Rep. Reginald Phillips

Filed: 3/29/2017

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 1848

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 1848 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Illinois Power Agency Act is amended by
5changing Section 1-75 as follows:
 
6    (20 ILCS 3855/1-75)
7    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 99-906)
8    Sec. 1-75. Planning and Procurement Bureau. The Planning
9and Procurement Bureau has the following duties and
10responsibilities:
11    (a) The Planning and Procurement Bureau shall each year,
12beginning in 2008, develop procurement plans and conduct
13competitive procurement processes in accordance with the
14requirements of Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act
15for the eligible retail customers of electric utilities that on
16December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000

 

 

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1customers in Illinois. The Planning and Procurement Bureau
2shall also develop procurement plans and conduct competitive
3procurement processes in accordance with the requirements of
4Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act for the eligible
5retail customers of small multi-jurisdictional electric
6utilities that (i) on December 31, 2005 served less than
7100,000 customers in Illinois and (ii) request a procurement
8plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load. This Section shall
9not apply to a small multi-jurisdictional utility until such
10time as a small multi-jurisdictional utility requests the
11Agency to prepare a procurement plan for their Illinois
12jurisdictional load. For the purposes of this Section, the term
13"eligible retail customers" has the same definition as found in
14Section 16-111.5(a) of the Public Utilities Act.
15        (1) The Agency shall each year, beginning in 2008, as
16    needed, issue a request for qualifications for experts or
17    expert consulting firms to develop the procurement plans in
18    accordance with Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
19    Act. In order to qualify an expert or expert consulting
20    firm must have:
21            (A) direct previous experience assembling
22        large-scale power supply plans or portfolios for
23        end-use customers;
24            (B) an advanced degree in economics, mathematics,
25        engineering, risk management, or a related area of
26        study;

 

 

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1            (C) 10 years of experience in the electricity
2        sector, including managing supply risk;
3            (D) expertise in wholesale electricity market
4        rules, including those established by the Federal
5        Energy Regulatory Commission and regional transmission
6        organizations;
7            (E) expertise in credit protocols and familiarity
8        with contract protocols;
9            (F) adequate resources to perform and fulfill the
10        required functions and responsibilities; and
11            (G) the absence of a conflict of interest and
12        inappropriate bias for or against potential bidders or
13        the affected electric utilities.
14        (2) The Agency shall each year, as needed, issue a
15    request for qualifications for a procurement administrator
16    to conduct the competitive procurement processes in
17    accordance with Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
18    Act. In order to qualify an expert or expert consulting
19    firm must have:
20            (A) direct previous experience administering a
21        large-scale competitive procurement process;
22            (B) an advanced degree in economics, mathematics,
23        engineering, or a related area of study;
24            (C) 10 years of experience in the electricity
25        sector, including risk management experience;
26            (D) expertise in wholesale electricity market

 

 

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1        rules, including those established by the Federal
2        Energy Regulatory Commission and regional transmission
3        organizations;
4            (E) expertise in credit and contract protocols;
5            (F) adequate resources to perform and fulfill the
6        required functions and responsibilities; and
7            (G) the absence of a conflict of interest and
8        inappropriate bias for or against potential bidders or
9        the affected electric utilities.
10        (3) The Agency shall provide affected utilities and
11    other interested parties with the lists of qualified
12    experts or expert consulting firms identified through the
13    request for qualifications processes that are under
14    consideration to develop the procurement plans and to serve
15    as the procurement administrator. The Agency shall also
16    provide each qualified expert's or expert consulting
17    firm's response to the request for qualifications. All
18    information provided under this subparagraph shall also be
19    provided to the Commission. The Agency may provide by rule
20    for fees associated with supplying the information to
21    utilities and other interested parties. These parties
22    shall, within 5 business days, notify the Agency in writing
23    if they object to any experts or expert consulting firms on
24    the lists. Objections shall be based on:
25            (A) failure to satisfy qualification criteria;
26            (B) identification of a conflict of interest; or

 

 

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1            (C) evidence of inappropriate bias for or against
2        potential bidders or the affected utilities.
3        The Agency shall remove experts or expert consulting
4    firms from the lists within 10 days if there is a
5    reasonable basis for an objection and provide the updated
6    lists to the affected utilities and other interested
7    parties. If the Agency fails to remove an expert or expert
8    consulting firm from a list, an objecting party may seek
9    review by the Commission within 5 days thereafter by filing
10    a petition, and the Commission shall render a ruling on the
11    petition within 10 days. There is no right of appeal of the
12    Commission's ruling.
13        (4) The Agency shall issue requests for proposals to
14    the qualified experts or expert consulting firms to develop
15    a procurement plan for the affected utilities and to serve
16    as procurement administrator.
17        (5) The Agency shall select an expert or expert
18    consulting firm to develop procurement plans based on the
19    proposals submitted and shall award contracts of up to 5
20    years to those selected.
21        (6) The Agency shall select an expert or expert
22    consulting firm, with approval of the Commission, to serve
23    as procurement administrator based on the proposals
24    submitted. If the Commission rejects, within 5 days, the
25    Agency's selection, the Agency shall submit another
26    recommendation within 3 days based on the proposals

 

 

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1    submitted. The Agency shall award a 5-year contract to the
2    expert or expert consulting firm so selected with
3    Commission approval.
4    (b) The experts or expert consulting firms retained by the
5Agency shall, as appropriate, prepare procurement plans, and
6conduct a competitive procurement process as prescribed in
7Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, to ensure
8adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and environmentally
9sustainable electric service at the lowest total cost over
10time, taking into account any benefits of price stability, for
11eligible retail customers of electric utilities that on
12December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000
13customers in the State of Illinois, and for eligible Illinois
14retail customers of small multi-jurisdictional electric
15utilities that (i) on December 31, 2005 served less than
16100,000 customers in Illinois and (ii) request a procurement
17plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load.
18    (c) Renewable portfolio standard.
19        (1) The procurement plans shall include cost-effective
20    renewable energy resources. A minimum percentage of each
21    utility's total supply to serve the load of eligible retail
22    customers, as defined in Section 16-111.5(a) of the Public
23    Utilities Act, procured for each of the following years
24    shall be generated from cost-effective renewable energy
25    resources: at least 2% by June 1, 2008; at least 4% by June
26    1, 2009; at least 5% by June 1, 2010; at least 6% by June 1,

 

 

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1    2011; at least 7% by June 1, 2012; at least 8% by June 1,
2    2013; at least 9% by June 1, 2014; at least 10% by June 1,
3    2015; and increasing by at least 1.5% each year thereafter
4    to at least 25% by June 1, 2025. To the extent that it is
5    available, at least 75% of the renewable energy resources
6    used to meet these standards shall come from wind
7    generation and, beginning on June 1, 2011, at least the
8    following percentages of the renewable energy resources
9    used to meet these standards shall come from photovoltaics
10    on the following schedule: 0.5% by June 1, 2012, 1.5% by
11    June 1, 2013; 3% by June 1, 2014; and 6% by June 1, 2015 and
12    thereafter. Of the renewable energy resources procured
13    pursuant to this Section, at least the following
14    percentages shall come from distributed renewable energy
15    generation devices: 0.5% by June 1, 2013, 0.75% by June 1,
16    2014, and 1% by June 1, 2015 and thereafter. To the extent
17    available, half of the renewable energy resources procured
18    from distributed renewable energy generation shall come
19    from devices of less than 25 kilowatts in nameplate
20    capacity. Renewable energy resources procured from
21    distributed generation devices may also count towards the
22    required percentages for wind and solar photovoltaics.
23    Procurement of renewable energy resources from distributed
24    renewable energy generation devices shall be done on an
25    annual basis through multi-year contracts of no less than 5
26    years, and shall consist solely of renewable energy

 

 

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1    credits.
2        The Agency shall create credit requirements for
3    suppliers of distributed renewable energy. In order to
4    minimize the administrative burden on contracting
5    entities, the Agency shall solicit the use of third-party
6    organizations to aggregate distributed renewable energy
7    into groups of no less than one megawatt in installed
8    capacity. These third-party organizations shall administer
9    contracts with individual distributed renewable energy
10    generation device owners. An individual distributed
11    renewable energy generation device owner shall have the
12    ability to measure the output of his or her distributed
13    renewable energy generation device.
14        For purposes of this subsection (c), "cost-effective"
15    means that the costs of procuring renewable energy
16    resources do not cause the limit stated in paragraph (2) of
17    this subsection (c) to be exceeded and do not exceed
18    benchmarks based on market prices for renewable energy
19    resources in the region, which shall be developed by the
20    procurement administrator, in consultation with the
21    Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement
22    monitor and shall be subject to Commission review and
23    approval.
24        (2) For purposes of this subsection (c), the required
25    procurement of cost-effective renewable energy resources
26    for a particular year shall be measured as a percentage of

 

 

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1    the actual amount of electricity (megawatt-hours) supplied
2    by the electric utility to eligible retail customers in the
3    planning year ending immediately prior to the procurement.
4    For purposes of this subsection (c), the amount paid per
5    kilowatthour means the total amount paid for electric
6    service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For purposes
7    of this subsection (c), the total amount paid for electric
8    service includes without limitation amounts paid for
9    supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges, and add-on
10    taxes.
11        Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
12    (c), the total of renewable energy resources procured
13    pursuant to the procurement plan for any single year shall
14    be reduced by an amount necessary to limit the annual
15    estimated average net increase due to the costs of these
16    resources included in the amounts paid by eligible retail
17    customers in connection with electric service to:
18            (A) in 2008, no more than 0.5% of the amount paid
19        per kilowatthour by those customers during the year
20        ending May 31, 2007;
21            (B) in 2009, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
22        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
23        during the year ending May 31, 2008 or 1% of the amount
24        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
25        year ending May 31, 2007;
26            (C) in 2010, the greater of an additional 0.5% of

 

 

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1        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
2        during the year ending May 31, 2009 or 1.5% of the
3        amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during
4        the year ending May 31, 2007;
5            (D) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
6        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
7        during the year ending May 31, 2010 or 2% of the amount
8        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
9        year ending May 31, 2007; and
10            (E) thereafter, the amount of renewable energy
11        resources procured pursuant to the procurement plan
12        for any single year shall be reduced by an amount
13        necessary to limit the estimated average net increase
14        due to the cost of these resources included in the
15        amounts paid by eligible retail customers in
16        connection with electric service to no more than the
17        greater of 2.015% of the amount paid per kilowatthour
18        by those customers during the year ending May 31, 2007
19        or the incremental amount per kilowatthour paid for
20        these resources in 2011.
21            No later than June 30, 2011, the Commission shall
22        review the limitation on the amount of renewable energy
23        resources procured pursuant to this subsection (c) and
24        report to the General Assembly its findings as to
25        whether that limitation unduly constrains the
26        procurement of cost-effective renewable energy

 

 

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1        resources.
2        (3) Through June 1, 2011, renewable energy resources
3    shall be counted for the purpose of meeting the renewable
4    energy standards set forth in paragraph (1) of this
5    subsection (c) only if they are generated from facilities
6    located in the State, provided that cost-effective
7    renewable energy resources are available from those
8    facilities. If those cost-effective resources are not
9    available in Illinois, they shall be procured in states
10    that adjoin Illinois and may be counted towards compliance.
11    If those cost-effective resources are not available in
12    Illinois or in states that adjoin Illinois, they shall be
13    purchased elsewhere and shall be counted towards
14    compliance. After June 1, 2011, cost-effective renewable
15    energy resources located in Illinois and in states that
16    adjoin Illinois may be counted towards compliance with the
17    standards set forth in paragraph (1) of this subsection
18    (c). If those cost-effective resources are not available in
19    Illinois or in states that adjoin Illinois, they shall be
20    purchased elsewhere and shall be counted towards
21    compliance.
22        (4) The electric utility shall retire all renewable
23    energy credits used to comply with the standard.
24        (5) Beginning with the year commencing June 1, 2010, an
25    electric utility subject to this subsection (c) shall apply
26    the lesser of the maximum alternative compliance payment

 

 

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1    rate or the most recent estimated alternative compliance
2    payment rate for its service territory for the
3    corresponding compliance period, established pursuant to
4    subsection (d) of Section 16-115D of the Public Utilities
5    Act to its retail customers that take service pursuant to
6    the electric utility's hourly pricing tariff or tariffs.
7    The electric utility shall retain all amounts collected as
8    a result of the application of the alternative compliance
9    payment rate or rates to such customers, and, beginning in
10    2011, the utility shall include in the information provided
11    under item (1) of subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the
12    Public Utilities Act the amounts collected under the
13    alternative compliance payment rate or rates for the prior
14    year ending May 31. Notwithstanding any limitation on the
15    procurement of renewable energy resources imposed by item
16    (2) of this subsection (c), the Agency shall increase its
17    spending on the purchase of renewable energy resources to
18    be procured by the electric utility for the next plan year
19    by an amount equal to the amounts collected by the utility
20    under the alternative compliance payment rate or rates in
21    the prior year ending May 31.
22    (d) Clean coal portfolio standard.
23        (1) The procurement plans shall include electricity
24    generated using clean coal. Each utility shall enter into
25    one or more sourcing agreements with the initial clean coal
26    facility, as provided in paragraph (3) of this subsection

 

 

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1    (d), covering electricity generated by the initial clean
2    coal facility representing at least 5% of each utility's
3    total supply to serve the load of eligible retail customers
4    in 2015 and each year thereafter, as described in paragraph
5    (3) of this subsection (d), subject to the limits specified
6    in paragraph (2) of this subsection (d). It is the goal of
7    the State that by January 1, 2025, 25% of the electricity
8    used in the State shall be generated by cost-effective
9    clean coal facilities. For purposes of this subsection (d),
10    "cost-effective" means that the expenditures pursuant to
11    such sourcing agreements do not cause the limit stated in
12    paragraph (2) of this subsection (d) to be exceeded and do
13    not exceed cost-based benchmarks, which shall be developed
14    to assess all expenditures pursuant to such sourcing
15    agreements covering electricity generated by clean coal
16    facilities, other than the initial clean coal facility, by
17    the procurement administrator, in consultation with the
18    Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement
19    monitor and shall be subject to Commission review and
20    approval.
21        A utility party to a sourcing agreement shall
22    immediately retire any emission credits that it receives in
23    connection with the electricity covered by such agreement.
24        Utilities shall maintain adequate records documenting
25    the purchases under the sourcing agreement to comply with
26    this subsection (d) and shall file an accounting with the

 

 

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1    load forecast that must be filed with the Agency by July 15
2    of each year, in accordance with subsection (d) of Section
3    16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
4        A utility shall be deemed to have complied with the
5    clean coal portfolio standard specified in this subsection
6    (d) if the utility enters into a sourcing agreement as
7    required by this subsection (d).
8        (2) For purposes of this subsection (d), the required
9    execution of sourcing agreements with the initial clean
10    coal facility for a particular year shall be measured as a
11    percentage of the actual amount of electricity
12    (megawatt-hours) supplied by the electric utility to
13    eligible retail customers in the planning year ending
14    immediately prior to the agreement's execution. For
15    purposes of this subsection (d), the amount paid per
16    kilowatthour means the total amount paid for electric
17    service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For purposes
18    of this subsection (d), the total amount paid for electric
19    service includes without limitation amounts paid for
20    supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges and add-on
21    taxes.
22        Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
23    (d), the total amount paid under sourcing agreements with
24    clean coal facilities pursuant to the procurement plan for
25    any given year shall be reduced by an amount necessary to
26    limit the annual estimated average net increase due to the

 

 

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1    costs of these resources included in the amounts paid by
2    eligible retail customers in connection with electric
3    service to:
4            (A) in 2010, no more than 0.5% of the amount paid
5        per kilowatthour by those customers during the year
6        ending May 31, 2009;
7            (B) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
8        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
9        during the year ending May 31, 2010 or 1% of the amount
10        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
11        year ending May 31, 2009;
12            (C) in 2012, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
13        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
14        during the year ending May 31, 2011 or 1.5% of the
15        amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during
16        the year ending May 31, 2009;
17            (D) in 2013, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
18        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
19        during the year ending May 31, 2012 or 2% of the amount
20        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
21        year ending May 31, 2009; and
22            (E) thereafter, the total amount paid under
23        sourcing agreements with clean coal facilities
24        pursuant to the procurement plan for any single year
25        shall be reduced by an amount necessary to limit the
26        estimated average net increase due to the cost of these

 

 

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1        resources included in the amounts paid by eligible
2        retail customers in connection with electric service
3        to no more than the greater of (i) 2.015% of the amount
4        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
5        year ending May 31, 2009 or (ii) the incremental amount
6        per kilowatthour paid for these resources in 2013.
7        These requirements may be altered only as provided by
8        statute.
9        No later than June 30, 2015, the Commission shall
10    review the limitation on the total amount paid under
11    sourcing agreements, if any, with clean coal facilities
12    pursuant to this subsection (d) and report to the General
13    Assembly its findings as to whether that limitation unduly
14    constrains the amount of electricity generated by
15    cost-effective clean coal facilities that is covered by
16    sourcing agreements.
17        (3) Initial clean coal facility. In order to promote
18    development of clean coal facilities in Illinois, each
19    electric utility subject to this Section shall execute a
20    sourcing agreement to source electricity from a proposed
21    clean coal facility in Illinois (the "initial clean coal
22    facility") that will have a nameplate capacity of at least
23    500 MW when commercial operation commences, that has a
24    final Clean Air Act permit on the effective date of this
25    amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, and that will
26    meet the definition of clean coal facility in Section 1-10

 

 

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1    of this Act when commercial operation commences. The
2    sourcing agreements with this initial clean coal facility
3    shall be subject to both approval of the initial clean coal
4    facility by the General Assembly and satisfaction of the
5    requirements of paragraph (4) of this subsection (d) and
6    shall be executed within 90 days after any such approval by
7    the General Assembly. The Agency and the Commission shall
8    have authority to inspect all books and records associated
9    with the initial clean coal facility during the term of
10    such a sourcing agreement. A utility's sourcing agreement
11    for electricity produced by the initial clean coal facility
12    shall include:
13            (A) a formula contractual price (the "contract
14        price") approved pursuant to paragraph (4) of this
15        subsection (d), which shall:
16                (i) be determined using a cost of service
17            methodology employing either a level or deferred
18            capital recovery component, based on a capital
19            structure consisting of 45% equity and 55% debt,
20            and a return on equity as may be approved by the
21            Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which in any
22            case may not exceed the lower of 11.5% or the rate
23            of return approved by the General Assembly
24            pursuant to paragraph (4) of this subsection (d);
25            and
26                (ii) provide that all miscellaneous net

 

 

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1            revenue, including but not limited to net revenue
2            from the sale of emission allowances, if any,
3            substitute natural gas, if any, grants or other
4            support provided by the State of Illinois or the
5            United States Government, firm transmission
6            rights, if any, by-products produced by the
7            facility, energy or capacity derived from the
8            facility and not covered by a sourcing agreement
9            pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection (d) or
10            item (5) of subsection (d) of Section 16-115 of the
11            Public Utilities Act, whether generated from the
12            synthesis gas derived from coal, from SNG, or from
13            natural gas, shall be credited against the revenue
14            requirement for this initial clean coal facility;
15            (B) power purchase provisions, which shall:
16                (i) provide that the utility party to such
17            sourcing agreement shall pay the contract price
18            for electricity delivered under such sourcing
19            agreement;
20                (ii) require delivery of electricity to the
21            regional transmission organization market of the
22            utility that is party to such sourcing agreement;
23                (iii) require the utility party to such
24            sourcing agreement to buy from the initial clean
25            coal facility in each hour an amount of energy
26            equal to all clean coal energy made available from

 

 

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1            the initial clean coal facility during such hour
2            times a fraction, the numerator of which is such
3            utility's retail market sales of electricity
4            (expressed in kilowatthours sold) in the State
5            during the prior calendar month and the
6            denominator of which is the total retail market
7            sales of electricity (expressed in kilowatthours
8            sold) in the State by utilities during such prior
9            month and the sales of electricity (expressed in
10            kilowatthours sold) in the State by alternative
11            retail electric suppliers during such prior month
12            that are subject to the requirements of this
13            subsection (d) and paragraph (5) of subsection (d)
14            of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act,
15            provided that the amount purchased by the utility
16            in any year will be limited by paragraph (2) of
17            this subsection (d); and
18                (iv) be considered pre-existing contracts in
19            such utility's procurement plans for eligible
20            retail customers;
21            (C) contract for differences provisions, which
22        shall:
23                (i) require the utility party to such sourcing
24            agreement to contract with the initial clean coal
25            facility in each hour with respect to an amount of
26            energy equal to all clean coal energy made

 

 

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1            available from the initial clean coal facility
2            during such hour times a fraction, the numerator of
3            which is such utility's retail market sales of
4            electricity (expressed in kilowatthours sold) in
5            the utility's service territory in the State
6            during the prior calendar month and the
7            denominator of which is the total retail market
8            sales of electricity (expressed in kilowatthours
9            sold) in the State by utilities during such prior
10            month and the sales of electricity (expressed in
11            kilowatthours sold) in the State by alternative
12            retail electric suppliers during such prior month
13            that are subject to the requirements of this
14            subsection (d) and paragraph (5) of subsection (d)
15            of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act,
16            provided that the amount paid by the utility in any
17            year will be limited by paragraph (2) of this
18            subsection (d);
19                (ii) provide that the utility's payment
20            obligation in respect of the quantity of
21            electricity determined pursuant to the preceding
22            clause (i) shall be limited to an amount equal to
23            (1) the difference between the contract price
24            determined pursuant to subparagraph (A) of
25            paragraph (3) of this subsection (d) and the
26            day-ahead price for electricity delivered to the

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 21 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            regional transmission organization market of the
2            utility that is party to such sourcing agreement
3            (or any successor delivery point at which such
4            utility's supply obligations are financially
5            settled on an hourly basis) (the "reference
6            price") on the day preceding the day on which the
7            electricity is delivered to the initial clean coal
8            facility busbar, multiplied by (2) the quantity of
9            electricity determined pursuant to the preceding
10            clause (i); and
11                (iii) not require the utility to take physical
12            delivery of the electricity produced by the
13            facility;
14            (D) general provisions, which shall:
15                (i) specify a term of no more than 30 years,
16            commencing on the commercial operation date of the
17            facility;
18                (ii) provide that utilities shall maintain
19            adequate records documenting purchases under the
20            sourcing agreements entered into to comply with
21            this subsection (d) and shall file an accounting
22            with the load forecast that must be filed with the
23            Agency by July 15 of each year, in accordance with
24            subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public
25            Utilities Act;
26                (iii) provide that all costs associated with

 

 

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1            the initial clean coal facility will be
2            periodically reported to the Federal Energy
3            Regulatory Commission and to purchasers in
4            accordance with applicable laws governing
5            cost-based wholesale power contracts;
6                (iv) permit the Illinois Power Agency to
7            assume ownership of the initial clean coal
8            facility, without monetary consideration and
9            otherwise on reasonable terms acceptable to the
10            Agency, if the Agency so requests no less than 3
11            years prior to the end of the stated contract term;
12                (v) require the owner of the initial clean coal
13            facility to provide documentation to the
14            Commission each year, starting in the facility's
15            first year of commercial operation, accurately
16            reporting the quantity of carbon emissions from
17            the facility that have been captured and
18            sequestered and report any quantities of carbon
19            released from the site or sites at which carbon
20            emissions were sequestered in prior years, based
21            on continuous monitoring of such sites. If, in any
22            year after the first year of commercial operation,
23            the owner of the facility fails to demonstrate that
24            the initial clean coal facility captured and
25            sequestered at least 50% of the total carbon
26            emissions that the facility would otherwise emit

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 23 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            or that sequestration of emissions from prior
2            years has failed, resulting in the release of
3            carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the owner of
4            the facility must offset excess emissions. Any
5            such carbon offsets must be permanent, additional,
6            verifiable, real, located within the State of
7            Illinois, and legally and practicably enforceable.
8            The cost of such offsets for the facility that are
9            not recoverable shall not exceed $15 million in any
10            given year. No costs of any such purchases of
11            carbon offsets may be recovered from a utility or
12            its customers. All carbon offsets purchased for
13            this purpose and any carbon emission credits
14            associated with sequestration of carbon from the
15            facility must be permanently retired. The initial
16            clean coal facility shall not forfeit its
17            designation as a clean coal facility if the
18            facility fails to fully comply with the applicable
19            carbon sequestration requirements in any given
20            year, provided the requisite offsets are
21            purchased. However, the Attorney General, on
22            behalf of the People of the State of Illinois, may
23            specifically enforce the facility's sequestration
24            requirement and the other terms of this contract
25            provision. Compliance with the sequestration
26            requirements and offset purchase requirements

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 24 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            specified in paragraph (3) of this subsection (d)
2            shall be reviewed annually by an independent
3            expert retained by the owner of the initial clean
4            coal facility, with the advance written approval
5            of the Attorney General. The Commission may, in the
6            course of the review specified in item (vii),
7            reduce the allowable return on equity for the
8            facility if the facility wilfully fails to comply
9            with the carbon capture and sequestration
10            requirements set forth in this item (v);
11                (vi) include limits on, and accordingly
12            provide for modification of, the amount the
13            utility is required to source under the sourcing
14            agreement consistent with paragraph (2) of this
15            subsection (d);
16                (vii) require Commission review: (1) to
17            determine the justness, reasonableness, and
18            prudence of the inputs to the formula referenced in
19            subparagraphs (A)(i) through (A)(iii) of paragraph
20            (3) of this subsection (d), prior to an adjustment
21            in those inputs including, without limitation, the
22            capital structure and return on equity, fuel
23            costs, and other operations and maintenance costs
24            and (2) to approve the costs to be passed through
25            to customers under the sourcing agreement by which
26            the utility satisfies its statutory obligations.

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 25 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            Commission review shall occur no less than every 3
2            years, regardless of whether any adjustments have
3            been proposed, and shall be completed within 9
4            months;
5                (viii) limit the utility's obligation to such
6            amount as the utility is allowed to recover through
7            tariffs filed with the Commission, provided that
8            neither the clean coal facility nor the utility
9            waives any right to assert federal pre-emption or
10            any other argument in response to a purported
11            disallowance of recovery costs;
12                (ix) limit the utility's or alternative retail
13            electric supplier's obligation to incur any
14            liability until such time as the facility is in
15            commercial operation and generating power and
16            energy and such power and energy is being delivered
17            to the facility busbar;
18                (x) provide that the owner or owners of the
19            initial clean coal facility, which is the
20            counterparty to such sourcing agreement, shall
21            have the right from time to time to elect whether
22            the obligations of the utility party thereto shall
23            be governed by the power purchase provisions or the
24            contract for differences provisions;
25                (xi) append documentation showing that the
26            formula rate and contract, insofar as they relate

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 26 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            to the power purchase provisions, have been
2            approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory
3            Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal
4            Power Act;
5                (xii) provide that any changes to the terms of
6            the contract, insofar as such changes relate to the
7            power purchase provisions, are subject to review
8            under the public interest standard applied by the
9            Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to
10            Sections 205 and 206 of the Federal Power Act; and
11                (xiii) conform with customary lender
12            requirements in power purchase agreements used as
13            the basis for financing non-utility generators.
14        (4) Effective date of sourcing agreements with the
15    initial clean coal facility.
16        Any proposed sourcing agreement with the initial clean
17    coal facility shall not become effective unless the
18    following reports are prepared and submitted and
19    authorizations and approvals obtained:
20            (i) Facility cost report. The owner of the initial
21        clean coal facility shall submit to the Commission, the
22        Agency, and the General Assembly a front-end
23        engineering and design study, a facility cost report,
24        method of financing (including but not limited to
25        structure and associated costs), and an operating and
26        maintenance cost quote for the facility (collectively

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 27 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        "facility cost report"), which shall be prepared in
2        accordance with the requirements of this paragraph (4)
3        of subsection (d) of this Section, and shall provide
4        the Commission and the Agency access to the work
5        papers, relied upon documents, and any other backup
6        documentation related to the facility cost report.
7            (ii) Commission report. Within 6 months following
8        receipt of the facility cost report, the Commission, in
9        consultation with the Agency, shall submit a report to
10        the General Assembly setting forth its analysis of the
11        facility cost report. Such report shall include, but
12        not be limited to, a comparison of the costs associated
13        with electricity generated by the initial clean coal
14        facility to the costs associated with electricity
15        generated by other types of generation facilities, an
16        analysis of the rate impacts on residential and small
17        business customers over the life of the sourcing
18        agreements, and an analysis of the likelihood that the
19        initial clean coal facility will commence commercial
20        operation by and be delivering power to the facility's
21        busbar by 2016. To assist in the preparation of its
22        report, the Commission, in consultation with the
23        Agency, may hire one or more experts or consultants,
24        the costs of which shall be paid for by the owner of
25        the initial clean coal facility. The Commission and
26        Agency may begin the process of selecting such experts

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 28 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        or consultants prior to receipt of the facility cost
2        report.
3            (iii) General Assembly approval. The proposed
4        sourcing agreements shall not take effect unless,
5        based on the facility cost report and the Commission's
6        report, the General Assembly enacts authorizing
7        legislation approving (A) the projected price, stated
8        in cents per kilowatthour, to be charged for
9        electricity generated by the initial clean coal
10        facility, (B) the projected impact on residential and
11        small business customers' bills over the life of the
12        sourcing agreements, and (C) the maximum allowable
13        return on equity for the project; and
14            (iv) Commission review. If the General Assembly
15        enacts authorizing legislation pursuant to
16        subparagraph (iii) approving a sourcing agreement, the
17        Commission shall, within 90 days of such enactment,
18        complete a review of such sourcing agreement. During
19        such time period, the Commission shall implement any
20        directive of the General Assembly, resolve any
21        disputes between the parties to the sourcing agreement
22        concerning the terms of such agreement, approve the
23        form of such agreement, and issue an order finding that
24        the sourcing agreement is prudent and reasonable.
25        The facility cost report shall be prepared as follows:
26            (A) The facility cost report shall be prepared by

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 29 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        duly licensed engineering and construction firms
2        detailing the estimated capital costs payable to one or
3        more contractors or suppliers for the engineering,
4        procurement and construction of the components
5        comprising the initial clean coal facility and the
6        estimated costs of operation and maintenance of the
7        facility. The facility cost report shall include:
8                (i) an estimate of the capital cost of the core
9            plant based on one or more front end engineering
10            and design studies for the gasification island and
11            related facilities. The core plant shall include
12            all civil, structural, mechanical, electrical,
13            control, and safety systems.
14                (ii) an estimate of the capital cost of the
15            balance of the plant, including any capital costs
16            associated with sequestration of carbon dioxide
17            emissions and all interconnects and interfaces
18            required to operate the facility, such as
19            transmission of electricity, construction or
20            backfeed power supply, pipelines to transport
21            substitute natural gas or carbon dioxide, potable
22            water supply, natural gas supply, water supply,
23            water discharge, landfill, access roads, and coal
24            delivery.
25            The quoted construction costs shall be expressed
26        in nominal dollars as of the date that the quote is

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 30 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        prepared and shall include capitalized financing costs
2        during construction, taxes, insurance, and other
3        owner's costs, and an assumed escalation in materials
4        and labor beyond the date as of which the construction
5        cost quote is expressed.
6            (B) The front end engineering and design study for
7        the gasification island and the cost study for the
8        balance of plant shall include sufficient design work
9        to permit quantification of major categories of
10        materials, commodities and labor hours, and receipt of
11        quotes from vendors of major equipment required to
12        construct and operate the clean coal facility.
13            (C) The facility cost report shall also include an
14        operating and maintenance cost quote that will provide
15        the estimated cost of delivered fuel, personnel,
16        maintenance contracts, chemicals, catalysts,
17        consumables, spares, and other fixed and variable
18        operations and maintenance costs. The delivered fuel
19        cost estimate will be provided by a recognized third
20        party expert or experts in the fuel and transportation
21        industries. The balance of the operating and
22        maintenance cost quote, excluding delivered fuel
23        costs, will be developed based on the inputs provided
24        by duly licensed engineering and construction firms
25        performing the construction cost quote, potential
26        vendors under long-term service agreements and plant

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 31 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        operating agreements, or recognized third party plant
2        operator or operators.
3            The operating and maintenance cost quote
4        (including the cost of the front end engineering and
5        design study) shall be expressed in nominal dollars as
6        of the date that the quote is prepared and shall
7        include taxes, insurance, and other owner's costs, and
8        an assumed escalation in materials and labor beyond the
9        date as of which the operating and maintenance cost
10        quote is expressed.
11            (D) The facility cost report shall also include an
12        analysis of the initial clean coal facility's ability
13        to deliver power and energy into the applicable
14        regional transmission organization markets and an
15        analysis of the expected capacity factor for the
16        initial clean coal facility.
17            (E) Amounts paid to third parties unrelated to the
18        owner or owners of the initial clean coal facility to
19        prepare the core plant construction cost quote,
20        including the front end engineering and design study,
21        and the operating and maintenance cost quote will be
22        reimbursed through Coal Development Bonds.
23        (5) Re-powering and retrofitting coal-fired power
24    plants previously owned by Illinois utilities to qualify as
25    clean coal facilities. During the 2009 procurement
26    planning process and thereafter, the Agency and the

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 32 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    Commission shall consider sourcing agreements covering
2    electricity generated by power plants that were previously
3    owned by Illinois utilities and that have been or will be
4    converted into clean coal facilities, as defined by Section
5    1-10 of this Act. Pursuant to such procurement planning
6    process, the owners of such facilities may propose to the
7    Agency sourcing agreements with utilities and alternative
8    retail electric suppliers required to comply with
9    subsection (d) of this Section and item (5) of subsection
10    (d) of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act, covering
11    electricity generated by such facilities. In the case of
12    sourcing agreements that are power purchase agreements,
13    the contract price for electricity sales shall be
14    established on a cost of service basis. In the case of
15    sourcing agreements that are contracts for differences,
16    the contract price from which the reference price is
17    subtracted shall be established on a cost of service basis.
18    The Agency and the Commission may approve any such utility
19    sourcing agreements that do not exceed cost-based
20    benchmarks developed by the procurement administrator, in
21    consultation with the Commission staff, Agency staff and
22    the procurement monitor, subject to Commission review and
23    approval. The Commission shall have authority to inspect
24    all books and records associated with these clean coal
25    facilities during the term of any such contract.
26        (6) Costs incurred under this subsection (d) or

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 33 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    pursuant to a contract entered into under this subsection
2    (d) shall be deemed prudently incurred and reasonable in
3    amount and the electric utility shall be entitled to full
4    cost recovery pursuant to the tariffs filed with the
5    Commission.
6    (e) The draft procurement plans are subject to public
7comment, as required by Section 16-111.5 of the Public
8Utilities Act.
9    (f) The Agency shall submit the final procurement plan to
10the Commission. The Agency shall revise a procurement plan if
11the Commission determines that it does not meet the standards
12set forth in Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
13    (g) The Agency shall assess fees to each affected utility
14to recover the costs incurred in preparation of the annual
15procurement plan for the utility.
16    (h) The Agency shall assess fees to each bidder to recover
17the costs incurred in connection with a competitive procurement
18process.
19(Source: P.A. 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 99-536, eff. 7-8-16.)
 
20    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 99-906)
21    Sec. 1-75. Planning and Procurement Bureau. The Planning
22and Procurement Bureau has the following duties and
23responsibilities:
24    (a) The Planning and Procurement Bureau shall each year,
25beginning in 2008, develop procurement plans and conduct

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 34 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1competitive procurement processes in accordance with the
2requirements of Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act
3for the eligible retail customers of electric utilities that on
4December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000
5customers in Illinois. Beginning with the delivery year
6commencing on June 1, 2017, the Planning and Procurement Bureau
7shall develop plans and processes for the procurement of zero
8emission credits from zero emission facilities in accordance
9with the requirements of subsection (d-5) of this Section. The
10Planning and Procurement Bureau shall also develop procurement
11plans and conduct competitive procurement processes in
12accordance with the requirements of Section 16-111.5 of the
13Public Utilities Act for the eligible retail customers of small
14multi-jurisdictional electric utilities that (i) on December
1531, 2005 served less than 100,000 customers in Illinois and
16(ii) request a procurement plan for their Illinois
17jurisdictional load. This Section shall not apply to a small
18multi-jurisdictional utility until such time as a small
19multi-jurisdictional utility requests the Agency to prepare a
20procurement plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load. For
21the purposes of this Section, the term "eligible retail
22customers" has the same definition as found in Section
2316-111.5(a) of the Public Utilities Act.
24    Beginning with the plan or plans to be implemented in the
252017 delivery year, the Agency shall no longer include the
26procurement of renewable energy resources in the annual

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 35 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1procurement plans required by this subsection (a), except as
2provided in subsection (q) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public
3Utilities Act, and shall instead develop a long-term renewable
4resources procurement plan in accordance with subsection (c) of
5this Section and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
6        (1) The Agency shall each year, beginning in 2008, as
7    needed, issue a request for qualifications for experts or
8    expert consulting firms to develop the procurement plans in
9    accordance with Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
10    Act. In order to qualify an expert or expert consulting
11    firm must have:
12            (A) direct previous experience assembling
13        large-scale power supply plans or portfolios for
14        end-use customers;
15            (B) an advanced degree in economics, mathematics,
16        engineering, risk management, or a related area of
17        study;
18            (C) 10 years of experience in the electricity
19        sector, including managing supply risk;
20            (D) expertise in wholesale electricity market
21        rules, including those established by the Federal
22        Energy Regulatory Commission and regional transmission
23        organizations;
24            (E) expertise in credit protocols and familiarity
25        with contract protocols;
26            (F) adequate resources to perform and fulfill the

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 36 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        required functions and responsibilities; and
2            (G) the absence of a conflict of interest and
3        inappropriate bias for or against potential bidders or
4        the affected electric utilities.
5        (2) The Agency shall each year, as needed, issue a
6    request for qualifications for a procurement administrator
7    to conduct the competitive procurement processes in
8    accordance with Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
9    Act. In order to qualify an expert or expert consulting
10    firm must have:
11            (A) direct previous experience administering a
12        large-scale competitive procurement process;
13            (B) an advanced degree in economics, mathematics,
14        engineering, or a related area of study;
15            (C) 10 years of experience in the electricity
16        sector, including risk management experience;
17            (D) expertise in wholesale electricity market
18        rules, including those established by the Federal
19        Energy Regulatory Commission and regional transmission
20        organizations;
21            (E) expertise in credit and contract protocols;
22            (F) adequate resources to perform and fulfill the
23        required functions and responsibilities; and
24            (G) the absence of a conflict of interest and
25        inappropriate bias for or against potential bidders or
26        the affected electric utilities.

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 37 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        (3) The Agency shall provide affected utilities and
2    other interested parties with the lists of qualified
3    experts or expert consulting firms identified through the
4    request for qualifications processes that are under
5    consideration to develop the procurement plans and to serve
6    as the procurement administrator. The Agency shall also
7    provide each qualified expert's or expert consulting
8    firm's response to the request for qualifications. All
9    information provided under this subparagraph shall also be
10    provided to the Commission. The Agency may provide by rule
11    for fees associated with supplying the information to
12    utilities and other interested parties. These parties
13    shall, within 5 business days, notify the Agency in writing
14    if they object to any experts or expert consulting firms on
15    the lists. Objections shall be based on:
16            (A) failure to satisfy qualification criteria;
17            (B) identification of a conflict of interest; or
18            (C) evidence of inappropriate bias for or against
19        potential bidders or the affected utilities.
20        The Agency shall remove experts or expert consulting
21    firms from the lists within 10 days if there is a
22    reasonable basis for an objection and provide the updated
23    lists to the affected utilities and other interested
24    parties. If the Agency fails to remove an expert or expert
25    consulting firm from a list, an objecting party may seek
26    review by the Commission within 5 days thereafter by filing

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 38 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    a petition, and the Commission shall render a ruling on the
2    petition within 10 days. There is no right of appeal of the
3    Commission's ruling.
4        (4) The Agency shall issue requests for proposals to
5    the qualified experts or expert consulting firms to develop
6    a procurement plan for the affected utilities and to serve
7    as procurement administrator.
8        (5) The Agency shall select an expert or expert
9    consulting firm to develop procurement plans based on the
10    proposals submitted and shall award contracts of up to 5
11    years to those selected.
12        (6) The Agency shall select an expert or expert
13    consulting firm, with approval of the Commission, to serve
14    as procurement administrator based on the proposals
15    submitted. If the Commission rejects, within 5 days, the
16    Agency's selection, the Agency shall submit another
17    recommendation within 3 days based on the proposals
18    submitted. The Agency shall award a 5-year contract to the
19    expert or expert consulting firm so selected with
20    Commission approval.
21    (b) The experts or expert consulting firms retained by the
22Agency shall, as appropriate, prepare procurement plans, and
23conduct a competitive procurement process as prescribed in
24Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, to ensure
25adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and environmentally
26sustainable electric service at the lowest total cost over

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 39 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1time, taking into account any benefits of price stability, for
2eligible retail customers of electric utilities that on
3December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000
4customers in the State of Illinois, and for eligible Illinois
5retail customers of small multi-jurisdictional electric
6utilities that (i) on December 31, 2005 served less than
7100,000 customers in Illinois and (ii) request a procurement
8plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load.
9    (c) Renewable portfolio standard.
10        (1)(A) The Agency shall develop a long-term renewable
11    resources procurement plan that shall include procurement
12    programs and competitive procurement events necessary to
13    meet the goals set forth in this subsection (c). The
14    initial long-term renewable resources procurement plan
15    shall be released for comment no later than 160 days after
16    the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th
17    General Assembly. The Agency shall review, and may revise
18    on an expedited basis, the long-term renewable resources
19    procurement plan at least every 2 years, which shall be
20    conducted in conjunction with the procurement plan under
21    Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act to the extent
22    practicable to minimize administrative expense. The
23    long-term renewable resources procurement plans shall be
24    subject to review and approval by the Commission under
25    Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
26        (B) Subject to subparagraph (F) of this paragraph (1),

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 40 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    the long-term renewable resources procurement plan shall
2    include the goals for procurement of renewable energy
3    credits to meet at least the following overall percentages:
4    13% by the 2017 delivery year; increasing by at least 1.5%
5    each delivery year thereafter to at least 25% by the 2025
6    delivery year; and continuing at no less than 25% for each
7    delivery year thereafter. In the event of a conflict
8    between these goals and the new wind and new photovoltaic
9    procurement requirements described in items (i) through
10    (iii) of subparagraph (C) of this paragraph (1), the
11    long-term plan shall prioritize compliance with the new
12    wind and new photovoltaic procurement requirements
13    described in items (i) through (iii) of subparagraph (C) of
14    this paragraph (1) over the annual percentage targets
15    described in this subparagraph (B).
16        For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2017, the
17    procurement plan shall include cost-effective renewable
18    energy resources equal to at least 13% of each utility's
19    load for eligible retail customers and 13% of the
20    applicable portion of each utility's load for retail
21    customers who are not eligible retail customers, which
22    applicable portion shall equal 50% of the utility's load
23    for retail customers who are not eligible retail customers
24    on February 28, 2017.
25        For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2018, the
26    procurement plan shall include cost-effective renewable

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 41 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    energy resources equal to at least 14.5% of each utility's
2    load for eligible retail customers and 14.5% of the
3    applicable portion of each utility's load for retail
4    customers who are not eligible retail customers, which
5    applicable portion shall equal 75% of the utility's load
6    for retail customers who are not eligible retail customers
7    on February 28, 2017.
8        For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2019, and for
9    each year thereafter, the procurement plans shall include
10    cost-effective renewable energy resources equal to a
11    minimum percentage of each utility's load for all retail
12    customers as follows: 16% by June 1, 2019; increasing by
13    1.5% each year thereafter to 25% by June 1, 2025; and 25%
14    by June 1, 2026 and each year thereafter.
15        For each delivery year, the Agency shall first
16    recognize each utility's obligations for that delivery
17    year under existing contracts. Any renewable energy
18    credits under existing contracts, including renewable
19    energy credits as part of renewable energy resources, shall
20    be used to meet the goals set forth in this subsection (c)
21    for the delivery year.
22        (C) Of the renewable energy credits procured under this
23    subsection (c), at least 75% shall come from wind and
24    photovoltaic projects. The long-term renewable resources
25    procurement plan described in subparagraph (A) of this
26    paragraph (1) shall include the procurement of renewable

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 42 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    energy credits in amounts equal to at least the following:
2            (i) By the end of the 2020 delivery year:
3                At least 2,000,000 renewable energy credits
4            for each delivery year shall come from new wind
5            projects; and
6                At least 2,000,000 renewable energy credits
7            for each delivery year shall come from new
8            photovoltaic projects; of that amount, to the
9            extent possible, the Agency shall procure: at
10            least 50% from solar photovoltaic projects using
11            the program outlined in subparagraph (K) of this
12            paragraph (1) from distributed renewable energy
13            generation devices or community renewable
14            generation projects; at least 40% from
15            utility-scale solar projects; at least 2% from
16            brownfield site photovoltaic projects that are not
17            community renewable generation projects; and the
18            remainder shall be determined through the
19            long-term planning process described in
20            subparagraph (A) of this paragraph (1).
21            (ii) By the end of the 2025 delivery year:
22                At least 3,000,000 renewable energy credits
23            for each delivery year shall come from new wind
24            projects; and
25                At least 3,000,000 renewable energy credits
26            for each delivery year shall come from new

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 43 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            photovoltaic projects; of that amount, to the
2            extent possible, the Agency shall procure: at
3            least 50% from solar photovoltaic projects using
4            the program outlined in subparagraph (K) of this
5            paragraph (1) from distributed renewable energy
6            devices or community renewable generation
7            projects; at least 40% from utility-scale solar
8            projects; at least 2% from brownfield site
9            photovoltaic projects that are not community
10            renewable generation projects; and the remainder
11            shall be determined through the long-term planning
12            process described in subparagraph (A) of this
13            paragraph (1).
14            (iii) By the end of the 2030 delivery year:
15                At least 4,000,000 renewable energy credits
16            for each delivery year shall come from new wind
17            projects; and
18                At least 4,000,000 renewable energy credits
19            for each delivery year shall come from new
20            photovoltaic projects; of that amount, to the
21            extent possible, the Agency shall procure: at
22            least 50% from solar photovoltaic projects using
23            the program outlined in subparagraph (K) of this
24            paragraph (1) from distributed renewable energy
25            devices or community renewable generation
26            projects; at least 40% from utility-scale solar

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 44 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            projects; at least 2% from brownfield site
2            photovoltaic projects that are not community
3            renewable generation projects; and the remainder
4            shall be determined through the long-term planning
5            process described in subparagraph (A) of this
6            paragraph (1).
7            For purposes of this Section:
8                "New wind projects" means wind renewable
9            energy facilities that are energized after June 1,
10            2017 for the delivery year commencing June 1, 2017
11            or within 3 years after the date the Commission
12            approves contracts for subsequent delivery years.
13                "New photovoltaic projects" means photovoltaic
14            renewable energy facilities that are energized
15            after June 1, 2017. Photovoltaic projects
16            developed under Section 1-56 of this Act shall not
17            apply towards the new photovoltaic project
18            requirements in this subparagraph (C).
19        (D) Renewable energy credits shall be cost effective.
20    For purposes of this subsection (c), "cost effective" means
21    that the costs of procuring renewable energy resources do
22    not cause the limit stated in subparagraph (E) of this
23    paragraph (1) to be exceeded and, for renewable energy
24    credits procured through a competitive procurement event,
25    do not exceed benchmarks based on market prices for like
26    products in the region. For purposes of this subsection

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 45 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    (c), "like products" means contracts for renewable energy
2    credits from the same or substantially similar technology,
3    same or substantially similar vintage (new or existing),
4    the same or substantially similar quantity, and the same or
5    substantially similar contract length and structure.
6    Benchmarks shall be developed by the procurement
7    administrator, in consultation with the Commission staff,
8    Agency staff, and the procurement monitor and shall be
9    subject to Commission review and approval. If price
10    benchmarks for like products in the region are not
11    available, the procurement administrator shall establish
12    price benchmarks based on publicly available data on
13    regional technology costs and expected current and future
14    regional energy prices. The benchmarks in this Section
15    shall not be used to curtail or otherwise reduce
16    contractual obligations entered into by or through the
17    Agency prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act
18    of the 99th General Assembly.
19        (E) For purposes of this subsection (c), the required
20    procurement of cost-effective renewable energy resources
21    for a particular year commencing prior to June 1, 2017
22    shall be measured as a percentage of the actual amount of
23    electricity (megawatt-hours) supplied by the electric
24    utility to eligible retail customers in the delivery year
25    ending immediately prior to the procurement, and, for
26    delivery years commencing on and after June 1, 2017, the

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 46 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    required procurement of cost-effective renewable energy
2    resources for a particular year shall be measured as a
3    percentage of the actual amount of electricity
4    (megawatt-hours) delivered by the electric utility in the
5    delivery year ending immediately prior to the procurement,
6    to all retail customers in its service territory. For
7    purposes of this subsection (c), the amount paid per
8    kilowatthour means the total amount paid for electric
9    service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For purposes
10    of this subsection (c), the total amount paid for electric
11    service includes without limitation amounts paid for
12    supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges, and add-on
13    taxes.
14        Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
15    (c), the total of renewable energy resources procured under
16    the procurement plan for any single year shall be subject
17    to the limitations of this subparagraph (E). Such
18    procurement shall be reduced for all retail customers based
19    on the amount necessary to limit the annual estimated
20    average net increase due to the costs of these resources
21    included in the amounts paid by eligible retail customers
22    in connection with electric service to no more than the
23    greater of 2.015% of the amount paid per kilowatthour by
24    those customers during the year ending May 31, 2007 or the
25    incremental amount per kilowatthour paid for these
26    resources in 2011. To arrive at a maximum dollar amount of

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 47 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    renewable energy resources to be procured for the
2    particular delivery year, the resulting per kilowatthour
3    amount shall be applied to the actual amount of
4    kilowatthours of electricity delivered, or applicable
5    portion of such amount as specified in paragraph (1) of
6    this subsection (c), as applicable, by the electric utility
7    in the delivery year immediately prior to the procurement
8    to all retail customers in its service territory. The
9    calculations required by this subparagraph (E) shall be
10    made only once for each delivery year at the time that the
11    renewable energy resources are procured. Once the
12    determination as to the amount of renewable energy
13    resources to procure is made based on the calculations set
14    forth in this subparagraph (E) and the contracts procuring
15    those amounts are executed, no subsequent rate impact
16    determinations shall be made and no adjustments to those
17    contract amounts shall be allowed. All costs incurred under
18    such contracts shall be fully recoverable by the electric
19    utility as provided in this Section.
20        (F) If the limitation on the amount of renewable energy
21    resources procured in subparagraph (E) of this paragraph
22    (1) prevents the Agency from meeting all of the goals in
23    this subsection (c), the Agency's long-term plan shall
24    prioritize compliance with the requirements of this
25    subsection (c) regarding renewable energy credits in the
26    following order:

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 48 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            (i) renewable energy credits under existing
2        contractual obligations;
3            (i-5) funding for the Illinois Solar for All
4        Program, as described in subparagraph (O) of this
5        paragraph (1);
6            (ii) renewable energy credits necessary to comply
7        with the new wind and new photovoltaic procurement
8        requirements described in items (i) through (iii) of
9        subparagraph (C) of this paragraph (1); and
10            (iii) renewable energy credits necessary to meet
11        the remaining requirements of this subsection (c).
12        (G) The following provisions shall apply to the
13    Agency's procurement of renewable energy credits under
14    this subsection (c):
15            (i) Notwithstanding whether a long-term renewable
16        resources procurement plan has been approved, the
17        Agency shall conduct an initial forward procurement
18        for renewable energy credits from new utility-scale
19        wind projects within 160 days after the effective date
20        of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly.
21        For the purposes of this initial forward procurement,
22        the Agency shall solicit 15-year contracts for
23        delivery of 1,000,000 renewable energy credits
24        delivered annually from new utility-scale wind
25        projects to begin delivery on June 1, 2019, if
26        available, but not later than June 1, 2021. Payments to

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 49 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        suppliers of renewable energy credits shall commence
2        upon delivery. Renewable energy credits procured under
3        this initial procurement shall be included in the
4        Agency's long-term plan and shall apply to all
5        renewable energy goals in this subsection (c).
6            (ii) Notwithstanding whether a long-term renewable
7        resources procurement plan has been approved, the
8        Agency shall conduct an initial forward procurement
9        for renewable energy credits from new utility-scale
10        solar projects and brownfield site photovoltaic
11        projects within one year after the effective date of
12        this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly. For
13        the purposes of this initial forward procurement, the
14        Agency shall solicit 15-year contracts for delivery of
15        1,000,000 renewable energy credits delivered annually
16        from new utility-scale solar projects and brownfield
17        site photovoltaic projects to begin delivery on June 1,
18        2019, if available, but not later than June 1, 2021.
19        The Agency may structure this initial procurement in
20        one or more discrete procurement events. Payments to
21        suppliers of renewable energy credits shall commence
22        upon delivery. Renewable energy credits procured under
23        this initial procurement shall be included in the
24        Agency's long-term plan and shall apply to all
25        renewable energy goals in this subsection (c).
26            (iii) Subsequent forward procurements for

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 50 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        utility-scale wind projects shall solicit at least
2        1,000,000 renewable energy credits delivered annually
3        per procurement event and shall be planned, scheduled,
4        and designed such that the cumulative amount of
5        renewable energy credits delivered from all new wind
6        projects in each delivery year shall not exceed the
7        Agency's projection of the cumulative amount of
8        renewable energy credits that will be delivered from
9        all new photovoltaic projects, including utility-scale
10        and distributed photovoltaic devices, in the same
11        delivery year at the time scheduled for wind contract
12        delivery.
13            (iv) If, at any time after the time set for
14        delivery of renewable energy credits pursuant to the
15        initial procurements in items (i) and (ii) of this
16        subparagraph (G), the cumulative amount of renewable
17        energy credits projected to be delivered from all new
18        wind projects in a given delivery year exceeds the
19        cumulative amount of renewable energy credits
20        projected to be delivered from all new photovoltaic
21        projects in that delivery year by 200,000 or more
22        renewable energy credits, then the Agency shall within
23        60 days adjust the procurement programs in the
24        long-term renewable resources procurement plan to
25        ensure that the projected cumulative amount of
26        renewable energy credits to be delivered from all new

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 51 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        wind projects does not exceed the projected cumulative
2        amount of renewable energy credits to be delivered from
3        all new photovoltaic projects by 200,000 or more
4        renewable energy credits, provided that nothing in
5        this Section shall preclude the projected cumulative
6        amount of renewable energy credits to be delivered from
7        all new photovoltaic projects from exceeding the
8        projected cumulative amount of renewable energy
9        credits to be delivered from all new wind projects in
10        each delivery year and provided further that nothing in
11        this item (iv) shall require the curtailment of an
12        executed contract. The Agency shall update, on a
13        quarterly basis, its projection of the renewable
14        energy credits to be delivered from all projects in
15        each delivery year. Notwithstanding anything to the
16        contrary, the Agency may adjust the timing of
17        procurement events conducted under this subparagraph
18        (G). The long-term renewable resources procurement
19        plan shall set forth the process by which the
20        adjustments may be made.
21            (v) All procurements under this subparagraph (G)
22        shall comply with the geographic requirements in
23        subparagraph (I) of this paragraph (1) and shall follow
24        the procurement processes and procedures described in
25        this Section and Section 16-111.5 of the Public
26        Utilities Act to the extent practicable, and these

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 52 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        processes and procedures may be expedited to
2        accommodate the schedule established by this
3        subparagraph (G).
4        (H) The procurement of renewable energy resources for a
5    given delivery year shall be reduced as described in this
6    subparagraph (H) if an alternate retail electric supplier
7    meets the requirements described in this subparagraph (H).
8            (i) Within 45 days after the effective date of this
9        amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, an
10        alternative retail electric supplier or its successor
11        shall submit an informational filing to the Illinois
12        Commerce Commission certifying that, as of December
13        31, 2015, the alternative retail electric supplier
14        owned one or more electric generating facilities that
15        generates renewable energy resources as defined in
16        Section 1-10 of this Act, provided that such facilities
17        are not powered by wind or photovoltaics, and the
18        facilities generate one renewable energy credit for
19        each megawatthour of energy produced from the
20        facility.
21            The informational filing shall identify each
22        facility that was eligible to satisfy the alternative
23        retail electric supplier's obligations under Section
24        16-115D of the Public Utilities Act as described in
25        this item (i).
26            (ii) For a given delivery year, the alternative

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 53 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        retail electric supplier may elect to supply its retail
2        customers with renewable energy credits from the
3        facility or facilities described in item (i) of this
4        subparagraph (H) that continue to be owned by the
5        alternative retail electric supplier.
6            (iii) The alternative retail electric supplier
7        shall notify the Agency and the applicable utility, no
8        later than February 28 of the year preceding the
9        applicable delivery year or 15 days after the effective
10        date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
11        Assembly, whichever is later, of its election under
12        item (ii) of this subparagraph (H) to supply renewable
13        energy credits to retail customers of the utility. Such
14        election shall identify the amount of renewable energy
15        credits to be supplied by the alternative retail
16        electric supplier to the utility's retail customers
17        and the source of the renewable energy credits
18        identified in the informational filing as described in
19        item (i) of this subparagraph (H), subject to the
20        following limitations:
21                For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2018,
22            the maximum amount of renewable energy credits to
23            be supplied by an alternative retail electric
24            supplier under this subparagraph (H) shall be 68%
25            multiplied by 25% multiplied by 14.5% multiplied
26            by the amount of metered electricity

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 54 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            (megawatt-hours) delivered by the alternative
2            retail electric supplier to Illinois retail
3            customers during the delivery year ending May 31,
4            2016.
5                For delivery years beginning June 1, 2019 and
6            each year thereafter, the maximum amount of
7            renewable energy credits to be supplied by an
8            alternative retail electric supplier under this
9            subparagraph (H) shall be 68% multiplied by 50%
10            multiplied by 16% multiplied by the amount of
11            metered electricity (megawatt-hours) delivered by
12            the alternative retail electric supplier to
13            Illinois retail customers during the delivery year
14            ending May 31, 2016, provided that the 16% value
15            shall increase by 1.5% each delivery year
16            thereafter to 25% by the delivery year beginning
17            June 1, 2025, and thereafter the 25% value shall
18            apply to each delivery year.
19            For each delivery year, the total amount of
20        renewable energy credits supplied by all alternative
21        retail electric suppliers under this subparagraph (H)
22        shall not exceed 9% of the Illinois target renewable
23        energy credit quantity. The Illinois target renewable
24        energy credit quantity for the delivery year beginning
25        June 1, 2018 is 14.5% multiplied by the total amount of
26        metered electricity (megawatt-hours) delivered in the

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 55 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        delivery year immediately preceding that delivery
2        year, provided that the 14.5% shall increase by 1.5%
3        each delivery year thereafter to 25% by the delivery
4        year beginning June 1, 2025, and thereafter the 25%
5        value shall apply to each delivery year.
6            If the requirements set forth in items (i) through
7        (iii) of this subparagraph (H) are met, the charges
8        that would otherwise be applicable to the retail
9        customers of the alternative retail electric supplier
10        under paragraph (6) of this subsection (c) for the
11        applicable delivery year shall be reduced by the ratio
12        of the quantity of renewable energy credits supplied by
13        the alternative retail electric supplier compared to
14        that supplier's target renewable energy credit
15        quantity. The supplier's target renewable energy
16        credit quantity for the delivery year beginning June 1,
17        2018 is 14.5% multiplied by the total amount of metered
18        electricity (megawatt-hours) delivered by the
19        alternative retail supplier in that delivery year,
20        provided that the 14.5% shall increase by 1.5% each
21        delivery year thereafter to 25% by the delivery year
22        beginning June 1, 2025, and thereafter the 25% value
23        shall apply to each delivery year.
24            On or before April 1 of each year, the Agency shall
25        annually publish a report on its website that
26        identifies the aggregate amount of renewable energy

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 56 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        credits supplied by alternative retail electric
2        suppliers under this subparagraph (H).
3        (I) The Agency shall design its long-term renewable
4    energy procurement plan to maximize the State's interest in
5    the health, safety, and welfare of its residents, including
6    but not limited to minimizing sulfur dioxide, nitrogen
7    oxide, particulate matter and other pollution that
8    adversely affects public health in this State, increasing
9    fuel and resource diversity in this State, enhancing the
10    reliability and resiliency of the electricity distribution
11    system in this State, meeting goals to limit carbon dioxide
12    emissions under federal or State law, and contributing to a
13    cleaner and healthier environment for the citizens of this
14    State. In order to further these legislative purposes,
15    renewable energy credits shall be eligible to be counted
16    toward the renewable energy requirements of this
17    subsection (c) if they are generated from facilities
18    located in this State. The Agency may qualify renewable
19    energy credits from facilities located in states adjacent
20    to Illinois if the generator demonstrates and the Agency
21    determines that the operation of such facility or
22    facilities will help promote the State's interest in the
23    health, safety, and welfare of its residents based on the
24    public interest criteria described above. To ensure that
25    the public interest criteria are applied to the procurement
26    and given full effect, the Agency's long-term procurement

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 57 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    plan shall describe in detail how each public interest
2    factor shall be considered and weighted for facilities
3    located in states adjacent to Illinois.
4        (J) In order to promote the competitive development of
5    renewable energy resources in furtherance of the State's
6    interest in the health, safety, and welfare of its
7    residents, renewable energy credits shall not be eligible
8    to be counted toward the renewable energy requirements of
9    this subsection (c) if they are sourced from a generating
10    unit whose costs were being recovered through rates
11    regulated by this State or any other state or states on or
12    after January 1, 2017. Each contract executed to purchase
13    renewable energy credits under this subsection (c) shall
14    provide for the contract's termination if the costs of the
15    generating unit supplying the renewable energy credits
16    subsequently begin to be recovered through rates regulated
17    by this State or any other state or states; and each
18    contract shall further provide that, in that event, the
19    supplier of the credits must return 110% of all payments
20    received under the contract. Amounts returned under the
21    requirements of this subparagraph (J) shall be retained by
22    the utility and all of these amounts shall be used for the
23    procurement of additional renewable energy credits from
24    new wind or new photovoltaic resources as defined in this
25    subsection (c). The long-term plan shall provide that these
26    renewable energy credits shall be procured in the next

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 58 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    procurement event.
2        Notwithstanding the limitations of this subparagraph
3    (J), renewable energy credits sourced from generating
4    units that are constructed, purchased, owned, or leased by
5    an electric utility as part of an approved project,
6    program, or pilot under Section 1-56 of this Act shall be
7    eligible to be counted toward the renewable energy
8    requirements of this subsection (c), regardless of how the
9    costs of these units are recovered.
10        (K) The long-term renewable resources procurement plan
11    developed by the Agency in accordance with subparagraph (A)
12    of this paragraph (1) shall include an Adjustable Block
13    program for the procurement of renewable energy credits
14    from new photovoltaic projects that are distributed
15    renewable energy generation devices or new photovoltaic
16    community renewable generation projects. The Adjustable
17    Block program shall be designed to provide a transparent
18    schedule of prices and quantities to enable the
19    photovoltaic market to scale up and for renewable energy
20    credit prices to adjust at a predictable rate over time.
21    The prices set by the Adjustable Block program can be
22    reflected as a set value or as the product of a formula.
23        The Adjustable Block program shall include for each
24    category of eligible projects: a schedule of standard block
25    purchase prices to be offered; a series of steps, with
26    associated nameplate capacity and purchase prices that

 

 

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1    adjust from step to step; and automatic opening of the next
2    step as soon as the nameplate capacity and available
3    purchase prices for an open step are fully committed or
4    reserved. Only projects energized on or after June 1, 2017
5    shall be eligible for the Adjustable Block program. For
6    each block group the Agency shall determine the number of
7    blocks, the amount of generation capacity in each block,
8    and the purchase price for each block, provided that the
9    purchase price provided and the total amount of generation
10    in all blocks for all block groups shall be sufficient to
11    meet the goals in this subsection (c). The Agency may
12    periodically review its prior decisions establishing the
13    number of blocks, the amount of generation capacity in each
14    block, and the purchase price for each block, and may
15    propose, on an expedited basis, changes to these previously
16    set values, including but not limited to redistributing
17    these amounts and the available funds as necessary and
18    appropriate, subject to Commission approval as part of the
19    periodic plan revision process described in Section
20    16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act. The Agency may define
21    different block sizes, purchase prices, or other distinct
22    terms and conditions for projects located in different
23    utility service territories if the Agency deems it
24    necessary to meet the goals in this subsection (c).
25        The Adjustable Block program shall include at least the
26    following block groups in at least the following amounts,

 

 

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1    which may be adjusted upon review by the Agency and
2    approval by the Commission as described in this
3    subparagraph (K):
4            (i) At least 25% from distributed renewable energy
5        generation devices with a nameplate capacity of no more
6        than 10 kilowatts.
7            (ii) At least 25% from distributed renewable
8        energy generation devices with a nameplate capacity of
9        more than 10 kilowatts and no more than 2,000
10        kilowatts. The Agency may create sub-categories within
11        this category to account for the differences between
12        projects for small commercial customers, large
13        commercial customers, and public or non-profit
14        customers.
15            (iii) At least 25% from photovoltaic community
16        renewable generation projects.
17            (iv) The remaining 25% shall be allocated as
18        specified by the Agency in the long-term renewable
19        resources procurement plan.
20        The Adjustable Block program shall be designed to
21    ensure that renewable energy credits are procured from
22    photovoltaic distributed renewable energy generation
23    devices and new photovoltaic community renewable energy
24    generation projects in diverse locations and are not
25    concentrated in a few geographic areas.
26        (L) The procurement of photovoltaic renewable energy

 

 

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1    credits under items (i) through (iv) of subparagraph (K) of
2    this paragraph (1) shall be subject to the following
3    contract and payment terms:
4            (i) The Agency shall procure contracts of at least
5        15 years in length.
6            (ii) For those renewable energy credits that
7        qualify and are procured under item (i) of subparagraph
8        (K) of this paragraph (1), the renewable energy credit
9        purchase price shall be paid in full by the contracting
10        utilities at the time that the facility producing the
11        renewable energy credits is interconnected at the
12        distribution system level of the utility and
13        energized. The electric utility shall receive and
14        retire all renewable energy credits generated by the
15        project for the first 15 years of operation.
16            (iii) For those renewable energy credits that
17        qualify and are procured under item (ii) and (iii) of
18        subparagraph (K) of this paragraph (1) and any
19        additional categories of distributed generation
20        included in the long-term renewable resources
21        procurement plan and approved by the Commission, 20
22        percent of the renewable energy credit purchase price
23        shall be paid by the contracting utilities at the time
24        that the facility producing the renewable energy
25        credits is interconnected at the distribution system
26        level of the utility and energized. The remaining

 

 

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1        portion shall be paid ratably over the subsequent
2        4-year period. The electric utility shall receive and
3        retire all renewable energy credits generated by the
4        project for the first 15 years of operation.
5            (iv) Each contract shall include provisions to
6        ensure the delivery of the renewable energy credits for
7        the full term of the contract.
8            (v) The utility shall be the counterparty to the
9        contracts executed under this subparagraph (L) that
10        are approved by the Commission under the process
11        described in Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
12        Act. No contract shall be executed for an amount that
13        is less than one renewable energy credit per year.
14            (vi) If, at any time, approved applications for the
15        Adjustable Block program exceed funds collected by the
16        electric utility or would cause the Agency to exceed
17        the limitation described in subparagraph (E) of this
18        paragraph (1) on the amount of renewable energy
19        resources that may be procured, then the Agency shall
20        consider future uncommitted funds to be reserved for
21        these contracts on a first-come, first-served basis,
22        with the delivery of renewable energy credits required
23        beginning at the time that the reserved funds become
24        available.
25            (vii) Nothing in this Section shall require the
26        utility to advance any payment or pay any amounts that

 

 

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1        exceed the actual amount of revenues collected by the
2        utility under paragraph (6) of this subsection (c) and
3        subsection (k) of Section 16-108 of the Public
4        Utilities Act, and contracts executed under this
5        Section shall expressly incorporate this limitation.
6        (M) The Agency shall be authorized to retain one or
7    more experts or expert consulting firms to develop,
8    administer, implement, operate, and evaluate the
9    Adjustable Block program described in subparagraph (K) of
10    this paragraph (1), and the Agency shall retain the
11    consultant or consultants in the same manner, to the extent
12    practicable, as the Agency retains others to administer
13    provisions of this Act, including, but not limited to, the
14    procurement administrator. The selection of experts and
15    expert consulting firms and the procurement process
16    described in this subparagraph (M) are exempt from the
17    requirements of Section 20-10 of the Illinois Procurement
18    Code, under Section 20-10 of that Code. The Agency shall
19    strive to minimize administrative expenses in the
20    implementation of the Adjustable Block program.
21        The Agency and its consultant or consultants shall
22    monitor block activity, share program activity with
23    stakeholders and conduct regularly scheduled meetings to
24    discuss program activity and market conditions. If
25    necessary, the Agency may make prospective administrative
26    adjustments to the Adjustable Block program design, such as

 

 

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1    redistributing available funds or making adjustments to
2    purchase prices as necessary to achieve the goals of this
3    subsection (c). Program modifications to any price,
4    capacity block, or other program element that do not
5    deviate from the Commission's approved value by more than
6    25% shall take effect immediately and are not subject to
7    Commission review and approval. Program modifications to
8    any price, capacity block, or other program element that
9    deviate more than 25% from the Commission's approved value
10    must be approved by the Commission as a long-term plan
11    amendment under Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
12    Act. The Agency shall consider stakeholder feedback when
13    making adjustments to the Adjustable Block design and shall
14    notify stakeholders in advance of any planned changes.
15        (N) The long-term renewable resources procurement plan
16    required by this subsection (c) shall include a community
17    renewable generation program. The Agency shall establish
18    the terms, conditions, and program requirements for
19    community renewable generation projects with a goal to
20    expand renewable energy generating facility access to a
21    broader group of energy consumers, to ensure robust
22    participation opportunities for residential and small
23    commercial customers and those who cannot install
24    renewable energy on their own properties. Any plan approved
25    by the Commission shall allow subscriptions to community
26    renewable generation projects to be portable and

 

 

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1    transferable. For purposes of this subparagraph (N),
2    "portable" means that subscriptions may be retained by the
3    subscriber even if the subscriber relocates or changes its
4    address within the same utility service territory; and
5    "transferable" means that a subscriber may assign or sell
6    subscriptions to another person within the same utility
7    service territory.
8        Electric utilities shall provide a monetary credit to a
9    subscriber's subsequent bill for service for the
10    proportional output of a community renewable generation
11    project attributable to that subscriber as specified in
12    Section 16-107.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
13        The Agency shall purchase renewable energy credits
14    from subscribed shares of photovoltaic community renewable
15    generation projects through the Adjustable Block program
16    described in subparagraph (K) of this paragraph (1) or
17    through the Illinois Solar for All Program described in
18    Section 1-56 of this Act. The electric utility shall
19    purchase any unsubscribed energy from community renewable
20    generation projects that are Qualifying Facilities ("QF")
21    under the electric utility's tariff for purchasing the
22    output from QFs under Public Utilities Regulatory Policies
23    Act of 1978.
24        The owners of and any subscribers to a community
25    renewable generation project shall not be considered
26    public utilities or alternative retail electricity

 

 

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1    suppliers under the Public Utilities Act solely as a result
2    of their interest in or subscription to a community
3    renewable generation project and shall not be required to
4    become an alternative retail electric supplier by
5    participating in a community renewable generation project
6    with a public utility.
7        (O) For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2018, the
8    long-term renewable resources procurement plan required by
9    this subsection (c) shall provide for the Agency to procure
10    contracts to continue offering the Illinois Solar for All
11    Program described in subsection (b) of Section 1-56 of this
12    Act, and the contracts approved by the Commission shall be
13    executed by the utilities that are subject to this
14    subsection (c). The long-term renewable resources
15    procurement plan shall allocate 5% of the funds available
16    under the plan for the applicable delivery year, or
17    $10,000,000 per delivery year, whichever is greater, to
18    fund the programs, and the plan shall determine the amount
19    of funding to be apportioned to the programs identified in
20    subsection (b) of Section 1-56 of this Act; provided that
21    for the delivery years beginning June 1, 2017, June 1,
22    2021, and June 1, 2025, the long-term renewable resources
23    procurement plan shall allocate 10% of the funds available
24    under the plan for the applicable delivery year, or
25    $20,000,000 per delivery year, whichever is greater, and
26    $10,000,000 of such funds in such year shall be used by an

 

 

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1    electric utility that serves more than 3,000,000 retail
2    customers in the State to implement a Commission-approved
3    plan under Section 16-108.12 of the Public Utilities Act.
4    In making the determinations required under this
5    subparagraph (O), the Commission shall consider the
6    experience and performance under the programs and any
7    evaluation reports. The Commission shall also provide for
8    an independent evaluation of those programs on a periodic
9    basis that are funded under this subparagraph (O).
10        (2) (Blank).
11        (3) (Blank).
12        (4) The electric utility shall retire all renewable
13    energy credits used to comply with the standard.
14        (5) Beginning with the 2010 delivery year and ending
15    June 1, 2017, an electric utility subject to this
16    subsection (c) shall apply the lesser of the maximum
17    alternative compliance payment rate or the most recent
18    estimated alternative compliance payment rate for its
19    service territory for the corresponding compliance period,
20    established pursuant to subsection (d) of Section 16-115D
21    of the Public Utilities Act to its retail customers that
22    take service pursuant to the electric utility's hourly
23    pricing tariff or tariffs. The electric utility shall
24    retain all amounts collected as a result of the application
25    of the alternative compliance payment rate or rates to such
26    customers, and, beginning in 2011, the utility shall

 

 

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1    include in the information provided under item (1) of
2    subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
3    Act the amounts collected under the alternative compliance
4    payment rate or rates for the prior year ending May 31.
5    Notwithstanding any limitation on the procurement of
6    renewable energy resources imposed by item (2) of this
7    subsection (c), the Agency shall increase its spending on
8    the purchase of renewable energy resources to be procured
9    by the electric utility for the next plan year by an amount
10    equal to the amounts collected by the utility under the
11    alternative compliance payment rate or rates in the prior
12    year ending May 31.
13        (6) The electric utility shall be entitled to recover
14    all of its costs associated with the procurement of
15    renewable energy credits under plans approved under this
16    Section and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
17    These costs shall include associated reasonable expenses
18    for implementing the procurement programs, including, but
19    not limited to, the costs of administering and evaluating
20    the Adjustable Block program, through an automatic
21    adjustment clause tariff in accordance with subsection (k)
22    of Section 16-108 of the Public Utilities Act.
23        (7) Renewable energy credits procured from new
24    photovoltaic projects or new distributed renewable energy
25    generation devices under this Section after the effective
26    date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 69 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    must be procured from devices installed by a qualified
2    person in compliance with the requirements of Section
3    16-128A of the Public Utilities Act and any rules or
4    regulations adopted thereunder.
5        In meeting the renewable energy requirements of this
6    subsection (c), to the extent feasible and consistent with
7    State and federal law, the renewable energy credit
8    procurements, Adjustable Block solar program, and
9    community renewable generation program shall provide
10    employment opportunities for all segments of the
11    population and workforce, including minority-owned and
12    female-owned business enterprises, and shall not,
13    consistent with State and federal law, discriminate based
14    on race or socioeconomic status.
15    (d) Clean coal portfolio standard.
16        (1) The procurement plans shall include electricity
17    generated using clean coal. Each utility shall enter into
18    one or more sourcing agreements with the initial clean coal
19    facility, as provided in paragraph (3) of this subsection
20    (d), covering electricity generated by the initial clean
21    coal facility representing at least 5% of each utility's
22    total supply to serve the load of eligible retail customers
23    in 2015 and each year thereafter, as described in paragraph
24    (3) of this subsection (d), subject to the limits specified
25    in paragraph (2) of this subsection (d). It is the goal of
26    the State that by January 1, 2025, 25% of the electricity

 

 

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1    used in the State shall be generated by cost-effective
2    clean coal facilities. For purposes of this subsection (d),
3    "cost-effective" means that the expenditures pursuant to
4    such sourcing agreements do not cause the limit stated in
5    paragraph (2) of this subsection (d) to be exceeded and do
6    not exceed cost-based benchmarks, which shall be developed
7    to assess all expenditures pursuant to such sourcing
8    agreements covering electricity generated by clean coal
9    facilities, other than the initial clean coal facility, by
10    the procurement administrator, in consultation with the
11    Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement
12    monitor and shall be subject to Commission review and
13    approval.
14        A utility party to a sourcing agreement shall
15    immediately retire any emission credits that it receives in
16    connection with the electricity covered by such agreement.
17        Utilities shall maintain adequate records documenting
18    the purchases under the sourcing agreement to comply with
19    this subsection (d) and shall file an accounting with the
20    load forecast that must be filed with the Agency by July 15
21    of each year, in accordance with subsection (d) of Section
22    16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
23        A utility shall be deemed to have complied with the
24    clean coal portfolio standard specified in this subsection
25    (d) if the utility enters into a sourcing agreement as
26    required by this subsection (d).

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 71 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        (2) For purposes of this subsection (d), the required
2    execution of sourcing agreements with the initial clean
3    coal facility for a particular year shall be measured as a
4    percentage of the actual amount of electricity
5    (megawatt-hours) supplied by the electric utility to
6    eligible retail customers in the planning year ending
7    immediately prior to the agreement's execution. For
8    purposes of this subsection (d), the amount paid per
9    kilowatthour means the total amount paid for electric
10    service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For purposes
11    of this subsection (d), the total amount paid for electric
12    service includes without limitation amounts paid for
13    supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges and add-on
14    taxes.
15        Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
16    (d), the total amount paid under sourcing agreements with
17    clean coal facilities pursuant to the procurement plan for
18    any given year shall be reduced by an amount necessary to
19    limit the annual estimated average net increase due to the
20    costs of these resources included in the amounts paid by
21    eligible retail customers in connection with electric
22    service to:
23            (A) in 2010, no more than 0.5% of the amount paid
24        per kilowatthour by those customers during the year
25        ending May 31, 2009;
26            (B) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5% of

 

 

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1        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
2        during the year ending May 31, 2010 or 1% of the amount
3        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
4        year ending May 31, 2009;
5            (C) in 2012, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
6        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
7        during the year ending May 31, 2011 or 1.5% of the
8        amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during
9        the year ending May 31, 2009;
10            (D) in 2013, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
11        the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
12        during the year ending May 31, 2012 or 2% of the amount
13        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
14        year ending May 31, 2009; and
15            (E) thereafter, the total amount paid under
16        sourcing agreements with clean coal facilities
17        pursuant to the procurement plan for any single year
18        shall be reduced by an amount necessary to limit the
19        estimated average net increase due to the cost of these
20        resources included in the amounts paid by eligible
21        retail customers in connection with electric service
22        to no more than the greater of (i) 2.015% of the amount
23        paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
24        year ending May 31, 2009 or (ii) the incremental amount
25        per kilowatthour paid for these resources in 2013.
26        These requirements may be altered only as provided by

 

 

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1        statute.
2        No later than June 30, 2015, the Commission shall
3    review the limitation on the total amount paid under
4    sourcing agreements, if any, with clean coal facilities
5    pursuant to this subsection (d) and report to the General
6    Assembly its findings as to whether that limitation unduly
7    constrains the amount of electricity generated by
8    cost-effective clean coal facilities that is covered by
9    sourcing agreements.
10        (3) Initial clean coal facility. In order to promote
11    development of clean coal facilities in Illinois, each
12    electric utility subject to this Section shall execute a
13    sourcing agreement to source electricity from a proposed
14    clean coal facility in Illinois (the "initial clean coal
15    facility") that will have a nameplate capacity of at least
16    500 MW when commercial operation commences, that has a
17    final Clean Air Act permit on the effective date of this
18    amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, and that will
19    meet the definition of clean coal facility in Section 1-10
20    of this Act when commercial operation commences. The
21    sourcing agreements with this initial clean coal facility
22    shall be subject to both approval of the initial clean coal
23    facility by the General Assembly and satisfaction of the
24    requirements of paragraph (4) of this subsection (d) and
25    shall be executed within 90 days after any such approval by
26    the General Assembly. The Agency and the Commission shall

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 74 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    have authority to inspect all books and records associated
2    with the initial clean coal facility during the term of
3    such a sourcing agreement. A utility's sourcing agreement
4    for electricity produced by the initial clean coal facility
5    shall include:
6            (A) a formula contractual price (the "contract
7        price") approved pursuant to paragraph (4) of this
8        subsection (d), which shall:
9                (i) be determined using a cost of service
10            methodology employing either a level or deferred
11            capital recovery component, based on a capital
12            structure consisting of 45% equity and 55% debt,
13            and a return on equity as may be approved by the
14            Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which in any
15            case may not exceed the lower of 11.5% or the rate
16            of return approved by the General Assembly
17            pursuant to paragraph (4) of this subsection (d);
18            and
19                (ii) provide that all miscellaneous net
20            revenue, including but not limited to net revenue
21            from the sale of emission allowances, if any,
22            substitute natural gas, if any, grants or other
23            support provided by the State of Illinois or the
24            United States Government, firm transmission
25            rights, if any, by-products produced by the
26            facility, energy or capacity derived from the

 

 

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1            facility and not covered by a sourcing agreement
2            pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection (d) or
3            item (5) of subsection (d) of Section 16-115 of the
4            Public Utilities Act, whether generated from the
5            synthesis gas derived from coal, from SNG, or from
6            natural gas, shall be credited against the revenue
7            requirement for this initial clean coal facility;
8            (B) power purchase provisions, which shall:
9                (i) provide that the utility party to such
10            sourcing agreement shall pay the contract price
11            for electricity delivered under such sourcing
12            agreement;
13                (ii) require delivery of electricity to the
14            regional transmission organization market of the
15            utility that is party to such sourcing agreement;
16                (iii) require the utility party to such
17            sourcing agreement to buy from the initial clean
18            coal facility in each hour an amount of energy
19            equal to all clean coal energy made available from
20            the initial clean coal facility during such hour
21            times a fraction, the numerator of which is such
22            utility's retail market sales of electricity
23            (expressed in kilowatthours sold) in the State
24            during the prior calendar month and the
25            denominator of which is the total retail market
26            sales of electricity (expressed in kilowatthours

 

 

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1            sold) in the State by utilities during such prior
2            month and the sales of electricity (expressed in
3            kilowatthours sold) in the State by alternative
4            retail electric suppliers during such prior month
5            that are subject to the requirements of this
6            subsection (d) and paragraph (5) of subsection (d)
7            of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act,
8            provided that the amount purchased by the utility
9            in any year will be limited by paragraph (2) of
10            this subsection (d); and
11                (iv) be considered pre-existing contracts in
12            such utility's procurement plans for eligible
13            retail customers;
14            (C) contract for differences provisions, which
15        shall:
16                (i) require the utility party to such sourcing
17            agreement to contract with the initial clean coal
18            facility in each hour with respect to an amount of
19            energy equal to all clean coal energy made
20            available from the initial clean coal facility
21            during such hour times a fraction, the numerator of
22            which is such utility's retail market sales of
23            electricity (expressed in kilowatthours sold) in
24            the utility's service territory in the State
25            during the prior calendar month and the
26            denominator of which is the total retail market

 

 

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1            sales of electricity (expressed in kilowatthours
2            sold) in the State by utilities during such prior
3            month and the sales of electricity (expressed in
4            kilowatthours sold) in the State by alternative
5            retail electric suppliers during such prior month
6            that are subject to the requirements of this
7            subsection (d) and paragraph (5) of subsection (d)
8            of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act,
9            provided that the amount paid by the utility in any
10            year will be limited by paragraph (2) of this
11            subsection (d);
12                (ii) provide that the utility's payment
13            obligation in respect of the quantity of
14            electricity determined pursuant to the preceding
15            clause (i) shall be limited to an amount equal to
16            (1) the difference between the contract price
17            determined pursuant to subparagraph (A) of
18            paragraph (3) of this subsection (d) and the
19            day-ahead price for electricity delivered to the
20            regional transmission organization market of the
21            utility that is party to such sourcing agreement
22            (or any successor delivery point at which such
23            utility's supply obligations are financially
24            settled on an hourly basis) (the "reference
25            price") on the day preceding the day on which the
26            electricity is delivered to the initial clean coal

 

 

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1            facility busbar, multiplied by (2) the quantity of
2            electricity determined pursuant to the preceding
3            clause (i); and
4                (iii) not require the utility to take physical
5            delivery of the electricity produced by the
6            facility;
7            (D) general provisions, which shall:
8                (i) specify a term of no more than 30 years,
9            commencing on the commercial operation date of the
10            facility;
11                (ii) provide that utilities shall maintain
12            adequate records documenting purchases under the
13            sourcing agreements entered into to comply with
14            this subsection (d) and shall file an accounting
15            with the load forecast that must be filed with the
16            Agency by July 15 of each year, in accordance with
17            subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public
18            Utilities Act;
19                (iii) provide that all costs associated with
20            the initial clean coal facility will be
21            periodically reported to the Federal Energy
22            Regulatory Commission and to purchasers in
23            accordance with applicable laws governing
24            cost-based wholesale power contracts;
25                (iv) permit the Illinois Power Agency to
26            assume ownership of the initial clean coal

 

 

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1            facility, without monetary consideration and
2            otherwise on reasonable terms acceptable to the
3            Agency, if the Agency so requests no less than 3
4            years prior to the end of the stated contract term;
5                (v) require the owner of the initial clean coal
6            facility to provide documentation to the
7            Commission each year, starting in the facility's
8            first year of commercial operation, accurately
9            reporting the quantity of carbon emissions from
10            the facility that have been captured and
11            sequestered and report any quantities of carbon
12            released from the site or sites at which carbon
13            emissions were sequestered in prior years, based
14            on continuous monitoring of such sites. If, in any
15            year after the first year of commercial operation,
16            the owner of the facility fails to demonstrate that
17            the initial clean coal facility captured and
18            sequestered at least 50% of the total carbon
19            emissions that the facility would otherwise emit
20            or that sequestration of emissions from prior
21            years has failed, resulting in the release of
22            carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the owner of
23            the facility must offset excess emissions. Any
24            such carbon offsets must be permanent, additional,
25            verifiable, real, located within the State of
26            Illinois, and legally and practicably enforceable.

 

 

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1            The cost of such offsets for the facility that are
2            not recoverable shall not exceed $15 million in any
3            given year. No costs of any such purchases of
4            carbon offsets may be recovered from a utility or
5            its customers. All carbon offsets purchased for
6            this purpose and any carbon emission credits
7            associated with sequestration of carbon from the
8            facility must be permanently retired. The initial
9            clean coal facility shall not forfeit its
10            designation as a clean coal facility if the
11            facility fails to fully comply with the applicable
12            carbon sequestration requirements in any given
13            year, provided the requisite offsets are
14            purchased. However, the Attorney General, on
15            behalf of the People of the State of Illinois, may
16            specifically enforce the facility's sequestration
17            requirement and the other terms of this contract
18            provision. Compliance with the sequestration
19            requirements and offset purchase requirements
20            specified in paragraph (3) of this subsection (d)
21            shall be reviewed annually by an independent
22            expert retained by the owner of the initial clean
23            coal facility, with the advance written approval
24            of the Attorney General. The Commission may, in the
25            course of the review specified in item (vii),
26            reduce the allowable return on equity for the

 

 

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1            facility if the facility wilfully fails to comply
2            with the carbon capture and sequestration
3            requirements set forth in this item (v);
4                (vi) include limits on, and accordingly
5            provide for modification of, the amount the
6            utility is required to source under the sourcing
7            agreement consistent with paragraph (2) of this
8            subsection (d);
9                (vii) require Commission review: (1) to
10            determine the justness, reasonableness, and
11            prudence of the inputs to the formula referenced in
12            subparagraphs (A)(i) through (A)(iii) of paragraph
13            (3) of this subsection (d), prior to an adjustment
14            in those inputs including, without limitation, the
15            capital structure and return on equity, fuel
16            costs, and other operations and maintenance costs
17            and (2) to approve the costs to be passed through
18            to customers under the sourcing agreement by which
19            the utility satisfies its statutory obligations.
20            Commission review shall occur no less than every 3
21            years, regardless of whether any adjustments have
22            been proposed, and shall be completed within 9
23            months;
24                (viii) limit the utility's obligation to such
25            amount as the utility is allowed to recover through
26            tariffs filed with the Commission, provided that

 

 

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1            neither the clean coal facility nor the utility
2            waives any right to assert federal pre-emption or
3            any other argument in response to a purported
4            disallowance of recovery costs;
5                (ix) limit the utility's or alternative retail
6            electric supplier's obligation to incur any
7            liability until such time as the facility is in
8            commercial operation and generating power and
9            energy and such power and energy is being delivered
10            to the facility busbar;
11                (x) provide that the owner or owners of the
12            initial clean coal facility, which is the
13            counterparty to such sourcing agreement, shall
14            have the right from time to time to elect whether
15            the obligations of the utility party thereto shall
16            be governed by the power purchase provisions or the
17            contract for differences provisions;
18                (xi) append documentation showing that the
19            formula rate and contract, insofar as they relate
20            to the power purchase provisions, have been
21            approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory
22            Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal
23            Power Act;
24                (xii) provide that any changes to the terms of
25            the contract, insofar as such changes relate to the
26            power purchase provisions, are subject to review

 

 

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1            under the public interest standard applied by the
2            Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to
3            Sections 205 and 206 of the Federal Power Act; and
4                (xiii) conform with customary lender
5            requirements in power purchase agreements used as
6            the basis for financing non-utility generators.
7        (4) Effective date of sourcing agreements with the
8    initial clean coal facility.
9        Any proposed sourcing agreement with the initial clean
10    coal facility shall not become effective unless the
11    following reports are prepared and submitted and
12    authorizations and approvals obtained:
13            (i) Facility cost report. The owner of the initial
14        clean coal facility shall submit to the Commission, the
15        Agency, and the General Assembly a front-end
16        engineering and design study, a facility cost report,
17        method of financing (including but not limited to
18        structure and associated costs), and an operating and
19        maintenance cost quote for the facility (collectively
20        "facility cost report"), which shall be prepared in
21        accordance with the requirements of this paragraph (4)
22        of subsection (d) of this Section, and shall provide
23        the Commission and the Agency access to the work
24        papers, relied upon documents, and any other backup
25        documentation related to the facility cost report.
26            (ii) Commission report. Within 6 months following

 

 

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1        receipt of the facility cost report, the Commission, in
2        consultation with the Agency, shall submit a report to
3        the General Assembly setting forth its analysis of the
4        facility cost report. Such report shall include, but
5        not be limited to, a comparison of the costs associated
6        with electricity generated by the initial clean coal
7        facility to the costs associated with electricity
8        generated by other types of generation facilities, an
9        analysis of the rate impacts on residential and small
10        business customers over the life of the sourcing
11        agreements, and an analysis of the likelihood that the
12        initial clean coal facility will commence commercial
13        operation by and be delivering power to the facility's
14        busbar by 2016. To assist in the preparation of its
15        report, the Commission, in consultation with the
16        Agency, may hire one or more experts or consultants,
17        the costs of which shall be paid for by the owner of
18        the initial clean coal facility. The Commission and
19        Agency may begin the process of selecting such experts
20        or consultants prior to receipt of the facility cost
21        report.
22            (iii) General Assembly approval. The proposed
23        sourcing agreements shall not take effect unless,
24        based on the facility cost report and the Commission's
25        report, the General Assembly enacts authorizing
26        legislation approving (A) the projected price, stated

 

 

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1        in cents per kilowatthour, to be charged for
2        electricity generated by the initial clean coal
3        facility, (B) the projected impact on residential and
4        small business customers' bills over the life of the
5        sourcing agreements, and (C) the maximum allowable
6        return on equity for the project; and
7            (iv) Commission review. If the General Assembly
8        enacts authorizing legislation pursuant to
9        subparagraph (iii) approving a sourcing agreement, the
10        Commission shall, within 90 days of such enactment,
11        complete a review of such sourcing agreement. During
12        such time period, the Commission shall implement any
13        directive of the General Assembly, resolve any
14        disputes between the parties to the sourcing agreement
15        concerning the terms of such agreement, approve the
16        form of such agreement, and issue an order finding that
17        the sourcing agreement is prudent and reasonable.
18        The facility cost report shall be prepared as follows:
19            (A) The facility cost report shall be prepared by
20        duly licensed engineering and construction firms
21        detailing the estimated capital costs payable to one or
22        more contractors or suppliers for the engineering,
23        procurement and construction of the components
24        comprising the initial clean coal facility and the
25        estimated costs of operation and maintenance of the
26        facility. The facility cost report shall include:

 

 

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1                (i) an estimate of the capital cost of the core
2            plant based on one or more front end engineering
3            and design studies for the gasification island and
4            related facilities. The core plant shall include
5            all civil, structural, mechanical, electrical,
6            control, and safety systems.
7                (ii) an estimate of the capital cost of the
8            balance of the plant, including any capital costs
9            associated with sequestration of carbon dioxide
10            emissions and all interconnects and interfaces
11            required to operate the facility, such as
12            transmission of electricity, construction or
13            backfeed power supply, pipelines to transport
14            substitute natural gas or carbon dioxide, potable
15            water supply, natural gas supply, water supply,
16            water discharge, landfill, access roads, and coal
17            delivery.
18            The quoted construction costs shall be expressed
19        in nominal dollars as of the date that the quote is
20        prepared and shall include capitalized financing costs
21        during construction, taxes, insurance, and other
22        owner's costs, and an assumed escalation in materials
23        and labor beyond the date as of which the construction
24        cost quote is expressed.
25            (B) The front end engineering and design study for
26        the gasification island and the cost study for the

 

 

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1        balance of plant shall include sufficient design work
2        to permit quantification of major categories of
3        materials, commodities and labor hours, and receipt of
4        quotes from vendors of major equipment required to
5        construct and operate the clean coal facility.
6            (C) The facility cost report shall also include an
7        operating and maintenance cost quote that will provide
8        the estimated cost of delivered fuel, personnel,
9        maintenance contracts, chemicals, catalysts,
10        consumables, spares, and other fixed and variable
11        operations and maintenance costs. The delivered fuel
12        cost estimate will be provided by a recognized third
13        party expert or experts in the fuel and transportation
14        industries. The balance of the operating and
15        maintenance cost quote, excluding delivered fuel
16        costs, will be developed based on the inputs provided
17        by duly licensed engineering and construction firms
18        performing the construction cost quote, potential
19        vendors under long-term service agreements and plant
20        operating agreements, or recognized third party plant
21        operator or operators.
22            The operating and maintenance cost quote
23        (including the cost of the front end engineering and
24        design study) shall be expressed in nominal dollars as
25        of the date that the quote is prepared and shall
26        include taxes, insurance, and other owner's costs, and

 

 

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1        an assumed escalation in materials and labor beyond the
2        date as of which the operating and maintenance cost
3        quote is expressed.
4            (D) The facility cost report shall also include an
5        analysis of the initial clean coal facility's ability
6        to deliver power and energy into the applicable
7        regional transmission organization markets and an
8        analysis of the expected capacity factor for the
9        initial clean coal facility.
10            (E) Amounts paid to third parties unrelated to the
11        owner or owners of the initial clean coal facility to
12        prepare the core plant construction cost quote,
13        including the front end engineering and design study,
14        and the operating and maintenance cost quote will be
15        reimbursed through Coal Development Bonds.
16        (5) Re-powering and retrofitting coal-fired power
17    plants previously owned by Illinois utilities to qualify as
18    clean coal facilities. During the 2009 procurement
19    planning process and thereafter, the Agency and the
20    Commission shall consider sourcing agreements covering
21    electricity generated by power plants that were previously
22    owned by Illinois utilities and that have been or will be
23    converted into clean coal facilities, as defined by Section
24    1-10 of this Act. Pursuant to such procurement planning
25    process, the owners of such facilities may propose to the
26    Agency sourcing agreements with utilities and alternative

 

 

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1    retail electric suppliers required to comply with
2    subsection (d) of this Section and item (5) of subsection
3    (d) of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act, covering
4    electricity generated by such facilities. In the case of
5    sourcing agreements that are power purchase agreements,
6    the contract price for electricity sales shall be
7    established on a cost of service basis. In the case of
8    sourcing agreements that are contracts for differences,
9    the contract price from which the reference price is
10    subtracted shall be established on a cost of service basis.
11    The Agency and the Commission may approve any such utility
12    sourcing agreements that do not exceed cost-based
13    benchmarks developed by the procurement administrator, in
14    consultation with the Commission staff, Agency staff and
15    the procurement monitor, subject to Commission review and
16    approval. The Commission shall have authority to inspect
17    all books and records associated with these clean coal
18    facilities during the term of any such contract.
19        (5.5) Other clean coal facilities. In order to promote
20    the development of clean coal power generation, and in
21    furtherance of the State's goal of having at least 25% of
22    the State's electricity generated by cost-effective clean
23    coal facilities by January 1, 2025 as provided in paragraph
24    (1) of this subsection (d), the Agency and Commission shall
25    include sourcing agreements covering power produced by (i)
26    clean coal facilities, as defined in Section 1-10 of this

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 90 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    Act, and (ii) facilities specified in paragraphs (3) and
2    (5) of this subsection (d), in each annual power
3    procurement plan.
4        The Agency and Commission shall require utilities and
5    alternative retail electric suppliers to enter into such
6    sourcing agreements as part of the annual power procurement
7    process.
8        The Agency and Commission shall establish a
9    competitive procedure to solicit and receive proposed
10    sourcing terms from producers of clean coal power
11    interested in selection for sourcing agreements. The
12    competitive procedure shall include a method of selection
13    for inclusion in those agreements.
14        These sourcing agreements shall be subject to the
15    limits contained in items (A) through (E) of paragraph (2)
16    of this subsection (d), the benchmarks as set forth by
17    paragraph (1) of this subsection (d), and the requirements
18    for sourcing agreements contained in paragraph (3) of this
19    subsection (d). As part of the annual procurement planning
20    process, the owners of clean coal facilities may offer
21    proposals to the Agency sourcing agreements with utilities
22    and alternate retail electric suppliers required to comply
23    with this subsection (d), as well as item (5) of subsection
24    (d) of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act, covering
25    electricity generated by such facilities. In the case of
26    sourcing agreements that are power purchase agreements,

 

 

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1    the contract price for electricity sales shall be
2    established on a cost-of-service basis. In the case of
3    sourcing agreements that are contracts for differences,
4    the contract price from which the reference price is
5    subtracted shall be established on a cost-of-service
6    basis. The sourcing agreements shall be included under and
7    governed by provisions of the Public Utilities Act.
8        (6) Costs incurred under this subsection (d) or
9    pursuant to a contract entered into under this subsection
10    (d) shall be deemed prudently incurred and reasonable in
11    amount and the electric utility shall be entitled to full
12    cost recovery pursuant to the tariffs filed with the
13    Commission.
14    (d-5) Zero emission standard.
15        (1) Beginning with the delivery year commencing on June
16    1, 2017, the Agency shall, for electric utilities that
17    serve at least 100,000 retail customers in this State,
18    procure contracts with zero emission facilities that are
19    reasonably capable of generating cost-effective zero
20    emission credits in an amount approximately equal to 16% of
21    the actual amount of electricity delivered by each electric
22    utility to retail customers in the State during calendar
23    year 2014. For an electric utility serving fewer than
24    100,000 retail customers in this State that requested,
25    under Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, that
26    the Agency procure power and energy for all or a portion of

 

 

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1    the utility's Illinois load for the delivery year
2    commencing June 1, 2016, the Agency shall procure contracts
3    with zero emission facilities that are reasonably capable
4    of generating cost-effective zero emission credits in an
5    amount approximately equal to 16% of the portion of power
6    and energy to be procured by the Agency for the utility.
7    The duration of the contracts procured under this
8    subsection (d-5) shall be for a term of 10 years ending May
9    31, 2027. The quantity of zero emission credits to be
10    procured under the contracts shall be all of the zero
11    emission credits generated by the zero emission facility in
12    each delivery year; however, if the zero emission facility
13    is owned by more than one entity, then the quantity of zero
14    emission credits to be procured under the contracts shall
15    be the amount of zero emission credits that are generated
16    from the portion of the zero emission facility that is
17    owned by the winning supplier.
18        The 16% value identified in this paragraph (1) is the
19    average of the percentage targets in subparagraph (B) of
20    paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this Act
21    for the 5 delivery years beginning June 1, 2017.
22        The procurement process shall be subject to the
23    following provisions:
24            (A) Those zero emission facilities that intend to
25        participate in the procurement shall submit to the
26        Agency the following eligibility information for each

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 93 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        zero emission facility on or before the date
2        established by the Agency:
3                (i) the in-service date and remaining useful
4            life of the zero emission facility;
5                (ii) the amount of power generated annually
6            for each of the years 2005 through 2015, and the
7            projected zero emission credits to be generated
8            over the remaining useful life of the zero emission
9            facility, which shall be used to determine the
10            capability of each facility;
11                (iii) the annual zero emission facility cost
12            projections, expressed on a per megawatthour
13            basis, over the next 6 delivery years, which shall
14            include the following: operation and maintenance
15            expenses; fully allocated overhead costs, which
16            shall be allocated using the methodology developed
17            by the Institute for Nuclear Power Operations;
18            fuel expenditures; non-fuel capital expenditures;
19            spent fuel expenditures; a return on working
20            capital; the cost of operational and market risks
21            that could be avoided by ceasing operation; and any
22            other costs necessary for continued operations,
23            provided that "necessary" means, for purposes of
24            this item (iii), that the costs could reasonably be
25            avoided only by ceasing operations of the zero
26            emission facility; and

 

 

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1                (iv) a commitment to continue operating, for
2            the duration of the contract or contracts executed
3            under the procurement held under this subsection
4            (d-5), the zero emission facility that produces
5            the zero emission credits to be procured in the
6            procurement.
7        The information described in item (iii) of this
8    subparagraph (A) may be submitted on a confidential basis
9    and shall be treated and maintained by the Agency, the
10    procurement administrator, and the Commission as
11    confidential and proprietary and exempt from disclosure
12    under subparagraphs (a) and (g) of paragraph (1) of Section
13    7 of the Freedom of Information Act. The Office of Attorney
14    General shall have access to, and maintain the
15    confidentiality of, such information pursuant to Section
16    6.5 of the Attorney General Act.
17            (B) The price for each zero emission credit
18        procured under this subsection (d-5) for each delivery
19        year shall be in an amount that equals the Social Cost
20        of Carbon, expressed on a price per megawatthour basis.
21        However, to ensure that the procurement remains
22        affordable to retail customers in this State if
23        electricity prices increase, the price in an
24        applicable delivery year shall be reduced below the
25        Social Cost of Carbon by the amount ("Price
26        Adjustment") by which the market price index for the

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 95 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        applicable delivery year exceeds the baseline market
2        price index for the consecutive 12-month period ending
3        May 31, 2016. If the Price Adjustment is greater than
4        or equal to the Social Cost of Carbon in an applicable
5        delivery year, then no payments shall be due in that
6        delivery year. The components of this calculation are
7        defined as follows:
8                (i) Social Cost of Carbon: The Social Cost of
9            Carbon is $16.50 per megawatthour, which is based
10            on the U.S. Interagency Working Group on Social
11            Cost of Carbon's price in the August 2016 Technical
12            Update using a 3% discount rate, adjusted for
13            inflation for each year of the program. Beginning
14            with the delivery year commencing June 1, 2023, the
15            price per megawatthour shall increase by $1 per
16            megawatthour, and continue to increase by an
17            additional $1 per megawatthour each delivery year
18            thereafter.
19                (ii) Baseline market price index: The baseline
20            market price index for the consecutive 12-month
21            period ending May 31, 2016 is $31.40 per
22            megawatthour, which is based on the sum of (aa) the
23            average day-ahead energy price across all hours of
24            such 12-month period at the PJM Interconnection
25            LLC Northern Illinois Hub, (bb) 50% multiplied by
26            the Base Residual Auction, or its successor,

 

 

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1            capacity price for the rest of the RTO zone group
2            determined by PJM Interconnection LLC, divided by
3            24 hours per day, and (cc) 50% multiplied by the
4            Planning Resource Auction, or its successor,
5            capacity price for Zone 4 determined by the
6            Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc.,
7            divided by 24 hours per day.
8                (iii) Market price index: The market price
9            index for a delivery year shall be the sum of
10            projected energy prices and projected capacity
11            prices determined as follows:
12                    (aa) Projected energy prices: the
13                projected energy prices for the applicable
14                delivery year shall be calculated once for the
15                year using the forward market price for the PJM
16                Interconnection, LLC Northern Illinois Hub.
17                The forward market price shall be calculated as
18                follows: the energy forward prices for each
19                month of the applicable delivery year averaged
20                for each trade date during the calendar year
21                immediately preceding that delivery year to
22                produce a single energy forward price for the
23                delivery year. The forward market price
24                calculation shall use data published by the
25                Intercontinental Exchange, or its successor.
26                    (bb) Projected capacity prices:

 

 

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1                        (I) For the delivery years commencing
2                    June 1, 2017, June 1, 2018, and June 1,
3                    2019, the projected capacity price shall
4                    be equal to the sum of (1) 50% multiplied
5                    by the Base Residual Auction, or its
6                    successor, price for the rest of the RTO
7                    zone group as determined by PJM
8                    Interconnection LLC, divided by 24 hours
9                    per day and, (2) 50% multiplied by the
10                    resource auction price determined in the
11                    resource auction administered by the
12                    Midcontinent Independent System Operator,
13                    Inc., in which the largest percentage of
14                    load cleared for Local Resource Zone 4,
15                    divided by 24 hours per day, and where such
16                    price is determined by the Midcontinent
17                    Independent System Operator, Inc.
18                        (II) For the delivery year commencing
19                    June 1, 2020, and each year thereafter, the
20                    projected capacity price shall be equal to
21                    the sum of (1) 50% multiplied by the Base
22                    Residual Auction, or its successor, price
23                    for the ComEd zone as determined by PJM
24                    Interconnection LLC, divided by 24 hours
25                    per day, and (2) 50% multiplied by the
26                    resource auction price determined in the

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 98 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1                    resource auction administered by the
2                    Midcontinent Independent System Operator,
3                    Inc., in which the largest percentage of
4                    load cleared for Local Resource Zone 4,
5                    divided by 24 hours per day, and where such
6                    price is determined by the Midcontinent
7                    Independent System Operator, Inc.
8            For purposes of this subsection (d-5):
9                "Rest of the RTO" and "ComEd Zone" shall have
10            the meaning ascribed to them by PJM
11            Interconnection, LLC.
12                "RTO" means regional transmission
13            organization.
14            (C) No later than 45 days after the effective date
15        of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly,
16        the Agency shall publish its proposed zero emission
17        standard procurement plan. The plan shall be
18        consistent with the provisions of this paragraph (1)
19        and shall provide that winning bids shall be selected
20        based on public interest criteria that include, but are
21        not limited to, minimizing carbon dioxide emissions
22        that result from electricity consumed in Illinois and
23        minimizing sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and
24        particulate matter emissions that adversely affect the
25        citizens of this State. In particular, the selection of
26        winning bids shall take into account the incremental

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 99 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        environmental benefits resulting from the procurement,
2        such as any existing environmental benefits that are
3        preserved by the procurements held under this
4        amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly and would
5        cease to exist if the procurements were not held,
6        including the preservation of zero emission
7        facilities. The plan shall also describe in detail how
8        each public interest factor shall be considered and
9        weighted in the bid selection process to ensure that
10        the public interest criteria are applied to the
11        procurement and given full effect.
12            For purposes of developing the plan, the Agency
13        shall consider any reports issued by a State agency,
14        board, or commission under House Resolution 1146 of the
15        98th General Assembly and paragraph (4) of subsection
16        (d) of Section 1-75 of this Act, as well as publicly
17        available analyses and studies performed by or for
18        regional transmission organizations that serve the
19        State and their independent market monitors.
20            Upon publishing of the zero emission standard
21        procurement plan, copies of the plan shall be posted
22        and made publicly available on the Agency's website.
23        All interested parties shall have 10 days following the
24        date of posting to provide comment to the Agency on the
25        plan. All comments shall be posted to the Agency's
26        website. Following the end of the comment period, but

 

 

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1        no more than 60 days later than the effective date of
2        this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, the
3        Agency shall revise the plan as necessary based on the
4        comments received and file its zero emission standard
5        procurement plan with the Commission.
6            If the Commission determines that the plan will
7        result in the procurement of cost-effective zero
8        emission credits, then the Commission shall, after
9        notice and hearing, but no later than 45 days after the
10        Agency filed the plan, approve the plan or approve with
11        modification. For purposes of this subsection (d-5),
12        "cost effective" means the projected costs of
13        procuring zero emission credits from zero emission
14        facilities do not cause the limit stated in paragraph
15        (2) of this subsection to be exceeded.
16            (C-5) As part of the Commission's review and
17        acceptance or rejection of the procurement results,
18        the Commission shall, in its public notice of
19        successful bidders:
20                (i) identify how the winning bids satisfy the
21            public interest criteria described in subparagraph
22            (C) of this paragraph (1) of minimizing carbon
23            dioxide emissions that result from electricity
24            consumed in Illinois and minimizing sulfur
25            dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and particulate matter
26            emissions that adversely affect the citizens of

 

 

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1            this State;
2                (ii) specifically address how the selection of
3            winning bids takes into account the incremental
4            environmental benefits resulting from the
5            procurement, including any existing environmental
6            benefits that are preserved by the procurements
7            held under this amendatory Act of the 99th General
8            Assembly and would have ceased to exist if the
9            procurements had not been held, such as the
10            preservation of zero emission facilities;
11                (iii) quantify the environmental benefit of
12            preserving the resources identified in item (ii)
13            of this subparagraph (C-5), including the
14            following:
15                    (aa) the value of avoided greenhouse gas
16                emissions measured as the product of the zero
17                emission facilities' output over the contract
18                term multiplied by the U.S. Environmental
19                Protection Agency eGrid subregion carbon
20                dioxide emission rate and the U.S. Interagency
21                Working Group on Social Cost of Carbon's price
22                in the August 2016 Technical Update using a 3%
23                discount rate, adjusted for inflation for each
24                delivery year; and
25                    (bb) the costs of replacement with other
26                zero carbon dioxide resources, including wind

 

 

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1                and photovoltaic, based upon the simple
2                average of the following:
3                        (I) the price, or if there is more than
4                    one price, the average of the prices, paid
5                    for renewable energy credits from new
6                    utility-scale wind projects in the
7                    procurement events specified in item (i)
8                    of subparagraph (G) of paragraph (1) of
9                    subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this Act;
10                    and
11                        (II) the price, or if there is more
12                    than one price, the average of the prices,
13                    paid for renewable energy credits from new
14                    utility-scale solar projects and
15                    brownfield site photovoltaic projects in
16                    the procurement events specified in item
17                    (ii) of subparagraph (G) of paragraph (1)
18                    of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this
19                    Act and, after January 1, 2015, renewable
20                    energy credits from photovoltaic
21                    distributed generation projects in
22                    procurement events held under subsection
23                    (c) of Section 1-75 of this Act.
24            Each utility shall enter into binding contractual
25        arrangements with the winning suppliers.
26            The procurement described in this subsection

 

 

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1        (d-5), including, but not limited to, the execution of
2        all contracts procured, shall be completed no later
3        than May 10, 2017. Based on the effective date of this
4        amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, the Agency
5        and Commission may, as appropriate, modify the various
6        dates and timelines under this subparagraph and
7        subparagraphs (C) and (D) of this paragraph (1). The
8        procurement and plan approval processes required by
9        this subsection (d-5) shall be conducted in
10        conjunction with the procurement and plan approval
11        processes required by subsection (c) of this Section
12        and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, to
13        the extent practicable. Notwithstanding whether a
14        procurement event is conducted under Section 16-111.5
15        of the Public Utilities Act, the Agency shall
16        immediately initiate a procurement process on the
17        effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th
18        General Assembly.
19            (D) Following the procurement event described in
20        this paragraph (1) and consistent with subparagraph
21        (B) of this paragraph (1), the Agency shall calculate
22        the payments to be made under each contract for the
23        next delivery year based on the market price index for
24        that delivery year. The Agency shall publish the
25        payment calculations no later than May 25, 2017 and
26        every May 25 thereafter.

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 104 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            (E) Notwithstanding the requirements of this
2        subsection (d-5), the contracts executed under this
3        subsection (d-5) shall provide that the zero emission
4        facility may, as applicable, suspend or terminate
5        performance under the contracts in the following
6        instances:
7                (i) A zero emission facility shall be excused
8            from its performance under the contract for any
9            cause beyond the control of the resource,
10            including, but not restricted to, acts of God,
11            flood, drought, earthquake, storm, fire,
12            lightning, epidemic, war, riot, civil disturbance
13            or disobedience, labor dispute, labor or material
14            shortage, sabotage, acts of public enemy,
15            explosions, orders, regulations or restrictions
16            imposed by governmental, military, or lawfully
17            established civilian authorities, which, in any of
18            the foregoing cases, by exercise of commercially
19            reasonable efforts the zero emission facility
20            could not reasonably have been expected to avoid,
21            and which, by the exercise of commercially
22            reasonable efforts, it has been unable to
23            overcome. In such event, the zero emission
24            facility shall be excused from performance for the
25            duration of the event, including, but not limited
26            to, delivery of zero emission credits, and no

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 105 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            payment shall be due to the zero emission facility
2            during the duration of the event.
3                (ii) A zero emission facility shall be
4            permitted to terminate the contract if legislation
5            is enacted into law by the General Assembly that
6            imposes or authorizes a new tax, special
7            assessment, or fee on the generation of
8            electricity, the ownership or leasehold of a
9            generating unit, or the privilege or occupation of
10            such generation, ownership, or leasehold of
11            generation units by a zero emission facility.
12            However, the provisions of this item (ii) do not
13            apply to any generally applicable tax, special
14            assessment or fee, or requirements imposed by
15            federal law.
16                (iii) A zero emission facility shall be
17            permitted to terminate the contract in the event
18            that the resource requires capital expenditures in
19            excess of $40,000,000 that were neither known nor
20            reasonably foreseeable at the time it executed the
21            contract and that a prudent owner or operator of
22            such resource would not undertake.
23                (iv) A zero emission facility shall be
24            permitted to terminate the contract in the event
25            the Nuclear Regulatory Commission terminates the
26            resource's license.

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 106 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1            (F) If the zero emission facility elects to
2        terminate a contract under this subparagraph (E, of
3        this paragraph (1), then the Commission shall reopen
4        the docket in which the Commission approved the zero
5        emission standard procurement plan under subparagraph
6        (C) of this paragraph (1) and, after notice and
7        hearing, enter an order acknowledging the contract
8        termination election if such termination is consistent
9        with the provisions of this subsection (d-5).
10        (2) For purposes of this subsection (d-5), the amount
11    paid per kilowatthour means the total amount paid for
12    electric service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For
13    purposes of this subsection (d-5), the total amount paid
14    for electric service includes, without limitation, amounts
15    paid for supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges,
16    and add-on taxes.
17        Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
18    (d-5), the contracts executed under this subsection (d-5)
19    shall provide that the total of zero emission credits
20    procured under a procurement plan shall be subject to the
21    limitations of this paragraph (2). For each delivery year,
22    the contractual volume receiving payments in such year
23    shall be reduced for all retail customers based on the
24    amount necessary to limit the net increase that delivery
25    year to the costs of those credits included in the amounts
26    paid by eligible retail customers in connection with

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 107 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    electric service to no more than 1.65% of the amount paid
2    per kilowatthour by eligible retail customers during the
3    year ending May 31, 2009. The result of this computation
4    shall apply to and reduce the procurement for all retail
5    customers, and all those customers shall pay the same
6    single, uniform cents per kilowatthour charge under
7    subsection (k) of Section 16-108 of the Public Utilities
8    Act. To arrive at a maximum dollar amount of zero emission
9    credits to be paid for the particular delivery year, the
10    resulting per kilowatthour amount shall be applied to the
11    actual amount of kilowatthours of electricity delivered by
12    the electric utility in the delivery year immediately prior
13    to the procurement, to all retail customers in its service
14    territory. Unpaid contractual volume for any delivery year
15    shall be paid in any subsequent delivery year in which such
16    payments can be made without exceeding the amount specified
17    in this paragraph (2). The calculations required by this
18    paragraph (2) shall be made only once for each procurement
19    plan year. Once the determination as to the amount of zero
20    emission credits to be paid is made based on the
21    calculations set forth in this paragraph (2), no subsequent
22    rate impact determinations shall be made and no adjustments
23    to those contract amounts shall be allowed. All costs
24    incurred under those contracts and in implementing this
25    subsection (d-5) shall be recovered by the electric utility
26    as provided in this Section.

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 108 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1        No later than June 30, 2019, the Commission shall
2    review the limitation on the amount of zero emission
3    credits procured under this subsection (d-5) and report to
4    the General Assembly its findings as to whether that
5    limitation unduly constrains the procurement of
6    cost-effective zero emission credits.
7        (3) Six years after the execution of a contract under
8    this subsection (d-5), the Agency shall determine whether
9    the actual zero emission credit payments received by the
10    supplier over the 6-year period exceed the Average ZEC
11    Payment. In addition, at the end of the term of a contract
12    executed under this subsection (d-5), or at the time, if
13    any, a zero emission facility's contract is terminated
14    under subparagraph (E) of paragraph (1) of this subsection
15    (d-5), then the Agency shall determine whether the actual
16    zero emission credit payments received by the supplier over
17    the term of the contract exceed the Average ZEC Payment,
18    after taking into account any amounts previously credited
19    back to the utility under this paragraph (3). If the Agency
20    determines that the actual zero emission credit payments
21    received by the supplier over the relevant period exceed
22    the Average ZEC Payment, then the supplier shall credit the
23    difference back to the utility. The amount of the credit
24    shall be remitted to the applicable electric utility no
25    later than 120 days after the Agency's determination, which
26    the utility shall reflect as a credit on its retail

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 109 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    customer bills as soon as practicable; however, the credit
2    remitted to the utility shall not exceed the total amount
3    of payments received by the facility under its contract.
4        For purposes of this Section, the Average ZEC Payment
5    shall be calculated by multiplying the quantity of zero
6    emission credits delivered under the contract times the
7    average contract price. The average contract price shall be
8    determined by subtracting the amount calculated under
9    subparagraph (B) of this paragraph (3) from the amount
10    calculated under subparagraph (A) of this paragraph (3), as
11    follows:
12            (A) The average of the Social Cost of Carbon, as
13        defined in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of this
14        subsection (d-5), during the term of the contract.
15            (B) The average of the market price indices, as
16        defined in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of this
17        subsection (d-5), during the term of the contract,
18        minus the baseline market price index, as defined in
19        subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of this subsection
20        (d-5).
21    If the subtraction yields a negative number, then the
22Average ZEC Payment shall be zero.
23        (4) Cost-effective zero emission credits procured from
24    zero emission facilities shall satisfy the applicable
25    definitions set forth in Section 1-10 of this Act.
26        (5) The electric utility shall retire all zero emission

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 110 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    credits used to comply with the requirements of this
2    subsection (d-5).
3        (6) Electric utilities shall be entitled to recover all
4    of the costs associated with the procurement of zero
5    emission credits through an automatic adjustment clause
6    tariff in accordance with subsection (k) and (m) of Section
7    16-108 of the Public Utilities Act, and the contracts
8    executed under this subsection (d-5) shall provide that the
9    utilities' payment obligations under such contracts shall
10    be reduced if an adjustment is required under subsection
11    (m) of Section 16-108 of the Public Utilities Act.
12        (7) This subsection (d-5) shall become inoperative on
13    January 1, 2028.
14    (e) The draft procurement plans are subject to public
15comment, as required by Section 16-111.5 of the Public
16Utilities Act.
17    (f) The Agency shall submit the final procurement plan to
18the Commission. The Agency shall revise a procurement plan if
19the Commission determines that it does not meet the standards
20set forth in Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
21    (g) The Agency shall assess fees to each affected utility
22to recover the costs incurred in preparation of the annual
23procurement plan for the utility.
24    (h) The Agency shall assess fees to each bidder to recover
25the costs incurred in connection with a competitive procurement
26process.

 

 

10000HB1848ham001- 111 -LRB100 04546 RJF 23846 a

1    (i) A renewable energy credit, carbon emission credit, or
2zero emission credit can only be used once to comply with a
3single portfolio or other standard as set forth in subsection
4(c), subsection (d), or subsection (d-5) of this Section,
5respectively. A renewable energy credit, carbon emission
6credit, or zero emission credit cannot be used to satisfy the
7requirements of more than one standard. If more than one type
8of credit is issued for the same megawatt hour of energy, only
9one credit can be used to satisfy the requirements of a single
10standard. After such use, the credit must be retired together
11with any other credits issued for the same megawatt hour of
12energy.
13(Source: P.A. 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 99-536, eff. 7-8-16;
1499-906, eff. 6-1-17.)
 
15    Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
16changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
17that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
18represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
19not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
20made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
21Public Act.
 
22    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect June 1,
232017.".