California lawmakers ended last week with a long list of
energy and environmental bills that they passed — and a shorter list of those
that failed to come to a vote.
We’ve already covered the highest-profile bills that managed
to win enough votes to move on to Gov. Jerry Brown’s desk for a signature by
Sept. 30. Those include SB
100 and its new 100 percent clean energy mandate; SB
700 and its extension of behind-the-meter energy storage incentives;
and AB
901, the sprawling and controversial bill to give utilities including
Pacific Gas & Electric ways to manage the multibillion-dollar costs of
wildfires past and future.
We also covered the failure
of AB 813, the “grid regionalization” bill that would have allowed
California to take the first steps toward expanding its grid operator CAISO
across the Western U.S.
Here are some of the other bills we’ve been tracking through
the finish line of this year’s legislative session.
Renewable energy, geothermal and biogas
Clean energy advocates won a major victory with the passage
of SB 100, which sets a 100-percent-by-2045 zero-carbon energy mandate for the
state, and increases the percentage of energy that must come from renewable
resources over the next decade.
But another bill aimed at boosting California’s shorter-term
renewable procurement failed to come to a vote before Friday’s deadline.
AB
893 would have ordered California utilities to procure about
2,500 megawatts of wind and solar power over the next four years, as well as
about 1,750 megawatts of geothermal power over the coming decade.
The Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) came on as an
AB 893 supporter after the original geothermal-only mandate was amended to
include short-term solar and wind procurement, saying that the move was needed
to fill a gap in the slowing market for utility-scale renewables.
Rick Umoff, SEIA’s California director of state affairs,
wrote in a statement that failing to pass the bill — along with the failure of
grid regionalization bill AB 813 — represented “missed opportunities to get a
jump-start on reaching the bold goals set in SB 100. The bills provided a
solution that not only is vital to meeting the state’s clean energy goals, but
also would have saved consumers money, and it’s disappointing the Legislature
did not act on this bill this session.”
Umoff did praise the passage of SB 100 and SB 700, however,
and noted that SEIA is planning to work with lawmakers and regulators “to
stimulate near-term solar and job growth through implementation of SB 100 and
the state’s integrated resource planning process."
AB 893 also had promoted the use of “renewable natural gas,”
which is methane collected from wastewater plants, city dumps, dairy farms and
other organic sources. But despite its failure, two other biogas-related bills
did pass this session.
SB 1440 authorizes the California Public Utilities
Commission (CPUC) to work with the California Air Resources Board to develop a
biomethane procurement program that will “benefit ratepayers, is
cost-effective, and advances the state's environmental and energy policies.”
And AB 3187 will ask the CPUC to open a proceeding next
year to consider options to promote in-state production and distribution of
biomethane, including recovery in rates of the costs of interconnection
infrastructure investments.
Electric vehicles and clean transportation
Electric vehicles are a critical part of California’s
broader carbon-reduction plans — and California’s utilities are in the midst of
rolling out multi-hundred-million-dollar
EV charging infrastructure programs to support that growth.
While SB 100’s zero-carbon energy mandate doesn’t
specifically include EVs, several EV-related bills passed this session aimed
at meeting Gov. Brown’s goal of 5 million zero-emission vehicles on the
road by 2030, and bringing greenhouse gas emissions to 40 percent below
1990 levels by 2030.
AB 2127 would direct the California Energy Commission
(CEC) to work with the CPUC and the California Air Resources Board (CARB) on
assessing statewide EV charging infrastructure needs, linking the CPUC’s
oversight of utility EV charging programs with the CEC’s long-range carbon
reduction goals. According to Amisha Rai, senior director for California
policy for AB 1722 backer Advanced Energy Economy, the bill "will result
in more efficient use of public dollars and smarter implementation of the state's
ongoing ZEV [zero-emission vehicle] efforts."
And AB 1014 would target ridesharing companies Lyft and
Uber, directing CARB and the CPUC to “adopt and implement targets to
reduce the amount of greenhouse gases emitted per passenger mile” for
ridesharing vehicles.
Climate change and community support
California’s decision to close Diablo Canyon, its last
operating nuclear power plant, has been accompanied by a debate over how
carbon-free nuclear energy can be replaced without increasing the state’s
greenhouse gas burden — and how much money PG&E should be able to collect
from ratepayers to help the San Luis Obispo region recover from the economic
effects of its closure.
With the passage
of SB 1090 a week before the end of the legislative session, PG&E
was handed a legislative mandate to restore hundreds of millions of dollars of
worker retraining and community support called for in the original plan, as
well as enshrine zero-carbon replacements for its 2 gigawatts of always-on
power.
Assisting communities in managing a transition to clean
energy was also the focus of SB 1072, which passed the legislature last week. The bill
would create technical assistance partnerships to help low-income and
high-pollution communities “access statewide public and other grant moneys for
climate change mitigation and adaptation projects that maximize the benefits
for the region.”
The Greenlining Institute, a
supporter of SB 1072, noted that technical assistance is an important
factor in whether or not communities win or lose their grant proposals — and
that low-income communities don’t get as much of this technical support as
wealthy communities do.
Amidst the controversy surrounding wildfire relief for
PG&E, the California legislature also quietly passed two bills that will require insurers to
assess homeowners’ property values at least every two years, as well as
standardize how insurers explain their wildfire coverage policies to
customers.
Building decarbonization
California’s already lengthy list of efficiency and clean
energy regulations for homes, offices, factories and other buildings saw a few
new additions this legislative session. The Natural Resources Defense
Council highlighted two bills aimed at reducing the greenhouse
gas footprint for buildings, which now generate about a quarter of the state’s
emissions.
The first, AB 3232, requires the CEC to assess the potential for the
state to reduce carbon pollution from residential and commercial buildings by
40 percent from 1990 levels by 2030 — a target that will involve significant
retrofitting of existing building stock as well as the improvements mandated
for new construction.
The second, SB 1477, will direct the CPUC to spend $50 million a year
from cap-and-trade revenue to support two programs. The first of these, dubbed
BUILD (Building Initiative for Low-Emissions Development), will provide
incentives for innovative and low-cost methods to improve efficiency and carbon
reduction practices for new construction. The second, dubbed TECH (Technology
and Equipment for Clean Heating), will provide incentives, as well as customer
outreach and contractor training, for low-emissions space and water heating
equipment such as heat pumps.
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