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SB0200 • 2026

Utilities

Utilities

Energy
Passed Legislature

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

Sponsor
Bradley
Last action
2026-03-13
Official status
Senate - Died in Community Affairs
Effective date
2026-07-01

Plain English Breakdown

The bill summary does not provide specific details on enforcement mechanisms or penalties for non-compliance with decommissioning rules.

Solar Facility Decommissioning

This bill allows counties to create rules for decommissioning solar facilities and requires financial assurance from facility owners.

What This Bill Does

  • Allows a county to make rules about how to properly remove and clean up land after a large solar facility stops working.
  • Requires solar facility owners to show they can pay for the cleanup when their facilities are no longer useful.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Solar facility owners
  • Counties with large solar installations

Terms To Know

Decommissioning
Removing a solar facility and restoring the land to its original agricultural state.
Financial Assurance
Money or other assets that guarantee a solar facility owner can pay for decommissioning costs.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not apply to sites where construction applications were submitted before July 1, 2021.
  • It is unclear how the new rules will be enforced or what penalties there are for non-compliance.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-13 Senate

    • Died in Community Affairs

  2. 2026-01-13 Senate

    • Introduced

  3. 2025-12-10 Senate

    • Now in Community Affairs

  4. 2025-12-09 Senate

    • Favorable by Regulated Industries; YEAS 9 NAYS 0

  5. 2025-12-01 Senate

    • On Committee agenda-- Regulated Industries, 12/09/25, 1:00 pm, 412 Knott Building

  6. 2025-11-03 Senate

    • Referred to Regulated Industries; Community Affairs; Fiscal Policy

  7. 2025-10-15 Senate

    • Filed

Official Summary Text

Utilities; Authorizing a county to adopt an ordinance for the decommissioning of certain solar facilities that have reached the end of their useful life; authorizing a county to require financial assurance from a solar facility owner to establish that the solar facility owner has the capability to satisfy the estimated cost of decommissioning the solar facility; requiring that improvements included in certain transmission and distribution storm protection plans have forecasted customer benefits that exceed their forecasted cost, etc.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Florida Senate
-
2026

SB 200

By
Senator Bradley

6-00460-26 2026200__
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to utilities; amending s. 163.3205,
3 F.S.; revising legislative intent; defining terms;
4 authorizing a county to adopt an ordinance for the
5 decommissioning of certain solar facilities that have
6 reached the end of their useful life; providing for
7 the rebuttal of certain presumptions; authorizing a
8 county to require financial assurance from a solar
9 facility owner to establish that the solar facility
10 owner has the capability to satisfy the estimated cost
11 of decommissioning the solar facility; authorizing a
12 county to decommission a solar facility under certain
13 circumstances; requiring the Department of
14 Environmental Protection to develop best management
15 practices (BMPs) for the construction of a solar
16 facility; specifying requirements for the BMPs;
17 requiring the department to review certain information
18 to revise and update such BMPs annually; requiring a
19 solar facility operator to implement specified BMPs;
20 amending s. 366.96, F.S.; requiring that improvements
21 included in certain transmission and distribution
22 storm protection plans have forecasted customer
23 benefits that exceed their forecasted cost; revising
24 the factors that the Public Service Commission must
25 consider in reviewing such plans; deleting obsolete
26 language; requiring the commission to submit a
27 proposed rule for adoption by a specified date;
28 providing an effective date.
29
30 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
31
32 Section 1. Section 163.3205, Florida Statutes, is amended
33 to read:
34 163.3205 Solar facility approval process
;
decommissioning

35
requirements
; construction requirements
.—
36 (1)
LEGISLATIVE INTENT.
—
It is the intent of the Legislature
37 to encourage renewable solar electrical generation throughout
38 this state
, while ensuring that agricultural land used for a

39
solar facility be returned to its original state and be viable

40
for agricultural use at the end of the solar facility’s useful

41
life
. It is essential that solar facilities and associated
42 electric infrastructure be constructed and maintained in various
43 locations throughout this state in order to ensure the
44 availability of renewable energy production, which is critical
45 to this state’s energy and economic future.
46 (2)
DEFINITIONS.—
As used in this section, the term
:

47
(a)

“Agricultural land” means land within:

48
1.

An area categorized as agricultural land in a local

49
government comprehensive plan. Such categorization includes any

50
agricultural land use category; or

51
2.

An agricultural zoning district within an unincorporated

52
area.

53
(b)

“Decommission” means the removal of a solar facility

54
and return of agricultural land that was used for the solar

55
facility to an agriculturally useful condition similar to that

56
which existed before construction of the solar facility,

57
including the removal of above-ground facilities and

58
infrastructure that do not serve a continuing purpose.

59
(c)
“Solar facility” means a production facility for
60 electric power which:
61
1.
(a)
Uses photovoltaic modules to convert solar energy to
62 electricity that may be stored on site, delivered to a
63 transmission system, and consumed primarily offsite.
64
2.
(b)
Consists principally of photovoltaic modules, a
65 mounting or racking system, power inverters, transformers,
66 collection systems, battery systems, fire suppression equipment,
67 and associated components.
68
3.
(c)
May include accessory administration or maintenance
69 buildings, electric transmission lines, substations, energy
70 storage equipment, and related accessory uses and structures.
71 (3)
PERMITTED USE
.—
A solar facility
is

shall be
a permitted
72 use in all agricultural land use categories in a local
73 government comprehensive plan and all agricultural zoning
74 districts within an unincorporated area and must comply with the
75 setback and landscaped buffer area criteria for other similar
76 uses in the agricultural district.
77 (4)
LANDSCAPE REQUIREMENTS
.—
A county may adopt an ordinance
78 specifying buffer and landscaping requirements for solar
79 facilities. Such requirements may not exceed the requirements
80 for similar uses involving the construction of other facilities
81 that are permitted uses in agricultural land use categories and
82 zoning districts.
83
(
5
)

DECOMMISSIONING.—
A county
may adopt an ordinance

84
requiring that a solar facility with a generating capacity of 1

85
megawatt or more be properly decommissioned within 24 months

86
after notice to the solar facility owner that the facility has

87
reached the end of its useful life.

88
(a)

It is presumed that a solar facility has reached the

89
end of its useful life if:

90
1.

The solar facility fails to produce power for a period

91
of 12 months after construction of the solar facility has been

92
completed. This 12-month period does not include a period in

93
which the solar facility does not produce power due to a

94
disaster or other event beyond the control of the facility

95
owner; or

96
2.

The solar facility has been abandoned. A solar facility

97
is considered abandoned if:

98
a.

After commencement of the solar facility’s construction

99
but before its completion, no significant construction of the

100
facility occurs for a period of 24 months; or

101
b.

After becoming nonoperational due to a disaster or other

102
event beyond the control of the facility owner, no significant

103
reconstruction of the solar facility occurs for a period of 12

104
months.

105
(
b)

A solar
facility owner may rebut the presumption that a

106
solar facility has reached the end of its useful life by

107
submitting to the county a plan, a schedule, and adequate

108
assurances that construction or operation of the solar facility

109
will continue.

110
(c)

A county may require financial assurance from a solar

111
facility owner in the form of a bond, an irrevocable letter of

112
credit established pursuant to chapter 675, a guarantee by the

113
solar facility owner’s parent company, or another financial

114
device deemed adequate by the county to establish that the solar

115
facility owner has the capability to satisfy the estimated cost

116
of decommissioning the solar facility.

117
(d)

If a facility owner does not complete decommissioning

118
in the timeframe required by county ordinance, the county may

119
take action to complete the decommissioning, including action to

120
require forfeiture of the financial assurance provided under

121
paragraph (c). A county must allow a solar facility owner at

122
least 12 months to commence decommissioning and 24 months to

123
complete decommissioning before taking such action.

124
(
6
)

CONSTRUCTION BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES.—

125
(a)

The Department of Environmental Protection shall

126
develop best management practices (BMPs) for the construction of

127
a solar facility. Such BMPs must include, but are not limited

128
to, all of the following:

129
1.

Requirements for percolation testing on the premises of

130
a proposed solar facility.

131
2.

Requirements for stormwater runoff management during the

132
construction of a solar facility.

133
3.

Requirements for construction design that would enable a

134
solar facility to withstand a 100-year storm event.

135
(b)

The Department of Environmental Protection shall update

136
and revise its BMPs annually. As part of the update and revision

137
process, the department shall review all settlements, consent

138
decrees, judgments, and resolutions of civil cases since 2020

139
which relate to the construction of a solar facility.

140
(c)

An operator of a solar facility or a proposed solar

141
facility shall implement all BMPs developed pursuant to

142
paragraph (a).

143
(7)
(5)

APPLICABILI
TY.—
This section does not apply to any
144 site that was the subject of an application to construct a solar
145 facility submitted to a local governmental entity before July 1,
146 2021.
147 Section 2. Subsections (4) and (11) of section 366.96,
148 Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
149 366.96 Storm protection plan cost recovery.—
150 (4)
At a minimum, any improvement included in a

151
transmission and distribution storm
protection plan
filed

152
pursuant to this section must have a forecasted customer benefit

153
that exceeds its forecasted cost. In addition,
in its review of
154 each
transmission and distribution storm protection
plan filed
155 pursuant to this section, the commission shall consider:
156 (a) The extent to which the plan is expected to reduce
157 restoration costs and outage times associated with extreme
158 weather events and enhance reliability, including whether the
159 plan prioritizes areas of lower reliability performance
and

160
whether the cost of implementing the plan is reasonable and

161
prudent, given the expected benefit
.
162 (b) The extent to which storm protection of transmission
163 and distribution infrastructure is feasible, reasonable, or
164 practical in certain areas of the utility’s service territory,
165 including, but not limited to, flood zones and rural areas.
166 (c) The estimated costs and benefits to the utility and its
167 customers of making the improvements proposed in the plan.
168 (d) The estimated annual rate impact resulting from
169 implementation of the plan during the first 3 years addressed in
170 the plan.
171
(e) The performance of previously approved plan

172
improvements in reducing outage times and storm restoration

173
costs.

174 (11) The commission shall adopt rules to implement and
175 administer this section
and shall propose a rule for adoption as

176
soon as practicable after the effective date of this act, but

177
not later than October 31, 2019
.
178 Section 3.
The Public Service Commission shall
submit a

179
propose
d
rule for adoption
which implements
the amendments
made

180
by this act
to s. 366.96, Florida Statutes, as soon as

181
practicable after the effective date of this act, but not later

182
than October 31, 202
6
.

183 Section 4. This act shall take effect July 1, 2026.