1 of 132 FILED ON: 7/1/2024 SENATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 2838 Senate, June 25, 2024 -- Text of the Senate Bill upgrading the grid and protecting ratepayers (Senate, No. 2838) (being the text of Senate, No. 2829, printed as amended) The Commonwealth of Massachusetts _______________ In the One Hundred and Ninety-Third General Court (2023-2024) _______________ An Act upgrading the grid and protecting ratepayers. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows: 1 SECTION 1. Section 30 of chapter 7C of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2022 2Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking out, in line 4, the words “the energy consumption 3of” and inserting in place thereof the following words:- the: (i) energy consumption of; (ii) 4energy efficiency of; and (iii) greenhouse gas emissions directly attributable to. 5 SECTION 2. Said section 30 of said chapter 7C, as so appearing, is hereby further 6amended by striking out, in lines 10 and 11, the words “energy conservation maintenance and 7operating procedures” and inserting in place thereof the following words:- maintenance and 8operating procedures for energy conservation, energy efficiency and greenhouse gas emissions 9reductions. 10 SECTION 3. Said section 30 of said chapter 7C, as so appearing, is hereby further 11amended by striking out, in line 13, the words “energy efficiency standards” and inserting in 2 of 132 12place thereof the following words:- standards for energy efficiency and greenhouse gas 13emissions reductions. 14 SECTION 4. Section 31 of said chapter 7C, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 15striking out the first paragraph and inserting in place thereof the following paragraph:- 16 The division of capital asset management and maintenance shall evaluate the potential for 17increasing energy efficiency and reducing greenhouse gas emissions, including, but not limited 18to, by installing and maintaining electric vehicle supply equipment, as defined in section 2 of 19chapter 25B, in each building owned by an authority or state agency or leased by such authority 20or agency for not less than a 10-year period. 21 SECTION 5. Chapter 21A of the General Laws is hereby amended by inserting after 22section 2A the following section:- 23 Section 2B. (a) There shall be within the office a drought management task force. The 24task force shall consist of: the secretary or a designee, who shall serve as co-chair; the director of 25the Massachusetts emergency management agency or a designee, who shall serve as co-chair; the 26commissioner of agricultural resources or a designee; the commissioner of conservation and 27recreation or a designee; the commissioner of environmental protection or a designee; the state 28fire marshal or a designee; the commissioner of fish and game or a designee; the commissioner 29of public health or a designee; the commissioner of public utilities or a designee; the executive 30director of the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority or a designee; the executive director of 31the Massachusetts Association of Health Boards, Inc.; the executive director of the 32Massachusetts Rivers Alliance, Inc., or a designee; the executive director of the Massachusetts 33Water Works Association Inc.; and the executive director of the Water Supply Citizens advisory 3 of 132 34committee to the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority. The co-chairs may invite officials 35from federal agencies to provide scientific and technical input and shall have joint responsibility 36for coordinating the task force. The task force shall meet not less than monthly when drought 37conditions exist. The task force shall be staffed by a director appointed by the secretary. 38 (b) The task force shall: (i) assist in collecting and assessing technical information; (ii) 39facilitate coordination and communication among task force members, agencies and the public; 40and (iii) provide recommendations to the secretary, the secretary of public safety and security 41and the governor on the existing drought level and any proposed responses to such drought level. 42The task force shall also make recommendations for the end of a drought or the reduction of the 43drought level or for the commencement or cessation of a drought declaration. 44 (c) The task force shall maintain and periodically update a statewide drought 45management plan that addresses drought preparedness and response protocol to drought 46conditions and protects public health, public safety and the environment. The task force may 47update the statewide drought management plan at any time; provided, however, that the plan 48shall be reviewed not less than every 5 years and updated not less than every 10 years; provided 49further, that the drought management plan shall be approved by the water resources commission. 50 (d) The task force may create and maintain a map that shall seek to create drought regions 51consistent with watersheds. 52 (e) The secretary may order water conservation measures, including limits on 53nonessential outdoor water use, based on the severity of drought in drought regions to protect 54public health, safety or the environment. Such water conservation measures shall apply to all 4 of 132 55water users within a drought region unless otherwise determined by the secretary with prior 56notice to the task force. 57 (f) Notwithstanding section 27C of chapter 29 or any other general or special law, 58ordinance, by-law, rule or regulation to the contrary, cities and towns shall enforce water 59conservation restrictions issued by the secretary to the fullest extent permitted by law. 60 SECTION 6. Said chapter 21A is hereby further amended by adding the following 3 61sections:- 62 Section 29. There shall be an office of environmental justice and equity within the 63executive office of energy and environmental affairs, which shall be administered by an 64undersecretary of environmental justice and equity who shall be appointed and may be removed 65by the secretary. The office shall be responsible for implementing environmental justice 66principles as defined in section 62 of chapter 30 in the operation of each office and agency under 67the executive office. The office shall develop standards and guidelines governing the potential 68use and applicability of community benefit plans and agreements and cumulative impact 69analyses in developing energy infrastructure with input from representatives from utilities, the 70renewable energy industry, local governments, low and moderate income community 71organizations, environmental sectors and other representatives as deemed appropriate by the 72office. Annually, not later than July 30, the office shall submit a report to the executive office of 73energy and environmental affairs and the clerks of the senate and house of representatives that 74compiles data regarding the proportion of benefits attributable to clean energy programs received 75by low and moderate income communities as defined in section 38EE of chapter 63. 5 of 132 76 Section 30. The executive office of energy and environmental affairs shall establish and 77periodically update a methodology for determining the suitability of sites for clean energy 78generation facilities, clean energy storage facilities and clean transmission and distribution 79infrastructure facilities in newly established public rights of way. The methodology shall include 80multiple geospatial screening criteria to evaluate sites for development potential, climate change 81resilience, carbon storage and sequestration, biodiversity and social and environmental benefits 82and burdens. The executive office shall require facility development project proponents to avoid 83or minimize or, if impacts cannot be avoided or minimized, mitigate siting impacts and 84environmental and land use concerns. The executive office shall develop and periodically update 85guidance to inform state, regional and local regulations, ordinances, by-laws and permitting 86processes on ways to avoid, minimize or mitigate impacts on the environment and people to the 87greatest extent practicable. 88 Section 31. (a) For the purposes of this section, the following words shall have the 89following meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise: 90 “Charger”, a device having at least 1 charging port and connector for charging electric 91vehicles; provided, however, that “charger” shall also mean electric vehicle supply equipment. 92 “Charging network provider”, the entity that operates the digital communication network 93that remotely manages the chargers which may include charging station operators and 94manufacture chargers. 95 “Charging station”, a charger or group of chargers and the area in the immediate vicinity 96of such charger or group of chargers, which may include, at the discretion of the regulating 97entity, supporting equipment, parking areas adjacent to the chargers and lanes for vehicle ingress 6 of 132 98and egress; provided, however, that a charging station may comprise only part of the property on 99which it is located. 100 “Charging station operator”, an entity that owns or provides the chargers and the 101supporting equipment and facilities at charging stations and is responsible for the operation and 102maintenance of the chargers and the supporting equipment and facilities; provided, however, that 103such operator may delegate responsibility for certain aspects of the charging station operation 104and maintenance to subcontractors. 105 “Connector”, a device that attaches an electric vehicle to a charging port to transfer 106electricity; provided, however, that the term “connector” may also be referred to as a plug. 107 “Direct current fast charger”, a charger that enables rapid charging by delivering direct- 108current, or DC current, electricity directly to an electric vehicle’s battery. 109 “Electric vehicle”, a battery electric vehicle that is either a zero-emission vehicle or a 110plug-in hybrid electric vehicle equipped with an on-board electrical energy storage device that 111can be recharged from an external source of electricity and has the capability to run on another 112fuel; provided, however, that “electric vehicle” shall not include a golf cart, electric bicycle or 113other micromobility device. 114 “Electric vehicle charging services”, the transfer of electric energy from an electric 115vehicle charging station to a battery or other storage device in an electric vehicle and related 116billing services, networking and operation and maintenance. 7 of 132 117 “Electric vehicle supply equipment”, a device, including at least 1 charging port and 118connector, for charging electric vehicles; provided, however, that the term “electric vehicle 119supply equipment” may also be referred to as a charger. 120 “Level 1”, a galvanically-connected electric vehicle supply equipment with a single- 121phase input voltage nominally 120 volts AC and maximum output current of not more than 16 122amperes AC. 123 “Level 2”, a galvanically-connected electric vehicle supply equipment with a single- 124phase input voltage range from 208 volts to 240 volts AC and maximum output current of not 125more than 80 amperes AC. 126 “National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Formula program”, the federal program 127established pursuant to the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Pub.L.117-58, pursuant to 128which the Federal Highway Administration provides funding to the states to facilitate the 129strategic, nationwide deployment of electric vehicle infrastructure and the related establishment 130of an interconnected, interstate network that is designed to facilitate data collection, access and 131reliability in association with the increased use of electric vehicles and electric vehicle 132infrastructure. 133 “Public electric vehicle charging station”, an electric vehicle charging station located at a 134publicly-available parking space. 135 ''Publicly-available parking space'', a parking space that has been designated by a 136property owner or lessee to be available to and accessible by the public and may include on- 137street parking spaces and parking spaces in surface lots or parking garages; provided, however, 138that “publicly-available parking space” shall not include a parking space that is part of or 8 of 132 139associated with residential real property containing not more than 4 dwelling units or that is 140reserved for the exclusive use of an individual driver or vehicle or for a group of drivers or 141vehicles, including employees, tenants, visitors, residents of a common interest development and 142residents of an adjacent building. 143 “Publicly-funded and available charging station", a public electric vehicle charging 144station installed on or after January 1, 2025, that has received, or expects to receive, a grant, loan 145or other incentive from a federal or state government source or through a charge on ratepayers 146and is located at a publicly available parking space. 147 (b) The executive office of energy and environmental affairs shall promulgate regulations 148to: (i) monitor the utilization or frequency of use of such chargers and charging stations; (ii) 149monitor the reliability and availability of such chargers and charging stations, including, but not 150limited to, whether reliability varies by the income of municipalities or neighborhoods or by 151regions of the commonwealth; and (iii) require charging network providers and charging station 152operators to share, free of charge, certain data fields, with third-party software developers via 153application programming interfaces; provided, however, that any such data sharing may be 154conditioned on measures to protect sensitive or confidential business information. The executive 155office of energy and environmental affairs may designate any of its agencies to promulgate such 156regulations. 157 (c) In promulgating regulations under this section, the executive office or its designated 158agency may apply different requirements to publicly-funded and available charging stations or 159other charging stations. 9 of 132 160 (d) Regulations promulgated under this section may vary by technology type, power 161levels, number of chargers per site, site ownership and according to whether chargers: (i) are 162networked; (ii) are public; (iii) are publicly-funded and available; (iv) are level 1, level 2 or 163direct current fast chargers; or (v) are or are not all-inclusive mobile solar charging stations. Such 164regulations may apply to charging stations other than publicly-funded and available charging 165stations but shall not apply to chargers or charging stations installed at a residential real property 166containing not more than 4 dwelling units. The executive office or its designated agency may, in 167its discretion, set such standards as it deems necessary for data formats that comply with electric 168vehicle charging industry best practices and standards. 169 (e) With respect to any regulations that may be promulgated pertaining to reliability, the 170office or its designated agency shall develop definitions of “uptime” and “exempted downtime” 171through a public process and in such a manner to promote, as much as is practicable, consistency 172with other jurisdictions and the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure formula program 173requirements; provided, however, that the office or designated agency may: (i) set standards for 174uptime; (ii) consider which events, if any, may count as exempted downtime; and (iii) take into 175account the quality and condition of software and hardware. 176 SECTION 7. Section 1 of chapter 23J of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2022 177Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking out the definitions of “Clean energy” and “Clean 178energy research” and inserting in place thereof the following 2 definitions:- 179 “Clean energy”, advanced and applied technologies that significantly reduce or eliminate 180the use of energy from non-renewable sources including, but not limited to: (i) energy efficiency; 181(ii) demand response; (iii) energy conservation; (iv) carbon dioxide removal; (v) embodied 10 of 132 182carbon reduction; or (vi) technologies powered, in whole or in part, by the sun, wind, water, 183geothermal energy, including networked geothermal and deep geothermal energy, hydrogen 184produced by non-fossil fuel sources and methods, alcohol, fuel cells, fusion energy, any other 185renewable, nondepletable or recyclable fuel and nuclear fission; provided, however, that “clean 186energy” shall include an alternative energy generating source as defined in clauses (i) to (vi), 187inclusive, of subsection (a) of section 11F½ of chapter 25A. 188 “Clean energy research”, advanced and applied research in new clean energy 189technologies including: (i) solar photovoltaic; (ii) solar thermal; (iii) wind power; (iv) geothermal 190energy, including networked geothermal and deep geothermal energy; (v) wave and tidal energy; 191(vi) advanced hydropower; (vii) energy transmission and distribution; (viii) energy storage; (ix) 192renewable biofuels, including ethanol, biodiesel and advanced biofuels; (x) renewable, 193biodegradable chemicals; (xi) advanced thermal-to-energy conversion; (xii) fusion energy; (xiii) 194hydrogen produced by non-fossil fuel sources and methods; (xiv) carbon capture and 195sequestration; (xv) carbon dioxide removal; (xvi) energy monitoring; (xvii) green building 196materials and embodied carbon reduction; (xviii) energy efficiency; (xix) energy-efficient 197lighting; (xx) gasification and conversion of gas to liquid fuels; (xxi) industrial energy 198efficiency; (xxii) demand-side management; (xxiii) fuel cells; and (xxiv) nuclear fission; 199provided, however, that “clean energy research” shall not include advanced and applied research 200in coal, oil or natural gas. 201 SECTION 8. Section 2 of said chapter 23J, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 202inserting after the word “ventures”, in line 23, the following words:- , which may include carbon 203sequestration and other clean energy sources. 11 of 132 204 SECTION 9. Chapter 25 of the General Laws is hereby amended by striking out section 20512N, as so appearing, and inserting in place thereof the following section:- 206 Section 12N. There shall be within the department and under the general supervision and 207control of the commission a facility siting division, which shall be under the charge of a director 208appointed by the commission. The division shall perform such functions as the commission 209deems necessary for the administration, implementation and enforcement of sections 69G to 21069W, inclusive, of chapter 164 imposed upon the department and the energy facilities siting 211board. 212 The division shall maintain a real-time, online, clean energy infrastructure dashboard. 213The division shall, in cooperation with the executive office of energy and environmental affairs 214and its affiliated departments and offices, create, maintain and update the dashboard by 215collecting, facilitating the collection of and reporting comprehensive data and information related 216to: (i) accelerating the responsible deployment of clean energy infrastructure through siting and 217permitting reform in a manner consistent with applicable legal requirements including, but not 218limited to, emissions limits and sublimits set under chapter 21N; (ii) facilitating community input 219into the siting and permitting of clean energy infrastructure; and (iii) ensuring that the benefits of 220clean energy deployment are shared equitably among all residents of the commonwealth. The 221dashboard shall, at a minimum, report for the most recent reporting period and in the aggregate 222the number of facility applications filed, decided or pending information including, but not 223limited to: (a) the number of applications deemed incomplete and the number of applications 224constructively approved; (b) the average duration of application review; and (c) average staffing 225levels delineated by job classification. The dashboard shall make use of bar charts, line charts 226and other visual representations to facilitate public understanding of both recent performance and 12 of 132 227long-term and cumulative trends and outcomes of clean energy deployment. The division shall 228convene a stakeholder process to develop and inform the design and content of the dashboard; 229provided, however, that comprehensive data and information shall be made publicly available in 230a machine-readable format. 231 SECTION 10. The first paragraph of section 12Q of said chapter 25, as so appearing, is 232hereby amended by striking out the second sentence and inserting in place thereof the following 233sentence:- The department shall credit to the fund: (i) appropriations or other money authorized 234or transferred by the general court and specifically designated to be credited to the fund; (ii) 235application fees collected pursuant to section 69J1/2 of chapter 164; and (iii) income derived 236from the investment of amounts credited to the fund. 237 SECTION 11. Said chapter 25 is hereby further amended by inserting after section 12R 238the following 2 sections:- 239 Section 12S. There shall be a Department of Public Utilities and Energy Facilities Siting 240Board Intervenor Support Fund. The department shall credit to the fund: (i) appropriations or 241other money authorized or transferred by the general court and specifically designated to be 242credited to the fund; (ii) a portion of application fees, as determined by the department, collected 243pursuant to sections 69J1/2, 69T, 69U, 69V and 69W of chapter 164; (iii) any nonratepayer 244funded sources obtained through gifts, grants, contributions and bequests of funds from any 245department, agency or subdivision of federal, state or municipal government or any individual, 246foundation, corporation, association or public authority; and (iv) income derived from the 247investment of amounts credited to the fund. All amounts credited to the fund shall be held in trust 248and shall be expended solely, without further appropriation, for the purposes of section 149 of 13 of 132 249chapter 164, consistent with the requirements of said section 149 of said chapter 164 and any 250regulations promulgated thereunder. Any unexpended balance in the fund at the close of a fiscal 251year shall remain in the fund and shall be available for expenditure for the purposes of the fund 252in subsequent fiscal years. 253 Section 12T. There shall be a division of public participation within the department and 254under the general supervision and control of the commission, which shall be under the charge of 255a director appointed by the commission. The division shall perform such functions as the 256commission may determine and shall be responsible for assisting individuals, local governments, 257community organizations and other entities with business before the department or the energy 258facilities siting board. With respect to matters before the department, the division shall assist 259such parties with navigating filing requirements, opportunities to provide comment and intervene 260and facilitating dialogue among parties to proceedings. With respect to siting and permitting 261matters under the jurisdiction of the energy facilities siting board, the division shall assist 262individuals, local governments, community organizations, project applicants, and other entities 263with navigating pre-filing consultation and engagement requirements, clarifying filing 264requirements, identifying opportunities to intervene and facilitating dialogue among stakeholders 265involved in the permitting process and shall assist with coordinating with other state, regional 266and local officials, including the office of environmental justice and equity established in section 26729 of chapter 21A, involved in prefiling consultation and engagement processes and permitting 268processes generally. The director and staff of the division shall not participate as adjudicatory 269staff in matters before the department or in reviewing applications submitted to the energy 270facilities siting board and shall not serve as legal counsel to or otherwise represent any party 271before the department or the energy facilities siting board. The director shall make final 14 of 132 272determinations with respect to intervenor funding support requests made pursuant to section 149 273of chapter 164 and administering all aspects of the intervenor support grant program established 274in said section 149 of said chapter 164. 275 SECTION 12. Section 22 of said chapter 25 is hereby amended by striking out, in line 6, 276as appearing in the 2022 Official Edition, the words “the manufacturing industry” and inserting 277in place thereof the following words:- low and moderate income interests. 278 SECTION 13. Said section 22 of said chapter 25 is hereby further amended by inserting 279after the word “labor”, in line 7, as so appearing, the following words:- appointed by the 280president of the Massachusetts AFL-CIO”. 281 SECTION 14. Said section 22 of said chapter 25 is hereby further amended by striking 282out, in lines 11 and 12, as so appearing, the words “employing fewer than 10 persons”. 283 SECTION 15. Said section 22 of said chapter 25 is hereby further amended by striking 284out, in lines 24 and 25, as so appearing, the words “energy efficiency businesses” and inserting 285in place thereof the following words:- the Massachusetts clean energy center. 286 SECTION 16. Said section 22 of said chapter 25 is hereby further amended by striking 287out subsection (b), as so appearing, and inserting in place thereof the following subsection:- 288 (b) The council shall, as part of the approval process by the department, seek to: (i) 289maximize net economic benefits through energy efficiency, demand management and beneficial 290electrification resources; and (ii) achieve energy, capacity, climate and environmental goals 291through a sustained and integrated statewide energy efficiency and decarbonization effort. 15 of 132 292 The council shall: (i) review and approve plans and budgets; (ii) work with program 293administrators in preparing energy resource assessments; (iii) determine the economic, system 294reliability, climate and air quality benefits of energy efficiency, demand management and 295beneficial electrification resources; (iv) conduct and recommend relevant research; and (v) 296recommend long-term energy efficiency, demand management and beneficial electrification 297goals consistent with meeting greenhouse gas emissions limits and sublimits imposed by law or 298regulation and with mitigating ratepayer impacts. Approval of energy efficiency, demand 299management and beneficial electrification plans and budgets shall require a 2/3 vote. The 300council shall, as part of its review of plans, examine opportunities to offer joint programs. Any 301costs for such joint programs shall be allocated equitably among the efficiency programs. 302 SECTION 17. Said chapter 25 is hereby further amended by adding the following 303section:- 304 Section 24. (a) As used in this section, the following words shall have the following 305meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise:- 306 “Division”, the division of capital asset management and maintenance. 307 “Environmental product declaration” or “EPD”, an independently verified and registered 308declaration that provides a life cycle assessment of a product’s global warming potential and 309facilitates a comparison of environmental impacts between products fulfilling the same function; 310provided, however, that such declaration shall be a Type III or higher as defined by the 311International Organization for Standardization (“ISO”), 14025:2006, or substantially similar life 312cycle assessment and comparative methodologies that have uniform standards in data collection 16 of 132 313and scientific integrity, and any pertinent product category rule developed in conformance with 314ISO 14025. 315 “Global warming potential”, a numeric value that measures the total contribution to 316global warming from the emission of greenhouse gasses or the elimination of greenhouse gas 317sinks. 318 “Life cycle assessment” or “LCA”, an assessment used to calculate the environmental 319primary and secondary impacts of a product, service or process over the lifetime of such product, 320service or process. 321 “Low-embodied carbon material”, material used in building and transportation 322construction that has been verified to embody carbon emissions that are sufficiently low, based 323on a threshold set by the division, as compared to the embodied carbon emissions of a 324conventional material fulfilling the same function. 325 (b) There shall be within the division of capital asset management and maintenance, but 326not subject to the control of the division, an embodied carbon intergovernmental coordinating 327council. The council shall consist of: the commissioner of capital asset management and 328maintenance or a designee, who shall serve as co-chair; the climate chief or a designee, who shall 329serve as co-chair; the secretary of energy and environmental affairs or a designee; the secretary 330of transportation or a designee; the secretary of housing and livable communities or a designee; 331the secretary of administration and finance or a designee; the secretary of economic development 332or a designee; the chief executive officer of the Massachusetts Port Authority or a designee; the 333general manager of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority or a designee; the chief 334executive officer of the Massachusetts clean energy technology center or a designee; the chair of 17 of 132 335the board of building regulations and standards or a designee; the chairs of the joint committee 336on telecommunications, utilities and energy or their designees, who shall serve as nonvoting 337members with respect to any spending matters; and 5 persons who shall be appointed by the 338governor, 1 of whom shall be a representative of the building trades, 1 of whom shall be a 339general contractor; 1 of whom shall be a licensed architect with expertise in using low-embodied 340carbon materials of construction, 1 of whom shall be 1 structural engineer who shall be a 341licensed professional engineer with expertise in using low-embodied carbon materials of 342construction and 1 of whom shall be the executive director of a regional planning agency . The 343council shall not be a public body as defined in section 18 of chapter 30A; provided, however, 344that the council shall hold a public meeting not less than quarterly while the council is 345developing the plan pursuant to subsection (f). 346 (c) The council shall prepare an embodied carbon reduction plan, which shall include, but 347shall not be limited to, strategies to measure, monitor and reduce embodied carbon. The plan 348shall: (i) with respect to major building and transportation projects of executive offices, 349departments, divisions, centers, agencies and authorities of state and municipal governments, 350include, but not be limited to, steps to encourage and, where appropriate, recommend requiring: 351(a) environmental product declarations for construction materials commonly used in such 352projects; and (b) the use of low-embodied carbon materials, with particular attention to cement 353and concrete mixtures, steel, glass, asphalt and asphalt mixtures and wood, in such projects; (ii) 354review progress in research, development and commercialization of low-embodied carbon 355technologies and materials in the government, private and nonprofit sectors within and outside of 356the commonwealth; (iii) make recommendations for establishing a process to set, on or before 357January 1, 2026, maximum global warming potential values for products likely to be used in 18 of 132 358such building and transportation projects including, but not limited to, cement and concrete 359mixtures, steel, glass, asphalt and asphalt mixtures and wood; (iv) develop recommended 360procedures for the use of: (a) EPDs in state government contracting and procurement; and (b) 361low-embodied carbon materials in the commonwealth, where available and at reasonable cost, 362including conditions under which waivers may be obtained; (v) examine current laws, 363regulations, policies and guidelines that affect the use of EPDs and low-embodied carbon 364materials in the private and nonprofit sectors and recommend laws, regulations, policies or 365guidelines to increase the use of EPDs and low-embodied carbon materials; and (vi) consider 366interactions between embodied carbon and operational carbon to ensure policy recommendations 367to reduce embodied carbon will also contribute to the reduction of operational carbon. The 368council shall consider: (i) the best approaches to integrate the reduction of embodied carbon into 369the state building code, including the stretch and specialized stretch energy code pursuant to 370section 96 of chapter 143 and the state building code; and (ii) best practices to incentivize and 371enhance the reuse of building materials and decrease building demolition. 372 (d) The council shall meet regularly and seek data, input and advice related to EPDs and 373low-embodied carbon materials from stakeholders which shall include, but not be limited to, 374companies, contractors and subcontractors involved in construction, architecture, engineering, 375design and procurement and organizations and associations of such companies, contractors and 376subcontractors, academic and nonprofit institutions with relevant missions and activities, labor 377organizations involved in construction and transportation, organizations focused on 378environmental, energy and climate policy and perspectives and groups representing consumers, 379including, but not limited to, low-income consumers. The council shall hold not less than 3 380public hearings in geographically diverse areas of the commonwealth prior to finalizing the plan. 19 of 132 381 (e) The division and the executive office of energy and environmental affairs shall 382provide administrative support to the council. 383 (f) The council shall update the plan and submit the updated plan and a progress report at 384least every 2 years to the senate and house committees on ways and means, the joint committee 385on state administration and regulatory oversight and the joint committee on telecommunications, 386utilities and energy and shall cause the plan and the report to be publicly available on the website 387of each cabinet official, executive office, department, division, center, agency and authority 388represented on the council. 389 SECTION 18. Section 2 of chapter 25A of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2022 390Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking the second paragraph and inserting in place 391thereof the following paragraph:- 392 There shall be within the department: (i) a division of energy efficiency, which shall 393work with the department of public utilities regarding energy efficiency programs; (ii) a division 394of renewable and alternative energy development, which shall oversee and coordinate activities 395that seek to maximize the installation of renewable and alternative energy generating sources that 396will provide benefits to ratepayers, advance the production and use of biofuels and other 397alternative fuels as the division may define by regulation and administer the renewable portfolio 398standard and the alternative portfolio standard; (iii) a division of green communities, which shall 399serve as the principal point of contact for local governments and other governmental bodies 400concerning all matters under the jurisdiction of the department of energy resources, excluding 401matters involving the siting and permitting of small clean energy infrastructure facilities; (iv) a 402division of clean energy procurement, which shall develop resource solicitation plans, administer 20 of 132 403procurements for clean energy generation and energy services and negotiate and manage 404contracts with clean energy generation and energy service facilities as required by section 21; 405and (v) a division of clean energy siting and permitting, which shall establish standard 406conditions, criteria and requirements for the siting and permitting of small clean energy 407infrastructure facilities by local governments and provide technical support and assistance to 408local governments, small clean energy infrastructure facility project proponents and other 409stakeholders impacted by the siting and permitting of small clean energy infrastructure facilities 410at the local government level. Each division shall be headed by a director appointed by the 411commissioner and who shall be a person of skill and experience in the field of energy efficiency, 412renewable energy or alternative energy, energy regulation or policy and land use and planning, 413respectively. The directors shall be the executive and administrative heads of their respective 414divisions and shall be responsible for administering and enforcing the law relative to their 415division and to each administrative unit thereof under the supervision, direction and control of 416the commissioner. The directors shall serve at the pleasure of the commissioner, shall receive 417such salary as may be determined by law and shall devote full time during regular business hours 418to the duties of the office. In the case of an absence or vacancy in the office of a director or ,in 419the case of disability as determined by the commissioner, the commissioner may designate an 420acting director to serve as director until the vacancy is filled or the absence or disability ceases. 421The acting director shall have all the powers and duties of the director and shall have similar 422qualifications as the director. 423 SECTION 19. Section 6 of said chapter 25A, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 424striking out, in lines 56 and 57, the words “and (14)” and inserting in place thereof the following 425words:- 21 of 132 426 (14) develop resource solicitation plans, conduct procurements pursuant to such plans as 427approved by the department of public utilities and negotiate and execute contracts with clean 428energy generation and energy services providers pursuant to section 21; 429 (15) develop and promulgate regulations, criteria, guidelines, standard conditions and 430requirements that establish parameters for the siting, zoning, review and permitting of small 431clean energy infrastructure facilities by local governments pursuant to section 22; and 432 (16). 433 SECTION 20. Section 7 of said chapter 25A, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 434striking out, in lines 21 and 22, the words “with total storage capacity of fifty thousand gallons”. 435 SECTION 21. Said Section 7 of said chapter 25A, as so appearing, is hereby further 436amended by striking out the third paragraph and inserting in place thereof the following 2 437paragraphs:- 438 All electric and gas companies, transmission companies, distribution companies, 439suppliers and aggregators, as defined in section 1 of chapter 164, and suppliers of natural gas, 440including aggregators, marketers, brokers and marketing affiliates of gas companies, excluding 441gas companies, as defined in said section 1 of said chapter 164, engaged in distributing or selling 442electricity or natural gas in the commonwealth shall make accurate reports to the department in 443such form and at such times, which shall be at least quarterly, as the department shall require 444pursuant to this section. Each such company, supplier and aggregator shall report semi-annually 445to the department the average of all rates charged for default, low-income and standard offer 446service to each customer class and for each subclass within the residential class, respectively; 447provided, however, that all such rate information so reported pursuant to this paragraph shall be 22 of 132 448deemed public information and no such rate information shall be protected as a trade secret, 449confidential, competitively sensitive or other proprietary information pursuant to section 5D of 450chapter 25. Each such company, supplier and aggregator shall report to the department, in such 451form and at such times as the department shall require, detailed and accurate information 452including, but not limited to, data regarding number of customers, load served, amounts, in 453dollars, billed to customers, renewable and clean energy attribute certificate purchases and 454supply product offerings. The department shall make such information, or aggregates of such 455information, available to the public on its website. 456 All resellers of petroleum products, including retail heating oil and propane suppliers, 457doing business in the commonwealth shall make accurate reports of price, inventory and product 458delivery data to the department in such form and at such time as the department shall require. A 459retail heating oil or propane supplier who operates in the commonwealth shall make the daily 460delivery price of heating oil or propane for residential heating customers available in a clear and 461conspicuous manner. If the retail heating oil or propane supplier operates a website for 462commonwealth customers, the daily delivery price shall be clearly and conspicuously displayed 463on the dealer’s website. 464 SECTION 22. Section 11F1/2 of said chapter 25A, as so appearing, is hereby amended 465by striking out, in line 18, the words “naturally occurring”. 466 SECTION 23. Section 12 of said chapter 25A is hereby repealed. 467 SECTION 24. Section 17 of said chapter 25A, as appearing in the 2022 Official Edition, 468is hereby amended by striking out, in line 38, the figure “2018” and inserting in place thereof the 469following figure:- 2021. 23 of 132 470 SECTION 25. Said section 17 of said chapter 25A, as so appearing, is hereby further 471amended by striking out, in line 39, the words “in the Clean Peak Standard Incentive program”. 472 SECTION 26. Said section 17 of said chapter 25A, as so appearing, is hereby further 473amended by striking out, in line 46, the figure “2023” and inserting in place thereof the following 474figure:- 2024. 475 SECTION 27. Said chapter 25A is hereby further amended by adding the following 2 476sections:- 477 Section 21. (a) As used in this section, the following words shall have the following 478meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise: 479 “Clean energy generation”, electrical energy output, or that portion of the electrical 480energy output, excluding any electrical energy utilized for parasitic load of a clean existing 481generation unit, that qualifies under clean energy standard regulations established pursuant to 482subsection (c) of section 3 of chapter 21N. 483 “Clean energy solicitation”, a competitive solicitation for clean energy associated 484environmental attributes or energy services completed by the department conducted pursuant to 485this section. 486 “Distribution company”, a distribution company as defined in section 1 of chapter 164. 487 “Energy services”, operation of infrastructure that increases the deliverability or 488reliability of clean energy generation or reduces the cost of clean energy generation, including, 489but not limited to, transmission, energy storage and demand response technologies. 24 of 132 490 “Environmental attributes”, all present and future attributes under any and all 491international, federal, regional, state or other law or market, including, but not limited to, all 492credits or certificates that are associated, either now or by future action, with unit specific clean 493energy generation, including, but not limited to, those provided for in regulations promulgated 494pursuant to subsection (c) of section 3 of chapter 21N and sections 11F and 17. 495 “Long-term contract” a contract for a period of not more than 20 years. 496 (b) Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, in order to maximize the 497commonwealth’s ability to achieve compliance with limits and sublimits established pursuant to 498sections 3 and 3A of chapter 21N, the department shall investigate the necessity, benefits and 499risks of solicitations for environmental attributes or energy services, competitively solicit for 500environmental attributes or energy services established pursuant to said sections 3 and 3A of said 501chapter 21N and may negotiate and enter into long-term contracts for such environmental 502attributes or energy services. 503 (c) Not less than every 3 years, the department shall publish a resource solicitation plan, 504which shall include, but not be limited to: (i) a description of the clean energy generation needs 505sufficient to maximize the commonwealth’s ability to achieve compliance with limits and 506sublimits established pursuant to sections 3 and 3A of chapter 21N, including resource 507generation type, nameplate capacity amounts and commercial operation dates for new resources; 508(ii) a schedule recommendation for clean energy solicitations that the department will conduct 509within the next 3 years; (iii) economic development objectives and requirements for the clean 510energy solicitations; (iv) a mechanism for the distribution companies to recover the costs 511associated with long-term contracts for clean energy associated environmental attributes or 25 of 132 512energy services entered into by the department under this section, including any administrative 513costs to support the department’s requirements under this section; and (v) a review of the 514previous clean energy solicitations, if applicable. The department shall consult with the 515department of public utilities and attorney general’s office in the development of this resource 516plan in advance of publishing it. Any ex parte rules established by the department of public 517utilities shall not apply to this consultation process. 518 (d) The department shall file the resource solicitation plan and its recommendations with 519the department of public utilities. The department of public utilities shall review the resource 520solicitation plan and recommendations to determine whether the resource solicitation plan is a 521reasonable, appropriate and cost-effective mechanism to achieve the goals of this section. The 522department of public utilities shall approve, approve with modifications or reject the plan within 5237 months of submission. Upon approval of the resource solicitation plan, the department of 524public utilities shall require the distribution companies to jointly propose tariffs consistent with 525the approved resource solicitation plan to recover costs associated with all contracts pursuant to 526this section not later than 3 months following the approval; provided, however, that the 527distribution companies shall not receive any remuneration, benefit or fee to compensate for costs 528associated with such contracts. The tariffs shall apportion costs associated with the contracts to 529be recovered from ratepayers among the distribution companies. 530 (e) The method for the clean energy solicitations shall be proposed by the department and 531shall utilize a competitive bidding process. The department shall consult with the attorney 532general regarding the choice of solicitation methods. The department may coordinate any 533solicitation under this section with other states, municipal light plants or other governmental and 534non-governmental organizations; provided, however, that the department shall describe any 26 of 132 535impacts coordination may have on the solicitation, including any impacts to nameplate capacity 536amounts or quantities of clean energy generation attributes sought in its solicitation. After notice 537and the opportunity for public comment, the department shall proceed with the clean energy 538solicitation. The department may competitively solicit proposals for long-term contracts for: (i) 539environmental attributes from clean energy generation; or (ii) energy services contracts. The 540department may consult with other states, federal agencies and regional organizations, including, 541but not limited to, ISO New England Inc. or its successor; provided, however, that reasonable 542proposals have been received, the department shall make or cause to be made filings as necessary 543through the appropriate jurisdictional mechanism and enter into long-term contracts that are 544consistent with the roadmap plans published pursuant to chapter 21N. 545 (f) The department shall propose draft contracts and take all reasonable actions to 546structure the contracts, pricing or administration of the products purchased under this section to 547contribute towards achieving compliance with limits and sublimits established pursuant to 548sections 3 and 3A of chapter 21N in a cost-effective manner that minimizes rate-payer impacts. 549 (g) Long-term contracts executed pursuant to this section shall be subject to the approval 550of the department of public utilities. The department of public utilities shall consider the 551potential costs and benefits of the proposed long-term contract and shall approve a long-term 552contract if the department finds that the contract is cost-effective and consistent with the 553roadmap plans published pursuant to chapter 21N, taking into account the factors outlined in this 554section, consistency with the approved resource solicitation plan and the department’s 555recommendations. The department of public utilities shall complete its review of long-term 556contracts submitted for its approval not later than 90 days after the contracts are filed by the 557department of energy resources. 27 of 132 558 (h) The department may retire any environmental attributes purchased pursuant to 559approved long-term contracts under this section on behalf of the commonwealth to be used 560toward satisfying compliance with the limits and sublimits established pursuant to sections 3 and 5613A of chapter 21N and any regulations or programs established pursuant to sections 3 and 6 of 562said chapter 21N or sections 11F and 17. If any retired environmental attributes are eligible 563under a clean, renewable, clean peak or other energy portfolio standard established by the 564department or the department of environmental protection, the portfolio standard minimum 565obligations of suppliers subject to such standards may be reduced in proportion to any eligible 566environmental attributes retired pursuant to this section, subject to the discretion of the 567department and the department of environmental protection. 568 (i) There shall be a separate, non-budgeted special revenue fund known as the central 569procurement fund, which shall be administered by the department, without further appropriation, 570for funding long-term contracts consistent with this section. The fund shall be credited with: (i) 571funds or revenue collected by distribution companies pursuant to a tariff approved by the 572department of public utilities in furtherance of the objectives and requirements of this section; 573(ii) revenue from appropriations or other money authorized by the general court and specifically 574designated to be credited to the fund; (iii) interest earned on such funds or revenues; (iv) bid fees 575collected by the department from participants in clean energy solicitations conducted pursuant to 576this section; (v) other revenue from public and private sources, including gifts, grants and 577donations; and (vi) any funds provided from other sources. All amounts credited to the fund shall 578be used solely for activities and expenditures consistent with the public purposes of this section, 579including the ordinary and necessary administrative and personnel expenses of the department 580related to the administration and operation of the fund and performance of the duties established 28 of 132 581by this section. Revenues deposited in the fund that are unexpended at the end of a fiscal year 582shall not revert to the General Fund and shall be available for expenditure in the following fiscal 583year. No expenditure made from the fund shall cause the fund to be in deficit at any point. 584 (j) A request for proposal or solicitation under this section shall include: 585 (i) documentation reflecting the applicant’s demonstrated commitment to workforce or 586economic development within the commonwealth; 587 (ii) a statement of intent concerning efforts that the applicant and its contractors and 588subcontractors will make to promote workforce or economic development through the project; 589 (iii) documentation reflecting the applicant’s demonstrated commitment to expand 590workforce diversity, equity and inclusion in its past projects within the commonwealth; 591 (iv) documentation as to whether the applicant and its contractors and subcontractors 592participate in a state or federally certified apprenticeship program and the number of apprentices 593the apprenticeship program has trained to completion for each of the last 5 years; 594 (v) a statement of intent concerning how or if the applicant and its contractors and 595subcontractors intend to utilize apprentices on the project; 596 (vi) documentation relative to the applicant and its contractors and subcontractors 597regarding their history of compliance with chapters 149, 151, 151A, 151B and 152, 29 U.S.C. § 598201, et seq. and applicable federal antidiscrimination laws; 599 (vii) documentation that the applicant and its contractors and subcontractors are currently, 600and will remain, in compliance with chapters 149, 151, 151A, 151B, and 152, 29 U.S.C. § 201, 601et seq. and applicable federal anti-discrimination laws for the duration of the project; 29 of 132 602 (viii) documentation of the applicant’s history with picketing, work stoppages, boycotts 603or other economic actions against the applicant and a description or plan on how the applicant 604intends to prevent or address such actions; and 605 (ix) documentation relative to whether the applicant and its contractors have been found 606in violation of state or federal safety regulations in the previous 10 years. 607 The department may require a wage bond or other comparable form of insurance in an 608amount to be set by the department to ensure compliance with law, certifications or department 609obligations. 610 (k) A proposal or solicitation issued by the department shall notify applicants that 611applicants shall be disqualified from the project if the applicant has been debarred by the federal 612government or commonwealth for the entire term of the debarment. 613 (l) An applicant shall, in a timely manner, provide documentation and certifications as 614required by law or otherwise directed by the department. Incomplete or inaccurate information 615may be grounds for disqualification, dismissal or other action deemed appropriate by the 616department. 617 (m) Applicants that demonstrate compliance with sections 26 to 27F, inclusive, of chapter 618149 and the use of state or federally certified apprenticeship programs, shall receive added 619weight in clean energy solicitations under subsection (e). 620 Section 22. (a) For the purposes of this section, the following words shall have the 621following meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise: 30 of 132 622 “Anaerobic digestion facility”, a facility that: (i) generates electricity from a biogas 623produced by the accelerated biodegradation of organic materials under controlled anaerobic 624conditions; and (ii) has been determined by the department of energy resources, in coordination 625with the department of environmental protection, to qualify under department of energy 626resources regulations as a Class I renewable energy generating source under section 11F. 627 “Local government”, the chief executive officer of a municipality or regional agency, 628including the Cape Cod commission and the Martha’s Vineyard commission. 629 “Small clean energy generation facility”, energy generation infrastructure with a 630nameplate capacity of less than 25 megawatts that is an anaerobic digestion facility, solar facility 631or wind facility, including any ancillary structure that is an integral part of the operation of the 632small clean energy generation facility or, following a rulemaking by the department in 633consultation with the energy facilities siting board in which the facility type is added to the 634regulatory definition of a small clean energy generation facility, any other type of generation 635facility that produces no greenhouse gas emissions or other pollutant emissions known to have 636negative health impacts; provided, however, that the nameplate capacity for solar facilities shall 637be calculated in direct current. 638 "Small clean energy infrastructure facility”, a small clean energy generation facility, 639small clean energy storage facility or small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure 640facility. 641 “Small clean energy storage facility”, an energy storage system as defined in section 1 of 642chapter 164 with a rated capacity of less than 100 megawatt hours, including any ancillary 643structure that is an integral part of the operation of the small clean energy storage facility. 31 of 132 644 “Small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility”, electric transmission 645and distribution infrastructure and related ancillary infrastructure including: (i) electric 646transmission line reconductoring or rebuilding projects; (ii) new or substantially altered electric 647transmission lines located in an existing transmission corridor that are not more than 10 miles 648long, including any ancillary structure that is an integral part of the operation of the transmission 649line; (iii) new or substantially altered electric transmission lines located in a new transmission 650corridor that are not more than 1 mile long, including any ancillary structure that is an integral 651part of the operation of the transmission line; (iv) any other new electric transmission 652infrastructure, including standalone transmission substations and upgrades and any ancillary 653structure that is an integral part of the operation of the transmission line, that does not require 654zoning exemptions; and (v) electric distribution-level projects that meet a certain threshold as 655determined by the department; provided, however, that the “small clean transmission and 656distribution infrastructure facility” shall be: (A) designed, fully or in part, to directly interconnect 657or otherwise facilitate the interconnection of clean energy infrastructure to the electric grid; (B) 658designed to ensure electric grid reliability and stability; or (C) designed to help facilitate the 659electrification of the building and transportation sectors; provided further, that a “small clean 660transmission and distribution infrastructure facility” shall not include new transmission and 661distribution infrastructure facilities that solely interconnect new or existing generation powered 662by fossil fuels to the electric grid on or after January 1, 2026. 663 “Solar facility”, a ground mounted facility that uses sunlight to generate electricity. 664 “Wind facility”, an onshore or offshore facility that uses wind to generate electricity. 32 of 132 665 (b) The department shall establish standards, requirements and procedures governing the 666siting and permitting of small clean energy infrastructure facilities by local governments that 667include: (i) uniform sets of public health, safety, environmental and other standards, including 668zoning criteria, that local governments shall require for the issuance of permits for small clean 669energy infrastructure facilities; (ii) a common standard application for small clean energy 670infrastructure facility project applicants submitting a permit application to local governments; 671(iii) uniform pre-filing requirements for small clean energy infrastructure facilities, which shall 672include specific requirements for public meetings and other forms of outreach that must occur in 673advance of an applicant submitting an application; (iv) standards for applying site suitability 674guidance developed by the executive office of energy and environmental affairs pursuant to 675section 30 of chapter 21A to evaluate the social and environmental impacts of proposed small 676clean energy generation facilities, small clean energy storage facilities and small clean 677transmission and distribution infrastructure facilities in new rights of way, which shall include a 678mitigation hierarchy to be applied during the permitting process to avoid or minimize or, if 679impacts cannot be avoided or minimized, mitigate negative impacts of siting on the environment, 680people and the commonwealth’s goals and objectives for climate mitigation, resilience, 681biodiversity and protection of natural and working lands, to the extent practicable; (v) common 682conditions and requirements for a single permit consolidating all necessary local approvals to be 683issued for different types of small clean energy infrastructure facilities in the event that 684constructive approval is triggered through the non-issuance of a final decision by a local 685government pursuant to subsection (d); (vi) guidance for procedures and potential extensions of 686time should an applicant fail to respond to a request for information within a specified timeframe 687or proposes a significant revision to a proposed project; provided, however, that the department 33 of 132 688shall solicit public input in the development of such guidance; and (vii) responsible parties 689subject to enforcement actions, including in the event of sale of small clean energy infrastructure 690facilities after permitting. The department of energy resources may promulgate rules and 691regulations allowing local governments to set fees for compensatory environmental mitigation 692for the restoration, establishment, enhancement or preservation of comparable environmental 693resources through funds paid to the local government or a non-profit entity to be used at the 694election of an applicant to satisfy the standard of mitigation to the maximum extent practicable. 695Local governments acting in accordance with the standards established by the department for 696small clean energy generation facilities and small clean energy storage facilities pursuant to this 697subsection shall be considered to have acted consistent with the limitations on solar facility and 698small clean energy storage facility zoning under section 3 of chapter 40A. The department shall 699establish a transition or concurrency period for the effective date of any standards that it 700establishes. 701 (c) The proponent of a small clean energy infrastructure facility may submit a 702consolidated small clean energy infrastructure facility permit application seeking a single permit 703consolidating all necessary local permits and approvals. To initiate the permitting of a small 704clean energy infrastructure facility, an applicant may elect to submit an application, with 705supporting information in the form developed by the department pursuant to subsection (b), for 706the local government to conduct a consolidated review pursuant to the criteria and standards set 707forth in subsection (b) and using the process set forth in subsection (d). Local governments shall 708determine whether such consolidated small clean energy infrastructure facility permit application 709is complete within 30 days of receipt. If an application is deemed incomplete, the applicant shall 710have 30 days, and any additional time as determined by the local government, to cure any 34 of 132 711deficiencies before the application is rejected. In the event of a rejection of the application, the 712local government shall provide a detailed reasoning for the rejection. 713 (d) Local governments shall issue a single, final decision on a consolidated small clean 714energy infrastructure facility permit application submitted pursuant to subsection (c), including 715all decisions necessary for a project to proceed with construction, but not including any state 716permits that may be required to proceed with construction and operation of said facility, within 71712 months of the receipt of a complete permit application. All local government authorities, 718boards, commissions, offices or other entities that may be required to issue a decision on 1 or 719more permits in response to the application for the small clean energy infrastructure facility may 720conduct reviews separately and concurrently. Such permits shall adhere to any requirements 721established by the department pursuant to subsection (b). If a final decision is not issued within 72212 months of the receipt of a complete permit application, a constructive approval permit shall be 723issued by the local government that adopts the common conditions and requirements established 724by the department for the type of small clean energy infrastructure facility under review. 725 (e) An appeal or review may be made only of the single, final decision of a local 726government on an application for a small clean energy infrastructure facility, including all 727decisions necessary to complete the application and permitting process, but not including 728decisions on any state permits that may be required to proceed with construction and operation of 729said facility. Decisions of local government authorities, boards, commissions, offices or other 730entities on the issuance of 1 or more permits to the applicant for the small clean energy 731infrastructure facility shall not be subject to independent appeal or review. Decisions on any state 732permits that may be required shall be subject to de novo adjudication of the permit application by 733the director of the energy facilities siting division, as provided in subsection (f). 35 of 132 734 (f) Within 30 days of the single, final decision on a consolidated permit application by a 735local government described in subsections (d) and (e), project proponents and other individuals 736or entities substantially and specifically affected by a proposed small clean energy infrastructure 737facility may file a petition to request in writing a de novo adjudication of the permit application 738by the director of the facilities siting division pursuant to section 69W of chapter 164 following 739permit issuance, including constructive approval permits or denial by a local government. 740 (g) If a local government lacks the resources, capacity or staffing to review a small clean 741energy infrastructure facility permit application within 12 months, it may, not later than 60 days 742after receipt of such application or at any time thereafter with the consent of the applicant, 743request in writing a de novo adjudication of the such application by the director pursuant to 744section 69W of chapter 164. 745 (h) The department shall promulgate regulations to implement this section in consultation 746with local governments, Massachusetts Municipal Association, Inc., the department of public 747utilities, the department of environmental protection, the department of fish and game, the 748department of conservation and recreation, the department of agricultural resources, the 749Massachusetts environmental policy act office, the office of environmental justice and equity, the 750executive office of health and human services, the executive office of housing and livable 751communities and the executive office of public safety and security. 752 (i) Nothing in subsections (c) to (g), inclusive, shall apply to a comprehensive permit 753pursuant to sections 20 to 23, inclusive of chapter 40B. For the purpose of this section, the 754procedures and standards for filing and review of an application for a comprehensive permit that 36 of 132 755includes a small clean energy infrastructure facility shall be in accordance with said sections 20 756to 23, inclusive, of said chapter 40B. 757 (j) If more than 50 per cent of applications for small clean energy infrastructure facilities 758processed in a 24-month period have been constructively approved, the department of energy 759resources, the department of public utilities, and the office of environmental justice and equity 760shall, within 6 months, analyze and report on the cause of the high rate of constructive approvals 761and make recommendations to local governments, the general court, and the governor on how to 762reduce the number of constructive approvals and increase the number of decisions issued within 763the 12-months for local governments and, for small clean energy infrastructure facilities that the 764energy facilities siting board reviews, within the deadlines established for such reviews by the 765energy facilities siting board. 766 SECTION 28. Section 2 of chapter 25B of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2022 767Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting after the definition of “Compensation” the 768following definition:- 769 “Connector”, a device that attaches an electric vehicle to a charging port to transfer 770electricity; provided, however, that “connector” shall include a plug. 771 SECTION 29. Said section 2 of chapter 25B, as so appearing, is hereby further amended 772by striking out the definition of “Electric vehicle supply equipment” and inserting in place 773thereof the following definition:- 774 “Electric vehicle supply equipment” or “EVSE”, a device, including at least 1 charging 775port and connector, for charging electric vehicles; provided, however, that “electric vehicle 776supply equipment” shall include a charger. 37 of 132 777 SECTION 30. Said section 2 of said chapter 25B, as so appearing, is hereby further 778amended by inserting after the definition of “Electricity Ratio (ER)” the following definition:- 779 “Fast DC”, galvanically-connected electric vehicle supply equipment that includes an off- 780board charger and provides DC current of not less than 80 amperes. 781 SECTION 31. Said section 2 of said chapter 25B, as so appearing, is hereby further 782amended by inserting after the definition of “Faucet” the following definition:- 783 “Flexible demand”, the capability to schedule, shift or curtail the electrical demand of a 784load-serving entity’s customer through direct action by the customer or through action by a third 785party, the load-serving entity or a grid balancing authority, with the customer’s consent. 786 SECTION 32. Said section 2 of said chapter 25B, as so appearing, is hereby further 787amended by inserting after the definition of “Lamp” the following 2 definitions:- 788 “Level 1”, galvanically-connected electric vehicle supply equipment with a single-phase 789input voltage nominally 120 volts AC and maximum output current of not more than 16 amperes 790AC. 791 “Level 2”, a galvanically-connected electric vehicle supply equipment with a single- 792phase input voltage range from 208 to 240 volts AC and maximum output current of not more 793than 80 amperes AC. 794 SECTION 33. Said section 2 of said chapter 25B, as so appearing, is hereby further 795amended by inserting after the definition of “Plumbing fixture” the following definition:- 38 of 132 796 “Port”, a system or connecting outlet on a charger that provides power to charge an 797electric vehicle; provided, however, that a port may be equipped with multiple connectors but 798use only 1 connector at a time to provide such power. 799 SECTION 34. Section 5 of said chapter 25B, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 800striking out the first and second paragraphs and inserting in place thereof the following 801paragraph:- 802 The commissioner may, by regulation, update energy efficiency standards for the types of 803new products set forth in clauses (f) to (y), inclusive, of section 3. Any revision of such 804efficiency standards shall be based upon the determination of the commissioner; provided, 805however, that a revision of said efficiency standards for electric vehicle supply equipment may 806allow the use of equipment that consumes additional kilowatts per hour. Any standard revised 807pursuant to this section which conflicts with a corresponding standard in the state plumbing code 808shall take precedence over the standard in said state plumbing code. Any standard revised 809pursuant to this section shall not take effect for at least 1 year after its adoption. 810 SECTION 35. Said section 5 of said chapter 25B, as so appearing, is hereby further 811amended by striking out clause (20) and inserting in place thereof the following clause:- 812 (20) Electric vehicle supply equipment included in the scope of the ENERGY STAR 813Program Requirements Product Specification for Electric Vehicle Supply Equipment, Version 8141.2 (Rev. June 2023), shall meet the qualification criteria of that specification. 815 SECTION 36. Said section 5 of said chapter 25B, as so appearing, is hereby further 816amended by striking out, in line 198, the words “, electric vehicle supply equipment”. 39 of 132 817 SECTION 37. Said section 5 of said chapter 25B, as so appearing, is hereby further 818amended by inserting after the fifth paragraph the following paragraph:- 819 The commissioner may adopt and update regulations for the standards for any appliances 820to facilitate the deployment of flexible demand technologies. The regulations may include 821labeling provisions to promote the use of appliances with flexible demand capabilities. The 822flexible demand appliance standards shall be based on feasible and attainable efficiencies or 823feasible improvements that will enable appliance operations to be scheduled, shifted or curtailed 824to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases associated with electricity generation. The standards 825shall become effective not earlier than 1 year after the date of their adoption or updating. 826 SECTION 38. The second paragraph of section 62A of chapter 30 of the General Laws, 827as so appearing, is hereby amended by striking out the last sentence and inserting in place thereof 828the following sentence:- This section and sections 62B to 62L, inclusive, shall not apply to the 829energy facilities siting board established under section 69H of chapter 164 or to any proponent or 830owner of a large clean energy infrastructure facility as defined in section 69G of said chapter 164 831or small clean energy infrastructure facility as defined in section 22 of chapter 25A in relation to 832an application or petition for a consolidated permit or de novo adjudication filed under sections 83369T to 69W, inclusive, of said chapter 164. 834 SECTION 39. Chapter 30B of the General Laws is hereby amended by striking out 835section 23, as so appearing, and inserting in place thereof the following section:- 836 Section 23. Notwithstanding section 39M of chapter 30 or any other general or special 837law to the contrary, a governmental body may, pursuant to this chapter, procure electric school 838buses and the installation of electric vehicle supply equipment as defined in section 2 of chapter 40 of 132 83925B for such school buses. Electric school buses and the installation of related electric vehicle 840supply equipment may be procured separately or in a single procurement. For the purposes of 841this section, electric school buses shall be considered supplies and electric vehicle supply 842equipment and its installation shall be considered services; provided, however, that if electric 843school buses and electric vehicle supply equipment and its installation are procured in a single 844procurement both shall be considered supplies. 845 A contract under this section shall only be awarded to a bidder who: (i) possesses the 846skill, ability and integrity necessary for the faithful performance of the work; (ii) certifies that it 847is able to furnish labor that can work in harmony with all other elements of labor employed or to 848be employed in the work; (iii) certifies that all employees to be employed at the worksite will 849have successfully completed a course in construction safety and health approved by the United 850States Occupational Safety and Health Administration that is not less than 10 hours in duration at 851the time the employee begins work and furnish documentation of successful completion of such 852course with the first certified payroll report for each employee; and (iv) obtains within 10 days of 853the notification of contract award the security by bond required under section 29 of chapter 149. 854For the purposes of this section, “security by bond” shall mean the bond of a surety company 855qualified to do business under the laws of the commonwealth and satisfactory to the awarding 856authority; provided, however, that if there is more than 1 surety company, the surety companies 857shall be jointly and severally liable. 858 SECTION 40. Section 23 of said chapter 30B is hereby repealed. 41 of 132 859 SECTION 41. Section 1A of chapter 40A of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2022 860Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting after the definition of “Permit granting 861authority” the following definition:- 862 “Public service corporation”, (i) a corporation or other entity duly qualified to conduct 863business in the commonwealth that owns or operates or proposes to own or operate assets or 864facilities to provide electricity, gas, telecommunications, cable, water or other similar services of 865public need or convenience to the public directly or indirectly including, but not limited to, an 866entity that owns or operates or proposes to own or operate electricity generation, storage, 867transmission or distribution facilities or natural gas facilities including pipelines and 868manufacturing and storage facilities; (ii) any transportation company that owns or operates or 869proposes to own or operate railways and related common carrier facilities; (iii) any 870communications company, including a wireless communications company or cable company that 871owns or operates or proposes to own or operate communications or cable facilities; and (iv) any 872water company that owns or operates or proposes to own or operate facilities necessary for its 873operations. 874 SECTION 42. Section 3 of said chapter 40A, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 875striking out, in lines 64 to 65, 74 and 82, the words “department of public utilities” and inserting 876in place thereof, in each instance, the following words:- energy facilities siting board. 877 SECTION 43. Section 5 of chapter 40C of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby 878amended by inserting after the word “districts”, in line 20, the following words:- ; the words 879“solar energy system” shall mean a device or structural design feature, a substantial purpose of 42 of 132 880which is to provide for the collection, storage and distribution of solar energy for space heating 881or cooling, electricity generation or water heating. 882 SECTION 44. The first paragraph of section 7 of said chapter 40C, as so appearing, is 883hereby amended by striking out the third sentence and inserting in place thereof the following 884sentence:- Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, the commission shall give 885substantial weight to the threat posed by climate change and to the commonwealth’s obligation 886to meet statewide greenhouse gas emission limits and sublimits established under chapter 21N 887when ruling on applications for certificates of appropriateness for solar energy systems. 888 SECTION 45. Section 321 of chapter 94 of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby 889amended by striking out the definitions of “Beverage” and “Beverage container” and inserting in 890place thereof the following 2 definitions:- 891 “Beverage”, any drinkable liquid intended for human consumption; provided, however, 892that “beverage” shall not include: (i) a drug regulated under the Federal Food, Drug, and 893Cosmetic Act of 1938, 21 U.S.C. 301 et seq; (ii) infant formula; (iii) a meal replacement liquid; 894or (iv) products for which the first ingredient is derived from animal milk. 895 “Beverage container”, an individual, separate, sealed glass, metal, plastic or multi- 896material bottle, can or jar designed to hold not more than 3.79 liters; provided, however, that 897“beverage container” shall not include a container: (i) of not more than 150 milliliters that 898contains no alcohol content; (ii) that is a carton or pouch; and (iii) that is aseptic. 899 SECTION 46. Said section 321 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby further 900amended by inserting after the definition of “Consumer” the following definition:- 43 of 132 901 “Contracted agent”, a person acting for, or on behalf of, a registered deposit initiator to 902collect, process or administer payments of deposits and handling fees on empty beverage 903containers accepted from redemption centers and dealers. 904 SECTION 47. Said section 321 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby further 905amended by inserting after the definition of “Dealer” the following 2 definitions:- 906 “Department”, the department of environmental protection. 907 “Deposit initiator”, the first dealer, distributor, retailer or other party to collect the deposit 908on a beverage container sold to any person within the commonwealth. 909 SECTION 48. Said section 321 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby further 910amended by inserting after the definition of “Plastic bottle” the following 3 definitions:- 911 “Recycle”, the series of activities by which a covered product is: (i) collected, sorted and 912processed; (ii) converted into a raw material with minimal loss of material quality; and (iii) used 913in the production of a new product, including the original product; provided, however, that 914“recycle” shall not include any method of sorting, processing or aggregating materials from solid 915waste that substantially degrades the original material quality, such that the aggregated material 916is no longer usable for its initial purposes or for a substantially similar product. 917 “Reusable beverage container”, a beverage container designed and constructed to be 918structurally capable of being refilled and resold by a bottle not less than 50 times after its initial 919use as part of a washing system that meets the health and safety standards of the commonwealth. 44 of 132 920 “Reverse vending machine” a mechanical device that accepts used beverage containers 921from consumers and provides a means of refunding the refund value for such beverage container 922to the user of such device. 923 SECTION 49. Section 322 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 924striking out, in line 2, the word “five” and inserting in place thereof the following figure:- 10. 925 SECTION 50. Section 323 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 926inserting after the word “returned”, in line 8, the following words:- ; provided, however, that this 927subsection shall not apply to a dealer whose place of business is not more than 2,000 square feet; 928provided further, that a redemption center or dealer shall pay the refund value at the time the 929beverage container is returned; and provided further, that, at the request of a consumer, a 930redemption center or dealer may repay deposits through an account system in which the amount 931of refund value is placed into an account to be held for the benefit of the consumer and such 932account is funded in a manner that allows the customer to obtain deposits due within 2 business 933days of the time of return. 934 SECTION 51. Said section 323 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby further 935amended by striking out, in line 13, the words “at least one” and inserting in place there of the 936following words:- not less than 3.25. 937 SECTION 52. Said section 323 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby further 938amended by striking out, in line 37, the words “at least one” and inserting in place thereof the 939following words:- not less than 4. 45 of 132 940 SECTION 53. Section 325 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 941inserting after the word “container”, in line 6, the following words:- and a universal product code 942barcode to identify and validate participation in the redemption program. 943 SECTION 54. Said section 325 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby further 944amended by striking out, in line 22, the word “five” and inserting in place thereof the following 945figure:- 10. 946 SECTION 55. Said section 325 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby further 947amended by adding the following subsection:- 948 (c) Each deposit initiator shall provide such universal product code barcode, with 949packaging information, to reverse vending machine system administrators and contracted agents 950not less than 30 days prior to placement of any such beverage container on the market. 951 SECTION 56. Section 326 of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 952inserting after the first paragraph the following paragraph:- 953 The secretary of energy and environmental affairs shall review and may increase 954handling fees not less than every 3 years. In setting and reviewing handling fees, the secretary 955shall consider whether there are enough points of redemption across the commonwealth and 956whether a higher handling fee would increase the number of points of redemption. 957 SECTION 57. Said chapter 94 is hereby further amended by inserting after section 327 958the following section:- 959 Section 327A. (a) Annually, not later than June 1, the department shall publish a report 960containing information including, but not limited to, the average statewide redemption rate for 46 of 132 961the preceding calendar year, calculated as the number of beverage containers redeemed for 962deposit divided by the number of beverage containers sold; provided, however, that the 963commissioner of revenue shall make the data necessary to compile this information available to 964the department. 965 (b) Annually, not later than February 1 and as determined by the commissioner of 966revenue, each deposit initiator shall provide to the department a report that includes the: (i) 967locations where its redeemed containers were delivered for processing and recycling; (ii) number 968of its redeemed containers processed and recycled at each location; and (iii) number of beverage 969containers it sold. 970 Annually, not later than June 1, the department shall report the information provided 971pursuant to this subsection to the joint committee on telecommunications, utilities and energy 972and the joint committee on environment and natural resources. 973 (c) A dealer shall post a conspicuous sign, at the point of sale, that states: “STATE LAW 974REQUIRES US TO REDEEM EMPTY RETURNABLE BEVERAGE CONTAINERS OF THE 975TYPE, SIZE AND BRAND SOLD BY US WITHIN THE PAST 60 DAYS. TO REPORT 976REFUSAL OF REDEMPTION, CONTACT THE MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF 977ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AT 617-556-1054 or mass.gov/orgs/massachusetts- 978department-of-environmental-protection.” The posted sign may also include the toll-free 979telephone number as established by the department of environmental protection; provided, 980however, that the sign shall be not less than 8 inches by 10 inches in size and have lettering a 981minimum of 1/4 inch high and of a color which contrasts with the background. The department 47 of 132 982shall maintain a website and toll-free telephone number for a “bottle bill hotline” that shall be 983available from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. each business day to receive reports of violations. 984 (d) There shall be a commission to study and examine the effectiveness of bottle and 985beverage container recycling and to study and make recommendations, if necessary, to improve 986the effectiveness of programs designed to improve and increase the recycling of bottles and 987beverage containers as defined in section 321. The commission shall review and report on the 988best practices in other states or countries. 989 The commission shall consist of: the chairs of the joint committee on 990telecommunications, utilities and energy, who shall serve as co-chairs; the commissioner of 991environmental protection or a designee; the commissioner of revenue or a designee; 2 persons to 992be appointed by the president of the senate; 2 persons to be appointed by the speaker of the house 993of representatives; 1 person to be appointed by the minority leader of the senate; 1 person to be 994appointed by the minority leader of the house of representatives and 3 persons to be appointed by 995the governor, 1 of whom shall have expertise in beverage container recycling, 1 of whom shall 996represent consumers and be familiar with container deposit systems and 1 of whom shall 997represent municipalities. 998 The commission shall conduct at least 3 public hearings annually in geographically 999diverse locations of the commonwealth and, not later than April 30, submit a report and any 1000recommendations to the clerks of the senate and house of representatives. The report shall detail 1001findings from such public hearings, best practices in other states and countries and any 1002recommendations to improve the effectiveness of the commonwealth’s recycling programs. 48 of 132 1003 SECTION 58. Section 327A of said chapter 94, inserted by section 57, is hereby 1004amended by adding the following subsection:- 1005 (d) The department shall, through its own communications and by engaging deposit 1006initiators and dealers, educate consumers regarding the redemption value for beverage containers 1007and how and where they can redeem containers for deposit money. 1008 SECTION 59. Chapter 98 of the General Laws is hereby amended by adding the 1009following section:- 1010 Section 59. (a) For the purposes of this section, the following words shall have the 1011following meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise: 1012 “Charger”, a device having at least 1 charging port and connector for charging electric 1013vehicles; provided, however, that “charger” shall also mean electric vehicle supply equipment. 1014 “Charging network provider”, the entity that operates the digital communication network 1015that remotely manages the chargers which may include charging station operators and 1016manufacture chargers. 1017 “Charging station”, a charger or group of chargers and the area in the immediate vicinity 1018of such charger or group of chargers, which may include, at the discretion of the regulating 1019entity, supporting equipment, parking areas adjacent to the chargers and lanes for vehicle ingress 1020and egress; provided, however, that a charging station may comprise only part of the property on 1021which it is located. 1022 “Charging station operator”, an entity that owns or provides the chargers and the 1023supporting equipment and facilities at charging stations and is responsible for the operation and 49 of 132 1024maintenance of the chargers and the supporting equipment and facilities; provided, however, that 1025such operator may delegate responsibility for certain aspects of the charging station operation 1026and maintenance to subcontractors. 1027 “Connector”, a device that attaches an electric vehicle to a charging port to transfer 1028electricity; provided, however, that the term “connector” may also be referred to as a plug. 1029 “Direct current fast charger”, a charger that enables rapid charging by delivering direct- 1030current, or DC current, electricity directly to an electric vehicle’s battery. 1031 “Electric vehicle”, a battery electric vehicle that is either a zero-emission vehicle or a 1032plug-in hybrid electric vehicle equipped with an on-board electrical energy storage device that 1033can be recharged from an external source of electricity and has the capability to run on another 1034fuel; provided, however, that “electric vehicle” shall not include a golf cart, electric bicycle or 1035other micromobility device. 1036 “Electric vehicle charging services”, the transfer of electric energy from an electric 1037vehicle charging station to a battery or other storage device in an electric vehicle and related 1038billing services, networking and operation and maintenance. 1039 “Electric vehicle supply equipment”, a device, including at least 1 charging port and 1040connector, for charging electric vehicles; provided, however, that “electric vehicle supply 1041equipment” shall also mean a charger. 1042 “Level 1”, a galvanically-connected electric vehicle supply equipment with a single- 1043phase input voltage nominally 120 volts AC, or alternating current, and maximum output current 1044of not more than 16 amperes AC. 50 of 132 1045 “Level 2”, a galvanically-connected electric vehicle supply equipment with a single- 1046phase input voltage range from 208 volts to 240 volts AC, or alternating current, and maximum 1047output current of not more than 80 amperes AC. 1048 “Public electric vehicle charging station”, an electric vehicle charging station located at a 1049publicly-available parking space. 1050 ''Publicly-available parking space'', a parking space that has been designated by a 1051property owner or lessee to be available to and accessible by the public and may include on- 1052street parking spaces and parking spaces in surface lots or parking garages; provided, however, 1053that “publicly-available parking space” shall not include a parking space that is part of or 1054associated with residential real property containing not more than 4 dwelling units or that is 1055reserved for the exclusive use of an individual driver or vehicle or for a group of drivers or 1056vehicles, including employees, tenants, visitors, residents of a common interest development and 1057residents of an adjacent building. 1058 “Publicly-funded and available charging station", a public electric vehicle charging 1059station installed on or after January 1, 2025, that has received, or expects to receive, a grant, loan 1060or other incentive from a federal or state government source or through a charge on ratepayers 1061and is located at a publicly available parking space. 1062 (b) The division of standards shall promulgate regulations to: (i) inventory the number 1063and location of charging stations; and (ii) ensure the accuracy of pricing and volumes of 1064electricity purchased at public electric vehicle charging stations; provided, however, that, with 1065respect to such public charging stations, such regulations shall include setting minimum 1066requirements for the communication and display of pricing information; provided further, that 51 of 132 1067the division of standards shall not prevent a charging station from operating due to an omission 1068or inability by the division to test, inspect, seal or inventory the charging station or otherwise 1069administer and enforce such regulations or, in the case of a public electric vehicle charging 1070station, due to an omission or inability to ensure the accuracy of pricing and volumes of 1071electricity purchased at, and information communicated by, such charging station. 1072 (c) Any regulations promulgated pursuant to this section may vary by technology type, 1073power levels, number of chargers per site, site ownership and according to whether charging 1074stations and chargers: (i) are networked; (ii) are level 1, level 2 or direct current fast chargers; 1075and (iii) are or are not all-inclusive mobile solar charging stations. Such regulations shall not 1076apply to chargers or charging stations installed at a residential real property containing not more 1077than 4 dwelling units. The division may set standards for data formats that comply with electric 1078vehicle charging industry best practices and standards, as determined by the division. 1079 (d) Annually, not later than May 1, the division shall submit a report and accompanying 1080data with respect to the inventory required under subsections (b) and (c) and other findings made 1081and activities undertaken pursuant to said subsections (b) and (c) to the joint committee on ways 1082and means, the joint committee on telecommunications, utilities and energy, the secretary of 1083energy and environmental affairs and the secretary of administration and finance. 1084 (e) In promulgating regulations under this section, the division may apply different 1085requirements to publicly-funded and available electric vehicle chargers and other charging 1086stations 1087 SECTION 60. Section 13 of chapter 142 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2022 1088Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting after the word “thereof”, in line 9, the following 52 of 132 1089words:- ; and provided further, that, notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, 1090grounds for such variances by examiners may include the advancement of reductions in 1091greenhouse gas emissions needed to advance the health of building occupants and reductions in 1092greenhouse gas emissions needed to meet the statewide greenhouse gas emissions limits and 1093sublimits established in chapter 21N. 1094 SECTION 61. Said section 13 of said chapter 142, as so appearing, is hereby further 1095amended by inserting after the word “thereof”, in line 24, the following words:- ; provided, 1096however, that notwithstanding any general or special law or rule or regulation to the contrary, 1097grounds for making, altering, amending and repealing such rules and regulations may include the 1098advancement of the health of building occupants and reductions in greenhouse gas emissions 1099needed to meet the statewide greenhouse gas emissions limits and sublimits established pursuant 1100to chapter 21N. 1101 SECTION 62. Section 95 of chapter 143 of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby 1102amended by inserting after the word “conservation”, in line 6, the following words:- , energy 1103efficiency, reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, reductions in embodied carbon. 1104 SECTION 63. Said section 95 of said chapter 143, as so appearing, is hereby further 1105amended by inserting after the word “buildings”, in line 21, the following words:- ; provided 1106however, that, notwithstanding any general or special law or regulation to the contrary, the 1107board may vary such standards, regulations and requirements and prefer the treatment of certain 1108types of classes of materials, products and methods of construction, in order to advance 1109reductions in greenhouse gas emissions needed to meet the statewide greenhouse gas emissions 1110limits and sublimits established pursuant to chapter 21N; and provided further, that any such 53 of 132 1111variation in standards, regulations and requirements and any such preferential treatment shall not 1112affect the health, safety and security of the occupants or users of buildings. 1113 SECTION 64. Said chapter 143 is hereby further amended by adding the following 1114section:- 1115 Section 101. Notwithstanding the of the state building code, specialized code or any 1116other general or special law to the contrary, refrigerants identified as an alternative for use in 1117accordance with, 42 U.S.C. 7671k shall be acceptable for use in the commonwealth. 1118 SECTION 65. Section 1 of chapter 164 of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby 1119amended by striking out, in lines 213 and 214, the words “gas company shall not mean an 1120alternative energy producer” and inserting in place thereof the following words:- a gas company 1121may make, sell or distribute geothermal energy, including networked geothermal and deep 1122geothermal energy. 1123 SECTION 66. Section 1B of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 1124striking out, in line 83, the words “periods of up to six months” and inserting in place thereof the 1125following words:- the period of time resulting from the competitive bidding process. 1126 SECTION 67. Section 1F of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 1127striking out paragraph (4) and inserting in place thereof the following paragraph:- 1128 (4)(i) The department shall require that distribution companies provide discounted rates 1129for low-income customers and eligible moderate-income customers comparable to the low- 1130income discount rate in effect prior to March 1, 1998. Such discounts shall be in addition to any 1131reduction in rates that becomes effective pursuant to subsection (b) of section 1B on March 1, 54 of 132 11321998 and to any subsequent rate reductions provided by a distribution company pursuant to said 1133subsection. The cost of such discounts shall be included in the rates charged to all other 1134customers of a distribution company upon approval by the department. Each distribution 1135company shall guarantee payment to the generation supplier for all power sold to low-income 1136and eligible moderate-income customers at the discounted rates. Eligibility for the discount rates 1137provided for in this section shall be established upon verification of a low-income customer’s 1138receipt of any means-tested public benefit or verification of eligibility for the low-income home 1139energy assistance program, or its successor program, for which eligibility does not exceed 200 1140per cent of the federal poverty level based on a household’s gross income and by criteria 1141determined by the department for verification of an eligible moderate-income customer. Such 1142public benefits may include, but shall not be limited to including, assistance which provides 1143cash, housing, food or medical care including, but not limited to, transitional assistance for needy 1144families, supplemental security income, emergency assistance to elders, disabled and children, 1145food stamps, public housing, federally-subsidized or state-subsidized housing, the low-income 1146home energy assistance program, veterans’ benefits and similar benefits. The department of 1147energy resources shall make available to distribution companies the eligibility guidelines for said 1148public benefit programs. Each distribution company shall conduct substantial outreach efforts to 1149make the low-income or moderate-income discount available to eligible customers and shall 1150report to the department of energy resources, at least annually, as to its outreach activities and 1151results. Outreach may include establishing an automated program of matching customer accounts 1152with: (A) lists of recipients of said means-tested public benefit programs and, based on the 1153results of said matching program, to presumptively offer a low-income discount rate to eligible 1154customers so identified; and (B) criteria established by the department for verification of a 55 of 132 1155moderate-income customer to presumptively offer a moderate-income discount rate to eligible 1156customers so identified; provided, however, that the distribution company, within 60 days of said 1157presumptive enrollment, informs any such low-income customer or eligible moderate-income 1158customer of said presumptive enrollment and all rights and obligations of a customer under said 1159program, including the right to withdraw from said program without penalty. 1160 In a program year in which maximum eligibility for the low-income home energy 1161assistance program, or its successor program, exceeds 200 per cent of the federal poverty level, a 1162household that is income eligible for the low-income home energy assistance program shall be 1163eligible for the low-income discount rates required by this subparagraph. 1164 (ii) A residential customer eligible for low-income or moderate-income discount rates 1165shall receive the service on demand. Each distribution company shall periodically notify all 1166customers of the availability and method of obtaining low-income or moderate-income discount 1167rates. An existing residential customer eligible for a low-income or moderate-income discount on 1168the date of the start of retail access who orders service for the first time from a distribution 1169company shall be offered basic service by that distribution company. 1170 The department shall promulgate rules and regulations requiring utility companies 1171organized pursuant to this chapter to produce information, in the form of a mailing, webpage or 1172other approved method of distribution, to their consumers, to inform them of available rebates, 1173discounts, credits and other cost-saving mechanisms that can help them lower their monthly 1174utility bills and send out such information semi-annually, unless otherwise provided by this 1175chapter. 56 of 132 1176 (iii) There shall be no charge to any residential customer for initiating or terminating low- 1177income or moderate-income discount rates, default service or standard offer service when said 1178initiation or termination request is made after a regular meter reading has occurred and the 1179customer is in receipt of the results of said reading. A distribution company may impose a 1180reasonable charge, as set by the department through regulation, for initiating or terminating low- 1181income or moderate-income discount rates, default service or standard offer service when a 1182customer does not make such an initiation or termination request upon the receipt of said results 1183and prior to the receipt of the next regularly scheduled meter reading. For purposes of this 1184subsection, there shall be a regular meter reading conducted of every residential account not less 1185often than once every 2 months. Notwithstanding the foregoing, there shall be no charge when 1186the initiation or termination is involuntary on the part of the customer. 1187 SECTION 68. Said chapter 164 is hereby further amended by inserting after section 1K 1188the following section:- 1189 Section 1L. On or after January 1, 2026, no supplier, energy marketer or energy broker 1190shall execute a new contract or renew an existing contract for generation services with any 1191individual residential retail customer. This section shall not apply to, or otherwise affect, any 1192government body that aggregates the load of residential retail customers as part of a municipal 1193load aggregation program pursuant to section 134. A violation of this section shall be deemed an 1194unfair and deceptive act pursuant to chapter 93A. The attorney general may bring an action under 1195section 4 of said chapter 93A to enforce this section and to obtain restitution, civil penalties, 1196injunctive relief or any other relief available under said chapter 93A. 57 of 132 1197 SECTION 69. Section 30 of said chapter 164, as appearing in the 2022 Official Edition, 1198is hereby amended by adding the following paragraph:- 1199 Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, in deciding whether to 1200exercise its authority pursuant to this section, the department shall consider whether a request to 1201authorize gas distribution service is reasonable and in the public interest; provided, however, that 1202in determining reasonableness and the public interest, the department shall consider factors 1203including, but not limited to: (i) the commonwealth’s interest in complying with the greenhouse 1204gas emissions limits and sublimits established pursuant to chapter 21N, including the statewide 1205emissions limit set for 2050; (ii) the commonwealth’s interest in avoiding the stranding of assets 1206and the likelihood of its costs being borne by ratepayers; and (iii) whether an alternative to gas 1207service is available and likely to provide substantially similar service, which shall include 1208consideration of cost. 1209 SECTION 70. Section 69G of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 1210striking out, in line 1, the words “sixty-nine H to sixty-nine R” and inserting in place thereof the 1211following words:- 69H to 69W. 1212 SECTION 71. Said section 69G of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1213amended by striking out the definition of “Applicant” and inserting in place thereof the following 12145 definitions:- 1215 “Advanced conductors”, any hardware technology that can conduct electricity across 1216transmission and distribution lines and demonstrate enhanced performance over traditional 1217conductor products. 58 of 132 1218 “Advanced power flow control”, any hardware and software technologies used to push or 1219pull electric power in a manner that balances overloaded lines and underutilized corridors within 1220the distribution or transmission system. 1221 “Advanced reconductoring”, the application of advanced conductors to increase the 1222capacity and efficiency of the existing electric grid. 1223 “Anaerobic digestion facility”, a facility that: (i) generates electricity from a biogas 1224produced by the accelerated biodegradation of organic materials under controlled anaerobic 1225conditions; and (ii) has been determined by the department of energy resources, in coordination 1226with the department of environmental protection, to qualify under the department of energy 1227resources regulations as a Class I renewable energy generating source under section 11F of 1228chapter 25A. 1229 “Applicant”, a person or group of persons who submits to the department or board a long- 1230range plan, a petition to construct a facility, a petition for a consolidated permit for a large clean 1231energy infrastructure facility or small clean energy infrastructure facility, a petition for a 1232certificate of environmental impact and public need, a notice of intent to construct an oil facility 1233or any application, petition or matter referred by the chair of the department to the board 1234pursuant to section 69H. 1235 SECTION 72. Said section 69G of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1236amended by inserting after the definition of “Certificate” the following definition:- 1237 “Consolidated permit”, a permit issued by the board to a large clean energy infrastructure 1238facility or a small clean energy infrastructure facility that includes all municipal, regional and 1239state permits that the large or small clean energy infrastructure facility would otherwise need to 59 of 132 1240obtain individually, with the exception of certain federal permits that are delegated to specific 1241state agencies as determined by the board. 1242 SECTION 73. Said section 69G of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1243amended by striking out the definition of “Department” and inserting in place thereof the 1244following 3 definitions:- 1245 “Cumulative impact analysis”, a written report produced by the applicant assessing any 1246existing inequitable environmental burden and related public health consequences impacting a 1247specific geographical area in which a facility, large clean energy infrastructure facility or small 1248clean energy infrastructure facility is proposed from any prior or current private, industrial, 1249commercial, state or municipal operation or project that has damaged the environment; provided, 1250however, that the analysis shall be limited to the types of exposures and risks that are attributable 1251to the type of proposed project; provided further, that if the analysis indicates that such a 1252geographical area is subject to an existing inequitable environmental burden or related health 1253consequence, the analysis shall identify any: (i) environmental and public health impact from the 1254proposed project that would likely result in a disproportionate adverse effect on such 1255geographical area; (ii) potential impact or consequence from the proposed project that would 1256increase or reduce the effects of climate change on such geographical area; and (iii) proposed 1257potential remedial actions to address any disproportionate adverse impacts to the environment, 1258public health and climate resilience of such geographical area; and provided further, that the 1259analysis shall be developed in accordance with guidance established by the office of 1260environmental justice and equity established pursuant to section 29 of chapter 21A and 1261regulations promulgated by the board. 60 of 132 1262 “Department”, the department of public utilities. 1263 “Director”, the director of the facilities siting division appointed pursuant to section 12N 1264of chapter 25, who shall serve as the director of the board; provided, however, that the director 1265may issue decisions on de novo adjudications of local permit applications pursuant to section 126669W. 1267 “Dynamic line rating”, any hardware or software technology used to appropriately update 1268the calculated thermal limits of existing distribution or transmission lines based on real-time and 1269forecasted weather conditions. 1270 SECTION 74. Said section 69G of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1271amended by inserting after the word “capacity”, in line 46, the following words:- ; provided, 1272however, that “facility” shall not include a large clean energy infrastructure facility or small 1273clean energy infrastructure facility. 1274 SECTION 75. Said section 69G of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1275amended by striking out, in line 48, the words “and liquified natural gas” and inserting in place 1276thereof the following words:- liquified natural gas, renewable natural gas and hydrogen. 1277 SECTION 76. Said section 69G of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1278amended by striking out, in line 61, the figure “100” and inserting in place thereof the following 1279figure:- 25. 1280 SECTION 77. Said section 69G of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1281amended by inserting after the definition of “Generating facility” the following 5 definitions:- 61 of 132 1282 “Grid enhancing technology”, any hardware or software technology that enables 1283enhanced or more efficient performance from the electric distribution or transmission system 1284including, but not limited to, dynamic line rating, advanced power flow control technology, 1285topology optimization and energy storage when used as a distribution or transmission resource. 1286 “Large clean energy generation facility”, energy generation infrastructure with a 1287nameplate capacity of not less than 25 megawatts that is an anaerobic digestion facility, solar 1288facility or wind facility, including any ancillary structure that is an integral part of the operation 1289of the large clean energy generation facility, or, following a rulemaking by the board in 1290consultation with the department of energy resources that includes the facility within the 1291regulatory definition of a large clean energy generation facility, any other type of generation 1292facility that does not emit greenhouse gas; provided, however, that the nameplate capacity for 1293solar facilities shall be calculated in direct current. 1294 “Large clean energy infrastructure facility”, a large clean energy generation facility, large 1295clean energy storage facility or large clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility. 1296 “Large clean energy storage facility”, an energy storage system as defined under section 12971 with a rated capacity of not less than 100 megawatt hours, including any ancillary structure that 1298is an integral part of the operation of the large clean energy storage facility. 1299 “Large clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility”, electric transmission 1300and distribution infrastructure and related ancillary infrastructure that is: (i) a new electric 1301transmission line having a design rating of not less than 69 kilovolts and that is not less than 1 1302mile in length on a new transmission corridor, including any ancillary structure that is an integral 1303part of the operation of the transmission line; (ii) a new electric transmission line having a design 62 of 132 1304rating of not less than 115 kilovolts that is not less than 10 miles in length on an existing 1305transmission corridor except reconductored or rebuilt transmission lines at the same voltage, 1306including any ancillary structure that is an integral part of the operation of the transmission line; 1307(iii) any other new electric transmission infrastructure requiring zoning exemptions, including 1308standalone transmission substations and upgrades and any ancillary structure that is an integral 1309part of the operation of the transmission line; and (iv) facilities needed to interconnect offshore 1310wind to the grid; provided, however, that the large clean transmission and distribution facility is: 1311(A) designed, fully or in part, to directly interconnect or otherwise facilitate the interconnection 1312of clean energy infrastructure to the electric grid; (B) approved by the regional transmission 1313operator in relation to interconnecting clean energy infrastructure; (C) proposed to ensure electric 1314grid reliability and stability; or (D) will help facilitate the electrification of the building and 1315transportation sectors; provided further, that a “large clean transmission and distribution 1316infrastructure facility” shall not include new transmission and distribution infrastructure that 1317solely interconnects new and existing energy generation powered by fossil fuels on or after 1318January 1, 2026. 1319 SECTION 78. Said section 69G of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1320amended by inserting after the definition of “Significant portion of his income”, the following 6 1321definitions:- 1322 “Small clean energy generation facility”, a small clean energy generation facility as 1323defined in section 22 of chapter 25A. 1324 “Small clean energy infrastructure facility”, a small clean energy infrastructure facility as 1325defined in section 22 of chapter 25A. 63 of 132 1326 “Small clean energy storage facility”, a small clean energy storage facility as defined in 1327section 22 of chapter 25A. 1328 “Small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility”, a small clean 1329transmission and distribution infrastructure facility as defined in section 22 of chapter 25A. 1330 “Solar facility”, a ground mounted facility that uses sunlight to generate electricity. 1331 “Topology optimization”, any hardware or software technology that identifies 1332reconfigurations of the distribution or transmission grid and can enable the routing of power 1333flows around congested or overloaded distribution or transmission elements. 1334 SECTION 79. Said section 69G of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1335amended by adding the following definition:- 1336 “Wind facility”, an onshore or offshore facility that uses wind to generate electricity. 1337 SECTION 80. Section 69H of said chapter 164 is hereby amended by striking out the first 13383 paragraphs, as amended by section 292 of chapter 7 of the acts of 2023, and inserting in place 1339thereof the following 4 paragraphs:- 1340 There shall be an energy facilities siting board within the department, but not under the 1341supervision or control of the department. The board shall implement the provisions contained in 1342sections 69H to 69Q, inclusive, and sections 69S to 69W, inclusive, to: (i) provide a reliable, 1343resilient and clean supply of energy consistent with the commonwealth’s climate change and 1344greenhouse gas reduction policies and requirements; (ii) ensure that large clean energy 1345infrastructure facilities, small clean energy infrastructure facilities, facilities and oil facilities 1346avoid or minimize or, if impacts cannot be avoided or minimized, mitigate environmental 64 of 132 1347impacts and negative health impacts to the extent practicable; (iii) ensure that large clean energy 1348infrastructure facilities, small clean energy infrastructure facilities, facilities and oil facilities are, 1349to the extent practicable, in compliance with energy, environmental, land use, labor, economic 1350justice, environmental justice and equity and public health and safety policies of the 1351commonwealth, its subdivisions and its municipalities; and (iv) ensure large clean energy 1352infrastructure facilities, small clean energy infrastructure facilities, facilities and oil facilities are 1353constructed in a manner that avoids or minimizes costs. The board shall review: (A) the need for, 1354cost of and environmental and public health impacts of transmission lines, natural gas pipelines, 1355facilities for the manufacture and storage of gas, oil facilities, large clean transmission and 1356distribution infrastructure facilities and small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure 1357facilities; and (B) the environmental and public health impacts of generating facilities, large 1358clean energy generation facilities, small clean energy generation facilities, large clean energy 1359storage facilities and small clean energy storage facilities. 1360 A determination made by the board shall describe the environmental and public health 1361impacts, if any, of the large clean energy infrastructure facility, small clean energy infrastructure 1362facility, facility or oil facility and shall include findings including, but not be limited to, findings 1363that: (i) efforts have been made to avoid or minimize or, if impacts cannot be avoided or 1364minimized, mitigate environmental impacts; (ii) due consideration has been given to the findings 1365and recommendations of local governments; (iii) in the case of large clean transmission and 1366distribution infrastructure facilities, small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure 1367facilities and natural gas pipelines, due consideration has been given to advanced conductors, 1368advanced transmission technologies, grid enhancement technologies, non-wires or non-pipeline 1369alternatives, the repair or retirement of pipelines and other alternatives in an effort to avoid or 65 of 132 1370minimize expenditures; (iv) in the case of large clean transmission and distribution infrastructure 1371facilities and small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facilities, the infrastructure 1372or project will increase the capacity of the system to interconnect large electricity customers, 1373electric vehicle supply equipment, clean energy generation, clean energy storage or other clean 1374energy generation sources that qualify under any clean energy standard regulation established by 1375the department of environmental protection pursuant to subsection (c) of section 3 of chapter 137621N or will facilitate the electrification of the building and transportation sectors; and (v) due 1377consideration has been given to any cumulative burdens on host communities and efforts to be 1378taken to avoid or minimize or, if impacts cannot be avoided or minimized, efforts to mitigate 1379such burdens. In considering and issuing a decision, the board shall also consider reasonably 1380foreseeable climate change impacts, including additional greenhouse gas or other pollutant 1381emissions known to have negative health impacts, predicted sea level rise, flooding and any other 1382disproportionate adverse effects on a specific geographical area. Such reviews shall be conducted 1383consistent with section 69J1/4 for generating facilities, section 69T for large clean energy 1384infrastructure facilities, sections 69U to 69W, inclusive, for small clean energy infrastructure 1385facilities and section 69J for all other types of facilities. 1386 The board shall be composed of: the secretary of energy and environmental affairs or a 1387designee, who shall serve as chair; the secretary of economic development or a designee; the 1388commissioner of environmental protection or a designee; the commissioner of energy resources 1389or a designee; the commissioner of public utilities or a designee; the commissioner of fish and 1390game or a designee; and 3 public members to be appointed by the governor for a term 1391coterminous with that of the governor, 1 of whom shall be a representative of Massachusetts 1392Municipal Association, Inc. with expertise in municipal permitting matters, 1 of whom shall be 66 of 132 1393experienced in advocating for low and moderate income communities or indigenous sovereignty 1394and 1 of whom shall be experienced in labor issues; provided, however, that public members 1395shall not have received within the 2 years immediately preceding appointment a significant 1396portion of their income directly or indirectly from the developer of an energy facility or an 1397electric, gas or oil company. The public members shall serve on a part-time basis, receive $100 1398per diem of board service and be reimbursed by the commonwealth for all reasonable expenses 1399actually and necessarily incurred in the performance of official board duties. Upon the 1400resignation of any public member, a successor shall be appointed in a like manner for the 1401unexpired portion of the term. Appointees may serve for not more than 2 consecutive full terms. 1402 Upon the absence, recusal or disqualification of the chair, the commissioner of energy 1403resources shall appoint an acting chair from the remaining members of the board. The board shall 1404meet at such time and place as the chair may designate or upon the request of 3 members. The 1405board shall render a final decision on an application by a majority vote of the members in 1406attendance at a meeting and 5 members shall constitute a quorum. 1407 SECTION 81. The fifth paragraph of said section 69H of said chapter 164, as appearing 1408in the 2022 Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking out clause (1) and inserting in place 1409thereof the following clause:- 1410 (1) to adopt and publish rules and regulations consistent with this section and sections 69I 1411to 69S, inclusive, and from time to time to amend the same including, but not limited to, rules 1412and regulations for the conduct of the board's public hearings under sections 69H1/2, 69J, 141369J1/4, 69M and 69T to 69W, inclusive. 67 of 132 1414 SECTION 82. Said section 69H of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1415amended by adding the following 2 paragraphs:- 1416 The board shall promulgate regulations for cumulative impact analysis as part of its 1417review of facilities, large clean energy infrastructure facilities and small clean energy 1418infrastructure facilities in consultation with the office of environmental justice and equity and 1419Massachusetts environmental policy act office, which shall be informed by the cumulative 1420impact analysis guidance under section 29 of chapter 21A. 1421 The board and any proponent or owner of a large clean energy infrastructure facility or 1422small clean energy infrastructure facility shall not be subject to any provisions of sections 61 to 142362L, inclusive, of chapter 30 in relation to an application or petition for a comprehensive permit 1424or de novo adjudication filed under sections 69T to 69W, inclusive. This section shall apply to 1425any state agency issuing, in relation to an application or petition under said sections 69T to 69V, 1426inclusive, a federal permit that is delegated to that agency and determined by the board to be 1427excluded from the definition of consolidated permit in section 69G. 1428 SECTION 83. The third paragraph of section 69I of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is 1429hereby amended by striking out the last sentence and inserting in place thereof the following 1430sentence:- The board or any other person, in taking any action pursuant to this section, sections 143169J to 69J1/4, inclusive, or sections 69T to 69W, inclusive, shall not be subject to sections 61 to 143262H, inclusive, of chapter 30. 1433 SECTION 84. Section 69J of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 1434inserting after the word “facility”, in lines 1 and 2, the following words:- that is not a large clean 1435energy infrastructure facility or small clean energy infrastructure facility. 68 of 132 1436 SECTION 85. Said section 69J of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1437amended by striking out the second to fourth paragraphs, inclusive, and inserting in place thereof 1438the following paragraph:- 1439 A petition to construct a facility shall include, in such form and detail as the board shall 1440from time to time prescribe: (i) a description of the facility, site and surrounding areas; (ii) an 1441analysis of the need for the facility, either within or outside or both within and outside the 1442commonwealth, including a description of the energy benefits of the facility; (iii) a description of 1443the alternatives to the facility, such as other methods of transmitting or storing energy, other site 1444locations, other sources of electrical power or gas or a reduction of requirements through load 1445management; (iv) a description of the environmental impacts of the facility, including both 1446environmental benefits and burdens, that includes a description of efforts to avoid, minimize and 1447mitigate burdens and efforts to enhance benefits, such as shared use, recreational paths or access 1448to nature; (v) evidence that all prefiling consultation and community engagement requirements 1449established by the board have been satisfied and, if not, the applicant shall demonstrate good 1450cause for a waiver of the requirements that could not be satisfied by the applicant; and (vi) a 1451cumulative impact analysis. The board may issue and revise filing guidelines after public notice 1452and a period for comment. Said filing guidelines shall require the applicant to provide a 1453minimum of data for review concerning climate change impact, land use impact, water resource 1454impact, air quality impact, fire and other public safety risks, solid waste impact, radiation impact, 1455noise impact and other public health impacts as determined by the board. 1456 SECTION 86. Said section 69J of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1457amended by striking out the last paragraph and inserting in place thereof the following 1458paragraph:- 69 of 132 1459 This section shall not apply to petitions submitted under sections 69U to 69W, inclusive, 1460or petitions to construct a generating facility or a large clean energy infrastructure facility, which 1461shall be subject to sections 69J1/4 and 69T, respectively. 1462 SECTION 87. Section 69J1/4 of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 1463inserting after the word “facility”, in line 2, the following words:- that is not a large clean energy 1464infrastructure facility or small clean energy infrastructure facility. 1465 SECTION 88. Said section 69J1/4 of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1466amended by striking out the third paragraph and inserting in place thereof the following 1467paragraph:- 1468 A petition to construct a generating facility shall include, in such form and detail as the 1469board shall from time to time prescribe, the following information: (i) a description of the 1470proposed generating facility, including any ancillary structures and related facilities, including a 1471description of the energy benefits of the generating facility; (ii) a description of the 1472environmental and public health impacts of facility, including both environmental and public 1473health benefits and burdens that includes a description of efforts to avoid or minimize or, if 1474impacts cannot be avoided or minimized, mitigate the burdens and enhance the benefits and the 1475costs associated with the mitigation, control or reduction of the environmental and public health 1476impacts of the proposed generating facility; (iii) a description of the project development and site 1477selection process used in choosing the design and location of the proposed generating facility; 1478(iv) either: (a) evidence that the expected emissions from the facility meet the technology 1479performance standard in effect at the time of filing; or (b) a description of the environmental 1480impacts, costs and reliability of other fossil fuel generating technologies and an explanation of 70 of 132 1481why the proposed technology was chosen; (v) evidence that all prefiling consultation and 1482community engagement requirements established by the board have been satisfied and, if not, the 1483applicant shall demonstrate good cause for a waiver of the requirements that could not be 1484satisfied by the applicant; (vi) a cumulative impact analysis; and (vii) any other information 1485necessary to demonstrate that the generating facility meets the requirements for approval 1486specified in this section. 1487 SECTION 89. Said chapter 164 is hereby further amended by striking out section 69J1/2, 1488as so appearing, and inserting in place thereof the following section:- 1489 Section 69J1/2. Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, the 1490department may charge a fee as specified by its regulations for each application to construct a 1491facility that generates electricity, a large clean energy generation facility, a small clean energy 1492generation facility, a large clean energy storage facility, a small clean energy storage facility, a 1493non-utility-owned large clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility or a small clean 1494transmission and distribution infrastructure facility. If the application to construct any such 1495facility is accompanied by an application to construct an additional facility that does not generate 1496electricity, the department may charge a fee as specified by its regulations for the combined 1497application. If an application to construct a facility that generates electricity is accompanied by 1498applications to construct 2 additional facilities that do not generate electricity, the department 1499may charge a fee as specified by its regulations for the combined application. If an application to 1500construct a facility that does not generate electricity is filed separately, the department may 1501charge a fee as specified by its regulations for each such application; provided, however, that, the 1502department may charge a lower fee for applications to construct facilities that do not generate 71 of 132 1503electricity and that are below a size to be determined by the department. The fees shall be 1504payable upon issuance of the notice of adjudication and public hearing. 1505 The department may retain the fees for the purpose of reviewing applications to construct 1506or consolidated permit applications for large clean energy infrastructure facilities, small clean 1507energy infrastructure facilities or other facilities subject to this section and to create a clean 1508energy infrastructure dashboard pursuant to section 12N of chapter 25. 1509 Any remaining balance of fees at the end of a fiscal year shall not revert to the General 1510Fund and shall remain available to the department during the following fiscal year for the 1511purposes of this section or section 12S of chapter 25. 1512 The department shall issue an annual report summarizing the data and information 1513required by this section including, but not limited to: (i) the number of applications filed for 1514facilities, large clean energy infrastructure facilities and small clean energy infrastructure 1515facilities, decided and pending; (ii) the average duration of review; and (iii) average staffing 1516levels; provided, however, that the annual report shall make use of bar charts, line charts and 1517other visual representations in order to facilitate public understanding of events of the immediate 1518preceding year and of long-term and cumulative trends and outcomes. The board shall file a 1519report with the clerks of the senate and house of representatives, the senate and house 1520committees on ways and means and the joint committee on telecommunications, utilities and 1521energy not later than January 31. 1522 Nothing in this section shall be construed to change the statutory mandates of the 1523department or board or the type of facilities that may be constructed by applicants that are not 1524utilities. Nothing in this section shall be construed as changing the regulations or body of 72 of 132 1525precedent of the department or board., Nothing in this section shall be construed as changing the 1526rights of intervenors before the department or board. 1527 SECTION 90. Section 69O of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 1528striking out, in lines 7 and 8, the words “sixty-one to sixty-two H, inclusive, of chapter thirty” 1529and inserting in place thereof the following words:- 61 to 62L, inclusive, of chapter 30. 1530 SECTION 91. Said chapter 164 is hereby further amended by striking out section 69P, as 1531so appearing, and inserting in place thereof the following section:- 1532 Section 69P. Any party in interest aggrieved by a final decision of the board or the 1533director shall have a right to judicial review in the manner provided by section 5 of chapter 25. 1534The scope of such judicial review shall be limited to whether the decision of the board or the 1535director is in conformity with the Constitution of the Commonwealth and the United states 1536Constitution, was made in accordance with the procedures established in section 69H to section 153769O, inclusive, and section 69T to section 69W, inclusive, and the rules and regulations of the 1538board with respect to such provisions, was supported by substantial evidence of record in the 1539board’s proceedings and was arbitrary, capricious or an abuse of the board’s discretion under 1540said section 69H to 69O, inclusive, and said section 69T to 69W, inclusive. 1541 SECTION 92. Said chapter 164 is hereby further amended by striking out section 69R, as 1542so appearing, and inserting in place thereof the following section:- 1543 Section 69R. An electric or gas company, generation company or wholesale generation 1544company may petition the board for the right to exercise the power of eminent domain with 1545respect to a facility, large clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility or small clean 1546transmission and distribution infrastructure facility, specified and contained in a petition or 73 of 132 1547application submitted in accordance with sections 69J, 69T or 69U or a bulk power supply 1548substation if such company is unable to reach agreement with the owners of land for the 1549acquisition of any necessary estate or interest in land. The applicant shall forward, at the time of 1550filing such petition, a copy thereof to each city, town and property owner affected. 1551 The company shall file with such petition or have annexed thereto: (i) a statement of the 1552use for which such land is to be taken; (ii) a description of land to be taken sufficient for the 1553identification thereof; (iii) a statement of the estate or interest in the land to be taken for such 1554use; (iv) a plan showing the land to be taken; (v) a statement of the sum of money established by 1555such utility to be just compensation for the land to be taken; and (vi) such additional maps and 1556information as the board requires. 1557 The board, after such notice as it may direct, shall hold at least 1 public hearing in the 1558community in which the land to be taken is located. For facilities involving takings in several 1559communities, the hearing shall be held in communities in proximity to the land to be taken, as 1560determined by the board. The board may thereafter authorize the company to take by eminent 1561domain under chapter 79 such lands necessary for the construction of the facility as are required 1562in the public interest, convenience and necessity. The board shall transmit a certified copy of its 1563order to the company and to the town clerk of each affected community. 1564 If the board dismisses the petition at any stage in the proceedings, no further action shall 1565be taken thereon and the company may file a new petition not sooner than 1 year after the date of 1566such dismissal. 1567 Following a taking under this section, the electric or gas company may forthwith proceed 1568to utilize the land. If the electric or gas company shall not utilize the lands so taken for the 74 of 132 1569purposes authorized in the department’s order within such time as the board shall determine, its 1570rights under such taking shall cease and terminate. 1571 No land, rights of way or other easements therein in any public way, public park, 1572reservation or other land subject to article 97 of the amendments to the Constitution of the 1573Commonwealth shall be taken by eminent domain under this section, except in accordance with 1574said article. 1575 This section shall not be construed as abrogating the board’s jurisdiction described in 1576section 72 in respect to transmission lines or the board’s jurisdiction described in sections 75B to 157775G, inclusive, in respect to natural gas transmission lines. 1578 SECTION 93. The second paragraph of said section 69S of said chapter 164, as so 1579appearing, is hereby amended by striking out the first sentence and inserting in place thereof the 1580following sentence:- The board, after such notice as it may direct, shall hold at least 1 public 1581hearing in the city or town in which the greater portion of said land in question is located. 1582 SECTION 94. Said chapter 164 is hereby further amended by inserting after section 69S 1583the following 4 sections:- 1584 Section 69T. (a) The energy facilities siting board may issue consolidated permits for 1585large clean energy infrastructure facilities. No applicant shall commence construction of a large 1586clean energy infrastructure facility at a site unless an application for a consolidated permit for 1587such facility pursuant to this section has been approved by the board and no state agency shall 1588issue a construction permit for any such facility unless the petition to construct such facility has 1589been approved by the board. For purposes of this section, construction shall not include 1590contractual obligations to purchase facilities or equipment. 75 of 132 1591 (b) The board shall establish the following criteria governing the siting and permitting of 1592large clean energy infrastructure facilities: (i) a uniform set of baseline health, safety, 1593environmental and other standards that apply to the issuance of a consolidated permit; (ii) a 1594common standard application to be used when submitting an application to the board; (iii) pre- 1595filing requirements commensurate with the scope and scale of the proposed large clean energy 1596infrastructure facility, which shall include specific requirements for pre-filing consultations with 1597permitting agencies and the Massachusetts environmental policy act office, public meetings and 1598other forms of outreach that must occur in advance of an applicant submitting an application; (iv) 1599standards for applying site suitability criteria developed by the executive office of energy and 1600environmental affairs pursuant to section 30 of chapter 21A to evaluate the social and 1601environmental impacts of proposed large clean energy infrastructure project sites and which shall 1602include a mitigation hierarchy to be applied during the permitting process to avoid or minimize 1603or, if impacts cannot be avoided or minimized, mitigate impacts of siting on the environment, 1604people and goals and objectives of the commonwealth for climate mitigation, carbon storage and 1605sequestration, resilience, biodiversity and protection of natural and working lands to the extent 1606practicable; (v) standards for applying the cumulative impacts analysis standards and guidelines 1607developed by the office of environmental justice and equity pursuant to section 29 of chapter 160821A to evaluate and minimize the impacts of large clean energy infrastructure facilities in the 1609context of existing infrastructure and conditions; (vi) standard permit conditions and 1610requirements for a single permit consolidating all necessary local, regional and state approvals to 1611be issued to different types of large clean energy infrastructure facilities in the event that 1612constructive approval is triggered through the non-issuance of a permit by the board pursuant to 1613subsection (i); and (vii) entities responsible for compliance and enforcement of permit 76 of 132 1614conditions, including in the event of sale of large clean energy infrastructure facilities after 1615permitting. 1616 (c) An application for a consolidated permit for a large clean transmission and 1617distribution infrastructure facility shall include, in such form and detail as the board shall from 1618time to time prescribe, the following information: (i) a description of the large clean transmission 1619and distribution infrastructure facility, site and surrounding areas; (ii) an analysis of the need for 1620the large clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility, either within or outside or 1621both within and outside the commonwealth, including a description of energy benefits; (iii) a 1622description of the alternatives to the large clean transmission and distribution infrastructure 1623facility including siting and project alternatives to avoid or minimize or, if impacts cannot be 1624avoided or minimized, mitigate impacts; (iv) a description of the environmental impacts of the 1625large clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility, including both environmental 1626benefits and burdens, including shared use, recreational paths and access to nature; (v) evidence 1627that all prefiling consultation and community engagement requirements established by the board 1628have been satisfied and, if not, demonstrate good cause for a waiver of the requirements that 1629could not be satisfied by the applicant; and (vi) a cumulative impact analysis. The board may 1630issue and revise filing guidelines after public notice and a period for comment. 1631 (d) An application for a consolidated permit for a large clean energy generation facility or 1632large clean energy storage facility shall include, in such form and detail as the board shall from 1633time to time prescribe: (i) a description of the large clean energy generation facility’s or large 1634clean energy storage facility’s site and surrounding areas, including any ancillary structures and 1635related facilities and a description of the energy benefits of the large clean energy generation 1636facility or large clean energy storage facility; (ii) a description of the environmental impacts of 77 of 132 1637the large clean energy generation facility or large clean energy storage facility, including both 1638environmental benefits and burdens; (iii) a description of the project site selection process and 1639alternatives analysis used in choosing the location of the proposed large clean energy generation 1640facility or large clean energy storage facility to avoid or minimize or, if impacts cannot be 1641avoided or minimized, mitigate impacts; (iv) evidence that all prefiling consultation and 1642community requirements established by the board have been satisfied and, if not, demonstrate 1643good cause for a waiver of the requirements that could not be satisfied by the applicant; and (v) a 1644cumulative impact analysis. The board shall be empowered may issue and revise filing 1645guidelines after public notice and a period for comment. 1646 (e) A review by the board of the application shall be an adjudicatory proceeding under 1647chapter 30A. The authority of the board to conduct the adjudicatory proceeding under this 1648section may be delegated in whole or in part to the employees of the department. Pursuant to the 1649rules of the board, such employees shall report back to the board with recommended decisions 1650for final action thereon. 1651 (f) The board shall determine whether a large clean energy infrastructure facility permit 1652application is complete within 30 days of receipt. If an application is deemed not complete, the 1653applicant shall have 30 days to cure any deficiencies identified by the board before the 1654application is rejected. The board may provide extensions of time to cure deficiencies if the 1655applicant can demonstrate there are extenuating circumstances. 1656 (g) The board shall conduct a public hearing in at least 1 of the affected cities or towns in 1657which a large clean energy infrastructure facility would be located. 78 of 132 1658 (h) Following a determination that an application for a large clean energy infrastructure 1659facility is complete, all municipal, regional and state agencies, authorities, boards, commissions, 1660offices or other entities that would otherwise be required to issue at least 1 permits to the facility 1661shall be deemed to be substantially and specifically affected by the proceeding and upon 1662notification to the board shall have intervenor status in the proceeding to review the facility’s 1663application. All municipal, regional and state agencies, authorities, boards, commissions, offices 1664or other entities that would otherwise be required to issue at least 1 permit to the facility shall be 1665afforded an opportunity to submit statements of recommended permit conditions to the board 1666relative to the respective permits that each agency would be responsible for otherwise issuing 1667themselves. 1668 (i) The board shall establish timeframes for reviewing different types of large clean 1669energy infrastructure facilities based on the complexity of the facility, the need for an exemption 1670from local zoning requirements and community impacts but the board shall not take more than 167115 months from the determination of application completeness to render a final decision on an 1672application. The board may approve, approve with conditions or reject a consolidated permit 1673application. If no final decision is issued within the deadline established by the board for the type 1674of large clean energy infrastructure facility, the board shall issue a permit granting approval to 1675construct that adopts the common conditions and requirements established by the board through 1676regulations for the type of large clean energy infrastructure facility under review, which shall be 1677deemed a final decision of the board. A consolidated permit, if issued, shall be in the form of a 1678composite of all individual permits, approvals or authorizations which would otherwise be 1679necessary for the construction and operation of the large clean energy infrastructure facility and 1680that portion of the consolidated permit which relates to subject matters within the jurisdiction of 79 of 132 1681a state or local agency shall be enforced by said agency under other applicable laws of the 1682commonwealth as if it had been directly granted by the said agency. 1683 Section 69U. (a) Upon request by an applicant and upon a showing of good cause, the 1684board may issue a consolidated permit for a small clean transmission and distribution 1685infrastructure facility that is not automatically subject to the jurisdiction of the board pursuant to 1686section 69G if the applicant petitions the board to be granted a consolidated permit for such 1687facility. The board shall review such petition in accordance with subsections (b) and (c). The 1688board may issue such consolidated permit upon finding that the small clean transmission and 1689distribution infrastructure facility will serve the public convenience and is consistent with the 1690public interest. Upon application for a consolidated permit under this section, no applicant shall 1691commence construction of a small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility at a 1692site unless a consolidated permit for construction of that small clean transmission and 1693distribution infrastructure facility pursuant to this section has been approved by the board. For 1694purposes of this section, “construction” shall not include contractual obligations to purchase such 1695facilities or equipment. 1696 (b) The board shall establish the same criteria governing the siting and permitting of 1697small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facilities eligible to submit an application 1698under this section as it is required to establish for large clean energy infrastructure facilities 1699under subsection (b) of section 69T. An application for a consolidated permit for a small clean 1700transmission and distribution infrastructure facility shall include the same elements as required 1701for large clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facilities under subsection (c) of said 1702section 69T. Subject to subsection (c) of this section, subsections (d) to (i), inclusive, of section 80 of 132 170369T shall apply to the process followed by the board regarding the issuance of a consolidated 1704permit to any small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility under this section. 1705 (c) The board shall establish timeframes and procedures for reviewing different types of 1706small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facilities based on the complexity of the 1707facility and the need for an exemption from local zoning requirements, but in no instance shall 1708the board take more than 12 months from the determination of application completeness to 1709render a final decision on an application. The board shall have the authority to approve, approve 1710with conditions or reject a permit application. If no final decision is issued within the deadline 1711for the type of small clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility established by the 1712board, the board shall issue a permit granting approval to construct that adopts the common 1713conditions and requirements established by the board in regulation for the type of small clean 1714transmission and distribution infrastructure facility under review, which shall be deemed a final 1715decision of the board. A consolidated permit, if issued, shall be in the form of a composite of all 1716individual permits, approvals or authorizations which would otherwise be necessary for the 1717construction and operation of the clean transmission and distribution infrastructure facility and 1718that portion of the consolidated permit which relates to subject matters within the jurisdiction of 1719a state or local agency shall be enforced by said agency under the other applicable laws of the 1720commonwealth as if it had been directly granted by said agency. 1721 Section 69V. (a) The board may issue consolidated state permits for small clean energy 1722generation and small clean energy storage facilities. Owners or proponents of small clean energy 1723generation facilities and small clean energy storage facilities may submit an application to the 1724board to be granted a consolidated permit that shall include all state permits necessary to 1725construct the small clean energy generation facility or small clean energy storage facility. All 81 of 132 1726local government permits and approvals for such small clean energy generation facilities and 1727small clean energy storage facilities shall be issued separately pursuant to section 22 of chapter 172825A. 1729 (b) The board shall establish the same criteria governing the siting and permitting of 1730small clean energy generation facilities and small clean energy storage facilities eligible to 1731submit an application under this section as it is required to establish for large clean energy 1732infrastructure facilities under subsection (b) of section 69T. An application for a consolidated 1733permit for a small clean energy generation facility or small clean energy storage facility eligible 1734to submit an application under this section shall include the same elements as required for large 1735clean energy generation facilities and large clean energy storage facilities under subsection (d) of 1736said section 69T. Subsections (e) to (g), inclusive, of said section 69T shall apply to the issuance 1737of a consolidated permit to any small clean energy generation facility or small clean energy 1738storage facility under this section. 1739 (c) The board shall not take more than 12 months from the determination of application 1740completeness to render a final decision on an application. The board may approve, approve with 1741conditions or reject a permit application. If no final decision is issued within the deadline for the 1742type of small clean energy generation facility or small clean energy storage facility established 1743by the board, the board shall issue a permit granting approval to construct that adopts the 1744common conditions and requirements established by the board in regulation for the type of small 1745clean energy generation facility or small clean energy storage facility under review, which shall 1746be deemed a final decision of the board. A consolidated permit shall be in the form of a 1747composite of all individual permits, approvals or authorizations which would otherwise be 1748necessary for the construction and operation of the small clean energy generation facility or 82 of 132 1749small clean energy storage facility and that portion of the consolidated permit which relates to 1750subject matters within the jurisdiction of a state or local agency shall be enforced by the agency 1751under other applicable state laws as if it had been directly granted by the agency. 1752 Section 69W. (a) Owners or proponents of small clean energy infrastructure facilities that 1753have received a final decision on or a constructive approval of a consolidated local permit 1754application from a local government, as defined in section 22 of chapter 25A, or other parties 1755substantially and specifically affected by the decision of the local government may submit a 1756request for a de novo adjudication of the local permit application by the director. Subject to the 1757provisions of subsection (g) of said section 22 of said chapter 25A, a local government may also 1758submit a request for a de novo adjudication if their resources, capacity and staffing do not allow 1759for review of a small clean energy infrastructure facility’s permit application within the required 1760maximum 12-month timeframe for local government review established by said section 22 of 1761said chapter 25A. Review by the director of the board of the request for de novo adjudication 1762shall be deemed an adjudicatory proceeding under the provisions of chapter 30A. 1763 (b) A request for a de novo adjudication by an owner or proponent of a small clean 1764energy infrastructure facility or other party substantially and specifically affected by a final 1765decision of a local government shall be filed within 30 days of such decision. 1766 (c) Upon determination that at least 1 party seeking a de novo adjudication is 1767substantially and specifically affected, the director of the board shall review the request and the 1768local government’s final decision for consistency with the regulations adopting statewide 1769permitting standards for such facilities established by the department of energy resources 1770pursuant to section 22 of chapter 25A. The director shall render a decision on the request within 83 of 132 17716 months of receipt of the application and such decision shall be final. If the local government’s 1772decision is found to be inconsistent with the regulatory standards established by the department 1773of energy resources, the director may issue a final decision that supersedes the local 1774government’s prior decision and impose new local permit conditions that are consistent with 1775applicable laws. 1776 (d) The board shall establish regulations governing the process that the director of the 1777facility siting division shall follow to conduct the review of requests for de novo adjudication 1778under this section. 1779 SECTION 95. Said chapter 164 is hereby further amended by striking out sections 72 1780and 72A, as appearing in the 2022 Official Edition, and inserting in place thereof the following 2 1781sections:- 1782 Section 72. An electric company, distribution company, generation company or 1783transmission company or any other entity providing or seeking to provide transmission service 1784may petition the energy facilities siting board for authority to construct and use or to continue to 1785use as constructed or with altered construction a line for the transmission of electricity for 1786distribution in some definite area or for supplying electricity to itself or to another electric 1787company or to a municipal lighting plant for distribution and sale or to a railroad, street railway 1788or electric railroad for the purpose of operating it and shall represent that such line will or does 1789serve the public convenience and is consistent with the public interest. The company shall 1790forward at the time of filing such petition a copy thereof to each city and town within such area. 1791The company shall file with such petition a general description of such transmission line and a 1792map or plan showing the towns through which the line will or does pass and its general location. 84 of 132 1793The company shall also furnish an estimate showing in reasonable detail the cost of the line and 1794such additional maps and information as the energy facilities siting board requires. The energy 1795facilities siting board, after notice and a public hearing in at least 1 of the towns affected, may 1796determine that said line is necessary for the purpose alleged and will serve the public 1797convenience and is consistent with the public interest. If the electric company, distribution 1798company, generation company or transmission company or any other entity providing or seeking 1799to provide transmission service shall file with the energy facilities siting board a map or plan of 1800the transmission line showing the towns through which it will or does pass, the public ways, 1801railroads, railways, navigable streams and tide waters in the town named in said petition which it 1802will cross and the extent to which it will be located upon private land or upon, under or along 1803public ways and places the energy facilities siting board, after such notice as it may direct, shall 1804hold a public hearing in at least 1 of the towns through which the line passes or is intended to 1805pass. The energy facilities siting board may by order authorize an electric company, distribution 1806company, generation company or transmission company or any other entity to take by eminent 1807domain under chapter 79 such lands, or such rights of way or widening thereof or other 1808easements therein, as may be necessary for the construction and use or continued use as 1809constructed or with altered construction of such line along the route prescribed in the order of the 1810energy facilities siting board. The energy facilities siting board shall transmit a certified copy of 1811its order to the company and the town clerk of each affected town. At any time before such 1812hearing, the company may modify the whole or a part of the route of such line, either of its own 1813motion or at the insistence of the energy facilities siting board or otherwise and, in such case, 1814shall file with the energy facilities siting board maps, plans and estimates as aforesaid showing 1815such changes. If the energy facilities siting board dismisses the petition at any stage in the 85 of 132 1816proceedings, no further action shall be taken thereon and the company may file a new petition 1817not sooner than 1 year after the date of such dismissal. When a taking under this section is 1818effected, the company may forthwith, except as hereinafter provided, proceed to erect, maintain 1819and operate thereon the line. If the company shall not enter upon and construct such line upon the 1820land so taken within 1 year thereafter, its right under such taking shall terminate. No lands or 1821rights of way or other easements therein shall be taken by eminent domain under this section in 1822any public way, public place, park or reservation or within the location of any railroad, electric 1823railroad or street railway company except with the consent of such company and on such terms 1824and conditions as it may impose or except as otherwise provided in this chapter No electricity 1825shall be transmitted over any land, right of way or other easement taken by eminent domain as 1826provided herein until the electric company, distribution company, generation company or 1827transmission company or any other entity shall have acquired from the select board or such other 1828authority having jurisdiction all necessary rights in the public ways or public places in the town 1829or towns or in any park or reservation, through which the line will or does pass. No entity shall 1830be authorized under this section or section 69R or section 24 of chapter 164A to take by eminent 1831domain any lands or rights of way or other easements therein held by an electric company or 1832transmission company to support an existing or proposed transmission line without the consent 1833of the electric company or transmission company. 1834 No electric company, distribution company, generation company or transmission 1835company or any other entity providing or seeking to provide transmission services shall be 1836required to petition the energy facilities siting board under this section unless it is seeking 1837authorization to take lands, rights of way or other easements by eminent domain under chapter 183879. 86 of 132 1839 Section 72A. Upon petition, the energy facilities siting board may authorize an electric 1840company to enter upon lands of any person or corporation for the purpose of making a survey 1841preliminary to eminent domain proceedings. The energy facilities siting board shall give notice 1842of the authorization granted, by registered mail, to the landowners involved not less than 5 days 1843prior to any entry by such electric company. The company entering upon any such lands shall be 1844subject to liability for any damages occasioned thereby to be recovered under chapter 79. 1845 SECTION 96. Said chapter 164 is hereby further amended by striking out section 75C, 1846as so appearing, and inserting in place thereof the following section:- 1847 Section 75C. A natural gas pipeline company may petition the energy facilities siting 1848board for the right to exercise the power of eminent domain under chapter 79. Such company 1849shall file with the petition a general description of the pipeline and a map or plan thereof 1850showing the rights of way, easements and other interests in land or other property proposed to be 1851taken for such use, the towns through which the pipeline will pass, the public ways, railroads, 1852railways, navigable streams and tide waters in the towns named in the petition that it will cross 1853and the extent to which it will be located upon private land and upon, under or along public 1854ways, lands and places. Upon the filing of such petition, the energy facilities siting board, after 1855such notice as it may direct, shall provide notice to each municipality through which the pipeline 1856is intended to pass and hold a public hearing in at least 1 of the towns through which the pipeline 1857is intended to pass and may, by order, authorize the company to take by eminent domain under 1858said chapter 79 such lands or such rights of way, easements or other interests in land or other 1859property necessary for the construction, operation, maintenance, alteration and removal of the 1860pipeline, compressor stations, appliances, appurtenances and other equipment along the route 1861described in the order of the energy facilities siting board. The energy facilities siting board shall 87 of 132 1862transmit a certified copy of its order to the company and the town clerk of each affected town. At 1863any time before such hearing, the company may modify the whole or a part of the route of the 1864pipeline, either of its own motion or at the insistence of the energy facilities siting board or 1865otherwise and, in such case, shall file with the energy facilities siting board maps, plans and 1866estimates showing such changes. If the energy facilities siting board dismisses the petition at any 1867stage in the proceedings, no further action shall be taken thereon and the company may file a 1868new petition not sooner than 1 year after the date of such dismissal. 1869 When a taking under this section is effected, the company may forthwith, except as 1870hereinafter provided, proceed to construct, install, maintain and operate thereon such pipeline. If 1871the company shall not enter upon and construct such line upon the land so taken within 1 year 1872thereafter, its right under such taking shall cease and terminate. No lands or rights of way or 1873easements therein shall be taken by eminent domain under the provisions of this section in any 1874public way, public place, park or reservation or within the location of any railroad, electric 1875railroad or street railway company, except that such pipeline may be constructed under any 1876public way or any way dedicated to the public use; provided, however, that the rights granted 1877hereunder shall not affect the right or remedy to recover damages for an injury caused to persons 1878or property by the acts of such company and such company shall put all such streets, lanes and 1879highways in as good repair as they were when opened by such company and the method of such 1880construction and the plans and specifications therefor have been approved either generally or in 1881any particular instance by the energy facilities siting board or, in the case of state highways, by 1882the department of highways. Natural gas pipeline companies may construct such lines under, 1883over or across the location on private land of any railroad, electric railroad or street railway 1884corporation subject to section 73. Rights of way, buildings, structures or lands to be used in the 88 of 132 1885construction of such pipelines over or upon the lands referred to therein shall be governed by 1886section 34A of chapter 132. 1887 SECTION 97. The first paragraph of section 92 of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is 1888hereby amended by adding the following sentence:- Notwithstanding any general or special law 1889to the contrary, in determining whether to issue an order directing a corporation to supply a 1890petitioner with gas service, the department shall consider: (i) whether the grant of the petition is 1891in the public interest, including the public interest in reducing greenhouse gas emissions and 1892complying with the limits and sublimits established pursuant to chapter 21N; and (ii) whether, in 1893the totality of the circumstances, the petitioner can secure adequate substitutes for gas-fired 1894services for space heating, water heating and cooking appliances which, in the case of space 1895heating, may include thermal energy that provides heating or cooling without combustion. The 1896department may, in order to advance the public interest in reducing greenhouse gas emissions 1897and complying with the limits and sublimits established pursuant to said chapter 21N, order 1898actions that may vary the uniformity of the availability of natural gas service. 1899 SECTION 98. Section 139 of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 1900striking out, in line 210, the words “such solar”. 1901 SECTION 99. Said section 139 of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby further 1902amended by inserting after the word “each”, in lines 218 and 221, each time it appears, the 1903following word:- solar. 1904 SECTION 100. Section 141 of said chapter 164, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 1905striking out the last sentence and inserting in place thereof the following sentence:- Where the 1906scale of on-site generation would have an impact on affordability for low-income or eligible 89 of 132 1907moderate-income customers, a fully compensating adjustment shall be made to the low-income 1908or moderate-income rate discount. 1909 SECTION 101. Said chapter 164 is hereby further amended by striking out section 145, 1910as so appearing, and inserting in place thereof the following section:- 1911 Section 145. (a) For the purposes of this section, the following words shall, unless the 1912context clearly requires otherwise, have the following meanings:- 1913 “Customer”, a retail natural gas customer. 1914 “Decommissioning proposal”, a proposal to decommission a portion of existing natural 1915gas infrastructure to be retired or replaced by a non-gas pipe alternative. 1916 “Eligible infrastructure measure”, a retirement, repair or replacement of existing 1917infrastructure of a gas company that: (i) is made on or after January 1, 2015 and not later than 1918December 31, 2028; (ii) seeks in a balanced manner to preserve and improve public safety, 1919improve infrastructure reliability, minimize ratepayer impacts, minimize the risk of stranded 1920assets and reduce greenhouse gas emissions in compliance with the limits and sublimits 1921established in chapter 21N; (iii) does not increase the revenue of a gas company by connecting 1922an improvement for a principal purpose of serving new customers; (iv) is not included in the 1923current rate base of the gas company as determined in the gas company's most recent rate 1924proceeding; (v) may include use of advanced leak repair technology approved by the department 1925to repair an existing leak-prone gas pipe to extend the useful life of the such gas pipe by not less 1926than 10 years; (vi) may include replacing gas infrastructure with utility-scale non-emitting 1927renewable thermal energy infrastructure; (vii) involves circumstances in which a non-gas pipe 1928alternative has been shown to be infeasible or not cost effective; (viii) reduces, or has the 90 of 132 1929potential to reduce, natural gas emissions through a reduction in natural gas system leaks; and 1930(ix) is not inconsistent with the greenhouse gas emissions limits and sublimits established in said 1931chapter 21N. 1932 “Non-emitting renewable thermal energy infrastructure”, utility-scale distribution 1933infrastructure that supplies heating or cooling from energy sources that do not emit greenhouse 1934gas emissions as defined in section 1 of chapter 21N; provided, however, that such infrastructure 1935may include, but shall not be limited to including, infrastructure for networked geothermal and 1936deep geothermal energy. 1937 “Non-gas pipe alternative”, an activity or investment that delays, reduces or avoids the 1938need to build or upgrade combustible gas infrastructure including, but not limited to, 1939electrification or non-emitting renewable thermal energy infrastructure. 1940 “Plan”, a detailed compilation of eligible infrastructure measures and decommissioning 1941proposals that a gas company files pursuant to subsection (b). 1942 “Project”, an eligible infrastructure measure or decommissioning proposal as proposed by 1943a gas company in a plan filed under this section. 1944 (b) A gas company shall file with the department a plan that shall include annual targets 1945for the department's review. The department shall review such annual targets to ensure each gas 1946company is meeting the appropriate pace to preserve and improve public safety, improve 1947infrastructure reliability, minimize the risk of stranded assets and reduce greenhouse gas 1948emissions in compliance with the limits and sublimits established in chapter 21N. A gas 1949company filing a plan shall update the targets each year based on overall progress. The 1950department may levy a penalty against any gas company that fails to meet its most recently 91 of 132 1951updated annual target in an amount up to and including the equivalent of 2.5 per cent of such gas 1952company’s transmission and distribution service revenues for the previous calendar year. 1953 (c) Any plan filed with the department shall include, but not be limited to: (i) capital 1954investment in eligible infrastructure measures and decommissioning proposals concerning mains, 1955services, leak-prone meter sets and other ancillary facilities composed of non-cathodically 1956protected steel, cast iron and wrought iron, prioritized to implement the federal gas distribution 1957pipeline integrity management plan annually submitted to the department and consistent with 1958subpart P of 49 C.F.R. part 192; (ii) an evaluation of the cost to retire, replace or repurpose 1959natural gas infrastructure with non-gas pipe alternatives including, but not limited to, utility-scale 1960non-emitting renewable thermal energy infrastructure; (iii) an anticipated timeline for the 1961completion of each project; (iv) the estimated cost of each project; (v) rate change requests; (vi) a 1962description of customer costs and benefits under the plan, including the costs of potential 1963stranded assets and the benefits of avoiding financial exposure to such assets; (vii) the 1964relocations, where practical, of a meter located inside a structure to the outside of the structure to 1965improve public safety; (viii) a comparison of costs and benefits of proposed eligible 1966infrastructure measures in low and moderate income communities with costs and benefits of such 1967measures in upper income communities; (ix) a comparison of projected greenhouse gas 1968emissions reductions from eligible infrastructure measures with other investment alternatives, 1969including electrification; (x) an analysis of how the proposed plan fits within the company’s 1970climate compliance plan approved by the department; and (xi) any other information the 1971department considers necessary to evaluate the plan. 1972 As part of each plan filed under this section, a gas company shall include a timeline for 1973remedying leak-prone infrastructure to preserve and improve public safety, improve 92 of 132 1974infrastructure reliability, minimize the risk of stranded assets and reduce greenhouse gas 1975emissions, on an accelerated basis specifying an annual remediation pace and an end date of 1976November 1, 2030. After filing the initial plan required under this section, a gas company shall 1977annually provide the department with a summary of its remediation progress to date, a summary 1978of work to be completed during the next 2 years and any similar information the department may 1979require. 1980 (d) If a gas company files a plan on or before October 31 for the subsequent construction 1981year, the department shall review the plan within 6 months. The plan shall be effective as of the 1982date of filing, pending department review. The department may modify a plan prior to approval 1983at the request of a gas company or make other modifications to a plan as a condition of approval. 1984The department shall consider the costs and benefits of the plan, including preserving and 1985improving public safety, minimizing ratepayer impacts, improving infrastructure reliability, 1986minimizing the risk of stranded assets and reducing greenhouse gas emissions in compliance 1987with the greenhouse gas emissions limits and sublimits established in chapter 21N. 1988 (e) If a plan is in compliance with this section and the department determines the plan 1989operates in a balanced manner to reasonably preserve and improve public safety, minimize 1990ratepayer impacts, improve infrastructure reliability, minimize the risk of stranded assets and 1991reduce greenhouse gas emissions in compliance with the limits and sublimits established in 1992chapter 21N, the department shall issue preliminary acceptance of the plan in whole or in part. A 1993gas company shall then be permitted to begin recovery of the estimated costs of projects included 1994in the plan beginning on May 1 of the year following the initial filing and collect any revenue 1995requirement, including depreciation, property taxes and return associated with the plan. 93 of 132 1996 (f) Annually, not later than May 1, a gas company shall file final project documentation 1997for projects completed in the prior year to demonstrate substantial compliance with the plan 1998approved pursuant to subsection (e) and that project costs were reasonably and prudently 1999incurred. The department shall investigate project costs within 6 months of submission and shall 2000approve and reconcile the authorized rate factor, if necessary, upon a determination that the costs 2001were reasonable and prudent. Annual changes in the revenue requirement eligible for recovery 2002shall not exceed the applicable percentages of the gas company’s most recent calendar year total 2003firm revenues, including gas revenues attributable to sales and transportation customers as 2004established in subsection (i). 2005 (g) All rate change requests made to the department pursuant to an approved plan shall be 2006filed annually on a fully reconciling basis, subject to final determination by the department 2007pursuant to subsection (f). The rate change included in a plan pursuant to section (c), reviewed 2008pursuant to subsection (d) and taking effect each May 1 pursuant to subsection (e) shall be 2009subject to investigation by the department pursuant to subsection (f) to determine whether the gas 2010company has overcollected or undercollected its requested rate adjustment with such over 2011collection or under collection reconciled annually. If the department determines that any of the 2012costs were not reasonably or prudently incurred, the department shall disallow the costs and 2013direct the gas company to refund the full value of the costs charged to customers with the 2014appropriate carrying charges on the overcollected amounts. If the department determines that any 2015of the costs were not in compliance with the approved plan, the department shall disallow the 2016costs from the cost recovery mechanism established in this section and shall direct the gas 2017company to refund the full value of the costs charged to customers with the appropriate carrying 2018charges on the overcollected amounts. 94 of 132 2019 (h) Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, pursuant to a 2020decommissioning proposal approved by the department, a gas company may terminate natural 2021gas service to a customer where such proposal ensures that the affected customer retains 2022continuous access to safe, reliable and affordable energy services and can secure adequate 2023substitutes, with consideration of the cost of such substitutes, for gas-fired services as determined 2024by the department. 2025 (i) For the purposes of subsection (f), the applicable percentage of the local gas 2026distribution company’s most recent calendar year total firm revenues, including gas revenues 2027attributable to sales and transportation customers, beginning: 2028 (A) on or after November 1, 2024 and before November 1, 2025 shall be 2.8 per cent; 2029 (B) on or after November 1, 2025 and before November 1, 2026 shall be 2.5 per cent; 2030 (C) on or after November 1, 2026, and before November 1, 2027 shall be 2.0 per cent; 2031 (D) on or after November 1, 2027 and before November 1, 2028 shall be 1.5 per cent; 2032 (E) on or after November 1, 2028 and before November 1, 2029 shall be 1.0 per cent; 2033 (F) on or after November 1, 2029 and before November 1, 2030 shall be 0.5 per cent; and 2034 (G) on or after November 1, 2030 shall be 0 per cent. 2035 (j) The department may promulgate rules and regulations to carry out this section. The 2036department may discontinue a plan and require a gas company to refund any costs charged to 2037customers due to failure to substantially comply with such plan or failure to reasonably and 2038prudently manage project costs. 95 of 132 2039 SECTION 102. Said chapter 164 is hereby further amended by adding the following 2 2040sections:- 2041 Section 149. (a) For the purposes of this section, the following words shall have the 2042following meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise:- 2043 “Director”, the director of public participation established in section 12T of chapter 25. 2044 “Governmental body”, a city, town, district, regional school district, county, agency, 2045board, commission, authority, department or instrumentality of a city, town, district, regional 2046school district or county. 2047 “Grantee”, an organization, entity, governmental body, federally recognized tribe, state 2048acknowledged tribe or state recognized tribe that has received a grant award under this section. 2049 “Prospective grantee”, an organization, entity, governmental body, federally recognized 2050tribe, state acknowledged tribe, or state recognized tribe that has applied or plans to apply for a 2051grant under this section. 2052 (b) The department may make available as grants, funds deposited into the Department of 2053Public Utilities and Energy Facilities Siting Board Intervenor Support Fund established in 2054section 12S of chapter 25 to parties that have been granted intervenor status by the department or 2055the board pursuant to clause (4) of the second sentence of the first paragraph of section 10 of 2056chapter 30A and corresponding department and board regulations and that are: (i) organizations 2057and entities that advocate on behalf of a relevant subset of residential customers defined 2058geographically or based on specific shared interests; (ii) organizations and entities that advocate 2059on behalf of low-income or moderate-income residential populations, residents of historically 96 of 132 2060marginalized or overburdened and underserved communities; or (iii) governmental bodies, 2061federally recognized tribes, state acknowledged tribes or state recognized tribes. 2062 (c) The director, in consultation with the office of environmental justice and equity 2063established in section 29 of chapter 21A, shall establish criteria to determine whether and to what 2064extent a prospective grantee shall be eligible to receive a grant award pursuant to this section. 2065Such criteria shall include, but not be limited to, whether the prospective grantee: (i) lacks the 2066financial resources that would enable it to intervene and participate in a department or board 2067proceeding absent a grant award pursuant to this section; and (ii) previously intervened in 2068department or board proceedings prior to the establishment of the intervenor support grant 2069program pursuant to this section; provided, however, that a municipality with a population of less 2070than 7,500 and that is a prospective grantee for a proceeding pertaining to a facility, large clean 2071energy infrastructure facility or small clean energy infrastructure facility as those terms are 2072defined in section 69G within its boundaries shall not be required to meet the criteria set forth in 2073this paragraph to receive a grant award pursuant to this section. 2074 (d) A prospective grantee seeking funding under this section shall submit a grant 2075application in a form and manner developed by the director demonstrating that it meets the 2076criteria established by the director in accordance with subsection (c). Such grant application shall 2077include: (i) a statement outlining the prospective grantee’s anticipated participation in the 2078department or board proceeding, to the extent it is known at the time of making the grant 2079application; (ii) a detailed estimated budget of anticipated attorney, consultant and expert, 2080including community expert, costs and fees and all other costs related to the preparation for, and 2081intervention and participation in, the proceeding; and (iii) background information on the 2082attorneys, consultants and experts, including community experts, that the prospective applicant 97 of 132 2083plans to retain if awarded grant funding. The director may, at their discretion, make conditional 2084grant awards to grant applicants that have not yet been granted intervenor status by the 2085department or board; provided, however, that no grant may be awarded until such intervenor 2086status is granted. 2087 (e) The director shall, in the director’s sole discretion, determine the amount of financial 2088support to be granted to an applicant under this section, taking into account the demonstrated 2089needs of the intervenor and the complexity of the proceeding. No such grant to be awarded shall 2090exceed $150,000 for a single department or board proceeding; provided, however, that the 2091director may, in the director’s sole discretion: (i) upon the petition of a prospective grantee, 2092award a grant exceeding $150,000 upon a demonstration of good cause, including the complexity 2093of the proceeding in which the grantee is intervening; and (ii) upon the petition of a grantee, 2094provide additional grant funding than initially requested under section (c) upon a showing that 2095new, novel or complex issues have arisen in the proceeding since the time the grant application 2096was submitted. The director shall consider the potential for intervenors to share costs through 2097collaborative efforts with other parties to a proceeding as part of determining the amount of 2098funding awarded to a prospective grantee and such intervenors shall be expected to reduce 2099duplicative costs to the extent possible in instances where the positions of multiple intervenors 2100align. 2101 (f) The aggregate grant funding for any individual department or board proceeding shall 2102not exceed $500,000; provided, however, that where the aggregate amount of funding being 2103requested exceeds $500,000, funding shall be allocated to prospective grantees on the basis of 2104their relative financial hardship. The director may, at the director’s discretion and upon a 98 of 132 2105determination of good cause, provide funding that exceeds $500,000 for an individual 2106department or board proceeding. 2107 (g) Ten per cent of grant funds awarded to a grantee, or a greater percentage as 2108determined by the director at the director’s sole discretion, may be expended on nonlegal, non- 2109expert and non-consultant administrative costs directly attributable to the intervention and 2110participation in a proceeding before the department or board. All remaining grant funds may be 2111expended to retain legal counsel, experts and consultants to assist in proceedings before the 2112department or board; provided, however, that such funds may be used to retain qualified 2113community experts, which shall include residential ratepayers and residents with lived 2114experience that can inform such proceedings. Such funding may be expended for administrative, 2115legal, consultant and expert costs associated with an intervention petition submitted pursuant to 2116clause (4) of the second sentence of the first paragraph section 10 of chapter 30A or pursuant to 2117section 10A of said chapter 30A and any applicable regulations. 2118 (h) All grants sunder this section shall be made from the Department of Public Utilities 2119and Energy Facilities Siting Board Intervenor Support Trust Fund established in chapter 12S of 2120chapter 25. Such grant payments shall be made only for reasonable costs incurred and upon 2121submission of a grant payment request by an applicant therefor. Such grant payment requests 2122shall be in a form and manner as prescribed by the director and grant payments shall be made 2123within 30 days of receipt of such grant payment requests by the director to the grantee or to the 2124entity designated by the grantee to receive grant payments. The director, at the director’s 2125discretion or as provided for in regulations promulgated pursuant to this section, may provide 2126grant payments before such costs are incurred by the grantee upon a showing of financial 2127hardship by the grantee. 99 of 132 2128 (i) All decisions pertaining to the issuance of financial support shall be made solely by 2129the director. The director shall have sole discretion to deny funding to a prospective grantee that 2130demonstrates a pattern of repeatedly delaying or obstructing, or attempting to repeatedly delay or 2131obstruct, proceedings or that otherwise has misused funds. 2132 (j) In the department’s annual report required under section 2 of chapter 25, the director 2133shall include a report describing all activities of the Department of Public Utilities and Energy 2134Facilities Siting Board Intervenor Support Trust Fund established in section 12S of chapter 25 2135including, but not limited to: (i) amounts credited to the fund, amounts expended from the fund 2136and any unexpended balance; (ii) a summary of the intervenor support grant fund application 2137process; (iii) the number of grant applications received, the number and amount of awards 2138granted and the number of grant applications rejected; (iv) the number of intervenors who 2139participated in proceedings, with or without support from the fund; (v) an itemization of costs 2140incurred by and payments made to grantees; (vi) an evaluation of the impact and contribution of 2141grantees in department and board proceedings; (vii) a summary of education and outreach 2142activities conducted by the division of public participation established in section 12T of said 2143chapter 25 related to the intervenor support grant program; and (viii) any recommended changes 2144to the program. 2145 (k) The director shall develop: 2146 (i) accessible, multilingual and easily comprehensible web-based educational materials, 2147including forms and templates, to educate prospective grantees and the public on the intervenor 2148support grant program established in this section; and 100 of 132 2149 (ii) a robust virtual and in-person outreach program to educate prospective grantees and 2150the public about the intervenor support grant program established in this section. 2151 (l) The department, in consultation with the board, shall promulgate regulations to 2152implement this section. 2153 Section 150. (a) As used in this section, the following words shall have the following 2154meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise: 2155 “Advanced conductors”, any hardware technology that can conduct electricity across 2156transmission and distribution lines and demonstrate enhanced performance over traditional 2157conductor products. 2158 “Advanced power flow control”, any hardware and software technologies used to push or 2159pull electric power in a manner that balances overloaded lines and underutilized corridors within 2160the distribution or transmission system. 2161 “Advanced reconductoring”, the application of advanced conductors to increase the 2162capacity and efficiency of the existing electric grid. 2163 “Dynamic line rating”, any hardware or software technology used to appropriately update 2164the calculated thermal limits of existing distribution or transmission lines based on real-time and 2165forecasted weather conditions. 2166 “Grid enhancing technology”, any hardware or software technology that enables 2167enhanced or more efficient performance from the electric distribution or transmission system 2168including, but not limited to, dynamic line rating, advanced power flow control technology, 2169topology optimization and energy storage when used as a distribution or transmission resource. 101 of 132 2170 “Topology optimization”, any hardware or software technology that identifies 2171reconfigurations of the distribution or transmission grid and can enable the routing of power 2172flows around congested or overloaded distribution or transmission elements. 2173 (b) To the extent authorized by federal law, for base rate proceedings and other 2174proceedings in which a distribution or transmission company proposes capital improvements or 2175additions to the distribution or transmission system, such distribution or transmission company 2176shall conduct a cost-effectiveness and timetable analysis of multiple strategies including, but not 2177limited to, the deployment of grid enhancing technology, advanced conductors or energy storage 2178used as a distribution or transmission resource. Where grid enhancing technology, advanced 2179conductors or energy storage used as a distribution or transmission resource, whether in 2180combination with or instead of capital investments, offer a more cost-effective strategy to 2181achieve distribution or transmission goals including, but not limited to, distributed energy 2182resource interconnection, grid reliability and enhanced cyber and physical security, the 2183department may approve the deployment of grid enhancing technology, advanced conductors or 2184energy storage used as a distribution or transmission resource as part of the overall solutions 2185strategy. 2186 (c) As part of a base rate filing or other filing in which capital improvements or additions 2187to the distribution or transmission system are proposed, the distribution or transmission company 2188may propose a performance incentive mechanism that provides a financial incentive for the cost- 2189effective deployment of grid enhancing technologies, advanced reconductoring or energy storage 2190used as a distribution or transmission resource. 2191 (d) The department may promulgate regulations to implement subsections (b) and (c). 102 of 132 2192 (e) At least every 5 years, each distribution company and, to the extent authorized by 2193federal law, each transmission company shall make a compliance filing with the department and 2194provide a separate report to the joint committee on telecommunications, utilities and energy not 2195later than September 1 on the deployment of grid enhancing technology, advanced conductors or 2196energy storage used as a distribution or transmission resource in a format determined by the 2197department. 2198 SECTION 103. Chapter 166 of the General Laws is amended by striking out section 28, 2199as appearing in the 2022 Official Edition, and inserting in place thereof the following section:- 2200 Section 28. A company subject to this chapter, except a telegraph or telephone company, 2201desiring to construct a line for the transmission of electricity that will of necessity pass through at 2202least 1 city or town to connect the proposed termini of such line, whose petition for the location 2203necessary for such line has been refused or has not been granted within 3 months after the filing 2204thereof by the city council or the select board of the town through which the company intends to 2205construct such line, may apply to the energy facilities siting board for such location. The energy 2206facilities siting board shall hold a public hearing thereon after notice to the city council or select 2207board refusing or neglecting to grant such location and to all persons owning real estate abutting 2208upon any way in the city or town where such location is sought, as such ownership is determined 2209by the last assessment for taxation. The energy facilities siting board shall, if requested by the 2210city council or select board, hold the hearing in the city or town where the location is sought. If it 2211appears at the hearing that the company has already been granted and has accepted a location for 2212such line in 2 cities or in 2 towns or in a city and town adjoining the city or town refusing or 2213neglecting to grant a location or, if it appears at the hearing that the company has already been 2214granted and has accepted locations for such line in a majority of the municipalities through 103 of 132 2215which such line will pass and if the energy facilities siting board deems the location necessary 2216for public convenience and in the public interest, the board may issue an order granting a 2217location for such line in the city or town with respect to which the application has been made and 2218shall have and exercise the powers and authority conferred by section 22 upon the city council or 2219select board and, in addition to any laws governing such company, may impose any other terms, 2220limitations and restrictions as public interest may require. The energy facilities siting board shall 2221cause an attested copy of its order, with the certificate of its clerk endorsed thereon that the order 2222was adopted after due notice and a public hearing, to be forwarded to the city or town clerk who 2223shall record the same and furnish at the tested copies thereof. The company in whose favor the 2224order is made shall pay for the record and attested copies in the amount provided therefor in 2225clauses (31) and (32) of section 34 of chapter 262. 2226 SECTION 104. Section 6 of chapter 183A of the General Laws, as so appearing, is 2227hereby amended by striking out, in lines 37 to 42, inclusive, the words “any energy conservation 2228device installed in a unit, not already separately metered for water and utilities, including but not 2229limited to the installation of separate water meters, low-flow toilets and showerheads, faucet 2230aerators, windows and storm windows; provided, however, that a unit owner required to install 2231such energy conservation” and inserting in place thereof the following words:- a device installed 2232pursuant to an action taken by a corporation, trust or association pursuant to section 10; 2233provided, however, that a unit owner required to install such. 2234 SECTION 105. Subsection (b) of section 10 of chapter 183A of the General Laws, as so 2235appearing, is hereby amended by striking out clause (6) and inserting in place thereof the 2236following clause:- 104 of 132 2237 (6) to require reasonable measures to facilitate energy savings, energy efficiency and 2238greenhouse gas emissions reductions and, in furtherance of such measures, to cause the 2239installation of devices that result in energy savings, energy efficiency and greenhouse gas 2240emissions reductions in all units not already separately metered for water and utilities; provided, 2241however, that such measures and devices shall not include solar energy systems, the installation 2242of which shall be governed by section 18; provided further, that electric vehicle supply 2243equipment as defined in section 2 of chapter 25B shall only be required in the common areas 2244and facilities in the condominium; provided further, that such devices may include, but shall not 2245be limited to including, separate meters for each unit to monitor the use of water, electricity and 2246other utilities for the unit to which it is attached, low-flow toilets and showerheads, faucet 2247aerators, windows and storm windows; provided further, that such devices and, in the case of 2248electric vehicle supply equipment installed in common areas and facilities, such supply 2249equipment shall not be considered improvements for the purposes of said section 18 if the board 2250of trustees of the organization of unit owners or, if there is no board of trustees, the entity 2251performing its duties, receives the approval of the majority of unit owners in attendance at a 2252meeting for which notice was duly given and which was held for the purpose of voting on the 2253installation of such devices and supply equipment; provided further, that the cost of installation 2254of such devices and, in the case of supply equipment installed in common areas and facilities, of 2255such supply equipment shall be an expense of the organization of unit owners, which may be 2256assessed to the individual unit owners as a special assessment, the amount of which, if such 2257device was installed in each individual unit or in substantially all of the units in the 2258condominium, may be attributable to each unit owner in the amount of the cost of the item 2259installed. The organization of unit owners may assess to each unit owner their proportionate 105 of 132 2260share of the costs for water, electricity and other utilities as measured by the meter attached to 2261the unit. In the event of a conflict between this clause and the master deed, trust or by-laws of a 2262condominium under of this chapter, this clause shall control; provided further, that nothing 2263herein shall be construed to conflict with the state sanitary code, the state building code, the 2264stretch energy code or any municipal opt-in specialized energy code; provided further, that 2265notwithstanding any rights to use common areas reserved for individual unit owners, if the 2266governing board of the organization of unit owners determines to install electric vehicle supply 2267equipment in a common area for the use of all members of the organization, the organization 2268shall develop appropriate terms of use of the supply equipment; and provided further, that the 2269expenses incurred in and proceeds accruing from the exercise of the rights and powers under this 2270clause shall be common expenses and common profits. 2271 SECTION 106. Said chapter 183A is hereby further amended by inserting after section 227210 the following section:- 2273 Section 10A. (a) As used in this section, the following words shall have the following 2274meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise: 2275 “Association”, a condominium association, homeowners’ association, community 2276association, cooperative, trust or other nongovernmental entity with covenants, by-laws and 2277administrative provisions with which the compliance of a homeowner or unit owner is required. 2278 “Dedicated parking space”, a parking space located within an owner’s separate interest or 2279a parking space in a common area but subject to exclusive use rights of an owner including, but 2280not limited to, a deeded parking space, a garage space, a carport or a parking space specifically 2281designated for use by a particular owner. 106 of 132 2282 “Historic district commission”, a commission or other body responsible for administering 2283the rules and regulations of an historic district established by a community pursuant to any 2284general or special law. 2285 “Municipal governing body”, the legislative body of a city or town. 2286 “Neighborhood conservation district”, a district established by a municipal governing 2287body as part of the local zoning code or by-laws for the express purpose of protecting the 2288architectural character of a neighborhood. 2289 “Owner”, a person or group of persons who owns a separate lot, unit or interest, along 2290with an undivided interest or membership interest in the common area of the entire project 2291including, but not limited to, a condominium, planned unit development and parcel subject to a 2292homeowners’ association. 2293 “Reasonable restrictions”, restrictions that do not significantly: (i) increase the cost of 2294electric vehicle supply equipment as defined in section 2 of chapter 25B or the installation 2295thereof; or (ii) significantly decrease its efficiency or specified performance or effectively 2296prohibit the installation. 2297 “Separate interest”, a separate lot, unit or interest to which an owner has exclusive rights 2298of ownership. 2299 (b) Notwithstanding chapters 21, 40C, 183A or any other general or special law to the 2300contrary, a historic district commission, commission or board of a neighborhood conservation 2301district or manager or organization of unit owners of an association shall not prohibit or 2302unreasonably restrict an owner from installing electric vehicle supply equipment, as defined in 107 of 132 2303section 2 of chapter 25B, on or in an area subject to the owner’s separate interest on or in an area 2304to which the owner has exclusive use or on or in a common element as long as the common 2305element is within a reasonable distance of the owner’s dedicated parking space. Nothing in this 2306section shall prohibit a historic district commission, a commission or board of a neighborhood 2307conservation district or a manager or organization of unit owners of an association from setting 2308reasonable restrictions; provided, however, that in setting such restrictions, the commission, 2309board, manager or organization shall give substantial weight to threats posed by climate change 2310and the commonwealth’s obligation to meet the statewide greenhouse gas emission limits and 2311sublimits established under chapter 21N. 2312 (c) Electric vehicle supply equipment shall: (i) be installed at the owner’s expense; (ii) be 2313installed by a licensed contractor or electrician; and (iii) conform to all applicable health and 2314safety standards and requirements imposed by national, state and local authorities and all other 2315applicable zoning, land use or other ordinances and land use permits. 2316 (d) A historic district commission, a commission or board of a neighborhood 2317conservation district or a manager or organization of unit owners of an association may require 2318an owner to submit an application before installing electric vehicle supply equipment. If the 2319commission, board, manager or organization requires an application, the application shall be 2320processed and approved by the commission, board, manager or organization in the same manner 2321as an application for approval of an architectural modification to the property and such 2322application shall not be willfully avoided or delayed; provided further, that the commission, 2323board, manager or organization shall approve the application if the owner complies with this 2324section and the architectural standards of the association, historic district or neighborhood 2325conservation district The approval or denial of an application shall be in writing and if an 108 of 132 2326application is not denied in writing within 60 days after the date of receipt thereof , the 2327application shall be deemed approved unless the delay is the result of a reasonable request for 2328additional information. The association, historic district or neighborhood conservation district 2329shall not assess or charge the owner any fees for the placement of any electric vehicle supply 2330equipment above any reasonable fees for processing the application if any fees exist for all 2331applications for approval of architectural modifications. 2332 (e) The owner and each successive owner of the separate interest or with exclusive rights 2333to the area where the electric vehicle supply equipment is installed shall be responsible for: (i) 2334disclosing to prospective buyers the existence of such supply equipment, its owner and the 2335related responsibilities of the owner pursuant to this section; (ii) disclosing to prospective buyers 2336whether such supply equipment is removable and whether the owner intends to remove the 2337supply equipment in order to install it elsewhere; (iii) the costs of the maintenance, repair and 2338replacement of such supply equipment until such equipment has been removed and the common 2339area is restored after removal; (iv) the costs of any damage to such supply equipment, common 2340area, exclusive common area or separate interest resulting from the installation, maintenance, 2341repair, removal or replacement of such equipment; (v) the cost of electricity associated with the 2342electric vehicle supply equipment; provided, however, that the owner shall connect such supply 2343equipment to the owner’s own electric utility account unless the licensed contractor performing 2344the installation deems that to be impossible; provided further that if the connection is deemed 2345impossible, the association, historic district commission or neighborhood conservation district 2346shall allow the owner to connect such supply equipment to the common electricity account but 2347may require reimbursement by the owner to the association, historic district commission or 2348neighborhood conservation district for electricity costs; and (vi) removing the electric vehicle 109 of 132 2349supply equipment if reasonably necessary for the repair, maintenance or replacement of any 2350property of the association, historic district commission, neighborhood conservation district or 2351separate interest. 2352 (f) A historic district commission, a commission or board of a neighborhood conservation 2353district or a manager or organization of unit owners of an association may install electric vehicle 2354supply equipment in a common area reserved for the use of all members or residents of the 2355association or district; provided, however, that the commission, board, manager or organization 2356shall develop appropriate terms of use for such supply equipment. 2357 SECTION 107. Section 3A of chapter 185 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2022 2358Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking out, in lines 35 to 37, inclusive, the words 2359“involves either 25 or more dwelling units or the construction or alteration of 25,000 square feet 2360or more of gross floor area or both” and inserting in place thereof the following words:- 2361involves: (i) not less than 25 dwelling units; (ii) the construction or alteration of not less than 236225,000 square feet of gross floor area; (iii) the construction or alteration of a Class I renewable 2363energy generating source as defined in subsection (c) of section 11F of chapter 25A; or (iv) the 2364construction or alteration of an energy storage facility as defined in section 1 of chapter 164. 2365 SECTION 107A. Said section 3A of said chapter 185 is hereby further amended by 2366striking out the words “involves: (i) not less than 25 dwelling units; (ii) the construction or 2367alteration of not less than 25,000 square feet of gross floor area; (iii) the construction or 2368alteration of a Class I renewable energy generating source as defined in subsection (c) of section 236911F of chapter 25A; or (iv) the construction or alteration of an energy storage facility as defined 2370in section 1 of chapter 164”, inserted by section 107, and inserting in place thereof the following 110 of 132 2371words:- involves either 25 or more dwelling units or the construction or alteration of 25,000 2372square feet or more of gross floor area or both. 2373 SECTION 108. The first paragraph of section 2 of chapter 465 of the acts of 1956 is 2374hereby amended by inserting after the first sentence the following sentence:- In discharging its 2375responsibilities and exercising its powers under this chapter, the Authority shall, with respect to 2376itself and the entities with which it contracts or conducts business and in a manner consistent 2377with any act of congress relating to aeronautics or any regulations promulgated or standards 2378established pursuant thereto, promote commerce, economic prosperity, safety and security in and 2379for the commonwealth while prioritizing environmental resilience and equity and reductions in 2380greenhouse gas emissions. 2381 SECTION 109. Section 3 of said chapter 465, as most recently amended by section 2 of 2382chapter 660 of the acts of 1977, is hereby further amended by striking out clause (g) and 2383inserting in place thereof the following clause:- 2384 (g) to extend, enlarge, improve, rehabilitate, lease as lessor or lessee, maintain, repair and 2385operate the projects under its control and to establish rules and regulations for the use of any 2386such project; provided, however, that the Authority shall, with respect to itself and the entities 2387with which it contracts or does business and in a manner consistent with any act of congress 2388relating to aeronautics or to any regulations promulgated or standards established pursuant 2389thereto, undertake such activities and promulgate such rules and regulations to promote 2390commerce, economic prosperity, safety and security in and for the commonwealth while 2391prioritizing environmental resilience and equity and reductions in greenhouse gas emissions; 2392provided further, however, that no such rules or regulations shall conflict with the rules and 111 of 132 2393regulations of any state or federal regulatory body having jurisdiction over the operation of 2394aircraft; provided further, that in the enforcement of such rules and regulations, police officers 2395appointed or employed by the Authority under section 23 shall have within the boundaries of all 2396projects all the powers of police officers and constables of the cities and towns of the 2397commonwealth, except the power of serving and executing civil process. 2398 SECTION 110. Section 2A of chapter 395 of the acts of 1970, as most recently amended 2399by section 1 of chapter 57 of the acts of 2000, is hereby further amended by inserting after the 2400definition of “Razed” the following definition:- 2401 “Solar energy system”, a device or structural design feature, a substantial purpose of 2402which is to provide for the collection, storage and distribution of solar energy for space heating 2403or cooling, electricity generation or water heating. 2404 SECTION 111. Subsection (b) of section 9 of said chapter 395, as amended by section 2 2405of said chapter 57, is hereby further amended by adding the following sentence:- The 2406commission shall give substantial weight to the threat posed by climate change and to the 2407commonwealth’s obligation to meet statewide greenhouse gas emission limits and sublimits 2408established under chapter 21N of the General Laws when ruling on applications for certificates 2409of appropriateness for solar energy systems 2410 SECTION 112. Section 3 of chapter 470 of the acts of 1973 is hereby amended by 2411inserting after the definition of “Public place”, inserted by section 3 of chapter 845 of the acts of 24121975, the following definition:- 112 of 132 2413 “Solar energy system”, a device or structural design feature, a substantial purpose of 2414which is to provide for the collection, storage and distribution of solar energy for space heating 2415or cooling, electricity generation or water heating. 2416 SECTION 113. Clause (a) of the first paragraph of section 10 of said chapter 470 is 2417hereby amended by adding the following words:- ; provided, however, that the commission shall 2418give substantial weight to the threat posed by climate change and to the commonwealth’s 2419obligation to meet statewide greenhouse gas emission limits and sublimits established under 2420chapter 21N of the General Laws when ruling on applications for certificates of appropriateness 2421for solar energy systems. 2422 SECTION 114. Chapter 149 of the acts of 2014 is hereby amended by striking out section 24233. 2424 SECTION 115. Chapter 8 of the acts of 2021 is hereby amended by striking out section 242534 and 112. 2426 SECTION 116. Subsection (a) of section 81 of chapter 179 of the acts of 2022 is hereby 2427amended by striking out the figure “11”. 2428 SECTION 117. Said subsection (a) of said section 81 of said chapter 179 is hereby 2429further amended by inserting after the words “utilities or designee” the following words:- ; the 2430commissioner of standards or a designee; the chief executive officer of the Massachusetts clean 2431energy technology center or a designee; the executive director of the Cape Cod commission or a 2432designee. 113 of 132 2433 SECTION 118. The second paragraph of said subsection (a) of said section 81 of said 2434chapter 179 is hereby amended by striking out the words “and ( ix)” and inserting in place 2435thereof the following words:- (ix) estimates of the number of zero-emission medium- and heavy- 2436duty vehicle charging stations required to meet the commonwealth’s emissions limits and 2437sublimits pursuant to said chapter 21N; (x) a discussion of costs, permitting processes and 2438estimated timelines for installing charging stations for medium- and heavy-duty vehicles; and 2439(xi). 2440 SECTION 119. Said section 81 of said chapter 179 is hereby further amended by adding 2441the following subsection:- 2442 (f) The council shall be responsible for providing leadership and direction for the 2443deployment of electric vehicle charging infrastructure and electric vehicle chargers and shall 2444strive to ensure a network of convenient, affordable, reliable and equitable electric vehicle 2445chargers in the commonwealth. Responsibilities of the council shall include, but not be limited 2446to: (i) achieving the objectives and serving the purposes enumerated in this section; (ii) 2447monitoring the preparedness, staffing level, staff training and overall effectiveness of public and 2448private initiatives, activities, programs, agencies, offices and divisions involved in siting, 2449permitting, financing, installing, inspecting, maintaining or protecting consumer interactions 2450with electric vehicle chargers in the commonwealth; (iii) facilitating intergovernmental 2451coordination and effectiveness with respect to achieving the objectives and serving the purposes 2452enumerated in this section; (iv) achieving timely compliance with, and implementation and 2453administration of, standards, requirements and regulations promulgated by the National Electric 2454Vehicle Infrastructure Formula Program established pursuant to the Infrastructure Investment 114 of 132 2455and Jobs Act, Public Law 117-58; and (v) ensuring wayfinding signage on highways and on 2456streets adjacent to charging locations with information on such locations . 2457 Not later than July 31, 2025 or as part of the next periodic assessment compiled pursuant 2458to subsection (d), whichever occurs later, and every 2 years thereafter, the council shall report on 2459its efforts to lead and direct such deployment and its results to the senate and house committees 2460on ways and means and the joint committee on telecommunications, utilities and energy. The 2461council shall make such reports publicly available on the website of each secretariat with a 2462member serving on the council. 2463 SECTION 120. Said chapter 179 is hereby further amended by striking out section 82 2464and inserting in place thereof the following section:- 2465 Section 82. The department of energy resources may coordinate with 1 or more New 2466England states to consider competitive solicitations for long-term clean energy generation, 2467associated environmental attributes, transmission or capacity for the benefit of residents of the 2468commonwealth and the region. If the department of energy resources determines not later than 2469December 31, 2025 that a project would satisfy all of the benefits listed below, the electric 2470distribution companies shall enter into cost-effective long-term contracts. In its determination, 2471the department of energy resources shall determine if any proposals: (i) provide cost-effective 2472clean energy generation to electric ratepayers in the commonwealth and the region over the term 2473of the contract; (ii) provide the benefits of clean energy and associated transmission towards 2474meeting the commonwealth’s decarbonization goals; (iii) where possible, avoid, minimize or 2475mitigate, to the maximum extent practicable, environmental impacts and impacts to low-income 2476populations; and (iv) reduce ratepayer costs in winter months and improve energy security 115 of 132 2477during winter months. For the purposes of this section, a long-term contract shall mean a contract 2478with a term of 10 to 20 years. Eligible clean energy generation must contribute to achieving 2479compliance with limits and sublimits established pursuant to sections 3 and 3A of chapter 21N of 2480the General Laws. Associated transmission costs must be incorporated into a proposal. All 2481proposed contracts shall be subject to the review and approval of the department of public 2482utilities. The department of public utilities shall consider both potential costs and benefits of such 2483contracts and shall approve a contract only upon a finding that it is cost-effective, taking into 2484account the factors provided in this section. 2485 SECTION 121. Subsection (c) of section 84 of said chapter 179 is hereby amended by 2486striking out, the first, second and seventh time it appears, the figure “10” and inserting in place 2487thereof, in each instance, the following figure:- 11. 2488 SECTION 122. Said subsection (c) of said section 84 of said chapter 179 is hereby 2489further amended by inserting after the word “court”, the third time it appears, the following 2490words:- ; provided further, that such substitute applications shall have been submitted not later 2491than November 10, 2023. 2492 SECTION 123. The Massachusetts clean energy technology center shall conduct and 2493publish a study of prospects and opportunities for carbon dioxide removal innovation and 2494operations within the commonwealth or in waters not more than 50 nautical miles of the 2495commonwealth. Methods of carbon dioxide removal shall include, but not be limited to: (i) 2496sequestration and storage involving terrestrial mineralization or enhanced rock weathering; (ii) 2497sequestration and storage involving biochar, woody waste, agricultural waste or other waste 2498products; (iii) ocean-based solutions including electro-chemical alkalinity enhancement, marine 116 of 132 2499permaculture, deep-ocean sequestration and storage of biomass and coastal enhanced 2500weathering; (iv) construction materials and products, the production of which directly contributes 2501to the sequestration and storage of carbon dioxide or other greenhouse gases, including mass 2502timber; and (v) direct air capture paired with either durable geologic sequestration and storage or 2503durable sequestration and storage in the built environment including in concrete. 2504 The study shall include, but not be limited to: (i) cost considerations, including ranges of 2505likely prices per ton of carbon dioxide removed; (ii) the scale potential of various potential 2506carbon dioxide removal processes; (iii) the likely duration of various potential carbon dioxide 2507removal operations; (iv) projected start times of various activities and operations; (v) the 2508conservation efficiency of various activities and operations in terms of their use of water, land 2509and energy resources with explicit consideration of projects with low water, land and energy 2510requirements and of projects that exclusively employ renewable energy; (vi) the number of 2511potential jobs within the commonwealth, including research and development jobs, that are likely 2512to be created by various activities and operations; (vii) the potential of various activities and 2513operations to involve purchases of equipment and supplies from businesses located in the 2514commonwealth; (viii) the potential of various activities and operations to generate significant 2515agricultural, ecological or ecosystem co-benefits, harms or effects of ocean acidification on the 2516marine environment, habitats and species, including shellfish, lobsters and other commercially- 2517important fisheries in the waters of the commonwealth; (ix) the extent to which various activities 2518and operations may generate economic benefit to 1 or more disadvantaged communities; (x) 2519methods of measuring, reporting and verifying carbon dioxide removal technologies; and (xi) 2520recommended next steps, if any, for legislative or executive branch action. 117 of 132 2521 The center shall publish a draft study for comment not later than December 31, 2025 and 2522a final study not later than April 30, 2026. 2523 SECTION 124. Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary and subject to 2524availability of sufficient proceeds, the department of energy resources shall expend amounts 2525from the RGGI Auction Trust Fund established in section 35II of chapter 10 of the General Laws 2526to fund the green communities program established in section 10 of chapter 25A of the General 2527Laws and the Electric Vehicle Adoption Incentive Trust Fund established in section 19 of said 2528chapter 25A through June 30, 2027. Payments made from the fund shall be prioritized by 2529directing initial payments to the green communities program and the Electric Vehicle Adoption 2530Incentive Trust Fund; provided, however, that not less than $27,000,000 shall be available for the 2531Electric Vehicle Adoption Incentive Trust Fund each fiscal year. 2532 SECTION 125. Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, an energy 2533storage system, as defined in section 1 of chapter 164 of the General Laws, that is not less than 2534100 megawatt hours and has received a comprehensive exemption from local zoning by-laws 2535from the department of public utilities pursuant to section 3 of chapter 40A of the General Laws, 2536may petition the energy facilities siting board to obtain a certificate of environmental impact and 2537public interest if the petition is filed prior to the date when regulations are promulgated pursuant 2538to section 130. 2539 The energy facilities siting board shall consider such petition if the applicant is prevented 2540from building the energy storage system because: (i) it cannot meet standards imposed by a state 2541or local agency with reasonable and commercially available equipment;(ii)the processing or 2542granting by a state or local agency of any approval, consent, permit or certificate has been unduly 118 of 132 2543delayed for any reason; (iii) the applicant believes there are inconsistencies among resource use 2544permits issued by such state or local agencies; (iv) the applicant believes that a nonregulatory 2545issue or condition has been raised or imposed by such state or local agencies, including, but not 2546limited to, aesthetics and recreation; (v) the generating facility cannot be constructed due to any 2547disapprovals, conditions or denials by a state or local agency or body, except with respect to any 2548lands or interests therein, excluding public ways, owned or managed by any state agency or local 2549government; or (vi) the facility cannot be constructed because of delays caused by the appeal of 2550any approval, consent, permit, or certificate. 2551 The energy facilities siting board shall, upon petition, consider an application for a 2552certificate of environmental impact and public interest if it finds that any state or local agency 2553has imposed a burdensome condition or limitation on any license or permit. An energy storage 2554system, with respect to which a certificate is issued by the energy facilities siting board, shall 2555thereafter be constructed, maintained and operated in conformity with such certificate and any 2556terms and conditions contained therein. 2557 Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, such certificate may be so 2558issued; provided, however, that when so issued no state agency or local government shall require 2559any approval, consent, permit, certificate or condition for the construction, operation or 2560maintenance of the energy storage system with respect to which the certificate is issued and no 2561state agency or local government shall impose or enforce any law, ordinance, by-law, rule or 2562regulation nor take any action nor fail to take any action which would delay or prevent the 2563construction, operation or maintenance of such energy storage system except as required by 2564federal law; provided, however, that the energy facilities siting board shall not issue a certificate, 2565the effect of which would be to grant or modify a permit, approval or authorization, which, if so 119 of 132 2566granted or modified by the appropriate state or local agency, would be invalid because of a 2567conflict with applicable federal water or air standards or requirements. A certificate, if issued, 2568shall be in the form of a composite of all individual permits, approvals or authorizations that 2569would otherwise be necessary for the construction and operation of the energy storage system 2570and that portion of the certificate which relates to subject matters within the jurisdiction of a state 2571or local agency shall be enforced by said agency under the other applicable laws of the 2572commonwealth as if it had been directly granted by the said agency. 2573 Energy storage systems that have not petitioned the department of public utilities for a 2574comprehensive exemption from local zoning by-laws pursuant to section 3 of chapter 40A prior 2575to March 1, 2026 shall not be eligible to petition the energy facilities siting board to obtain a 2576certificate of environmental impact and public interest under this section. 2577 SECTION 126. (a) For purposes of this section, the following words shall have the 2578following meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise: 2579 "Approval", except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), any permit, certificate, order, 2580excluding enforcement orders, license, certification, determination, exemption, variance, waiver, 2581building permit or other approval or determination of rights from any municipal, regional or state 2582governmental entity, including any agency, department, commission or other instrumentality of 2583the municipal, regional or state governmental entity, concerning the use or development of real 2584property, including certificates, licenses, certifications, determinations, exemptions, variances, 2585waivers, building permits or other approvals or determination of rights issued or made under 2586chapter 21, chapter 21A excepting section 16, chapter 21D, sections 61 to 62H, inclusive, of 2587chapter 30, chapters 30A, 40, 40A to 40C, inclusive, 40R, 41, 43D, section 21 of chapter 81, 120 of 132 2588chapter 91, chapter 131, chapter 131A, chapter 143, sections 4 and 5 of chapter 249 or chapter 2589258 of the General Laws or chapter 665 of the acts of 1956 or any local by-law or ordinance. 2590 "Clean energy infrastructure project", a project involving the construction, reconstruction, 2591conversion, relocation or enlargement of any renewable energy generating source, as defined in 2592subsection (c) of section 11F of chapter 25A of the General Laws, any energy storage system, as 2593defined in section 1 of chapter 164 of the General Laws, any transmission facility or distribution 2594facility, as defined in said section 1 of said chapter 164, or related infrastructure, including 2595substations, and any other project that may be so designated as a clean energy infrastructure 2596project by the department of energy resources. 2597 (b) (1) Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, any approval granted 2598for a clean energy generation or storage project that was in effect from October 22, 2020 to 2599August 1, 2024, inclusive, shall be extended to August 1, 2029. 2600 (2) A clean energy infrastructure project shall be governed by the applicable provisions 2601of any state, regional or local statute, regulation, ordinance or by-law, if any, in effect at the time 2602of the initial approval granted for such project, unless the owner or petitioner of such project 2603elects to waive the provisions of this section. 2604 (3) Nothing in this section shall extend or purport to extend: (i) a permit or approval 2605issued by the government of the United States or an agency or instrumentality of the government 2606of the United States or to a permit or approval of which the duration of effect or the date or terms 2607of its expiration are specified or determined by or under law or regulation of the federal 2608government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities; or (ii) a permit, license, privilege or 121 of 132 2609approval issued by the division of fisheries and wildlife under chapter 131 of the General Laws 2610for hunting, fishing or aquaculture. 2611 (4) If an owner or petitioner sells or otherwise transfers a property or project, in order to 2612receive approval for an extension, the new owner or petitioner shall agree to assume all 2613commitments made by the original owner or petitioner under the terms of the approval, 2614otherwise the approval shall not be extended under this section. 2615 SECTION 127. The office of environmental justice and equity established pursuant to 2616section 29 of chapter 21A of the General Laws shall establish standards and guidelines for 2617community benefit plans and agreements as required by said section 29 of said chapter 21A not 2618later than March 1, 2026 and shall establish the cumulative impacts analysis guidance required 2619under said section 29 of said chapter 21A before the energy facilities siting board regulations 2620required by section 130 are promulgated. 2621 SECTION 128. The executive office of energy and environmental affairs shall coordinate 2622and convene a stakeholder process with the agencies and offices under its jurisdiction and any 2623other relevant local, regional and state agencies with a permitting role in energy related 2624infrastructure to establish the methodology for determining the suitability of sites and associated 2625guidance required by section 30 of chapter 21A of the General Laws not later than March 1, 26262026. 2627 SECTION 129. The department of energy resources shall promulgate regulations to 2628implement section 22 of chapter 25A of the General Laws not later than March 1, 2026. 2629 SECTION 130. The energy facilities siting board shall promulgate regulations to 2630implement the changes to sections 69G to 69J1/4, inclusive, sections 69O and 69P, sections 69R 122 of 132 2631and 69S and sections 69T to 69W, inclusive, of chapter 164 of the General Laws not later than 2632March 1, 2026. In promulgating said regulations, the board shall consult with the department of 2633public utilities, the department of energy resources, the department of environmental protection, 2634the department of fish and game, the department of conservation and recreation, the department 2635of agricultural resources, the Massachusetts environmental policy act office, the Massachusetts 2636Department of Transportation, the executive office of public safety and security and all other 2637agencies, authorities and departments whose approval, order, order of conditions, permit, license, 2638certificate or permission in any form is required prior to or for construction of a facility, small 2639clean energy infrastructure facility or large clean energy infrastructure facility. 2640 SECTION 131. The department of public utilities and the energy facilities siting board, in 2641consultation with the office of environmental justice and equity established by section 29 of 2642chapter 21A of the General Laws and the office of the attorney general, shall promulgate 2643regulations to implement section 149 of chapter 164 of the General Laws not later than March 1, 26442026. 2645 SECTION 132. The department of public utilities shall commission a management study 2646to assess: (i) the likely workload of the energy facilities siting board based on the new 2647requirements of this act and the commonwealth’s clean energy and climate plans; (ii) the 2648workforce qualifications needed to implement this act; (iii) the cost associated with the hiring 2649and retention of qualified professionals and consultants to successfully complete that work 2650required pursuant to this act; and (iv) the design, population and maintenance of a real-time, 2651online clean energy infrastructure dashboard, as required to be maintained by the facility siting 2652division pursuant to section 12N of chapter 25 of the General Laws. The funding and staffing 2653resource requirements identified in the management study shall be reported to the joint 123 of 132 2654committee on ways and means, the joint committee on telecommunications, utilities and energy, 2655the secretary of energy and environmental affairs and the secretary of administration and finance 2656not later than December 1, 2024. The secretary of energy and environmental affairs and the 2657secretary of administration and finance shall within 60 days of their receipt of the study provide 2658recommendations to the joint committee on ways and means and the joint committee on 2659telecommunications, utilities and energy on options to implement any proposed 2660recommendations of the study. 2661 SECTION 133. The department of energy resources shall convene a stakeholder working 2662group to develop recommendations for regulatory and legislative changes that may be necessary 2663to encourage the construction and operation of solar power generating canopies. The 2664recommendations shall be designed to contribute to the state’s greenhouse gas emission limits 2665and sublimits established pursuant to chapter 21N of the General Laws and facilitate the 2666development and deployment of solar canopies in a cost-effective manner. The working group 2667shall be convened not later than September 30, 2024. The working group shall consist of the 2668commissioner of energy resources or a designee, who shall serve as chair, and the following 2669members to be appointed by the secretary of energy and environmental affairs: a representative 2670of the commercial real estate sector; a representative of the residential real estate sector; a 2671representative of the organized labor industry; a representative of the solar energy industry; a 2672representative of an environmental group concerned with energy; a representative of the 2673construction industry; a representative of an electric utility or organization representing electric 2674utilities; a representative of local government; a person with expertise in energy siting; and a 2675person with expertise in solar energy and energy efficiency. The working group shall submit its 2676report to the joint committee on telecommunications, utilities and energy, the senate and house 124 of 132 2677committees on global warming and climate change and the clerks of the senate and house of 2678representatives not later than December 31, 2024. 2679 SECTION 134. Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, the 2680department of public utilities, in consultation with the department of energy resources, shall 2681amend any applicable rules, regulations and tariffs to permit the transfer of credits from an 2682alternative on-bill credit generation unit, as defined by regulations of the department of energy 2683resources, to customers of any electric distribution company located in the commonwealth. 2684 SECTION 135. The office of coastal zone management, in consultation with the 2685department of fish and game, shall study the process and efficacy of storing carbon in coastal and 2686marine ecosystems including, but not limited to, wetlands, salt marshes, seagrasses and 2687waterways. The office shall submit the results of the study to the secretary of energy and 2688environmental affairs and the clerks of the senate and house of representatives not later than 2689January 1, 2028. 2690 SECTION 136. Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, the executive 2691office of housing and livable communities, in consultation with the department of public health, 2692shall study whether to apply for funding to include cooling assistance in the application to the 2693United States Department of Health and Human Services for the Low Income Home Energy 2694Assistance Program. The study shall include, but not be limited to: (i) the number of households 2695that could qualify for cooling assistance, including the number of qualifying households that 2696reside in heat islands; (ii) the potential health impacts of offering cooling assistance including, 2697but not limited to, the impact on the rate of heat-related illness and the effect on individuals 2698suffering from chronic illnesses; and (iii) whether offering cooling assistance would impact the 125 of 132 2699ability of the commonwealth to offer heating assistance. The secretary of housing and livable 2700communities shall report the findings of this study and a recommendation for any actions taken 2701pursuant to this section to the clerks of the senate and house of representatives, the senate and 2702house committees on ways and means, the joint committee on telecommunications, utilities and 2703energy and the joint committee on housing not later than January 1, 2025. 2704 SECTION 137. The secretary of energy and environmental affairs shall review existing 2705flood risk mapping resources and assess the need for and feasibility of creating additional flood 2706risk mapping resources to identify areas vulnerable to current and future flooding across the 2707commonwealth. 2708 The secretary shall develop recommendations, including any legislation or funding 2709necessary, to support any additional required flood risk mapping resources and shall its submit 2710recommendations to the joint committee on environment and natural resources, the climate chief, 2711the house and senate committees on ways and means and the clerks of the senate and house of 2712representatives not later than December 31, 2024. The recommendations shall also be made 2713available to the public on the website of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs. 2714 SECTION 138. (a) The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority shall develop and 2715implement short-term, medium-term and long-term plans for each line of the commuter rail 2716system ensuring that the line is fully integrated into the commonwealth’s transportation system 2717and designed to make the system more productive, equitable and decarbonized. Each plan shall 2718maximize the ridership returns on investment and shall be designed to meet statewide 2719greenhouse gas emissions limits and sublimits established in chapter 21N of the General Laws. 126 of 132 2720 (b)(1) The authority shall include in the short-term plan immediate action items to run 2721fully decarbonized service along the Providence/Stoughton commuter rail line, the Fairmont 2722commuter rail line and the segment of the Newburyport commuter rail line and the Rockport 2723commuter rail line that extends from the city of Boston to the city of Beverly. The plan shall 2724include, but not be limited to: (i) a detailed critical path schedule for each phase; (ii) cash flow 2725needs organized by fiscal year through completion of each phase; (iii) a regional strategy to 2726receive all necessary environmental approvals and permits; (iv) identification of needs from 2727utilities to achieve adequate and redundant power to update the system; (v) a platform strategy 2728that would enable the utilization of fully automated doors; (vi)target completion dates; (vii) a 2729conceptual work plan; and (viii) a schedule outlining the work to be pursued in 2025 and 2026. 2730 (2) The authority shall include in its medium-term and long-term plans a comprehensive 2731and specific plan to electrify the remainder of the commuter rail fleet for all commuter rail lines 2732not later than December 31, 2029 as necessary to maximize the ridership returns on investment 2733and meet statewide greenhouse gas emissions limits and sublimits established in chapter 21N of 2734the General Laws. The plan shall include, but not be limited to, necessary updates to layover and 2735maintenance facilities, necessary infrastructure upgrades and a schedule for fleet design, testing, 2736procurement and deployment. The plan shall also include a detailed approach to platform heights 2737that would enable the deployment of fully automated doors. 2738 (c) The authority shall publish and receive public comment on its short-term plan under 2739paragraph (1) of subsection (b) not later than November 1, 2024 or 180 days after the effective 2740date of this act, whichever is later. The authority shall publish and receive public comment on its 2741medium-term and long-term plans under paragraph (2) of said subsection (b) not later than 2742December 31, 2025 or 180 days after the effective date of this act, whichever is later. 127 of 132 2743 SECTION 139. Orders restricting coastal wetlands recorded pursuant to section 105 of 2744chapter 130 of the General Laws prior to July 1, 2024, and orders restricting inland wetlands 2745recorded pursuant to section 40A of chapter 131 of the General Laws prior to July 1, 2024, shall 2746permit or allow ecological restoration projects as defined in 310 CMR 10.04; provided, however, 2747that such ecological restoration project is permitted by the department of environmental 2748protection or local issuing authority pursuant to section 40 of said chapter 131 and applicable 2749regulations. 2750 SECTION 140. There shall be a special commission to study the impacts on the fossil 2751fuel workforce caused by public and private efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and 2752transition from fossil fuels to clean energy. The commission shall seek to measure and monitor 2753the impact on fossil fuel workers and industries and examine ways to increase access to 2754employment, training and workforce opportunities in clean energy industries and related fields. 2755 The commission shall consist of: the secretary of labor and workforce development or a 2756designee, who shall serve as co-chair; the commissioner of energy resources or a designee, who 2757shall serve as co-chair; the secretary of economic development or a designee; the director of 2758environmental justice and equity or a designee; the executive director of the Massachusetts clean 2759energy technology center or a designee; 8 members to be appointed by the governor, 1 of whom 2760shall be a representative of employers in the gas utility sector, 1 of whom shall be a 2761representative of employers in the electric power generation sector, 1 of whom shall be a 2762representative of employers in the renewable electricity sector, 1 of whom shall be a 2763representative of employers in the energy efficiency sector, 1 of whom shall be a representative 2764of employers in the clean transportation sector, 1 of whom shall be a representative of employers 2765in the clean heating sector and 2 of whom shall work in or be affiliated with a higher education 128 of 132 2766university with educational expertise in labor policy and the fossil fuel or clean energy workforce 2767and 5 of whom shall be recommended by the president of the Massachusetts AFL-CIO, 1 of 2768whom shall be a representative of employees in the gas utility sector, 1 of whom shall be a 2769representative of employees in the electric power generation sector, 2 of whom shall be 2770representatives of employees in the clean energy sector and 1 of whom shall be a representative 2771of employees in the transportation sector; the president of the Massachusetts Building Trades; 2772and 2 representatives of environmental justice communities appointed by the director of 2773environmental justice and equity. 2774 The work of the commission shall include, but not be limited to, identifying workers 2775currently employed in the energy sector by industry, trade and job classification, including an 2776analysis of wage and benefit packages and current licensing, certification and training 2777requirements. The commission shall recommend education and training programs to enhance re- 2778employment opportunities within the energy sector and services to support dislocated workers 2779displaced from jobs within the energy sector as a result of public or private efforts to reduce 2780greenhouse gas emissions or transition from fossil fuels to clean energy and advancements in 2781clean energy technology. The commission shall, not later than December 31, 2024, issue a 2782report, including any plans and recommendations, to the clerks of the senate and house of 2783representatives and shall issue a final report, including any plans and recommendations, not later 2784than December 31, 2025. 2785 SECTION 141. The department of environmental protection shall conduct a study of the 2786opportunities for, and potential strengths and weaknesses of, an expanded reusable beverage 2787container return and refill system pursuant to which beverage containers would be collected for 2788reuse, washed and refilled. For the purposes of this section, “reusable beverage container” shall 129 of 132 2789have the same meaning as ascribed to it in section 321 of chapter 94 of the General Laws. Not 2790later than December 31, 2025, the department shall publish for public comment a draft of the 2791study required under this section and shall submit the final study to the clerks of the senate and 2792the house of representatives not later than May 1, 2026; provided, however, that the final study 2793shall also be published on the department’s website. 2794 SECTION 142. Not later than July 31, 2025, the department of public utilities shall open 2795a proceeding to encourage right-of-way or pole-mounted electric vehicle supply equipment 2796throughout the commonwealth and shall require certain parties as it may identify, including, but 2797not limited to, electric distribution companies as defined in section 1 of chapter 164 of the 2798General Laws, to submit plans to facilitate the deployment of such equipment. 2799 Not later than December 31, 2025, electric distribution companies and such other parties 2800as the department may identify shall file plans with the department for establishing such 2801equipment throughout the commonwealth. Such plans may: (i) include schedules and calendar 2802dates for deploying the equipment, making chargers operational and meeting other requirements 2803as set by the department; (ii) promote partnerships between companies and municipalities or 2804other governmental entities; (iii) ensure accessibility and affordability for rural communities and 2805low and moderate-income populations, including renters; (iv) favor chargers at Level 2 and 2806higher capacity; (v) promote the use of poles owned by, or under the control of, electric 2807distribution companies; (vi) review potential funding mechanisms and sources including, but not 2808limited to, off-peak charging rate structures; (vii) review potential funding mechanisms, sources 2809and liability provisions for ensuring routine maintenance and a state of good repair; and (viii) 2810require annual reporting and tabulations including, but not limited to: (A) the number of 2811equipment installations completed, identified by specific location; (B) pricing and consumer 130 of 132 2812costs; (C) the number of supply equipment outages, identified by specific location, together with 2813estimates of downtime; and (D) identification of software and hardware malfunctions or 2814characteristics or labor or parts shortages that may have contributed to excessive equipment 2815outages or downtimes; provided, however, that such annual reporting and tabulations may be 2816coordinated with, or delegated to, the division of standards. 2817 Not later than July 31, 2026, the department shall approve, approve with conditions or 2818reject such plans; provided, however, that nothing in this section shall conflict with or delay 2819pole-mounted electric vehicle supply equipment installations that are underway before a relevant 2820departmental approval. 2821 SECTION 143. The department of public utilities shall promulgate regulations to 2822implement section 67 including, but not limited to, the establishment of a moderate income 2823discount eligibility rate following an investigation thereof. 2824 SECTION 144. Not later than December 31, 2024, the department of public utilities shall 2825promulgate regulations governing the terms, including notice requirements and provisions 2826protecting customers from service interruption, under which a gas company may terminate 2827natural gas service pursuant to subsection (h) of section 145 of chapter 164 of the General Laws. 2828 SECTION 145. The department of energy resources shall publish the first resource 2829solicitation plan required under subsection (c) of section 21 of chapter 25A of the General Laws 2830not later than July 31, 2026. 2831 SECTION 146. Not later than June 1, 2029, the director of public participation 2832established in section 12T of chapter 25 of the General Laws shall complete a review of the 2833intervenor support grant program established in section 149 of chapter 164 of the General Laws 131 of 132 2834and provide an opportunity for public comment to determine whether the program and 2835corresponding regulations should be amended. 2836 SECTION 147. Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary and not later 2837than July 31, 2025, the executive office of housing and livable communities, in consultation with 2838the executive office of energy and environmental affairs, shall promulgate rules or regulations to 2839implement a cradle-to-grave life cycle assessment in accordance with International Standard ISO 284014040 and ISO 14044 of state-funded housing projects. The assessment shall encompass the full 2841life cycle including, but not limited to: (i) resource extraction through demolition and disposal; 2842and (ii) on-site construction, operations, maintenance and replacement, and material-and 2843product-embodied acquisition, processing and transportation energy. 2844 SECTION 148. The embodied carbon intergovernmental coordinating council shall 2845submit the initial embodied carbon reduction plan under section 24 of chapter 25 of the General 2846Laws to the clerks of the senate and house of representatives not later than July 31, 2025. 2847 SECTION 149. The initial regulations required to be promulgated by the executive office 2848of energy and environmental affairs or its designated agency under section 31 of chapter 31A of 2849the General Laws and the initial regulations required to be promulgated by division of standards 2850in the office of consumer affairs and business regulation under section 59 of chapter 98 of the 2851General Laws shall be completed not later than February 1, 2026 and shall apply to chargers 2852installed on or after June 1, 2026. 2853 SECTION 150. Sections 12 to 15, inclusive, shall take effect on January 1, 2028. 2854 SECTION 151. Section 40 shall take effect on June 30, 2029. 132 of 132 2855 SECTION 152. Section 55 shall take effect on January 1, 2026. 2856 SECTION 153. Section 58 shall take effect on February 1, 2026. 2857 SECTION 154. Section 107A shall take effect on March 1, 2027.