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HOUSE BILL NO. 153
IN THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
THIRTY-FOURTH LEGISLATURE - FIRST SESSION
BY REPRESENTATIVES HOLLAND, Carrick
Introduced: 3/24/25
Referred: House Special Committee on Energy, Resources, Finance
A BILL
FOR AN ACT ENTITLED
"An Act relating to generation of electricity from renewable en ergy resources; relating 1
to a renewable portfolio standard; relating to power cost equalization; and providing for 2
an effective date." 3
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF ALASKA: 4
* Section 1. AS 42.05.780(a) is amended to read: 5
(a) An electric reliability organization shall file with the c ommission in a 6
petition for approval an integrated resource plan for meeting t he reliability 7
requirements of all customers within its interconnected electri c energy transmission 8
network in a manner that provides the greatest value, consisten t with the load-serving 9
entities' obligations. An integrated resource plan must contain an evaluation of the full 10
range of cost-effective means for load-serving entities to meet the service 11
requirements of all customers, including additional generation, transmission, battery 12
storage, and conservation or similar improvements in efficiency . An integrated 13
resource plan must include options to meet customers' collectiv e needs in a manner 14
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that provides the greatest valu e, consistent with the public in terest, regardless of the 1
location or ownership of new facilities or conservation activit ies. An integrated 2
resource plan must include options for satisfying the renewable portfolio 3
standard under AS 42.05.900. 4
* Sec. 2. AS 42.05.785(a) is amended to read: 5
(a) A public utility, including a public utility that is exemp t from other 6
regulation under AS 42.05.711 or another provision of this chap ter, that is 7
interconnected with an interconnected electric energy transmiss ion network served by 8
an electric reliability organization certificated by the commis sion may not construct a 9
large energy facility unless the commission determines that the facility 10
(1) is necessary to the interconnected electric energy transmi ssion 11
network with which it would be interconnected; 12
(2) complies with reliability standards; [AND] 13
(3) would, in a cost-effective manner, meet the needs of a loa d-serving 14
entity that is substantially served by the facility; and 15
(4) is not detrimental to a load-serving entity's ability to m eet the 16
renewable portfolio standard under AS 42.05.900. 17
* Sec. 3. AS 42.05.785(c) is amended to read: 18
(c) The commission may not require preapproval for a 19
(1) project for refurbishment or capitalized maintenance; 20
(2) hydropower project licensed by the Federal Energy Regulato ry 21
Commission before September 30, 2016; 22
(3) project that generates electricity from a renewable energy 23
resource and helps a load-serving entity meet the renewable por tfolio standard 24
under AS 42.05.900. 25
* Sec. 4. AS 42.05.785(e) is amended to read: 26
(e) In this section, 27
(1) "large energy facility" means 28
(A) [(1)] an electric power gener ating plant or combination of 29
plants at a single site with a combined capacity of 15,000 kilo watts or more 30
with transmission lines that dir ectly interconnect the plant wi th the 31
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transmission system; 1
(B) [(2)] a high-voltage, above-ground transmission line that 2
(i) [(A)] has a capacity of 69 kilovolts or more; and 3
(ii) [(B)] is longer than 10 miles; 4
(C) [(3)] a high-voltage submarine or underground cable that 5
(i) [(A)] has a capacity of 69 kilovolts or more; and 6
(ii) [(B)] is longer than three miles; 7
(D) [(4)] an energy storage device or combination of devices at 8
a single site with a combined capacity of 15,000 kilowatts and one hour or 9
more of energy storage that directly connects with the intercon nected bulk-10
electric system; and 11
(E) [(5)] a reactive compensation device or combination of 12
devices at a single site with a combined reactive capability of 15,000 kilovars 13
or more with a step-up device to regulate interconnected bulk-e lectric system 14
voltage; 15
(2) "renewable energy resource" has the meaning given in 16
AS 42.05.925. 17
* Sec. 5. AS 42.05 is amended by adding new sections to read: 18
Article 11A. Renewable Portfolio Standard. 19
Sec. 42.05.900. Renewable portfolio standard. The portfolio of a load-20
serving entity that is subject to the standards of an electric reliability organization 21
under AS 42.05.760 must include megaw att hours of electricity g enerated from 22
renewable energy resources, adjusted according to AS 42.05.905, in the following 23
percentages: 24
(1) 40 percent by December 31, 2030; 25
(2) 55 percent by December 31, 2035. 26
Sec. 42.05.905. Compli ance incentives. (a) To calculate a load-serving 27
entity's compliance with the renewable portfolio standard, the megawatt hours of 28
electricity from a project that generates electricity from wind energy are multiplied by 29
a factor of 1.25 if 30
(1) the project is operational before January 1, 2033; 31
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(2) the project has a nameplate generation capacity of at leas t 100 1
megawatts; and 2
(3) more than one load-serving entity acquires electricity pro duction 3
from the project and each entity acquires at least the entity's load ratio share or 20 4
percent of the project's energy output, whichever is less; in t his paragraph, "load ratio 5
share" means a percentage calculated by dividing a load-serving entity's total retail 6
electricity sales by the sum of retail electricity sales from a ll load-serving entities that 7
acquire electricity from the project. 8
(b) A load-serving entity may satisfy the renewable portfolio standard through 9
energy produced by distributed e nergy systems, adjusted accordi ng to (d) of this 10
section and then multiplied by a factor of 2.0, regardless of w hether the energy is 11
acquired by the load-serving entit y or used by the customer. Ea ch load-serving entity 12
shall file a tariff with the commission that establishes and ju stifies the average 13
capacity factor for each distri buted energy system technology c onnected to the 14
interconnected electric energy transmission network within the entity's service area. 15
(c) A load-serving entity may satisfy the renewable portfolio standard through 16
renewable electricity credits t hat qualify as part of the load- serving entity's portfolio 17
under AS 42.05.910. 18
(d) A load-serving entity may satisfy the renewable portfolio standard with 19
electricity consumption displaced because of energy efficiency investments made in 20
whole or in part with payment s under AS 42.05.915(g), if the di splaced consumption 21
is documented under a program established by the state. 22
Sec. 42.05.910. Renewable electricity credits. (a) To qualify as part of a load-23
serving entity's portfolio, a renewable electricity credit must be from generation 24
connected to the same interconnected electric energy transmission network that serves 25
the load-serving entity's customers or must be purchased from g eneration located 26
within the service area of an electric utility that serves cust omers who receive power 27
cost equalization under AS 42.45.100 - 42.45.150. 28
(b) A renewable electricity credit may be used only once. A re newable 29
electricity credit expires one year after it was created. 30
(c) A load-serving entity shall track the life cycle of a rene wable electricity 31
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credit created, transferred, or used by the load-serving entity . Each load-serving entity 1
is responsible for demonstrating that a renewable electricity c redit used to comply 2
with the renewable portfolio standard is derived from a renewable energy resource and 3
that the renewable electricity credit has not been previously used or transferred. 4
(d) A renewable electricity credit may be traded, sold, or oth erwise transferred 5
for value. A load-serving entity that transfers a renewable ele ctricity credit may not 6
use the renewable electricity associated with the transferred c redit to comply with the 7
renewable portfolio standard. 8
Sec. 42.05.915. Noncompliance fine; waiver. (a) A load-serving entity that 9
fails to meet the renewable portfolio standard is subject to a noncompliance fine for 10
each year that the entity fails to meet the renewable portfolio standard. After notice 11
and an opportunity for hearing, the commission may impose a fin e of $45 for every 12
megawatt hour that the entity is b elow the renewable portfolio standard. The 13
commission shall increase the dollar amount of the noncomplianc e fine under this 14
subsection annually by a percent age equal to the average percen tage increase over the 15
prior calendar year in all items of the Consumer Price Index fo r all urban consumers 16
for urban Alaska prepared by the United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor 17
Statistics. A load-serving entity shall itemize the effect of a noncompliance fine on the 18
entity's monthly customer bills. 19
(b) The commission shall waive all or part of a load-serving e ntity's 20
noncompliance fine to the extent that the load-serving entity 21
(1) has entered into a power purchase agreement for renewable 22
electricity before the next compliance period; 23
(2) begins receiving renewable electricity under the power pur chase 24
agreement not later than two years after the prior compliance period; and 25
(3) files with the commission an annual estimate of the megawa tt 26
hours the load-serving entity expects to receive from the power purchase agreement 27
that contribute to compliance with the renewable portfolio stan dard; if the megawatt 28
hours of renewable electricity received by the load-serving ent ity within two years 29
after the prior compliance period falls below the amount estima ted under this 30
paragraph, the load-serving entity is subject to a retroactive noncompliance fine. 31
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(c) If electricity transmission constraints prevent delivery o f renewable 1
electricity that a load-serving entity is obligated to purchase from a third party, the 2
megawatt hours of undelivered renew able electricity, adjusted a ccording to 3
AS 42.05.905, count toward the load-serving entity's compliance with the renewable 4
portfolio standard. 5
(d) The commission may waive the noncompliance fine in whole o r in part if 6
the commission determines that a load-serving entity is unable to meet the renewable 7
portfolio standard because of r easons outside the reasonable co ntrol of the load-8
serving entity as set out in (e) of this section, or the entity establishes good cause for 9
noncompliance as set out in (f) of this section. 10
(e) The following events or cir cumstances are outside of a loa d-serving 11
entity's reasonable control: 12
(1) weather-related damage to generation or transmission assets; 13
(2) natural disasters; 14
(3) failure of renewable elect ricity producers to meet contrac tual 15
obligations to the load-serving entity; 16
(4) lower than reasonably expe cted electricity production at a project 17
that generates electricity from a renewable energy resource if the lower electricity 18
production is caused by variation in renewable energy resource availability; 19
(5) global pandemics; and 20
(6) acts of war. 21
(f) The following factors may establish good cause for noncompliance: 22
(1) the extent of good faith efforts by the load-serving entit y to 23
comply, including the actions taken by the load-serving entity to procure the 24
renewable electricity and the lack of past failures to comply; 25
(2) the likelihood and amount of future renewable electricity to be 26
acquired by the load-serving entity. 27
(g) A load-serving entity may, within one year after the commission imposes a 28
noncompliance fine, satisfy the fine by paying a customer all o r a portion of the 29
customer's costs of installing a distributed energy system or e lectricity efficiency 30
technologies. 31
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(h) If a load-serving entity's portfolio includes at least 40 percent of electricity 1
generated from renewable energy resources, adjusted according t o AS 42.05.905, the 2
load-serving entity may, instead of paying a noncompliance fine associated with the 3
load-serving entity's failure to comply with the renewable port folio standard by 4
December 31, 2035, deposit an amount equal to the fine into an account, approved by 5
the commission, for use by the load-serving entity to defray th e costs of future 6
renewable electricity projects or purchases. 7
Sec. 42.05.920. Exemptions. A load-serving entity is exempt from compliance 8
with the renewable portfolio standard if the aggregate percenta ge of electricity 9
generated from renewable energy resources by all load-serving e ntities on the 10
interconnected electric energy transmission network, adjusted a ccording to 11
AS 42.05.905, meets or exceeds the aggregate renewable portfoli o standard for those 12
entities. 13
Sec. 42.05.925. Definitions. In AS 42.05.900 - 42.05.925, 14
(1) "compliance period" means each period identified in AS 42.05.900; 15
(2) "distributed energy system" means a renewable energy resou rce 16
that is located on any property owned or leased by a customer w ithin the service 17
territory of the load-serving entity that is interconnected on the customer's side of the 18
utility meter; 19
(3) "interconnected electric energy transmission network" has the 20
meaning given in AS 42.05.790; 21
(4) "load-serving entity" has the meaning given in AS 42.05.790; 22
(5) "megawatt hour" means 1,000,000 watts of electricity being used in 23
one hour and includes the steam equivalent of a megawatt hour; 24
(6) "renewable electricity" means electricity or energy genera ted from 25
renewable energy resources; 26
(7) "renewable electricity credit" means one credit equal to t he 27
generation attributes of one meg awatt hour that is derived from a renewable energy 28
resource; where fossil and renewable fuels are co-fired in the same generating unit, the 29
unit is considered to generate renewable electricity in direct proportion to the 30
percentage of the total heat input value represented by the hea t input value of the 31
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renewable fuels; 1
(8) "renewable energy resource" means a resource, other than 2
petroleum, nuclear, natural gas, or coal, that naturally replen ishes over a human, not a 3
geological, time frame, is ultimately derived from solar power, water power, or wind 4
power, comes from the sun or from thermal inertia of the earth, and minimizes the 5
output of toxic material in the conversion of the energy; in th is paragraph, "resource" 6
includes 7
(A) solar and solar thermal energy, wind energy, and kinetic 8
energy of moving water, including 9
(i) waves, tides, or currents; 10
(ii) run-of-river hydropower, in-river hydrokinetic; 11
(iii) conventional hydropower, lake tap hydropower; 12
(iv) water released through a dam; and 13
(v) geothermal energy; 14
(B) waste to energy systems, including 15
(i) wood; 16
(ii) landfill gas produced by municipal solid waste or 17
fuel that has been manufactured in whole or significant part fr om 18
waste; 19
(iii) biofuels produced in the state; and 20
(iv) thermal energy produ ced from a geothermal heat 21
pump using municipal solid waste, including biogenic and 22
anthropogenic factions. 23
(9) "renewable portfolio standard" means the percentage of ele ctricity 24
in a load-serving entity's portfo lio that must be generated fro m renewable energy 25
resources under AS 42.05.900, adjusted according to AS 42.05.905. 26
* Sec. 6. AS 42.45.110(a) is amended to read: 27
(a) The costs used to calculate the amount of power cost equal ization for all 28
electric utilities eligible under AS 42.45.100 - 42.45.150 incl ude all allowable costs, 29
except return on equity, used by the commission to determine th e revenue requirement 30
for electric utilities subject t o rate regulation under AS 42.0 5. The costs used in 31
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determining the power cost equalization per kilowatt-hour shall exclude any other type 1
of assistance that reduces the customer's costs of power on a k ilowatt-hour basis and 2
that is provided to the electric utility within 60 days before the commission determines 3
the power cost equalization per kilowatt-hour of the electric u tility. In calculating 4
power cost equalization, the commission may not consider validated costs or kilowatt-5
hour sales associated with a Unite d States Department of Defens e facility, revenue 6
from the sale of recovered heat, or revenue from the sale of re newable electricity 7
credits acquired under AS 42.05.910. 8
* Sec. 7. AS 42.05.785(c)(3) is repealed December 31, 2030. 9
* Sec. 8. This Act takes effect July 1, 2025. 10