Bill Text: NY A08586 | 2017-2018 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Relates to the state's electric system energy efficiency framework; establishes a program for energy efficient development.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 2-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2018-02-02 - enacting clause stricken [A08586 Detail]

Download: New_York-2017-A08586-Introduced.html


                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
                                          8586
                               2017-2018 Regular Sessions
                   IN ASSEMBLY
                                      July 10, 2017
                                       ___________
        Introduced by M. of A. PAULIN -- read once and referred to the Committee
          on Corporations, Authorities and Commissions
        AN ACT to amend the public service law, in relation to the state's elec-
          tric system energy efficiency framework
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
     1    Section 1. Short title. This act shall be known and may  be  cited  as
     2  the "New York Electric Efficiency Jobs Act".
     3    § 2. Legislative findings and intent. The legislature hereby finds and
     4  determines:
     5    1.  New  York  has  long  held  a  leadership role among the states in
     6  achieving efficiency savings in its electricity sector. Yet, its current
     7  electric energy efficiency achievements are inadequate to  generate  the
     8  amount  of  savings  necessary  to  achieve the state's clean energy and
     9  climate goals in as cost-effective a manner as possible, to  reduce  the
    10  cost  of energy for the state's energy customers. New York's most recent
    11  state energy plan calls for the achievement of several  goals  by  2030,
    12  including  a  twenty-three  percent  decrease in energy consumption from
    13  buildings, fifty percent renewable  energy  supply,  and  forty  percent
    14  reduction of greenhouse gas emissions from 1990 levels. If New York does
    15  not  significantly  increase  the  amount of savings it achieves through
    16  electric energy efficiency, reaching these goals will  be  significantly
    17  more  difficult, if not impossible. As the Public Service Commission has
    18  recognized, energy efficiency "is the cheapest and most effective manner
    19  to reduce carbon emissions in the energy sector." It also reduces  over-
    20  all capacity charges and helps avoid the need for costly utility infras-
    21  tructure upgrades. In other words, New York's current underinvestment in
    22  energy  efficiency  results in higher utility bills for New Yorkers than
    23  is necessary. Public utilities and other market  participants  have  not
    24  been  given  the  market signals necessary to aggressively reduce energy
    25  usage.
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD13281-01-7

        A. 8586                             2
     1    2.  Energy  efficiency  investment  creates  clean  energy  jobs,   as
     2  evidenced  by  the  2017  United  States  Energy  and  Employment Report
     3  published by the United States Department of Energy,  which  shows  that
     4  New  York's  energy efficiency market has generated 110,582 energy effi-
     5  ciency  jobs  across the state. The number represents 5.1 percent of all
     6  energy efficiency jobs nationwide. Most energy efficiency  jobs  in  New
     7  York  state  are  found  in  energy  star  and efficient lighting firms,
     8  followed by high efficiency heating, ventilation, and  air  conditioning
     9  services.
    10    3.  Demonstrating  leadership  with  respect to energy efficiency will
    11  drive even greater clean energy job growth  in  the  state,  helping  to
    12  reverse recent trends of workforce reductions seen in many of New York's
    13  communities,  and increase the competitiveness of the state, by not only
    14  increasing job opportunities for electricians,  engineers  and  contrac-
    15  tors,  but also reducing the overall energy costs in the state, bringing
    16  down the cost of living and the cost of doing  business  and  generating
    17  economic  activity across the state. The United States economy has grown
    18  significantly since 2007, even while electricity  consumption  has  been
    19  flat,  in large part attributable to energy efficiency gains.  According
    20  to Bloomberg New Energy Finance, "the  key  policy  story  of  the  past
    21  decade  has  been  the uptake of EERS (Energy Efficiency Resource Stand-
    22  ards) in the U.S. state targets," leading  to  increased  investment  in
    23  efficiency and job growth.
    24    4.  Cost-effective  energy  efficiency  investment directly results in
    25  lower electricity use and lower  electricity  bills,  and  also  reduces
    26  total  statewide  energy  demand,  peak  demand, and distribution system
    27  investment needs. Thus, a well-deployed energy efficiency  program  will
    28  provide  worthwhile  benefits to both the individual bill payers partic-
    29  ipating in it and collectively to all bill payers.
    30    5. Under the current system, New York is achieving significantly lower
    31  amounts of annual incremental savings through energy efficiency than the
    32  amounts being achieved in other states.  The  American  Council  for  an
    33  Energy-Efficient  Economy estimates that New York achieved only approxi-
    34  mately 1.05 percent annual incremental savings in 2015, as  compared  to
    35  annual incremental savings of 2.91 percent in Rhode Island, 2.74 percent
    36  in  Massachusetts, 2.01 percent in Vermont, and 1.95 percent in Califor-
    37  nia (which recently set  a  goal  of  four  percent  annual  incremental
    38  savings).  The  Clean Energy Standard Order issued by the Public Service
    39  Commission on August 1, 2016, estimated the amount  of  new  incremental
    40  renewable  energy  required  to  meet its fifty percent renewable energy
    41  supply target by assuming 1.4 percent annual incremental savings through
    42  energy efficiency. Should the state continue on its  current  trajectory
    43  and  thus  fail  to achieve the Clean Energy Standard's assumed level of
    44  savings, far more renewable energy will be required to meet the  state's
    45  2030  goal  than the amount currently being planned for. In other words,
    46  the state is falling behind the trajectory of combined energy efficiency
    47  and renewable energy needed to achieve the 50 by '30 target,  which  may
    48  become difficult or impossible to achieve, or significantly more costly,
    49  if  the  state's  energy  efficiency framework is not adjusted soon. New
    50  York has the ability to achieve its laudable State  Energy  Plan  goals,
    51  but  only  if  the  current  energy efficient framework is redesigned to
    52  capture more of the state's energy efficiency potential.
    53    6. The Public Service Commission has  expressed  conviction  regarding
    54  the  vital  importance of energy efficiency in its "Reforming the Energy
    55  Vision" (REV) proceeding and has taken steps to advance energy efficien-
    56  cy through the work of the Clean Energy Advisory Council. However,  more

        A. 8586                             3
     1  is needed. REV does not yet have any mechanism to fund energy efficiency
     2  procurement or catalyze the private sector to invest significant capital
     3  in  energy  saving  measures. Effective and appropriate economic signals
     4  have  not  been  provided  consistently to all the utilities or to other
     5  parties to pursue all cost-effective efficiency measures.
     6    7. It is imperative that New York provide leadership to the nation  on
     7  energy efficiency, not only to protect New Yorkers and lower electricity
     8  bills,  but  to  respond  to  the serious threatened rollback of bedrock
     9  energy efficiency programs at the  federal  level,  including  the  Home
    10  Energy  Assistance  Program,  the Weatherization Assistance Program, and
    11  energy star. This leadership will provide critical assistance to low-in-
    12  come customers and providers of affordable housing while  also  enabling
    13  energy  management  solutions for all types of customers and providing a
    14  broad range of benefits to all income levels.
    15    8. Accordingly, the overlying intent of this act is to provide a clear
    16  regulatory framework for energy efficiency to better serve the constitu-
    17  ency of New York state and as a model for other states. This legislation
    18  will help invigorate the market for energy investments foreseen by  REV,
    19  incent  significantly  greater amounts of private capital to be invested
    20  in energy efficiency, thereby supporting job growth, increasing electric
    21  grid efficiency, reducing emissions, and lowering customers' bills.
    22    § 3. The public service law is amended by adding a new section 66-o to
    23  read as follows:
    24    § 66-o.   New York energy efficiency  development  program.    1.  For
    25  purposes of this section "cost-effective" shall mean generating benefits
    26  that  outweigh  cost,  including, but not limited to, generating more in
    27  electricity cost savings and other benefits than costs over a  specified
    28  period of time, as determined by the commission.
    29    2. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, includ-
    30  ing,  but  not  limited  to,  any  order, rule or regulation promulgated
    31  pursuant to this chapter, the public authorities law, and/or  the  state
    32  administrative  procedure  act, the commission, in consultation with the
    33  New York state energy research and development authority, shall adopt  a
    34  program  within  one  hundred  twenty days of the effective date of this
    35  section. The program shall:
    36    (a) Establish a robust annual incremental minimum savings mandate  for
    37  each  utility  for the years two thousand eighteen to two thousand twen-
    38  ty-one that provides for annual incremental increases in energy  savings
    39  of at least 0.4 percent of total electricity load served by that utility
    40  until at least two percent minimum annual savings is achieved;
    41    (b) Study, identify, and establish appropriate long-term annual, bien-
    42  nial,  or  triennial incremental targets that achieve all cost-effective
    43  electric energy efficiency savings levels for each utility for the years
    44  two thousand twenty-two to two thousand thirty, which shall  be  updated
    45  every  three  years  to allow for necessary adjustments in such targets;
    46  and
    47    (c) Provide a clear and  consistent  funding  framework  for  electric
    48  energy  efficiency  that applies to all the state's utilities and allows
    49  them to: make investments in electric  energy  efficiency  as  a  system
    50  resource;  earn  incentives  for  significant  savings  achievements, as
    51  prescribed in the commission's order adopting a ratemaking  and  utility
    52  revenue  model  policy  framework  dated  May  nineteenth,  two thousand
    53  sixteen; and, catalyze private  market  investment  in  electric  energy
    54  efficiency.  The  funding  framework must allow utilities to recover the
    55  costs of meeting the minimum mandates set forth in paragraph (a) of this
    56  subdivision.

        A. 8586                             4
     1    § 4. Severability clause. If any provision of this  act  is,  for  any
     2  reason,  declared  unconstitutional  or invalid, in whole or in part, by
     3  any court of competent jurisdiction, such portion shall be deemed sever-
     4  able, and such unconstitutionality or invalidity shall  not  affect  the
     5  validity  of  the  remaining  provisions  of  this  act, which remaining
     6  provisions shall continue in full force and effect.
     7    § 5. This act shall take effect immediately.
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