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HB479 • 2025

AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 7 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO COMMERCIAL OPERATIONS.

AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 7 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO COMMERCIAL OPERATIONS.

Energy Technology
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Burns
Last action
2026-06-30
Official status
House Natural Resources & Energy 6/30/26
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The official text states implementation occurs either six months after regulations are published or twenty-four months after enactment, whichever comes first. The candidate explanation simplified this to a single timeline based on regulation creation.

Community Heat Protection and Industrial Accountability Act

This law requires certain commercial operations in Delaware to stop or reduce activities that raise nearby residential temperatures by more than 2 degrees Fahrenheit during extreme heat events.

What This Bill Does

  • Requires businesses that exceed a specific temperature increase limit near homes to pause work until they fix the problem if there is an official heat warning.
  • Directs the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) to create rules for measuring how much heat businesses add to their surroundings.
  • Allows DNREC to fine violators up to $10,000 per day or order them to shut down operations immediately.
  • Gives residents living near these facilities the right to file a lawsuit if they are harmed by violations of this law.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Commercial and industrial businesses that emit waste heat into residential areas, including data centers.
  • Residents in neighborhoods where commercial operations may raise outdoor temperatures during extreme heat events.
  • The Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC), which must enforce the rules.

Terms To Know

Thermal impact threshold
A rise in outside temperature greater than 2.0 degrees Fahrenheit caused by a specific business operation within a residential area.
Mitigation measures
Changes to technology or operations that lower the amount of heat released into the environment below the thermal impact threshold.

Limits and Unknowns

  • Facilities zoned for heavy industrial use, such as oil refineries, are exempt from these rules unless they are data centers.
  • The law cannot take full effect until DNREC creates specific regulations within 18 months of the bill becoming law.

Bill History

No action history is stored for this bill yet.

Official Summary Text

AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 7 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO COMMERCIAL OPERATIONS.
This Act safeguards public health by requiring the temporary cessation, or mitigation, of commercial activities that materially elevate nearby residential temperatures during periods of extreme heat. This Act shall be known as the “Community Heat Protection and Industrial Accountability Act.” This Act requires DNREC to develop standardized methodologies for measuring and modeling thermal impacts.
DNREC may assess fines of up to $10,000 per day, issue mandatory shut down orders, or issue additional penalties for willful non-compliance. Affected residents will also have a private right of action to file a lawsuit. Facilities, that are not data centers, zoned for heavy industrial use, such as oil refineries, are exempt from the requirements of this chapter. The Department shall promulgate regulations to implement this Act within 18 months of enactment.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Legislation Document

SPONSOR:

Rep. Burns

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

153rd GENERAL ASSEMBLY

HOUSE BILL NO. 479

AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 7 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO COMMERCIAL OPERATIONS.

WHEREAS, extreme heat is one of the leading weather-related causes of death, contributing to heat exhaustion, heat stroke, cardiovascular strain, and exacerbation of respiratory and chronic illnesses; and

WHEREAS, vulnerable populations—including children, the elderly, outdoor workers, and individuals with preexisting health conditions—are disproportionately impacted by elevated ambient temperatures; and

WHEREAS, certain commercial and industrial operations, including data centers, can contribute to localized temperature increases through waste heat discharge and thermal emissions; and

WHEREAS, even modest increases in ambient temperature—on the order of 2 degrees Fahrenheit or greater—can significantly increase the risk of heat-related illness and mortality during heat advisories or extreme heat events; and

WHEREAS, urban heat island effects compound these risks, particularly in densely populated or historically under-resourced residential communities; and

WHEREAS, public health protection during declared heat emergencies requires minimizing avoidable sources of additional heat loading in residential environments; and

WHEREAS, elevated ambient temperatures increase the body’s thermal load, impairing its ability to regulate core temperature, particularly in high humidity conditions; and

WHEREAS, a temperature increase of even 2 degrees Fahrenheit during extreme heat events can:

1. Increase the incidence of heat exhaustion and heat stroke;

2. Elevate cardiovascular stress, leading to higher rates of heart attacks and strokes;

3. Worsen air quality by accelerating ozone formation; and

4. Increase nighttime temperatures, reducing physiological recovery and compounding health risks.

WHEREAS, studies have demonstrated that incremental temperature increases during heat waves correlate with measurable increases in mortality rates, especially in urban and heat-vulnerable communities.

NOW, THEREFORE:

BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE:

Section 1. Amend Part X, Title 7 of the Delaware Code by making deletions as shown by strike through and insertions as shown by underline as follows:

Chapter 101. Community Heat Protection and Industrial Accountability Act.

§10101. Short title.

This chapter is known and may be cited as the “Community Heat Protection and Industrial Accountability Act.”

§10102. Purpose.

(a) The General Assembly finds all of the following:

(1) Elevated ambient temperatures increase the body’s thermal load, impairing its ability to regulate core temperature, particularly in high humidity conditions.

(2) A temperature increase of even 2 degrees Fahrenheit during extreme heat events can:

a. Increase the incidence of heat exhaustion and heat stroke.

b. Elevate cardiovascular stress, leading to higher rates of heart attacks and strokes.

c. Worsen air quality by accelerating ozone formation.

d. Increase nighttime temperatures, reducing physiological recovery and compounding health risks.

(3) Studies have demonstrated that incremental temperature increases during heat waves correlate with measurable increases in mortality rates, especially in urban and heat-vulnerable communities.

(4) Preventing anthropogenic (human-caused) heat contributions during critical periods is a cost-effective and immediate method of reducing heat-related health risks.

(b) Based on the findings under subsection (a) of this section, the purpose of this chapter is to safeguard public health by requiring the temporary cessation, or mitigation, of commercial activities that materially elevate nearby residential temperatures during periods of extreme heat.

§10103. Definitions.

For purposes of this chapter:

(1) “Commercial operation” means any non-residential facility engaged in industrial, manufacturing, data processing, energy generation, or other large-scale activities that emit waste heat into the surrounding environment.

(2) “Department” means the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC).

(3) “Heat advisory” and “extreme heat warning” mean official designations issued by the National Weather Service or an equivalent authority.

(4) “Mitigation measures” include technological or operational changes that reduce heat emissions to below the thermal impact threshold.

(5) “Residential community” means an area primarily zoned for housing or containing a significant population of permanent residents.

(6) “Thermal impact threshold” means a measured or modeled increase of greater than 2.0 degrees Fahrenheit in ambient outdoor temperature within a residential community attributable to a specific commercial operation.

§10104. Applicability.

(a) This chapter applies to any commercial operation determined by the Department to have a measurable thermal impact on a residential community.

(b) The Department must establish standardized methodologies for measuring and modeling thermal impacts, which may include:

(1) Temperature monitoring.

(2) Remote sensing.

(3) Atmospheric dispersion and heat transfer modeling.

§10105. Operational restrictions during heat events.

(a) Any commercial operation determined to exceed the thermal impact threshold must cease operations until implementation of sufficient mitigation measures to reduce the thermal impact below the threshold during any period in which a heat advisory or extreme heat warning is in effect for the affected area.

(b) Operational suspension must remain in effect for the duration of the advisory or warning unless compliance is demonstrated.

§10106. Monitoring, reporting, and compliance.

(a) Covered commercial operations must do all of the following:

(1) Conduct regular thermal impact assessments.

(2) Maintain records of waste heat emissions and mitigation efforts.

(3) Report data to the Department upon request.

(b) The Department must:

(1) Establish a public reporting system for community complaints and temperature data.

(2) Publish guidance for compliance.

§10107. Enforcement and penalties.

(a) A commercial operation found in violation of this chapter is subject to one or more of the following:

(1) A civil penalty not to exceed $10,000 per day of violation.

(2) A mandatory shutdown order.

(3) An additional penalty for repeated or wilful noncompliance.

(b) A private cause of action is available to any victim of a violation of this chapter for any remedy available under State law, including compensatory and punitive damages and injunctive relief.

§10108. Exemptions.

Facilities, not including data centers, that are zoned for heavy industrial use are exempt from the requirements of this chapter.

Section 2. The Secretary of the Department

of Natural Resources and Environmental Control

must promulgate regulations necessary to implement this chapter within 18 months of [the enactment date of this Act], including:

(1) Technical standards for thermal measurement.

(2) Procedures for emergency compliance.

Section 3. This Act is severable. If any provision of this Act, or the application of this Act to a person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder must not be affected.

Section 4. This Act must be implemented the earlier of the following:

(1) Six months after notice by the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control in the Register of Regulations that regulations implementing this Act have been promulgated.

(2) Twenty-four months after enactment.

SYNOPSIS

This Act safeguards public health by requiring the temporary cessation, or mitigation, of commercial activities that materially elevate nearby residential temperatures during periods of extreme heat. This Act shall be known as the “Community Heat Protection and Industrial Accountability Act.” This Act requires DNREC to develop standardized methodologies for measuring and modeling thermal impacts.

DNREC may assess fines of up to $10,000 per day, issue mandatory shut down orders, or issue additional penalties for willful non-compliance. Affected residents will also have a private right of action to file a lawsuit. Facilities, that are not data centers, zoned for heavy industrial use, such as oil refineries, are exempt from the requirements of this chapter. The Department shall promulgate regulations to implement this Act within 18 months of enactment.