87R11028 CXP-F
 
  By: Thierry H.B. No. 3470
 
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to electricity service in this state; imposing
  administrative penalties.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Section 15.023, Utilities Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (b), (c), and (d) and adding Subsections (b-1)
  and (b-2) to read as follows:
         (b)  Except as provided by Subsection (b-1), the [The]
  penalty for a violation may be in an amount not to exceed $25,000.  
  Each day a violation continues or occurs is a separate violation for
  purposes of imposing a penalty.
         (b-1)  The penalty for a violation of a reliability standard
  adopted by the independent organization certified under Section
  39.151 or of a commission rule relating to reliability in the
  wholesale electric market may be in an amount not to exceed
  $100,000.  Each day a violation continues or occurs is a separate
  violation for purposes of imposing a penalty.
         (b-2)  If a person pays a penalty to a federal authority for a
  violation of a reliability standard that is the same or
  substantially the same as a reliability standard adopted by the
  independent organization certified under Section 39.151:
               (1)  the commission may not assess an administrative
  penalty for the same instance or circumstance for which the person
  paid the federal penalty; and
               (2)  the commission shall refund the full amount of an
  administrative penalty that the commission assessed against the
  person before the date the person paid the federal penalty, if the
  commission assessed the penalty for the same instance or
  circumstance for which the person paid the federal penalty.
         (c)  The commission by rule shall establish a classification
  system for violations described by Subsection (b) and a separate
  classification system for violations described by Subsection
  (b-1).  Each system must include [that includes] a range of
  administrative penalties that may be assessed for each class of
  violation, based on:
               (1)  the seriousness of the violation, including:
                     (A)  the nature, circumstances, extent, and
  gravity of a prohibited act; and
                     (B)  the hazard or potential hazard created to the
  health, safety, or economic welfare of the public;
               (2)  the economic harm to property or the environment
  caused by the violation;
               (3)  the history of previous violations;
               (4)  the amount necessary to deter future violations;
               (5)  efforts to correct the violation; and
               (6)  any other matter that justice may require.
         (d)  The classification system established under Subsection
  (c) shall provide that a penalty in an amount that exceeds $5,000
  may be assessed only if the violation is included in the highest
  class of violations in the classification system.  This subsection
  does not apply to the classification system established under
  Subsection (c) for a violation described by Subsection (b-1).
         SECTION 2.  Section 15.104(a), Utilities Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (a)  The commission on its own motion may issue a cease and
  desist order:
               (1)  after providing notice and an opportunity for a
  hearing if practicable or without notice or opportunity for a
  hearing; and
               (2)  if the commission determines that the conduct of a
  person:
                     (A)  poses a threat to continuous and adequate
  electric service;
                     (B)  is fraudulent;
                     (C)  is hazardous;
                     (D) [(C)]  creates an immediate danger to the
  public safety; or
                     (E) [(D)]  is causing or can be reasonably
  expected to cause an immediate injury to a customer of electric
  services and that the injury is incapable of being repaired or
  rectified by monetary compensation.
         SECTION 3.  Subchapter D, Chapter 15, Utilities Code, is
  amended by adding Section 15.108 to read as follows:
         Sec. 15.108.  ADMINISTRATIVE PENALTY.  The commission may
  impose an administrative penalty under Subchapter B against a
  person who violates an order issued under this subchapter.
         SECTION 4.  Section 31.003, Utilities Code, is amended by
  adding Subsection (c) to read as follows:
         (c)  A report issued under this section before September 1,
  2023, must include a summary of the information required by Section
  39.926 to be provided on the Internet website found at
  http://www.puc.state.tx.us.  This subsection expires September 1,
  2023.
         SECTION 5.  Section 39.002, Utilities Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 39.002.  APPLICABILITY. This chapter, other than
  Sections 39.1516, 39.155, 39.157(e), 39.203, 39.904, 39.9051,
  39.9052, [and] 39.914(e), and 39.9161, does not apply to a
  municipally owned utility or an electric cooperative. Sections
  39.157(e), 39.203, and 39.904, however, apply only to a municipally
  owned utility or an electric cooperative that is offering customer
  choice. If there is a conflict between the specific provisions of
  this chapter and any other provisions of this title, except for
  Chapters 40 and 41, the provisions of this chapter control.
         SECTION 6.  Section 39.151, Utilities Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (d-1), (d-2), (d-3), and (e) and adding
  Subsections (g-2) and (g-3) to read as follows:
         (d-1)  The commission shall require an independent
  organization certified by the commission under this section to
  annually submit to the commission for review and approval the
  organization's entire proposed annual budget.  The commission
  [shall review the proposed budgets either annually or biennially
  and] may approve, disapprove, or modify any item included in the [a]
  proposed budget. The commission by rule shall establish the type of
  information or documents needed to effectively evaluate the
  proposed budget and reasonable dates for the submission of that
  information or those documents. The commission shall establish a
  procedure to provide public notice of and public participation in
  the budget review process.
         (d-2)  An [Except as otherwise agreed to by the commission
  and an] independent organization certified by the commission under
  this section[, the organization] must submit to the commission for
  review and approval proposals for obtaining debt financing or for
  refinancing existing debt.  The commission may approve, disapprove,
  or modify a proposal.
         (d-3)  An independent organization certified by the
  commission under this section shall develop proposed performance
  measures to track the organization's operations.  The independent
  organization must submit the proposed performance measures to the
  commission for review and approval.  The commission shall annually
  review the organization's performance as part of the budget review
  process under Subsection (d-1).  The commission shall prepare an
  annual [a] report [at the time the commission approves the
  organization's budget] detailing the organization's performance
  and submit the report to the lieutenant governor, the speaker of the
  house of representatives, and each house and senate standing
  committee that has jurisdiction over electric utility issues.
         (e)  After approving the budget of an independent
  organization under Subsection (d-1), the commission shall
  authorize the organization to charge to wholesale buyers and
  sellers a system administration fee, within a range determined by
  the commission, that is reasonable and competitively neutral to
  fund the independent organization's approved budget. The
  commission shall investigate the organization's cost efficiencies,
  salaries and benefits, and use of debt financing and may require the
  organization to provide any information needed to effectively
  evaluate the reasonableness and neutrality of the fee or to
  evaluate the effectiveness or efficiency of the organization. The
  commission shall work with the organization to establish the detail
  of information, both current and historical, and the time frames
  the commission needs to effectively evaluate the fee. The
  commission shall require the independent organization to closely
  match actual revenues generated by the fee [and other sources of
  revenue] with revenue necessary to fund the budget and make
  quarterly fee adjustments[, taking into account the effect of a fee
  change on market participants and consumers,] to ensure that the
  budget year does not end with surplus or insufficient funds. The
  commission shall require the organization to submit to the
  commission quarterly[, on a schedule determined by the commission,]
  reports that compare actual expenditures with budgeted
  expenditures.
         (g-2)  To maintain certification as an independent
  organization under this section, the organization's governing body
  must establish and implement a formal process for adopting new
  protocols or revisions to existing protocols. The process must
  require that:
               (1)  a majority of the organization's governing body
  initiate the creation or revision of protocols; and
               (2)  the organization's staff develop the new or
  revised protocols and submit the protocols to the governing body
  for adoption.
         (g-3)  The governing body of an independent organization
  certified by the commission under this section shall, in accordance
  with formal bylaws or protocols adopted by the organization and
  approved by the commission, establish and maintain an advisory
  committee whose membership is broadly representative of the
  organization's members to assist the organization's governing body
  and staff in developing or revising protocols or in performing the
  organization's other duties and functions.  This subsection does
  not prohibit the governing body of the organization from appointing
  one or more additional committees or subcommittees to assist the
  organization's governing body and staff in performing the
  organization's duties and functions.
         SECTION 7.  Section 39.904(d), Utilities Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         (d)  In this section, "renewable energy technology" means
  any technology that exclusively relies on an energy source that is
  naturally regenerated over a short time and derived directly from
  the sun, indirectly from the sun, or from moving water or other
  natural movements and mechanisms of the environment. Renewable
  energy technologies include those that rely on energy derived
  directly from the sun, on wind, geothermal, hydroelectric, wave, or
  tidal energy, [or] on biomass or biomass-based waste products, or
  on gasified waste, including landfill gas. A renewable energy
  technology does not rely solely on energy resources derived from
  fossil fuels, waste products from fossil fuels, or waste products
  from inorganic sources.
         SECTION 8.  The heading to Section 39.916, Utilities Code,
  is amended to read as follows:
         Sec. 39.916.  [INTERCONNECTION OF] DISTRIBUTED RENEWABLE
  GENERATION.
         SECTION 9.  Section 39.916(a), Utilities Code, is amended by
  adding Subdivision (4) to read as follows:
               (4)  "Surplus electricity" means electricity generated
  by distributed renewable generation that is not consumed at the
  place the distributed renewable generation is installed and that
  flows onto the electric distribution system.
         SECTION 10.  Section 39.916, Utilities Code, is amended by
  adding Subsections (i), (j-1), (j-2), (j-3), (j-4), (j-5), and (l)
  and amending Subsection (j) to read as follows:
         (i)  A distributed renewable generation owner may sell
  surplus electricity to a retail electric provider or electric
  utility under this section only if the owner's distributed
  renewable generation is rated to produce an amount of electricity
  that is less than or equal to the amount of electricity that the
  retail electric customer for whom the distributed renewable
  generation is installed is reasonably expected to consume annually.
         (j)  A [For] distributed renewable generation owner that
  sells surplus electricity [owners] in an area [areas] in which
  customer choice has been introduced [, the distributed renewable
  generation owner] must sell the [owner's surplus] electricity
  [produced] to the retail electric provider that serves the
  [distributed renewable generation owner's] load of the retail
  electric customer for whom the distributed renewable generation is
  installed at a value agreed to by [between] the distributed
  renewable generation owner and the provider. The value [that serves
  the owner's load which] may include, but is not limited to, an
  agreed value based on the clearing price of energy at the time of
  day that the electricity is made available to the grid or the value 
  [it] may be a monetary credit applied to an account during a billing
  period that may be carried over to subsequent billing periods until
  the credit has been redeemed.
         (j-1)  The independent organization identified in Section
  39.151 shall develop procedures so that the amount of electricity
  purchased from a distributed renewable generation owner under this
  section in an area in which customer choice has been introduced is
  accounted for in settling the total load served by the provider that
  serves the [that owner's] load of the retail electric customer for
  whom the distributed renewable generation is installed [by January
  1, 2009].  A distributed renewable generation owner requesting net
  metering services for purposes of this section must have metering
  devices capable of providing measurements consistent with the
  independent organization's settlement requirements.
         (j-2)  A distributed renewable generation owner that sells
  surplus electricity in an area in which customer choice has not been
  introduced must sell the electricity to the electric utility that
  serves the load of the retail electric customer for whom the
  distributed renewable generation is installed.  The electric
  utility shall purchase the surplus electricity at a value that is
  equal to the avoided cost of the electric utility, as determined in
  accordance with commission rules.
         (j-3)  An electric utility that purchases surplus
  electricity under this section shall:
               (1)  make a payment to the seller at least once each
  quarter; or
               (2)  apply a monetary credit to the seller's account and
  allow the credit balance to be carried forward onto the seller's
  next monthly bill for not more than 12 months.
         (j-4)  An electric utility that purchases surplus
  electricity under this section shall inform the distributed
  renewable generation owner of the amount of surplus electricity
  purchased from the owner in kilowatt hours during the owner's most
  recent billing cycle and the price paid for the electricity.
         (j-5)  A distributed renewable generation owner may file a
  written complaint with the commission relating to a violation of
  Subsection (j-2), (j-3), or (j-4).
         (l)  This section does not apply to a municipally owned
  utility or electric cooperative.
         SECTION 11.  Subchapter Z, Chapter 39, Utilities Code, is
  amended by adding Section 39.9161 to read as follows:
         Sec. 39.9161.  DISTRIBUTED RENEWABLE GENERATION WITH
  MUNICIPALLY OWNED UTILITIES OR ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES. (a)  A
  municipally owned utility or electric cooperative shall provide the
  utility's or cooperative's customers access to interconnection of
  distributed renewable generation and payment for surplus
  electricity produced.
         (b)  The governing body of a municipally owned utility or
  board of directors of an electric cooperative shall provide
  oversight and adopt rates, rules, and procedures to allow
  interconnection and payment for surplus electricity on or before
  the 120th day after the date the governing body or board receives a
  bona fide request for interconnection.
         (c)  A municipally owned utility or electric cooperative
  that had retail sales of 500,000 megawatt hours or more in 2010
  shall file the utility's or cooperative's interconnection and
  surplus electricity rates, rules, and procedures with the State
  Energy Conservation Office not later than January 1, 2022, and
  shall make timely updates to the filed rates, rules, and
  procedures.
         (d)  An electric cooperative shall allow interconnection if:
               (1)  the distributed renewable generation to be
  interconnected has a five-year warranty against breakdown or undue
  degradation;
               (2)  the rated capacity of the distributed renewable
  generation does not exceed the electric cooperative service
  capacity; and
               (3)  the distributed renewable generation meets other
  technical requirements for interconnection that are consistent
  with commission rules.
         (e)  An electric cooperative may not require a distributed
  renewable generation owner whose distributed renewable generation
  meets the standards established under Subsection (d) to purchase an
  amount, type, or classification of liability insurance the
  distributed renewable generation owner would not have in the
  absence of the distributed renewable generation.
         SECTION 12.  Subchapter Z, Chapter 39, Utilities Code, is
  amended by adding Section 39.918 to read as follows:
         Sec. 39.918.  INFORMATION ON INTERNET REGARDING PURCHASE OF
  SURPLUS ELECTRICITY PRODUCED BY DISTRIBUTED RENEWABLE GENERATION.
  On an Internet website administered by the commission, the
  commission shall provide for access to easily comparable
  information regarding retail electric providers' offers to
  residential distributed renewable generation owners for their
  surplus electricity.
         SECTION 13.  Section 39.916(h), Utilities Code, is repealed.
         SECTION 14.  The changes in law made by this Act to Section
  15.023, Utilities Code, apply only to a violation that occurs on or
  after the effective date of this Act. For purposes of this section,
  a violation occurs before the effective date of this Act if any
  element of the violation occurs before that date. A violation that
  occurs before the effective date of this Act is covered by the law
  in effect on the date the violation occurred, and the former law is
  continued in effect for that purpose.
         SECTION 15.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2021.