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SB-127 • 2026

Climate change.

Climate change.

Budget Education Energy Technology
Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review (S) - ()
Last action
2025-06-27
Official status
Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 15, Statutes of 2025.
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill summary does not provide specific details on how the increased fees will impact project costs or if there are limits to follow-on funding under the EPIC program extension.

Climate Change Measures

The bill increases salaries and extends funding periods for certain programs related to climate change, modifies certification processes for energy projects, and adjusts fees associated with these processes.

What This Bill Does

  • Increases the salary of the chairperson of the Energy Commission by 5% in each fiscal year from 2025-26 through 2027-28.
  • Extends the period during which follow-on funding can be awarded for projects under the EPIC program until January 1, 2028.
  • Changes the certification process for energy projects by requiring a nonrefundable deposit and full payment of processing costs.
  • Increases annual fees for certified facilities from $25,000 to $70,000 per year.

Who It Names or Affects

  • The chairperson and members of the Energy Commission
  • Applicants seeking certification for energy projects
  • Owners of certified facilities

Terms To Know

Energy Commission
A state agency responsible for developing and implementing programs related to energy conservation, development, and technology.
EPIC program
Electric Program Investment Charge, a program that funds projects aimed at technological advancement in the electricity sector.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify how the increased fees will be used or what impact they might have on project costs.
  • It is unclear if there are any limits to the amount of follow-on funding that can be awarded under the EPIC program extension.

Bill History

  1. 2025-06-27 California Legislative Information

    Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 15, Statutes of 2025.

  2. 2025-06-27 California Legislative Information

    Approved by the Governor.

  3. 2025-06-27 California Legislative Information

    Enrolled and presented to the Governor at 3 p.m.

  4. 2025-06-27 California Legislative Information

    Assembly amendments concurred in. (Ayes 29. Noes 9. Page 1814.) Ordered to engrossing and enrolling.

  5. 2025-06-27 California Legislative Information

    In Senate. Concurrence in Assembly amendments pending.

  6. 2025-06-27 California Legislative Information

    Read third time. Passed. (Ayes 58. Noes 19. Page 2322.) Ordered to the Senate.

  7. 2025-06-27 California Legislative Information

    Assembly Rule 63 suspended. (Ayes 55. Noes 19. Page 2316.)

  8. 2025-06-27 California Legislative Information

    Ordered to third reading.

  9. 2025-06-27 California Legislative Information

    Withdrawn from committee pursuant to Assembly Rule 96.

  10. 2025-06-24 California Legislative Information

    From committee with author's amendments. Read second time and amended. Re-referred to Com. on BUDGET.

  11. 2025-03-24 California Legislative Information

    Referred to Com. on BUDGET.

  12. 2025-03-20 California Legislative Information

    In Assembly. Read first time. Held at Desk.

  13. 2025-03-20 California Legislative Information

    Read third time. Passed. (Ayes 28. Noes 10. Page 439.) Ordered to the Assembly.

  14. 2025-03-18 California Legislative Information

    Read second time. Ordered to third reading.

  15. 2025-03-17 California Legislative Information

    Ordered to second reading.

  16. 2025-03-17 California Legislative Information

    Withdrawn from committee. (Ayes 27. Noes 10. Page 384.)

  17. 2025-02-05 California Legislative Information

    Referred to Com. on B. & F. R.

  18. 2025-01-24 California Legislative Information

    From printer. May be acted upon on or after February 23.

  19. 2025-01-23 California Legislative Information

    Introduced. Read first time. To Com. on RLS. for assignment. To print.

Official Summary Text

SB 127, Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review.
Climate change.
Existing law establishes the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission) under the direction of a chairperson. Existing law provides an annual salary for members and for the chairperson and prescribes a method by which those salaries may be increased.
Existing law grants an additional salary increase of 5% in each of the 2023–24, 2024–25, and 2025–26 fiscal years for members of the Energy Commission.
This bill would, similarly, grant the chairperson of the Energy Commission an additional salary increase of 5% for the 2025–26, 2026–27, and 2027–28 fiscal years.
Existing law requires the Energy Commission to develop and
implement the Electric Program Investment Charge (EPIC) program to award moneys for projects that will benefit electricity ratepayers, lead to technological advancement and breakthroughs, and result in a portfolio of projects that is strategically focused and sufficiently narrow to make advancement on the most significant technological challenges, as specified. Existing law, until July 1, 2025, authorizes the Energy Commission to award, through a noncompetitive method, follow-on funding for projects that meet specified criteria, including the EPIC program’s eligibility requirements and that the projects have been funded, at least in part, through the EPIC program.
This bill would extend the authorization to award follow-on funding for those projects until January 1, 2028.
Existing law vests the Energy Commission with the exclusive jurisdiction to certify
the construction of stationary or floating electrical generating facilities using a source of thermal energy with a generating capacity of 50 megawatts or more and prohibits a person from constructing those facilities unless that person obtains a certificate from the commission, as provided. Existing law establishes an opt-in certification process, as provided, for solar photovoltaic, terrestrial wind electrical generation powerplants, and thermal powerplants that do not use fossil or nuclear fuels, with a generating capacity of 50 megawatts or more, an energy storage system capable of storing 200 megawatthours or more of electricity, or projects associated with the manufacture, production, or assembly of energy storage systems, wind systems, solar photovoltaic energy systems, or specialized products, components, or systems integral to renewable energy or energy storage technologies, that authorizes a person proposing to construct those facilities to file an application for certification with the Energy
Commission. Existing law requires a person submitting an application for certification to submit a fee of $250,000 plus $500 per megawatt of gross generating capacity or per megawatthour of gross energy storage capacity, or $0.70 per square foot of those manufacturing, production, or assembly facilities. Existing law prohibits the application fee from exceeding $750,000. Existing law requires a person receiving a certification from the Energy Commission to pay an annual fee of $25,000 for each year the facility retains its certification. Existing law requires a person submitting a petition to amend an existing project that previously received certification to submit with the petition a fee of $5,000. Existing law requires that those fees be adjusted annually, as provided.
This bill would instead require a person submitting an application for certification to submit with the application a nonrefundable deposit of $750,000 and would require the applicant to pay all
costs incurred by the Energy Commission in processing the application. The bill would require the Energy Commission to provide invoices for additional fees, at least annually, for the actual costs incurred by the Energy Commission in excess of the deposit. The bill would increase the annual fee to $70,000 for each year the facility retains its certification. The bill would specify that the petition fee is nonrefundable.
Existing law requires the Energy Commission to implement and administer the Distributed Electricity Backup Assets Program to incentivize the construction of cleaner and more efficient distributed energy assets that would serve as on-call emergency supply or load reduction for the state’s electrical grid during extreme events, and the Demand Side Grid Support Program to incentivize dispatchable customer load reduction and backup generation operation as on-call emergency supply and load reduction for the state’s electrical grid
during extreme events, as provided.
Existing law requires the Department of Water Resources, in consultation with the Energy Commission, to implement those projects, purchases, and contracts to carry out the above-described purposes. Existing law requires facilities constructed by the department, or under a contract with the department, that use any form of fossil fuel to be operated as necessary to respond to extreme events and prohibits those facilities from being operated any other time, except as provided.
This bill would instead require facilities constructed and owned by the department, rather than constructed by the department, or under a contract with the department, that use any form of fossil fuel to be operated as necessary to respond to extreme events and prohibit those facilities from being operated any other time, except as provided.
Existing law,
for the 2021–22 fiscal year, appropriates $200,000,000 to the Energy Commission to be used for a program to provide incentives for demand side grid support and associated mitigation costs and authorizes the expenditure of those moneys for the adoption of regulations, guidelines, or other standards for the program, third-party block grants or contracts with incentive program implementers for purposes of implementing the program, or advancing up to 25% of the awarded funds at a time to parties that are eligible for funding for purposes of the program.
This bill would authorize the use of any additional funding appropriated by the Legislature to the Energy Commission for demand side grid support and associated mitigation costs for the above-specified uses.
Existing law establishes the Clean Transportation Program, administered by the Energy Commission, to provide funding to certain entities to develop and
deploy innovative technologies that transform California’s fuel and vehicle types to help attain the state’s climate change policies. Existing law limits funding under the program to specified categories of programs and projects, including, among others, block grants or incentive programs administered by public entities or not-for-profit technology entities for multiple projects, education and program promotion within California, and development of zero-emission fuel and vehicle technology centers.
This bill would revise that category of programs and projects eligible for this funding by eliminating the restriction that the block grants or incentive programs be administered by public entities or not-for-profit technology entities and by expanding the category to authorize this funding for block grants or incentive programs for zero-emission vehicle infrastructure.
Existing law requires the State Air
Resources Board (state board) to adopt and implement motor vehicle emission standards. Existing law provides that a person who violates specified vehicular air pollution statutes or specified orders, rules, or regulations of the state board is subject to a civil penalty, and requires those penalties to be deposited in the Air Pollution Control Fund.
Existing law authorizes the state board to adopt a schedule of annual fees for the certification, audit, and compliance of motor vehicles and engines sold in the state to cover the state board’s reasonable costs in implementing the certification, audit, and compliance programs, and requires those fees be deposited in the Certification and Compliance Fund. Existing law authorizes the state board to adopt a schedule of fees to cover all or a portion of the state board’s reasonable costs for the certification, audit, and compliance of off-road or nonvehicular engines and equipment, aftermarket parts, and emissions control
components sold in the state, and requires all moneys collected by the state board as part of that schedule of fees to be deposited in the Certification and Compliance Fund.
This bill would also authorize the state board to adopt a schedule of annual fees for deficiencies of motor vehicles and engines sold in the state and a schedule of fees to cover all or a portion of the state board’s reasonable costs for the deficiencies of off-road or nonvehicular engines and equipment, aftermarket parts, and emissions control components sold in the state. The bill would require the fees collected under both of those schedules to be deposited in the Certification and Compliance Fund.
Existing law establishes the Charge Ahead California Initiative, administered by the state board, and with the goals of, among other things, placing in service at least 1,000,000 zero-emission and near-zero-emission vehicles by January
1, 2023, and increasing access for disadvantaged, low-income, and moderate-income communities and consumers to zero-emission and near-zero-emission vehicles. Existing law also establishes the Clean Cars 4 All Program, which is administered by the state board, to focus on achieving reductions in the emissions of greenhouse gases, improvements in air quality, and benefits to low-income state residents through the replacement of high-polluter motor vehicles with cleaner and more efficient motor vehicles or a mobility option. Under existing law, the distribution of incentives under the program is implemented in air pollution control and air quality management districts that choose to participate in the program and through a statewide program. Existing law requires the state board, with respect to specified funds made available to the state board and that the state board allocated to the program, to maintain funding for each local air district participating in the program by requiring the state board to
reallocate funds to local air districts under certain circumstances.
This bill would expand the requirement to maintain funding to local air districts in that manner using other specified funds made available to the state board for the suite of equity transportation programs established under the Charge Ahead California Initiative, including the Clean Cars 4 All Program.
This bill would appropriate the sum of $132,175,000 from the Air Pollution Control Fund to the State Air Resources Board for the 2025–26 fiscal year, when funds are available from a specified consent decree, to be administered through the Hybrid and Zero-Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project, as specified. The bill would make the funds available for encumbrance or expenditure until June 30, 2027, and available for liquidation until June 30, 2029.
This bill would
declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.

Current Bill Text

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