Texas 2023 88th Regular

Texas House Bill HB3964 Introduced / Bill

Filed 03/07/2023

                    88R11656 JXC-F
 By: Morales of Maverick H.B. No. 3964


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to energy efficiency goals and programs, public
 information regarding energy efficiency programs, and the
 participation of loads in certain energy markets.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 39.905, Utilities Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a), (b), (e), (g), (h), (i), and (j) and
 adding Subsection (i-1) to read as follows:
 (a)  It is the goal of the legislature that:
 (1)  electric utilities will administer energy
 efficiency incentive programs in a market-neutral,
 nondiscriminatory manner but will not offer underlying competitive
 services;
 (2)  all customers, in all customer classes, will have
 a choice of and access to energy efficiency alternatives and other
 choices from the market that allow each customer to reduce energy
 consumption, summer and winter peak demand, or energy costs;
 (3)  each electric utility will administer energy
 efficiency programs that:
 (A)  cause the utility's portfolio of programs to
 be cost-effective;
 (B)  include load management programs and demand
 response programs;
 (C)  acquire the following minimum quantifiable
 reductions in demand annually:
 (i)  5,000 kilowatts for utilities with an
 average of less than 300,000 total eligible residential and
 commercial customers in the previous five years;
 (ii)  15,000 kilowatts for utilities with an
 average of greater than 300,000 but less than 750,000 total
 eligible residential and commercial customers in the previous five
 years;
 (iii)  25,000 kilowatts for utilities with
 an average of greater than 750,000 but less than 1.5 million total
 eligible residential and commercial customers in the previous five
 years;
 (iv)  75,000 kilowatts for utilities with an
 average of greater than 1.5 million but less than 3 million total
 eligible residential and commercial customers in the previous five
 years;
 (v)  100,000 kilowatts for utilities with an
 average of greater than 3 million but less than 4 million total
 eligible residential and commercial customers in the previous five
 years; or
 (vi)  125,000 kilowatts for utilities with
 an average of greater than 4 million total eligible residential and
 commercial customers in the previous five years; and
 (D)  acquire energy savings in the following
 amounts corresponding to that utility's total demand reductions
 identified by Paragraph (C):
 (i)  8,760,000 kilowatt hours for a demand
 reduction goal of 5,000 kilowatts;
 (ii)  26,280,000 kilowatt hours for a demand
 reduction goal of 15,000 kilowatts;
 (iii)  43,800,000 kilowatt hours for a
 demand reduction goal of 25,000 kilowatts;
 (iv)  131,400,000 kilowatt hours for a
 demand reduction goal of 75,000 kilowatts;
 (v)  175,200,000 kilowatt hours for a demand
 reduction goal of 100,000 kilowatts; or
 (vi)  219,000,000 kilowatt hours for a
 demand reduction goal of 125,000 kilowatts [annually will provide,
 through market-based standard offer programs or through targeted
 market-transformation programs, incentives sufficient for retail
 electric providers and competitive energy service providers to
 acquire additional cost-effective energy efficiency, subject to
 cost ceilings established by the commission, for the utility's
 residential and commercial customers equivalent to:
 [(A)  not less than:
 [(i)  30 percent of the electric utility's
 annual growth in demand of residential and commercial customers by
 December 31 of each year beginning with the 2013 calendar year; and
 [(ii)  the amount of energy efficiency to be
 acquired for the utility's residential and commercial customers for
 the most recent preceding year; and
 [(B)  for an electric utility whose amount of
 energy efficiency to be acquired under this subsection is
 equivalent to at least four-tenths of one percent of the electric
 utility's summer weather-adjusted peak demand for residential and
 commercial customers in the previous calendar year, not less than:
 [(i)  four-tenths of one percent of the
 utility's summer weather-adjusted peak demand for residential and
 commercial customers by December 31 of each subsequent year; and
 [(ii)  the amount of energy efficiency to be
 acquired for the utility's residential and commercial customers for
 the most recent preceding year;]
 (4)  each electric utility in the ERCOT region will
 [shall] use its best efforts to encourage and facilitate the
 involvement of the region's retail electric providers in the
 delivery of efficiency programs and demand response programs under
 this section, including programs for demand-side renewable energy
 systems that:
 (A)  use distributed renewable generation, as
 defined by Section 39.916; or
 (B)  reduce the need for energy consumption by
 using a renewable energy technology, a geothermal technology [heat
 pump], a solar water heater, or another natural mechanism of the
 environment;
 (5)  retail electric providers in the ERCOT region, and
 electric utilities outside of the ERCOT region, shall provide
 customers with energy efficiency educational materials; and
 (6)  notwithstanding Subsection (a)(3), electric
 utilities shall continue to make available, at 2023 [2007] funding
 and participation levels, any load management [standard offer]
 programs or demand response programs developed for [industrial]
 customers and implemented before January 1, 2023 [prior to May 1,
 2007].
 (b)  The commission shall provide oversight and adopt rules
 and procedures to ensure that the utilities can achieve the goals
 [goal] of this section, including:
 (1)  establishing an energy efficiency cost recovery
 factor for ensuring timely and reasonable cost recovery for utility
 expenditures made to satisfy the goals [goal] of this section;
 (2)  establishing an incentive under Section 36.204 to
 reward utilities administering programs under this section that
 exceed the minimum goals established by this section;
 (2-a)  prohibiting an incentive achieved under this
 section from being included in an electric utility's revenues or
 net income for the purposes of establishing a utility's rates or the
 utility's earnings monitoring report under Section 36.157, 36.210,
 or 36.212;
 (2-b)  providing that an incentive achieved by an
 electric utility under this section entitles the utility to receive
 an amount equal to the net benefits realized in meeting the
 applicable demand reduction and energy savings established under
 this section, provided that:
 (A)  the net benefits must be calculated by
 subtracting the total program costs from the total of the avoided
 costs associated with the portfolio of programs administered by the
 utility; and
 (B)  an electric utility that exceeds its demand
 reduction and energy savings goals is entitled to receive an
 incentive equal to one percent of the net benefits for every two
 percent that the demand reduction goal has been exceeded, with a
 maximum of 10 percent of the utility's total net benefits;
 (3)  providing a utility that is unable to establish an
 energy efficiency cost recovery factor in a timely manner due to a
 rate freeze with a mechanism to enable the utility to:
 (A)  defer the costs of complying with this
 section; and
 (B)  recover the deferred costs through an energy
 efficiency cost recovery factor on the expiration of the rate
 freeze period;
 (4)  ensuring that the costs associated with programs
 provided under this section and any shareholder incentive [bonus]
 awarded are borne by the customer classes that receive the services
 under the programs;
 (5)  establishing cost caps that:
 (A)  allow electric utilities to meet the goals of
 this section; and
 (B)  exclude:
 (i)  any shareholder incentive; and
 (ii)  any third-party evaluation
 measurement and verification costs;
 (6)  requiring that, for an industrial customer to opt
 out of an electric utility's energy efficiency cost recovery
 factor, the industrial customer must submit a notice to the
 electric utility and the commission;
 (7)  ensuring the program rules encourage the value of
 the incentives to be passed on to the end-use customer;
 (8) [(6)]  ensuring that programs are evaluated,
 measured, and verified using a framework established by the
 commission that promotes effective program design and consistent
 and streamlined reporting; and
 (9) [(7)]  ensuring that an independent organization
 certified under Section 39.151 allows load participation in all
 energy markets for residential, commercial, and industrial
 customer classes, either directly or through aggregators of retail
 customers, to the extent that load participation by each of those
 customer classes complies with reasonable requirements adopted by
 the organization relating to the reliability and adequacy of the
 regional electric network and in a manner that will increase market
 efficiency, competition, and customer benefits.
 (e)  An electric utility may use money approved by the
 commission for energy efficiency programs to perform necessary
 energy efficiency research and development to foster continuous
 improvement and innovation in the application of energy efficiency
 technology and energy efficiency program design and
 implementation. Money the utility uses under this subsection may
 not exceed 10 percent of the greater of:
 (1)  the amount the commission approved for energy
 efficiency programs in the utility's most recent [full rate]
 proceeding in which an energy efficiency cost recovery factor is
 set; or
 (2)  the commission-approved expenditures by the
 utility for energy efficiency in the previous year.
 (g)  The commission shall [may] provide for a good cause
 exemption to a utility's liability for an administrative penalty or
 other sanction if the utility fails to meet a goal [for energy
 efficiency] under this section and the utility's failure to meet
 the goal is caused by one or more factors outside of the utility's
 control, including:
 (1)  limitations caused by the imposition of cost caps
 on the energy efficiency cost recovery factor;
 (2)  insufficient demand by retail electric providers
 and competitive energy service providers for program incentive
 funds made available by the utility through its programs;
 (3) [(2)]  changes in building energy codes; and
 (4) [(3)]  changes in government-imposed appliance or
 equipment efficiency standards.
 (h)  For an electric utility operating in an area not open to
 competition, the utility may achieve the goal of this section by:
 (1)  providing rebate or incentive funds directly to
 customers to promote or facilitate the success of programs
 implemented under this section; or
 (2)  developing, subject to commission approval, new
 programs other than standard offer programs and market
 transformation programs, to the extent that the new programs make
 the portfolio of programs no longer cost-effective [satisfy the
 same cost-effectiveness requirements as standard offer programs
 and market transformation programs].
 (i)  For an electric utility operating in an area open to
 competition that provides [, on demonstration] to the commission a
 notice [, after a contested case hearing,] that the requirements
 under Subsection (a) cannot be met [in a rural area] through retail
 electric providers or competitive energy service providers in
 hard-to-reach areas or areas with low-income customers, the utility
 may achieve the goal of this section by providing rebate or
 incentive funds directly to customers in those areas [the rural
 area] to promote or facilitate the success of programs implemented
 under this section. The electric utility must provide the notice to
 the commission at least once every two years. In this subsection:
 (1)  "Hard-to-reach area" means a rural area not
 adequately served by retail electric providers or competitive
 energy service providers.
 (2)  "Low-income customer" means a residential
 customer with an annual household income at or below 200 percent of
 the federal poverty guidelines or who meets income eligibility
 requirements established by the commission.
 (i-1)  An electric utility described by Subdivision (i) may
 receive information identifying low-income electric customers
 under Section 17.007(a).
 (j)  An electric utility may use energy audit programs to
 achieve the goal of this section if[:
 [(1)  the programs do not constitute more than three
 percent of total program costs under this section; and
 [(2)]  the addition of the programs does not cause a
 utility's portfolio of programs to no longer be cost-effective.
 SECTION 2.  Section 39.905(k), Utilities Code, is repealed.
 SECTION 3.  The Public Utility Commission of Texas shall
 adopt rules to implement Section 39.905, Utilities Code, as amended
 by this Act, not later than January 1, 2024.
 SECTION 4.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
 a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
 provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.  If this
 Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
 Act takes effect September 1, 2023.