100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2017 and 2018
HB2825

 

Introduced , by Rep. Jerry Costello, II

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
220 ILCS 5/8-103
220 ILCS 5/8-103B
220 ILCS 5/8-104

    Amends the Public Utilities Act. Provides that certain energy efficiency and demand-response plans administered by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity that were approved by the Illinois Commerce Commission on or before the effective date of Public Act 99-906 for the period June 1, 2014 through May 31, 2017 shall continue to be in force and effect through December 31, 2017. Provides that the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and each such utility is authorized to increase, on a pro rata basis, the energy savings goals and budgets approved in its plan to reflect the additional 7 months of the plan's operation. Provides that implementation of energy efficiency measures targeted at the public sector shall prioritize programming whose goal is to make local, State, and federal public facilities more economical and environmentally responsible, and that such programming shall be contracted to State public universities and community colleges that have existing relationships with or experience serving public sector energy efficiency programs in the State.


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A BILL FOR

 

HB2825LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The Public Utilities Act is amended by changing
5Sections 8-103, 8-103B, and 8-104 as follows:
 
6    (220 ILCS 5/8-103)
7    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 99-906)
8    Sec. 8-103. Energy efficiency and demand-response
9measures.
10    (a) It is the policy of the State that electric utilities
11are required to use cost-effective energy efficiency and
12demand-response measures to reduce delivery load. Requiring
13investment in cost-effective energy efficiency and
14demand-response measures will reduce direct and indirect costs
15to consumers by decreasing environmental impacts and by
16avoiding or delaying the need for new generation, transmission,
17and distribution infrastructure. It serves the public interest
18to allow electric utilities to recover costs for reasonably and
19prudently incurred expenses for energy efficiency and
20demand-response measures. As used in this Section,
21"cost-effective" means that the measures satisfy the total
22resource cost test. The low-income measures described in
23subsection (f)(4) of this Section shall not be required to meet

 

 

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1the total resource cost test. For purposes of this Section, the
2terms "energy-efficiency", "demand-response", "electric
3utility", and "total resource cost test" shall have the
4meanings set forth in the Illinois Power Agency Act. For
5purposes of this Section, the amount per kilowatthour means the
6total amount paid for electric service expressed on a per
7kilowatthour basis. For purposes of this Section, the total
8amount paid for electric service includes without limitation
9estimated amounts paid for supply, transmission, distribution,
10surcharges, and add-on-taxes.
11    (b) Electric utilities shall implement cost-effective
12energy efficiency measures to meet the following incremental
13annual energy savings goals:
14        (1) 0.2% of energy delivered in the year commencing
15    June 1, 2008;
16        (2) 0.4% of energy delivered in the year commencing
17    June 1, 2009;
18        (3) 0.6% of energy delivered in the year commencing
19    June 1, 2010;
20        (4) 0.8% of energy delivered in the year commencing
21    June 1, 2011;
22        (5) 1% of energy delivered in the year commencing June
23    1, 2012;
24        (6) 1.4% of energy delivered in the year commencing
25    June 1, 2013;
26        (7) 1.8% of energy delivered in the year commencing

 

 

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1    June 1, 2014; and
2        (8) 2% of energy delivered in the year commencing June
3    1, 2015 and each year thereafter.
4    Electric utilities may comply with this subsection (b) by
5meeting the annual incremental savings goal in the applicable
6year or by showing that the total cumulative annual savings
7within a 3-year planning period associated with measures
8implemented after May 31, 2014 was equal to the sum of each
9annual incremental savings requirement from May 31, 2014
10through the end of the applicable year.
11    (c) Electric utilities shall implement cost-effective
12demand-response measures to reduce peak demand by 0.1% over the
13prior year for eligible retail customers, as defined in Section
1416-111.5 of this Act, and for customers that elect hourly
15service from the utility pursuant to Section 16-107 of this
16Act, provided those customers have not been declared
17competitive. This requirement commences June 1, 2008 and
18continues for 10 years.
19    (d) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsections (b)
20and (c) of this Section, an electric utility shall reduce the
21amount of energy efficiency and demand-response measures
22implemented over a 3-year planning period by an amount
23necessary to limit the estimated average annual increase in the
24amounts paid by retail customers in connection with electric
25service due to the cost of those measures to:
26        (1) in 2008, no more than 0.5% of the amount paid per

 

 

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1    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
2    31, 2007;
3        (2) in 2009, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
4    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
5    year ending May 31, 2008 or 1% of the amount paid per
6    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
7    31, 2007;
8        (3) in 2010, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
9    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
10    year ending May 31, 2009 or 1.5% of the amount paid per
11    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
12    31, 2007;
13        (4) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
14    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
15    year ending May 31, 2010 or 2% of the amount paid per
16    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
17    31, 2007; and
18        (5) thereafter, the amount of energy efficiency and
19    demand-response measures implemented for any single year
20    shall be reduced by an amount necessary to limit the
21    estimated average net increase due to the cost of these
22    measures included in the amounts paid by eligible retail
23    customers in connection with electric service to no more
24    than the greater of 2.015% of the amount paid per
25    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
26    31, 2007 or the incremental amount per kilowatthour paid

 

 

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1    for these measures in 2011.
2    No later than June 30, 2011, the Commission shall review
3the limitation on the amount of energy efficiency and
4demand-response measures implemented pursuant to this Section
5and report to the General Assembly its findings as to whether
6that limitation unduly constrains the procurement of energy
7efficiency and demand-response measures.
8    (e) Electric utilities shall be responsible for overseeing
9the design, development, and filing of energy efficiency and
10demand-response plans with the Commission. Electric utilities
11shall implement 100% of the demand-response measures in the
12plans. Electric utilities shall implement 75% of the energy
13efficiency measures approved by the Commission, and may, as
14part of that implementation, outsource various aspects of
15program development and implementation. The remaining 25% of
16those energy efficiency measures approved by the Commission
17shall be implemented by the Department of Commerce and Economic
18Opportunity, and must be designed in conjunction with the
19utility and the filing process. The Department may outsource
20development and implementation of energy efficiency measures.
21A minimum of 10% of the entire portfolio of cost-effective
22energy efficiency measures shall be procured from units of
23local government, municipal corporations, school districts,
24and community college districts. The Department shall
25coordinate the implementation of these measures.
26    The apportionment of the dollars to cover the costs to

 

 

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1implement the Department's share of the portfolio of energy
2efficiency measures shall be made to the Department once the
3Department has executed rebate agreements, grants, or
4contracts for energy efficiency measures and provided
5supporting documentation for those rebate agreements, grants,
6and contracts to the utility. The Department is authorized to
7adopt any rules necessary and prescribe procedures in order to
8ensure compliance by applicants in carrying out the purposes of
9rebate agreements for energy efficiency measures implemented
10by the Department made under this Section.
11    The details of the measures implemented by the Department
12shall be submitted by the Department to the Commission in
13connection with the utility's filing regarding the energy
14efficiency and demand-response measures that the utility
15implements.
16    A utility providing approved energy efficiency and
17demand-response measures in the State shall be permitted to
18recover costs of those measures through an automatic adjustment
19clause tariff filed with and approved by the Commission. The
20tariff shall be established outside the context of a general
21rate case. Each year the Commission shall initiate a review to
22reconcile any amounts collected with the actual costs and to
23determine the required adjustment to the annual tariff factor
24to match annual expenditures.
25    Each utility shall include, in its recovery of costs, the
26costs estimated for both the utility's and the Department's

 

 

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1implementation of energy efficiency and demand-response
2measures. Costs collected by the utility for measures
3implemented by the Department shall be submitted to the
4Department pursuant to Section 605-323 of the Civil
5Administrative Code of Illinois, shall be deposited into the
6Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standards Fund, and shall be used
7by the Department solely for the purpose of implementing these
8measures. A utility shall not be required to advance any moneys
9to the Department but only to forward such funds as it has
10collected. The Department shall report to the Commission on an
11annual basis regarding the costs actually incurred by the
12Department in the implementation of the measures. Any changes
13to the costs of energy efficiency measures as a result of plan
14modifications shall be appropriately reflected in amounts
15recovered by the utility and turned over to the Department.
16    The portfolio of measures, administered by both the
17utilities and the Department, shall, in combination, be
18designed to achieve the annual savings targets described in
19subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, as modified by
20subsection (d) of this Section.
21    The utility and the Department shall agree upon a
22reasonable portfolio of measures and determine the measurable
23corresponding percentage of the savings goals associated with
24measures implemented by the utility or Department.
25    No utility shall be assessed a penalty under subsection (f)
26of this Section for failure to make a timely filing if that

 

 

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1failure is the result of a lack of agreement with the
2Department with respect to the allocation of responsibilities
3or related costs or target assignments. In that case, the
4Department and the utility shall file their respective plans
5with the Commission and the Commission shall determine an
6appropriate division of measures and programs that meets the
7requirements of this Section.
8    If the Department is unable to meet incremental annual
9performance goals for the portion of the portfolio implemented
10by the Department, then the utility and the Department shall
11jointly submit a modified filing to the Commission explaining
12the performance shortfall and recommending an appropriate
13course going forward, including any program modifications that
14may be appropriate in light of the evaluations conducted under
15item (7) of subsection (f) of this Section. In this case, the
16utility obligation to collect the Department's costs and turn
17over those funds to the Department under this subsection (e)
18shall continue only if the Commission approves the
19modifications to the plan proposed by the Department.
20    (f) No later than November 15, 2007, each electric utility
21shall file an energy efficiency and demand-response plan with
22the Commission to meet the energy efficiency and
23demand-response standards for 2008 through 2010. No later than
24October 1, 2010, each electric utility shall file an energy
25efficiency and demand-response plan with the Commission to meet
26the energy efficiency and demand-response standards for 2011

 

 

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1through 2013. Every 3 years thereafter, each electric utility
2shall file, no later than September 1, an energy efficiency and
3demand-response plan with the Commission. If a utility does not
4file such a plan by September 1 of an applicable year, it shall
5face a penalty of $100,000 per day until the plan is filed.
6Each utility's plan shall set forth the utility's proposals to
7meet the utility's portion of the energy efficiency standards
8identified in subsection (b) and the demand-response standards
9identified in subsection (c) of this Section as modified by
10subsections (d) and (e), taking into account the unique
11circumstances of the utility's service territory. The
12Commission shall seek public comment on the utility's plan and
13shall issue an order approving or disapproving each plan within
145 months after its submission. If the Commission disapproves a
15plan, the Commission shall, within 30 days, describe in detail
16the reasons for the disapproval and describe a path by which
17the utility may file a revised draft of the plan to address the
18Commission's concerns satisfactorily. If the utility does not
19refile with the Commission within 60 days, the utility shall be
20subject to penalties at a rate of $100,000 per day until the
21plan is filed. This process shall continue, and penalties shall
22accrue, until the utility has successfully filed a portfolio of
23energy efficiency and demand-response measures. Penalties
24shall be deposited into the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund. In
25submitting proposed energy efficiency and demand-response
26plans and funding levels to meet the savings goals adopted by

 

 

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1this Act the utility shall:
2        (1) Demonstrate that its proposed energy efficiency
3    and demand-response measures will achieve the requirements
4    that are identified in subsections (b) and (c) of this
5    Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e).
6        (2) Present specific proposals to implement new
7    building and appliance standards that have been placed into
8    effect.
9        (3) Present estimates of the total amount paid for
10    electric service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis
11    associated with the proposed portfolio of measures
12    designed to meet the requirements that are identified in
13    subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, as modified by
14    subsections (d) and (e).
15        (4) Coordinate with the Department to present a
16    portfolio of energy efficiency measures proportionate to
17    the share of total annual utility revenues in Illinois from
18    households at or below 150% of the poverty level. The
19    energy efficiency programs shall be targeted to households
20    with incomes at or below 80% of area median income.
21        (5) Demonstrate that its overall portfolio of energy
22    efficiency and demand-response measures, not including
23    programs covered by item (4) of this subsection (f), are
24    cost-effective using the total resource cost test and
25    represent a diverse cross-section of opportunities for
26    customers of all rate classes to participate in the

 

 

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1    programs.
2        (6) Include a proposed cost-recovery tariff mechanism
3    to fund the proposed energy efficiency and demand-response
4    measures and to ensure the recovery of the prudently and
5    reasonably incurred costs of Commission-approved programs.
6        (7) Provide for an annual independent evaluation of the
7    performance of the cost-effectiveness of the utility's
8    portfolio of measures and the Department's portfolio of
9    measures, as well as a full review of the 3-year results of
10    the broader net program impacts and, to the extent
11    practical, for adjustment of the measures on a
12    going-forward basis as a result of the evaluations. The
13    resources dedicated to evaluation shall not exceed 3% of
14    portfolio resources in any given year.
15    (g) No more than 3% of energy efficiency and
16demand-response program revenue may be allocated for
17demonstration of breakthrough equipment and devices.
18    (h) This Section does not apply to an electric utility that
19on December 31, 2005 provided electric service to fewer than
20100,000 customers in Illinois.
21    (i) If, after 2 years, an electric utility fails to meet
22the efficiency standard specified in subsection (b) of this
23Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e), it shall make
24a contribution to the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance
25Program. The combined total liability for failure to meet the
26goal shall be $1,000,000, which shall be assessed as follows: a

 

 

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1large electric utility shall pay $665,000, and a medium
2electric utility shall pay $335,000. If, after 3 years, an
3electric utility fails to meet the efficiency standard
4specified in subsection (b) of this Section, as modified by
5subsections (d) and (e), it shall make a contribution to the
6Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program. The combined total
7liability for failure to meet the goal shall be $1,000,000,
8which shall be assessed as follows: a large electric utility
9shall pay $665,000, and a medium electric utility shall pay
10$335,000. In addition, the responsibility for implementing the
11energy efficiency measures of the utility making the payment
12shall be transferred to the Illinois Power Agency if, after 3
13years, or in any subsequent 3-year period, the utility fails to
14meet the efficiency standard specified in subsection (b) of
15this Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e). The
16Agency shall implement a competitive procurement program to
17procure resources necessary to meet the standards specified in
18this Section as modified by subsections (d) and (e), with costs
19for those resources to be recovered in the same manner as
20products purchased through the procurement plan as provided in
21Section 16-111.5. The Director shall implement this
22requirement in connection with the procurement plan as provided
23in Section 16-111.5.
24    For purposes of this Section, (i) a "large electric
25utility" is an electric utility that, on December 31, 2005,
26served more than 2,000,000 electric customers in Illinois; (ii)

 

 

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1a "medium electric utility" is an electric utility that, on
2December 31, 2005, served 2,000,000 or fewer but more than
3100,000 electric customers in Illinois; and (iii) Illinois
4electric utilities that are affiliated by virtue of a common
5parent company are considered a single electric utility.
6    (j) If, after 3 years, or any subsequent 3-year period, the
7Department fails to implement the Department's share of energy
8efficiency measures required by the standards in subsection
9(b), then the Illinois Power Agency may assume responsibility
10for and control of the Department's share of the required
11energy efficiency measures. The Agency shall implement a
12competitive procurement program to procure resources necessary
13to meet the standards specified in this Section, with the costs
14of these resources to be recovered in the same manner as
15provided for the Department in this Section.
16    (k) No electric utility shall be deemed to have failed to
17meet the energy efficiency standards to the extent any such
18failure is due to a failure of the Department or the Agency.
19(Source: P.A. 97-616, eff. 10-26-11; 97-841, eff. 7-20-12;
2098-90, eff. 7-15-13.)
 
21    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 99-906)
22    Sec. 8-103. Energy efficiency and demand-response
23measures.
24    (a) It is the policy of the State that electric utilities
25are required to use cost-effective energy efficiency and

 

 

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1demand-response measures to reduce delivery load. Requiring
2investment in cost-effective energy efficiency and
3demand-response measures will reduce direct and indirect costs
4to consumers by decreasing environmental impacts and by
5avoiding or delaying the need for new generation, transmission,
6and distribution infrastructure. It serves the public interest
7to allow electric utilities to recover costs for reasonably and
8prudently incurred expenses for energy efficiency and
9demand-response measures. As used in this Section,
10"cost-effective" means that the measures satisfy the total
11resource cost test. The low-income measures described in
12subsection (f)(4) of this Section shall not be required to meet
13the total resource cost test. For purposes of this Section, the
14terms "energy-efficiency", "demand-response", "electric
15utility", and "total resource cost test" shall have the
16meanings set forth in the Illinois Power Agency Act. For
17purposes of this Section, the amount per kilowatthour means the
18total amount paid for electric service expressed on a per
19kilowatthour basis. For purposes of this Section, the total
20amount paid for electric service includes without limitation
21estimated amounts paid for supply, transmission, distribution,
22surcharges, and add-on-taxes.
23    (a-5) This Section applies to electric utilities serving
24500,000 or less but more than 200,000 retail customers in this
25State. Through December 31, 2017, this Section also applies to
26electric utilities serving more than 500,000 retail customers

 

 

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1in the State.
2    (b) Electric utilities shall implement cost-effective
3energy efficiency measures to meet the following incremental
4annual energy savings goals:
5        (1) 0.2% of energy delivered in the year commencing
6    June 1, 2008;
7        (2) 0.4% of energy delivered in the year commencing
8    June 1, 2009;
9        (3) 0.6% of energy delivered in the year commencing
10    June 1, 2010;
11        (4) 0.8% of energy delivered in the year commencing
12    June 1, 2011;
13        (5) 1% of energy delivered in the year commencing June
14    1, 2012;
15        (6) 1.4% of energy delivered in the year commencing
16    June 1, 2013;
17        (7) 1.8% of energy delivered in the year commencing
18    June 1, 2014; and
19        (8) 2% of energy delivered in the year commencing June
20    1, 2015 and each year thereafter.
21    Electric utilities may comply with this subsection (b) by
22meeting the annual incremental savings goal in the applicable
23year or by showing that the total cumulative annual savings
24within a 3-year planning period associated with measures
25implemented after May 31, 2014 was equal to the sum of each
26annual incremental savings requirement from May 31, 2014

 

 

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1through the end of the applicable year.
2    (c) Electric utilities shall implement cost-effective
3demand-response measures to reduce peak demand by 0.1% over the
4prior year for eligible retail customers, as defined in Section
516-111.5 of this Act, and for customers that elect hourly
6service from the utility pursuant to Section 16-107 of this
7Act, provided those customers have not been declared
8competitive. This requirement commences June 1, 2008 and
9continues for 10 years.
10    (d) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsections (b)
11and (c) of this Section, an electric utility shall reduce the
12amount of energy efficiency and demand-response measures
13implemented over a 3-year planning period by an amount
14necessary to limit the estimated average annual increase in the
15amounts paid by retail customers in connection with electric
16service due to the cost of those measures to:
17        (1) in 2008, no more than 0.5% of the amount paid per
18    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
19    31, 2007;
20        (2) in 2009, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
21    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
22    year ending May 31, 2008 or 1% of the amount paid per
23    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
24    31, 2007;
25        (3) in 2010, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
26    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the

 

 

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

 

 

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1demand-response plans with the Commission. Electric utilities
2shall implement 100% of the demand-response measures in the
3plans. Electric utilities shall implement 75% of the energy
4efficiency measures approved by the Commission, and may, as
5part of that implementation, outsource various aspects of
6program development and implementation. The remaining 25% of
7those energy efficiency measures approved by the Commission
8shall be implemented by the Department of Commerce and Economic
9Opportunity, and must be designed in conjunction with the
10utility and the filing process. The Department may outsource
11development and implementation of energy efficiency measures.
12A minimum of 10% of the entire portfolio of cost-effective
13energy efficiency measures shall be procured from units of
14local government, municipal corporations, school districts,
15and community college districts. The Department shall
16coordinate the implementation of these measures.
17    The apportionment of the dollars to cover the costs to
18implement the Department's share of the portfolio of energy
19efficiency measures shall be made to the Department once the
20Department has executed rebate agreements, grants, or
21contracts for energy efficiency measures and provided
22supporting documentation for those rebate agreements, grants,
23and contracts to the utility. The Department is authorized to
24adopt any rules necessary and prescribe procedures in order to
25ensure compliance by applicants in carrying out the purposes of
26rebate agreements for energy efficiency measures implemented

 

 

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1by the Department made under this Section.
2    The details of the measures implemented by the Department
3shall be submitted by the Department to the Commission in
4connection with the utility's filing regarding the energy
5efficiency and demand-response measures that the utility
6implements.
7    A utility providing approved energy efficiency and
8demand-response measures in the State shall be permitted to
9recover costs of those measures through an automatic adjustment
10clause tariff filed with and approved by the Commission. The
11tariff shall be established outside the context of a general
12rate case. Each year the Commission shall initiate a review to
13reconcile any amounts collected with the actual costs and to
14determine the required adjustment to the annual tariff factor
15to match annual expenditures.
16    Each utility shall include, in its recovery of costs, the
17costs estimated for both the utility's and the Department's
18implementation of energy efficiency and demand-response
19measures. Costs collected by the utility for measures
20implemented by the Department shall be submitted to the
21Department pursuant to Section 605-323 of the Civil
22Administrative Code of Illinois, shall be deposited into the
23Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standards Fund, and shall be used
24by the Department solely for the purpose of implementing these
25measures. A utility shall not be required to advance any moneys
26to the Department but only to forward such funds as it has

 

 

HB2825- 20 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1collected. The Department shall report to the Commission on an
2annual basis regarding the costs actually incurred by the
3Department in the implementation of the measures. Any changes
4to the costs of energy efficiency measures as a result of plan
5modifications shall be appropriately reflected in amounts
6recovered by the utility and turned over to the Department.
7    The portfolio of measures, administered by both the
8utilities and the Department, shall, in combination, be
9designed to achieve the annual savings targets described in
10subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, as modified by
11subsection (d) of this Section.
12    The utility and the Department shall agree upon a
13reasonable portfolio of measures and determine the measurable
14corresponding percentage of the savings goals associated with
15measures implemented by the utility or Department.
16    No utility shall be assessed a penalty under subsection (f)
17of this Section for failure to make a timely filing if that
18failure is the result of a lack of agreement with the
19Department with respect to the allocation of responsibilities
20or related costs or target assignments. In that case, the
21Department and the utility shall file their respective plans
22with the Commission and the Commission shall determine an
23appropriate division of measures and programs that meets the
24requirements of this Section.
25    If the Department is unable to meet incremental annual
26performance goals for the portion of the portfolio implemented

 

 

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1by the Department, then the utility and the Department shall
2jointly submit a modified filing to the Commission explaining
3the performance shortfall and recommending an appropriate
4course going forward, including any program modifications that
5may be appropriate in light of the evaluations conducted under
6item (7) of subsection (f) of this Section. In this case, the
7utility obligation to collect the Department's costs and turn
8over those funds to the Department under this subsection (e)
9shall continue only if the Commission approves the
10modifications to the plan proposed by the Department.
11    (f) No later than November 15, 2007, each electric utility
12shall file an energy efficiency and demand-response plan with
13the Commission to meet the energy efficiency and
14demand-response standards for 2008 through 2010. No later than
15October 1, 2010, each electric utility shall file an energy
16efficiency and demand-response plan with the Commission to meet
17the energy efficiency and demand-response standards for 2011
18through 2013. Every 3 years thereafter, each electric utility
19shall file, no later than September 1, an energy efficiency and
20demand-response plan with the Commission. If a utility does not
21file such a plan by September 1 of an applicable year, it shall
22face a penalty of $100,000 per day until the plan is filed.
23Each utility's plan shall set forth the utility's proposals to
24meet the utility's portion of the energy efficiency standards
25identified in subsection (b) and the demand-response standards
26identified in subsection (c) of this Section as modified by

 

 

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1subsections (d) and (e), taking into account the unique
2circumstances of the utility's service territory. The
3Commission shall seek public comment on the utility's plan and
4shall issue an order approving or disapproving each plan within
55 months after its submission. If the Commission disapproves a
6plan, the Commission shall, within 30 days, describe in detail
7the reasons for the disapproval and describe a path by which
8the utility may file a revised draft of the plan to address the
9Commission's concerns satisfactorily. If the utility does not
10refile with the Commission within 60 days, the utility shall be
11subject to penalties at a rate of $100,000 per day until the
12plan is filed. This process shall continue, and penalties shall
13accrue, until the utility has successfully filed a portfolio of
14energy efficiency and demand-response measures. Penalties
15shall be deposited into the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund. In
16submitting proposed energy efficiency and demand-response
17plans and funding levels to meet the savings goals adopted by
18this Act the utility shall:
19        (1) Demonstrate that its proposed energy efficiency
20    and demand-response measures will achieve the requirements
21    that are identified in subsections (b) and (c) of this
22    Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e).
23        (2) Present specific proposals to implement new
24    building and appliance standards that have been placed into
25    effect.
26        (3) Present estimates of the total amount paid for

 

 

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1    electric service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis
2    associated with the proposed portfolio of measures
3    designed to meet the requirements that are identified in
4    subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, as modified by
5    subsections (d) and (e).
6        (4) Coordinate with the Department to present a
7    portfolio of energy efficiency measures proportionate to
8    the share of total annual utility revenues in Illinois from
9    households at or below 150% of the poverty level. The
10    energy efficiency programs shall be targeted to households
11    with incomes at or below 80% of area median income.
12        (5) Demonstrate that its overall portfolio of energy
13    efficiency and demand-response measures, not including
14    programs covered by item (4) of this subsection (f), are
15    cost-effective using the total resource cost test and
16    represent a diverse cross-section of opportunities for
17    customers of all rate classes to participate in the
18    programs.
19        (6) Include a proposed cost-recovery tariff mechanism
20    to fund the proposed energy efficiency and demand-response
21    measures and to ensure the recovery of the prudently and
22    reasonably incurred costs of Commission-approved programs.
23        (7) Provide for an annual independent evaluation of the
24    performance of the cost-effectiveness of the utility's
25    portfolio of measures and the Department's portfolio of
26    measures, as well as a full review of the 3-year results of

 

 

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1    the broader net program impacts and, to the extent
2    practical, for adjustment of the measures on a
3    going-forward basis as a result of the evaluations. The
4    resources dedicated to evaluation shall not exceed 3% of
5    portfolio resources in any given year.
6    (g) No more than 3% of energy efficiency and
7demand-response program revenue may be allocated for
8demonstration of breakthrough equipment and devices.
9    (h) This Section does not apply to an electric utility that
10on December 31, 2005 provided electric service to fewer than
11100,000 customers in Illinois.
12    (i) If, after 2 years, an electric utility fails to meet
13the efficiency standard specified in subsection (b) of this
14Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e), it shall make
15a contribution to the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance
16Program. The combined total liability for failure to meet the
17goal shall be $1,000,000, which shall be assessed as follows: a
18large electric utility shall pay $665,000, and a medium
19electric utility shall pay $335,000. If, after 3 years, an
20electric utility fails to meet the efficiency standard
21specified in subsection (b) of this Section, as modified by
22subsections (d) and (e), it shall make a contribution to the
23Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program. The combined total
24liability for failure to meet the goal shall be $1,000,000,
25which shall be assessed as follows: a large electric utility
26shall pay $665,000, and a medium electric utility shall pay

 

 

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1$335,000. In addition, the responsibility for implementing the
2energy efficiency measures of the utility making the payment
3shall be transferred to the Illinois Power Agency if, after 3
4years, or in any subsequent 3-year period, the utility fails to
5meet the efficiency standard specified in subsection (b) of
6this Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e). The
7Agency shall implement a competitive procurement program to
8procure resources necessary to meet the standards specified in
9this Section as modified by subsections (d) and (e), with costs
10for those resources to be recovered in the same manner as
11products purchased through the procurement plan as provided in
12Section 16-111.5. The Director shall implement this
13requirement in connection with the procurement plan as provided
14in Section 16-111.5.
15    For purposes of this Section, (i) a "large electric
16utility" is an electric utility that, on December 31, 2005,
17served more than 2,000,000 electric customers in Illinois; (ii)
18a "medium electric utility" is an electric utility that, on
19December 31, 2005, served 2,000,000 or fewer but more than
20100,000 electric customers in Illinois; and (iii) Illinois
21electric utilities that are affiliated by virtue of a common
22parent company are considered a single electric utility.
23    (j) If, after 3 years, or any subsequent 3-year period, the
24Department fails to implement the Department's share of energy
25efficiency measures required by the standards in subsection
26(b), then the Illinois Power Agency may assume responsibility

 

 

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1for and control of the Department's share of the required
2energy efficiency measures. The Agency shall implement a
3competitive procurement program to procure resources necessary
4to meet the standards specified in this Section, with the costs
5of these resources to be recovered in the same manner as
6provided for the Department in this Section.
7    (k) No electric utility shall be deemed to have failed to
8meet the energy efficiency standards to the extent any such
9failure is due to a failure of the Department or the Agency.
10    (l)(1) The energy efficiency and demand-response plans of
11electric utilities serving more than 500,000 retail customers
12in the State, including all such programs administered by the
13Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, that were
14approved by the Commission on or before the effective date of
15this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly for the period
16June 1, 2014 through May 31, 2017 shall continue to be in force
17and effect through December 31, 2017 so that the energy
18efficiency programs set forth in those plans continue to be
19offered during the period June 1, 2017 through December 31,
202017. The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and
21each Each such utility is authorized to increase, on a pro rata
22basis, the energy savings goals and budgets approved in its
23plan to reflect the additional 7 months of the plan's
24operation, provided that such increase shall also incorporate
25reductions to goals and budgets to reflect the proportion of
26the utility's load attributable to customers who are exempt

 

 

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1from this Section under subsection (m) of this Section.
2    (2) If an electric utility serving more than 500,000 retail
3customers in the State filed with the Commission, under
4subsection (f) of this Section, its proposed energy efficiency
5and demand-response plan for the period June 1, 2017 through
6May 31, 2020, and the Commission has not yet entered its final
7order approving such plan on or before the effective date of
8this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, then the
9utility shall file a notice of withdrawal with the Commission,
10following such effective date, to withdraw the proposed energy
11efficiency and demand-response plan. Upon receipt of such
12notice, the Commission shall dismiss with prejudice any docket
13that had been initiated to investigate such plan, and the plan
14and the record related thereto shall not be the subject of any
15further hearing, investigation, or proceeding of any kind.
16    (3) For those electric utilities that serve more than
17500,000 retail customers in the State, this amendatory Act of
18the 99th General Assembly preempts and supersedes any orders
19entered by the Commission that approved such utilities' energy
20efficiency and demand response plans for the period commencing
21June 1, 2017 and ending May 31, 2020. Any such orders shall be
22void, and the provisions of paragraph (1) of this subsection
23(l) shall apply.
24(m) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, after May 31,
252017, this Section does not apply to any retail customers of an
26electric utility that serves more than 3,000,000 retail

 

 

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1customers in the State and whose total highest 30 minute demand
2was more than 10,000 kilowatts, or any retail customers of an
3electric utility that serves less than 3,000,000 retail
4customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in the State
5and whose total highest 15 minute demand was more than 10,000
6kilowatts. For purposes of this subsection (m), "retail
7customer" has the meaning set forth in Section 16-102 of this
8Act. The criteria for determining whether this subsection (m)
9is applicable to a retail customer shall be based on the 12
10consecutive billing periods prior to the start of the first
11year of each such multi-year plan.
12(Source: P.A. 98-90, eff. 7-15-13; 99-906, eff. 6-1-17.)
 
13    (220 ILCS 5/8-103B)
14    (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a
15delayed effective date)
16    Sec. 8-103B. Energy efficiency and demand-response
17measures.
18    (a) It is the policy of the State that electric utilities
19are required to use cost-effective energy efficiency and
20demand-response measures to reduce delivery load. Requiring
21investment in cost-effective energy efficiency and
22demand-response measures will reduce direct and indirect costs
23to consumers by decreasing environmental impacts and by
24avoiding or delaying the need for new generation, transmission,
25and distribution infrastructure. It serves the public interest

 

 

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1to allow electric utilities to recover costs for reasonably and
2prudently incurred expenditures for energy efficiency and
3demand-response measures. As used in this Section,
4"cost-effective" means that the measures satisfy the total
5resource cost test. The low-income measures described in
6subsection (c) of this Section shall not be required to meet
7the total resource cost test. For purposes of this Section, the
8terms "energy-efficiency", "demand-response", "electric
9utility", and "total resource cost test" have the meanings set
10forth in the Illinois Power Agency Act.
11    (a-5) This Section applies to electric utilities serving
12more than 500,000 retail customers in the State for those
13multi-year plans commencing after December 31, 2017.
14    (b) For purposes of this Section, electric utilities
15subject to this Section that serve more than 3,000,000 retail
16customers in the State shall be deemed to have achieved a
17cumulative persisting annual savings of 6.6% from energy
18efficiency measures and programs implemented during the period
19beginning January 1, 2012 and ending December 31, 2017, which
20percent is based on the deemed average weather normalized sales
21of electric power and energy during calendar years 2014, 2015,
22and 2016 of 88,000,000 MWhs. For the purposes of this
23subsection (b) and subsection (b-5), the 88,000,000 MWhs of
24deemed electric power and energy sales shall be reduced by the
25number of MWhs equal to the sum of the annual consumption of
26customers that are exempt from subsections (a) through (j) of

 

 

HB2825- 30 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1this Section under subsection (l) of this Section, as averaged
2across the calendar years 2014, 2015, and 2016. After 2017, the
3deemed value of cumulative persisting annual savings from
4energy efficiency measures and programs implemented during the
5period beginning January 1, 2012 and ending December 31, 2017,
6shall be reduced each year, as follows, and the applicable
7value shall be applied to and count toward the utility's
8achievement of the cumulative persisting annual savings goals
9set forth in subsection (b-5):
10        (1) 5.8% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
11    for the year ending December 31, 2018;
12        (2) 5.2% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
13    for the year ending December 31, 2019;
14        (3) 4.5% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
15    for the year ending December 31, 2020;
16        (4) 4.0% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
17    for the year ending December 31, 2021;
18        (5) 3.5% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
19    for the year ending December 31, 2022;
20        (6) 3.1% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
21    for the year ending December 31, 2023;
22        (7) 2.8% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
23    for the year ending December 31, 2024;
24        (8) 2.5% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
25    for the year ending December 31, 2025;
26        (9) 2.3% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings

 

 

HB2825- 31 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    for the year ending December 31, 2026;
2        (10) 2.1% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
3    for the year ending December 31, 2027;
4        (11) 1.8% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
5    for the year ending December 31, 2028;
6        (12) 1.7% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
7    for the year ending December 31, 2029; and
8        (13) 1.5% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
9    for the year ending December 31, 2030.
10    For purposes of this Section, "cumulative persisting
11annual savings" means the total electric energy savings in a
12given year from measures installed in that year or in previous
13years, but no earlier than January 1, 2012, that are still
14operational and providing savings in that year because the
15measures have not yet reached the end of their useful lives.
16    (b-5) Beginning in 2018, electric utilities subject to this
17Section that serve more than 3,000,000 retail customers in the
18State shall achieve the following cumulative persisting annual
19savings goals, as modified by subsection (f) of this Section
20and as compared to the deemed baseline of 88,000,000 MWhs of
21electric power and energy sales set forth in subsection (b), as
22reduced by the number of MWhs equal to the sum of the annual
23consumption of customers that are exempt from subsections (a)
24through (j) of this Section under subsection (l) of this
25Section as averaged across the calendar years 2014, 2015, and
262016, through the implementation of energy efficiency measures

 

 

HB2825- 32 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1during the applicable year and in prior years, but no earlier
2than January 1, 2012:
3        (1) 7.8% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
4    year ending December 31, 2018;
5        (2) 9.1% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
6    year ending December 31, 2019;
7        (3) 10.4% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
8    year ending December 31, 2020;
9        (4) 11.8% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
10    year ending December 31, 2021;
11        (5) 13.1% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
12    year ending December 31, 2022;
13        (6) 14.4% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
14    year ending December 31, 2023;
15        (7) 15.7% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
16    year ending December 31, 2024;
17        (8) 17% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
18    year ending December 31, 2025;
19        (9) 17.9% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
20    year ending December 31, 2026;
21        (10) 18.8% cumulative persisting annual savings for
22    the year ending December 31, 2027;
23        (11) 19.7% cumulative persisting annual savings for
24    the year ending December 31, 2028;
25        (12) 20.6% cumulative persisting annual savings for
26    the year ending December 31, 2029; and

 

 

HB2825- 33 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1        (13) 21.5% cumulative persisting annual savings for
2    the year ending December 31, 2030.
3    (b-10) For purposes of this Section, electric utilities
4subject to this Section that serve less than 3,000,000 retail
5customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in the State
6shall be deemed to have achieved a cumulative persisting annual
7savings of 6.6% from energy efficiency measures and programs
8implemented during the period beginning January 1, 2012 and
9ending December 31, 2017, which is based on the deemed average
10weather normalized sales of electric power and energy during
11calendar years 2014, 2015, and 2016 of 36,900,000 MWhs. For the
12purposes of this subsection (b-10) and subsection (b-15), the
1336,900,000 MWhs of deemed electric power and energy sales shall
14be reduced by the number of MWhs equal to the sum of the annual
15consumption of customers that are exempt from subsections (a)
16through (j) of this Section under subsection (l) of this
17Section, as averaged across the calendar years 2014, 2015, and
182016. After 2017, the deemed value of cumulative persisting
19annual savings from energy efficiency measures and programs
20implemented during the period beginning January 1, 2012 and
21ending December 31, 2017, shall be reduced each year, as
22follows, and the applicable value shall be applied to and count
23toward the utility's achievement of the cumulative persisting
24annual savings goals set forth in subsection (b-15):
25        (1) 5.8% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
26    for the year ending December 31, 2018;

 

 

HB2825- 34 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1        (2) 5.2% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
2    for the year ending December 31, 2019;
3        (3) 4.5% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
4    for the year ending December 31, 2020;
5        (4) 4.0% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
6    for the year ending December 31, 2021;
7        (5) 3.5% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
8    for the year ending December 31, 2022;
9        (6) 3.1% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
10    for the year ending December 31, 2023;
11        (7) 2.8% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
12    for the year ending December 31, 2024;
13        (8) 2.5% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
14    for the year ending December 31, 2025;
15        (9) 2.3% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
16    for the year ending December 31, 2026;
17        (10) 2.1% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
18    for the year ending December 31, 2027;
19        (11) 1.8% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
20    for the year ending December 31, 2028;
21        (12) 1.7% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
22    for the year ending December 31, 2029; and
23        (13) 1.5% deemed cumulative persisting annual savings
24    for the year ending December 31, 2030.
25    (b-15) Beginning in 2018, electric utilities subject to
26this Section that serve less than 3,000,000 retail customers

 

 

HB2825- 35 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1but more than 500,000 retail customers in the State shall
2achieve the following cumulative persisting annual savings
3goals, as modified by subsection (b-20) and subsection (f) of
4this Section and as compared to the deemed baseline as reduced
5by the number of MWhs equal to the sum of the annual
6consumption of customers that are exempt from subsections (a)
7through (j) of this Section under subsection (l) of this
8Section as averaged across the calendar years 2014, 2015, and
92016, through the implementation of energy efficiency measures
10during the applicable year and in prior years, but no earlier
11than January 1, 2012:
12        (1) 7.4% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
13    year ending December 31, 2018;
14        (2) 8.2% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
15    year ending December 31, 2019;
16        (3) 9.0% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
17    year ending December 31, 2020;
18        (4) 9.8% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
19    year ending December 31, 2021;
20        (5) 10.6% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
21    year ending December 31, 2022;
22        (6) 11.4% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
23    year ending December 31, 2023;
24        (7) 12.2% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
25    year ending December 31, 2024;
26        (8) 13% cumulative persisting annual savings for the

 

 

HB2825- 36 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    year ending December 31, 2025;
2        (9) 13.6% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
3    year ending December 31, 2026;
4        (10) 14.2% cumulative persisting annual savings for
5    the year ending December 31, 2027;
6        (11) 14.8% cumulative persisting annual savings for
7    the year ending December 31, 2028;
8        (12) 15.4% cumulative persisting annual savings for
9    the year ending December 31, 2029; and
10        (13) 16% cumulative persisting annual savings for the
11    year ending December 31, 2030.
12    The difference between the cumulative persisting annual
13savings goal for the applicable calendar year and the
14cumulative persisting annual savings goal for the immediately
15preceding calendar year is 0.8% for the period of January 1,
162018 through December 31, 2025 and 0.6% for the period of
17January 1, 2026 through December 31, 2030.
18    (b-20) Each electric utility subject to this Section may
19include cost-effective voltage optimization measures in its
20plans submitted under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section,
21and the costs incurred by a utility to implement the measures
22under a Commission-approved plan shall be recovered under the
23provisions of Article IX or Section 16-108.5 of this Act. For
24purposes of this Section, the measure life of voltage
25optimization measures shall be 15 years. The measure life
26period is independent of the depreciation rate of the voltage

 

 

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1optimization assets deployed.
2    Within 270 days after the effective date of this amendatory
3Act of the 99th General Assembly, an electric utility that
4serves less than 3,000,000 retail customers but more than
5500,000 retail customers in the State shall file a plan with
6the Commission that identifies the cost-effective voltage
7optimization investment the electric utility plans to
8undertake through December 31, 2024. The Commission, after
9notice and hearing, shall approve or approve with modification
10the plan within 120 days after the plan's filing and, in the
11order approving or approving with modification the plan, the
12Commission shall adjust the applicable cumulative persisting
13annual savings goals set forth in subsection (b-15) to reflect
14any amount of cost-effective energy savings approved by the
15Commission that is greater than or less than the following
16cumulative persisting annual savings values attributable to
17voltage optimization for the applicable year:
18        (1) 0.0% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
19    the year ending December 31, 2018;
20        (2) 0.17% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
21    the year ending December 31, 2019;
22        (3) 0.17% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
23    the year ending December 31, 2020;
24        (4) 0.33% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
25    the year ending December 31, 2021;
26        (5) 0.5% of cumulative persisting annual savings for

 

 

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1    the year ending December 31, 2022;
2        (6) 0.67% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
3    the year ending December 31, 2023;
4        (7) 0.83% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
5    the year ending December 31, 2024; and
6        (8) 1.0% of cumulative persisting annual savings for
7    the year ending December 31, 2025.
8    (b-25) In the event an electric utility jointly offers an
9energy efficiency measure or program with a gas utility under
10plans approved under this Section and Section 8-104 of this
11Act, the electric utility may continue offering the program,
12including the gas energy efficiency measures, in the event the
13gas utility discontinues funding the program. In that event,
14the energy savings value associated with such other fuels shall
15be converted to electric energy savings on an equivalent Btu
16basis for the premises. However, the electric utility shall
17prioritize programs for low-income residential customers to
18the extent practicable. An electric utility may recover the
19costs of offering the gas energy efficiency measures under this
20subsection (b-25).
21    For those energy efficiency measures or programs that save
22both electricity and other fuels but are not jointly offered
23with a gas utility under plans approved under this Section and
24Section 8-104 or not offered with an affiliated gas utility
25under paragraph (6) of subsection (f) of Section 8-104 of this
26Act, the electric utility may count savings of fuels other than

 

 

HB2825- 39 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1electricity toward the achievement of its annual savings goal,
2and the energy savings value associated with such other fuels
3shall be converted to electric energy savings on an equivalent
4Btu basis at the premises.
5    In no event shall more than 10% of each year's applicable
6annual incremental goal as defined in paragraph (7) of
7subsection (g) of this Section be met through savings of fuels
8other than electricity.
9    (c) Electric utilities shall be responsible for overseeing
10the design, development, and filing of energy efficiency plans
11with the Commission and may, as part of that implementation,
12outsource various aspects of program development and
13implementation. A minimum of 10%, for electric utilities that
14serve more than 3,000,000 retail customers in the State, and a
15minimum of 7%, for electric utilities that serve less than
163,000,000 retail customers but more than 500,000 retail
17customers in the State, of the utility's entire portfolio
18funding level for a given year shall be used to procure
19cost-effective energy efficiency measures from units of local
20government, municipal corporations, school districts, public
21housing, and community college districts, provided that a
22minimum percentage of available funds shall be used to procure
23energy efficiency from public housing, which percentage shall
24be equal to public housing's share of public building energy
25consumption.
26    The utilities shall also implement energy efficiency

 

 

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1measures targeted at low-income households, which, for
2purposes of this Section, shall be defined as households at or
3below 80% of area median income, and expenditures to implement
4the measures shall be no less than $25,000,000 per year for
5electric utilities that serve more than 3,000,000 retail
6customers in the State and no less than $8,350,000 per year for
7electric utilities that serve less than 3,000,000 retail
8customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in the State.
9    Each electric utility shall assess opportunities to
10implement cost-effective energy efficiency measures and
11programs through a public housing authority or authorities
12located in its service territory. If such opportunities are
13identified, the utility shall propose such measures and
14programs to address the opportunities. Expenditures to address
15such opportunities shall be credited toward the minimum
16procurement and expenditure requirements set forth in this
17subsection (c).
18    Implementation of energy efficiency measures and programs
19targeted at low-income households should be contracted, when it
20is practicable, to independent third parties that have
21demonstrated capabilities to serve such households, with a
22preference for not-for-profit entities and government agencies
23that have existing relationships with or experience serving
24low-income communities in the State.
25    Implementation of energy efficiency measures targeted at
26the public sector shall prioritize programming with a goal of

 

 

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1making local, State, and federal public facilities more
2economical and environmentally responsible. Such programming
3shall be contracted, when it is practicable, to State public
4universities and community colleges that have existing
5relationships with or experience serving public sector energy
6efficiency programs in the State.
7    Each electric utility shall develop and implement
8reporting procedures that address and assist in determining the
9amount of energy savings that can be applied to the low-income
10procurement and expenditure requirements set forth in this
11subsection (c).
12    The electric utilities shall also convene a low-income
13energy efficiency advisory committee to assist in the design
14and evaluation of the low-income energy efficiency programs.
15The committee shall be comprised of the electric utilities
16subject to the requirements of this Section, the gas utilities
17subject to the requirements of Section 8-104 of this Act, the
18utilities' low-income energy efficiency implementation
19contractors, and representatives of community-based
20organizations.
21    (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
22contrary, a utility providing approved energy efficiency
23measures and, if applicable, demand-response measures in the
24State shall be permitted to recover all reasonable and
25prudently incurred costs of those measures from all retail
26customers, except as provided in subsection (l) of this

 

 

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1Section, as follows, provided that nothing in this subsection
2(d) permits the double recovery of such costs from customers:
3        (1) The utility may recover its costs through an
4    automatic adjustment clause tariff filed with and approved
5    by the Commission. The tariff shall be established outside
6    the context of a general rate case. Each year the
7    Commission shall initiate a review to reconcile any amounts
8    collected with the actual costs and to determine the
9    required adjustment to the annual tariff factor to match
10    annual expenditures. To enable the financing of the
11    incremental capital expenditures, including regulatory
12    assets, for electric utilities that serve less than
13    3,000,000 retail customers but more than 500,000 retail
14    customers in the State, the utility's actual year-end
15    capital structure that includes a common equity ratio,
16    excluding goodwill, of up to and including 50% of the total
17    capital structure shall be deemed reasonable and used to
18    set rates.
19        (2) A utility may recover its costs through an energy
20    efficiency formula rate approved by the Commission under a
21    filing under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section, which
22    shall specify the cost components that form the basis of
23    the rate charged to customers with sufficient specificity
24    to operate in a standardized manner and be updated annually
25    with transparent information that reflects the utility's
26    actual costs to be recovered during the applicable rate

 

 

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1    year, which is the period beginning with the first billing
2    day of January and extending through the last billing day
3    of the following December. The energy efficiency formula
4    rate shall be implemented through a tariff filed with the
5    Commission under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section
6    that is consistent with the provisions of this paragraph
7    (2) and that shall be applicable to all delivery services
8    customers. The Commission shall conduct an investigation
9    of the tariff in a manner consistent with the provisions of
10    this paragraph (2), subsections (f) and (g) of this
11    Section, and the provisions of Article IX of this Act to
12    the extent they do not conflict with this paragraph (2).
13    The energy efficiency formula rate approved by the
14    Commission shall remain in effect at the discretion of the
15    utility and shall do the following:
16            (A) Provide for the recovery of the utility's
17        actual costs incurred under this Section that are
18        prudently incurred and reasonable in amount consistent
19        with Commission practice and law. The sole fact that a
20        cost differs from that incurred in a prior calendar
21        year or that an investment is different from that made
22        in a prior calendar year shall not imply the imprudence
23        or unreasonableness of that cost or investment.
24            (B) Reflect the utility's actual year-end capital
25        structure for the applicable calendar year, excluding
26        goodwill, subject to a determination of prudence and

 

 

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1        reasonableness consistent with Commission practice and
2        law. To enable the financing of the incremental capital
3        expenditures, including regulatory assets, for
4        electric utilities that serve less than 3,000,000
5        retail customers but more than 500,000 retail
6        customers in the State, a participating electric
7        utility's actual year-end capital structure that
8        includes a common equity ratio, excluding goodwill, of
9        up to and including 50% of the total capital structure
10        shall be deemed reasonable and used to set rates.
11            (C) Include a cost of equity, which shall be
12        calculated as the sum of the following:
13                (i) the average for the applicable calendar
14            year of the monthly average yields of 30-year U.S.
15            Treasury bonds published by the Board of Governors
16            of the Federal Reserve System in its weekly H.15
17            Statistical Release or successor publication; and
18                (ii) 580 basis points.
19            At such time as the Board of Governors of the
20        Federal Reserve System ceases to include the monthly
21        average yields of 30-year U.S. Treasury bonds in its
22        weekly H.15 Statistical Release or successor
23        publication, the monthly average yields of the U.S.
24        Treasury bonds then having the longest duration
25        published by the Board of Governors in its weekly H.15
26        Statistical Release or successor publication shall

 

 

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1        instead be used for purposes of this paragraph (2).
2            (D) Permit and set forth protocols, subject to a
3        determination of prudence and reasonableness
4        consistent with Commission practice and law, for the
5        following:
6                (i) recovery of incentive compensation expense
7            that is based on the achievement of operational
8            metrics, including metrics related to budget
9            controls, outage duration and frequency, safety,
10            customer service, efficiency and productivity, and
11            environmental compliance; however, this protocol
12            shall not apply if such expense related to costs
13            incurred under this Section is recovered under
14            Article IX or Section 16-108.5 of this Act;
15            incentive compensation expense that is based on
16            net income or an affiliate's earnings per share
17            shall not be recoverable under the energy
18            efficiency formula rate;
19                (ii) recovery of pension and other
20            post-employment benefits expense, provided that
21            such costs are supported by an actuarial study;
22            however, this protocol shall not apply if such
23            expense related to costs incurred under this
24            Section is recovered under Article IX or Section
25            16-108.5 of this Act;
26                (iii) recovery of existing regulatory assets

 

 

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1            over the periods previously authorized by the
2            Commission;
3                (iv) as described in subsection (e),
4            amortization of costs incurred under this Section;
5            and
6                (v) projected, weather normalized billing
7            determinants for the applicable rate year.
8            (E) Provide for an annual reconciliation, as
9        described in paragraph (3) of this subsection (d), less
10        any deferred taxes related to the reconciliation, with
11        interest at an annual rate of return equal to the
12        utility's weighted average cost of capital, including
13        a revenue conversion factor calculated to recover or
14        refund all additional income taxes that may be payable
15        or receivable as a result of that return, of the energy
16        efficiency revenue requirement reflected in rates for
17        each calendar year, beginning with the calendar year in
18        which the utility files its energy efficiency formula
19        rate tariff under this paragraph (2), with what the
20        revenue requirement would have been had the actual cost
21        information for the applicable calendar year been
22        available at the filing date.
23        The utility shall file, together with its tariff, the
24    projected costs to be incurred by the utility during the
25    rate year under the utility's multi-year plan approved
26    under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section, including,

 

 

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1    but not limited to, the projected capital investment costs
2    and projected regulatory asset balances with
3    correspondingly updated depreciation and amortization
4    reserves and expense, that shall populate the energy
5    efficiency formula rate and set the initial rates under the
6    formula.
7        The Commission shall review the proposed tariff in
8    conjunction with its review of a proposed multi-year plan,
9    as specified in paragraph (5) of subsection (g) of this
10    Section. The review shall be based on the same evidentiary
11    standards, including, but not limited to, those concerning
12    the prudence and reasonableness of the costs incurred by
13    the utility, the Commission applies in a hearing to review
14    a filing for a general increase in rates under Article IX
15    of this Act. The initial rates shall take effect beginning
16    with the January monthly billing period following the
17    Commission's approval.
18        The tariff's rate design and cost allocation across
19    customer classes shall be consistent with the utility's
20    automatic adjustment clause tariff in effect on the
21    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
22    Assembly; however, the Commission may revise the tariff's
23    rate design and cost allocation in subsequent proceedings
24    under paragraph (3) of this subsection (d).
25        If the energy efficiency formula rate is terminated,
26    the then current rates shall remain in effect until such

 

 

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1    time as the energy efficiency costs are incorporated into
2    new rates that are set under this subsection (d) or Article
3    IX of this Act, subject to retroactive rate adjustment,
4    with interest, to reconcile rates charged with actual
5    costs.
6        (3) The provisions of this paragraph (3) shall only
7    apply to an electric utility that has elected to file an
8    energy efficiency formula rate under paragraph (2) of this
9    subsection (d). Subsequent to the Commission's issuance of
10    an order approving the utility's energy efficiency formula
11    rate structure and protocols, and initial rates under
12    paragraph (2) of this subsection (d), the utility shall
13    file, on or before June 1 of each year, with the Chief
14    Clerk of the Commission its updated cost inputs to the
15    energy efficiency formula rate for the applicable rate year
16    and the corresponding new charges, as well as the
17    information described in paragraph (9) of subsection (g) of
18    this Section. Each such filing shall conform to the
19    following requirements and include the following
20    information:
21            (A) The inputs to the energy efficiency formula
22        rate for the applicable rate year shall be based on the
23        projected costs to be incurred by the utility during
24        the rate year under the utility's multi-year plan
25        approved under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section,
26        including, but not limited to, projected capital

 

 

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1        investment costs and projected regulatory asset
2        balances with correspondingly updated depreciation and
3        amortization reserves and expense. The filing shall
4        also include a reconciliation of the energy efficiency
5        revenue requirement that was in effect for the prior
6        rate year (as set by the cost inputs for the prior rate
7        year) with the actual revenue requirement for the prior
8        rate year (determined using a year-end rate base) that
9        uses amounts reflected in the applicable FERC Form 1
10        that reports the actual costs for the prior rate year.
11        Any over-collection or under-collection indicated by
12        such reconciliation shall be reflected as a credit
13        against, or recovered as an additional charge to,
14        respectively, with interest calculated at a rate equal
15        to the utility's weighted average cost of capital
16        approved by the Commission for the prior rate year, the
17        charges for the applicable rate year. Such
18        over-collection or under-collection shall be adjusted
19        to remove any deferred taxes related to the
20        reconciliation, for purposes of calculating interest
21        at an annual rate of return equal to the utility's
22        weighted average cost of capital approved by the
23        Commission for the prior rate year, including a revenue
24        conversion factor calculated to recover or refund all
25        additional income taxes that may be payable or
26        receivable as a result of that return. Each

 

 

HB2825- 50 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1        reconciliation shall be certified by the participating
2        utility in the same manner that FERC Form 1 is
3        certified. The filing shall also include the charge or
4        credit, if any, resulting from the calculation
5        required by subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2) of this
6        subsection (d).
7            Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
8        contrary, the intent of the reconciliation is to
9        ultimately reconcile both the revenue requirement
10        reflected in rates for each calendar year, beginning
11        with the calendar year in which the utility files its
12        energy efficiency formula rate tariff under paragraph
13        (2) of this subsection (d), with what the revenue
14        requirement determined using a year-end rate base for
15        the applicable calendar year would have been had the
16        actual cost information for the applicable calendar
17        year been available at the filing date.
18            For purposes of this Section, "FERC Form 1" means
19        the Annual Report of Major Electric Utilities,
20        Licensees and Others that electric utilities are
21        required to file with the Federal Energy Regulatory
22        Commission under the Federal Power Act, Sections 3,
23        4(a), 304 and 209, modified as necessary to be
24        consistent with 83 Ill. Admin. Code Part 415 as of May
25        1, 2011. Nothing in this Section is intended to allow
26        costs that are not otherwise recoverable to be

 

 

HB2825- 51 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1        recoverable by virtue of inclusion in FERC Form 1.
2            (B) The new charges shall take effect beginning on
3        the first billing day of the following January billing
4        period and remain in effect through the last billing
5        day of the next December billing period regardless of
6        whether the Commission enters upon a hearing under this
7        paragraph (3).
8            (C) The filing shall include relevant and
9        necessary data and documentation for the applicable
10        rate year. Normalization adjustments shall not be
11        required.
12        Within 45 days after the utility files its annual
13    update of cost inputs to the energy efficiency formula
14    rate, the Commission shall with reasonable notice,
15    initiate a proceeding concerning whether the projected
16    costs to be incurred by the utility and recovered during
17    the applicable rate year, and that are reflected in the
18    inputs to the energy efficiency formula rate, are
19    consistent with the utility's approved multi-year plan
20    under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section and whether
21    the costs incurred by the utility during the prior rate
22    year were prudent and reasonable. The Commission shall also
23    have the authority to investigate the information and data
24    described in paragraph (9) of subsection (g) of this
25    Section, including the proposed adjustment to the
26    utility's return on equity component of its weighted

 

 

HB2825- 52 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    average cost of capital. During the course of the
2    proceeding, each objection shall be stated with
3    particularity and evidence provided in support thereof,
4    after which the utility shall have the opportunity to rebut
5    the evidence. Discovery shall be allowed consistent with
6    the Commission's Rules of Practice, which Rules of Practice
7    shall be enforced by the Commission or the assigned hearing
8    examiner. The Commission shall apply the same evidentiary
9    standards, including, but not limited to, those concerning
10    the prudence and reasonableness of the costs incurred by
11    the utility, during the proceeding as it would apply in a
12    proceeding to review a filing for a general increase in
13    rates under Article IX of this Act. The Commission shall
14    not, however, have the authority in a proceeding under this
15    paragraph (3) to consider or order any changes to the
16    structure or protocols of the energy efficiency formula
17    rate approved under paragraph (2) of this subsection (d).
18    In a proceeding under this paragraph (3), the Commission
19    shall enter its order no later than the earlier of 195 days
20    after the utility's filing of its annual update of cost
21    inputs to the energy efficiency formula rate or December
22    15. The utility's proposed return on equity calculation, as
23    described in paragraphs (7) through (9) of subsection (g)
24    of this Section, shall be deemed the final, approved
25    calculation on December 15 of the year in which it is filed
26    unless the Commission enters an order on or before December

 

 

HB2825- 53 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    15, after notice and hearing, that modifies such
2    calculation consistent with this Section. The Commission's
3    determinations of the prudence and reasonableness of the
4    costs incurred, and determination of such return on equity
5    calculation, for the applicable calendar year shall be
6    final upon entry of the Commission's order and shall not be
7    subject to reopening, reexamination, or collateral attack
8    in any other Commission proceeding, case, docket, order,
9    rule, or regulation; however, nothing in this paragraph (3)
10    shall prohibit a party from petitioning the Commission to
11    rehear or appeal to the courts the order under the
12    provisions of this Act.
13    (e) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act
14of the 99th General Assembly, a utility subject to the
15requirements of this Section may elect to defer, as a
16regulatory asset, up to the full amount of its expenditures
17incurred under this Section for each annual period, including,
18but not limited to, any expenditures incurred above the funding
19level set by subsection (f) of this Section for a given year.
20The total expenditures deferred as a regulatory asset in a
21given year shall be amortized and recovered over a period that
22is equal to the weighted average of the energy efficiency
23measure lives implemented for that year that are reflected in
24the regulatory asset. The unamortized balance shall be
25recognized as of December 31 for a given year. The utility
26shall also earn a return on the total of the unamortized

 

 

HB2825- 54 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1balances of all of the energy efficiency regulatory assets,
2less any deferred taxes related to those unamortized balances,
3at an annual rate equal to the utility's weighted average cost
4of capital that includes, based on a year-end capital
5structure, the utility's actual cost of debt for the applicable
6calendar year and a cost of equity, which shall be calculated
7as the sum of the (i) the average for the applicable calendar
8year of the monthly average yields of 30-year U.S. Treasury
9bonds published by the Board of Governors of the Federal
10Reserve System in its weekly H.15 Statistical Release or
11successor publication; and (ii) 580 basis points, including a
12revenue conversion factor calculated to recover or refund all
13additional income taxes that may be payable or receivable as a
14result of that return. Capital investment costs shall be
15depreciated and recovered over their useful lives consistent
16with generally accepted accounting principles. The weighted
17average cost of capital shall be applied to the capital
18investment cost balance, less any accumulated depreciation and
19accumulated deferred income taxes, as of December 31 for a
20given year.
21    When an electric utility creates a regulatory asset under
22the provisions of this Section, the costs are recovered over a
23period during which customers also receive a benefit which is
24in the public interest. Accordingly, it is the intent of the
25General Assembly that an electric utility that elects to create
26a regulatory asset under the provisions of this Section shall

 

 

HB2825- 55 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1recover all of the associated costs as set forth in this
2Section. After the Commission has approved the prudence and
3reasonableness of the costs that comprise the regulatory asset,
4the electric utility shall be permitted to recover all such
5costs, and the value and recoverability through rates of the
6associated regulatory asset shall not be limited, altered,
7impaired, or reduced.
8    (f) Beginning in 2017, each electric utility shall file an
9energy efficiency plan with the Commission to meet the energy
10efficiency standards for the next applicable multi-year period
11beginning January 1 of the year following the filing, according
12to the schedule set forth in paragraphs (1) through (3) of this
13subsection (f). If a utility does not file such a plan on or
14before the applicable filing deadline for the plan, it shall
15face a penalty of $100,000 per day until the plan is filed.
16        (1) No later than 30 days after the effective date of
17    this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly or May 1,
18    2017, whichever is later, each electric utility shall file
19    a 4-year energy efficiency plan commencing on January 1,
20    2018 that is designed to achieve the cumulative persisting
21    annual savings goals specified in paragraphs (1) through
22    (4) of subsection (b-5) of this Section or in paragraphs
23    (1) through (4) of subsection (b-15) of this Section, as
24    applicable, through implementation of energy efficiency
25    measures; however, the goals may be reduced if the
26    utility's expenditures are limited pursuant to subsection

 

 

HB2825- 56 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    (m) of this Section or, for a utility that serves less than
2    3,000,000 retail customers, if each of the following
3    conditions are met: (A) the plan's analysis and forecasts
4    of the utility's ability to acquire energy savings
5    demonstrate that achievement of such goals is not cost
6    effective; and (B) the amount of energy savings achieved by
7    the utility as determined by the independent evaluator for
8    the most recent year for which savings have been evaluated
9    preceding the plan filing was less than the average annual
10    amount of savings required to achieve the goals for the
11    applicable 4-year plan period. Except as provided in
12    subsection (m) of this Section, annual increases in
13    cumulative persisting annual savings goals during the
14    applicable 4-year plan period shall not be reduced to
15    amounts that are less than the maximum amount of cumulative
16    persisting annual savings that is forecast to be
17    cost-effectively achievable during the 4-year plan period.
18    The Commission shall review any proposed goal reduction as
19    part of its review and approval of the utility's proposed
20    plan.
21        (2) No later than March 1, 2021, each electric utility
22    shall file a 4-year energy efficiency plan commencing on
23    January 1, 2022 that is designed to achieve the cumulative
24    persisting annual savings goals specified in paragraphs
25    (5) through (8) of subsection (b-5) of this Section or in
26    paragraphs (5) through (8) of subsection (b-15) of this

 

 

HB2825- 57 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    Section, as applicable, through implementation of energy
2    efficiency measures; however, the goals may be reduced if
3    the utility's expenditures are limited pursuant to
4    subsection (m) of this Section or, each of the following
5    conditions are met: (A) the plan's analysis and forecasts
6    of the utility's ability to acquire energy savings
7    demonstrate that achievement of such goals is not cost
8    effective; and (B) the amount of energy savings achieved by
9    the utility as determined by the independent evaluator for
10    the most recent year for which savings have been evaluated
11    preceding the plan filing was less than the average annual
12    amount of savings required to achieve the goals for the
13    applicable 4-year plan period. Except as provided in
14    subsection (m) of this Section, annual increases in
15    cumulative persisting annual savings goals during the
16    applicable 4-year plan period shall not be reduced to
17    amounts that are less than the maximum amount of cumulative
18    persisting annual savings that is forecast to be
19    cost-effectively achievable during the 4-year plan period.
20    The Commission shall review any proposed goal reduction as
21    part of its review and approval of the utility's proposed
22    plan.
23        (3) No later than March 1, 2025, each electric utility
24    shall file a 5-year energy efficiency plan commencing on
25    January 1, 2026 that is designed to achieve the cumulative
26    persisting annual savings goals specified in paragraphs

 

 

HB2825- 58 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    (9) through (13) of subsection (b-5) of this Section or in
2    paragraphs (9) through (13) of subsection (b-15) of this
3    Section, as applicable, through implementation of energy
4    efficiency measures; however, the goals may be reduced if
5    the utility's expenditures are limited pursuant to
6    subsection (m) of this Section or, each of the following
7    conditions are met: (A) the plan's analysis and forecasts
8    of the utility's ability to acquire energy savings
9    demonstrate that achievement of such goals is not cost
10    effective; and (B) the amount of energy savings achieved by
11    the utility as determined by the independent evaluator for
12    the most recent year for which savings have been evaluated
13    preceding the plan filing was less than the average annual
14    amount of savings required to achieve the goals for the
15    applicable 5-year plan period. Except as provided in
16    subsection (m) of this Section, annual increases in
17    cumulative persisting annual savings goals during the
18    applicable 5-year plan period shall not be reduced to
19    amounts that are less than the maximum amount of cumulative
20    persisting annual savings that is forecast to be
21    cost-effectively achievable during the 5-year plan period.
22    The Commission shall review any proposed goal reduction as
23    part of its review and approval of the utility's proposed
24    plan.
25    Each utility's plan shall set forth the utility's proposals
26to meet the energy efficiency standards identified in

 

 

HB2825- 59 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1subsection (b-5) or (b-15), as applicable and as such standards
2may have been modified under this subsection (f), taking into
3account the unique circumstances of the utility's service
4territory. For those plans commencing on January 1, 2018, the
5Commission shall seek public comment on the utility's plan and
6shall issue an order approving or disapproving each plan no
7later than August 31, 2017, or 105 days after the effective
8date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly,
9whichever is later. For those plans commencing after December
1031, 2021, the Commission shall seek public comment on the
11utility's plan and shall issue an order approving or
12disapproving each plan within 6 months after its submission. If
13the Commission disapproves a plan, the Commission shall, within
1430 days, describe in detail the reasons for the disapproval and
15describe a path by which the utility may file a revised draft
16of the plan to address the Commission's concerns
17satisfactorily. If the utility does not refile with the
18Commission within 60 days, the utility shall be subject to
19penalties at a rate of $100,000 per day until the plan is
20filed. This process shall continue, and penalties shall accrue,
21until the utility has successfully filed a portfolio of energy
22efficiency and demand-response measures. Penalties shall be
23deposited into the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund.
24    (g) In submitting proposed plans and funding levels under
25subsection (f) of this Section to meet the savings goals
26identified in subsection (b-5) or (b-15) of this Section, as

 

 

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1applicable, the utility shall:
2        (1) Demonstrate that its proposed energy efficiency
3    measures will achieve the applicable requirements that are
4    identified in subsection (b-5) or (b-15) of this Section,
5    as modified by subsection (f) of this Section.
6        (2) Present specific proposals to implement new
7    building and appliance standards that have been placed into
8    effect.
9        (3) Demonstrate that its overall portfolio of
10    measures, not including low-income programs described in
11    subsection (c) of this Section, is cost-effective using the
12    total resource cost test or complies with paragraphs (1)
13    through (3) of subsection (f) of this Section and
14    represents a diverse cross-section of opportunities for
15    customers of all rate classes, other than those customers
16    described in subsection (l) of this Section, to participate
17    in the programs. Individual measures need not be cost
18    effective.
19        (4) Present a third-party energy efficiency
20    implementation program subject to the following
21    requirements:
22            (A) beginning with the year commencing January 1,
23        2019, electric utilities that serve more than
24        3,000,000 retail customers in the State shall fund
25        third-party energy efficiency programs in an amount
26        that is no less than $25,000,000 per year, and electric

 

 

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1        utilities that serve less than 3,000,000 retail
2        customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in the
3        State shall fund third-party energy efficiency
4        programs in an amount that is no less than $8,350,000
5        per year;
6            (B) during 2018, the utility shall conduct a
7        solicitation process for purposes of requesting
8        proposals from third-party vendors for those
9        third-party energy efficiency programs to be offered
10        during one or more of the years commencing January 1,
11        2019, January 1, 2020, and January 1, 2021; for those
12        multi-year plans commencing on January 1, 2022 and
13        January 1, 2026, the utility shall conduct a
14        solicitation process during 2021 and 2025,
15        respectively, for purposes of requesting proposals
16        from third-party vendors for those third-party energy
17        efficiency programs to be offered during one or more
18        years of the respective multi-year plan period; for
19        each solicitation process, the utility shall identify
20        the sector, technology, or geographical area for which
21        it is seeking requests for proposals;
22            (C) the utility shall propose the bidder
23        qualifications, performance measurement process, and
24        contract structure, which must include a performance
25        payment mechanism and general terms and conditions;
26        the proposed qualifications, process, and structure

 

 

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1        shall be subject to Commission approval; and
2            (D) the utility shall retain an independent third
3        party to score the proposals received through the
4        solicitation process described in this paragraph (4),
5        rank them according to their cost per lifetime
6        kilowatt-hours saved, and assemble the portfolio of
7        third-party programs.
8        The electric utility shall recover all costs
9    associated with Commission-approved, third-party
10    administered programs regardless of the success of those
11    programs.
12        (4.5)Implement cost-effective demand-response measures
13    to reduce peak demand by 0.1% over the prior year for
14    eligible retail customers, as defined in Section 16-111.5
15    of this Act, and for customers that elect hourly service
16    from the utility pursuant to Section 16-107 of this Act,
17    provided those customers have not been declared
18    competitive. This requirement continues until December 31,
19    2026.
20        (5) Include a proposed or revised cost-recovery tariff
21    mechanism, as provided for under subsection (d) of this
22    Section, to fund the proposed energy efficiency and
23    demand-response measures and to ensure the recovery of the
24    prudently and reasonably incurred costs of
25    Commission-approved programs.
26        (6) Provide for an annual independent evaluation of the

 

 

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1    performance of the cost-effectiveness of the utility's
2    portfolio of measures, as well as a full review of the
3    multi-year plan results of the broader net program impacts
4    and, to the extent practical, for adjustment of the
5    measures on a going-forward basis as a result of the
6    evaluations. The resources dedicated to evaluation shall
7    not exceed 3% of portfolio resources in any given year.
8        (7) For electric utilities that serve more than
9    3,000,000 retail customers in the State:
10            (A) Through December 31, 2025, provide for an
11        adjustment to the return on equity component of the
12        utility's weighted average cost of capital calculated
13        under subsection (d) of this Section:
14                (i) If the independent evaluator determines
15            that the utility achieved a cumulative persisting
16            annual savings that is less than the applicable
17            annual incremental goal, then the return on equity
18            component shall be reduced by a maximum of 200
19            basis points in the event that the utility achieved
20            no more than 75% of such goal. If the utility
21            achieved more than 75% of the applicable annual
22            incremental goal but less than 100% of such goal,
23            then the return on equity component shall be
24            reduced by 8 basis points for each percent by which
25            the utility failed to achieve the goal.
26                (ii) If the independent evaluator determines

 

 

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1            that the utility achieved a cumulative persisting
2            annual savings that is more than the applicable
3            annual incremental goal, then the return on equity
4            component shall be increased by a maximum of 200
5            basis points in the event that the utility achieved
6            at least 125% of such goal. If the utility achieved
7            more than 100% of the applicable annual
8            incremental goal but less than 125% of such goal,
9            then the return on equity component shall be
10            increased by 8 basis points for each percent by
11            which the utility achieved above the goal. If the
12            applicable annual incremental goal was reduced
13            under paragraphs (1) or (2) of subsection (f) of
14            this Section, then the following adjustments shall
15            be made to the calculations described in this item
16            (ii):
17                    (aa) the calculation for determining
18                achievement that is at least 125% of the
19                applicable annual incremental goal shall use
20                the unreduced applicable annual incremental
21                goal to set the value; and
22                    (bb) the calculation for determining
23                achievement that is less than 125% but more
24                than 100% of the applicable annual incremental
25                goal shall use the reduced applicable annual
26                incremental goal to set the value for 100%

 

 

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1                achievement of the goal and shall use the
2                unreduced goal to set the value for 125%
3                achievement. The 8 basis point value shall also
4                be modified, as necessary, so that the 200
5                basis points are evenly apportioned among each
6                percentage point value between 100% and 125%
7                achievement.
8            (B) For the period January 1, 2026 through December
9        31, 2030, provide for an adjustment to the return on
10        equity component of the utility's weighted average
11        cost of capital calculated under subsection (d) of this
12        Section:
13                (i) If the independent evaluator determines
14            that the utility achieved a cumulative persisting
15            annual savings that is less than the applicable
16            annual incremental goal, then the return on equity
17            component shall be reduced by a maximum of 200
18            basis points in the event that the utility achieved
19            no more than 66% of such goal. If the utility
20            achieved more than 66% of the applicable annual
21            incremental goal but less than 100% of such goal,
22            then the return on equity component shall be
23            reduced by 6 basis points for each percent by which
24            the utility failed to achieve the goal.
25                (ii) If the independent evaluator determines
26            that the utility achieved a cumulative persisting

 

 

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1            annual savings that is more than the applicable
2            annual incremental goal, then the return on equity
3            component shall be increased by a maximum of 200
4            basis points in the event that the utility achieved
5            at least 134% of such goal. If the utility achieved
6            more than 100% of the applicable annual
7            incremental goal but less than 134% of such goal,
8            then the return on equity component shall be
9            increased by 6 basis points for each percent by
10            which the utility achieved above the goal. If the
11            applicable annual incremental goal was reduced
12            under paragraph (3) of subsection (f) of this
13            Section, then the following adjustments shall be
14            made to the calculations described in this item
15            (ii):
16                    (aa) the calculation for determining
17                achievement that is at least 134% of the
18                applicable annual incremental goal shall use
19                the unreduced applicable annual incremental
20                goal to set the value; and
21                    (bb) the calculation for determining
22                achievement that is less than 134% but more
23                than 100% of the applicable annual incremental
24                goal shall use the reduced applicable annual
25                incremental goal to set the value for 100%
26                achievement of the goal and shall use the

 

 

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1                unreduced goal to set the value for 134%
2                achievement. The 6 basis point value shall also
3                be modified, as necessary, so that the 200
4                basis points are evenly apportioned among each
5                percentage point value between 100% and 134%
6                achievement.
7        (7.5) For purposes of this Section, the term
8    "applicable annual incremental goal" means the difference
9    between the cumulative persisting annual savings goal for
10    the calendar year that is the subject of the independent
11    evaluator's determination and the cumulative persisting
12    annual savings goal for the immediately preceding calendar
13    year, as such goals are defined in subsections (b-5) and
14    (b-15) of this Section and as these goals may have been
15    modified as provided for under subsection (b-20) and
16    paragraphs (1) through (3) of subsection (f) of this
17    Section. Under subsections (b), (b-5), (b-10), and (b-15)
18    of this Section, a utility must first replace energy
19    savings from measures that have reached the end of their
20    measure lives and would otherwise have to be replaced to
21    meet the applicable savings goals identified in subsection
22    (b-5) or (b-15) of this Section before any progress towards
23    achievement of its applicable annual incremental goal may
24    be counted. Notwithstanding anything else set forth in this
25    Section, the difference between the actual annual
26    incremental savings achieved in any given year, including

 

 

HB2825- 68 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    the replacement of energy savings from measures that have
2    expired, and the applicable annual incremental goal shall
3    not affect adjustments to the return on equity for
4    subsequent calendar years under this subsection (g).
5        (8) For electric utilities that serve less than
6    3,000,000 retail customers but more than 500,000 retail
7    customers in the State:
8            (A) Through December 31, 2025, the applicable
9        annual incremental goal shall be compared to the annual
10        incremental savings as determined by the independent
11        evaluator.
12                (i) The return on equity component shall be
13            reduced by 8 basis points for each percent by which
14            the utility did not achieve 84.4% of the applicable
15            annual incremental goal.
16                (ii) The return on equity component shall be
17            increased by 8 basis points for each percent by
18            which the utility exceeded 100% of the applicable
19            annual incremental goal.
20                (iii) The return on equity component shall not
21            be increased or decreased if the annual
22            incremental savings as determined by the
23            independent evaluator is greater than 84.4% of the
24            applicable annual incremental goal and less than
25            100% of the applicable annual incremental goal.
26                (iv) The return on equity component shall not

 

 

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1            be increased or decreased by an amount greater than
2            200 basis points pursuant to this subparagraph
3            (A).
4            (B) For the period of January 1, 2026 through
5        December 31, 2030, the applicable annual incremental
6        goal shall be compared to the annual incremental
7        savings as determined by the independent evaluator.
8                (i) The return on equity component shall be
9            reduced by 6 basis points for each percent by which
10            the utility did not achieve 100% of the applicable
11            annual incremental goal.
12                (ii) The return on equity component shall be
13            increased by 6 basis points for each percent by
14            which the utility exceeded 100% of the applicable
15            annual incremental goal.
16                (iii) The return on equity component shall not
17            be increased or decreased by an amount greater than
18            200 basis points pursuant to this subparagraph
19            (B).
20            (C) If the applicable annual incremental goal was
21        reduced under paragraphs (1), (2) or (3) of subsection
22        (f) of this Section, then the following adjustments
23        shall be made to the calculations described in
24        subparagraphs (A) and (B) of this paragraph (8):
25                (i) The calculation for determining
26            achievement that is at least 125% or 134%, as

 

 

HB2825- 70 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1            applicable, of the applicable annual incremental
2            goal shall use the unreduced applicable annual
3            incremental goal to set the value.
4                (ii) For the period through December 31, 2025,
5            the calculation for determining achievement that
6            is less than 125% but more than 100% of the
7            applicable annual incremental goal shall use the
8            reduced applicable annual incremental goal to set
9            the value for 100% achievement of the goal and
10            shall use the unreduced goal to set the value for
11            125% achievement. The 8 basis point value shall
12            also be modified, as necessary, so that the 200
13            basis points are evenly apportioned among each
14            percentage point value between 100% and 125%
15            achievement.
16                (iii) For the period of January 1, 2026 through
17            December 31, 2030, the calculation for determining
18            achievement that is less than 134% but more than
19            100% of the applicable annual incremental goal
20            shall use the reduced applicable annual
21            incremental goal to set the value for 100%
22            achievement of the goal and shall use the unreduced
23            goal to set the value for 125% achievement. The 6
24            basis point value shall also be modified, as
25            necessary, so that the 200 basis points are evenly
26            apportioned among each percentage point value

 

 

HB2825- 71 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1            between 100% and 134% achievement.
2        (9) The utility shall submit the energy savings data to
3    the independent evaluator no later than 30 days after the
4    close of the plan year. The independent evaluator shall
5    determine the cumulative persisting annual savings for a
6    given plan year no later than 120 days after the close of
7    the plan year. The utility shall submit an informational
8    filing to the Commission no later than 160 days after the
9    close of the plan year that attaches the independent
10    evaluator's final report identifying the cumulative
11    persisting annual savings for the year and calculates,
12    under paragraph (7) or (8) of this subsection (g), as
13    applicable, any resulting change to the utility's return on
14    equity component of the weighted average cost of capital
15    applicable to the next plan year beginning with the January
16    monthly billing period and extending through the December
17    monthly billing period. However, if the utility recovers
18    the costs incurred under this Section under paragraphs (2)
19    and (3) of subsection (d) of this Section, then the utility
20    shall not be required to submit such informational filing,
21    and shall instead submit the information that would
22    otherwise be included in the informational filing as part
23    of its filing under paragraph (3) of such subsection (d)
24    that is due on or before June 1 of each year.
25        For those utilities that must submit the informational
26    filing, the Commission may, on its own motion or by

 

 

HB2825- 72 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    petition, initiate an investigation of such filing,
2    provided, however, that the utility's proposed return on
3    equity calculation shall be deemed the final, approved
4    calculation on December 15 of the year in which it is filed
5    unless the Commission enters an order on or before December
6    15, after notice and hearing, that modifies such
7    calculation consistent with this Section.
8        The adjustments to the return on equity component
9    described in paragraphs (7) and (8) of this subsection (g)
10    shall be applied as described in such paragraphs through a
11    separate tariff mechanism, which shall be filed by the
12    utility under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section.
13    (h) No more than 6% of energy efficiency and
14demand-response program revenue may be allocated for research,
15development, or pilot deployment of new equipment or measures.
16    (i) When practicable, electric utilities shall incorporate
17advanced metering infrastructure data into the planning,
18implementation, and evaluation of energy efficiency measures
19and programs, subject to the data privacy and confidentiality
20protections of applicable law.
21    (j) The independent evaluator shall follow the guidelines
22and use the savings set forth in Commission-approved energy
23efficiency policy manuals and technical reference manuals, as
24each may be updated from time to time. Until such time as
25measure life values for energy efficiency measures implemented
26for low-income households under subsection (c) of this Section

 

 

HB2825- 73 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1are incorporated into such Commission-approved manuals, the
2low-income measures shall have the same measure life values
3that are established for same measures implemented in
4households that are not low-income households.
5    (k) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary,
6an electric utility subject to the requirements of this Section
7may file a tariff cancelling an automatic adjustment clause
8tariff in effect under this Section or Section 8-103, which
9shall take effect no later than one business day after the date
10such tariff is filed. Thereafter, the utility shall be
11authorized to defer and recover its expenditures incurred under
12this Section through a new tariff authorized under subsection
13(d) of this Section or in the utility's next rate case under
14Article IX or Section 16-108.5 of this Act, with interest at an
15annual rate equal to the utility's weighted average cost of
16capital as approved by the Commission in such case. If the
17utility elects to file a new tariff under subsection (d) of
18this Section, the utility may file the tariff within 10 days
19after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th
20General Assembly, and the cost inputs to such tariff shall be
21based on the projected costs to be incurred by the utility
22during the calendar year in which the new tariff is filed and
23that were not recovered under the tariff that was cancelled as
24provided for in this subsection. Such costs shall include those
25incurred or to be incurred by the utility under its multi-year
26plan approved under subsections (f) and (g) of this Section,

 

 

HB2825- 74 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1including, but not limited to, projected capital investment
2costs and projected regulatory asset balances with
3correspondingly updated depreciation and amortization reserves
4and expense. The Commission shall, after notice and hearing,
5approve, or approve with modification, such tariff and cost
6inputs no later than 75 days after the utility filed the
7tariff, provided that such approval, or approval with
8modification, shall be consistent with the provisions of this
9Section to the extent they do not conflict with this subsection
10(k). The tariff approved by the Commission shall take effect no
11later than 5 days after the Commission enters its order
12approving the tariff.
13    No later than 60 days after the effective date of the
14tariff cancelling the utility's automatic adjustment clause
15tariff, the utility shall file a reconciliation that reconciles
16the moneys collected under its automatic adjustment clause
17tariff with the costs incurred during the period beginning June
181, 2016 and ending on the date that the electric utility's
19automatic adjustment clause tariff was cancelled. In the event
20the reconciliation reflects an under-collection, the utility
21shall recover the costs as specified in this subsection (k). If
22the reconciliation reflects an over-collection, the utility
23shall apply the amount of such over-collection as a one-time
24credit to retail customers' bills.
25    (l) For the calendar years covered by a multi-year plan
26commencing after December 31, 2017, subsections (a) through (j)

 

 

HB2825- 75 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1of this Section do not apply to any retail customers of an
2electric utility that serves more than 3,000,000 retail
3customers in the State and whose total highest 30 minute demand
4was more than 10,000 kilowatts, or any retail customers of an
5electric utility that serves less than 3,000,000 retail
6customers but more than 500,000 retail customers in the State
7and whose total highest 15 minute demand was more than 10,000
8kilowatts. For purposes of this subsection (l), "retail
9customer" has the meaning set forth in Section 16-102 of this
10Act. A determination of whether this subsection is applicable
11to a customer shall be made for each multi-year plan beginning
12after December 31, 2017. The criteria for determining whether
13this subsection (l) is applicable to a retail customer shall be
14based on the 12 consecutive billing periods prior to the start
15of the first year of each such multi-year plan.
16    (m) Notwithstanding the requirements of this Section, as
17part of a proceeding to approve a multi-year plan under
18subsections (f) and (g) of this Section, the Commission shall
19reduce the amount of energy efficiency measures implemented for
20any single year, and whose costs are recovered under subsection
21(d) of this Section, by an amount necessary to limit the
22estimated average net increase due to the cost of the measures
23to no more than
24        (1) 3.5% for the each of the 4 years beginning January
25    1, 2018,
26        (2) 3.75% for each of the 4 years beginning January 1,

 

 

HB2825- 76 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    2022, and
2        (3) 4% for each of the 5 years beginning January 1,
3    2026,
4of the average amount paid per kilowatthour by residential
5eligible retail customers during calendar year 2015. To
6determine the total amount that may be spent by an electric
7utility in any single year, the applicable percentage of the
8average amount paid per kilowatthour shall be multiplied by the
9total amount of energy delivered by such electric utility in
10the calendar year 2015, adjusted to reflect the proportion of
11the utility's load attributable to customers who are exempt
12from subsections (a) through (j) of this Section under
13subsection (l) of this Section. For purposes of this subsection
14(m), the amount paid per kilowatthour includes, without
15limitation, estimated amounts paid for supply, transmission,
16distribution, surcharges, and add-on taxes. For purposes of
17this Section, "eligible retail customers" shall have the
18meaning set forth in Section 16-111.5 of this Act. Once the
19Commission has approved a plan under subsections (f) and (g) of
20this Section, no subsequent rate impact determinations shall be
21made.
22(Source: P.A. 99-906, eff. 6-1-17.)
 
23    (220 ILCS 5/8-104)
24    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 99-906)
25    Sec. 8-104. Natural gas energy efficiency programs.

 

 

HB2825- 77 -LRB100 09650 RJF 19819 b

1    (a) It is the policy of the State that natural gas
2utilities and the Department of Commerce and Economic
3Opportunity are required to use cost-effective energy
4efficiency to reduce direct and indirect costs to consumers. It
5serves the public interest to allow natural gas utilities to
6recover costs for reasonably and prudently incurred expenses
7for cost-effective energy efficiency measures.
8    (b) For purposes of this Section, "energy efficiency" means
9measures that reduce the amount of energy required to achieve a
10given end use. "Energy efficiency" also includes measures that
11reduce the total Btus of electricity and natural gas needed to
12meet the end use or uses. "Cost-effective" means that the
13measures satisfy the total resource cost test which, for
14purposes of this Section, means a standard that is met if, for
15an investment in energy efficiency, the benefit-cost ratio is
16greater than one. The benefit-cost ratio is the ratio of the
17net present value of the total benefits of the measures to the
18net present value of the total costs as calculated over the
19lifetime of the measures. The total resource cost test compares
20the sum of avoided natural gas utility costs, representing the
21benefits that accrue to the system and the participant in the
22delivery of those efficiency measures, as well as other
23quantifiable societal benefits, including avoided electric
24utility costs, to the sum of all incremental costs of end use
25measures (including both utility and participant
26contributions), plus costs to administer, deliver, and

 

 

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1evaluate each demand-side measure, to quantify the net savings
2obtained by substituting demand-side measures for supply
3resources. In calculating avoided costs, reasonable estimates
4shall be included for financial costs likely to be imposed by
5future regulation of emissions of greenhouse gases. The
6low-income programs described in item (4) of subsection (f) of
7this Section shall not be required to meet the total resource
8cost test.
9    (c) Natural gas utilities shall implement cost-effective
10energy efficiency measures to meet at least the following
11natural gas savings requirements, which shall be based upon the
12total amount of gas delivered to retail customers, other than
13the customers described in subsection (m) of this Section,
14during calendar year 2009 multiplied by the applicable
15percentage. Natural gas utilities may comply with this Section
16by meeting the annual incremental savings goal in the
17applicable year or by showing that total cumulative annual
18savings within a 3-year planning period associated with
19measures implemented after May 31, 2011 were equal to the sum
20of each annual incremental savings requirement from May 31,
212011 through the end of the applicable year:
22        (1) 0.2% by May 31, 2012;
23        (2) an additional 0.4% by May 31, 2013, increasing
24    total savings to .6%;
25        (3) an additional 0.6% by May 31, 2014, increasing
26    total savings to 1.2%;

 

 

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1        (4) an additional 0.8% by May 31, 2015, increasing
2    total savings to 2.0%;
3        (5) an additional 1% by May 31, 2016, increasing total
4    savings to 3.0%;
5        (6) an additional 1.2% by May 31, 2017, increasing
6    total savings to 4.2%;
7        (7) an additional 1.4% by May 31, 2018, increasing
8    total savings to 5.6%;
9        (8) an additional 1.5% by May 31, 2019, increasing
10    total savings to 7.1%; and
11        (9) an additional 1.5% in each 12-month period
12    thereafter.
13    (d) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsection (c) of
14this Section, a natural gas utility shall limit the amount of
15energy efficiency implemented in any 3-year reporting period
16established by subsection (f) of Section 8-104 of this Act, by
17an amount necessary to limit the estimated average increase in
18the amounts paid by retail customers in connection with natural
19gas service to no more than 2% in the applicable 3-year
20reporting period. The energy savings requirements in
21subsection (c) of this Section may be reduced by the Commission
22for the subject plan, if the utility demonstrates by
23substantial evidence that it is highly unlikely that the
24requirements could be achieved without exceeding the
25applicable spending limits in any 3-year reporting period. No
26later than September 1, 2013, the Commission shall review the

 

 

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1limitation on the amount of energy efficiency measures
2implemented pursuant to this Section and report to the General
3Assembly, in the report required by subsection (k) of this
4Section, its findings as to whether that limitation unduly
5constrains the procurement of energy efficiency measures.
6    (e) Natural gas utilities shall be responsible for
7overseeing the design, development, and filing of their
8efficiency plans with the Commission. The utility shall utilize
975% of the available funding associated with energy efficiency
10programs approved by the Commission, and may outsource various
11aspects of program development and implementation. The
12remaining 25% of available funding shall be used by the
13Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to implement
14energy efficiency measures that achieve no less than 20% of the
15requirements of subsection (c) of this Section. Such measures
16shall be designed in conjunction with the utility and approved
17by the Commission. The Department may outsource development and
18implementation of energy efficiency measures. A minimum of 10%
19of the entire portfolio of cost-effective energy efficiency
20measures shall be procured from local government, municipal
21corporations, school districts, and community college
22districts. Five percent of the entire portfolio of
23cost-effective energy efficiency measures may be granted to
24local government and municipal corporations for market
25transformation initiatives. The Department shall coordinate
26the implementation of these measures and shall integrate

 

 

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1delivery of natural gas efficiency programs with electric
2efficiency programs delivered pursuant to Section 8-103 of this
3Act, unless the Department can show that integration is not
4feasible.
5    The apportionment of the dollars to cover the costs to
6implement the Department's share of the portfolio of energy
7efficiency measures shall be made to the Department once the
8Department has executed rebate agreements, grants, or
9contracts for energy efficiency measures and provided
10supporting documentation for those rebate agreements, grants,
11and contracts to the utility. The Department is authorized to
12adopt any rules necessary and prescribe procedures in order to
13ensure compliance by applicants in carrying out the purposes of
14rebate agreements for energy efficiency measures implemented
15by the Department made under this Section.
16    The details of the measures implemented by the Department
17shall be submitted by the Department to the Commission in
18connection with the utility's filing regarding the energy
19efficiency measures that the utility implements.
20    A utility providing approved energy efficiency measures in
21this State shall be permitted to recover costs of those
22measures through an automatic adjustment clause tariff filed
23with and approved by the Commission. The tariff shall be
24established outside the context of a general rate case and
25shall be applicable to the utility's customers other than the
26customers described in subsection (m) of this Section. Each

 

 

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1year the Commission shall initiate a review to reconcile any
2amounts collected with the actual costs and to determine the
3required adjustment to the annual tariff factor to match annual
4expenditures.
5    Each utility shall include, in its recovery of costs, the
6costs estimated for both the utility's and the Department's
7implementation of energy efficiency measures. Costs collected
8by the utility for measures implemented by the Department shall
9be submitted to the Department pursuant to Section 605-323 of
10the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois, shall be deposited
11into the Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standards Fund, and shall
12be used by the Department solely for the purpose of
13implementing these measures. A utility shall not be required to
14advance any moneys to the Department but only to forward such
15funds as it has collected. The Department shall report to the
16Commission on an annual basis regarding the costs actually
17incurred by the Department in the implementation of the
18measures. Any changes to the costs of energy efficiency
19measures as a result of plan modifications shall be
20appropriately reflected in amounts recovered by the utility and
21turned over to the Department.
22    The portfolio of measures, administered by both the
23utilities and the Department, shall, in combination, be
24designed to achieve the annual energy savings requirements set
25forth in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
26subsection (d) of this Section.

 

 

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1    The utility and the Department shall agree upon a
2reasonable portfolio of measures and determine the measurable
3corresponding percentage of the savings goals associated with
4measures implemented by the Department.
5    No utility shall be assessed a penalty under subsection (f)
6of this Section for failure to make a timely filing if that
7failure is the result of a lack of agreement with the
8Department with respect to the allocation of responsibilities
9or related costs or target assignments. In that case, the
10Department and the utility shall file their respective plans
11with the Commission and the Commission shall determine an
12appropriate division of measures and programs that meets the
13requirements of this Section.
14    If the Department is unable to meet performance
15requirements for the portion of the portfolio implemented by
16the Department, then the utility and the Department shall
17jointly submit a modified filing to the Commission explaining
18the performance shortfall and recommending an appropriate
19course going forward, including any program modifications that
20may be appropriate in light of the evaluations conducted under
21item (8) of subsection (f) of this Section. In this case, the
22utility obligation to collect the Department's costs and turn
23over those funds to the Department under this subsection (e)
24shall continue only if the Commission approves the
25modifications to the plan proposed by the Department.
26    (f) No later than October 1, 2010, each gas utility shall

 

 

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1file an energy efficiency plan with the Commission to meet the
2energy efficiency standards through May 31, 2014. Every 3 years
3thereafter, each utility shall file, no later than October 1,
4an energy efficiency plan with the Commission. If a utility
5does not file such a plan by October 1 of the applicable year,
6then it shall face a penalty of $100,000 per day until the plan
7is filed. Each utility's plan shall set forth the utility's
8proposals to meet the utility's portion of the energy
9efficiency standards identified in subsection (c) of this
10Section, as modified by subsection (d) of this Section, taking
11into account the unique circumstances of the utility's service
12territory. The Commission shall seek public comment on the
13utility's plan and shall issue an order approving or
14disapproving each plan. If the Commission disapproves a plan,
15the Commission shall, within 30 days, describe in detail the
16reasons for the disapproval and describe a path by which the
17utility may file a revised draft of the plan to address the
18Commission's concerns satisfactorily. If the utility does not
19refile with the Commission within 60 days after the
20disapproval, the utility shall be subject to penalties at a
21rate of $100,000 per day until the plan is filed. This process
22shall continue, and penalties shall accrue, until the utility
23has successfully filed a portfolio of energy efficiency
24measures. Penalties shall be deposited into the Energy
25Efficiency Trust Fund and the cost of any such penalties may
26not be recovered from ratepayers. In submitting proposed energy

 

 

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1efficiency plans and funding levels to meet the savings goals
2adopted by this Act the utility shall:
3        (1) Demonstrate that its proposed energy efficiency
4    measures will achieve the requirements that are identified
5    in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
6    subsection (d) of this Section.
7        (2) Present specific proposals to implement new
8    building and appliance standards that have been placed into
9    effect.
10        (3) Present estimates of the total amount paid for gas
11    service expressed on a per therm basis associated with the
12    proposed portfolio of measures designed to meet the
13    requirements that are identified in subsection (c) of this
14    Section, as modified by subsection (d) of this Section.
15        (4) Coordinate with the Department to present a
16    portfolio of energy efficiency measures proportionate to
17    the share of total annual utility revenues in Illinois from
18    households at or below 150% of the poverty level. Such
19    programs shall be targeted to households with incomes at or
20    below 80% of area median income.
21        (5) Demonstrate that its overall portfolio of energy
22    efficiency measures, not including programs covered by
23    item (4) of this subsection (f), are cost-effective using
24    the total resource cost test and represent a diverse cross
25    section of opportunities for customers of all rate classes
26    to participate in the programs.

 

 

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1        (6) Demonstrate that a gas utility affiliated with an
2    electric utility that is required to comply with Section
3    8-103 of this Act has integrated gas and electric
4    efficiency measures into a single program that reduces
5    program or participant costs and appropriately allocates
6    costs to gas and electric ratepayers. The Department shall
7    integrate all gas and electric programs it delivers in any
8    such utilities' service territories, unless the Department
9    can show that integration is not feasible or appropriate.
10        (7) Include a proposed cost recovery tariff mechanism
11    to fund the proposed energy efficiency measures and to
12    ensure the recovery of the prudently and reasonably
13    incurred costs of Commission-approved programs.
14        (8) Provide for quarterly status reports tracking
15    implementation of and expenditures for the utility's
16    portfolio of measures and the Department's portfolio of
17    measures, an annual independent review, and a full
18    independent evaluation of the 3-year results of the
19    performance and the cost-effectiveness of the utility's
20    and Department's portfolios of measures and broader net
21    program impacts and, to the extent practical, for
22    adjustment of the measures on a going forward basis as a
23    result of the evaluations. The resources dedicated to
24    evaluation shall not exceed 3% of portfolio resources in
25    any given 3-year period.
26    (g) No more than 3% of expenditures on energy efficiency

 

 

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1measures may be allocated for demonstration of breakthrough
2equipment and devices.
3    (h) Illinois natural gas utilities that are affiliated by
4virtue of a common parent company may, at the utilities'
5request, be considered a single natural gas utility for
6purposes of complying with this Section.
7    (i) If, after 3 years, a gas utility fails to meet the
8efficiency standard specified in subsection (c) of this Section
9as modified by subsection (d), then it shall make a
10contribution to the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program.
11The total liability for failure to meet the goal shall be
12assessed as follows:
13        (1) a large gas utility shall pay $600,000;
14        (2) a medium gas utility shall pay $400,000; and
15        (3) a small gas utility shall pay $200,000.
16    For purposes of this Section, (i) a "large gas utility" is
17a gas utility that on December 31, 2008, served more than
181,500,000 gas customers in Illinois; (ii) a "medium gas
19utility" is a gas utility that on December 31, 2008, served
20fewer than 1,500,000, but more than 500,000 gas customers in
21Illinois; and (iii) a "small gas utility" is a gas utility that
22on December 31, 2008, served fewer than 500,000 and more than
23100,000 gas customers in Illinois. The costs of this
24contribution may not be recovered from ratepayers.
25    If a gas utility fails to meet the efficiency standard
26specified in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by

 

 

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1subsection (d) of this Section, in any 2 consecutive 3-year
2planning periods, then the responsibility for implementing the
3utility's energy efficiency measures shall be transferred to an
4independent program administrator selected by the Commission.
5Reasonable and prudent costs incurred by the independent
6program administrator to meet the efficiency standard
7specified in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
8subsection (d) of this Section, may be recovered from the
9customers of the affected gas utilities, other than customers
10described in subsection (m) of this Section. The utility shall
11provide the independent program administrator with all
12information and assistance necessary to perform the program
13administrator's duties including but not limited to customer,
14account, and energy usage data, and shall allow the program
15administrator to include inserts in customer bills. The utility
16may recover reasonable costs associated with any such
17assistance.
18    (j) No utility shall be deemed to have failed to meet the
19energy efficiency standards to the extent any such failure is
20due to a failure of the Department.
21    (k) Not later than January 1, 2012, the Commission shall
22develop and solicit public comment on a plan to foster
23statewide coordination and consistency between statutorily
24mandated natural gas and electric energy efficiency programs to
25reduce program or participant costs or to improve program
26performance. Not later than September 1, 2013, the Commission

 

 

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1shall issue a report to the General Assembly containing its
2findings and recommendations.
3    (l) This Section does not apply to a gas utility that on
4January 1, 2009, provided gas service to fewer than 100,000
5customers in Illinois.
6    (m) Subsections (a) through (k) of this Section do not
7apply to customers of a natural gas utility that have a North
8American Industry Classification System code number that is
922111 or any such code number beginning with the digits 31, 32,
10or 33 and (i) annual usage in the aggregate of 4 million therms
11or more within the service territory of the affected gas
12utility or with aggregate usage of 8 million therms or more in
13this State and complying with the provisions of item (l) of
14this subsection (m); or (ii) using natural gas as feedstock and
15meeting the usage requirements described in item (i) of this
16subsection (m), to the extent such annual feedstock usage is
17greater than 60% of the customer's total annual usage of
18natural gas.
19        (1) Customers described in this subsection (m) of this
20    Section shall apply, on a form approved on or before
21    October 1, 2009 by the Department, to the Department to be
22    designated as a self-directing customer ("SDC") or as an
23    exempt customer using natural gas as a feedstock from which
24    other products are made, including, but not limited to,
25    feedstock for a hydrogen plant, on or before the 1st day of
26    February, 2010. Thereafter, application may be made not

 

 

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1    less than 6 months before the filing date of the gas
2    utility energy efficiency plan described in subsection (f)
3    of this Section; however, a new customer that commences
4    taking service from a natural gas utility after February 1,
5    2010 may apply to become a SDC or exempt customer up to 30
6    days after beginning service. Customers described in this
7    subsection (m) that have not already been approved by the
8    Department may apply to be designated a self-directing
9    customer or exempt customer, on a form approved by the
10    Department, between September 1, 2013 and September 30,
11    2013. Customer applications that are approved by the
12    Department under this amendatory Act of the 98th General
13    Assembly shall be considered to be a self-directing
14    customer or exempt customer, as applicable, for the current
15    3-year planning period effective December 1, 2013. Such
16    application shall contain the following:
17            (A) the customer's certification that, at the time
18        of its application, it qualifies to be a SDC or exempt
19        customer described in this subsection (m) of this
20        Section;
21            (B) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
22        certification that it has established or will
23        establish by the beginning of the utility's 3-year
24        planning period commencing subsequent to the
25        application, and will maintain for accounting
26        purposes, an energy efficiency reserve account and

 

 

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1        that the customer will accrue funds in said account to
2        be held for the purpose of funding, in whole or in
3        part, energy efficiency measures of the customer's
4        choosing, which may include, but are not limited to,
5        projects involving combined heat and power systems
6        that use the same energy source both for the generation
7        of electrical or mechanical power and the production of
8        steam or another form of useful thermal energy or the
9        use of combustible gas produced from biomass, or both;
10            (C) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
11        certification that annual funding levels for the
12        energy efficiency reserve account will be equal to 2%
13        of the customer's cost of natural gas, composed of the
14        customer's commodity cost and the delivery service
15        charges paid to the gas utility, or $150,000, whichever
16        is less;
17            (D) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
18        certification that the required reserve account
19        balance will be capped at 3 years' worth of accruals
20        and that the customer may, at its option, make further
21        deposits to the account to the extent such deposit
22        would increase the reserve account balance above the
23        designated cap level;
24            (E) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
25        certification that by October 1 of each year, beginning
26        no sooner than October 1, 2012, the customer will

 

 

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1        report to the Department information, for the 12-month
2        period ending May 31 of the same year, on all deposits
3        and reductions, if any, to the reserve account during
4        the reporting year, and to the extent deposits to the
5        reserve account in any year are in an amount less than
6        $150,000, the basis for such reduced deposits; reserve
7        account balances by month; a description of energy
8        efficiency measures undertaken by the customer and
9        paid for in whole or in part with funds from the
10        reserve account; an estimate of the energy saved, or to
11        be saved, by the measure; and that the report shall
12        include a verification by an officer or plant manager
13        of the customer or by a registered professional
14        engineer or certified energy efficiency trade
15        professional that the funds withdrawn from the reserve
16        account were used for the energy efficiency measures;
17            (F) in the case of an exempt customer, the
18        customer's certification of the level of gas usage as
19        feedstock in the customer's operation in a typical year
20        and that it will provide information establishing this
21        level, upon request of the Department;
22            (G) in the case of either an exempt customer or a
23        SDC, the customer's certification that it has provided
24        the gas utility or utilities serving the customer with
25        a copy of the application as filed with the Department;
26            (H) in the case of either an exempt customer or a

 

 

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1        SDC, certification of the natural gas utility or
2        utilities serving the customer in Illinois including
3        the natural gas utility accounts that are the subject
4        of the application; and
5            (I) in the case of either an exempt customer or a
6        SDC, a verification signed by a plant manager or an
7        authorized corporate officer attesting to the
8        truthfulness and accuracy of the information contained
9        in the application.
10        (2) The Department shall review the application to
11    determine that it contains the information described in
12    provisions (A) through (I) of item (1) of this subsection
13    (m), as applicable. The review shall be completed within 30
14    days after the date the application is filed with the
15    Department. Absent a determination by the Department
16    within the 30-day period, the applicant shall be considered
17    to be a SDC or exempt customer, as applicable, for all
18    subsequent 3-year planning periods, as of the date of
19    filing the application described in this subsection (m). If
20    the Department determines that the application does not
21    contain the applicable information described in provisions
22    (A) through (I) of item (1) of this subsection (m), it
23    shall notify the customer, in writing, of its determination
24    that the application does not contain the required
25    information and identify the information that is missing,
26    and the customer shall provide the missing information

 

 

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1    within 15 working days after the date of receipt of the
2    Department's notification.
3        (3) The Department shall have the right to audit the
4    information provided in the customer's application and
5    annual reports to ensure continued compliance with the
6    requirements of this subsection. Based on the audit, if the
7    Department determines the customer is no longer in
8    compliance with the requirements of items (A) through (I)
9    of item (1) of this subsection (m), as applicable, the
10    Department shall notify the customer in writing of the
11    noncompliance. The customer shall have 30 days to establish
12    its compliance, and failing to do so, may have its status
13    as a SDC or exempt customer revoked by the Department. The
14    Department shall treat all information provided by any
15    customer seeking SDC status or exemption from the
16    provisions of this Section as strictly confidential.
17        (4) Upon request, or on its own motion, the Commission
18    may open an investigation, no more than once every 3 years
19    and not before October 1, 2014, to evaluate the
20    effectiveness of the self-directing program described in
21    this subsection (m).
22    Customers described in this subsection (m) that applied to
23the Department on January 3, 2013, were approved by the
24Department on February 13, 2013 to be a self-directing customer
25or exempt customer, and receive natural gas from a utility that
26provides gas service to at least 500,000 retail customers in

 

 

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1Illinois and electric service to at least 1,000,000 retail
2customers in Illinois shall be considered to be a
3self-directing customer or exempt customer, as applicable, for
4the current 3-year planning period effective December 1, 2013.
5    (n) The applicability of this Section to customers
6described in subsection (m) of this Section is conditioned on
7the existence of the SDC program. In no event will any
8provision of this Section apply to such customers after January
91, 2020.
10(Source: P.A. 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-841, eff. 7-20-12;
1198-90, eff. 7-15-13; 98-225, eff. 8-9-13; 98-604, eff.
1212-17-13.)
 
13    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 99-906)
14    Sec. 8-104. Natural gas energy efficiency programs.
15    (a) It is the policy of the State that natural gas
16utilities and the Department of Commerce and Economic
17Opportunity are required to use cost-effective energy
18efficiency to reduce direct and indirect costs to consumers. It
19serves the public interest to allow natural gas utilities to
20recover costs for reasonably and prudently incurred expenses
21for cost-effective energy efficiency measures.
22    (b) For purposes of this Section, "energy efficiency" means
23measures that reduce the amount of energy required to achieve a
24given end use. "Energy efficiency" also includes measures that
25reduce the total Btus of electricity and natural gas needed to

 

 

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1meet the end use or uses. "Cost-effective" means that the
2measures satisfy the total resource cost test which, for
3purposes of this Section, means a standard that is met if, for
4an investment in energy efficiency, the benefit-cost ratio is
5greater than one. The benefit-cost ratio is the ratio of the
6net present value of the total benefits of the measures to the
7net present value of the total costs as calculated over the
8lifetime of the measures. The total resource cost test compares
9the sum of avoided natural gas utility costs, representing the
10benefits that accrue to the system and the participant in the
11delivery of those efficiency measures, as well as other
12quantifiable societal benefits, including avoided electric
13utility costs, to the sum of all incremental costs of end use
14measures (including both utility and participant
15contributions), plus costs to administer, deliver, and
16evaluate each demand-side measure, to quantify the net savings
17obtained by substituting demand-side measures for supply
18resources. In calculating avoided costs, reasonable estimates
19shall be included for financial costs likely to be imposed by
20future regulation of emissions of greenhouse gases. The
21low-income programs described in item (4) of subsection (f) of
22this Section shall not be required to meet the total resource
23cost test.
24    (c) Natural gas utilities shall implement cost-effective
25energy efficiency measures to meet at least the following
26natural gas savings requirements, which shall be based upon the

 

 

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1total amount of gas delivered to retail customers, other than
2the customers described in subsection (m) of this Section,
3during calendar year 2009 multiplied by the applicable
4percentage. Natural gas utilities may comply with this Section
5by meeting the annual incremental savings goal in the
6applicable year or by showing that total cumulative annual
7savings within a multi-year planning period associated with
8measures implemented after May 31, 2011 were equal to the sum
9of each annual incremental savings requirement from the first
10day of the multi-year planning period through the last day of
11the multi-year planning period:
12        (1) 0.2% by May 31, 2012;
13        (2) an additional 0.4% by May 31, 2013, increasing
14    total savings to .6%;
15        (3) an additional 0.6% by May 31, 2014, increasing
16    total savings to 1.2%;
17        (4) an additional 0.8% by May 31, 2015, increasing
18    total savings to 2.0%;
19        (5) an additional 1% by May 31, 2016, increasing total
20    savings to 3.0%;
21        (6) an additional 1.2% by May 31, 2017, increasing
22    total savings to 4.2%;
23        (7) an additional 1.4% in the year commencing January
24    1, 2018;
25        (8) an additional 1.5% in the year commencing January
26    1, 2019; and

 

 

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1        (9) an additional 1.5% in each 12-month period
2    thereafter.
3    (d) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsection (c) of
4this Section, a natural gas utility shall limit the amount of
5energy efficiency implemented in any multi-year reporting
6period established by subsection (f) of Section 8-104 of this
7Act, by an amount necessary to limit the estimated average
8increase in the amounts paid by retail customers in connection
9with natural gas service to no more than 2% in the applicable
10multi-year reporting period. The energy savings requirements
11in subsection (c) of this Section may be reduced by the
12Commission for the subject plan, if the utility demonstrates by
13substantial evidence that it is highly unlikely that the
14requirements could be achieved without exceeding the
15applicable spending limits in any multi-year reporting period.
16No later than September 1, 2013, the Commission shall review
17the limitation on the amount of energy efficiency measures
18implemented pursuant to this Section and report to the General
19Assembly, in the report required by subsection (k) of this
20Section, its findings as to whether that limitation unduly
21constrains the procurement of energy efficiency measures.
22    (e) The provisions of this subsection (e) apply to those
23multi-year plans that commence prior to January 1, 2018. The
24utility shall utilize 75% of the available funding associated
25with energy efficiency programs approved by the Commission, and
26may outsource various aspects of program development and

 

 

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1implementation. The remaining 25% of available funding shall be
2used by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to
3implement energy efficiency measures that achieve no less than
420% of the requirements of subsection (c) of this Section. Such
5measures shall be designed in conjunction with the utility and
6approved by the Commission. The Department may outsource
7development and implementation of energy efficiency measures.
8A minimum of 10% of the entire portfolio of cost-effective
9energy efficiency measures shall be procured from local
10government, municipal corporations, school districts, and
11community college districts. Five percent of the entire
12portfolio of cost-effective energy efficiency measures may be
13granted to local government and municipal corporations for
14market transformation initiatives. The Department shall
15coordinate the implementation of these measures and shall
16integrate delivery of natural gas efficiency programs with
17electric efficiency programs delivered pursuant to Section
188-103 of this Act, unless the Department can show that
19integration is not feasible.
20    The apportionment of the dollars to cover the costs to
21implement the Department's share of the portfolio of energy
22efficiency measures shall be made to the Department once the
23Department has executed rebate agreements, grants, or
24contracts for energy efficiency measures and provided
25supporting documentation for those rebate agreements, grants,
26and contracts to the utility. The Department is authorized to

 

 

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1adopt any rules necessary and prescribe procedures in order to
2ensure compliance by applicants in carrying out the purposes of
3rebate agreements for energy efficiency measures implemented
4by the Department made under this Section.
5    The details of the measures implemented by the Department
6shall be submitted by the Department to the Commission in
7connection with the utility's filing regarding the energy
8efficiency measures that the utility implements.
9    The portfolio of measures, administered by both the
10utilities and the Department, shall, in combination, be
11designed to achieve the annual energy savings requirements set
12forth in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
13subsection (d) of this Section.
14    The utility and the Department shall agree upon a
15reasonable portfolio of measures and determine the measurable
16corresponding percentage of the savings goals associated with
17measures implemented by the Department.
18    No utility shall be assessed a penalty under subsection (f)
19of this Section for failure to make a timely filing if that
20failure is the result of a lack of agreement with the
21Department with respect to the allocation of responsibilities
22or related costs or target assignments. In that case, the
23Department and the utility shall file their respective plans
24with the Commission and the Commission shall determine an
25appropriate division of measures and programs that meets the
26requirements of this Section.

 

 

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1    (e-5) The provisions of this subsection (e-5) shall be
2applicable to those multi-year plans that commence after
3December 31, 2017. Natural gas utilities shall be responsible
4for overseeing the design, development, and filing of their
5efficiency plans with the Commission and may outsource
6development and implementation of energy efficiency measures.
7A minimum of 10% of the entire portfolio of cost-effective
8energy efficiency measures shall be procured from local
9government, municipal corporations, school districts, and
10community college districts. Five percent of the entire
11portfolio of cost-effective energy efficiency measures may be
12granted to local government and municipal corporations for
13market transformation initiatives.
14    The utilities shall also present a portfolio of energy
15efficiency measures proportionate to the share of total annual
16utility revenues in Illinois from households at or below 150%
17of the poverty level. Such programs shall be targeted to
18households with incomes at or below 80% of area median income.
19    (e-10) A utility providing approved energy efficiency
20measures in this State shall be permitted to recover costs of
21those measures through an automatic adjustment clause tariff
22filed with and approved by the Commission. The tariff shall be
23established outside the context of a general rate case and
24shall be applicable to the utility's customers other than the
25customers described in subsection (m) of this Section. Each
26year the Commission shall initiate a review to reconcile any

 

 

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1amounts collected with the actual costs and to determine the
2required adjustment to the annual tariff factor to match annual
3expenditures.
4    (e-15) For those multi-year plans that commence prior to
5January 1, 2018, each utility shall include, in its recovery of
6costs, the costs estimated for both the utility's and the
7Department's implementation of energy efficiency measures.
8Costs collected by the utility for measures implemented by the
9Department shall be submitted to the Department pursuant to
10Section 605-323 of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois,
11shall be deposited into the Energy Efficiency Portfolio
12Standards Fund, and shall be used by the Department solely for
13the purpose of implementing these measures. A utility shall not
14be required to advance any moneys to the Department but only to
15forward such funds as it has collected. The Department shall
16report to the Commission on an annual basis regarding the costs
17actually incurred by the Department in the implementation of
18the measures. Any changes to the costs of energy efficiency
19measures as a result of plan modifications shall be
20appropriately reflected in amounts recovered by the utility and
21turned over to the Department.
22    (f) No later than October 1, 2010, each gas utility shall
23file an energy efficiency plan with the Commission to meet the
24energy efficiency standards through May 31, 2014. No later than
25October 1, 2013, each gas utility shall file an energy
26efficiency plan with the Commission to meet the energy

 

 

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1efficiency standards through May 31, 2017. Beginning in 2017
2and every 4 years thereafter, each utility shall file an energy
3efficiency plan with the Commission to meet the energy
4efficiency standards for the next applicable 4-year period
5beginning January 1 of the year following the filing. For those
6multi-year plans commencing on January 1, 2018, each utility
7shall file its proposed energy efficiency plan no later than 30
8days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
999th General Assembly or May 1, 2017, whichever is later.
10Beginning in 2021 and every 4 years thereafter, each utility
11shall file its energy efficiency plan no later than March 1. If
12a utility does not file such a plan on or before the applicable
13filing deadline for the plan, then it shall face a penalty of
14$100,000 per day until the plan is filed.
15    Each utility's plan shall set forth the utility's proposals
16to meet the utility's portion of the energy efficiency
17standards identified in subsection (c) of this Section, as
18modified by subsection (d) of this Section, taking into account
19the unique circumstances of the utility's service territory.
20For those plans commencing after December 31, 2021, the
21Commission shall seek public comment on the utility's plan and
22shall issue an order approving or disapproving each plan within
236 months after its submission. For those plans commencing on
24January 1, 2018, the Commission shall seek public comment on
25the utility's plan and shall issue an order approving or
26disapproving each plan no later than August 31, 2017, or 105

 

 

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1days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
299th General Assembly, whichever is later. If the Commission
3disapproves a plan, the Commission shall, within 30 days,
4describe in detail the reasons for the disapproval and describe
5a path by which the utility may file a revised draft of the
6plan to address the Commission's concerns satisfactorily. If
7the utility does not refile with the Commission within 60 days
8after the disapproval, the utility shall be subject to
9penalties at a rate of $100,000 per day until the plan is
10filed. This process shall continue, and penalties shall accrue,
11until the utility has successfully filed a portfolio of energy
12efficiency measures. Penalties shall be deposited into the
13Energy Efficiency Trust Fund and the cost of any such penalties
14may not be recovered from ratepayers. In submitting proposed
15energy efficiency plans and funding levels to meet the savings
16goals adopted by this Act the utility shall:
17        (1) Demonstrate that its proposed energy efficiency
18    measures will achieve the requirements that are identified
19    in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
20    subsection (d) of this Section.
21        (2) Present specific proposals to implement new
22    building and appliance standards that have been placed into
23    effect.
24        (3) Present estimates of the total amount paid for gas
25    service expressed on a per therm basis associated with the
26    proposed portfolio of measures designed to meet the

 

 

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1    requirements that are identified in subsection (c) of this
2    Section, as modified by subsection (d) of this Section.
3        (4) For those multi-year plans that commence prior to
4    January 1, 2018, coordinate with the Department to present
5    a portfolio of energy efficiency measures proportionate to
6    the share of total annual utility revenues in Illinois from
7    households at or below 150% of the poverty level. Such
8    programs shall be targeted to households with incomes at or
9    below 80% of area median income.
10        (5) Demonstrate that its overall portfolio of energy
11    efficiency measures, not including low-income programs
12    described in item (4) of this subsection (f) and subsection
13    (e-5) of this Section, are cost-effective using the total
14    resource cost test and represent a diverse cross section of
15    opportunities for customers of all rate classes to
16    participate in the programs.
17        (6) Demonstrate that a gas utility affiliated with an
18    electric utility that is required to comply with Section
19    8-103 or 8-103B of this Act has integrated gas and electric
20    efficiency measures into a single program that reduces
21    program or participant costs and appropriately allocates
22    costs to gas and electric ratepayers. For those multi-year
23    plans that commence prior to January 1, 2018, the
24    Department shall integrate all gas and electric programs it
25    delivers in any such utilities' service territories,
26    unless the Department can show that integration is not

 

 

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1    feasible or appropriate.
2        (7) Include a proposed cost recovery tariff mechanism
3    to fund the proposed energy efficiency measures and to
4    ensure the recovery of the prudently and reasonably
5    incurred costs of Commission-approved programs.
6        (8) Provide for quarterly status reports tracking
7    implementation of and expenditures for the utility's
8    portfolio of measures and, if applicable, the Department's
9    portfolio of measures, an annual independent review, and a
10    full independent evaluation of the multi-year results of
11    the performance and the cost-effectiveness of the
12    utility's and, if applicable, Department's portfolios of
13    measures and broader net program impacts and, to the extent
14    practical, for adjustment of the measures on a going
15    forward basis as a result of the evaluations. The resources
16    dedicated to evaluation shall not exceed 3% of portfolio
17    resources in any given multi-year period.
18    (g) No more than 3% of expenditures on energy efficiency
19measures may be allocated for demonstration of breakthrough
20equipment and devices.
21    (h) Illinois natural gas utilities that are affiliated by
22virtue of a common parent company may, at the utilities'
23request, be considered a single natural gas utility for
24purposes of complying with this Section.
25    (i) If, after 3 years, a gas utility fails to meet the
26efficiency standard specified in subsection (c) of this Section

 

 

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1as modified by subsection (d), then it shall make a
2contribution to the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program.
3The total liability for failure to meet the goal shall be
4assessed as follows:
5        (1) a large gas utility shall pay $600,000;
6        (2) a medium gas utility shall pay $400,000; and
7        (3) a small gas utility shall pay $200,000.
8    For purposes of this Section, (i) a "large gas utility" is
9a gas utility that on December 31, 2008, served more than
101,500,000 gas customers in Illinois; (ii) a "medium gas
11utility" is a gas utility that on December 31, 2008, served
12fewer than 1,500,000, but more than 500,000 gas customers in
13Illinois; and (iii) a "small gas utility" is a gas utility that
14on December 31, 2008, served fewer than 500,000 and more than
15100,000 gas customers in Illinois. The costs of this
16contribution may not be recovered from ratepayers.
17    If a gas utility fails to meet the efficiency standard
18specified in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
19subsection (d) of this Section, in any 2 consecutive multi-year
20planning periods, then the responsibility for implementing the
21utility's energy efficiency measures shall be transferred to an
22independent program administrator selected by the Commission.
23Reasonable and prudent costs incurred by the independent
24program administrator to meet the efficiency standard
25specified in subsection (c) of this Section, as modified by
26subsection (d) of this Section, may be recovered from the

 

 

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1customers of the affected gas utilities, other than customers
2described in subsection (m) of this Section. The utility shall
3provide the independent program administrator with all
4information and assistance necessary to perform the program
5administrator's duties including but not limited to customer,
6account, and energy usage data, and shall allow the program
7administrator to include inserts in customer bills. The utility
8may recover reasonable costs associated with any such
9assistance.
10    (j) No utility shall be deemed to have failed to meet the
11energy efficiency standards to the extent any such failure is
12due to a failure of the Department.
13    (k) Not later than January 1, 2012, the Commission shall
14develop and solicit public comment on a plan to foster
15statewide coordination and consistency between statutorily
16mandated natural gas and electric energy efficiency programs to
17reduce program or participant costs or to improve program
18performance. Not later than September 1, 2013, the Commission
19shall issue a report to the General Assembly containing its
20findings and recommendations.
21    (l) This Section does not apply to a gas utility that on
22January 1, 2009, provided gas service to fewer than 100,000
23customers in Illinois.
24    (m) Subsections (a) through (k) of this Section do not
25apply to customers of a natural gas utility that have a North
26American Industry Classification System code number that is

 

 

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122111 or any such code number beginning with the digits 31, 32,
2or 33 and (i) annual usage in the aggregate of 4 million therms
3or more within the service territory of the affected gas
4utility or with aggregate usage of 8 million therms or more in
5this State and complying with the provisions of item (l) of
6this subsection (m); or (ii) using natural gas as feedstock and
7meeting the usage requirements described in item (i) of this
8subsection (m), to the extent such annual feedstock usage is
9greater than 60% of the customer's total annual usage of
10natural gas.
11        (1) Customers described in this subsection (m) of this
12    Section shall apply, on a form approved on or before
13    October 1, 2009 by the Department, to the Department to be
14    designated as a self-directing customer ("SDC") or as an
15    exempt customer using natural gas as a feedstock from which
16    other products are made, including, but not limited to,
17    feedstock for a hydrogen plant, on or before the 1st day of
18    February, 2010. Thereafter, application may be made not
19    less than 6 months before the filing date of the gas
20    utility energy efficiency plan described in subsection (f)
21    of this Section; however, a new customer that commences
22    taking service from a natural gas utility after February 1,
23    2010 may apply to become a SDC or exempt customer up to 30
24    days after beginning service. Customers described in this
25    subsection (m) that have not already been approved by the
26    Department may apply to be designated a self-directing

 

 

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1    customer or exempt customer, on a form approved by the
2    Department, between September 1, 2013 and September 30,
3    2013. Customer applications that are approved by the
4    Department under this amendatory Act of the 98th General
5    Assembly shall be considered to be a self-directing
6    customer or exempt customer, as applicable, for the current
7    3-year planning period effective December 1, 2013. Such
8    application shall contain the following:
9            (A) the customer's certification that, at the time
10        of its application, it qualifies to be a SDC or exempt
11        customer described in this subsection (m) of this
12        Section;
13            (B) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
14        certification that it has established or will
15        establish by the beginning of the utility's multi-year
16        planning period commencing subsequent to the
17        application, and will maintain for accounting
18        purposes, an energy efficiency reserve account and
19        that the customer will accrue funds in said account to
20        be held for the purpose of funding, in whole or in
21        part, energy efficiency measures of the customer's
22        choosing, which may include, but are not limited to,
23        projects involving combined heat and power systems
24        that use the same energy source both for the generation
25        of electrical or mechanical power and the production of
26        steam or another form of useful thermal energy or the

 

 

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1        use of combustible gas produced from biomass, or both;
2            (C) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
3        certification that annual funding levels for the
4        energy efficiency reserve account will be equal to 2%
5        of the customer's cost of natural gas, composed of the
6        customer's commodity cost and the delivery service
7        charges paid to the gas utility, or $150,000, whichever
8        is less;
9            (D) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
10        certification that the required reserve account
11        balance will be capped at 3 years' worth of accruals
12        and that the customer may, at its option, make further
13        deposits to the account to the extent such deposit
14        would increase the reserve account balance above the
15        designated cap level;
16            (E) in the case of a SDC, the customer's
17        certification that by October 1 of each year, beginning
18        no sooner than October 1, 2012, the customer will
19        report to the Department information, for the 12-month
20        period ending May 31 of the same year, on all deposits
21        and reductions, if any, to the reserve account during
22        the reporting year, and to the extent deposits to the
23        reserve account in any year are in an amount less than
24        $150,000, the basis for such reduced deposits; reserve
25        account balances by month; a description of energy
26        efficiency measures undertaken by the customer and

 

 

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1        paid for in whole or in part with funds from the
2        reserve account; an estimate of the energy saved, or to
3        be saved, by the measure; and that the report shall
4        include a verification by an officer or plant manager
5        of the customer or by a registered professional
6        engineer or certified energy efficiency trade
7        professional that the funds withdrawn from the reserve
8        account were used for the energy efficiency measures;
9            (F) in the case of an exempt customer, the
10        customer's certification of the level of gas usage as
11        feedstock in the customer's operation in a typical year
12        and that it will provide information establishing this
13        level, upon request of the Department;
14            (G) in the case of either an exempt customer or a
15        SDC, the customer's certification that it has provided
16        the gas utility or utilities serving the customer with
17        a copy of the application as filed with the Department;
18            (H) in the case of either an exempt customer or a
19        SDC, certification of the natural gas utility or
20        utilities serving the customer in Illinois including
21        the natural gas utility accounts that are the subject
22        of the application; and
23            (I) in the case of either an exempt customer or a
24        SDC, a verification signed by a plant manager or an
25        authorized corporate officer attesting to the
26        truthfulness and accuracy of the information contained

 

 

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1        in the application.
2        (2) The Department shall review the application to
3    determine that it contains the information described in
4    provisions (A) through (I) of item (1) of this subsection
5    (m), as applicable. The review shall be completed within 30
6    days after the date the application is filed with the
7    Department. Absent a determination by the Department
8    within the 30-day period, the applicant shall be considered
9    to be a SDC or exempt customer, as applicable, for all
10    subsequent multi-year planning periods, as of the date of
11    filing the application described in this subsection (m). If
12    the Department determines that the application does not
13    contain the applicable information described in provisions
14    (A) through (I) of item (1) of this subsection (m), it
15    shall notify the customer, in writing, of its determination
16    that the application does not contain the required
17    information and identify the information that is missing,
18    and the customer shall provide the missing information
19    within 15 working days after the date of receipt of the
20    Department's notification.
21        (3) The Department shall have the right to audit the
22    information provided in the customer's application and
23    annual reports to ensure continued compliance with the
24    requirements of this subsection. Based on the audit, if the
25    Department determines the customer is no longer in
26    compliance with the requirements of items (A) through (I)

 

 

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1    of item (1) of this subsection (m), as applicable, the
2    Department shall notify the customer in writing of the
3    noncompliance. The customer shall have 30 days to establish
4    its compliance, and failing to do so, may have its status
5    as a SDC or exempt customer revoked by the Department. The
6    Department shall treat all information provided by any
7    customer seeking SDC status or exemption from the
8    provisions of this Section as strictly confidential.
9        (4) Upon request, or on its own motion, the Commission
10    may open an investigation, no more than once every 3 years
11    and not before October 1, 2014, to evaluate the
12    effectiveness of the self-directing program described in
13    this subsection (m).
14    Customers described in this subsection (m) that applied to
15the Department on January 3, 2013, were approved by the
16Department on February 13, 2013 to be a self-directing customer
17or exempt customer, and receive natural gas from a utility that
18provides gas service to at least 500,000 retail customers in
19Illinois and electric service to at least 1,000,000 retail
20customers in Illinois shall be considered to be a
21self-directing customer or exempt customer, as applicable, for
22the current 3-year planning period effective December 1, 2013.
23    (n) The applicability of this Section to customers
24described in subsection (m) of this Section is conditioned on
25the existence of the SDC program. In no event will any
26provision of this Section apply to such customers after January

 

 

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11, 2020.
2    (o) Utilities' 3-year energy efficiency plans approved by
3the Commission on or before the effective date of this
4amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly for the period June
51, 2014 through May 31, 2017, including all such programs
6administered by the Department of Commerce and Economic
7Opportunity, shall continue to be in force and effect through
8December 31, 2017 so that the energy efficiency programs set
9forth in those plans continue to be offered during the period
10June 1, 2017 through December 31, 2017. Each utility is
11authorized to increase, on a pro rata basis, the energy savings
12goals and budgets approved in its plan to reflect the
13additional 7 months of the plan's operation.
14(Source: P.A. 98-90, eff. 7-15-13; 98-225, eff. 8-9-13; 98-604,
15eff. 12-17-13; 99-906, eff. 6-1-17.)
 
16    Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
17changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
18that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
19represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
20not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
21made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
22Public Act.