BILL ANALYSIS

 

 

Senate Research Center

C.S.S.B. 330

 

By: Hall et al.

 

Business & Commerce

 

4/14/2023

 

Committee Report (Substituted)

 

 

 

AUTHOR'S / SPONSOR'S STATEMENT OF INTENT

 

Currently, the electric grid is vulnerable to a wide range of both natural and man-made existential threats, including cyber-attacks, malware, electromagnetic pulses (EMP), and geomagnetic disturbances (GMD) that would, at best, disrupt the grid, and at worst, cause the entire grid to go down.

 

Electricity is the second most important thing for sustaining life as we now know it and impacts almost every aspect of our modern life. Currently, Texas does not have a robust plan in place to address a widespread, long-term power outage. Since electricity is vital for survival, if the grid goes down, thousands of people risk losing their lives. 

 

But just hardening the grid would not solve the problem. As we saw in Winter Storm Uri, the loss of electrical power also leads to the loss of gas and water.  If corresponding critical infrastructure for water and wastewater systems, food and agriculture, communication systems, energy sectors, including refineries and fuel distribution systems, chemical plants, financial sectors, hospitals and health care facilities, law enforcement and government facilities, and nuclear reactors are not also addressed, the hardening efforts would be useless. All these systems are crucial to maintaining modern life.  

 

Solutions to harden the grid, once thought to be too expensive, can now be implemented at a fraction of the cost due to technological advances. While some cities and localities have begun implementing measures to harden their infrastructure, it is time for Texas to take steps to ensure the safety of all Texans by addressing vulnerabilities to the ERCOT electric grid and other critical infrastructure. 

 

While increasing capacity is important, we must not overlook the vulnerability of our grid to multiple threats. We must ensure it is both reliable and resilient by incorporating the necessary technologies that protect against both natural and man-made threats.

 

This bill would create the Texas Grid Security Commission (TGSC) under the direction of the Texas Department of Emergency Management (TDEM) to evaluate all hazards to the ERCOT electric grid and vulnerabilities of essential service systems for municipalities. 

 

All hazards include:   

         Terrestrial weather (wind, hurricanes, tornadoes, flooding, ice storms, heat waves, wildfires)

         Earthquakes and tsunamis

         Terrorist attacks and cyber attacks

         Manipulation of operational technology

         EMP or GMD

         Insecure or inadequate fuel transportation or storage

         Insider threats

 

The bill would require TGSC to develop standards and recommend a plan to harden critical infrastructure in the state to make a resilient grid. In determining these standards, TGSC will evaluate current Critical Infrastructure Protections standards established by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) and National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). 

 

Critical infrastructure includes:         

         Water and wastewater systems

         Food and agriculture

         Communication systems

         Energy sector including refineries and fuel distribution systems

         Chemical plants

         Financial sector

         Hospitals and health care facilities

         Law enforcement and government facilities

         Nuclear reactors

         And other critical functions that depend on the electric grid and are vital to our economy

 

The bill would require TGSC to evaluate resiliency of essential service systems of municipalities and develop standards and recommend a plan for resilient communities. These systems would provide citizens with reliable services in the event of a long-term power outage and a path toward expeditious electrical and economic recovery. 

 

Resilient community standards would include:

         Emergency services 

         Communications systems

         Clean water and sewer systems

         Healthcare

         Financial services

         Energy systems

         Transportation

 

The bill would require TGSC to create a statewide plan for protection from catastrophic loss of power.

 

The bill would require TGSC to establish resiliency standards for micro-grids and certify a micro-grid that meets these standards.

 

The bill would require TGSC to develop a recommended timeline to implement the plan for protection of all hazards and resiliency standards for municipalities.

 

The bill includes a provision to ensure the confidentiality of information provided for an assessment of vulnerabilities by requiring the information to be maintained at ERCOT and that it be accessible only to individuals with appropriate security clearances.

 

The bill enables the Public Utility Commission (PUC) and the Railroad Commission (RRC) to access penalties on entities that do not comply with the standards for resiliency as outlined in TGSC's plan.

 

After receiving additional feedback from stakeholders, changes were made to address the concerns. The intent of these changes is to have TGSC research, develop, and adopt resiliency standards, yet leave the implementation up to the PUC and RRC after review by the legislature. 

 

The following changes were made in the committee substitute:

 

C.S.S.B. 330 amends current law relating to the resilience of the electric grid and certain municipalities.

 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY

 

This bill does not expressly grant any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, institution, or agency.

 

SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS

 

SECTION 1. Provides that the legislature finds that:

 

(1) electric grid outages threaten the lives of the citizens of this state and pose a disproportionately large risk to:

 

(A) the elderly, vulnerable, and underprivileged within this state; and

 

(B) communities facing disproportionate environmental health burdens and population vulnerabilities relating to facilities such as chemical plants and refineries that can become environmental disaster areas when taken off-line due to loss of electricity;

 

(2) the 16 critical infrastructures identified in President Barack Obama's Presidential Policy Directive "Critical Infrastructure Security and Resilience" (PPD-21) including water and wastewater systems, food and agriculture, communications systems, the energy sector including refineries and fuel distribution systems, chemical plants, the financial sector, hospitals and health care facilities, law enforcement and government facilities, nuclear reactors, and other critical functions depend on the electric grid in this state and make the grid's protection vital to the economy of this nation and homeland security;

 

(3) the power outage that occurred in this state in February 2021 caused:

 

(A) death and suffering in this state;

 

(B) economic loss to this state's economy;

 

(C) impacts to all critical infrastructures in this state;

 

(D) the dispatch of generation units that likely exceeded limits established by the Environmental Protection Agency for sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, mercury, and carbon monoxide emissions and wastewater release limits;

 

(E) radically increased pricing of electricity that resulted in making electric power bills unaffordable to many customers across this state; and

 

(F) the exacerbation of the COVID-19 pandemic risk by forcing many of the state's citizens to consolidate at warming centers and in other small spaces where warmth for survival superseded social distancing protocols;

 

(4) a previous large-scale power outage occurred in this state in February 2011 during which 4.4 million customers were affected;

 

(5) this state is uniquely positioned to prevent blackouts because this state is a net exporter of energy and is the only state with an electric grid almost exclusively within its territorial boundaries;

 

(6) the 2011 and 2021 power outages call into question:

 

(A) whether too much risk has been accepted regarding weatherization of electric generation infrastructure;

 

(B) whether this state lacks the internal distribution structure and control systems to manage rolling outages; and

 

(C) whether sufficient resources have been allocated toward overall grid resilience;

 

(7) public confidence in the resilience of the electric grid in this state is essential to ensuring economic prosperity, domestic tranquility, continuity of government, and life-sustaining systems;

 

(8) a resilient electric grid that offers businesses in this state continuity of operations in the event of a natural or man-made disaster will be an unrivaled attraction for businesses to expand or move their operations to this state and for protecting what is important to this state, including its military installations and its environment;

 

(9) current market incentives and regulations are not sufficient for electric utilities to:

 

(A) prioritize grid security and resilience; and

 

(B) protect the grid against hazards;

 

(10) protection of the electric grid in this state against hazards would assure businesses and the citizens of this state that the "lights will be back on first in Texas" in the event of a nationwide catastrophe affecting electric infrastructure, sparing catastrophic societal and environmental consequences for this state; and

 

(11) when this state begins implementation of the plan for all hazards resilience described by Section 44.006, Utilities Code, as added by this Act, to protect the electric grid in this state, short-term and long-term economic benefit will far exceed even the most optimistic estimates of the conventional economic incentives provided by tax abatements to attract businesses to this state.

 

SECTION 2. Amends Subtitle B, Title 2, Utilities Code, by adding Chapter 44, as follows:

 

CHAPTER 44. GRID RESILIENCE

 

Sec. 44.001. DEFINITIONS. Defines "all hazards," "micro-grid," and "security commission."

 

Sec. 44.002. TEXAS GRID SECURITY COMMISSION. (a) Provides that the Texas Grid Security Commission (security commission) is composed of the following members:

 

(1) a representative of the Texas Division of Emergency Management (TDEM) appointed by the chief of TDEM (chief);

 

(2) a representative of the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUC) appointed by the PUC;

 

(3) a representative of the Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) appointed by RRC;

 

(4) a representative of the independent organization certified under Section 39.151 (Essential Organizations) for the Energy Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) power region appointed by the chief executive officer of that organization;

 

(5) a representative of power generation companies appointed by the chief; and

 

(6) a representative of transmission and distribution utilities appointed by the chief.

 

(b) Authorizes the chief to invite members or former members of the United States Air Force's Electromagnetic Defense Task Force to the membership of the security commission.

 

(c) Requires TDEM to designate a member of the security commission to serve as presiding officer.

 

(d) Authorizes the presiding officer to invite to the membership of the security commission any person whose expertise the security commission considers necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter.

 

(e) Requires the security commission to convene at the call of the presiding officer.

 

(f) Requires the security commission to report to the chief.

 

(g) Provides that a vacancy on the security commission is filled by appointment for the unexpired term in the same manner as the original appointment.

 

(h) Requires individuals appointed to the security commission to be residents of this state, to the extent possible.

 

(i) Authorizes the presiding officer of the security commission or the chief to invite subject matter experts to advise the security commission, including individuals recognized as experts in the fields of law enforcement, emergency services, communications, water and sewer services, health care, financial services, agriculture, transportation, electricity markets, cybersecurity of grid control systems, electromagnetic pulse mitigation, terrestrial and solar weather, and micro-grids. Authorizes the presiding officer to invite an individual for this purpose regardless of whether the individual is a resident of this state.

 

Sec. 44.003. GRID RESILIENCE INFORMATION. (a) Requires each of the following members of the security commission to apply for a secret security clearance or an interim secret security clearance to be granted by the federal government: the representative of the independent organization certified under Section 39.151 for the ERCOT region; the representative of TDEM; and the representative of the PUC.

 

(b) Provides that a member of the security commission listed under Subsection (a) who is granted an applicable security clearance under that subsection is a member of the information security working group.

 

(c) Requires the information security working group to determine:

 

(1) which information created or obtained by the security commission is confidential;

 

(2) which members of the security commission are authorized to access which types of information received by the security commission; and

 

(3) which members, other than members of the working group, should apply for a secret security clearance or interim clearance granted by the federal government.

 

(d) Requires that information that the information security working group determines is confidential under Subsection (c) be stored and maintained by the independent organization certified under Section 39.151 for the ERCOT power region.

 

(e) Requires the security commission to maintain a reasonable balance between public transparency and security for information determined to be confidential under Subsection (c).

 

(f) Provides that confidential information created or obtained by the security commission is not subject to disclosure under Chapter 552 (Public Information), Government Code.

 

(g) Provides that a meeting of the security commission that involves the discussion of confidential information is not subject to Chapter 551 (Open Meetings), Government Code.

 

Sec. 44.004. GRID RESILIENCE EVALUATION. (a) Requires the security commission to evaluate, using available information on past power outages in ERCOT, all hazards to the ERCOT electric grid, including threats that can cause future outages. Requires the security commission to evaluate the resilience of municipalities in this state in the following essential areas:

 

(1) emergency services;

 

(2) communications systems;

 

(3) water and sewer services;

 

(4) health care systems;

 

(5) financial services;

 

(6) energy systems, including an evaluation of whether energy, electric power, and fuel supplies are protected and available for recovery in the event of a catastrophic power outage; and

 

(7) transportation systems.

 

(b) Authorizes the security commission to create groups or teams to identify and address each hazard as necessary. Requires the security commission to assess each hazard both on the likelihood of occurrence of the hazard and the potential consequences of the hazard.

 

(c) Requires the security commission to identify methods by which this state can support an overall national deterrence policy as proposed by the Cyberspace Solarium Commission, including by:

 

(1) identifying means to ensure that all hazards resilience for electric utilities supports critical national security functions in this state; and

 

(2) engaging the Texas National Guard to be trained as first responders to cybersecurity threats to the ERCOT electric grid and other critical infrastructure.

 

(d) Requires the security commission to evaluate nuclear generation sites in this state, the resilience of each nuclear reactor to all hazards, and the resilience to all hazards of off-site power for critical safety systems that support the reactor and spent fuel. Authorizes the security commission to communicate with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to accomplish the evaluation.

 

(e) Requires the security commission to evaluate current Critical Infrastructure Protection standards established by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation and standards set by the National Institute of Standards and Technology to determine the most appropriate standards for protecting grid infrastructure in this state.

 

(f) Requires the security commission to investigate the steps that local communities and other states have taken to address grid resilience. Authorizes the security commission to request funding to conduct site visits to these locations as required.

 

(g) Requires the security commission to identify universities based in this state that have expertise in cybersecurity and other matters that can contribute to the security commission's goal of mitigating all hazards to the grid in this state.

 

(h) Authorizes the security commission, in carrying out the security commission's duties under this section, to solicit information from:

 

(1) defense contractors with experience protecting defense systems from electromagnetic pulse;

 

(2) electric utilities that have developed electromagnetic pulse protections for the utilities' grid assets;

 

(3) the United States Department of Homeland Security; and

 

(4) the Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) Attack.

 

Sec. 44.005. RESILIENCE STANDARDS. (a) Requires the security commission to develop and adopt resilience standards for municipalities and critical components of the ERCOT electric grid based on the findings of the evaluations and investigations conducted under Section 44.004.

 

(b) Requires that standards developed and adopted for energy systems of municipalities include provisions to ensure that energy, electric power, and fuel supplies are protected and available for recovery in the event of a catastrophic power outage.

 

(c) Requires the security commission, not later than October 1, 2024, to prepare and deliver a report to the legislature on the development of the resilience standards as required under this section and a recommended timeline for implementation.

 

Sec. 44.006. PLAN FOR ALL HAZARDS RESILIENCE. (a) Requires the security commission to prepare and deliver to the legislature a plan for protecting the ERCOT electric grid from all hazards, including a catastrophic loss of power in the state, not later than October 1, 2024.

 

(b) Requires that the plan include:

 

(1) weatherizing requirements to prevent power outages from extreme cold weather events, an analysis of whether these requirements would induce cyber vulnerabilities, and an analysis of the associated costs for these requirements;

 

(2) provisions for installing, replacing, or upgrading industrial control systems and associated networks, or the use of compensating controls or procedures, in critical facilities to address cyber vulnerabilities;

 

(3) provisions for installing, replacing, or upgrading extra high-voltage power transformers and supervisory control and data acquisition systems to withstand 100 kilovolts/meter E1 electromagnetic pulses and 85 volts/kilometer E3 electromagnetic pulses;

 

(4) a timeline for making improvements to remaining infrastructure to meet resilience standards adopted by the security commission under Section 44.005;

 

(5) long-term resilience provisions for supporting industries including: nuclear reactors, materials, and waste; fuel supply; health care; communications; water and sewer services; food supply; and transportation; and

 

(6) any additional provisions considered necessary by the security commission.

 

(c) Authorizes the security commission to consult with the Private Sector Advisory Council in developing the plan.

 

(d) Requires TDEM to incorporate the plan into the state emergency management plan and update the state emergency management plan as necessary to incorporate progressive resilience improvements.

 

Sec. 44.007. GRID RESILIENCE REPORT. (a) Requires the security commission to prepare and deliver a nonclassified report to the legislature, the governor, and the PUC assessing natural and man-made threats to the electric grid and efforts to mitigate the threats, not later than January 1 of each year.

 

(b) Requires the security commission to make the report available to the public.

 

(c) Authorizes the security commission to hold confidential or classified briefings with federal, state, and local officials as necessary in preparing the report.

 

Sec. 44.008. RESILIENCE COST RECOVERY. Requires a regulatory authority to include in establishing the rates of an electric utility consideration of the costs incurred to install, replace, or upgrade facilities or equipment to meet a resilience standard established under this chapter. Requires a regulatory authority to presume that costs incurred to meet a resilience standard under this chapter are reasonable and necessary expenses.

 

Sec. 44.009. MICRO-GRIDS. (a) Requires the security commission to establish resilience standards for micro-grids and certify a micro-grid that meets the standards. Requires that the standards be developed for both alternating current and direct current micro-grids.

 

(b) Prohibits a municipality or other political subdivision from enacting or enforcing an ordinance or other measure that bans, limits, or otherwise regulates inside the boundaries or extraterritorial jurisdiction of the municipality or political subdivision a micro-grid that is certified by the security commission under this section, except as provided by Subsection (c).

 

(c) Provides that the owner or operator of a micro-grid certified by the security commission is a power generation company and is required to register under Section 39.351(a) (relating to filing requirements for power generation companies). Authorizes the owner or operator of the micro-grid to:

 

(1) interconnect the micro-grid to the ERCOT electric grid;

 

(2) obtain transmission service for the micro-grid; and

 

(3) use the micro-grid to sell electricity at wholesale in a manner consistent with the provisions of Title 2 (Public Utility Regulatory Act), PUC rules applicable to a power generation company or an exempt wholesale generator, and the requirements of the independent organization certified under Section 39.151 for the ERCOT power region.

 

SECTION 3. Effective date: upon passage or September 1, 2023. �