Bill Text: IL HB4285 | 2017-2018 | 100th General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Creates the Downstate Illinois Competitive Generation Procurement and Reliability Security Act of 2018 with legislative findings. Provides for the establishment and implementation of an Illinois-specific process for securing electric generation resource adequacy and stable pricing for electric capacity within Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., (MISO) Zone 4. Amends the Illinois Power Agency Act. Authorizes the Illinois Power Agency to develop capacity procurement plans and conduct competitive procurement processes for the procurement of capacity needed to meet the capacity requirements of the retail customers of electric utilities that serve less than 3,000,000 retail customers, but more than 500,000 retail customers in this State. Requires the Agency's Planning and Procurement Bureau to develop plans and processes and conduct competitive procurement processes for the procurement of capacity needed to meet the capacity requirements of the retail customers of electric utilities that serve less than 3,000,000 retail customers, but more than 500,000 retail customers in this State. Modifies the calculation of the projected capacity price for delivering energy under the Act. Amends the Public Utilities Act to make changes regarding capacity procurement and delivery of energy by the Illinois Power Agency and the Illinois Commerce Commission. Makes conforming changes. Defines terms. Effective immediately.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Failed) 2019-01-08 - Session Sine Die [HB4285 Detail]

Download: Illinois-2017-HB4285-Introduced.html


100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2017 and 2018
HB4285

Introduced , by Rep. Linda Chapa LaVia

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
20 ILCS 3855/1-20
20 ILCS 3855/1-75
220 ILCS 5/16-111.5
220 ILCS 5/16-115A

Creates the Downstate Illinois Competitive Generation Procurement and Reliability Security Act of 2018 with legislative findings. Provides for the establishment and implementation of an Illinois-specific process for securing electric generation resource adequacy and stable pricing for electric capacity within Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., (MISO) Zone 4. Amends the Illinois Power Agency Act. Authorizes the Illinois Power Agency to develop capacity procurement plans and conduct competitive procurement processes for the procurement of capacity needed to meet the capacity requirements of the retail customers of electric utilities that serve less than 3,000,000 retail customers, but more than 500,000 retail customers in this State. Requires the Agency's Planning and Procurement Bureau to develop plans and processes and conduct competitive procurement processes for the procurement of capacity needed to meet the capacity requirements of the retail customers of electric utilities that serve less than 3,000,000 retail customers, but more than 500,000 retail customers in this State. Modifies the calculation of the projected capacity price for delivering energy under the Act. Amends the Public Utilities Act to make changes regarding capacity procurement and delivery of energy by the Illinois Power Agency and the Illinois Commerce Commission. Makes conforming changes. Defines terms. Effective immediately.
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FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

A BILL FOR

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1 AN ACT concerning regulation.
2 Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
4 Section 1. Short title. This Act may be referred to as the
5Downstate Illinois Competitive Generation Procurement and
6Reliability Security Act of 2018.
7 Section 5. Legislative findings. The General Assembly
8finds and declares:
9 (1) The overall objectives of regulation of the electric
10utility industry in this State, as expressed by the General
11Assembly in the Illinois Power Agency Act and the Public
12Utilities Act, include the provision of adequate, efficient,
13reliable, environmentally safe, and least-cost utility
14services at prices which accurately reflect the long-term cost
15of such services and which are equitable to all citizens.
16 (2) Through previous enactments beginning in 1997, the
17General Assembly has promoted the use of market-based
18solutions, in combination with adequate regulatory oversight,
19to achieve the objectives of adequate, efficient, reliable,
20environmentally safe and least-cost utility services at prices
21which accurately reflect the long-term cost of such services
22and which are equitable to all citizens.
23 (3) To a significant extent, electricity, when generated,

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1cannot be stored for future use. Rather, for the most part,
2electricity must be generated instantaneously at the time and
3in the amount that it is demanded by consumers. This requires
4that there be sufficient generating capacity available and
5ready to produce electricity to meet the demands of consumers
6within each load zone in this State, 24 hours per day, 7 days
7per week, on every day of the year. Reliable electric service
8at all times is essential to the functioning of a modern
9economy and of society in general. The health, welfare, and
10prosperity of Illinois citizens, including the attractiveness
11of the State of Illinois to business and industry, requires the
12availability of sufficient electric generating capacity to
13meet the demands of consumers and businesses in this State at
14all times.
15 (4) Consistent with the overall objectives of the
16regulation of the electric utility industry in this State,
17regulation should ensure that sufficient generating capacity
18resources are available on a long-term basis to enable the
19electric utility grid to meet the demands of Illinois
20electricity consumers at all times.
21 (5) The Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., or
22MISO, has been established under federal authority as the
23operator of the electric transmission grid serving
24substantially all of the portion of the State of Illinois
25located south of, and some portions located north of,
26Interstate Highway 80, which area is sometimes referred to as

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1MISO Zone 4. Overall, MISO's geographic footprint and
2responsibilities as operator of the electric transmission grid
3covers numerous states and multiple load zones. As part of its
4responsibilities, MISO imposes requirements on load-serving
5entities serving electricity consumers in each of MISO's load
6zones for the purpose of ensuring that the load-serving
7entities have access to sufficient electrical generating
8capacity to meet the demands of their customers at all times.
9MISO conducts competitive auctions for the procurement of
10capacity for each of MISO's load zones, which result in the
11establishment of indicative prices for capacity in each load
12zone.
13 (6) All but one of the other MISO load zones in other
14states are unlike Illinois in that electric service in those
15states is provided by vertically integrated electric utilities
16that are subject to traditional cost-based regulation by a
17state utility commission, and there is not a competitive retail
18electricity market in which consumers are allowed to choose
19their electricity suppliers. The processes used by MISO to
20procure and price electric generating capacity in load zones
21located in these other states are not suitable for Illinois,
22which has a competitive retail electricity market and in which
23the major electric utilities no longer own electric generating
24facilities, but obtain electric capacity to meet their
25requirements through competitive wholesale electricity
26markets.

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1 (7) Prices for electric generating capacity resulting from
2MISO's capacity auctions for Zone 4 have not been stable, but
3have fluctuated significantly in recent years, from a high of
4$150 per megawatt-day in 2015 to a low of $1.50 per
5megawatt-day in 2017. Electric capacity prices that fluctuate
6dramatically, by a factor of 100 to one nearly year to year,
7result in retail electricity prices that impose uncertainty,
8disruption, and potential hardships on consumers and
9businesses in Illinois.
10 (8) Further, the prices for electric generating capacity in
11MISO Zone 4 resulting from several of MISO's recent capacity
12auctions have not been sufficient to incentivize the
13development of new electric generating capacity resources that
14will be committed to serve the demands of electricity consumers
15in Zone 4 over the long run, and in fact, have not been
16sufficient to enable some electric generating facilities
17located within Zone 4 to remain in operation. Electric
18generating facilities are long-lived facilities requiring
19substantial capital investments. Long-term pricing stability,
20at levels sufficient to support the substantial capital
21investment, is necessary to encourage the development of new
22electric generating facilities and to enable existing electric
23generating facilities to remain in operation.
24 (9) Since 2015, electric generating facilities located in
25Illinois within Zone 4 with generating capacity, in the
26aggregate, of more than 1,100 megawatts have been permanently

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1retired so that this capacity is no longer available to serve
2the demands of Illinois electricity consumers. In this same
3period, additional electric generating facilities with
4capacity of 600 megawatts have been placed into "mothballed"
5status so that this capacity presently is not available to
6serve the needs of Illinois electricity consumers. It is
7estimated that additional electric generating facilities
8located in Illinois within Zone 4 with generating capacity, in
9the aggregate, of at least 3,000 megawatts is currently at risk
10of retirement in light of low prices for electric generating
11capacity prevailing in Zone 4.
12 (10) MISO has advised the Governor of the State of Illinois
13and the leadership of the General Assembly that MISO prefers
14state-based solutions to achieving resource adequacy and
15ensuring that sufficient electric resources continue to be
16available in downstate Illinois to maintain reliable service
17for consumers at times of peak electricity demand, and that
18additional action is needed in downstate Illinois to maintain
19reliability of electric service. MISO has further stated that
20without further action to develop an Illinois-based solution
21for long term adequacy of electric capacity resources in
22downstate Illinois, the outlook for reliable electric service
23in downstate Illinois is unclear and uncertain from year to
24year.
25 (11) Consistent with MISO's recommendations, there is a
26need to establish an Illinois-specific process for procuring

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1electric capacity to meet the needs of electricity consumers in
2MISO Zone 4 that are served by Illinois electric utilities and
3alternative retail electric suppliers. Such a process should
4(i) be consistent to the extent feasible with existing
5processes of MISO; (ii) rely to the extent feasible on
6competitive market-based approaches; (iii) provide for the
7procurement of electric generating capacity, to the maximum
8extent feasible, on a long-term forward basis of at least 3
9years, rather than on a shorter-term basis, in order to provide
10incentives for the development of new electric generating
11facilities and the retention of existing electric generating
12facilities that are and will be committed to serving the
13electricity requirements of electricity consumers within MISO
14Zone 4 in Illinois; (iv) be open to all forms of electric
15generating capacity that meet MISO's operational and
16availability requirements; and (v) be administered and
17overseen by the Illinois Power Agency and the Illinois Commerce
18Commission.
19 (12) The General Assembly therefore finds and declares that
20it is necessary for the health, welfare, and prosperity of the
21citizens and businesses of Illinois located within the portion
22of Illinois encompassed by MISO Zone 4, to establish and
23implement an Illinois-specific process for securing electric
24generation resource adequacy and stable pricing for electric
25capacity within MISO Zone 4, through the adoption of this Act.

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1 Section 10. The Illinois Power Agency Act is amended by
2changing Sections 1-20 and 1-75 as follows:
3 (20 ILCS 3855/1-20)
4 Sec. 1-20. General powers of the Agency.
5 (a) The Agency is authorized to do each of the following:
6 (1) Develop electricity procurement plans to ensure
7 adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and
8 environmentally sustainable electric service at the lowest
9 total cost over time, taking into account any benefits of
10 price stability, for electric utilities that on December
11 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000
12 customers in Illinois and for small multi-jurisdictional
13 electric utilities that (A) on December 31, 2005 served
14 less than 100,000 customers in Illinois and (B) request a
15 procurement plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load.
16 Except as provided in paragraph (1.5) of this subsection
17 (a), the electricity procurement plans shall be updated on
18 an annual basis and shall include electricity generated
19 from renewable resources sufficient to achieve the
20 standards specified in this Act. Beginning with the
21 delivery year commencing June 1, 2017, develop procurement
22 plans to include zero emission credits generated from zero
23 emission facilities sufficient to achieve the standards
24 specified in this Act.
25 (1.5) Develop a long-term renewable resources

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1 procurement plan in accordance with subsection (c) of
2 Section 1-75 of this Act for renewable energy credits in
3 amounts sufficient to achieve the standards specified in
4 this Act for delivery years commencing June 1, 2017 and for
5 the programs and renewable energy credits specified in
6 Section 1-56 of this Act. Electricity procurement plans for
7 delivery years commencing after May 31, 2017, shall not
8 include procurement of renewable energy resources.
9 (2) Conduct competitive procurement processes to
10 procure the supply resources identified in the electricity
11 procurement plan, pursuant to Section 16-111.5 of the
12 Public Utilities Act, and, for the delivery year commencing
13 June 1, 2017, conduct procurement processes to procure zero
14 emission credits from zero emission facilities, under
15 subsection (d-5) of Section 1-75 of this Act.
16 (2.5) Beginning with the procurement for the 2017
17 delivery year, conduct competitive procurement processes
18 and implement programs to procure renewable energy credits
19 identified in the long-term renewable resources
20 procurement plan developed and approved under subsection
21 (c) of Section 1-75 of this Act and Section 16-111.5 of the
22 Public Utilities Act.
23 (2.10) Beginning with the procurement for the delivery
24 year commencing June 1, 2019, develop capacity procurement
25 plans and conduct competitive procurement processes for
26 the procurement of capacity needed to ensure long-term

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1 resource adequacy at the lowest cost over time, taking into
2 account the benefits of price stability and the need to
3 ensure the reliability, adequacy, and resilience of the
4 bulk power generation and delivery system in the Applicable
5 Local Resource Zone, as defined in Section 1-75 of this
6 Act, to meet the capacity requirements of the retail
7 customers of electric utilities that serve less than
8 3,000,000 retail customers, but more than 500,000 retail
9 customers in this State.
10 (3) Develop electric generation and co-generation
11 facilities that use indigenous coal or renewable
12 resources, or both, financed with bonds issued by the
13 Illinois Finance Authority.
14 (4) Supply electricity from the Agency's facilities at
15 cost to one or more of the following: municipal electric
16 systems, governmental aggregators, or rural electric
17 cooperatives in Illinois.
18 (b) Except as otherwise limited by this Act, the Agency has
19all of the powers necessary or convenient to carry out the
20purposes and provisions of this Act, including without
21limitation, each of the following:
22 (1) To have a corporate seal, and to alter that seal at
23 pleasure, and to use it by causing it or a facsimile to be
24 affixed or impressed or reproduced in any other manner.
25 (2) To use the services of the Illinois Finance
26 Authority necessary to carry out the Agency's purposes.

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1 (3) To negotiate and enter into loan agreements and
2 other agreements with the Illinois Finance Authority.
3 (4) To obtain and employ personnel and hire consultants
4 that are necessary to fulfill the Agency's purposes, and to
5 make expenditures for that purpose within the
6 appropriations for that purpose.
7 (5) To purchase, receive, take by grant, gift, devise,
8 bequest, or otherwise, lease, or otherwise acquire, own,
9 hold, improve, employ, use, and otherwise deal in and with,
10 real or personal property whether tangible or intangible,
11 or any interest therein, within the State.
12 (6) To acquire real or personal property, whether
13 tangible or intangible, including without limitation
14 property rights, interests in property, franchises,
15 obligations, contracts, and debt and equity securities,
16 and to do so by the exercise of the power of eminent domain
17 in accordance with Section 1-21; except that any real
18 property acquired by the exercise of the power of eminent
19 domain must be located within the State.
20 (7) To sell, convey, lease, exchange, transfer,
21 abandon, or otherwise dispose of, or mortgage, pledge, or
22 create a security interest in, any of its assets,
23 properties, or any interest therein, wherever situated.
24 (8) To purchase, take, receive, subscribe for, or
25 otherwise acquire, hold, make a tender offer for, vote,
26 employ, sell, lend, lease, exchange, transfer, or

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1 otherwise dispose of, mortgage, pledge, or grant a security
2 interest in, use, and otherwise deal in and with, bonds and
3 other obligations, shares, or other securities (or
4 interests therein) issued by others, whether engaged in a
5 similar or different business or activity.
6 (9) To make and execute agreements, contracts, and
7 other instruments necessary or convenient in the exercise
8 of the powers and functions of the Agency under this Act,
9 including contracts with any person, including personal
10 service contracts, or with any local government, State
11 agency, or other entity; and all State agencies and all
12 local governments are authorized to enter into and do all
13 things necessary to perform any such agreement, contract,
14 or other instrument with the Agency. No such agreement,
15 contract, or other instrument shall exceed 40 years.
16 (10) To lend money, invest and reinvest its funds in
17 accordance with the Public Funds Investment Act, and take
18 and hold real and personal property as security for the
19 payment of funds loaned or invested.
20 (11) To borrow money at such rate or rates of interest
21 as the Agency may determine, issue its notes, bonds, or
22 other obligations to evidence that indebtedness, and
23 secure any of its obligations by mortgage or pledge of its
24 real or personal property, machinery, equipment,
25 structures, fixtures, inventories, revenues, grants, and
26 other funds as provided or any interest therein, wherever

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1 situated.
2 (12) To enter into agreements with the Illinois Finance
3 Authority to issue bonds whether or not the income
4 therefrom is exempt from federal taxation.
5 (13) To procure insurance against any loss in
6 connection with its properties or operations in such amount
7 or amounts and from such insurers, including the federal
8 government, as it may deem necessary or desirable, and to
9 pay any premiums therefor.
10 (14) To negotiate and enter into agreements with
11 trustees or receivers appointed by United States
12 bankruptcy courts or federal district courts or in other
13 proceedings involving adjustment of debts and authorize
14 proceedings involving adjustment of debts and authorize
15 legal counsel for the Agency to appear in any such
16 proceedings.
17 (15) To file a petition under Chapter 9 of Title 11 of
18 the United States Bankruptcy Code or take other similar
19 action for the adjustment of its debts.
20 (16) To enter into management agreements for the
21 operation of any of the property or facilities owned by the
22 Agency.
23 (17) To enter into an agreement to transfer and to
24 transfer any land, facilities, fixtures, or equipment of
25 the Agency to one or more municipal electric systems,
26 governmental aggregators, or rural electric agencies or

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1 cooperatives, for such consideration and upon such terms as
2 the Agency may determine to be in the best interest of the
3 citizens of Illinois.
4 (18) To enter upon any lands and within any building
5 whenever in its judgment it may be necessary for the
6 purpose of making surveys and examinations to accomplish
7 any purpose authorized by this Act.
8 (19) To maintain an office or offices at such place or
9 places in the State as it may determine.
10 (20) To request information, and to make any inquiry,
11 investigation, survey, or study that the Agency may deem
12 necessary to enable it effectively to carry out the
13 provisions of this Act.
14 (21) To accept and expend appropriations.
15 (22) To engage in any activity or operation that is
16 incidental to and in furtherance of efficient operation to
17 accomplish the Agency's purposes, including hiring
18 employees that the Director deems essential for the
19 operations of the Agency.
20 (23) To adopt, revise, amend, and repeal rules with
21 respect to its operations, properties, and facilities as
22 may be necessary or convenient to carry out the purposes of
23 this Act, subject to the provisions of the Illinois
24 Administrative Procedure Act and Sections 1-22 and 1-35 of
25 this Act.
26 (24) To establish and collect charges and fees as

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1 described in this Act.
2 (25) To conduct competitive gasification feedstock
3 procurement processes to procure the feedstocks for the
4 clean coal SNG brownfield facility in accordance with the
5 requirements of Section 1-78 of this Act.
6 (26) To review, revise, and approve sourcing
7 agreements and mediate and resolve disputes between gas
8 utilities and the clean coal SNG brownfield facility
9 pursuant to subsection (h-1) of Section 9-220 of the Public
10 Utilities Act.
11 (27) To request, review and accept proposals, execute
12 contracts, purchase renewable energy credits and otherwise
13 dedicate funds from the Illinois Power Agency Renewable
14 Energy Resources Fund to create and carry out the
15 objectives of the Illinois Solar for All program in
16 accordance with Section 1-56 of this Act.
17(Source: P.A. 99-906, eff. 6-1-17.)
18 (20 ILCS 3855/1-75)
19 Sec. 1-75. Planning and Procurement Bureau. The Planning
20and Procurement Bureau has the following duties and
21responsibilities:
22 (a) The Planning and Procurement Bureau shall each year,
23beginning in 2008, develop procurement plans and conduct
24competitive procurement processes in accordance with the
25requirements of Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act

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1for the eligible retail customers of electric utilities that on
2December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000
3customers in Illinois. Beginning with the delivery year
4commencing on June 1, 2017, the Planning and Procurement Bureau
5shall develop plans and processes for the procurement of zero
6emission credits from zero emission facilities in accordance
7with the requirements of subsection (d-5) of this Section. The
8Planning and Procurement Bureau shall also develop procurement
9plans and conduct competitive procurement processes in
10accordance with the requirements of Section 16-111.5 of the
11Public Utilities Act for the eligible retail customers of small
12multi-jurisdictional electric utilities that (i) on December
1331, 2005 served less than 100,000 customers in Illinois and
14(ii) request a procurement plan for their Illinois
15jurisdictional load. This Section shall not apply to a small
16multi-jurisdictional utility until such time as a small
17multi-jurisdictional utility requests the Agency to prepare a
18procurement plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load. For
19the purposes of this Section, the term "eligible retail
20customers" has the same definition as found in Section
2116-111.5(a) of the Public Utilities Act.
22 Beginning with the plan or plans to be implemented in the
232017 delivery year, the Agency shall no longer include the
24procurement of renewable energy resources in the annual
25procurement plans required by this subsection (a), except as
26provided in subsection (q) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public

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1Utilities Act, and shall instead develop a long-term renewable
2resources procurement plan in accordance with subsection (c) of
3this Section and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
4 Beginning with the procurement for the delivery year
5commencing June 1, 2019, the Planning and Procurement Bureau
6shall for each year develop plans and processes for and conduct
7competitive procurement processes in accordance with
8subsection (b-5) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
9Act and paragraph (2.10) of subsection (a) of Section 1-20 of
10this Act, the results of which shall be subject to approval of
11the Commission in accordance with subsection (f) of Section
1216-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, for the procurement of
13capacity needed to meet the capacity requirements of the retail
14customers of electric utilities that serve less than 3,000,000
15retail customers, but more than 500,000 retail customers in
16this State and are located in the Applicable Local Resource
17Zone of the Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., or
18its successor. For purposes of this Section, "Local Resource
19Zone" shall have the meaning set forth in the open access
20transmission and energy markets tariff of the Midcontinent
21Independent System Operator, Inc., or its successor, as such
22tariff may be updated from time to time, and "Applicable Local
23Resource Zone" means the Local Resource Zone or Zones within
24the Midcontinent Independent System Operator, that incorporate
25all retail customers of electric utilities that serve less than
263,000,000 retail customers, but more than 500,000 retail

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

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

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1 consideration to develop the procurement plans and to serve
2 as the procurement administrator. The Agency shall also
3 provide each qualified expert's or expert consulting
4 firm's response to the request for qualifications. All
5 information provided under this subparagraph shall also be
6 provided to the Commission. The Agency may provide by rule
7 for fees associated with supplying the information to
8 utilities and other interested parties. These parties
9 shall, within 5 business days, notify the Agency in writing
10 if they object to any experts or expert consulting firms on
11 the lists. Objections shall be based on:
12 (A) failure to satisfy qualification criteria;
13 (B) identification of a conflict of interest; or
14 (C) evidence of inappropriate bias for or against
15 potential bidders or the affected utilities.
16 The Agency shall remove experts or expert consulting
17 firms from the lists within 10 days if there is a
18 reasonable basis for an objection and provide the updated
19 lists to the affected utilities and other interested
20 parties. If the Agency fails to remove an expert or expert
21 consulting firm from a list, an objecting party may seek
22 review by the Commission within 5 days thereafter by filing
23 a petition, and the Commission shall render a ruling on the
24 petition within 10 days. There is no right of appeal of the
25 Commission's ruling.
26 (4) The Agency shall issue requests for proposals to

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1 the qualified experts or expert consulting firms to develop
2 a procurement plan for the affected utilities and to serve
3 as procurement administrator.
4 (5) The Agency shall select an expert or expert
5 consulting firm to develop procurement plans based on the
6 proposals submitted and shall award contracts of up to 5
7 years to those selected.
8 (6) The Agency shall select an expert or expert
9 consulting firm, with approval of the Commission, to serve
10 as procurement administrator based on the proposals
11 submitted. If the Commission rejects, within 5 days, the
12 Agency's selection, the Agency shall submit another
13 recommendation within 3 days based on the proposals
14 submitted. The Agency shall award a 5-year contract to the
15 expert or expert consulting firm so selected with
16 Commission approval.
17 (b) The experts or expert consulting firms retained by the
18Agency shall, as appropriate, prepare procurement plans, and
19conduct a competitive procurement process as prescribed in
20Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, to ensure
21adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and environmentally
22sustainable electric service at the lowest total cost over
23time, taking into account any benefits of price stability, for
24eligible retail customers of electric utilities that on
25December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000
26customers in the State of Illinois, and for eligible Illinois

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1retail customers of small multi-jurisdictional electric
2utilities that (i) on December 31, 2005 served less than
3100,000 customers in Illinois and (ii) request a procurement
4plan for their Illinois jurisdictional load.
5 (c) Renewable portfolio standard.
6 (1)(A) The Agency shall develop a long-term renewable
7 resources procurement plan that shall include procurement
8 programs and competitive procurement events necessary to
9 meet the goals set forth in this subsection (c). The
10 initial long-term renewable resources procurement plan
11 shall be released for comment no later than 160 days after
12 June 1, 2017 (the effective date of Public Act 99-906) this
13 amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly. The Agency
14 shall review, and may revise on an expedited basis, the
15 long-term renewable resources procurement plan at least
16 every 2 years, which shall be conducted in conjunction with
17 the procurement plan under Section 16-111.5 of the Public
18 Utilities Act to the extent practicable to minimize
19 administrative expense. The long-term renewable resources
20 procurement plans shall be subject to review and approval
21 by the Commission under Section 16-111.5 of the Public
22 Utilities Act.
23 (B) Subject to subparagraph (F) of this paragraph (1),
24 the long-term renewable resources procurement plan shall
25 include the goals for procurement of renewable energy
26 credits to meet at least the following overall percentages:

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1 13% by the 2017 delivery year; increasing by at least 1.5%
2 each delivery year thereafter to at least 25% by the 2025
3 delivery year; and continuing at no less than 25% for each
4 delivery year thereafter. In the event of a conflict
5 between these goals and the new wind and new photovoltaic
6 procurement requirements described in items (i) through
7 (iii) of subparagraph (C) of this paragraph (1), the
8 long-term plan shall prioritize compliance with the new
9 wind and new photovoltaic procurement requirements
10 described in items (i) through (iii) of subparagraph (C) of
11 this paragraph (1) over the annual percentage targets
12 described in this subparagraph (B).
13 For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2017, the
14 procurement plan shall include cost-effective renewable
15 energy resources equal to at least 13% of each utility's
16 load for eligible retail customers and 13% of the
17 applicable portion of each utility's load for retail
18 customers who are not eligible retail customers, which
19 applicable portion shall equal 50% of the utility's load
20 for retail customers who are not eligible retail customers
21 on February 28, 2017.
22 For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2018, the
23 procurement plan shall include cost-effective renewable
24 energy resources equal to at least 14.5% of each utility's
25 load for eligible retail customers and 14.5% of the
26 applicable portion of each utility's load for retail

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1 customers who are not eligible retail customers, which
2 applicable portion shall equal 75% of the utility's load
3 for retail customers who are not eligible retail customers
4 on February 28, 2017.
5 For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2019, and for
6 each year thereafter, the procurement plans shall include
7 cost-effective renewable energy resources equal to a
8 minimum percentage of each utility's load for all retail
9 customers as follows: 16% by June 1, 2019; increasing by
10 1.5% each year thereafter to 25% by June 1, 2025; and 25%
11 by June 1, 2026 and each year thereafter.
12 For each delivery year, the Agency shall first
13 recognize each utility's obligations for that delivery
14 year under existing contracts. Any renewable energy
15 credits under existing contracts, including renewable
16 energy credits as part of renewable energy resources, shall
17 be used to meet the goals set forth in this subsection (c)
18 for the delivery year.
19 (C) Of the renewable energy credits procured under this
20 subsection (c), at least 75% shall come from wind and
21 photovoltaic projects. The long-term renewable resources
22 procurement plan described in subparagraph (A) of this
23 paragraph (1) shall include the procurement of renewable
24 energy credits in amounts equal to at least the following:
25 (i) By the end of the 2020 delivery year:
26 At least 2,000,000 renewable energy credits

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

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

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

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1 the same or substantially similar quantity, and the same or
2 substantially similar contract length and structure.
3 Benchmarks shall be developed by the procurement
4 administrator, in consultation with the Commission staff,
5 Agency staff, and the procurement monitor and shall be
6 subject to Commission review and approval. If price
7 benchmarks for like products in the region are not
8 available, the procurement administrator shall establish
9 price benchmarks based on publicly available data on
10 regional technology costs and expected current and future
11 regional energy prices. The benchmarks in this Section
12 shall not be used to curtail or otherwise reduce
13 contractual obligations entered into by or through the
14 Agency prior to June 1, 2017 (the effective date of Public
15 Act 99-906) this amendatory Act of the 99th General
16 Assembly.
17 (E) For purposes of this subsection (c), the required
18 procurement of cost-effective renewable energy resources
19 for a particular year commencing prior to June 1, 2017
20 shall be measured as a percentage of the actual amount of
21 electricity (megawatt-hours) supplied by the electric
22 utility to eligible retail customers in the delivery year
23 ending immediately prior to the procurement, and, for
24 delivery years commencing on and after June 1, 2017, the
25 required procurement of cost-effective renewable energy
26 resources for a particular year shall be measured as a

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

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

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1 (i-5) funding for the Illinois Solar for All
2 Program, as described in subparagraph (O) of this
3 paragraph (1);
4 (ii) renewable energy credits necessary to comply
5 with the new wind and new photovoltaic procurement
6 requirements described in items (i) through (iii) of
7 subparagraph (C) of this paragraph (1); and
8 (iii) renewable energy credits necessary to meet
9 the remaining requirements of this subsection (c).
10 (G) The following provisions shall apply to the
11 Agency's procurement of renewable energy credits under
12 this subsection (c):
13 (i) Notwithstanding whether a long-term renewable
14 resources procurement plan has been approved, the
15 Agency shall conduct an initial forward procurement
16 for renewable energy credits from new utility-scale
17 wind projects within 160 days after June 1, 2017 (the
18 effective date of Public Act 99-906) this amendatory
19 Act of the 99th General Assembly. For the purposes of
20 this initial forward procurement, the Agency shall
21 solicit 15-year contracts for delivery of 1,000,000
22 renewable energy credits delivered annually from new
23 utility-scale wind projects to begin delivery on June
24 1, 2019, if available, but not later than June 1, 2021.
25 Payments to suppliers of renewable energy credits
26 shall commence upon delivery. Renewable energy credits

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1 procured under this initial procurement shall be
2 included in the Agency's long-term plan and shall apply
3 to all renewable energy goals in this subsection (c).
4 (ii) Notwithstanding whether a long-term renewable
5 resources procurement plan has been approved, the
6 Agency shall conduct an initial forward procurement
7 for renewable energy credits from new utility-scale
8 solar projects and brownfield site photovoltaic
9 projects within one year after June 1, 2017 (the
10 effective date of Public Act 99-906) this amendatory
11 Act of the 99th General Assembly. For the purposes of
12 this initial forward procurement, the Agency shall
13 solicit 15-year contracts for delivery of 1,000,000
14 renewable energy credits delivered annually from new
15 utility-scale solar projects and brownfield site
16 photovoltaic projects to begin delivery on June 1,
17 2019, if available, but not later than June 1, 2021.
18 The Agency may structure this initial procurement in
19 one or more discrete procurement events. Payments to
20 suppliers of renewable energy credits shall commence
21 upon delivery. Renewable energy credits procured under
22 this initial procurement shall be included in the
23 Agency's long-term plan and shall apply to all
24 renewable energy goals in this subsection (c).
25 (iii) Subsequent forward procurements for
26 utility-scale wind projects shall solicit at least

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

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1 amount of renewable energy credits to be delivered from
2 all new photovoltaic projects by 200,000 or more
3 renewable energy credits, provided that nothing in
4 this Section shall preclude the projected cumulative
5 amount of renewable energy credits to be delivered from
6 all new photovoltaic projects from exceeding the
7 projected cumulative amount of renewable energy
8 credits to be delivered from all new wind projects in
9 each delivery year and provided further that nothing in
10 this item (iv) shall require the curtailment of an
11 executed contract. The Agency shall update, on a
12 quarterly basis, its projection of the renewable
13 energy credits to be delivered from all projects in
14 each delivery year. Notwithstanding anything to the
15 contrary, the Agency may adjust the timing of
16 procurement events conducted under this subparagraph
17 (G). The long-term renewable resources procurement
18 plan shall set forth the process by which the
19 adjustments may be made.
20 (v) All procurements under this subparagraph (G)
21 shall comply with the geographic requirements in
22 subparagraph (I) of this paragraph (1) and shall follow
23 the procurement processes and procedures described in
24 this Section and Section 16-111.5 of the Public
25 Utilities Act to the extent practicable, and these
26 processes and procedures may be expedited to

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1 accommodate the schedule established by this
2 subparagraph (G).
3 (H) The procurement of renewable energy resources for a
4 given delivery year shall be reduced as described in this
5 subparagraph (H) if an alternative alternate retail
6 electric supplier meets the requirements described in this
7 subparagraph (H).
8 (i) Within 45 days after June 1, 2017 (the
9 effective date of Public Act 99-906) this amendatory
10 Act of the 99th General Assembly, an alternative retail
11 electric supplier or its successor shall submit an
12 informational filing to the Illinois Commerce
13 Commission certifying that, as of December 31, 2015,
14 the alternative retail electric supplier owned one or
15 more electric generating facilities that generates
16 renewable energy resources as defined in Section 1-10
17 of this Act, provided that such facilities are not
18 powered by wind or photovoltaics, and the facilities
19 generate one renewable energy credit for each
20 megawatthour of energy produced from the facility.
21 The informational filing shall identify each
22 facility that was eligible to satisfy the alternative
23 retail electric supplier's obligations under Section
24 16-115D of the Public Utilities Act as described in
25 this item (i).
26 (ii) For a given delivery year, the alternative

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1 retail electric supplier may elect to supply its retail
2 customers with renewable energy credits from the
3 facility or facilities described in item (i) of this
4 subparagraph (H) that continue to be owned by the
5 alternative retail electric supplier.
6 (iii) The alternative retail electric supplier
7 shall notify the Agency and the applicable utility, no
8 later than February 28 of the year preceding the
9 applicable delivery year or 15 days after June 1, 2017
10 (the effective date of Public Act 99-906) this
11 amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, whichever
12 is later, of its election under item (ii) of this
13 subparagraph (H) to supply renewable energy credits to
14 retail customers of the utility. Such election shall
15 identify the amount of renewable energy credits to be
16 supplied by the alternative retail electric supplier
17 to the utility's retail customers and the source of the
18 renewable energy credits identified in the
19 informational filing as described in item (i) of this
20 subparagraph (H), subject to the following
21 limitations:
22 For the delivery year beginning June 1, 2018,
23 the maximum amount of renewable energy credits to
24 be supplied by an alternative retail electric
25 supplier under this subparagraph (H) shall be 68%
26 multiplied by 25% multiplied by 14.5% multiplied

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

HB4285- 46 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 adjustments to the Adjustable Block program design, such as
2 redistributing available funds or making adjustments to
3 purchase prices as necessary to achieve the goals of this
4 subsection (c). Program modifications to any price,
5 capacity block, or other program element that do not
6 deviate from the Commission's approved value by more than
7 25% shall take effect immediately and are not subject to
8 Commission review and approval. Program modifications to
9 any price, capacity block, or other program element that
10 deviate more than 25% from the Commission's approved value
11 must be approved by the Commission as a long-term plan
12 amendment under Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
13 Act. The Agency shall consider stakeholder feedback when
14 making adjustments to the Adjustable Block design and shall
15 notify stakeholders in advance of any planned changes.
16 (N) The long-term renewable resources procurement plan
17 required by this subsection (c) shall include a community
18 renewable generation program. The Agency shall establish
19 the terms, conditions, and program requirements for
20 community renewable generation projects with a goal to
21 expand renewable energy generating facility access to a
22 broader group of energy consumers, to ensure robust
23 participation opportunities for residential and small
24 commercial customers and those who cannot install
25 renewable energy on their own properties. Any plan approved
26 by the Commission shall allow subscriptions to community

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

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

HB4285- 49 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 $10,000,000 of such funds in such year shall be used by an
2 electric utility that serves more than 3,000,000 retail
3 customers in the State to implement a Commission-approved
4 plan under Section 16-108.12 of the Public Utilities Act.
5 In making the determinations required under this
6 subparagraph (O), the Commission shall consider the
7 experience and performance under the programs and any
8 evaluation reports. The Commission shall also provide for
9 an independent evaluation of those programs on a periodic
10 basis that are funded under this subparagraph (O).
11 (2) (Blank).
12 (3) (Blank).
13 (4) The electric utility shall retire all renewable
14 energy credits used to comply with the standard.
15 (5) Beginning with the 2010 delivery year and ending
16 June 1, 2017, an electric utility subject to this
17 subsection (c) shall apply the lesser of the maximum
18 alternative compliance payment rate or the most recent
19 estimated alternative compliance payment rate for its
20 service territory for the corresponding compliance period,
21 established pursuant to subsection (d) of Section 16-115D
22 of the Public Utilities Act to its retail customers that
23 take service pursuant to the electric utility's hourly
24 pricing tariff or tariffs. The electric utility shall
25 retain all amounts collected as a result of the application
26 of the alternative compliance payment rate or rates to such

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1 customers, and, beginning in 2011, the utility shall
2 include in the information provided under item (1) of
3 subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
4 Act the amounts collected under the alternative compliance
5 payment rate or rates for the prior year ending May 31.
6 Notwithstanding any limitation on the procurement of
7 renewable energy resources imposed by item (2) of this
8 subsection (c), the Agency shall increase its spending on
9 the purchase of renewable energy resources to be procured
10 by the electric utility for the next plan year by an amount
11 equal to the amounts collected by the utility under the
12 alternative compliance payment rate or rates in the prior
13 year ending May 31.
14 (6) The electric utility shall be entitled to recover
15 all of its costs associated with the procurement of
16 renewable energy credits under plans approved under this
17 Section and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
18 These costs shall include associated reasonable expenses
19 for implementing the procurement programs, including, but
20 not limited to, the costs of administering and evaluating
21 the Adjustable Block program, through an automatic
22 adjustment clause tariff in accordance with subsection (k)
23 of Section 16-108 of the Public Utilities Act.
24 (7) Renewable energy credits procured from new
25 photovoltaic projects or new distributed renewable energy
26 generation devices under this Section after June 1, 2017

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1 (the effective date of Public Act 99-906) this amendatory
2 Act of the 99th General Assembly must be procured from
3 devices installed by a qualified person in compliance with
4 the requirements of Section 16-128A of the Public Utilities
5 Act and any rules or regulations adopted thereunder.
6 In meeting the renewable energy requirements of this
7 subsection (c), to the extent feasible and consistent with
8 State and federal law, the renewable energy credit
9 procurements, Adjustable Block solar program, and
10 community renewable generation program shall provide
11 employment opportunities for all segments of the
12 population and workforce, including minority-owned and
13 female-owned business enterprises, and shall not,
14 consistent with State and federal law, discriminate based
15 on race or socioeconomic status.
16 (d) Clean coal portfolio standard.
17 (1) The procurement plans shall include electricity
18 generated using clean coal. Each utility shall enter into
19 one or more sourcing agreements with the initial clean coal
20 facility, as provided in paragraph (3) of this subsection
21 (d), covering electricity generated by the initial clean
22 coal facility representing at least 5% of each utility's
23 total supply to serve the load of eligible retail customers
24 in 2015 and each year thereafter, as described in paragraph
25 (3) of this subsection (d), subject to the limits specified
26 in paragraph (2) of this subsection (d). It is the goal of

HB4285- 52 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 the State that by January 1, 2025, 25% of the electricity
2 used in the State shall be generated by cost-effective
3 clean coal facilities. For purposes of this subsection (d),
4 "cost-effective" means that the expenditures pursuant to
5 such sourcing agreements do not cause the limit stated in
6 paragraph (2) of this subsection (d) to be exceeded and do
7 not exceed cost-based benchmarks, which shall be developed
8 to assess all expenditures pursuant to such sourcing
9 agreements covering electricity generated by clean coal
10 facilities, other than the initial clean coal facility, by
11 the procurement administrator, in consultation with the
12 Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement
13 monitor and shall be subject to Commission review and
14 approval.
15 A utility party to a sourcing agreement shall
16 immediately retire any emission credits that it receives in
17 connection with the electricity covered by such agreement.
18 Utilities shall maintain adequate records documenting
19 the purchases under the sourcing agreement to comply with
20 this subsection (d) and shall file an accounting with the
21 load forecast that must be filed with the Agency by July 15
22 of each year, in accordance with subsection (d) of Section
23 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
24 A utility shall be deemed to have complied with the
25 clean coal portfolio standard specified in this subsection
26 (d) if the utility enters into a sourcing agreement as

HB4285- 53 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 required by this subsection (d).
2 (2) For purposes of this subsection (d), the required
3 execution of sourcing agreements with the initial clean
4 coal facility for a particular year shall be measured as a
5 percentage of the actual amount of electricity
6 (megawatt-hours) supplied by the electric utility to
7 eligible retail customers in the planning year ending
8 immediately prior to the agreement's execution. For
9 purposes of this subsection (d), the amount paid per
10 kilowatthour means the total amount paid for electric
11 service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For purposes
12 of this subsection (d), the total amount paid for electric
13 service includes without limitation amounts paid for
14 supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges and add-on
15 taxes.
16 Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
17 (d), the total amount paid under sourcing agreements with
18 clean coal facilities pursuant to the procurement plan for
19 any given year shall be reduced by an amount necessary to
20 limit the annual estimated average net increase due to the
21 costs of these resources included in the amounts paid by
22 eligible retail customers in connection with electric
23 service to:
24 (A) in 2010, no more than 0.5% of the amount paid
25 per kilowatthour by those customers during the year
26 ending May 31, 2009;

HB4285- 54 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 (B) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
2 the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
3 during the year ending May 31, 2010 or 1% of the amount
4 paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
5 year ending May 31, 2009;
6 (C) in 2012, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
7 the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
8 during the year ending May 31, 2011 or 1.5% of the
9 amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during
10 the year ending May 31, 2009;
11 (D) in 2013, the greater of an additional 0.5% of
12 the amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers
13 during the year ending May 31, 2012 or 2% of the amount
14 paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
15 year ending May 31, 2009; and
16 (E) thereafter, the total amount paid under
17 sourcing agreements with clean coal facilities
18 pursuant to the procurement plan for any single year
19 shall be reduced by an amount necessary to limit the
20 estimated average net increase due to the cost of these
21 resources included in the amounts paid by eligible
22 retail customers in connection with electric service
23 to no more than the greater of (i) 2.015% of the amount
24 paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
25 year ending May 31, 2009 or (ii) the incremental amount
26 per kilowatthour paid for these resources in 2013.

HB4285- 55 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 These requirements may be altered only as provided by
2 statute.
3 No later than June 30, 2015, the Commission shall
4 review the limitation on the total amount paid under
5 sourcing agreements, if any, with clean coal facilities
6 pursuant to this subsection (d) and report to the General
7 Assembly its findings as to whether that limitation unduly
8 constrains the amount of electricity generated by
9 cost-effective clean coal facilities that is covered by
10 sourcing agreements.
11 (3) Initial clean coal facility. In order to promote
12 development of clean coal facilities in Illinois, each
13 electric utility subject to this Section shall execute a
14 sourcing agreement to source electricity from a proposed
15 clean coal facility in Illinois (the "initial clean coal
16 facility") that will have a nameplate capacity of at least
17 500 MW when commercial operation commences, that has a
18 final Clean Air Act permit on June 1, 2009 (the effective
19 date of Public Act 95-1027) this amendatory Act of the 95th
20 General Assembly, and that will meet the definition of
21 clean coal facility in Section 1-10 of this Act when
22 commercial operation commences. The sourcing agreements
23 with this initial clean coal facility shall be subject to
24 both approval of the initial clean coal facility by the
25 General Assembly and satisfaction of the requirements of
26 paragraph (4) of this subsection (d) and shall be executed

HB4285- 56 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 within 90 days after any such approval by the General
2 Assembly. The Agency and the Commission shall have
3 authority to inspect all books and records associated with
4 the initial clean coal facility during the term of such a
5 sourcing agreement. A utility's sourcing agreement for
6 electricity produced by the initial clean coal facility
7 shall include:
8 (A) a formula contractual price (the "contract
9 price") approved pursuant to paragraph (4) of this
10 subsection (d), which shall:
11 (i) be determined using a cost of service
12 methodology employing either a level or deferred
13 capital recovery component, based on a capital
14 structure consisting of 45% equity and 55% debt,
15 and a return on equity as may be approved by the
16 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which in any
17 case may not exceed the lower of 11.5% or the rate
18 of return approved by the General Assembly
19 pursuant to paragraph (4) of this subsection (d);
20 and
21 (ii) provide that all miscellaneous net
22 revenue, including but not limited to net revenue
23 from the sale of emission allowances, if any,
24 substitute natural gas, if any, grants or other
25 support provided by the State of Illinois or the
26 United States Government, firm transmission

HB4285- 57 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 rights, if any, by-products produced by the
2 facility, energy or capacity derived from the
3 facility and not covered by a sourcing agreement
4 pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection (d) or
5 item (5) of subsection (d) of Section 16-115 of the
6 Public Utilities Act, whether generated from the
7 synthesis gas derived from coal, from SNG, or from
8 natural gas, shall be credited against the revenue
9 requirement for this initial clean coal facility;
10 (B) power purchase provisions, which shall:
11 (i) provide that the utility party to such
12 sourcing agreement shall pay the contract price
13 for electricity delivered under such sourcing
14 agreement;
15 (ii) require delivery of electricity to the
16 regional transmission organization market of the
17 utility that is party to such sourcing agreement;
18 (iii) require the utility party to such
19 sourcing agreement to buy from the initial clean
20 coal facility in each hour an amount of energy
21 equal to all clean coal energy made available from
22 the initial clean coal facility during such hour
23 times a fraction, the numerator of which is such
24 utility's retail market sales of electricity
25 (expressed in kilowatthours sold) in the State
26 during the prior calendar month and the

HB4285- 58 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 denominator of which is the total retail market
2 sales of electricity (expressed in kilowatthours
3 sold) in the State by utilities during such prior
4 month and the sales of electricity (expressed in
5 kilowatthours sold) in the State by alternative
6 retail electric suppliers during such prior month
7 that are subject to the requirements of this
8 subsection (d) and paragraph (5) of subsection (d)
9 of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act,
10 provided that the amount purchased by the utility
11 in any year will be limited by paragraph (2) of
12 this subsection (d); and
13 (iv) be considered pre-existing contracts in
14 such utility's procurement plans for eligible
15 retail customers;
16 (C) contract for differences provisions, which
17 shall:
18 (i) require the utility party to such sourcing
19 agreement to contract with the initial clean coal
20 facility in each hour with respect to an amount of
21 energy equal to all clean coal energy made
22 available from the initial clean coal facility
23 during such hour times a fraction, the numerator of
24 which is such utility's retail market sales of
25 electricity (expressed in kilowatthours sold) in
26 the utility's service territory in the State

HB4285- 59 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 during the prior calendar month and the
2 denominator of which is the total retail market
3 sales of electricity (expressed in kilowatthours
4 sold) in the State by utilities during such prior
5 month and the sales of electricity (expressed in
6 kilowatthours sold) in the State by alternative
7 retail electric suppliers during such prior month
8 that are subject to the requirements of this
9 subsection (d) and paragraph (5) of subsection (d)
10 of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act,
11 provided that the amount paid by the utility in any
12 year will be limited by paragraph (2) of this
13 subsection (d);
14 (ii) provide that the utility's payment
15 obligation in respect of the quantity of
16 electricity determined pursuant to the preceding
17 clause (i) shall be limited to an amount equal to
18 (1) the difference between the contract price
19 determined pursuant to subparagraph (A) of
20 paragraph (3) of this subsection (d) and the
21 day-ahead price for electricity delivered to the
22 regional transmission organization market of the
23 utility that is party to such sourcing agreement
24 (or any successor delivery point at which such
25 utility's supply obligations are financially
26 settled on an hourly basis) (the "reference

HB4285- 60 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 price") on the day preceding the day on which the
2 electricity is delivered to the initial clean coal
3 facility busbar, multiplied by (2) the quantity of
4 electricity determined pursuant to the preceding
5 clause (i); and
6 (iii) not require the utility to take physical
7 delivery of the electricity produced by the
8 facility;
9 (D) general provisions, which shall:
10 (i) specify a term of no more than 30 years,
11 commencing on the commercial operation date of the
12 facility;
13 (ii) provide that utilities shall maintain
14 adequate records documenting purchases under the
15 sourcing agreements entered into to comply with
16 this subsection (d) and shall file an accounting
17 with the load forecast that must be filed with the
18 Agency by July 15 of each year, in accordance with
19 subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public
20 Utilities Act;
21 (iii) provide that all costs associated with
22 the initial clean coal facility will be
23 periodically reported to the Federal Energy
24 Regulatory Commission and to purchasers in
25 accordance with applicable laws governing
26 cost-based wholesale power contracts;

HB4285- 61 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 (iv) permit the Illinois Power Agency to
2 assume ownership of the initial clean coal
3 facility, without monetary consideration and
4 otherwise on reasonable terms acceptable to the
5 Agency, if the Agency so requests no less than 3
6 years prior to the end of the stated contract term;
7 (v) require the owner of the initial clean coal
8 facility to provide documentation to the
9 Commission each year, starting in the facility's
10 first year of commercial operation, accurately
11 reporting the quantity of carbon emissions from
12 the facility that have been captured and
13 sequestered and report any quantities of carbon
14 released from the site or sites at which carbon
15 emissions were sequestered in prior years, based
16 on continuous monitoring of such sites. If, in any
17 year after the first year of commercial operation,
18 the owner of the facility fails to demonstrate that
19 the initial clean coal facility captured and
20 sequestered at least 50% of the total carbon
21 emissions that the facility would otherwise emit
22 or that sequestration of emissions from prior
23 years has failed, resulting in the release of
24 carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the owner of
25 the facility must offset excess emissions. Any
26 such carbon offsets must be permanent, additional,

HB4285- 62 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 verifiable, real, located within the State of
2 Illinois, and legally and practicably enforceable.
3 The cost of such offsets for the facility that are
4 not recoverable shall not exceed $15 million in any
5 given year. No costs of any such purchases of
6 carbon offsets may be recovered from a utility or
7 its customers. All carbon offsets purchased for
8 this purpose and any carbon emission credits
9 associated with sequestration of carbon from the
10 facility must be permanently retired. The initial
11 clean coal facility shall not forfeit its
12 designation as a clean coal facility if the
13 facility fails to fully comply with the applicable
14 carbon sequestration requirements in any given
15 year, provided the requisite offsets are
16 purchased. However, the Attorney General, on
17 behalf of the People of the State of Illinois, may
18 specifically enforce the facility's sequestration
19 requirement and the other terms of this contract
20 provision. Compliance with the sequestration
21 requirements and offset purchase requirements
22 specified in paragraph (3) of this subsection (d)
23 shall be reviewed annually by an independent
24 expert retained by the owner of the initial clean
25 coal facility, with the advance written approval
26 of the Attorney General. The Commission may, in the

HB4285- 63 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 course of the review specified in item (vii),
2 reduce the allowable return on equity for the
3 facility if the facility wilfully fails to comply
4 with the carbon capture and sequestration
5 requirements set forth in this item (v);
6 (vi) include limits on, and accordingly
7 provide for modification of, the amount the
8 utility is required to source under the sourcing
9 agreement consistent with paragraph (2) of this
10 subsection (d);
11 (vii) require Commission review: (1) to
12 determine the justness, reasonableness, and
13 prudence of the inputs to the formula referenced in
14 subparagraphs (A)(i) through (A)(iii) of paragraph
15 (3) of this subsection (d), prior to an adjustment
16 in those inputs including, without limitation, the
17 capital structure and return on equity, fuel
18 costs, and other operations and maintenance costs
19 and (2) to approve the costs to be passed through
20 to customers under the sourcing agreement by which
21 the utility satisfies its statutory obligations.
22 Commission review shall occur no less than every 3
23 years, regardless of whether any adjustments have
24 been proposed, and shall be completed within 9
25 months;
26 (viii) limit the utility's obligation to such

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

HB4285- 65 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 the contract, insofar as such changes relate to the
2 power purchase provisions, are subject to review
3 under the public interest standard applied by the
4 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to
5 Sections 205 and 206 of the Federal Power Act; and
6 (xiii) conform with customary lender
7 requirements in power purchase agreements used as
8 the basis for financing non-utility generators.
9 (4) Effective date of sourcing agreements with the
10 initial clean coal facility.
11 Any proposed sourcing agreement with the initial clean
12 coal facility shall not become effective unless the
13 following reports are prepared and submitted and
14 authorizations and approvals obtained:
15 (i) Facility cost report. The owner of the initial
16 clean coal facility shall submit to the Commission, the
17 Agency, and the General Assembly a front-end
18 engineering and design study, a facility cost report,
19 method of financing (including but not limited to
20 structure and associated costs), and an operating and
21 maintenance cost quote for the facility (collectively
22 "facility cost report"), which shall be prepared in
23 accordance with the requirements of this paragraph (4)
24 of subsection (d) of this Section, and shall provide
25 the Commission and the Agency access to the work
26 papers, relied upon documents, and any other backup

HB4285- 66 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 documentation related to the facility cost report.
2 (ii) Commission report. Within 6 months following
3 receipt of the facility cost report, the Commission, in
4 consultation with the Agency, shall submit a report to
5 the General Assembly setting forth its analysis of the
6 facility cost report. Such report shall include, but
7 not be limited to, a comparison of the costs associated
8 with electricity generated by the initial clean coal
9 facility to the costs associated with electricity
10 generated by other types of generation facilities, an
11 analysis of the rate impacts on residential and small
12 business customers over the life of the sourcing
13 agreements, and an analysis of the likelihood that the
14 initial clean coal facility will commence commercial
15 operation by and be delivering power to the facility's
16 busbar by 2016. To assist in the preparation of its
17 report, the Commission, in consultation with the
18 Agency, may hire one or more experts or consultants,
19 the costs of which shall be paid for by the owner of
20 the initial clean coal facility. The Commission and
21 Agency may begin the process of selecting such experts
22 or consultants prior to receipt of the facility cost
23 report.
24 (iii) General Assembly approval. The proposed
25 sourcing agreements shall not take effect unless,
26 based on the facility cost report and the Commission's

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

HB4285- 68 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 estimated costs of operation and maintenance of the
2 facility. The facility cost report shall include:
3 (i) an estimate of the capital cost of the core
4 plant based on one or more front end engineering
5 and design studies for the gasification island and
6 related facilities. The core plant shall include
7 all civil, structural, mechanical, electrical,
8 control, and safety systems.
9 (ii) an estimate of the capital cost of the
10 balance of the plant, including any capital costs
11 associated with sequestration of carbon dioxide
12 emissions and all interconnects and interfaces
13 required to operate the facility, such as
14 transmission of electricity, construction or
15 backfeed power supply, pipelines to transport
16 substitute natural gas or carbon dioxide, potable
17 water supply, natural gas supply, water supply,
18 water discharge, landfill, access roads, and coal
19 delivery.
20 The quoted construction costs shall be expressed
21 in nominal dollars as of the date that the quote is
22 prepared and shall include capitalized financing costs
23 during construction, taxes, insurance, and other
24 owner's costs, and an assumed escalation in materials
25 and labor beyond the date as of which the construction
26 cost quote is expressed.

HB4285- 69 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 (B) The front end engineering and design study for
2 the gasification island and the cost study for the
3 balance of plant shall include sufficient design work
4 to permit quantification of major categories of
5 materials, commodities and labor hours, and receipt of
6 quotes from vendors of major equipment required to
7 construct and operate the clean coal facility.
8 (C) The facility cost report shall also include an
9 operating and maintenance cost quote that will provide
10 the estimated cost of delivered fuel, personnel,
11 maintenance contracts, chemicals, catalysts,
12 consumables, spares, and other fixed and variable
13 operations and maintenance costs. The delivered fuel
14 cost estimate will be provided by a recognized third
15 party expert or experts in the fuel and transportation
16 industries. The balance of the operating and
17 maintenance cost quote, excluding delivered fuel
18 costs, will be developed based on the inputs provided
19 by duly licensed engineering and construction firms
20 performing the construction cost quote, potential
21 vendors under long-term service agreements and plant
22 operating agreements, or recognized third party plant
23 operator or operators.
24 The operating and maintenance cost quote
25 (including the cost of the front end engineering and
26 design study) shall be expressed in nominal dollars as

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

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

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1 (d-5) Zero emission standard.
2 (1) Beginning with the delivery year commencing on June
3 1, 2017, the Agency shall, for electric utilities that
4 serve at least 100,000 retail customers in this State,
5 procure contracts with zero emission facilities that are
6 reasonably capable of generating cost-effective zero
7 emission credits in an amount approximately equal to 16% of
8 the actual amount of electricity delivered by each electric
9 utility to retail customers in the State during calendar
10 year 2014. For an electric utility serving fewer than
11 100,000 retail customers in this State that requested,
12 under Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act, that
13 the Agency procure power and energy for all or a portion of
14 the utility's Illinois load for the delivery year
15 commencing June 1, 2016, the Agency shall procure contracts
16 with zero emission facilities that are reasonably capable
17 of generating cost-effective zero emission credits in an
18 amount approximately equal to 16% of the portion of power
19 and energy to be procured by the Agency for the utility.
20 The duration of the contracts procured under this
21 subsection (d-5) shall be for a term of 10 years ending May
22 31, 2027. The quantity of zero emission credits to be
23 procured under the contracts shall be all of the zero
24 emission credits generated by the zero emission facility in
25 each delivery year; however, if the zero emission facility
26 is owned by more than one entity, then the quantity of zero

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1 emission credits to be procured under the contracts shall
2 be the amount of zero emission credits that are generated
3 from the portion of the zero emission facility that is
4 owned by the winning supplier.
5 The 16% value identified in this paragraph (1) is the
6 average of the percentage targets in subparagraph (B) of
7 paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this Act
8 for the 5 delivery years beginning June 1, 2017.
9 The procurement process shall be subject to the
10 following provisions:
11 (A) Those zero emission facilities that intend to
12 participate in the procurement shall submit to the
13 Agency the following eligibility information for each
14 zero emission facility on or before the date
15 established by the Agency:
16 (i) the in-service date and remaining useful
17 life of the zero emission facility;
18 (ii) the amount of power generated annually
19 for each of the years 2005 through 2015, and the
20 projected zero emission credits to be generated
21 over the remaining useful life of the zero emission
22 facility, which shall be used to determine the
23 capability of each facility;
24 (iii) the annual zero emission facility cost
25 projections, expressed on a per megawatthour
26 basis, over the next 6 delivery years, which shall

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1 include the following: operation and maintenance
2 expenses; fully allocated overhead costs, which
3 shall be allocated using the methodology developed
4 by the Institute for Nuclear Power Operations;
5 fuel expenditures; non-fuel capital expenditures;
6 spent fuel expenditures; a return on working
7 capital; the cost of operational and market risks
8 that could be avoided by ceasing operation; and any
9 other costs necessary for continued operations,
10 provided that "necessary" means, for purposes of
11 this item (iii), that the costs could reasonably be
12 avoided only by ceasing operations of the zero
13 emission facility; and
14 (iv) a commitment to continue operating, for
15 the duration of the contract or contracts executed
16 under the procurement held under this subsection
17 (d-5), the zero emission facility that produces
18 the zero emission credits to be procured in the
19 procurement.
20 The information described in item (iii) of this
21 subparagraph (A) may be submitted on a confidential basis
22 and shall be treated and maintained by the Agency, the
23 procurement administrator, and the Commission as
24 confidential and proprietary and exempt from disclosure
25 under subparagraphs (a) and (g) of paragraph (1) of Section
26 7 of the Freedom of Information Act. The Office of Attorney

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1 General shall have access to, and maintain the
2 confidentiality of, such information pursuant to Section
3 6.5 of the Attorney General Act.
4 (B) The price for each zero emission credit
5 procured under this subsection (d-5) for each delivery
6 year shall be in an amount that equals the Social Cost
7 of Carbon, expressed on a price per megawatthour basis.
8 However, to ensure that the procurement remains
9 affordable to retail customers in this State if
10 electricity prices increase, the price in an
11 applicable delivery year shall be reduced below the
12 Social Cost of Carbon by the amount ("Price
13 Adjustment") by which the market price index for the
14 applicable delivery year exceeds the baseline market
15 price index for the consecutive 12-month period ending
16 May 31, 2016. If the Price Adjustment is greater than
17 or equal to the Social Cost of Carbon in an applicable
18 delivery year, then no payments shall be due in that
19 delivery year. The components of this calculation are
20 defined as follows:
21 (i) Social Cost of Carbon: The Social Cost of
22 Carbon is $16.50 per megawatthour, which is based
23 on the U.S. Interagency Working Group on Social
24 Cost of Carbon's price in the August 2016 Technical
25 Update using a 3% discount rate, adjusted for
26 inflation for each year of the program. Beginning

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1 with the delivery year commencing June 1, 2023, the
2 price per megawatthour shall increase by $1 per
3 megawatthour, and continue to increase by an
4 additional $1 per megawatthour each delivery year
5 thereafter.
6 (ii) Baseline market price index: The baseline
7 market price index for the consecutive 12-month
8 period ending May 31, 2016 is $31.40 per
9 megawatthour, which is based on the sum of (aa) the
10 average day-ahead energy price across all hours of
11 such 12-month period at the PJM Interconnection
12 LLC Northern Illinois Hub, (bb) 50% multiplied by
13 the Base Residual Auction, or its successor,
14 capacity price for the rest of the RTO zone group
15 determined by PJM Interconnection LLC, divided by
16 24 hours per day, and (cc) 50% multiplied by the
17 Planning Resource Auction, or its successor,
18 capacity price for Zone 4 determined by the
19 Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc.,
20 divided by 24 hours per day.
21 (iii) Market price index: The market price
22 index for a delivery year shall be the sum of
23 projected energy prices and projected capacity
24 prices determined as follows:
25 (aa) Projected energy prices: the
26 projected energy prices for the applicable

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1 delivery year shall be calculated once for the
2 year using the forward market price for the PJM
3 Interconnection, LLC Northern Illinois Hub.
4 The forward market price shall be calculated as
5 follows: the energy forward prices for each
6 month of the applicable delivery year averaged
7 for each trade date during the calendar year
8 immediately preceding that delivery year to
9 produce a single energy forward price for the
10 delivery year. The forward market price
11 calculation shall use data published by the
12 Intercontinental Exchange, or its successor.
13 (bb) Projected capacity prices:
14 (I) For the delivery year years
15 commencing June 1, 2017, June 1, 2018, and
16 June 1, 2019, the projected capacity price
17 shall be equal to the sum of (1) 50%
18 multiplied by the Base Residual Auction,
19 or its successor, price for the rest of the
20 RTO zone group as determined by PJM
21 Interconnection LLC, divided by 24 hours
22 per day and, (2) 50% multiplied by the
23 resource auction price determined in the
24 resource auction administered by the
25 Midcontinent Independent System Operator,
26 Inc., in which the largest percentage of

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1 load cleared for Local Resource Zone 4,
2 divided by 24 hours per day, and where such
3 price is determined by the Midcontinent
4 Independent System Operator, Inc.
5 (I-5) For the delivery years
6 commencing June 1, 2019, and June 1, 2020,
7 the projected capacity price shall be
8 equal to the sum of (1) 50% multiplied by
9 the Base Residual Auction, or its
10 successor, price for the rest of the RTO
11 zone group as determined by PJM
12 Interconnection LLC, divided by 24 hours
13 per day and (2) 50% multiplied by the
14 weighted average price for capacity in
15 capacity contracts awarded in procurement
16 events conducted by the Agency under
17 subsection (b-5) of Section 16-111.5 of
18 the Public Utilities Act, divided by 24
19 hours per day, with such price to be
20 determined by the Agency.
21 (II) For the delivery year commencing
22 June 1, 2020, and each year thereafter, the
23 projected capacity price shall be equal to
24 the sum of (1) 50% multiplied by the Base
25 Residual Auction, or its successor, price
26 for the ComEd zone as determined by PJM

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1 Interconnection LLC, divided by 24 hours
2 per day, and (2) 50% multiplied by the
3 weighted average price for capacity in
4 capacity contracts awarded in procurement
5 events conducted by the Agency under
6 subsection (b-5) of Section 16-111.5 of
7 the Public Utilities Act, divided by 24
8 hours per day, with such price to be
9 determined by the Agency 50% multiplied by
10 the resource auction price determined in
11 the resource auction administered by the
12 Midcontinent Independent System Operator,
13 Inc., in which the largest percentage of
14 load cleared for Local Resource Zone 4,
15 divided by 24 hours per day, and where such
16 price is determined by the Midcontinent
17 Independent System Operator, Inc.
18 For purposes of this subsection (d-5):
19 "Rest of the RTO" and "ComEd Zone" shall have
20 the meaning ascribed to them by PJM
21 Interconnection, LLC.
22 "RTO" means regional transmission
23 organization.
24 (C) No later than 45 days after June 1, 2017 (the
25 effective date of Public Act 99-906) this amendatory
26 Act of the 99th General Assembly, the Agency shall

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1 publish its proposed zero emission standard
2 procurement plan. The plan shall be consistent with the
3 provisions of this paragraph (1) and shall provide that
4 winning bids shall be selected based on public interest
5 criteria that include, but are not limited to,
6 minimizing carbon dioxide emissions that result from
7 electricity consumed in Illinois and minimizing sulfur
8 dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and particulate matter
9 emissions that adversely affect the citizens of this
10 State. In particular, the selection of winning bids
11 shall take into account the incremental environmental
12 benefits resulting from the procurement, such as any
13 existing environmental benefits that are preserved by
14 the procurements held under Public Act 99-906 this
15 amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly and would
16 cease to exist if the procurements were not held,
17 including the preservation of zero emission
18 facilities. The plan shall also describe in detail how
19 each public interest factor shall be considered and
20 weighted in the bid selection process to ensure that
21 the public interest criteria are applied to the
22 procurement and given full effect.
23 For purposes of developing the plan, the Agency
24 shall consider any reports issued by a State agency,
25 board, or commission under House Resolution 1146 of the
26 98th General Assembly and paragraph (4) of subsection

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1 (d) of Section 1-75 of this Act, as well as publicly
2 available analyses and studies performed by or for
3 regional transmission organizations that serve the
4 State and their independent market monitors.
5 Upon publishing of the zero emission standard
6 procurement plan, copies of the plan shall be posted
7 and made publicly available on the Agency's website.
8 All interested parties shall have 10 days following the
9 date of posting to provide comment to the Agency on the
10 plan. All comments shall be posted to the Agency's
11 website. Following the end of the comment period, but
12 no more than 60 days later than June 1, 2017 (the
13 effective date of Public Act 99-906) this amendatory
14 Act of the 99th General Assembly, the Agency shall
15 revise the plan as necessary based on the comments
16 received and file its zero emission standard
17 procurement plan with the Commission.
18 If the Commission determines that the plan will
19 result in the procurement of cost-effective zero
20 emission credits, then the Commission shall, after
21 notice and hearing, but no later than 45 days after the
22 Agency filed the plan, approve the plan or approve with
23 modification. For purposes of this subsection (d-5),
24 "cost effective" means the projected costs of
25 procuring zero emission credits from zero emission
26 facilities do not cause the limit stated in paragraph

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1 (2) of this subsection to be exceeded.
2 (C-5) As part of the Commission's review and
3 acceptance or rejection of the procurement results,
4 the Commission shall, in its public notice of
5 successful bidders:
6 (i) identify how the winning bids satisfy the
7 public interest criteria described in subparagraph
8 (C) of this paragraph (1) of minimizing carbon
9 dioxide emissions that result from electricity
10 consumed in Illinois and minimizing sulfur
11 dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and particulate matter
12 emissions that adversely affect the citizens of
13 this State;
14 (ii) specifically address how the selection of
15 winning bids takes into account the incremental
16 environmental benefits resulting from the
17 procurement, including any existing environmental
18 benefits that are preserved by the procurements
19 held under Public Act 99-906 this amendatory Act of
20 the 99th General Assembly and would have ceased to
21 exist if the procurements had not been held, such
22 as the preservation of zero emission facilities;
23 (iii) quantify the environmental benefit of
24 preserving the resources identified in item (ii)
25 of this subparagraph (C-5), including the
26 following:

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1 (aa) the value of avoided greenhouse gas
2 emissions measured as the product of the zero
3 emission facilities' output over the contract
4 term multiplied by the U.S. Environmental
5 Protection Agency eGrid subregion carbon
6 dioxide emission rate and the U.S. Interagency
7 Working Group on Social Cost of Carbon's price
8 in the August 2016 Technical Update using a 3%
9 discount rate, adjusted for inflation for each
10 delivery year; and
11 (bb) the costs of replacement with other
12 zero carbon dioxide resources, including wind
13 and photovoltaic, based upon the simple
14 average of the following:
15 (I) the price, or if there is more than
16 one price, the average of the prices, paid
17 for renewable energy credits from new
18 utility-scale wind projects in the
19 procurement events specified in item (i)
20 of subparagraph (G) of paragraph (1) of
21 subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this Act;
22 and
23 (II) the price, or if there is more
24 than one price, the average of the prices,
25 paid for renewable energy credits from new
26 utility-scale solar projects and

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1 brownfield site photovoltaic projects in
2 the procurement events specified in item
3 (ii) of subparagraph (G) of paragraph (1)
4 of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of this
5 Act and, after January 1, 2015, renewable
6 energy credits from photovoltaic
7 distributed generation projects in
8 procurement events held under subsection
9 (c) of Section 1-75 of this Act.
10 Each utility shall enter into binding contractual
11 arrangements with the winning suppliers.
12 The procurement described in this subsection
13 (d-5), including, but not limited to, the execution of
14 all contracts procured, shall be completed no later
15 than May 10, 2017. Based on the effective date of
16 Public Act 99-906 this amendatory Act of the 99th
17 General Assembly, the Agency and Commission may, as
18 appropriate, modify the various dates and timelines
19 under this subparagraph and subparagraphs (C) and (D)
20 of this paragraph (1). The procurement and plan
21 approval processes required by this subsection (d-5)
22 shall be conducted in conjunction with the procurement
23 and plan approval processes required by subsection (c)
24 of this Section and Section 16-111.5 of the Public
25 Utilities Act, to the extent practicable.
26 Notwithstanding whether a procurement event is

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1 conducted under Section 16-111.5 of the Public
2 Utilities Act, the Agency shall immediately initiate a
3 procurement process on June 1, 2017 (the effective date
4 of Public Act 99-906) this amendatory Act of the 99th
5 General Assembly.
6 (D) Following the procurement event described in
7 this paragraph (1) and consistent with subparagraph
8 (B) of this paragraph (1), the Agency shall calculate
9 the payments to be made under each contract for the
10 next delivery year based on the market price index for
11 that delivery year. The Agency shall publish the
12 payment calculations no later than May 25, 2017 and
13 every May 25 thereafter.
14 (E) Notwithstanding the requirements of this
15 subsection (d-5), the contracts executed under this
16 subsection (d-5) shall provide that the zero emission
17 facility may, as applicable, suspend or terminate
18 performance under the contracts in the following
19 instances:
20 (i) A zero emission facility shall be excused
21 from its performance under the contract for any
22 cause beyond the control of the resource,
23 including, but not restricted to, acts of God,
24 flood, drought, earthquake, storm, fire,
25 lightning, epidemic, war, riot, civil disturbance
26 or disobedience, labor dispute, labor or material

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1 shortage, sabotage, acts of public enemy,
2 explosions, orders, regulations or restrictions
3 imposed by governmental, military, or lawfully
4 established civilian authorities, which, in any of
5 the foregoing cases, by exercise of commercially
6 reasonable efforts the zero emission facility
7 could not reasonably have been expected to avoid,
8 and which, by the exercise of commercially
9 reasonable efforts, it has been unable to
10 overcome. In such event, the zero emission
11 facility shall be excused from performance for the
12 duration of the event, including, but not limited
13 to, delivery of zero emission credits, and no
14 payment shall be due to the zero emission facility
15 during the duration of the event.
16 (ii) A zero emission facility shall be
17 permitted to terminate the contract if legislation
18 is enacted into law by the General Assembly that
19 imposes or authorizes a new tax, special
20 assessment, or fee on the generation of
21 electricity, the ownership or leasehold of a
22 generating unit, or the privilege or occupation of
23 such generation, ownership, or leasehold of
24 generation units by a zero emission facility.
25 However, the provisions of this item (ii) do not
26 apply to any generally applicable tax, special

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1 assessment or fee, or requirements imposed by
2 federal law.
3 (iii) A zero emission facility shall be
4 permitted to terminate the contract in the event
5 that the resource requires capital expenditures in
6 excess of $40,000,000 that were neither known nor
7 reasonably foreseeable at the time it executed the
8 contract and that a prudent owner or operator of
9 such resource would not undertake.
10 (iv) A zero emission facility shall be
11 permitted to terminate the contract in the event
12 the Nuclear Regulatory Commission terminates the
13 resource's license.
14 (F) If the zero emission facility elects to
15 terminate a contract under this subparagraph (E, of
16 this paragraph (1), then the Commission shall reopen
17 the docket in which the Commission approved the zero
18 emission standard procurement plan under subparagraph
19 (C) of this paragraph (1) and, after notice and
20 hearing, enter an order acknowledging the contract
21 termination election if such termination is consistent
22 with the provisions of this subsection (d-5).
23 (2) For purposes of this subsection (d-5), the amount
24 paid per kilowatthour means the total amount paid for
25 electric service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For
26 purposes of this subsection (d-5), the total amount paid

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1 for electric service includes, without limitation, amounts
2 paid for supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges,
3 and add-on taxes.
4 Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
5 (d-5), the contracts executed under this subsection (d-5)
6 shall provide that the total of zero emission credits
7 procured under a procurement plan shall be subject to the
8 limitations of this paragraph (2). For each delivery year,
9 the contractual volume receiving payments in such year
10 shall be reduced for all retail customers based on the
11 amount necessary to limit the net increase that delivery
12 year to the costs of those credits included in the amounts
13 paid by eligible retail customers in connection with
14 electric service to no more than 1.65% of the amount paid
15 per kilowatthour by eligible retail customers during the
16 year ending May 31, 2009. The result of this computation
17 shall apply to and reduce the procurement for all retail
18 customers, and all those customers shall pay the same
19 single, uniform cents per kilowatthour charge under
20 subsection (k) of Section 16-108 of the Public Utilities
21 Act. To arrive at a maximum dollar amount of zero emission
22 credits to be paid for the particular delivery year, the
23 resulting per kilowatthour amount shall be applied to the
24 actual amount of kilowatthours of electricity delivered by
25 the electric utility in the delivery year immediately prior
26 to the procurement, to all retail customers in its service

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1 territory. Unpaid contractual volume for any delivery year
2 shall be paid in any subsequent delivery year in which such
3 payments can be made without exceeding the amount specified
4 in this paragraph (2). The calculations required by this
5 paragraph (2) shall be made only once for each procurement
6 plan year. Once the determination as to the amount of zero
7 emission credits to be paid is made based on the
8 calculations set forth in this paragraph (2), no subsequent
9 rate impact determinations shall be made and no adjustments
10 to those contract amounts shall be allowed. All costs
11 incurred under those contracts and in implementing this
12 subsection (d-5) shall be recovered by the electric utility
13 as provided in this Section.
14 No later than June 30, 2019, the Commission shall
15 review the limitation on the amount of zero emission
16 credits procured under this subsection (d-5) and report to
17 the General Assembly its findings as to whether that
18 limitation unduly constrains the procurement of
19 cost-effective zero emission credits.
20 (3) Six years after the execution of a contract under
21 this subsection (d-5), the Agency shall determine whether
22 the actual zero emission credit payments received by the
23 supplier over the 6-year period exceed the Average ZEC
24 Payment. In addition, at the end of the term of a contract
25 executed under this subsection (d-5), or at the time, if
26 any, a zero emission facility's contract is terminated

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1 under subparagraph (E) of paragraph (1) of this subsection
2 (d-5), then the Agency shall determine whether the actual
3 zero emission credit payments received by the supplier over
4 the term of the contract exceed the Average ZEC Payment,
5 after taking into account any amounts previously credited
6 back to the utility under this paragraph (3). If the Agency
7 determines that the actual zero emission credit payments
8 received by the supplier over the relevant period exceed
9 the Average ZEC Payment, then the supplier shall credit the
10 difference back to the utility. The amount of the credit
11 shall be remitted to the applicable electric utility no
12 later than 120 days after the Agency's determination, which
13 the utility shall reflect as a credit on its retail
14 customer bills as soon as practicable; however, the credit
15 remitted to the utility shall not exceed the total amount
16 of payments received by the facility under its contract.
17 For purposes of this Section, the Average ZEC Payment
18 shall be calculated by multiplying the quantity of zero
19 emission credits delivered under the contract times the
20 average contract price. The average contract price shall be
21 determined by subtracting the amount calculated under
22 subparagraph (B) of this paragraph (3) from the amount
23 calculated under subparagraph (A) of this paragraph (3), as
24 follows:
25 (A) The average of the Social Cost of Carbon, as
26 defined in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of this

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1 subsection (d-5), during the term of the contract.
2 (B) The average of the market price indices, as
3 defined in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of this
4 subsection (d-5), during the term of the contract,
5 minus the baseline market price index, as defined in
6 subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of this subsection
7 (d-5).
8 If the subtraction yields a negative number, then the
9Average ZEC Payment shall be zero.
10 (4) Cost-effective zero emission credits procured from
11 zero emission facilities shall satisfy the applicable
12 definitions set forth in Section 1-10 of this Act.
13 (5) The electric utility shall retire all zero emission
14 credits used to comply with the requirements of this
15 subsection (d-5).
16 (6) Electric utilities shall be entitled to recover all
17 of the costs associated with the procurement of zero
18 emission credits through an automatic adjustment clause
19 tariff in accordance with subsection (k) and (m) of Section
20 16-108 of the Public Utilities Act, and the contracts
21 executed under this subsection (d-5) shall provide that the
22 utilities' payment obligations under such contracts shall
23 be reduced if an adjustment is required under subsection
24 (m) of Section 16-108 of the Public Utilities Act.
25 (7) This subsection (d-5) shall become inoperative on
26 January 1, 2028.

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1 (e) The draft procurement plans are subject to public
2comment, as required by Section 16-111.5 of the Public
3Utilities Act.
4 (f) The Agency shall submit the final procurement plan to
5the Commission. The Agency shall revise a procurement plan if
6the Commission determines that it does not meet the standards
7set forth in Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act.
8 (g) The Agency shall assess fees to each affected utility
9to recover the costs incurred in preparation of the annual
10procurement plan for the utility.
11 (h) The Agency shall assess fees to each bidder to recover
12the costs incurred in connection with a competitive procurement
13process.
14 (i) A renewable energy credit, carbon emission credit, or
15zero emission credit can only be used once to comply with a
16single portfolio or other standard as set forth in subsection
17(c), subsection (d), or subsection (d-5) of this Section,
18respectively. A renewable energy credit, carbon emission
19credit, or zero emission credit cannot be used to satisfy the
20requirements of more than one standard. If more than one type
21of credit is issued for the same megawatt hour of energy, only
22one credit can be used to satisfy the requirements of a single
23standard. After such use, the credit must be retired together
24with any other credits issued for the same megawatt hour of
25energy.
26(Source: P.A. 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 99-536, eff. 7-8-16;

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199-906, eff. 6-1-17; revised 9-25-17.)
2 Section 15. The Public Utilities Act is amended by changing
3Sections 16-111.5 and 16-115A as follows:
4 (220 ILCS 5/16-111.5)
5 Sec. 16-111.5. Provisions relating to procurement.
6 (a) An electric utility that on December 31, 2005 served at
7least 100,000 customers in Illinois shall procure power and
8energy for its eligible retail customers in accordance with the
9applicable provisions set forth in Section 1-75 of the Illinois
10Power Agency Act and this Section; provided, that beginning
11with the delivery year commencing June 1, 2019, an electric
12utility that serves fewer than 3,000,000 retail customers, but
13more than 500,000 retail customers in Illinois shall procure
14capacity, including any demand response products, in
15accordance with subsection (b-5) of this Section. Beginning
16with the delivery year commencing on June 1, 2017, an such
17electric utility that on December 31, 2005 served at least
18100,000 customers in Illinois shall also procure zero emission
19credits from zero emission facilities in accordance with the
20applicable provisions set forth in Section 1-75 of the Illinois
21Power Agency Act, and, for years beginning on or after June 1,
222017, the utility shall procure renewable energy resources in
23accordance with the applicable provisions set forth in Section
241-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and this Section. A small

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1multi-jurisdictional electric utility that on December 31,
22005 served less than 100,000 customers in Illinois may elect
3to procure power and energy for all or a portion of its
4eligible Illinois retail customers in accordance with the
5applicable provisions set forth in this Section and Section
61-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. This Section shall not
7apply to a small multi-jurisdictional utility until such time
8as a small multi-jurisdictional utility requests the Illinois
9Power Agency to prepare a procurement plan for its eligible
10retail customers. "Eligible retail customers" for the purposes
11of this Section means those retail customers that purchase
12power and energy from the electric utility under fixed-price
13bundled service tariffs, other than those retail customers
14whose service is declared or deemed competitive under Section
1516-113 and those other customer groups specified in this
16Section, including self-generating customers, customers
17electing hourly pricing, or those customers who are otherwise
18ineligible for fixed-price bundled tariff service. For those
19customers that are excluded from the procurement plan's
20electric supply service requirements, and the utility shall
21procure any supply requirements, including capacity, ancillary
22services, and hourly priced energy, in the applicable markets
23as needed to serve those customers, provided that the utility
24may include in its procurement plan load requirements for the
25load that is associated with those retail customers whose
26service has been declared or deemed competitive pursuant to

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1Section 16-113 of this Act to the extent that those customers
2are purchasing power and energy during one of the transition
3periods identified in subsection (b) of Section 16-113 of this
4Act.
5 (b) Procurement plans A procurement plan shall be prepared
6for each electric utility consistent with the applicable
7requirements of the Illinois Power Agency Act and this Section.
8For purposes of this Section, Illinois electric utilities that
9are affiliated by virtue of a common parent company are
10considered to be a single electric utility. Small
11multi-jurisdictional utilities may request a procurement plan
12for a portion of or all of its Illinois load. Each procurement
13plan shall analyze the projected balance of supply and demand
14for those retail customers to be included in the plan's
15electric supply service requirements over a 5-year period, with
16the first planning year beginning on June 1 of the year
17following the year in which the plan is filed. The plan shall
18specifically identify the wholesale products to be procured
19following plan approval, and shall follow all the requirements
20set forth in the Public Utilities Act and all applicable State
21and federal laws, statutes, rules, or regulations, as well as
22Commission orders. Nothing in this Section precludes
23consideration of contracts longer than 5 years and related
24forecast data. Unless specified otherwise in this Section, in
25the procurement plan or in the implementing tariff, any
26procurement occurring in accordance with this plan shall be

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1competitively bid through a request for proposals process.
2Approval and implementation of the procurement plan shall be
3subject to review and approval by the Commission according to
4the provisions set forth in this Section. A procurement plan
5shall include each of the following components:
6 (1) Hourly load analysis. This analysis shall include:
7 (i) multi-year historical analysis of hourly
8 loads;
9 (ii) switching trends and competitive retail
10 market analysis;
11 (iii) known or projected changes to future loads;
12 and
13 (iv) growth forecasts by customer class.
14 (2) Analysis of the impact of any demand side and
15 renewable energy initiatives. This analysis shall include:
16 (i) the impact of demand response programs and
17 energy efficiency programs, both current and
18 projected; for small multi-jurisdictional utilities,
19 the impact of demand response and energy efficiency
20 programs approved pursuant to Section 8-408 of this
21 Act, both current and projected; and
22 (ii) supply side needs that are projected to be
23 offset by purchases of renewable energy resources, if
24 any.
25 (3) A plan for meeting the expected load requirements
26 that will not be met through preexisting contracts. This

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1 plan shall include:
2 (i) definitions of the different Illinois retail
3 customer classes for which supply is being purchased;
4 (ii) the proposed mix of demand-response products
5 for which contracts will be executed during the next
6 year. For small multi-jurisdictional electric
7 utilities that on December 31, 2005 served fewer than
8 100,000 customers in Illinois, these shall be defined
9 as demand-response products offered in an energy
10 efficiency plan approved pursuant to Section 8-408 of
11 this Act. The cost-effective demand-response measures
12 shall be procured whenever the cost is lower than
13 procuring comparable capacity products, provided that
14 such products shall:
15 (A) be procured by a demand-response provider
16 from those retail customers included in the plan's
17 electric supply service requirements;
18 (B) at least satisfy the demand-response
19 requirements of the regional transmission
20 organization market in which the utility's service
21 territory is located, including, but not limited
22 to, any applicable capacity or dispatch
23 requirements;
24 (C) provide for customers' participation in
25 the stream of benefits produced by the
26 demand-response products;

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1 (D) provide for reimbursement by the
2 demand-response provider of the utility for any
3 costs incurred as a result of the failure of the
4 supplier of such products to perform its
5 obligations thereunder; and
6 (E) meet the same credit requirements as apply
7 to suppliers of capacity, in the applicable
8 regional transmission organization market;
9 (iii) monthly forecasted system supply
10 requirements, including expected minimum, maximum, and
11 average values for the planning period;
12 (iv) the proposed mix and selection of standard
13 wholesale products for which contracts will be
14 executed during the next year, separately or in
15 combination, to meet that portion of its load
16 requirements not met through pre-existing contracts,
17 including but not limited to monthly 5 x 16 peak period
18 block energy, monthly off-peak wrap energy, monthly 7 x
19 24 energy, annual 5 x 16 energy, annual off-peak wrap
20 energy, annual 7 x 24 energy, monthly capacity, annual
21 capacity, peak load capacity obligations, capacity
22 purchase plan, and ancillary services;
23 (v) proposed term structures for each wholesale
24 product type included in the proposed procurement plan
25 portfolio of products; and
26 (vi) an assessment of the price risk, load

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1 uncertainty, and other factors that are associated
2 with the proposed procurement plan; this assessment,
3 to the extent possible, shall include an analysis of
4 the following factors: contract terms, time frames for
5 securing products or services, fuel costs, weather
6 patterns, transmission costs, market conditions, and
7 the governmental regulatory environment; the proposed
8 procurement plan shall also identify alternatives for
9 those portfolio measures that are identified as having
10 significant price risk.
11 (4) Proposed procedures for balancing loads. The
12 procurement plan shall include, for load requirements
13 included in the procurement plan, the process for (i)
14 hourly balancing of supply and demand and (ii) the criteria
15 for portfolio re-balancing in the event of significant
16 shifts in load.
17 (5) Long-Term Renewable Resources Procurement Plan.
18 The Agency shall prepare a long-term renewable resources
19 procurement plan for the procurement of renewable energy
20 credits under Sections 1-56 and 1-75 of the Illinois Power
21 Agency Act for delivery beginning in the 2017 delivery
22 year.
23 (i) The initial long-term renewable resources
24 procurement plan and all subsequent revisions shall be
25 subject to review and approval by the Commission. For
26 the purposes of this Section, "delivery year" has the

HB4285- 100 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 same meaning as in Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power
2 Agency Act. For purposes of this Section, "Agency"
3 shall mean the Illinois Power Agency.
4 (ii) The long-term renewable resources planning
5 process shall be conducted as follows:
6 (A) Electric utilities shall provide a range
7 of load forecasts to the Illinois Power Agency
8 within 45 days of the Agency's request for
9 forecasts, which request shall specify the length
10 and conditions for the forecasts including, but
11 not limited to, the quantity of distributed
12 generation expected to be interconnected for each
13 year.
14 (B) The Agency shall publish for comment the
15 initial long-term renewable resources procurement
16 plan no later than 120 days after the effective
17 date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
18 Assembly and shall review, and may revise, the plan
19 at least every 2 years thereafter. To the extent
20 practicable, the Agency shall review and propose
21 any revisions to the long-term renewable energy
22 resources procurement plan in conjunction with the
23 Agency's other planning and approval processes
24 conducted under this Section. The initial
25 long-term renewable resources procurement plan
26 shall:

HB4285- 101 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 (aa) Identify the procurement programs and
2 competitive procurement events consistent with
3 the applicable requirements of the Illinois
4 Power Agency Act and shall be designed to
5 achieve the goals set forth in subsection (c)
6 of Section 1-75 of that Act.
7 (bb) Include a schedule for procurements
8 for renewable energy credits from
9 utility-scale wind projects, utility-scale
10 solar projects, and brownfield site
11 photovoltaic projects consistent with
12 subparagraph (G) of paragraph (1) of
13 subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois
14 Power Agency Act.
15 (cc) Identify the process whereby the
16 Agency will submit to the Commission for review
17 and approval the proposed contracts to
18 implement the programs required by such plan.
19 Copies of the initial long-term renewable
20 resources procurement plan and all subsequent
21 revisions shall be posted and made publicly
22 available on the Agency's and Commission's
23 websites, and copies shall also be provided to each
24 affected electric utility. An affected utility and
25 other interested parties shall have 45 days
26 following the date of posting to provide comment to

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1 the Agency on the initial long-term renewable
2 resources procurement plan and all subsequent
3 revisions. All comments submitted to the Agency
4 shall be specific, supported by data or other
5 detailed analyses, and, if objecting to all or a
6 portion of the procurement plan, accompanied by
7 specific alternative wording or proposals. All
8 comments shall be posted on the Agency's and
9 Commission's websites. During this 45-day comment
10 period, the Agency shall hold at least one public
11 hearing within each utility's service area that is
12 subject to the requirements of this paragraph (5)
13 for the purpose of receiving public comment.
14 Within 21 days following the end of the 45-day
15 review period, the Agency may revise the long-term
16 renewable resources procurement plan based on the
17 comments received and shall file the plan with the
18 Commission for review and approval.
19 (C) Within 14 days after the filing of the
20 initial long-term renewable resources procurement
21 plan or any subsequent revisions, any person
22 objecting to the plan may file an objection with
23 the Commission. Within 21 days after the filing of
24 the plan, the Commission shall determine whether a
25 hearing is necessary. The Commission shall enter
26 its order confirming or modifying the initial

HB4285- 103 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 long-term renewable resources procurement plan or
2 any subsequent revisions within 120 days after the
3 filing of the plan by the Illinois Power Agency.
4 (D) The Commission shall approve the initial
5 long-term renewable resources procurement plan and
6 any subsequent revisions, including expressly the
7 forecast used in the plan and taking into account
8 that funding will be limited to the amount of
9 revenues actually collected by the utilities, if
10 the Commission determines that the plan will
11 reasonably and prudently accomplish the
12 requirements of Section 1-56 and subsection (c) of
13 Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. The
14 Commission shall also approve the process for the
15 submission, review, and approval of the proposed
16 contracts to procure renewable energy credits or
17 implement the programs authorized by the
18 Commission pursuant to a long-term renewable
19 resources procurement plan approved under this
20 Section.
21 (iii) The Agency or third parties contracted by the
22 Agency shall implement all programs authorized by the
23 Commission in an approved long-term renewable
24 resources procurement plan without further review and
25 approval by the Commission. Third parties shall not
26 begin implementing any programs or receive any payment

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1 under this Section until the Commission has approved
2 the contract or contracts under the process authorized
3 by the Commission in item (D) of subparagraph (ii) of
4 paragraph (5) of this subsection (b) and the third
5 party and the Agency or utility, as applicable, have
6 executed the contract. For those renewable energy
7 credits subject to procurement through a competitive
8 bid process under the plan or under the initial forward
9 procurements for wind and solar resources described in
10 subparagraph (G) of paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of
11 Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, the
12 Agency shall follow the procurement process specified
13 in the provisions relating to electricity procurement
14 in subsections (e) through (i) of this Section.
15 (iv) An electric utility shall recover its costs
16 associated with the procurement of renewable energy
17 credits under this Section through an automatic
18 adjustment clause tariff under subsection (k) of
19 Section 16-108 of this Act. A utility shall not be
20 required to advance any payment or pay any amounts
21 under this Section that exceed the actual amount of
22 revenues collected by the utility under paragraph (6)
23 of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
24 Agency Act and subsection (k) of Section 16-108 of this
25 Act, and contracts executed under this Section shall
26 expressly incorporate this limitation.

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1 (v) For the public interest, safety, and welfare,
2 the Agency and the Commission may adopt rules to carry
3 out the provisions of this Section on an emergency
4 basis immediately following the effective date of this
5 amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly.
6 (vi) On or before July 1 of each year, the
7 Commission shall hold an informal hearing for the
8 purpose of receiving comments on the prior year's
9 procurement process and any recommendations for
10 change.
11 (b-5)(1) For purposes of this Section:
12 "Midcontinent Independent System Operator" shall mean
13 the Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., or its
14 successor approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory
15 Commission as the regional transmission organization for
16 the Applicable Local Resource Zone.
17 "MISO Tariff" shall mean the open access transmission
18 and energy markets tariff of the Midcontinent Independent
19 System Operator, Inc. or its successor, as that tariff may
20 be updated from time to time.
21 "Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan", "Load Serving Entity",
22 "Local Clearing Requirement", "Local Resource Zone",
23 "Planning Resource", and "Planning Reserve Margin
24 Requirement" shall have the meanings set forth in the MISO
25 Tariff.
26 "Peak Load Contribution" shall mean the peak load

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1 contribution, calculated in the manner specified in the
2 MISO Tariff, of, as applicable, a retail customer, a group
3 of retail customers served by a Load Serving Entity, or all
4 retail customers of the Applicable Electric Utility in the
5 Applicable Local Resource Zone.
6 "Applicable Electric Utility" shall mean an electric
7 utility serving less than 3,000,000 retail customers and
8 more than 500,000 retail customers in this State.
9 "Applicable Local Resource Zone" shall have the
10 meaning set forth in Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
11 Agency Act.
12 "Municipal utility" shall mean an entity described in
13 paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of Section 3-105 of this
14 Act.
15 "Electric cooperative" shall have the meaning set
16 forth in Section 3-119 of this Act.
17 "Contracted LSE Capacity" shall mean the amount of
18 capacity that a Load Serving Entity (i) has procured and
19 has under contract for the delivery year beginning June 1,
20 2019, June 1, 2020, or June 1, 2021, under a contract or
21 contracts entered into no later than the effective date of
22 this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, for
23 purposes of serving retail customers of the Applicable
24 Electric Utility in the Applicable Local Resource Zone; and
25 (ii) certifies to the Agency, in a certification signed by
26 an officer of the Load Serving Entity and submitted to the

HB4285- 107 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 Agency no later than 30 days following the effective date
2 of this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, that
3 the Load Serving Entity has procured and has under
4 contract. For purposes of this definition, capacity under
5 contract shall include capacity that a supplier of capacity
6 has entered into a written commitment to provide to a Load
7 Serving Entity that is a corporate affiliate of the
8 capacity supplier.
9 (2)(A) During the period between January 1 and March 1
10 of 2019, and of each year thereafter, the Agency, and, as
11 applicable, the procurement administrator, shall conduct a
12 capacity procurement event to procure capacity that is
13 sufficient, together with capacity procured in previous
14 capacity procurement events, to meet at least 90% of the
15 portion of the projected Planning Reserve Margin
16 Requirement for the delivery year beginning the third June
17 1 following the capacity procurement event that is
18 attributable to the projected load of the retail customers
19 of each Applicable Electric Utility. Provided, that (i) the
20 initial capacity procurement event conducted in 2019 shall
21 also procure capacity that is sufficient to meet at least
22 90% of the projected Planning Reserve Margin Requirement
23 for the delivery years beginning June 1, 2020, and June 1,
24 2021, that is attributable to the projected load of the
25 retail customers of each Applicable Electric Utility; and
26 (ii) each capacity procurement event shall also procure any

HB4285- 108 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 additional capacity that is necessary, together with
2 capacity procured in previous annual capacity procurement
3 events, to meet 100% of the portion of the Planning Reserve
4 Margin Requirement for the delivery year beginning June 1
5 of that same year that is attributable to the projected
6 load of the retail customers of each Applicable Electric
7 Utility. The capacity procurement plans developed by the
8 Agency and the capacity procurement events shall be
9 designed to procure capacity to ensure long-term resource
10 adequacy at the lowest cost over time, taking into account
11 the benefits of price stability and the need to ensure the
12 reliability, adequacy, and resilience of the bulk power
13 generation and delivery system in the Applicable Local
14 Resource Zone.
15 (B) In determining or projecting the Planning
16 Reserve Margin Requirement and the Local Clearing
17 Requirement in the Applicable Local Resource Zone
18 attributable to the retail customers of the Applicable
19 Electric Utility for a delivery year for purposes of
20 capacity procurement plans and capacity procurement
21 events under this subsection (b-5), the Agency and, as
22 applicable, the procurement administrator shall use,
23 as applicable, the Planning Reserve Margin
24 Requirement, Peak Load Contribution, and Local
25 Clearing Requirement as established or projected by
26 the Midcontinent Independent System Operator. If the

HB4285- 109 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 Midcontinent Independent System Operator has not
2 established or released a projection of the Planning
3 Reserve Margin Requirement, Peak Load Contribution, or
4 Local Clearing Requirement for a delivery year, the
5 Agency and, as applicable, the procurement
6 administrator shall develop forecasts of the Planning
7 Reserve Margin Requirement, Peak Load Contribution,
8 and Local Clearing Requirement for that delivery year
9 based on available information, including, without
10 limiting the foregoing, the most recent Planning
11 Reserve Margin Requirement, Peak Load Contribution,
12 and Local Clearing Requirement established by the
13 Midcontinent Independent System Operator for a
14 delivery year and any other information from the
15 Midcontinent Independent System Operator and the
16 Applicable Electric Utility. If requested by the
17 Agency, the Applicable Electric Utility shall provide
18 to the Agency actual and forecasted peak electric load
19 information for the retail customers of the Applicable
20 Electric Utility in the Applicable Local Resource
21 Zone.
22 (3)(A) Each capacity procurement event may include the
23 procurement of capacity through a mix of contracts with
24 different terms and different initial delivery dates as
25 proposed by the Agency in its capacity procurement plan and
26 approved by the Commission, so long as each annual capacity

HB4285- 110 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 procurement event results in the procurement of an amount
2 of capacity that, together with capacity procured in
3 previous capacity procurement events, is equal to the
4 portion or portions of the projected Planning Reserve
5 Margin Requirement of the retail customers of each
6 Applicable Electric Utility for the delivery year or
7 delivery years for which capacity is to be procured as
8 specified in paragraph (2) of this subsection (b-5).
9 Provided, that in the initial procurement event conducted
10 in 2019, a portion, as proposed by the Agency and approved
11 by the Commission, of the capacity shall be procured under
12 contracts with a term of at least 3 years beginning June 1,
13 2019.
14 (B) The Agency's annual capacity procurement plans
15 for the Applicable Local Resource Zone shall be
16 developed as follows: No later than July 15 of each
17 year, the Agency shall post on its website and
18 otherwise make publicly available, for public comment,
19 its draft capacity procurement plan for the capacity
20 procurement event to be held in February of the
21 following calendar year. Interested parties shall be
22 allowed 30 days from the posting of the draft capacity
23 procurement plan to submit comments to the Agency. The
24 Agency shall consider any comments received and shall
25 file its proposed capacity procurement plan with the
26 Commission within 15 days following the conclusion of

HB4285- 111 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 the public comment period. The Commission shall open a
2 docketed proceeding for consideration and approval or
3 modification of the proposed capacity procurement
4 plan. The Commission or its administrative law judge
5 assigned to the proceeding shall establish a
6 procedural schedule for the proceeding that will
7 enable the Commission to issue an order, within 90 days
8 following the date the capacity procurement plan was
9 filed with the Commission, approving, with any
10 modifications directed by the Commission, the capacity
11 procurement plan. On or before December 1 each year,
12 the Commission shall issue its order in the proceeding
13 approving, or approving with modifications, the
14 capacity procurement plan. Provided, that for the
15 initial capacity procurement event to be conducted in
16 2019, (i) the Agency shall file its proposed capacity
17 procurement plan with the Commission within 30 days
18 following the effective date of this amendatory Act of
19 the 100th General Assembly; (ii) the Commission, after
20 notice and hearing, shall approve the capacity
21 procurement plan, with such modifications as directed
22 by the Commission, within 30 days following the date
23 that the proposed capacity procurement plan was filed
24 with the Commission; and (iii) the capacity
25 procurement event shall be held no later than March 1,
26 2019.

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1 (4) To the extent that any other provision of this
2 Section or any provision of the Illinois Power Agency Act
3 are not inconsistent with the provisions of this subsection
4 (b-5) for, and are otherwise applicable to, capacity
5 procurement events conducted under this subsection (b-5),
6 those other provisions shall be used in conducting capacity
7 procurement events conducted under this subsection (b-5).
8 (5) The capacity procurement plans prepared by, and the
9 capacity procurement events conducted by, the Agency under
10 this subsection (b-5) shall be subject to the following
11 requirements:
12 (A) The mix of capacity resources selected in any
13 procurement event conducted under this subsection
14 (b-5) must include sufficient qualified Zonal Resource
15 Credits, together with capacity procured in previous
16 capacity procurement events, to satisfy the portion
17 specified in paragraph (2) of this subsection (b-5) of
18 the Planning Reserve Margin Requirements of the MISO
19 Tariff for the Applicable Local Resource Zone, and must
20 otherwise be consistent with the Planning Reserve
21 Margin Requirements for capacity established by the
22 Midcontinent Independent System Operator. Provided,
23 that the procurement of capacity in the capacity
24 procurement events shall not include the portion of the
25 Planning Reserve Margin Requirement for the Applicable
26 Local Resource Zone associated with customers served

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1 by a municipal utility or an electric cooperative.
2 (B) The capacity to be procured for each delivery
3 year shall include an amount of capacity from capacity
4 resources physically located within the Applicable
5 Local Resource Zone that is no less than the portion of
6 the projected Local Clearing Requirement for the
7 Applicable Local Resource Zone for that delivery year
8 attributable to the load of the retail customers of the
9 Applicable Electric Utility.
10 (C) In each capacity procurement plan, the Agency
11 shall include a discussion of whether factors, other
12 than price, to support reliability in the Applicable
13 Local Resource Zone should be taken into account in
14 selecting capacity resources in the capacity
15 procurement event or events that are the subject of the
16 capacity procurement plan. The Agency may propose in
17 the capacity procurement plan to procure a specified
18 amount or amounts of capacity from capacity resources
19 located within the Applicable Local Resource Zone,
20 over and above the amount of capacity required to
21 satisfy the Local Clearing Requirement, to support
22 reliability within the Applicable Local Resource Zone,
23 including, but not limited to, for purposes of
24 transmission security, voltage support, dynamic
25 stability, frequency response, fuel security and
26 on-site fuel supply, and import transfer capability.

HB4285- 114 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 The inclusion of any such factors in the capacity
2 procurement plan shall be subject to approval of the
3 Commission.
4 (D) Any capacity resource, including, without
5 limitation, demand response resources, energy
6 efficiency resources, and renewable energy resources,
7 that meets the other eligibility requirements of this
8 subsection (b-5), shall be eligible to participate in a
9 capacity procurement event under this subsection (b-5)
10 if, and to the extent that, the resource satisfies all
11 the requirements of the MISO Tariff to be designated as
12 a Zonal Resource Credit or other Planning Resource in a
13 Load Serving Entity's Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan or
14 successor mechanism for the Applicable Local Resource
15 Zone. Provided, that a municipal utility, an electric
16 cooperative, a municipal electric power agency or
17 other group, association, or consortium of municipal
18 utilities or electric cooperatives may participate in
19 a capacity procurement event, using capacity that it
20 owns or leases, only to the extent that the owned and
21 leased capacity of the municipal utility, electric
22 cooperative, municipal electric power agency, or
23 group, association, or consortium exceeds the Planning
24 Reserve Margin Requirement (or comparable measure in
25 the regional transmission organization in which the
26 customers of the municipal utility, electric

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1 cooperative, municipal electric power agency, or
2 members of the group, association, or consortium are
3 located) attributable to the load of the customers that
4 the municipal utility, electric cooperative, municipal
5 electric power agency, or group, association, or
6 consortium is obligated to serve. As a condition to
7 eligibility to participate in a capacity procurement
8 event conducted under this subsection (b-5), each
9 municipal utility, electric cooperative, municipal
10 electric power agency, and group, association, and
11 consortium of municipal utilities or electric
12 cooperatives shall certify its compliance with this
13 requirement to the Agency for the capacity procurement
14 event.
15 (E) As a condition to eligibility to participate in
16 a capacity procurement event conducted under this
17 subsection (b-5), a supplier of capacity resources (i)
18 must commit to pay any fees assessed by the Agency to
19 recover the Agency's costs of conducting the capacity
20 procurement event and any related activities under
21 this subsection (b-5); and (ii) must agree that, if
22 selected as a supplier in the capacity procurement
23 event, it will enter into a standard form contract
24 developed by the procurement administrator and
25 conforming to the requirements of this subsection
26 (b-5) with each Load Serving Entity for which capacity

HB4285- 116 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 is procured in the capacity procurement event.
2 (F) For each capacity procurement event conducted
3 under this subsection (b-5), the procurement
4 administrator, in consultation with the Commission
5 staff, Agency staff, and the procurement monitor,
6 shall establish confidential market-based benchmarks,
7 in accordance with paragraph (3) of subsection (e) of
8 this Section, for evaluating the final prices in the
9 contracts for the capacity that will be procured.
10 (G) In each capacity procurement event conducted
11 under this subsection (b-5), the procurement
12 administrator shall select capacity resources in the
13 amounts offered by capacity suppliers based on each
14 capacity supplier's offer price until sufficient
15 capacity (including any capacity offered under item
16 (ii) of subparagraph (H) and subparagraph (J) of this
17 paragraph (5) of this subsection (b-5)) has been
18 selected to reach the total amount of capacity to be
19 selected for each delivery year for which capacity is
20 being procured in the capacity procurement event.
21 Provided, that in selecting capacity resources, the
22 procurement administrator shall also take into
23 account, in accordance with and to the extent and in
24 the manner specified in, the capacity procurement plan
25 approved by the Commission for the capacity
26 procurement event, other factors to support

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1 reliability in the Applicable Local Resource Zone,
2 including, but not limited to, for purposes of
3 transmission security, voltage support, dynamic
4 stability, frequency response, fuel security and
5 on-site fuel supply, and import transfer capability.
6 If the procurement administrator, or the
7 Commission upon receiving the procurement
8 administrator's recommendation submitted under item
9 (ix) of paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of this Section
10 for the immediately upcoming delivery year beginning
11 on the immediately upcoming June 1, determines that an
12 insufficient amount of capacity has been offered in
13 bids that conform to the bidding requirements for the
14 capacity procurement event and at bid prices that are
15 deemed reasonable as compared to the applicable
16 benchmarks to fulfill the capacity procurement
17 objectives of the capacity procurement event, then the
18 Agency and the procurement administrator, in their
19 discretion, shall either (i) if sufficient time
20 remains prior to March 1, expeditiously conduct an
21 additional bid solicitation to procure additional
22 capacity for the immediately upcoming delivery year;
23 or (ii) notify the Load Serving Entities in the
24 Applicable Local Resource Zone that any additional
25 capacity required to meet the Planning Reserve Margin
26 Requirement obligations of the Load Serving Entity for

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1 the immediately upcoming delivery year shall be
2 obtained through the planning reserve auction or other
3 auction conducted by the Midcontinent Independent
4 System Operator.
5 (H) For the initial capacity procurement event to
6 be conducted in 2019 to procure capacity for the
7 delivery years beginning June 1, 2019, June 1, 2020,
8 and June 1, 2021, any Load Serving Entity holding
9 Contracted LSE Capacity may, but shall not be required
10 to, participate in the capacity procurement event as a
11 supplier of capacity resources using either of the
12 following two options:
13 (i) The Load Serving Entity may bid all or a
14 portion of its Contracted LSE Capacity into the
15 capacity procurement event as a capacity resource,
16 at a specified offer price, and the Contracted LSE
17 Capacity bid shall be eligible to be selected by
18 the procurement administrator in accordance with
19 subparagraph (G) of this paragraph (5) of this
20 subsection (b-5).
21 (ii) The Load Serving Entity may designate all
22 or a portion of its Contracted LSE Capacity to be
23 selected by the procurement administrator at a
24 price equal to the weighted average offer price of
25 all other capacity resources selected by the
26 procurement administrator. Under this option, the

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1 Load Serving Entity's Contracted LSE Capacity is
2 selected as a capacity resource at a price equal to
3 the weighted average offer price of all other
4 capacity resources selected by the procurement
5 administrator.
6 Under either items (i) or (ii), the Contracted LSE
7 Capacity must be supplied from a capacity resource that
8 meets the other requirements of this subsection (b-5)
9 to participate and be selected in the capacity
10 procurement event, and the Contracted LSE Capacity
11 must be offered for a contract term lasting until the
12 end date of the Load Serving Entity's contract term for
13 the Contracted LSE Capacity or until May 31, 2022,
14 whichever occurs earlier. A Load Serving Entity shall
15 not be required to use either of the options specified
16 in this subparagraph (H) for its Contracted LSE
17 Capacity. The Agency shall maintain as confidential
18 and proprietary and exempt from disclosure the amount
19 of Contracted LSE Capacity certified by a Load Serving
20 Entity to the Agency, except to the extent that the
21 Load-Serving Entity elects to use one or both of the
22 options specified in this subparagraph (H).
23 (I) Each capacity supplier whose capacity resource
24 is selected shall enter into contracts conforming to
25 the provisions of this subsection (b-5) with the Load
26 Serving Entities serving the retail customers of the

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1 Applicable Electric Utility in the Applicable Local
2 Resource Zone for, in the aggregate, the total amount
3 of capacity selected at the price bid by the capacity
4 supplier for that amount of capacity. Provided, that
5 (i) the procurement administrator shall have authority
6 to negotiate with a capacity supplier that submitted a
7 bid price below the applicable benchmark price
8 established for the capacity procurement event to
9 lower that capacity supplier's bid price, as provided
10 in item (vii) of subparagraph (1) of subsection (c) of
11 this Section; and (ii) the selection of capacity
12 suppliers, the amounts of capacity selected from each
13 supplier, and the prices for any capacity resources
14 selected in a capacity procurement event shall be
15 subject to the approval of the Commission in accordance
16 with subsection (f) of this Section.
17 (J) Capacity awarded in the Peak Time Rewards
18 program or successor program, if any, of an Applicable
19 Electric Utility shall be included in the capacity
20 resources selected for each delivery year for which
21 capacity is procured in a capacity procurement event,
22 at a price for that delivery year equal to the weighted
23 average price of the other capacity resources selected
24 under this subsection (b-5) for the delivery year.
25 Prior to a capacity procurement event being conducted
26 under this subsection (b-5) to procure capacity for a

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1 delivery year, the Applicable Electric Utility shall
2 notify the Agency and the procurement administrator of
3 the amount of capacity awarded or forecasted to be
4 awarded in the Peak Time Rewards program for each
5 delivery year for which capacity is to be procured in
6 the capacity procurement event. For purposes of
7 contract administration and settlements, the
8 Applicable Electric Utility shall be deemed the
9 capacity supplier of capacity awarded in its Peak Time
10 Rewards program or successor program.
11 (6) Each (i) capacity supplier selected in a capacity
12 procurement event conducted by the Illinois Power Agency
13 under this subsection (b-5), including each Load Serving
14 Entity offering Contracted LSE Capacity under item (i) of
15 subparagraph (H) of paragraph (5) of this subsection (b-5)
16 that is selected in the capacity procurement event, each
17 Load Serving Entity designating Contracted LSE Capacity
18 under item (ii) of subparagraph (H) of paragraph (5) of
19 this subsection (b-5), and an Applicable Electric Utility
20 as the supplier of capacity awarded under its Peak Time
21 Rewards program or successor program in accordance with
22 subparagraph (J) of paragraph (5) of this subsection (b-5);
23 and (ii) each Load Serving Entity serving retail customers
24 of an Applicable Electric Utility in an Applicable Resource
25 Zone, shall enter into contracts for capacity developed by
26 the procurement administrator in accordance with paragraph

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1 (9) of this subsection (b-5).
2 (7) The Agency shall request that the Midcontinent
3 Independent System Operator serve as and perform the
4 responsibilities of the capacity data administrator as set
5 forth in this subsection (b-5). If the Midcontinent
6 Independent System Operator declines to serve as, or
7 resigns as, the capacity data administrator, the Agency,
8 after consultation with the Commission, shall contract
9 with a third party to serve as the capacity data
10 administrator. The costs of the capacity data
11 administrator to perform its responsibilities under this
12 subsection (b-5) shall be reimbursed by the Agency. The
13 Agency shall recover such costs through fees assessed to
14 the Load Serving Entities that enter into contracts for
15 capacity under this Section.
16 (8) The Applicable Electric Utility shall supply to the
17 capacity data administrator, on a daily basis, a report or
18 reports showing the total load of the Applicable Electric
19 Utility's retail customers in the Applicable Local
20 Resource Zone that is served by each Load Serving Entity on
21 each day. Based upon and in reliance on the information
22 provided by the Applicable Electric Utility, the capacity
23 data administrator shall issue daily reports to each
24 capacity supplier and each Load Serving Entity setting
25 forth the amount of capacity being provided by each
26 capacity supplier under its contract with each Load Serving

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1 Entity on that day, calculated in accordance with
2 subparagraph (C) of paragraph (9) of this subsection (b-5).
3 (9) The procurement administrator, in conjunction with
4 the Agency and the staff of the Commission and based on
5 consultation with prospective capacity suppliers and with
6 Load Serving Entities serving retail customers of
7 Applicable Electric Utilities in an Applicable Local
8 Resource Zone, shall promulgate, and shall revise from time
9 to time as necessary and appropriate, standard form
10 contracts to be entered into between the Load Serving
11 Entities and capacity suppliers selected in procurement
12 events conducted under this subsection (b-5). The standard
13 form contracts to be used in connection with each capacity
14 procurement event conducted under this subsection (b-5)
15 shall be made available to prospective capacity suppliers
16 prior to the capacity procurement event. Each capacity
17 supplier seeking to participate in a capacity procurement
18 event shall agree, as a condition of eligibility to
19 participate, that if selected, it will enter into the
20 standard form contract with each Load Serving Entity
21 serving retail customers of the Applicable Electric
22 Utility in the Applicable Local Resource Zone. The standard
23 form contracts shall contain, without limitation, the
24 following provisions.
25 (A) Each contract between a capacity supplier and a
26 Load Serving Entity shall specify that the amount of

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1 capacity to be provided by the capacity supplier and
2 purchased by the Load Serving Entity shall be that
3 portion of the total capacity to be supplied by the
4 capacity supplier equal to the load ratio share of the
5 Applicable Electric Utility's retail customers served
6 by the Load Serving Entity as a percentage of the total
7 Planning Reserve Margin Requirement attributable to
8 the load of the Applicable Electric Utility's retail
9 customers in the Applicable Local Resource Zone on
10 March 1 immediately preceding the first delivery year
11 for which the contract is in effect.
12 (B) The standard form contracts shall specify that
13 if the Agency determines between March 1 and June 1 of
14 a year that the aggregate amount of capacity procured
15 in capacity procurement events for the immediately
16 upcoming delivery year beginning June 1 exceeds the
17 amount of capacity needed to meet the Planning Reserve
18 Margin Requirement attributable to the load of the
19 retail customers of the Applicable Electric Utility in
20 the Applicable Local Resource Zone, and directs that
21 the capacity to be supplied by each capacity supplier
22 for the immediately upcoming delivery year beginning
23 June 1 shall be reduced on a pro rata basis so that the
24 aggregate amount of capacity to be supplied for the
25 immediately upcoming delivery year is equal to the
26 amount of capacity needed to meet the Planning Reserve

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1 Margin Requirement attributable to the load of the
2 retail customers of the Applicable Electric Utility in
3 the Applicable Local Resource Zone, then the amount of
4 capacity to be supplied and purchased under each
5 contract between a capacity supplier and a Load Serving
6 Entity shall be deemed reduced as directed by the
7 Agency. The standard form contract shall specify that
8 any such reduction in the capacity to be supplied under
9 the contract shall apply only to the immediately
10 upcoming delivery year and not to any subsequent years
11 in the contract term. The standard form contracts shall
12 provide that in the event of a reduction in the
13 capacity to be supplied in accordance with this
14 subparagraph (B), the capacity supplier may resell or
15 otherwise dispose of the capacity it is no longer
16 obligated to supply, including by offering the
17 capacity into a planning reserve auction or other
18 auction conducted by the Midcontinent Independent
19 System Operator.
20 (C) Each contract between a capacity supplier and a
21 Load Serving Entity shall specify that beginning on
22 June 1 of the first delivery year for which the
23 contract is in effect, and continuing for the term of
24 the contract, the amount of capacity being provided by
25 the capacity supplier and purchased by the Load Serving
26 Entity shall be deemed adjusted on a daily basis to be

HB4285- 126 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 equal to that portion of the total capacity to be
2 supplied by the capacity supplier equal to the load
3 ratio share of the Applicable Electric Utility's
4 retail customers in the Applicable Local Resource Zone
5 that are served by the Load Serving Entity to the total
6 Planning Reserve Margin Requirement attributable to
7 the load of the Applicable Electric Utility's retail
8 customers in the Applicable Local Resource Zone on that
9 day.
10 (D) The standard form contracts shall specify the
11 frequency of billing periods and payment remittance
12 periods for the capacity supplier to bill the Load
13 Serving Entity, and the Load Serving Entity to remit
14 payment to the capacity supplier, for the capacity
15 provided by the capacity supplier to the Load Serving
16 Entity under the contract on each day during the
17 billing period. A capacity supplier and a Load Serving
18 Entity may agree to modify their contract to provide
19 for billing and payment remittance periods other than
20 the billing and payment dates specified in the standard
21 form contracts.
22 (E) The standard form contracts shall include
23 provisions relating to the credit, collateral,
24 performance, and dispute resolution obligations of the
25 parties, and other terms and conditions as described in
26 paragraph (2) of subsection (e) of this Section. The

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1 provisions in the standard form contracts relating to
2 credit and collateral shall determine the collateral
3 obligations of the Load Serving Entity based on
4 application of metrics relating to the Load Serving
5 Entity's financial condition and creditworthiness, the
6 frequency of billing periods and payment remittance
7 periods specified in the contract, and the legal
8 authority of the Load Serving Entity to recover its
9 costs for the capacity from its retail customers. A
10 capacity supplier and a Load Serving Entity may agree
11 to modify these terms in their contract.
12 (10) Each Load Serving Entity that is an alternative
13 retail electric supplier shall be allowed to recover and
14 shall be responsible for recovering its costs for capacity
15 incurred under contracts entered into under this
16 subsection (b-5) in accordance with its contracts and
17 arrangements entered into with its customers. A Load
18 Serving Entity that is an Applicable Electric Utility shall
19 recover its costs for capacity incurred under contracts
20 entered into under this subsection (b-5) in accordance with
21 the electric utility's tariff or other cost recovery
22 mechanism approved by the Commission under subsection (l)
23 of this Section.
24 (11) Nothing in this subsection (b-5) is intended to
25 preclude the Agency or the Commission from conducting the
26 procurement events and processes described in this

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1 subsection (b-5) in conjunction with other procurement
2 processes described in this Section or Section 1-75 of the
3 Illinois Power Agency Act, to the extent the Agency and the
4 Commission find that approach is appropriate and
5 practicable while allowing the annual capacity procurement
6 plans to be developed and submitted by the Agency and
7 approved by the Commission in accordance with the schedule
8 set forth in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3) of this
9 subsection (b-5), and allowing the capacity procurement
10 events to be conducted within the time periods specified in
11 this subsection (b-5).
12 (12) It is the intent of this subsection (b-5) that the
13 Agency's and the Commission's implementation of this
14 subsection, including, but not limited to, the timing and
15 number of procurement events and the duration of contracts,
16 shall conform, at a minimum, to any applicable requirements
17 of the MISO Tariff, as the MISO Tariff may be changed,
18 replaced, or superseded from time to time, that are
19 necessary for Load Serving Entities serving retail
20 customers of an Applicable Electric Utility in an
21 Applicable Local Resource Zone to exercise and implement
22 the Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan capacity procurement
23 option, or a successor capacity procurement mechanism.
24 Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, the Agency and
25 the Commission shall have the authority to take all steps
26 necessary to implement this subsection (b-5) consistent

HB4285- 129 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 with applicable federal tariffs, and as those tariffs may
2 be changed, replaced, or superseded from time to time, to
3 procure capacity for the electric load of retail customers
4 of Applicable Electric Utilities subject to the
5 requirements of this subsection (b-5).
6 (c) The procurement process set forth in Section 1-75 of
7the Illinois Power Agency Act and subsection (e) of this
8Section shall be administered by a procurement administrator
9and monitored by a procurement monitor. Provided, beginning
10with the delivery year commencing June 1, 2019, that if and to
11the extent a provision of subsection (b-5) of this Section is
12inconsistent with a provision of Section 1-75 of the Illinois
13Power Agency Act or of another subsection of this Section, the
14provision of subsection (b-5) shall control and shall be
15applied for purposes of capacity procurement plans and capacity
16procurement processes conducted under subsection (b-5).
17 (1) The procurement administrator shall:
18 (i) design the final procurement process in
19 accordance with Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
20 Agency Act and subsection (e) of this Section following
21 Commission approval of the procurement plan;
22 (ii) develop benchmarks in accordance with
23 subsection (e)(3) to be used to evaluate bids; these
24 benchmarks shall be submitted to the Commission for
25 review and approval on a confidential basis prior to
26 the procurement event;

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1 (iii) serve as the interface between the electric
2 utility and suppliers;
3 (iv) manage the bidder pre-qualification and
4 registration process;
5 (v) obtain the electric utilities' agreement to
6 the final form of all supply contracts and credit
7 collateral agreements;
8 (vi) administer the request for proposals process;
9 (vii) have the discretion to negotiate to
10 determine whether bidders are willing to lower the
11 price of bids that meet the benchmarks approved by the
12 Commission; any post-bid negotiations with bidders
13 shall be limited to price only and shall be completed
14 within 24 hours after opening the sealed bids and shall
15 be conducted in a fair and unbiased manner; in
16 conducting the negotiations, there shall be no
17 disclosure of any information derived from proposals
18 submitted by competing bidders; if information is
19 disclosed to any bidder, it shall be provided to all
20 competing bidders;
21 (viii) maintain confidentiality of supplier and
22 bidding information in a manner consistent with all
23 applicable laws, rules, regulations, and tariffs;
24 (ix) submit a confidential report to the
25 Commission recommending acceptance or rejection of
26 bids;

HB4285- 131 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 (x) notify the utility of contract counterparties
2 and contract specifics; and
3 (xi) administer related contingency procurement
4 events.
5 (2) The procurement monitor, who shall be retained by
6 the Commission, shall:
7 (i) monitor interactions among the procurement
8 administrator, suppliers, and utility;
9 (ii) monitor and report to the Commission on the
10 progress of the procurement process;
11 (iii) provide an independent confidential report
12 to the Commission regarding the results of the
13 procurement event;
14 (iv) assess compliance with the procurement plans
15 approved by the Commission for each utility that on
16 December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least
17 100,000 customers in Illinois and for each small
18 multi-jurisdictional utility that on December 31, 2005
19 served less than 100,000 customers in Illinois;
20 (v) preserve the confidentiality of supplier and
21 bidding information in a manner consistent with all
22 applicable laws, rules, regulations, and tariffs;
23 (vi) provide expert advice to the Commission and
24 consult with the procurement administrator regarding
25 issues related to procurement process design, rules,
26 protocols, and policy-related matters; and

HB4285- 132 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 (vii) consult with the procurement administrator
2 regarding the development and use of benchmark
3 criteria, standard form contracts, credit policies,
4 and bid documents.
5 (d) Except as provided in subsection (j), or as otherwise
6provided in subsection (b-5) for capacity procurement plans and
7capacity procurement processes to be developed and conducted as
8required by subsection (b-5), the planning process shall be
9conducted as follows:
10 (1) Beginning in 2008, each Illinois utility procuring
11 power pursuant to this Section shall annually provide a
12 range of load forecasts to the Illinois Power Agency by
13 July 15 of each year, or such other date as may be required
14 by the Commission or Agency. The load forecasts shall cover
15 the 5-year procurement planning period for the next
16 procurement plan and shall include hourly data
17 representing a high-load, low-load, and expected-load
18 scenario for the load of those retail customers included in
19 the plan's electric supply service requirements. The
20 utility shall provide supporting data and assumptions for
21 each of the scenarios.
22 (2) Beginning in 2008, the Illinois Power Agency shall
23 prepare a procurement plan by August 15th of each year, or
24 such other date as may be required by the Commission. The
25 procurement plan shall identify the portfolio of
26 demand-response and power and energy products to be

HB4285- 133 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 procured. Cost-effective demand-response measures shall be
2 procured as set forth in item (iii) of subsection (b) of
3 this Section. Copies of the procurement plan shall be
4 posted and made publicly available on the Agency's and
5 Commission's websites, and copies shall also be provided to
6 each affected electric utility. An affected utility shall
7 have 30 days following the date of posting to provide
8 comment to the Agency on the procurement plan. Other
9 interested entities also may comment on the procurement
10 plan. All comments submitted to the Agency shall be
11 specific, supported by data or other detailed analyses,
12 and, if objecting to all or a portion of the procurement
13 plan, accompanied by specific alternative wording or
14 proposals. All comments shall be posted on the Agency's and
15 Commission's websites. During this 30-day comment period,
16 the Agency shall hold at least one public hearing within
17 each utility's service area for the purpose of receiving
18 public comment on the procurement plan. Within 14 days
19 following the end of the 30-day review period, the Agency
20 shall revise the procurement plan as necessary based on the
21 comments received and file the procurement plan with the
22 Commission and post the procurement plan on the websites.
23 (3) Within 5 days after the filing of the procurement
24 plan, any person objecting to the procurement plan shall
25 file an objection with the Commission. Within 10 days after
26 the filing, the Commission shall determine whether a

HB4285- 134 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 hearing is necessary. The Commission shall enter its order
2 confirming or modifying the procurement plan within 90 days
3 after the filing of the procurement plan by the Illinois
4 Power Agency.
5 (4) The Commission shall approve the procurement plan,
6 including expressly the forecast used in the procurement
7 plan, if the Commission determines that it will ensure
8 adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and
9 environmentally sustainable electric service at the lowest
10 total cost over time, taking into account any benefits of
11 price stability. Provided, that for capacity procurement
12 plans developed under subsection (b-5) of this Section, the
13 Commission shall approve the capacity procurement plan, as
14 modified to the extent directed by the Commission, if the
15 Commission determines that the capacity procurement plan
16 conforms to the requirements and objectives of subsection
17 (b-5), including the objective to ensure long-term
18 resource adequacy at the lowest cost over time, taking into
19 account the benefits of price stability and the need to
20 ensure the reliability, adequacy, and resilience of the
21 bulk power generation and delivery system in the Applicable
22 Local Resource Zone.
23 (e) The procurement process shall include each of the
24following components:
25 (1) Solicitation, pre-qualification, and registration
26 of bidders. The procurement administrator shall

HB4285- 135 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 disseminate information to potential bidders to promote a
2 procurement event, notify potential bidders that the
3 procurement administrator may enter into a post-bid price
4 negotiation with bidders that meet the applicable
5 benchmarks, provide supply requirements, and otherwise
6 explain the competitive procurement process. In addition
7 to such other publication as the procurement administrator
8 determines is appropriate, this information shall be
9 posted on the Illinois Power Agency's and the Commission's
10 websites. The procurement administrator shall also
11 administer the prequalification process, including
12 evaluation of credit worthiness, compliance with
13 procurement rules, and agreement to the standard form
14 contract developed pursuant to paragraph (2) of this
15 subsection (e). The procurement administrator shall then
16 identify and register bidders to participate in the
17 procurement event.
18 (2) Standard contract forms and credit terms and
19 instruments. The procurement administrator, in
20 consultation with the utilities, the Commission, and other
21 interested parties and subject to Commission oversight,
22 shall develop and provide standard contract forms for the
23 supplier contracts that meet generally accepted industry
24 practices. Standard credit terms and instruments that meet
25 generally accepted industry practices shall be similarly
26 developed. The procurement administrator shall make

HB4285- 136 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 available to the Commission all written comments it
2 receives on the contract forms, credit terms, or
3 instruments. If the procurement administrator cannot reach
4 agreement with the applicable electric utility as to the
5 contract terms and conditions, the procurement
6 administrator must notify the Commission of any disputed
7 terms and the Commission shall resolve the dispute. The
8 terms of the contracts shall not be subject to negotiation
9 by winning bidders, and the bidders must agree to the terms
10 of the contract in advance so that winning bids are
11 selected solely on the basis of price.
12 (3) Establishment of a market-based price benchmark.
13 As part of the development of the procurement process, the
14 procurement administrator, in consultation with the
15 Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement
16 monitor, shall establish benchmarks for evaluating the
17 final prices in the contracts for each of the products that
18 will be procured through the procurement process. The
19 benchmarks shall be based on price data for similar
20 products for the same delivery period and same delivery
21 hub, or other delivery hubs after adjusting for that
22 difference. The price benchmarks may also be adjusted to
23 take into account differences between the information
24 reflected in the underlying data sources and the specific
25 products and procurement process being used to procure
26 power for the Illinois utilities. The benchmarks shall be

HB4285- 137 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 confidential but shall be provided to, and will be subject
2 to Commission review and approval, prior to a procurement
3 event.
4 (4) Request for proposals competitive procurement
5 process. The procurement administrator shall design and
6 issue a request for proposals to supply electricity in
7 accordance with each utility's procurement plan, as
8 approved by the Commission. The request for proposals shall
9 set forth a procedure for sealed, binding commitment
10 bidding with pay-as-bid settlement, and provision for
11 selection of bids on the basis of price.
12 (5) A plan for implementing contingencies in the event
13 of supplier default or failure of the procurement process
14 to fully meet the expected load requirement due to
15 insufficient supplier participation, Commission rejection
16 of results, or any other cause.
17 (i) Event of supplier default: In the event of
18 supplier default, the utility shall review the
19 contract of the defaulting supplier to determine if the
20 amount of supply is 200 megawatts or greater, and if
21 there are more than 60 days remaining of the contract
22 term. If both of these conditions are met, and the
23 default results in termination of the contract, the
24 utility shall immediately notify the Illinois Power
25 Agency that a request for proposals must be issued to
26 procure replacement power, and the procurement

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1 administrator shall run an additional procurement
2 event. If the contracted supply of the defaulting
3 supplier is less than 200 megawatts or there are less
4 than 60 days remaining of the contract term, the
5 utility shall procure power and energy from the
6 applicable regional transmission organization market,
7 including ancillary services, capacity, and day-ahead
8 or real time energy, or both, for the duration of the
9 contract term to replace the contracted supply;
10 provided, however, that if a needed product is not
11 available through the regional transmission
12 organization market it shall be purchased from the
13 wholesale market.
14 (ii) Failure of the procurement process to fully
15 meet the expected load requirement: If the procurement
16 process fails to fully meet the expected load
17 requirement due to insufficient supplier participation
18 or due to a Commission rejection of the procurement
19 results, the procurement administrator, the
20 procurement monitor, and the Commission staff shall
21 meet within 10 days to analyze potential causes of low
22 supplier interest or causes for the Commission
23 decision. If changes are identified that would likely
24 result in increased supplier participation, or that
25 would address concerns causing the Commission to
26 reject the results of the prior procurement event, the

HB4285- 139 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1 procurement administrator may implement those changes
2 and rerun the request for proposals process according
3 to a schedule determined by those parties and
4 consistent with Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
5 Agency Act and this subsection. In any event, a new
6 request for proposals process shall be implemented by
7 the procurement administrator within 90 days after the
8 determination that the procurement process has failed
9 to fully meet the expected load requirement.
10 (iii) In all cases where there is insufficient
11 supply provided under contracts awarded through the
12 procurement process to fully meet the electric
13 utility's load requirement, the utility shall meet the
14 load requirement by procuring power and energy from the
15 applicable regional transmission organization market,
16 including ancillary services, capacity, and day-ahead
17 or real time energy, or both; provided, however, that
18 if a needed product is not available through the
19 regional transmission organization market it shall be
20 purchased from the wholesale market.
21 (6) The procurement process described in this
22 subsection is exempt from the requirements of the Illinois
23 Procurement Code, pursuant to Section 20-10 of that Code.
24 (f) Within 2 business days after opening the sealed bids,
25the procurement administrator shall submit a confidential
26report to the Commission. The report shall contain the results

HB4285- 140 -LRB100 16252 RJF 31375 b
1of the bidding for each of the products along with the
2procurement administrator's recommendation for the acceptance
3and rejection of bids based on the price benchmark criteria and
4other factors observed in the process. The procurement monitor
5also shall submit a confidential report to the Commission
6within 2 business days after opening the sealed bids. The
7report shall contain the procurement monitor's assessment of
8bidder behavior in the process as well as an assessment of the
9procurement administrator's compliance with the procurement
10process and rules. The Commission shall review the confidential
11reports submitted by the procurement administrator and
12procurement monitor, and shall accept or reject the
13recommendations of the procurement administrator within 2
14business days after receipt of the reports.
15 (g) Within 3 business days after the Commission decision
16approving the results of a procurement event, the utility, and
17in the case of a capacity procurement event under subsection
18(b-5) of this Section, all Load-Serving Entities in the
19Applicable Local Resource Zone, shall enter into binding
20contractual arrangements with the winning suppliers using the
21standard form contracts; except that the utility shall not be
22required either directly or indirectly to execute the contracts
23if a tariff that is consistent with subsection (l) of this
24Section has not been approved and placed into effect for that
25utility.
26 (h) The names of the successful bidders and the load

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1weighted average of the winning bid prices for each contract
2type and for each contract term shall be made available to the
3public at the time of Commission approval of a procurement
4event. The Commission, the procurement monitor, the
5procurement administrator, the Illinois Power Agency, and all
6participants in the procurement process shall maintain the
7confidentiality of all other supplier and bidding information
8in a manner consistent with all applicable laws, rules,
9regulations, and tariffs. Confidential information, including
10the confidential reports submitted by the procurement
11administrator and procurement monitor pursuant to subsection
12(f) of this Section, shall not be made publicly available and
13shall not be discoverable by any party in any proceeding,
14absent a compelling demonstration of need, nor shall those
15reports be admissible in any proceeding other than one for law
16enforcement purposes.
17 (i) Within 2 business days after a Commission decision
18approving the results of a procurement event or such other date
19as may be required by the Commission from time to time, the
20utility shall file for informational purposes with the
21Commission its actual or estimated retail supply charges, as
22applicable, by customer supply group reflecting the costs
23associated with the procurement and computed in accordance with
24the tariffs filed pursuant to subsection (l) of this Section
25and approved by the Commission.
26 (j) Within 60 days following August 28, 2007 (the effective

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1date of Public Act 95-481), each electric utility that on
2December 31, 2005 provided electric service to at least 100,000
3customers in Illinois shall prepare and file with the
4Commission an initial procurement plan, which shall conform in
5all material respects to the requirements of the procurement
6plan set forth in subsection (b); provided, however, that the
7Illinois Power Agency Act shall not apply to the initial
8procurement plan prepared pursuant to this subsection. The
9initial procurement plan shall identify the portfolio of power
10and energy products to be procured and delivered for the period
11June 2008 through May 2009, and shall identify the proposed
12procurement administrator, who shall have the same experience
13and expertise as is required of a procurement administrator
14hired pursuant to Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
15Act. Copies of the procurement plan shall be posted and made
16publicly available on the Commission's website. The initial
17procurement plan may include contracts for renewable resources
18that extend beyond May 2009.
19 (i) Within 14 days following filing of the initial
20 procurement plan, any person may file a detailed objection
21 with the Commission contesting the procurement plan
22 submitted by the electric utility. All objections to the
23 electric utility's plan shall be specific, supported by
24 data or other detailed analyses. The electric utility may
25 file a response to any objections to its procurement plan
26 within 7 days after the date objections are due to be

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1 filed. Within 7 days after the date the utility's response
2 is due, the Commission shall determine whether a hearing is
3 necessary. If it determines that a hearing is necessary, it
4 shall require the hearing to be completed and issue an
5 order on the procurement plan within 60 days after the
6 filing of the procurement plan by the electric utility.
7 (ii) The order shall approve or modify the procurement
8 plan, approve an independent procurement administrator,
9 and approve or modify the electric utility's tariffs that
10 are proposed with the initial procurement plan. The
11 Commission shall approve the procurement plan if the
12 Commission determines that it will ensure adequate,
13 reliable, affordable, efficient, and environmentally
14 sustainable electric service at the lowest total cost over
15 time, taking into account any benefits of price stability.
16 (k) (Blank).
17 (k-5) (Blank).
18 (l) An electric utility shall recover its costs incurred
19under this Section, including, but not limited to, its costs
20for capacity procured under subsection (b-5) of this Section,
21and the costs of procuring power and energy demand-response
22resources under this Section. The utility shall file with the
23initial procurement plan its proposed tariffs through which its
24costs of procuring power that are incurred pursuant to a
25Commission-approved procurement plan and those other costs
26identified in this subsection (l), will be recovered. The

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1tariffs shall include a formula rate or charge designed to pass
2through both the costs incurred by the utility in procuring a
3supply of electric power and energy for the applicable customer
4classes with no mark-up or return on the price paid by the
5utility for that supply, plus any just and reasonable costs
6that the utility incurs in arranging and providing for the
7supply of electric power and energy. The formula rate or charge
8shall also contain provisions that ensure that its application
9does not result in over or under recovery due to changes in
10customer usage and demand patterns, and that provide for the
11correction, on at least an annual basis, of any accounting
12errors that may occur. A utility shall recover through the
13tariff all reasonable costs incurred to implement or comply
14with any procurement plan that is developed and put into effect
15pursuant to Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and
16this Section, including any fees assessed by the Illinois Power
17Agency, costs associated with load balancing, and contingency
18plan costs. The electric utility shall also recover its full
19costs of procuring electric supply for which it contracted
20before the effective date of this Section in conjunction with
21the provision of full requirements service under fixed-price
22bundled service tariffs subsequent to December 31, 2006. All
23such costs shall be deemed to have been prudently incurred. The
24pass-through tariffs that are filed and approved pursuant to
25this Section shall not be subject to review under, or in any
26way limited by, Section 16-111(i) of this Act. All of the costs

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1incurred by the electric utility associated with the purchase
2of zero emission credits in accordance with subsection (d-5) of
3Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and, beginning
4June 1, 2017, all of the costs incurred by the electric utility
5associated with the purchase of renewable energy resources in
6accordance with Sections 1-56 and 1-75 of the Illinois Power
7Agency Act, shall be recovered through the electric utility's
8tariffed charges applicable to all of its retail customers, as
9specified in subsection (k) of Section 16-108 of this Act, and
10shall not be recovered through the electric utility's tariffed
11charges for electric power and energy supply to its eligible
12retail customers.
13 (m) The Commission has the authority to adopt rules to
14carry out the provisions of this Section. For the public
15interest, safety, and welfare, the Commission also has
16authority to adopt rules to carry out the provisions of this
17Section on an emergency basis immediately following August 28,
182007 (the effective date of Public Act 95-481).
19 (n) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, any
20affiliated electric utilities that submit a single procurement
21plan covering their combined needs may procure for those
22combined needs in conjunction with that plan, and may enter
23jointly into power supply contracts, purchases, and other
24procurement arrangements, and allocate capacity and energy and
25cost responsibility therefor among themselves in proportion to
26their requirements.

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1 (o) On or before June 1 of each year, the Commission shall
2hold an informal hearing for the purpose of receiving comments
3on the prior year's procurement process and any recommendations
4for change.
5 (p) An electric utility subject to this Section may propose
6to invest, lease, own, or operate an electric generation
7facility as part of its procurement plan, provided the utility
8demonstrates that such facility is the least-cost option to
9provide electric service to those retail customers included in
10the plan's electric supply service requirements. If the
11facility is shown to be the least-cost option and is included
12in a procurement plan prepared in accordance with Section 1-75
13of the Illinois Power Agency Act and this Section, then the
14electric utility shall make a filing pursuant to Section 8-406
15of this Act, and may request of the Commission any statutory
16relief required thereunder. If the Commission grants all of the
17necessary approvals for the proposed facility, such supply
18shall thereafter be considered as a pre-existing contract under
19subsection (b) of this Section. The Commission shall in any
20order approving a proposal under this subsection specify how
21the utility will recover the prudently incurred costs of
22investing in, leasing, owning, or operating such generation
23facility through just and reasonable rates charged to those
24retail customers included in the plan's electric supply service
25requirements. Cost recovery for facilities included in the
26utility's procurement plan pursuant to this subsection shall

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1not be subject to review under or in any way limited by the
2provisions of Section 16-111(i) of this Act. Nothing in this
3Section is intended to prohibit a utility from filing for a
4fuel adjustment clause as is otherwise permitted under Section
59-220 of this Act.
6 (q) If the Illinois Power Agency filed with the Commission,
7under Section 16-111.5 of this Act, its proposed procurement
8plan for the period commencing June 1, 2017, and the Commission
9has not yet entered its final order approving the plan on or
10before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th
11General Assembly, then the Illinois Power Agency shall file a
12notice of withdrawal with the Commission, after the effective
13date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, to
14withdraw the proposed procurement of renewable energy
15resources to be approved under the plan, other than the
16procurement of renewable energy credits from distributed
17renewable energy generation devices using funds previously
18collected from electric utilities' retail customers that take
19service pursuant to electric utilities' hourly pricing tariff
20or tariffs and, for an electric utility that serves less than
21100,000 retail customers in the State, other than the
22procurement of renewable energy credits from distributed
23renewable energy generation devices. Upon receipt of the
24notice, the Commission shall enter an order that approves the
25withdrawal of the proposed procurement of renewable energy
26resources from the plan. The initially proposed procurement of

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1renewable energy resources shall not be approved or be the
2subject of any further hearing, investigation, proceeding, or
3order of any kind.
4 This amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly preempts
5and supersedes any order entered by the Commission that
6approved the Illinois Power Agency's procurement plan for the
7period commencing June 1, 2017, to the extent it is
8inconsistent with the provisions of this amendatory Act of the
999th General Assembly. To the extent any previously entered
10order approved the procurement of renewable energy resources,
11the portion of that order approving the procurement shall be
12void, other than the procurement of renewable energy credits
13from distributed renewable energy generation devices using
14funds previously collected from electric utilities' retail
15customers that take service under electric utilities' hourly
16pricing tariff or tariffs and, for an electric utility that
17serves less than 100,000 retail customers in the State, other
18than the procurement of renewable energy credits for
19distributed renewable energy generation devices.
20(Source: P.A. 99-906, eff. 6-1-17.)
21 (220 ILCS 5/16-115A)
22 Sec. 16-115A. Obligations of alternative retail electric
23suppliers.
24 (a) An alternative retail electric supplier shall:
25 (i) comply with the requirements imposed on public

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1 utilities by Sections 8-201 through 8-207, 8-301, 8-505 and
2 8-507 of this Act, to the extent that these Sections have
3 application to the services being offered by the
4 alternative retail electric supplier; and
5 (ii) continue to comply with the requirements for
6 certification stated in subsection (d) of Section 16-115;
7 and .
8 (iii) for delivery years commencing on and after June
9 1, 2019, comply with the requirements of subsection (h) of
10 this Section and of subsection (b-5) of Section 16-111.5 of
11 this Act.
12 (b) An alternative retail electric supplier shall obtain
13verifiable authorization from a customer, in a form or manner
14approved by the Commission consistent with Section 2EE of the
15Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, before the
16customer is switched from another supplier.
17 (c) No alternative retail electric supplier, or electric
18utility other than the electric utility in whose service area a
19customer is located, shall (i) enter into or employ any
20arrangements which have the effect of preventing a retail
21customer with a maximum electrical demand of less than one
22megawatt from having access to the services of the electric
23utility in whose service area the customer is located or (ii)
24charge retail customers for such access. This subsection shall
25not be construed to prevent an arms-length agreement between a
26supplier and a retail customer that sets a term of service,

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1notice period for terminating service and provisions governing
2early termination through a tariff or contract as allowed by
3Section 16-119.
4 (d) An alternative retail electric supplier that is
5certified to serve residential or small commercial retail
6customers shall not:
7 (1) deny service to a customer or group of customers
8 nor establish any differences as to prices, terms,
9 conditions, services, products, facilities, or in any
10 other respect, whereby such denial or differences are based
11 upon race, gender or income.
12 (2) deny service to a customer or group of customers
13 based on locality nor establish any unreasonable
14 difference as to prices, terms, conditions, services,
15 products, or facilities as between localities.
16 (e) An alternative retail electric supplier shall comply
17with the following requirements with respect to the marketing,
18offering and provision of products or services to residential
19and small commercial retail customers:
20 (i) Any marketing materials which make statements
21 concerning prices, terms and conditions of service shall
22 contain information that adequately discloses the prices,
23 terms and conditions of the products or services that the
24 alternative retail electric supplier is offering or
25 selling to the customer.
26 (ii) Before any customer is switched from another

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1 supplier, the alternative retail electric supplier shall
2 give the customer written information that adequately
3 discloses, in plain language, the prices, terms and
4 conditions of the products and services being offered and
5 sold to the customer.
6 (iii) An alternative retail electric supplier shall
7 provide documentation to the Commission and to customers
8 that substantiates any claims made by the alternative
9 retail electric supplier regarding the technologies and
10 fuel types used to generate the electricity offered or sold
11 to customers.
12 (iv) The alternative retail electric supplier shall
13 provide to the customer (1) itemized billing statements
14 that describe the products and services provided to the
15 customer and their prices, and (2) an additional statement,
16 at least annually, that adequately discloses the average
17 monthly prices, and the terms and conditions, of the
18 products and services sold to the customer.
19 (f) An alternative retail electric supplier may limit the
20overall size or availability of a service offering by
21specifying one or more of the following: a maximum number of
22customers, maximum amount of electric load to be served, time
23period during which the offering will be available, or other
24comparable limitation, but not including the geographic
25locations of customers within the area which the alternative
26retail electric supplier is certificated to serve. The

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1alternative retail electric supplier shall file the terms and
2conditions of such service offering including the applicable
3limitations with the Commission prior to making the service
4offering available to customers.
5 (g) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as
6preventing an alternative retail electric supplier, which is an
7affiliate of, or which contracts with, (i) an industry or trade
8organization or association, (ii) a membership organization or
9association that exists for a purpose other than the purchase
10of electricity, or (iii) another organization that meets
11criteria established in a rule adopted by the Commission, from
12offering through the organization or association services at
13prices, terms and conditions that are available solely to the
14members of the organization or association.
15 (h) Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in this
16Act or the Illinois Power Agency Act, beginning with the
17delivery year commencing June 1, 2019, an alternative retail
18electric supplier shall use only capacity procured and
19allocated to the alternative retail electric supplier through
20the processes specified in subsection (b-5) of Section 16-111.5
21of this Act to serve retail customers of an Applicable Electric
22Utility in an Applicable Local Resource Zone in this State;
23provided, that an alternative electric retail supplier may
24procure through other means any capacity needed to serve the
25load requirements of retail customers of an Applicable Electric
26Utility in an Applicable Local Resource Zone in excess of the

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1capacity procured and allocated to the alternative retail
2electric supplier under subsection (b-5) of Section 16-111.5.
3An alternative retail electric supplier shall enter into
4contracts for capacity, in the form adopted by the procurement
5administrator and conforming to the requirements of subsection
6(b-5) of Section 16-111.5 of this Act, with capacity suppliers
7selected in capacity procurement events conducted under
8subsection (b-5) of Section 16-111.5. An alternative retail
9electric supplier shall take those actions that are necessary
10(i) to participate in capacity procurement events conducted
11under subsection (b-5) of Section 16-111.5 of this Act; and
12(ii) to participate in the Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan
13capacity procurement option, or a successor capacity
14procurement mechanism, under the MISO Tariff using the capacity
15procured in capacity procurement events conducted, and
16allocated to the alternative retail electric supplier, under
17subsection (b-5) of Section 16-111.5 of this Act.
18 As a condition of the continued effectiveness of the
19certificate of service authority of an alternative retail
20electric supplier that serves retail customers of an Applicable
21Electric Utility in an Applicable Local Resource Zone, the
22alternative retail electric supplier shall certify its
23compliance with the requirements of this subsection (h) in its
24annual reports to the Commission. The Commission shall initiate
25a proceeding to revoke the certificate of service authority of
26any alternative retail electric supplier that is required by

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1this subsection (h) to, but does not, certify its compliance
2with the requirements of this subsection (h) in an annual
3report to the Commission or that the Commission has reason to
4believe has failed or is failing to comply with the
5requirements of this subsection (h). No certificate of service
6authority shall be revoked under this subsection (h) unless and
7until the alternative retail electric supplier has received
8notice of the proceeding and the grounds on which the
9Commission proposes to revoke the certificate of service
10authority, and has been provided opportunity for a hearing.
11 For purposes of this subsection (h), the terms "Applicable
12Electric Utility", "Fixed Resource Adequacy Plan", "Contracted
13LSE Capacity", and "MISO Tariff" shall have the meanings set
14forth in subsection (b-5) of Section 16-111.5 of this Act, and
15the term "Applicable Local Resource Zone" shall have the
16meaning set forth in Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
17Act.
18(Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 12-16-97.)
19 Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
20becoming law.
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