Hawaii 2024 Regular Session

Hawaii Senate Bill SB3079 Compare Versions

OldNewDifferences
1-THE SENATE S.B. NO. 3079 THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024 S.D. 1 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
1+THE SENATE S.B. NO. 3079 THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
22
33 THE SENATE S.B. NO. 3079
4-THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024 S.D. 1
4+THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024
55 STATE OF HAWAII
66
77 THE SENATE
88
99 S.B. NO.
1010
1111 3079
1212
1313 THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024
1414
15-S.D. 1
15+
1616
1717 STATE OF HAWAII
1818
1919
2020
2121
2222
2323
2424
2525
2626
2727
2828
2929
3030
3131 A BILL FOR AN ACT
3232
3333
3434
3535
3636
3737 RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
3838
3939
4040
4141
4242
4343 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
4444
4545
4646
47- SECTION 1. The legislature finds that Hawaii is an isolated island chain that is uniquely vulnerable to climate change. As evidenced by the August 8, 2023, wildfires that devastated Lahaina and impacted areas of West Maui and other communities, climate disasters increasingly threaten the State's well-being. Act 109, Session Laws of Hawaii 2011, amended section 269‑6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to require the public utilities commission to explicitly consider the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels in various areas, including greenhouse gas emissions, in its determinations of the reasonableness of various costs. When Act 109 was being considered, the members of the senate standing committee on energy and environmental protection found that "Hawaii is dangerously reliant on imported fossil fuel, which subjects the State and residents to greater oil and gas price volatility, increased air pollution, and potentially harmful climate change due to the release of harmful greenhouse gases". The standing committee also found that requiring the commission to factor in the hidden and long-term costs of the State's detrimental reliance on fossil fuels when exercising its statutory authority would assist in reducing the State's reliance on fossil fuels. The purpose of this act is to clarify that the public utilities commission may determine that analysis of the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions is not necessary for energy projects that do not involve the combustion of fuel. SECTION 2. Section 269-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new definition to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows: ""Lifecycle greenhouse gas emission assessment" means the method used to estimate the greenhouse gas impact of a product or fuel based on a set of established system boundaries for the product, project, or fuel's value chain, that includes the extraction and processing of raw materials, manufacturing and processing of materials, transportation and distribution, lifetime use, recycling, and the final disposal." SECTION 3. Section 269-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows: 1. By amending subsections (a) and (b) to read: "(a) The public utilities commission shall have the general supervision hereinafter set forth over all public utilities, and shall perform the duties and exercise the powers imposed or conferred upon it by this chapter. Included among the general powers of the public utilities commission is the authority to adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 necessary for the purposes of this chapter. (b) The public utilities commission shall consider the need to reduce the State's reliance on fossil fuels through energy efficiency and increased renewable energy generation in exercising its authority and duties under this chapter. In making determinations of the reasonableness of the costs pertaining to electric or gas utility system capital improvements and operations, the public utilities commission shall explicitly consider, quantitatively or qualitatively, the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on: (1) Price volatility; (2) Export of funds for fuel imports; (3) Fuel supply reliability risk; and (4) [Greenhouse] Lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions[.] for projects involving the combustion of fuel; provided that the public utilities commission may require a lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions analysis for energy projects that do not involve the combustion of fuel. The public utilities commission may determine that short-term costs or direct costs of renewable energy generation that are higher than alternatives relying more heavily on fossil fuels are reasonable, considering the impacts resulting from the use of fossil fuels. The public utilities commission shall determine whether such analysis is necessary for proceedings involving water, wastewater, or telecommunications providers on an individual basis." 2. By amending subsection (d) to read: "(d) In exercising its authority and duties under this chapter, the public utilities commission shall consider the costs and benefits of a diverse [fossil fuel] portfolio of energy resources and of maximizing the efficiency of all electric utility assets to lower and stabilize the cost of electricity. Nothing in this section shall subvert the obligation of electric utilities to meet the renewable portfolio standards set forth in section 269-92." 3. By amending subsection (f) to read: "(f) The chairperson of the public utilities commission may appoint a hearings officer, who shall not be subject to chapter 76, to hear and recommend decisions in any proceeding before it other than a proceeding involving the rates or any other matters covered in the tariffs filed by the public utilities. The hearings officer shall have the power to take testimony, make findings of fact and conclusions of law, and recommend a decision; provided that the findings of fact, the conclusions of law, and the recommended decision shall be reviewed and may be approved by the public utilities commission after notice to the parties and an opportunity to be heard. The hearings officer shall have all of the above powers conferred upon the public utilities commission under section 269-10." SECTION 4. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
47+ SECTION 1. The legislature finds that Hawaii is an isolated island chain that is uniquely vulnerable to climate change. As evidenced by the August 8, 2023, wildfires that devastated Lāhainā and impacted areas of West Maui and other communities, climate disasters increasingly threaten the State's wellbeing. Act 109, Session Laws of Hawaii 2011, amended section 269-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to require the public utilities commission to explicitly consider the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels in various areas, including greenhouse gas emissions, in its determinations of the reasonableness of various costs. When Act 109 was being considered, the members of the committee on energy and environmental protection found that "Hawaii is dangerously reliant on imported fossil fuel, which subjects the State and residents to greater oil and gas price volatility, increased air pollution, and potentially harmful climate change due to the release of harmful greenhouse gases." The committee also found that requiring the commission to factor in the hidden and long-term costs of the State's detrimental reliance on fossil fuels when exercising its statutory authority would assist in reducing the State's reliance on fossil fuels. The purpose of this act is to clarify that the public utilities commission may determine that analysis of the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on greenhouse gas emissions is not necessary under certain circumstances when generation-based emissions for a project are zero. SECTION 2. Section 269-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§269-6 General powers and duties. (a) The public utilities commission shall have the general supervision hereinafter set forth over all public utilities, and shall perform the duties and exercise the powers imposed or conferred upon it by this chapter. Included among the general powers of the public utilities commission is the authority to adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 necessary for the purposes of this chapter. (b) The public utilities commission shall consider the need to reduce the State's reliance on fossil fuels through energy efficiency and increased renewable energy generation in exercising its authority and duties under this chapter. In making determinations of the reasonableness of the costs pertaining to electric or gas utility system capital improvements and operations, the public utilities commission shall explicitly consider, quantitatively or qualitatively, the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on: (1) Price volatility; (2) Export of funds for fuel imports; (3) Fuel supply reliability risk; and (4) [Greenhouse] Generation-based greenhouse gas emissions[.]; provided that the public utilities commission may require a greenhouse gas emissions analysis for energy projects that do not result in generation-based greenhouse gas emissions. The public utilities commission may determine that short-term costs or direct costs of renewable energy generation that are higher than alternatives relying more heavily on fossil fuels are reasonable, considering the impacts resulting from the use of fossil fuels. The public utilities commission shall determine whether such analysis is necessary for proceedings involving water, wastewater, or telecommunications providers on an individual basis. (c) The analysis described in subsection (b) shall not be required for a utility's routine system replacements, such as overhauls and overhead or underground line determinations, or determinations that do not pertain to capital improvements or operations, including but not limited to financing requests. (d) In exercising its authority and duties under this chapter, the public utilities commission shall consider the costs and benefits of a diverse [fossil fuel] portfolio of energy resources and of maximizing the efficiency of all electric utility assets to lower and stabilize the cost of electricity. Nothing in this section shall subvert the obligation of electric utilities to meet the renewable portfolio standards set forth in section 269-92. (e) The public utilities commission, in carrying out its responsibilities under this chapter, shall consider whether the implementation of one or more of the following economic incentives or cost recovery mechanisms would be in the public interest: (1) The establishment of a shared cost savings incentive mechanism designed to induce a public utility to reduce energy costs and operating costs and accelerate the implementation of energy cost reduction practices; (2) The establishment of a renewable energy curtailment mitigation incentive mechanism to encourage public utilities to implement curtailment mitigation practices when lower cost renewable energy is available but not utilized through the sharing of energy cost savings between the public utility, ratepayer, and affected renewable energy projects; (3) The establishment of a stranded cost recovery mechanism to encourage the accelerated retirement of an electric utility fossil fuel electric generation plant by allowing an electric utility to recover the stranded costs created by early retirement of a fossil generation plant; and (4) The establishment of differentiated authorized rates of return on common equity to encourage increased utility investments in transmission and distribution infrastructure, discourage an electric utility investment in fossil fuel electric generation plants to incentivize grid modernization, and disincentivize fossil generation, respectively. (f) The chairperson of the public utilities commission may appoint a hearings officer, who shall not be subject to chapter 76, to hear and recommend decisions in any proceeding before it other than a proceeding involving the rates or any other matters covered in the tariffs filed by the public utilities. The hearings officer shall have the power to take testimony, make findings of fact and conclusions of law, and recommend a decision; provided that the findings of fact, the conclusions of law, and the recommended decision shall be reviewed and may be approved by the public utilities commission after notice to the parties and an opportunity to be heard. The hearings officer shall have all of the above powers conferred upon the public utilities commission under section 269-10." SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect upon its approval. INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________ BY REQUEST
4848
49- SECTION 1. The legislature finds that Hawaii is an isolated island chain that is uniquely vulnerable to climate change. As evidenced by the August 8, 2023, wildfires that devastated Lahaina and impacted areas of West Maui and other communities, climate disasters increasingly threaten the State's well-being.
49+ SECTION 1. The legislature finds that Hawaii is an isolated island chain that is uniquely vulnerable to climate change. As evidenced by the August 8, 2023, wildfires that devastated Lāhainā and impacted areas of West Maui and other communities, climate disasters increasingly threaten the State's wellbeing.
5050
51- Act 109, Session Laws of Hawaii 2011, amended section 2696, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to require the public utilities commission to explicitly consider the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels in various areas, including greenhouse gas emissions, in its determinations of the reasonableness of various costs. When Act 109 was being considered, the members of the senate standing committee on energy and environmental protection found that "Hawaii is dangerously reliant on imported fossil fuel, which subjects the State and residents to greater oil and gas price volatility, increased air pollution, and potentially harmful climate change due to the release of harmful greenhouse gases". The standing committee also found that requiring the commission to factor in the hidden and long-term costs of the State's detrimental reliance on fossil fuels when exercising its statutory authority would assist in reducing the State's reliance on fossil fuels.
51+ Act 109, Session Laws of Hawaii 2011, amended section 269-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to require the public utilities commission to explicitly consider the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels in various areas, including greenhouse gas emissions, in its determinations of the reasonableness of various costs. When Act 109 was being considered, the members of the committee on energy and environmental protection found that "Hawaii is dangerously reliant on imported fossil fuel, which subjects the State and residents to greater oil and gas price volatility, increased air pollution, and potentially harmful climate change due to the release of harmful greenhouse gases." The committee also found that requiring the commission to factor in the hidden and long-term costs of the State's detrimental reliance on fossil fuels when exercising its statutory authority would assist in reducing the State's reliance on fossil fuels.
5252
53- The purpose of this act is to clarify that the public utilities commission may determine that analysis of the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions is not necessary for energy projects that do not involve the combustion of fuel.
53+ The purpose of this act is to clarify that the public utilities commission may determine that analysis of the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on greenhouse gas emissions is not necessary under certain circumstances when generation-based emissions for a project are zero.
5454
55- SECTION 2. Section 269-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new definition to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows:
55+ SECTION 2. Section 269-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
5656
57- ""Lifecycle greenhouse gas emission assessment" means the method used to estimate the greenhouse gas impact of a product or fuel based on a set of established system boundaries for the product, project, or fuel's value chain, that includes the extraction and processing of raw materials, manufacturing and processing of materials, transportation and distribution, lifetime use, recycling, and the final disposal."
58-
59- SECTION 3. Section 269-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:
60-
61- 1. By amending subsections (a) and (b) to read:
62-
63- "(a) The public utilities commission shall have the general supervision hereinafter set forth over all public utilities, and shall perform the duties and exercise the powers imposed or conferred upon it by this chapter. Included among the general powers of the public utilities commission is the authority to adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 necessary for the purposes of this chapter.
57+ "§269-6 General powers and duties. (a) The public utilities commission shall have the general supervision hereinafter set forth over all public utilities, and shall perform the duties and exercise the powers imposed or conferred upon it by this chapter. Included among the general powers of the public utilities commission is the authority to adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 necessary for the purposes of this chapter.
6458
6559 (b) The public utilities commission shall consider the need to reduce the State's reliance on fossil fuels through energy efficiency and increased renewable energy generation in exercising its authority and duties under this chapter. In making determinations of the reasonableness of the costs pertaining to electric or gas utility system capital improvements and operations, the public utilities commission shall explicitly consider, quantitatively or qualitatively, the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on:
6660
6761 (1) Price volatility;
6862
6963 (2) Export of funds for fuel imports;
7064
7165 (3) Fuel supply reliability risk; and
7266
73- (4) [Greenhouse] Lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions[.] for projects involving the combustion of fuel; provided that the public utilities commission may require a lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions analysis for energy projects that do not involve the combustion of fuel.
67+ (4) [Greenhouse] Generation-based greenhouse gas emissions[.]; provided that the public utilities commission may require a greenhouse gas emissions analysis for energy projects that do not result in generation-based greenhouse gas emissions.
7468
75-The public utilities commission may determine that short-term costs or direct costs of renewable energy generation that are higher than alternatives relying more heavily on fossil fuels are reasonable, considering the impacts resulting from the use of fossil fuels. The public utilities commission shall determine whether such analysis is necessary for proceedings involving water, wastewater, or telecommunications providers on an individual basis."
69+The public utilities commission may determine that short-term costs or direct costs of renewable energy generation that are higher than alternatives relying more heavily on fossil fuels are reasonable, considering the impacts resulting from the use of fossil fuels. The public utilities commission shall determine whether such analysis is necessary for proceedings involving water, wastewater, or telecommunications providers on an individual basis.
7670
77- 2. By amending subsection (d) to read:
71+ (c) The analysis described in subsection (b) shall not be required for a utility's routine system replacements, such as overhauls and overhead or underground line determinations, or determinations that do not pertain to capital improvements or operations, including but not limited to financing requests.
7872
79- "(d) In exercising its authority and duties under this chapter, the public utilities commission shall consider the costs and benefits of a diverse [fossil fuel] portfolio of energy resources and of maximizing the efficiency of all electric utility assets to lower and stabilize the cost of electricity. Nothing in this section shall subvert the obligation of electric utilities to meet the renewable portfolio standards set forth in section 269-92."
73+ (d) In exercising its authority and duties under this chapter, the public utilities commission shall consider the costs and benefits of a diverse [fossil fuel] portfolio of energy resources and of maximizing the efficiency of all electric utility assets to lower and stabilize the cost of electricity. Nothing in this section shall subvert the obligation of electric utilities to meet the renewable portfolio standards set forth in section 269-92.
8074
81- 3. By amending subsection (f) to read:
75+ (e) The public utilities commission, in carrying out its responsibilities under this chapter, shall consider whether the implementation of one or more of the following economic incentives or cost recovery mechanisms would be in the public interest:
8276
83- "(f) The chairperson of the public utilities commission may appoint a hearings officer, who shall not be subject to chapter 76, to hear and recommend decisions in any proceeding before it other than a proceeding involving the rates or any other matters covered in the tariffs filed by the public utilities. The hearings officer shall have the power to take testimony, make findings of fact and conclusions of law, and recommend a decision; provided that the findings of fact, the conclusions of law, and the recommended decision shall be reviewed and may be approved by the public utilities commission after notice to the parties and an opportunity to be heard. The hearings officer shall have all of the above powers conferred upon the public utilities commission under section 269-10."
77+ (1) The establishment of a shared cost savings incentive mechanism designed to induce a public utility to reduce energy costs and operating costs and accelerate the implementation of energy cost reduction practices;
8478
85- SECTION 4. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
79+ (2) The establishment of a renewable energy curtailment mitigation incentive mechanism to encourage public utilities to implement curtailment mitigation practices when lower cost renewable energy is available but not utilized through the sharing of energy cost savings between the public utility, ratepayer, and affected renewable energy projects;
8680
87- SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
81+ (3) The establishment of a stranded cost recovery mechanism to encourage the accelerated retirement of an electric utility fossil fuel electric generation plant by allowing an electric utility to recover the stranded costs created by early retirement of a fossil generation plant; and
8882
89- Report Title: PUC; Renewable Energy; Lifecycle Greenhouse Gas Emissions Description: Amends section 269-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to clarify that the Public Utilities Commission shall consider the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions and may require a lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions analysis for energy projects that do not involve the combustion of fuel. Makes conforming amendments. (SD1) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
83+ (4) The establishment of differentiated authorized rates of return on common equity to encourage increased utility investments in transmission and distribution infrastructure, discourage an electric utility investment in fossil fuel electric generation plants to incentivize grid modernization, and disincentivize fossil generation, respectively.
84+
85+ (f) The chairperson of the public utilities commission may appoint a hearings officer, who shall not be subject to chapter 76, to hear and recommend decisions in any proceeding before it other than a proceeding involving the rates or any other matters covered in the tariffs filed by the public utilities. The hearings officer shall have the power to take testimony, make findings of fact and conclusions of law, and recommend a decision; provided that the findings of fact, the conclusions of law, and the recommended decision shall be reviewed and may be approved by the public utilities commission after notice to the parties and an opportunity to be heard. The hearings officer shall have all of the above powers conferred upon the public utilities commission under section 269-10."
86+
87+ SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
88+
89+ SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
90+
91+
92+
93+INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________
94+ BY REQUEST
95+
96+INTRODUCED BY:
97+
98+_____________________________
99+
100+
101+
102+
103+
104+BY REQUEST
105+
106+ Report Title: PUC; Renewable Energy; Greenhouse Gas Emissions Description: Amends section 269-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to clarify that the Public Utilities Commission shall consider the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on generation-based greenhouse gas emissions and may require a greenhouse gas emissions analysis for energy projects that do not result in generation-based greenhouse gas emissions. The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
90107
91108
92109
93110
94111
95112
96113
97114 Report Title:
98115
99-PUC; Renewable Energy; Lifecycle Greenhouse Gas Emissions
116+PUC; Renewable Energy; Greenhouse Gas Emissions
100117
101118
102119
103120 Description:
104121
105-Amends section 269-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to clarify that the Public Utilities Commission shall consider the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions and may require a lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions analysis for energy projects that do not involve the combustion of fuel. Makes conforming amendments. (SD1)
122+Amends section 269-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to clarify that the Public Utilities Commission shall consider the effect of the State's reliance on fossil fuels on generation-based greenhouse gas emissions and may require a greenhouse gas emissions analysis for energy projects that do not result in generation-based greenhouse gas emissions.
106123
107124
108125
109126
110127
111128
112129
113130 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.