Bill Text: TX HB4332 | 2021-2022 | 87th Legislature | Introduced


Bill Title: Relating to distributed renewable generation and energy storage resources.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-03-29 - Referred to State Affairs [HB4332 Detail]

Download: Texas-2021-HB4332-Introduced.html
 
 
  By: Zwiener H.B. No. 4332
 
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to distributed renewable generation and energy storage
  resources.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Subtitle C, Title 5, Business & Commerce Code, is
  amended by adding Chapter 113 to read as follows:
  CHAPTER 113. SALES AND LEASING OF DISTRIBUTED RENEWABLE GENERATION
  RESOURCES
         Sec. 113.001.  DEFINITIONS. In this chapter:
               (1)  "Distributed renewable generation" has the
  meaning assigned by Section 39.916, Utilities Code.
               (2)  "Small commercial customer" has the meaning
  assigned by Section 39.202(o), Utilities Code.
         Sec. 113.002.  APPLICABILITY.  (a) This chapter applies to a
  seller or lessor of distributed renewable generation resources.
         (b)  This chapter does not apply to:
               (1)  a transaction involving the sale or transfer of
  the real property on which a distributed renewable generation
  resource is located;
               (2)  a person, including a person acting through the
  person's officers, employees, brokers, or agents, who markets,
  sells, solicits, negotiates, or enters into an agreement for the
  sale or financing of a distributed renewable generation resource as
  part of a transaction involving the sale or transfer of the real
  property on which the distributed renewable generation resource is
  or will be affixed; or
               (3)  a third party that enters into an agreement for the
  financing of a distributed renewable generation resource.
         Sec. 113.003.  LEASE, SALES, AND INSTALLATION DISCLOSURES. A
  seller or lessor who enters into a purchase, lease, or power
  purchase agreement with a residential or small commercial customer
  for the operation of a distributed renewable generation resource
  shall provide to the customer in writing:
               (1)  contact information of the salesperson and
  installer of the generation resource;
               (2)  a description of all equipment to be installed;
               (3)  the cost of all equipment to be installed;
               (4)  a detailed accounting of fees associated with the
  installation or operation of the generation resource;
               (5)  representations, if any, made as part of the
  agreement regarding the expected operational performance and
  financial performance of the generation resource; and
               (6)  all applicable warranties.
         Sec. 113.004.  ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES FOR LEASE AGREEMENTS.  
  In addition to the disclosures required under Section 113.003, a
  lessor shall provide to a leasing residential or small commercial
  customer in writing:
               (1)  the term and rate of the lease, including any
  payment escalators or other terms that affect the customer's
  payments; and
               (2)  a statement of whether the lease and any
  applicable warranty or maintenance agreement is transferable to the
  purchaser of the property where the distributed renewable
  generation resource is installed.
         Sec. 113.005.  ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES FOR POWER PURCHASE
  AGREEMENTS. A residential or small commercial customer who enters
  into a power purchase agreement is entitled to receive in writing:
               (1)  the disclosures required under Sections
  113.003(2), (3), (5), and (6);
               (2)  the term and rate of the power purchase agreement,
  including any payment escalators or other terms that affect the
  customer's payments; and
               (3)  whether the power purchase agreement and any
  applicable warranty or maintenance agreement is transferable to the
  subsequent purchaser of the property where the distributed
  renewable generation resource is installed.
         SECTION 2.  Chapter 229, Local Government Code, is amended
  by adding Subchapter C to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER C. REGULATION OF SOLAR ENERGY DEVICES
         Sec. 229.101.  REGULATION OF SOLAR ENERGY DEVICES.  (a) In
  this section:
               (1)  "Municipally owned utility" has the meaning
  assigned by Section 11.003, Utilities Code.
               (2)  "Small commercial customer" has the meaning
  assigned by Section 39.202(o), Utilities Code.
               (3)  "Solar energy device" has the meaning assigned by
  Section 171.107, Tax Code.
         (b)  A municipality may not prohibit or restrict the
  installation of a solar energy device by a residential or small
  commercial customer except to the extent:
               (1)  a property owner's association may prohibit the
  installation under Sections 202.010(d)(1) through (7), Property
  Code; or
               (2)  the interconnection guidelines and
  interconnection agreement of a municipally owned utility serving
  the customer's service area, the rules of the Public Utility
  Commission of Texas, or the protocols of an independent
  organization certified under Section 39.151, Utilities Code, limit
  the installation of solar energy devices due to reliability, power
  quality, or safety of the distribution system.
         (c)  A municipality may not assess one or more fees or other
  charges on a person related to the installation of a solar energy
  device by a residential or small commercial customer that exceeds
  in the aggregate $250.00.
         (d)  Pursuant to the following compliance schedule in this
  subsection, a city or county shall implement an online, automated
  permitting platform that verifies code compliance and
  instantaneously issues permits for a residential photovoltaic
  solar energy system or an energy storage system paired with a
  residential photovoltaic solar energy system consistent with the
  system parameters and configurations, including an inspection
  checklist.
               (1)  A city or county with a population of less than
  10,000 is exempt from this subsection.
               (2)  A city of county with a population of
  10,001-50,000 shall satisfy the requirements of this subsection no
  later than December 31, 2023.
               (3)  A city or county with a population greater than
  50,000 shall satisfy the requirements of this subsection no later
  than December 31, 2022.
         SECTION 3.  The heading to Section 202.010, Property Code,
  is amended to read as follows:
         Sec. 202.010.  REGULATION OF CERTAIN [SOLAR] ENERGY DEVICES.
         SECTION 4.  Section 202.010(a), Property Code, is amended by
  adding Subdivision (3) to read as follows:
               (3)  "Distributed renewable generation" has the
  meaning assigned by Section 39.916, Utilities Code.
         SECTION 5.  Section 202.010(d)(5)(B), Property Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
                     (B)  is located in an area other than an area
  designated by the property owners' association, unless the
  alternate location decreases the cost of the system by more than
  $1000 or increases the estimated annual energy production of the
  device, as determined by using a publicly available modeling tool
  provided by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, by more than
  10 percent above the energy production of the device if located in
  an area designated by the property owners' association. The
  property owner shall provide to the property owners' association
  documentation prepared by an independent solar panel design
  specialist who is certified by the North American Board of
  Certified Energy Practitioners and is licensed in Texas to show
  that the alternate location satisfies one of the applicable
  exception;
         SECTION 6.  Section 202.010(e), Property Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (e)  A property owners' association or the association's
  architectural review committee may not withhold approval for
  installation of a solar energy device if the provisions of the
  dedicatory instruments to the extent authorized by Subsection (d)
  are met or exceeded. If a property owner's application is not denied
  in writing by property owners' association or the association's
  architectural review committee within 90 days from date of receipt
  of the application, the application is deemed approved unless the
  delay is the result of a reasonable request for additional
  information.[, unless the association or committee, as applicable,
  determines in writing that placement of the device as proposed by
  the property owner constitutes a condition that substantially
  interferes with the use and enjoyment of land by causing
  unreasonable discomfort or annoyance to persons of ordinary
  sensibilities. For purposes of making a determination under this
  subsection, the written approval of the proposed placement of the
  device by all property owners of adjoining property constitutes
  prima facie evidence that such a condition does not exist.]
         SECTION 7.  Section 202.010, Property Code, is amended by
  adding Subsection (g) to read as follows:
         (g)  A property owners' association may not include or
  enforce a provision in a dedicatory instrument that:
               (1)  requires three or more inspections by the property
  owners' association of a distributed renewable generation or energy
  storage resource before the resource is operational;
               (2)  is more onerous than interconnection rules adopted
  by the Public Utility Commission of Texas; or
               (3)  imposes any inspection or approval requirements or
  changes more onerous than those required for a proposed
  modification or improvement of an owner's property that is
  unrelated to a distributed renewable generation or energy storage
  resource.
         SECTION 8.  Subchapter C, Chapter 39, Utilities Code, is
  amended by adding Section 39.9165 to read as follows:
         Sec. 39.9165.  CONSUMER PROTECTIONS FOR CERTAIN DISTRIBUTED
  RENEWABLE GENERATION AND ELECTRIC STORAGE RESOURCES.  (a) A
  residential or small commercial customer is entitled to have access
  to distributed renewable generation and energy storage resources
  to:
               (1)  generate and export electricity to the grid;
               (2)  consume electricity from the grid; and
               (3)  reduce the customer's use of electricity from the
  grid.
         (b)  A residential or small commercial customer is entitled
  to store energy at the location of the customer's connection to the
  grid.
         (c)  A residential or small commercial customer that
  installs a distributed renewable generation or energy storage
  resource is entitled to timely approval of an interconnection
  agreement and interconnection of the distributed renewable
  generation or energy storage resource with the customer's
  transmission and distribution utility or electric utility in
  accordance with Section 39.554 or 39.916, as applicable. A
  residential or small commercial customer is entitled to timely
  approval of any permission to operate or any other approval
  required for the customer to use the customer's distributed
  renewable generation or energy storage resource.
         (d)  A residential or small commercial customer is entitled
  to timely notice from the customer's transmission and distribution
  utility or electric utility of an improvement and the cost of the
  improvement to the distribution grid that must be made to allow the
  customer to install or expand existing distributed renewable
  generation or energy storage resources.
         (e)  Except for a charge to recover a cost described by
  Subsection (d), an electric utility or a retail electric provider
  may not impose a rate or charge on a residential or small commercial
  customer or require a residential or small commercial customer to
  take service under a tariff or service plan that applies only to
  customers who have installed distributed renewable generation or
  energy storage resources.
         (f)  An electric utility or a retail electric provider may
  not charge a residential or small commercial customer a fee solely
  because the customer elects to discontinue service from the utility
  or provider.
         (g)  An electric utility may not charge a residential or
  small commercial customer with a distributed renewable generation
  or energy storage resource a fee to reconnect to the electric grid
  that is more than the fee charged to a customer in the same rate
  class who does not have a distributed renewable generation or
  energy storage resource, except the interconnection fee applicable
  to the original installation of the distributed renewable
  generation or energy storage resource.
         (h)  A residential or small commercial customer is entitled
  to interconnect in a manner that allows the customer to receive
  power from the customer's energy storage resource when the electric
  grid is not operating if the customer's distributed renewable
  generation resource is equipped with an inverter or other
  technology that complies with a standard developed by a federal
  agency or standards widely used by industry and other states that
  enables the distributed renewable generation resource to safely
  provide power to the customer when the electric grid is not
  operating.
         (i)  A residential or commercial customer that installs a
  distributed renewable generation or energy storage resource,
  regardless of ownership or financing structure of the resource, is
  entitled to the same interconnection rules, metering rules and
  programs, and incentive programs that may be provided by their
  retail electric utility, transmission and distribution utility,
  municipally owned utility, or an electric cooperative.
         (j)  The commission shall adopt a rule within 1 year of the
  effective date of this Act that provides standards for billing and
  crediting mechanisms for distributed renewable generators.
               (1)  The standards shall calculate the value and
  benefits of distributed renewable generation. The value shall
  consider benefits of distributed renewable generation to the
  distribution grid, including time-based and performance-based
  benefits, technology capabilities, increased resiliency, and
  present and future grid needs. The billing and crediting mechanism
  shall be understandable and easy to use for customers.
               (2)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Title,
  the standards adopted by the Commission pursuant to this section
  shall be made available to a customer with distributed renewable
  generation installed anywhere in this state regardless of whether
  the customer is served by a retail electric utility, transmission
  and distribution utility, municipally owned utility, or an electric
  cooperative.
         SECTION 9.  Section 202.010(f), Property Code, is repealed.
         SECTION 10.  The changes in law made by this Act apply to an
  agreement governing the sale or lease of a distributed renewable
  generation system, as defined by Section 39.916, Utilities Code, as
  added by this Act, entered into on or after the effective date of
  this Act. An agreement entered into before the effective date of
  this Act is governed by the law as it existed immediately before the
  effective date of this Act, and that law is continued in effect for
  that purpose.
         SECTION 11.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2021.
feedback