, Oregon, and Washington, and British Columbia to harmonize local carbon fuel and greenhouse gas reduction policy and market-based measures and share best practices. (c) The Hawaii state energy office shall designate task force members that represent sectors involved in sustainable aviation fuel research, development, production, and utilization. The task force shall include but not be limited to representatives of the following, or their designees: (1) The Federal Aviation Administration; (2) The United States Department of Agriculture; (3) The Hawaii local chapter of the United States Commercial Aviation Alternative Fuel Initiative; (4) The Hawaii state senate appointed by the president of the senate; (5) The Hawaii state house of representatives appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives; (6) The department of agriculture; (7) The department of health; (8) The department of land and natural resources; (9) The department of transportation; (10) The Hawaii tourism authority; (11) The Hawaii state energy office; (12) The University of Hawaii; (13) The Hawaii natural energy institute; (14) A bioeconomy advocacy organization; (15) An international airline operator; (16) A fuel refiner; (17) Biofuels feedstock producers; (18) Sustainable transportation fuel producers; (19) A sustainable energy advocacy organization; and (20) A carbon offset project practitioner. The task force shall choose a chair from among its membership. (d) The task force shall hold at least two public meetings a year. (e) The work plan of the task force shall include: (1) Consultation with state and county agencies; (2) Consultation and best practice sharing with international and national organizations and other states to identify cost-effective policies and methods; (3) Harmonization of market-based measures and their supporting technical and quantification methods with the International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation, national, and other state peer-reviewed methods and avoidance of a unique Hawaii method or standard wherever practicable; (4) Development of measures of effectiveness of varying techniques for greenhouse gas emissions reduction for commercial aviation; and (5) Framework to evaluate the relative contribution of each method or project, relative to its cost, projected technical maturity between the years 2020 and 2050, and contributions toward other sustainability objectives such as skilled job creation, economic development, waste re-use, invasive species removal, and landscape restoration. (f) The task force shall submit an interim report of its findings and recommendations to the legislature no later than forty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2023, and a final report of its findings and recommendations to the legislature no later than forty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2024. (g) The task force shall cease to exist on June 30, 2024; provided that the Hawaii state energy office may continue the work of the task force without the effect of this Act should the Hawaii state energy office deem necessary. (h) The Hawaii state energy office shall submit a report of its findings and recommendations and data on clean transportation related to aviation transportation including: (1) Jet fuel consumption, imports, and local refining and the greenhouse gas benchmark for jet fuel and other transportation fuels; and (2) Sustainable aviation fuel and carbon offset projects and investments, infrastructure and financing needs, supply chain development, and other opportunities and challenges to reducing the greenhouse gas impacts from international commercial aviation, to the legislature no later than twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session. SECTION 3. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050.
47+ SECTION 1. The legislature finds that there is a need for a holistic plan of action for Hawaii regarding policy, technology, funding, and facilitation of public and private actions on climate change mitigation. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2018 report concludes that Hawaii has less than fifteen years to address permanent climate change and sea level rise and their associated high level of disruption to the islands of Hawaii. The legislature has established requirements to: (1) Reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the state economy to 1990 levels; establish a greenhouse gas emissions reduction task force, now repealed; and create a year 2020 statewide framework of action pursuant to Act 234, Session Laws of Hawaii 2007; (2) Sequester greenhouse gases with carbon offsets on state lands and require a plan to evaluate the feasibility and implications of establishing a carbon offset program for Hawaii; (3) Consider greenhouse gas impacts in government decisions and orders, such as environmental assessments, environmental impact statements, and decisions from the public utilities commission; (4) Establish the Hawaii climate change mitigation and adaptation commission; (5) Achieve a net-zero greenhouse gas emissions economy by 2050; (6) Establish a one hundred per cent renewable electricity portfolio standard by 2045; and (7) Resolve to integrate food, fuel, and waste reduction and re-use activities toward greater economic viability and environmental sustainability highlighted in S.C.R. No. 121, Regular Session of 2017. However, up to this point, these requirements and goals have been focused on the electricity and ground transportation sectors and on group and point sources of greenhouse emissions. These requirements do not regard the emissions from other forms of transportation or other major economic drivers. The legislature further finds that the Hawaii Aviation and Climate Action Summit held in December 2019 issued the following findings: (1) Nearly a third of the energy consumed in the State is for jet fuel, a higher proportion of energy consumption than for any other energy sector; (2) Over one-third of the flights are to and from international destinations; (3) International flights to and from Hawaii will start to come under the mandate established by the International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation to reduce their aviation greenhouse gas emission to fifty per cent below 2005 levels by 2050; (4) Transportation is the single largest producer of greenhouse gas emissions in Hawaii; (5) Renewable fuels must be part of a balanced portfolio and state action plan to effect certified greenhouse gas reduction in the near term, in addition to carbon offsets; (6) Sustainable aviation fuels have been demonstrated at commercial scale in the continental United States and can be manufactured in six different American Society for Testing Manuals approved and Federal Aviation Administration certified ways from agricultural, animal, municipal, and construction wastes as well as purpose-grown crops and forest materials; (7) The International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation mandate is a significant requirement on airlines serving Hawaii, for which the State should establish a task force and "flight plan" to map out public and private actions to cost-effectively reduce greenhouse gas emissions; (8) The International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation, United States' federal Renewable Fuel Standard, State of California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard, and State of Oregon's Clean Fuels Program are all market-based measures to quantify, incentivize, and monetize industry action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by the transportation sector. These measures are also flexible and effective ways to quantify and monetize the benefits of renewable fuels, carbon offsets, hydrogen and fuel cells, and transportation electrification based upon lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions performance; and (9) Market-based policy measures more directly stimulate innovation, economic growth, and meaningful behavioral change than the state-level policies Hawaii has in place today (barrel tax, carbon tax, environmental permitting/impact statements, and incentives which require annual appropriation). The federal Renewable Fuel Standard that Hawaii opted in to has directly led to a reduction of greenhouse gas in the ground transportation sector by thousands of barrels per day. California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard has reduced greenhouse gases emissions in California over fifty million metric tons through just second quarter of 2019. Seventy-five per cent of venture capital investment in clean transportation in the United States has been directed to California. California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard has also helped investors to justify one hundred and three hundred dollar million investments to build new renewable fuel production plants. Low-Carbon Fuel Standard-stimulated economic development currently at over three hundred companies and twenty thousand workers and decreased greenhouse gas emissions per gross domestic product by forty per cent. Therefore, the legislature concludes that the development of sustainable aviation fuel capability in Hawaii continues to exercise leadership in global greenhouse gas emission reduction actions and also has the potential to reduce dependence on foreign sources of fossil fuels, promote economic development, increase the limited options for waste disposal and re-use, facilitate invasive species removal and landscape restoration, and overall improve environmental sustainability in Hawaii. The purpose of this Act is to establish a task force to develop a state action plan to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions generated by international air transportation from Hawaii. SECTION 2. (a) There is established a sustainable aviation fuel task force within the department of business, economic development, and tourism's Hawaii state energy office for administrative purposes. The purpose of the sustainable aviation fuel task force is to: (1) Prepare a work plan and regulatory scheme for implementing the maximum practically and technically feasible and cost-effective reductions in greenhouse gas emissions from transportation sources or categories of sources of greenhouse gases to help commercial airlines serving Hawaii meet the mandate set for international commercial aviation by the International Civil Aviation Organization, specifically the Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation to reduce aviation greenhouse gas emission to fifty per cent below 2005 levels by 2050; (2) Further the development of sustainable aviation fuel as a productive industry in Hawaii, using as a foundation the results from the Hawaii Aviation and Climate Action Summit held in December 2019 and the best practices shared by the federal Aviation Administration's Aviation Sustainability Center and Commercial Aviation Alternative Fuel Initiative; (3) Facilitate communication and coordination among sustainable aviation fuel stakeholders; (4) Provide a forum for discussion and problem-solving regarding potential and current barriers related to technology development, production, distribution, supply chain development, and commercialization of sustainable aviation fuel; (5) Provide recommendations to the legislature on potential legislation that will facilitate the technology development, production, distribution, and commercialization of sustainable aviation fuel; facilitate and streamline the permitting process for new facilities and the expansion of existing facilities; and provide access to low-cost financing through the issuance of revenue bonds and matching funds through the Hawaii technology development corporation; and (6) Evaluate the prospect of Hawaii joining the Pacific Coast Collaborative of the states of California, Oregon, and Washington, and British Columbia to harmonize local carbon fuel and greenhouse gas reduction policy and market-based measures and share best practices. (c) The Hawaii state energy office shall designate task force members that represent sectors involved in sustainable aviation fuel research, development, production, and utilization. The task force shall include but not be limited to representatives of the following, or their designees: (1) The Federal Aviation Administration; (2) The United States Department of Agriculture; (3) The Hawaii local of the United States Commercial Aviation Alternative Fuel Initiative; (4) The Hawaii state senate appointed by the president of the senate; (5) The Hawaii state house of representatives appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives; (6) The department of agriculture; (7) The department of health; (8) The department of land and natural resources; (9) The department of transportation; (10) The Hawaii tourism authority; (11) The Hawaii state energy office; (12) The University of Hawaii; (13) The Hawaii natural energy institute; (14) A bioeconomy advocacy organization; (15) An international airline operator; (16) A fuel refiner; (17) Biofuels feedstock producers; (18) Sustainable transportation fuel producers; (19) A sustainable energy advocacy organization; and (20) A carbon offset project practitioner. The task force shall choose a chair from among its membership. (d) The task force shall hold at least two public meetings a year. (e) The work plan of the task force shall include: (1) Consultation with state and county agencies; (2) Consultation and best practice sharing with international and national organizations and other states to identify cost-effective policies and methods; (3) Harmonization of market-based measures and their supporting technical and quantification methods with the International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation, national, and other state peer-reviewed methods and avoidance of a unique Hawaii method or standard wherever practicable; (4) Development of measures of effectiveness of varying techniques for greenhouse gas emissions reduction for commercial aviation; and (5) Framework to evaluate the relative contribution of each method or project, relative to its cost, projected technical maturity between the years 2020 and 2050, and contributions toward other sustainability objectives such as skilled job creation, economic development, waste re-use, invasive species removal, and landscape restoration. (f) The task force shall submit an interim report of its findings and recommendations to the legislature no later than forty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2022, and a final report of its findings and recommendations to the legislature no later than forty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2023. (g) The task force shall cease to exist on June 30, 2023; provided that the Hawaii state energy office may continue the work of the task force without the effect of this Act should the Hawaii state energy office deem necessary. (h) The Hawaii state energy office shall submit a report of its findings and recommendations and data on clean transportation related to aviation transportation including: (1) Jet fuel consumption, imports, and local refining and the greenhouse gas benchmark for jet fuel and other transportation fuels; and (2) Sustainable aviation fuel and carbon offset projects and investments, infrastructure and financing needs, supply chain development, and other opportunities and challenges to reducing the greenhouse gas impacts from international commercial aviation, to the legislature no later than twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session. SECTION 3. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050.
4848
4949 SECTION 1. The legislature finds that there is a need for a holistic plan of action for Hawaii regarding policy, technology, funding, and facilitation of public and private actions on climate change mitigation. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2018 report concludes that Hawaii has less than fifteen years to address permanent climate change and sea level rise and their associated high level of disruption to the islands of Hawaii.
5050
5151 The legislature has established requirements to:
5252
5353 (1) Reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the state economy to 1990 levels; establish a greenhouse gas emissions reduction task force, now repealed; and create a year 2020 statewide framework of action pursuant to Act 234, Session Laws of Hawaii 2007;
5454
5555 (2) Sequester greenhouse gases with carbon offsets on state lands and require a plan to evaluate the feasibility and implications of establishing a carbon offset program for Hawaii;
5656
5757 (3) Consider greenhouse gas impacts in government decisions and orders, such as environmental assessments, environmental impact statements, and decisions from the public utilities commission;
5858
5959 (4) Establish the Hawaii climate change mitigation and adaptation commission;
6060
6161 (5) Achieve a net-zero greenhouse gas emissions economy by 2050;
6262
6363 (6) Establish a one hundred per cent renewable electricity portfolio standard by 2045; and
6464
6565 (7) Resolve to integrate food, fuel, and waste reduction and re-use activities toward greater economic viability and environmental sustainability highlighted in S.C.R. No. 121, Regular Session of 2017.
6666
6767 However, up to this point, these requirements and goals have been focused on the electricity and ground transportation sectors and on group and point sources of greenhouse emissions. These requirements do not regard the emissions from other forms of transportation or other major economic drivers.
6868
6969 The legislature further finds that the Hawaii Aviation and Climate Action Summit held in December 2019 issued the following findings:
7070
7171 (1) Nearly a third of the energy consumed in the State is for jet fuel, a higher proportion of energy consumption than for any other energy sector;
7272
7373 (2) Over one-third of the flights are to and from international destinations;
7474
7575 (3) International flights to and from Hawaii will start to come under the mandate established by the International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation to reduce their aviation greenhouse gas emission to fifty per cent below 2005 levels by 2050;
7676
7777 (4) Transportation is the single largest producer of greenhouse gas emissions in Hawaii;
7878
7979 (5) Renewable fuels must be part of a balanced portfolio and state action plan to effect certified greenhouse gas reduction in the near term, in addition to carbon offsets;
8080
8181 (6) Sustainable aviation fuels have been demonstrated at commercial scale in the continental United States and can be manufactured in six different American Society for Testing Manuals approved and Federal Aviation Administration certified ways from agricultural, animal, municipal, and construction wastes as well as purpose-grown crops and forest materials;
8282
8383 (7) The International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation mandate is a significant requirement on airlines serving Hawaii, for which the State should establish a task force and "flight plan" to map out public and private actions to cost-effectively reduce greenhouse gas emissions;
8484
8585 (8) The International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation, United States' federal Renewable Fuel Standard, State of California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard, and State of Oregon's Clean Fuels Program are all market-based measures to quantify, incentivize, and monetize industry action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by the transportation sector. These measures are also flexible and effective ways to quantify and monetize the benefits of renewable fuels, carbon offsets, hydrogen and fuel cells, and transportation electrification based upon lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions performance; and
8686
87- (9) Market-based policy measures more directly stimulate innovation, economic growth, and meaningful behavioral change than the state-level policies Hawaii has in place today (barrel tax, carbon tax, environmental permitting and impact statements, and incentives which require annual appropriation). The federal Renewable Fuel Standard that Hawaii opted in to has directly led to a reduction of greenhouse gas in the ground transportation sector by thousands of barrels per day. California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard has reduced greenhouse gases emissions in California over fifty million metric tons through just second quarter of 2019. Seventy-five per cent of venture capital investment in clean transportation in the United States has been directed to California. California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard has also helped investors to justify one hundred and three hundred dollar million investments to build new renewable fuel production plants. Low-Carbon Fuel Standard-stimulated economic development currently at over three hundred companies and twenty thousand workers and decreased greenhouse gas emissions per gross domestic product by forty per cent.
87+ (9) Market-based policy measures more directly stimulate innovation, economic growth, and meaningful behavioral change than the state-level policies Hawaii has in place today (barrel tax, carbon tax, environmental permitting/impact statements, and incentives which require annual appropriation). The federal Renewable Fuel Standard that Hawaii opted in to has directly led to a reduction of greenhouse gas in the ground transportation sector by thousands of barrels per day. California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard has reduced greenhouse gases emissions in California over fifty million metric tons through just second quarter of 2019. Seventy-five per cent of venture capital investment in clean transportation in the United States has been directed to California. California's Low-Carbon Fuel Standard has also helped investors to justify one hundred and three hundred dollar million investments to build new renewable fuel production plants. Low-Carbon Fuel Standard-stimulated economic development currently at over three hundred companies and twenty thousand workers and decreased greenhouse gas emissions per gross domestic product by forty per cent.
8888
8989 Therefore, the legislature concludes that the development of sustainable aviation fuel capability in Hawaii continues to exercise leadership in global greenhouse gas emission reduction actions and also has the potential to reduce dependence on foreign sources of fossil fuels, promote economic development, increase the limited options for waste disposal and re-use, facilitate invasive species removal and landscape restoration, and overall improve environmental sustainability in Hawaii.
9090
9191 The purpose of this Act is to establish a task force to develop a state action plan to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions generated by international air transportation from Hawaii.
9292
9393 SECTION 2. (a) There is established a sustainable aviation fuel task force within the department of business, economic development, and tourism's Hawaii state energy office for administrative purposes. The purpose of the sustainable aviation fuel task force is to:
9494
9595 (1) Prepare a work plan and regulatory scheme for implementing the maximum practically and technically feasible and cost-effective reductions in greenhouse gas emissions from transportation sources or categories of sources of greenhouse gases to help commercial airlines serving Hawaii meet the mandate set for international commercial aviation by the International Civil Aviation Organization, specifically the Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation to reduce aviation greenhouse gas emission to fifty per cent below 2005 levels by 2050;
9696
9797 (2) Further the development of sustainable aviation fuel as a productive industry in Hawaii, using as a foundation the results from the Hawaii Aviation and Climate Action Summit held in December 2019 and the best practices shared by the federal Aviation Administration's Aviation Sustainability Center and Commercial Aviation Alternative Fuel Initiative;
9898
9999 (3) Facilitate communication and coordination among sustainable aviation fuel stakeholders;
100100
101101 (4) Provide a forum for discussion and problem-solving regarding potential and current barriers related to technology development, production, distribution, supply chain development, and commercialization of sustainable aviation fuel;
102102
103103 (5) Provide recommendations to the legislature on potential legislation that will facilitate the technology development, production, distribution, and commercialization of sustainable aviation fuel; facilitate and streamline the permitting process for new facilities and the expansion of existing facilities; and provide access to low-cost financing through the issuance of revenue bonds and matching funds through the Hawaii technology development corporation; and
104104
105105 (6) Evaluate the prospect of Hawaii joining the Pacific Coast Collaborative of the states of California, Oregon, and Washington, and British Columbia to harmonize local carbon fuel and greenhouse gas reduction policy and market-based measures and share best practices.
106106
107107 (c) The Hawaii state energy office shall designate task force members that represent sectors involved in sustainable aviation fuel research, development, production, and utilization. The task force shall include but not be limited to representatives of the following, or their designees:
108108
109109 (1) The Federal Aviation Administration;
110110
111111 (2) The United States Department of Agriculture;
112112
113- (3) The Hawaii local chapter of the United States Commercial Aviation Alternative Fuel Initiative;
113+ (3) The Hawaii local of the United States Commercial Aviation Alternative Fuel Initiative;
114114
115115 (4) The Hawaii state senate appointed by the president of the senate;
116116
117117 (5) The Hawaii state house of representatives appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives;
118118
119119 (6) The department of agriculture;
120120
121121 (7) The department of health;
122122
123123 (8) The department of land and natural resources;
124124
125125 (9) The department of transportation;
126126
127127 (10) The Hawaii tourism authority;
128128
129129 (11) The Hawaii state energy office;
130130
131131 (12) The University of Hawaii;
132132
133133 (13) The Hawaii natural energy institute;
134134
135135 (14) A bioeconomy advocacy organization;
136136
137137 (15) An international airline operator;
138138
139139 (16) A fuel refiner;
140140
141141 (17) Biofuels feedstock producers;
142142
143143 (18) Sustainable transportation fuel producers;
144144
145145 (19) A sustainable energy advocacy organization; and
146146
147147 (20) A carbon offset project practitioner.
148148
149149 The task force shall choose a chair from among its membership.
150150
151151 (d) The task force shall hold at least two public meetings a year.
152152
153153 (e) The work plan of the task force shall include:
154154
155155 (1) Consultation with state and county agencies;
156156
157157 (2) Consultation and best practice sharing with international and national organizations and other states to identify cost-effective policies and methods;
158158
159159 (3) Harmonization of market-based measures and their supporting technical and quantification methods with the International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation, national, and other state peer-reviewed methods and avoidance of a unique Hawaii method or standard wherever practicable;
160160
161161 (4) Development of measures of effectiveness of varying techniques for greenhouse gas emissions reduction for commercial aviation; and
162162
163163 (5) Framework to evaluate the relative contribution of each method or project, relative to its cost, projected technical maturity between the years 2020 and 2050, and contributions toward other sustainability objectives such as skilled job creation, economic development, waste re-use, invasive species removal, and landscape restoration.
164164
165- (f) The task force shall submit an interim report of its findings and recommendations to the legislature no later than forty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2023, and a final report of its findings and recommendations to the legislature no later than forty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2024.
165+ (f) The task force shall submit an interim report of its findings and recommendations to the legislature no later than forty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2022, and a final report of its findings and recommendations to the legislature no later than forty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2023.
166166
167- (g) The task force shall cease to exist on June 30, 2024; provided that the Hawaii state energy office may continue the work of the task force without the effect of this Act should the Hawaii state energy office deem necessary.
167+ (g) The task force shall cease to exist on June 30, 2023; provided that the Hawaii state energy office may continue the work of the task force without the effect of this Act should the Hawaii state energy office deem necessary.
168168
169169 (h) The Hawaii state energy office shall submit a report of its findings and recommendations and data on clean transportation related to aviation transportation including:
170170
171171 (1) Jet fuel consumption, imports, and local refining and the greenhouse gas benchmark for jet fuel and other transportation fuels; and
172172
173173 (2) Sustainable aviation fuel and carbon offset projects and investments, infrastructure and financing needs, supply chain development, and other opportunities and challenges to reducing the greenhouse gas impacts from international commercial aviation,
174174
175175 to the legislature no later than twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session.
176176
177177 SECTION 3. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050.
178178
179- Report Title: Greenhouse Gas Emissions; Sustainable Aviation Fuel Task Force Description: Convenes a sustainable aviation fuel task force within the Hawaii state energy office to develop a state action plan to reduce the greenhouse gas intensity of international air transportation from Hawaii. Requires reports to the legislature. Effective 7/1/2050. (HD2) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
179+ Report Title: Greenhouse Gas Emissions; Sustainable Aviation Fuel Task Force Description: Convenes a Sustainable Aviation Fuel Task Force within the Hawaii State Energy Office to develop a state action plan to reduce the greenhouse gas intensity of international air transportation from Hawaii. Effective 7/1/2050. (HD1) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
180180
181181
182182
183183 Report Title:
184184
185185 Greenhouse Gas Emissions; Sustainable Aviation Fuel Task Force
186186
187187
188188
189189 Description:
190190
191-Convenes a sustainable aviation fuel task force within the Hawaii state energy office to develop a state action plan to reduce the greenhouse gas intensity of international air transportation from Hawaii. Requires reports to the legislature. Effective 7/1/2050. (HD2)
191+Convenes a Sustainable Aviation Fuel Task Force within the Hawaii State Energy Office to develop a state action plan to reduce the greenhouse gas intensity of international air transportation from Hawaii. Effective 7/1/2050. (HD1)
192192
193193
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199199 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.