BILL NUMBER: SBX1 31	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 5, 2001

INTRODUCED BY   Senator  Bowen   Alpert 
    (Coauthors:  Assembly Members Kehoe, Cedillo, Correa,
Frommer, Goldberg, Jackson, Keeley, Lowenthal, Nation, Oropeza,
Pescetti, Reyes, Shelley, Simitian, Steinberg, Strom-Martin, Pavley,
Liu, NegreteMcLeod, and Alquist) 

                        FEBRUARY 5, 2001

    An act to amend Sections 335, 337, and 341.2 of the
Public Utilities Code, relating to public utilities.  
An act to add and repeal Article 2 (commencing with Section 81610)
and Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 81620) to Chapter 3 of Part
49 of the Education Code, to add Article 6 (commencing with Section
14710) to Chapter 2 of Part 5.5 and Article 4 (commencing with
Section 15350) to Chapter 1 of Part 6.7, of Division 3 of Title 2 of,
the Government Code, to amend Sections 26003 and 26011.5 of, to add
Section 26011.6 to, to add Chapter 5.3 (commencing with Section
25425) to Division 15 of, and to add and repeal Chapter 4 (commencing
with Section 14420) of Division 12 of, the Public Resources Code, to
amend Section 739 of, to amend, repeal, and add Section 2827 of, to
add Sections 739.10, 2827.5, and 2827.7 to, and to add and repeal
Section 739.11 of, the Public Utilities Code, relating to energy,
making an appropriation therefor, and declaring the urgency thereof,
to take effect immediately. 



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 31, as amended,  Bowen   Alpert  .
 Electrical restructuring:  Oversight Board:  Independent
System Operator   Energy  . 
   The existing restructuring of the electrical services industry
within the Public Utilities Act provides for the authorization of
direct transactions between electricity suppliers and end-use
customers and for the establishment of an Independent System Operator
and a Power Exchange as separately incorporated public benefit,
nonprofit corporations.  An Electricity Oversight Board is also
established to oversee the Independent System Operator and the Power
Exchange.  Under existing law, the Oversight Board has the exclusive
right to decline to confirm the appointments of members of the
governing board of the Independent System Operator.  Under existing
law, the existing Independent System Operator governing board is
required to be replaced, within a specified period of time, by a
5-member independent governing board of directors appointed by the
Governor for one-year terms.  Existing law requires that a member of
the independent governing board of the Independent System Operator
not be affiliated with any actual or potential market participant
administered by the Independent System Operator.
   This bill would delete the Electricity Oversight Board's exclusive
right to decline to confirm the appointments of members of the
governing board of the Independent System Operator.  This bill would
require the Independent System Operator governing board appointed by
the Governor to be confirmed by the Senate.  The bill would require
these appointments to be for 3-year terms, with initial appointments
of one member for a one-year term, 2 members for a 2-year term, and 2
members for a 3-year term.  The bill would specify that a member of
the governing board of the Power Exchange is not considered to be
affiliated with a market participant solely as a consequence of
service on the governing board of the Power Exchange.
   This bill would make a conforming change in existing law.
 
   (1) Existing law establishes the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission in the Resources Agency
(Energy Commission), and grants it authority with respect to various
energy efficiency measures and programs. Existing law generally
permits public agencies to develop energy conservation, cogeneration,
and alternative energy supply sources at their facilities in order
to promote all feasible means of energy and water conservation.
Existing law also generally requires public agencies to meet
specified requirements regarding service, consulting, architectural,
and engineering contracts, and requires those contracts to be
approved by the Department of General Services.
   This bill would enact, until January 1, 2002, the Summer 2001
Energy Efficiency Projects by Community College Districts program,
which would fund the implementation of energy conservation,
efficiency, cogeneration, and alternate energy supply sources by
community college districts on public property.  The bill would
require a community college district to request proposals prior to
awarding or entering into a contract, agreement, or lease, and would
require the district to award each contract based on the
consideration of specified qualifications.  The bill would exempt
energy projects from specified requirements imposed on contracts
entered into by public agencies.
   The bill would require each community college district that
receives funds from the program to provide a report to the Chancellor
of the California Community Colleges, on or before January 1, 2002,
and would require the chancellor to report that information to the
Chairperson of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the
chairpersons of the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of each
house of the Legislature, and the Governor by March 1, 2002.
   By imposing additional duties on community college districts, this
bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
   This bill would establish the Statewide Energy Management Program
to assist community college districts to achieve energy independence
through the development of energy management plans, the construction
of sustainable green buildings, the use of renewable or other
distributed energy systems, and the expansion of statewide energy
education programs and services.  The bill would require the Board of
Governors of the California Community Colleges, in consultation with
the commission, to develop guidelines for this program.
   The bill would require the chancellor to establish an advisory
committee to provide recommendations regarding overall program
development, resource development and deployment, and strategies for
implementation and coordination of the program.
   (2) Existing law establishes the Technology, Trade and Commerce
Agency with specified powers and duties relating to economic
development and science and technology.  Existing law requires the
Energy Commission to establish a small business energy assistance
low-interest revolving loan program to fund the purchase of equipment
for alternative technology energy projects for California's small
businesses.
   This bill would require the agency to administer the California
Renewable Energy Loan Guarantee Program to guarantee loans made by
financial institutions to eligible businesses for the permitting,
manufacturing, acquisition, construction, or installation of
renewable energy systems that are intended to decrease demand on the
electricity grid.
   (3) Existing law establishes the California Conservation Corps to
conserve and develop natural resources, and enhance and maintain
environmentally important lands and waters through the use of
California's young women and men and to assist these youths in
becoming productive adults.  Existing law establishes the Department
of Community Services and Development to provide a range of services
and activities having a measurable and potentially major impact on
causes of poverty, and to assist low-income individuals and families,
migrants, and the elderly poor to obtain employment, education,
income, housing, food, and emergency services.
   This bill would create the Mobile Energy Efficiency Brigade, to be
implemented by the corps and the department, to expand current
weatherization, energy-efficiency, and rehabilitation programs in
accordance with prescribed objectives.  These provisions would remain
in effect until January 1, 2003.
   (4) Existing law requires the Energy Commission to administer a
program of grants and loans with respect to energy efficiency
measures and programs.
   This bill would  require the Energy Commission to administer a
grant and loan program for eligible construction or retrofit
projects, as defined, and the Small Business Energy Efficient
Refrigeration Loan Program established by the bill.
   (5) The existing Energy Conservation Assistance Act of 1979, until
January 1, 2011, permits a school, hospital, public care
institution, or unit of local government to submit an application to
the energy commission for a loan of funds for the purpose of
financing all or a portion of the costs incurred in implementing a
project, as defined, including an energy conservation project.
   This bill would establish the Energy Conservation Act of 2001 to
establish energy efficiency incentives in the form of grants and
loans to low-income residents, small businesses, and residential
property owners.
   (6) Existing law establishes the California Alternative Energy and
Advanced Transportation Financing Authority and prescribes the
duties of the authority with respect to, among other things,
promoting prompt and efficient development of energy sources that are
renewable or that more efficiently utilize and conserve scarce
energy resources.
   This bill would require the authority to establish a renewable
energy program to provide financial assistance to public power
entities, independent generators, utilities, or businesses
manufacturing renewable energy generation components or systems, or
both, to generate new and renewable energy sources, as defined,
develop clean and efficient distributed generation, and demonstrate
the economic feasibility of new technologies.  The bill would require
the authority to ensure that any financed project offer its power
within California on a long-term contract basis.
   (7) Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission requires
every electrical and gas corporation to file a schedule of rates and
charges providing baseline rates.  In establishing these rates,
existing law requires the commission to avoid excessive rate
increases for residential customers, and to establish an appropriate
gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of
usage.  Additionally, in establishing residential electric and gas
rates, including baseline rates, existing law requires the commission
to assure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical
corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable
amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while
observing the principle that electricity and gas services are
necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable.
   The bill would require the commission, at least until December 31,
2003, to require that all charges for residential electric customers
are volumetric, and to prohibit any electrical corporation from
imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent
of consumption unless the charges are in place prior to the effective
date of the bill.
   The bill would also require the commission to until December 31,
2002, to ensure that errors in estimates of demand elasticity of
sales do not result in material over or undercollections of the
electrical corporations.
   Because existing law makes any public utility that violates
specified provisions regulating public utilities guilty of a
misdemeanor, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program by
creating a new crime.
   (8) Existing law exempts an electrical corporation that provides
distribution service for direct transactions from the obligation to
provide net energy metering to a customer, if the customer
participates in direct transactions with an electric supplier that
does not offer net energy metering, and authorizes an electrical
corporation that provides distribution service for direct
transactions to recover from the electric service provider of a
customer that participates in direct transactions the incremental
costs of metering and billing service related to net energy metering,
in an amount set by the Public Utilities Commission.  Existing law
also establishes formulas for the calculation of net monthly
consumption for eligible customer-generators taking service employing
baseline, over baseline, and time use of rates.  Existing law, for
purposes of those provisions, defines the term "electric service
provider" to include specified entities and defines "eligible
customer-generator," to mean a residential customer, or a small
commercial customer of an electric service provider.
   This bill would revise the definition of an electric service
provider, until January 1, 2003, to also include any other entity
that provides electrical service.  The bill would revise the
definition of an eligible customer-generator, until January 1, 2003,
to also include commercial, industrial, or agricultural customers of
an electric service provider.  The bill would eliminate, until
January 1, 2003, certain requirements with respect to the information
electric service providers are required to provide to the ratemaking
authority relating to total rated generating capacity used by
eligible customer-generators.
   (9) Existing law requires every electric service provider, upon
request, to make available to eligible customer-generators contracts
for net energy metering subject to specified limitations on the
number of contracts.
   This bill would eliminate the specified limitations on the number
of contracts.
   (10) Existing law provides that if a customer participates in
direct transactions with an electric supplier that does not offer net
energy metering, the electrical corporation that provides
distribution service for the direct transactions is not obligated to
provide net energy metering to the customer.
   This bill would, instead, provide that if a customer participates
in direct transactions with an electric supplier that does not
provide distribution service for the direct transactions, the
electrical corporation that provides distribution service for an
eligible customer-generator is not obligated to provide net energy
metering to the customer.
   (11) Under existing law, the Emerging Renewable Resources Account
is created in the Renewable Resource Trust Fund and specified
portions of revenues collected by electrical corporations for the
benefit of in-state operation and development of existing and new and
emerging renewable resource technologies are required to be
transmitted to the Energy Commission for deposit in the Renewable
Resource Trust Fund.  The money in the fund and the account is
continuously appropriated to the Energy Commission for specified
purposes, including a multiyear, consumer-based program to foster the
development of emerging renewable technologies in distributed
generation applications.  Existing law requires this program to
provide monetary rebates, buydowns, or equivalent incentives to
purchasers, lessees, lessors, or sellers of eligible electricity
generating systems and limits the incentives to a maximum percentage
of the system price, as defined by the energy commission.
   This bill would require the commission to expand existing programs
to promote clean distribution generation technologies.
   The bill would authorize the commission to increase the maximum
rebate levels for certain distributed emerging technologies that have
a peak capacity greater than 10 kilowatts, if the commission makes a
specified determination.
   (12) Existing law authorizes the State Public Works Board to
develop energy and water conservation and cogeneration and
alternative energy and water supply sources at state facilities.
Existing law requires the buildings acquired or constructed by the
board to be operated and maintained by the board until they are
placed under the jurisdiction of the Department of General Services
or another state agency.
   This bill would require the department to identify, from the
department's state property inventory, all buildings where it is
feasible to reduce energy consumption and achieve energy
efficiencies, as well as to produce onsite electrical generation or
reduce the level of peak-period electrical consumption for that
building using alternative energy equipment thermal energy storage or
cogeneration equipment.
   This bill would authorize the Director of General Services to
enter into 3rd party agreements to implement energy efficiencies and
feasible onsite electrical generation.  The bill would authorize the
director to enter into negotiated agreements to accomplish specified
objectives relating to energy.
   This bill would require the department to retrofit specified
public buildings where feasible, provided that work on public
buildings of the California State University is performed at the
request or with the consent of the university.
   This bill would require the department to prepare and submit to
the Legislature and the Governor, a report of the energy savings, if
any, in terms of megawatts per year, for each public building
retrofitted on or before 2 years after the effective date of this
bill, and every 2 years thereafter.
   (13) This bill would limit administrative costs under the bill for
participating agencies to21/2%, and would require prescribed reports
to be filed with the Legislature and the Governor.
   (14) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse
local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the
state.  Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that
reimbursement, including the creation of a State Mandates Claims Fund
to pay the costs of mandates that do not exceed $1,000,000 statewide
and other procedures for claims whose statewide costs exceed
$1,000,000.
   This bill would provide that with regard to certain mandates no
reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
   With regard to any other mandates, this bill would provide that,
if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains
costs so mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall
be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
   (15) The bill would appropriate or reappropriate $408,650,000 from
specified funds to the Controller to be allocated as scheduled to
accomplish the purposes of this bill.
   (16) The bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately
as an urgency statute. 
   Vote:   majority   2/3  .
Appropriation:   no   yes  .  Fiscal
committee: yes.  State-mandated local program:   no 
 yes  .


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  
  SECTION 1.  Section 335 of the Public Utilities Code, as 

  SECTION 1.  Article 2 (commencing with Section 81610) is added to
Chapter 3 of Part 49 of the Education Code, to read:

      Article 2.  Summer 2001 Energy Efficiency Projects By Community
College Districts

   81610.  It is the intent of the Legislature to permit community
college districts to implement energy conservation, efficiency,
cogeneration, and alternate energy supply sources on public property
in accordance with this chapter in the most expedient manner
possible.  It is also the intent of the Legislature that the
California Community College system take all steps necessary to
ensure that the energy efficiency projects contemplated by this
chapter are in place by the summer of 2001.
   81611.  For the purposes of this article, "energy project" means
equipment, load management techniques, or other measures or services
that reduce energy consumption and provide for more efficient use of
energy in buildings or facilities owned or operated by community
college districts, and that can be completed and energy savings
realized by the summer of 2001 in order to minimize the need for
future state resources to pay for increased energy costs.
   81612.  (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, prior to
awarding, or entering into, any contract, agreement, or lease
pursuant to this article, a community college district shall request
proposals from qualified persons. After evaluating those proposals,
the community college district shall award contracts to responsible
persons or entities who submit responses to a request for proposal
which are responsive to the requirements of the request for
proposals.  A community college may award a contract for an energy
project under this article to any responsible person or entity timely
submitting a responsive answer to the request for proposals based on
qualifications, including the consideration of all of the following
factors:
   (1) Experience of the contractor, architect, engineer, or other
consultant, as applicable.
   (2) Type of technology to be employed by the contractor on the
energy project.
   (3) Cost to the district.
   (4) Any other considerations deemed relevant by the district.
   (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, community college
districts may award contracts pursuant to a request for proposals
issued under this article or award contracts to persons or entities
selected from the pool of qualified energy service companies
established pursuant to Section 388 of the Public Utilities Code,
when it is determined they are qualified to perform the work on a
particular project.  A request for proposal does not have to be
prepared if a community college district elects to award a contract
for an energy project to only those persons or entities included in
the pool of qualified energy service companies under Section 388 of
the Public Utilities Code.  If a community college district elects to
seek proposals for an energy project pursuant to a request for
proposals and from the pool of qualified energy service companies
under Section 388 of the Public Utilities Code, the community college
district shall prepare a request for proposals.  Award of such a
contract shall be based upon the factors described in subdivision
(a).
   81613.  (a) Notwithstanding the repeal of this section by Section
81615, on or before January 1, 2002, each community college district
receiving funds appropriated pursuant to this section shall provide a
report to the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges with
the following information:
   (1) The amount of funding expended.
   (2) The measures, programs, or activities funded.
   (3) A description of the effectiveness of the measures, programs,
or activities funded in reducing peak electricity demand and
improving energy efficiency, as measured in kilowatthours of
electricity or British thermal unit hours reduced per dollar
expended.
   (b) Notwithstanding the repeal of this section by Section 81615,
on or before March 1, 2002, the Chancellor of the California
Community Colleges shall provide a summary of the reports provided
pursuant to subdivision (a) to the Chairperson of the Joint
Legislative Budget Committee, to the chairpersons of the appropriate
policy and fiscal committees of both houses of the Legislature, and
to the Governor.
   81614.  Any contracts entered into pursuant to this chapter by a
community college district are exempt from the following
requirements:
   (a) Architectural, engineering, construction management, and
consulting contracts are exempt from Chapter 10 (commencing with
Section 4525) of Division 5 of Title 1 of the Government Code.
   (b) All contracts are exempt from Article 3.5 (commencing with
Section 81660).
   (c) All contracts are exempt from the publication requirements set
forth in Section 81641.
   (d) All contracts are exempt from Article 41 (commencing with
Section 20650) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division 2 of the Public
Contract Code, except that if in the request for proposals for an
energy project under this article, a community college district has
established a requirement for bid security, a response to the request
for proposal will be deemed responsive only if the response is
submitted with the required bid security.
   (e) If the value of a project awarded by a community college
district to a contractor to implement an energy project under this
article is in excess of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000),
regardless of whether the requirement is noted in the request for
proposals, the contractor awarded such a contract shall obtain and
submit to such a community college district for approval of a Labor
and Materials Payment Bond conforming to the requirements of Section
3248 of the Civil Code.
   (f) If required by the terms of a request for proposals issued by
a community college district under this article, the person or entity
awarded such a contract shall obtain a performance bond conforming
with the applicable requirements of the request for proposals.
   81615.  This article shall remain in effect only until January 1,
2002, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2002, deletes or extends
that date.
  SEC. 2.  Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 81620) is added to
Chapter 3 of Part 49 of the Education Code, to read:

      Article 2.5.  Statewide Energy Management Program

   81620.  This article shall be known, and may be cited, as the
Statewide Energy Management Program.
   81621.  The definitions set forth in this section govern the
construction of this article:
   (a) "Commission" means the State Energy Resources Conservation and
Development Commission.
   (b) "Energy independence" means the utilization of existing and
developing technologies to meet energy needs onsite, including, but
not necessarily limited to, the utilization of solar, fuel cells, and
other renewable and clean onsite energy sources, the optimization of
the use of daylighting, the use of passive solar orientation, and
the use of construction techniques that minimize energy loss, such as
appropriate insulation and lighting fixtures.
   (c) "Energy management plans" means the plans that community
colleges develop with guidance from the Statewide Energy Management
Program to implement energy efficiency projects such as sustainable
green buildings, renovations, and wind or solar farms that will move
the community colleges toward energy independence.
   (d) "Program" means the Statewide Energy Management Program,
established under this article, which is a state program modeled
after the Federal Energy Management Program.
   (e) "Renewable or other distributed energy systems" means
alternative efficient sources of energy such as daylighting,
photovoltaic panels (rooftops or solar farms), passive solar heating,
fuel cells, and steam.  Diesel-fueled electric generating systems
are not included in this definition.
   (f) "Sustainable green building" means a building that has been
designed to reduce both direct and indirect environmental
consequences associated with construction, occupancy, operation,
maintenance, and eventual decommissioning, and whose design is
evaluated for cost, quality of life, future flexibility, ease of
maintenance, energy and resource efficiency, and overall
environmental impact, with an emphasis on life-cycle cost analysis.
   81622.  (a) (1) In Executive Order D-16-00, issued August 2, 2000,
Governor Davis directed state agencies to design and construct
buildings that incorporate energy efficiency, resource conservation,
and renewable technologies.  In his State of the State Address
delivered on January 8, 2001, Governor Davis expressed his support
for the goal of moving the California Community Colleges toward
energy independence.
   (2) The Federal Energy Management Program, upon which the State
Energy Management Program is modeled, has resulted in approximately
four dollars ($4) in savings for every one dollar ($1) spent.  The
federal investment of two billion dollars ($2,000,000,000) in energy
efficiency has resulted in savings of six billion three hundred
million dollars ($6,300,000,000) on energy bills.
   (b) In consultation with the commission, the Board of Governors of
the California Community Colleges shall further develop and refine
certain guidelines for a Statewide Energy Management Program that
have been established under an ongoing joint effort of the commission
and DeAnza College.  This statewide effort shall allow community
college districts to achieve energy independence through the
development of energy management plans, the construction of
sustainable green buildings, the use of renewable or other
distributed energy systems, and the expansion of statewide energy
education programs and services.
   (c) By 2010, the program shall, at a minimum, facilitate the
completion of 20 district energy management plans, 15 renewable or
other distributed energy systems, and 3 sustainable green buildings
on community college campuses statewide.
   (d) In consultation with the commission, the board of governors
shall accomplish all of the following:
   (1) Review and comment on academic, occupational, and vocational
education materials developed by the commission, the Electric Power
Research Institute, public utilities, and the community colleges to
improve energy education programs and services.
   (2) Review and recommend actions regarding successful energy
education programs and services that can be identified for
replication, personnel exchanges, or implementation of successful
practices.
   (3) Review and recommend actions regarding program resources for
use by the community colleges or state agencies in improving energy
education programs and services.
   (4) Review exemplary programs and facilities, and recommend
activities for adoption, replication, or policy advice.
   (5) Review, comment, and recommend actions regarding services that
will effect energy conservation.
   (6) Review and comment on funding requests received to improve or
enhance energy education.
   (7) Review and comment on occupational and vocational training
programs and services to meet current employment standards in energy
occupations.
   81623.  The board of governors shall encourage the construction of
community college sustainable green buildings that implement energy
efficiency, sustainable building concepts, and solar electric, fuel
cell, and other technologies.  On the effective date of this article,
the board of governors shall immediately seek a prototype
sustainable green community college instructional building that can
be a model for all new construction and retrofit projects statewide.

   81624.  The Chancellor of the California Community Colleges shall
establish an advisory committee for the Statewide Energy Management
Program, and determine the membership of that committee.  The
advisory committee, with technical assistance from the commission,
shall make recommendations to the chancellor regarding overall
program development, resource development and deployment, and
strategies for implementation and coordination of the program.
   A leadership role on this committee shall initially be provided by
the staff of the commission and DeAnza College who have been
involved since 1992 in a joint effort to promote training, energy
efficiency, and energy independence in the California Community
Colleges.  This leadership role shall rotate to other community
colleges as they complete their own district energy management plans.

  SEC. 2.5.  Article 6 (commencing with Section 14710) is added to
Chapter 2 of Part 5.5 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
Code, to read:
      Article 6.  State Building Energy Retrofits

   14710.  As used in this article, the following terms have the
following meanings:
   (a) "Alternative energy equipment" means alternative energy
equipment, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 15814.11, and, in
the case of fossil fuel generation, complies with emission standards
and guidance adopted by the State Air Resources Board pursuant to
Sections 41514.9 and 41514.10 of the Health and Safety Code.  Prior
to the adoption of those standards and guidance, for the purposes of
this article, distributed energy resources shall meet emission levels
equivalent to nine ppm oxides of nitrogen, averaged over a
three-hour period, or best available control technology for the
applicable air district, whichever is lower.
   (b) "Cogeneration equipment" means equipment used for
cogeneration, as defined in Section 218.5 of the Public Utilities
Code.
   (c) "Feasible" means capable of being accomplished in a successful
manner within a reasonable period of time, taking into account
life-cycle costing analyses, and environmental, social, and
technological factors, however, renewable technologies shall not be
exempt based solely on cost considerations.
   (d) "Public building" means a public building, as defined in
Section 15802.
   (e) "State agency" means any state agency, board, department or
commission, including, but not limited to, the entities specified in
subdivision (a) of Section 15814.12.
   14711.5.  (a) The department in consultation with the State Energy
Resources Conservation and Development Commission, with the
concurrence of the Department of Finance, shall identify each public
building in the department's state property inventory where it is
feasible for that building to reduce energy consumption and achieve
energy efficiencies, as well as to produce its own onsite electrical
generation or reduce its level of peak demand electricity consumption
using alternative energy equipment, thermal energy storage
technologies, or cogeneration equipment.
   (b) The department may consider a variety of factors, including,
but not limited to, the size of the public building, its location,
the ease of conversion to onsite electrical generation, peak demand
reduction efficiency, cost effectiveness, and the amount of megawatts
generated or shifted to off-peak periods.
   14712.  The director may enter into third party agreements that
the director, with the concurrence of the Department of Finance,
determines are appropriate and cost-effective to implement energy
efficiencies and feasible onsite electric generation pursuant to
Section 14711.5 and to achieve the goals of this section.  The
director may enter into negotiated agreements with parties on the
terms and conditions that the director, with the concurrence of the
Department of Finance, deems are in the state's interests to
accomplish all of the following objectives:
   (a) Reduce overall energy consumption in state facilities by 30
percent.
   (b) Achieve energy self-sufficiency at state facilities using
clean, modern technologies that produce zero air emissions or that
meet or exceed state air quality standards.
   (c) Maximize the use of renewable energy technologies for both
onsite electrical generation as well as thermal energy production.
   (d) Utilize private third party financing, where feasible, for the
construction, operation, and maintenance of such energy investments.

   (e) Achieve these objectives at delivered energy costs equal to or
less than the cost of obtaining the energy through the electric grid
or other conventional means, as determined by the director.
   14713.  (a) Notwithstanding subdivision (b) of Section 15814.12,
the department shall retrofit all public buildings, identified in
Section 14711.5, where feasible, provided that work on public
buildings of the California State University shall be performed only
at the request or with the consent of the university.
   (b) If a public building generates more electricity than it uses,
it may make the energy available for the state electrical
distribution grid.
   14714.  On or before two years after the effective date of the act
adding this section, and every two years thereafter, the Department
of General Services shall prepare and submit to the Legislature and
the Governor, a report of the energy savings, if any, in terms of
megawatts per year, for each public building retrofitted pursuant to
this article.
  SEC. 3.  Article 4 (commencing with Section 15350) is added to
Chapter 1 of Part 6.7 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
Code, to read:

       Article 4.  Renewable Energy Loan Guarantee Program

   15350.  The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
   (a) California is experiencing severe electrical shortages, which
endanger the health, safety, and economic development opportunity of
its citizens.
   (b) Immediate measures are needed to increase the electrical
generation capacity within California, including energy from
economical renewable systems.
   (c) California has been a leader in the development of renewable
energy systems, from solar to wind to the most advanced fuel cell
technology.
   (d) California must take all reasonable actions necessary to
encourage the continuing construction of renewable energy
infrastructure and to maximize reliable, renewable energy systems for
homes and businesses.
   (e) In order to maximize the commercial lending available to
renewable energy projects, it is necessary and appropriate to
establish a loan guarantee program to assist in obtaining commercial
loans to  purchase and install renewable energy system projects.
   15351.  For the purposes of this article, the following
definitions apply:
   (a) "Eligible business" means an individual, corporation,
political body, partnership, joint venture, association, joint stock
company, trust, or unincorporated organization.
   (b) "Financial institution" means a financial institution
organized, chartered, or holding a license or authorization
certificate under a law of this state or the United States to make
loans or extend credit, and subject to supervision by an official or
agency of this state or the United States.
   (c) "Guarantee" means a written agreement between the agency and a
financial institution, by which the agency agrees to pay a specified
percentage of loan interest and principal for any combination of the
following:  permitting, acquisition, construction, or installation
of one or more renewable energy systems located in the state if the
eligible business defaults on the loan and the financial institution
complies with the terms of the guarantee.
   (d) "Loan" means a contract providing financing for a renewable
energy system.
   (e) "Renewable energy system" means any device or combination of
devices, including distributed generation and cogeneration that meets
all of the following requirements:
   (1) Conserves or produces one or more of the following:
   (A) Heat.
   (B) Process heat.
   (C) Space heating.
   (D) Water heating.
   (E) Steam.
   (F) Space cooling.
   (G) Refrigeration.
   (H) Mechanical energy.
   (I) Electricity.
   (J) Energy in any form convertible to any of the uses specified in
subparagraphs (A) to (I), inclusive.
   (2) Does not expend or use conventional energy fuels, any fuel
derived from petroleum deposits, including, but not limited to, oil,
heating oil, gasoline, fuel oil, or natural gas, including liquified
natural gas, or nuclear fissionable materials, except as provided in
subsection (b) of Section 292.204 of Title 18 of the Code of Federal
Regulations.
   (3) Uses one of more of the following renewable electricity
generation technologies:
   (A) Biomass.
   (B) Solar thermal.
   (C) Photovoltaic.
   (D) Wind.
   (E) Geothermal.
   (F) Small hydropower (30 megawatts or less).
   (G) Digester gas.
   (H) Landfill gas.
   15352.  (a) The agency, in consultation with the State Energy
Resources Conservation and Development Commission, shall administer
the California Renewable Energy Loan Guarantee Program to guarantee
loans made by financial institutions to eligible businesses for the
permitting, acquisition, construction, or installation of renewable
energy systems that are intended to decrease the demand on the
electricity grid.
   (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this article, the
California Renewable Energy Loan Guarantee Program shall not be used
to guarantee a loan for any small hydropower project that will
require a new or increased diversion from any natural stream, lake,
or other body of water, as described in Section 1200 of the Water
Code.
   15353.  (a) The secretary shall establish a Renewable Energy Loan
Guarantee Committee for the purpose of approving loan guarantees
based upon the criteria and procedures established by the agency.
The secretary may include agency staff, the Director of Finance,
representatives of other state agencies, and representatives of the
public on the committee.
   The secretary or his or her designee shall serve as the
chairperson of the committee.
   (b) The committee shall do both of the following:
   (1) Hold regularly scheduled meetings, at least quarterly, to
carry out the objectives and responsibilities of the committee.
   (2) Approve loan guarantees under this article.
   (c) The committee shall not approve any guarantee without a
determination that, at a minimum, the applicant appears able to repay
the guaranteed financing and the financing is adequately
collateralized.
   15354.  (a) The Renewable Energy Loan Guarantee Committee shall
comply with the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5
(commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7), except as specified in
subdivision (c).
   (b) To the extent that the committee is subject to the
Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section
11120) of Chapter 1 of Part (1), loan guarantee reviews described in
paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) shall be exempt from the
requirements of the act.
   (c) The California Public Records Act and the Bagley-Keene Open
Meeting Act shall not apply to the following activities of the
committee:
   (1) The disclosure of financial data contained in applications for
loan guarantees from the Renewable Energy Loan Guarantee Committee,
where the committee determines that disclosure of the financial data
would be competitively injurious to the applicant.  For this purpose,
financial data includes, but is not limited to, financial
statements, details of accounts receivable and accounts payable,
                                        income tax returns,
owner-officer compensation records, collateral details, cash-flow
analysis, orders, contracts, financing commitments and agreements,
and other documents that would disclose specific names or addresses
of customers and suppliers, potential customers and suppliers, or
agency and consultant reports analyzing the financial data.
   (2) Any loan guarantee review by the Renewable Energy Loan
Guarantee Committee.  For this purpose, the committee or a
subcommittee of the committee may review and approve loan guarantee
requests by means of a telephone conference, or in a meeting not open
to the public.
   15355. There is hereby created in the State Treasury the Renewable
Energy Loan Loss Reserve Fund.  All money in the fund is
appropriated for the support of the agency and shall be available for
expenditure for the purposes stated in this article.  The fund shall
be available for the receipt of federal, state, and local moneys,
and private donations.
   15356.  (a) The agency shall determine the percentage of the
reserve in the Renewable Energy Loan Loss Reserve Fund required to
secure loan guarantees made by the committee.  However, in no event
shall the reserve be less than 25 percent of the fund.
   (b) The minimum amount that the agency may guarantee for any
renewable energy system is twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) and
the maximum amount is two million dollars ($2,000,000).  The agency
may elect to lower or raise the minimum or maximum amount if a change
is found to be in the best interest of the state.
   (c) The term of the guaranteed loan shall not exceed the useful
life of the renewable energy system or 15 years, whichever is
shorter.
   (d) The amount guaranteed shall not exceed  90 percent of a loan,
or an amount equal to the anticipated proportion of renewable fuel
usage to fuel the renewable energy system, as authorized by paragraph
(2) of subdivision (d) of Section 15351, whichever is less.
   15357.  The agency shall adopt criteria and procedures for the
implementation of this article.  The criteria and procedures shall be
exempt from the requirements of Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
11340) of Part 1.  The criteria and procedures shall include
provisions for determining the maximum guarantee amount, leverage,
percentage guaranteed, guarantee term, and other conditions of a
guarantee.  In developing the criteria and procedures for the
program, the agency may consult with other state agencies, including
the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission.
A consultation and public comment period shall begin on the effective
date of this article, and shall end 30 days thereafter.
Notwithstanding the 120-day limit specified in subdivision (e) of
Section 11346.1, the regulations shall be repealed 180 days after
their effective date, unless the department complies with Chapter 3.5
(commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2,
as provided in subdivision (e) of Section 11346.1.
   15358.  (a) The agency shall execute guarantees supported solely
by funds in the Renewable Energy Loan Loss Reserve Fund.
   (b) No guarantee shall be approved unless the eligible business
agrees that all electricity generated by the project will be made
available within California on a long- term contract basis, except
that electricity may be made available outside California upon
approval by the Public Utilities Commission.
   15359.  (a) The agency shall establish a reasonable schedule of
administrative fees, not to exceed 2 percent of the guarantee amount,
which shall be paid by the eligible business to reimburse the state
for the costs of administering this article, including promotion and
outreach.
   (b) The agency may expend earnings on the deposits from, or up to
5 percent of, the Renewable Energy Loan Loss Reserve Fund for
administrative expenses, for the respective fiscal  year including
promotion and outreach, in carrying out this chapter.
   15360.  The agency may contract with any state or other agency,
persons, or firms to enable the agency to properly perform the duties
of this article.
   15361.  The state shall not be liable or obligated in any way
beyond the money that is allocated to the Renewable Energy Loan Loss
Reserve Fund as a result of any loan guarantee under this article.
   15362.  The agency, with the approval of the Director of Finance,
may request the Treasurer to invest the money in the Renewable Energy
Loan Loss Reserve Fund.  Returns from these investments shall be
deposited in the fund and shall be used to support this article.
   15362.5.  Because of the need to immediately increase the
availability of renewable energy sources, it is necessary to
implement this article without delay.  Therefore, from the effective
date of this article, and for a period of 18 months thereafter,
Section 10295 and Article 4 (commencing with Section 10335) of
Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code shall
not apply to contracts entered into pursuant to this article.  Any
contract that is entered into during that 18-month period shall be
awarded based upon the receipt of at least three bids, and the award
shall be based on a combination of the expertise of the bidder, the
bid price, and the probability that the services offered will meet
the needs of the program.
  SEC. 4.  Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 14420) is added to
Division 12 of the Public Resources Code, to read:

      CHAPTER 4.  MOBILE EFFICIENCY BRIGADE

   14420.  This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the Mobile
Efficiency Brigade.
   14421.  The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
   (a) California is in the midst of a dramatic energy crisis that
calls for both an increase in supply and a significant long-term
reduction in demand.
   (b) Conservation programs require a large mobilization effort
across the state, within a short timeframe, in order to affect peak
demand anticipated for the summer of 2001 and the subsequent winter.

   (c) California's low-income households and small businesses
require upgrading, modification, and conservation investment in order
to assist them in contributing to a reduction in demand that is
required statewide.
   (d) Current state programs can work in conjunction with
community-based organizations to significantly penetrate communities
and rapidly implement programs aimed at conservation and demand
reduction.
   (e) The state currently has programs operated and administered by
the Department of Community Services and Development and the
California Conservation Corps, working in conjunction with and
through community-based organizations, that can be expanded to assist
in the statewide conservation effort initiated through pending
programs.
   (f) To the maximum extent feasible, the expenditure of funds
appropriated pursuant to this chapter should be prioritized based
upon immediate benefits in peak energy demand reduction and more
efficient use of energy.
   14422.  As used in this chapter:
   (a) "Community-based organization" means a nonprofit corporation
that is exempt from income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
   (b) "Program" means the Energy Conservation Act of 2001 (Chapter
5.3 (commencing with Section 25425) of Division 15).
   (c) "Energy efficient appliance or measure" means anything that
meets the efficiency standards of the United States Department of
Energy that are effective on and after July 1, 2001, and, if
applicable, products certified as energy efficient zone heating
products by the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development
Commission.
   (d) "Installation" means all labor needed to install energy
efficient equipment, including any necessary construction.
   (e) "Low-income household," in the context of the implementation
of a specific program, shall be defined as each program specifies.
Outside of a specific program, it means households at or below  200
percent of the federal poverty level.
   (f) "Small business," in the context of the implementation of a
specific program, shall be defined as each program specifies.
Outside of a specific program, it means a licensed business that
employs not more than 100 persons.
   14423.  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the California
Conservation Corps and the Department of Community Services and
Development, in consultation with the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission, shall expand their current
weatherization, energy-efficiency, and rehabilitation programs and
assist in the implementation of pending programs as defined in
Section 14422, in accordance with the following objectives:
   (a) Determine the specifics of program expansion and focus on
energy efficiency measures including, but not limited to, energy
audits, weatherization including the insulation of doors, windows,
walls and ceilings, light bulb replacement with subcompact
flourescent lights, installation of water-saving devices and heater
exchanges, minor repairs and retrofits, appliance removal and
replacement, and tree planting.
   (b) Identify neighborhoods and areas with dense populations that
can be easily served in large numbers.
   (c) Establish qualifications and priorities consistent with the
objectives of this chapter for making grants and working with
community-based organizations.
   (d) Establish guidelines for broad geographic distribution across
the state, taking into consideration the factors of population
density, community need, and seasonal climate conditions.
   (e) Establish procedures and policies as may be necessary for the
administration of this chapter.
   14424.  Any contracts entered into pursuant to this chapter by a
state agency are exempt from the following requirements of the
Government Code and the Public Contract Code:
   (a) Services contracts and consulting services contracts are
exempt from Article 4 (commencing with Section 10335) of Chapter 2 of
Part 2 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code.
   (b) All contracts are exempt from Section 10295 of the Public
Contract Code, relating to approval from the Department of General
Services.
   (c) All contracts are exempt from Chapter 6 (commencing with
Section 14825) of Part 5.5 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
Code, relating to advertising.
   14425.  This chapter shall remain in effect only until January 1,
2003, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2003, deletes or extends
that date.
  SEC. 5.  Chapter 5.3 (commencing with Section 25425) is added to
Division 15 of the Public Resources Code, to read:

      CHAPTER 5.3.   ENERGY CONSERVATION ACT OF 2001
      Article 1.  General Provisions

   25425.  This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the
Energy Conservation Act of 2001.
   25426.  As used in this article, the following terms have the
following meanings:
   (a) "Commercial refrigeration" means a refrigerator that is not a
federally regulated consumer product.
   (b) "Energy-efficient model" means any appliance that meets the
efficiency standards of the United States Department of Energy that
are effective on and after July 1, 2001, and, if applicable, products
certified as energy efficient zone heating products by the State
Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission.
   (c) "Small business" means any small business as defined in
paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section 14837 of the Government
Code.

      Article 2.  Loans and Grants for Construction and Retrofit
Projects

   25433.  It is the intent of the Legislature to establish
incentives in the form of grants and loans to low-income residents,
small businesses, and residential property owners for constructing
and retrofitting buildings to be more energy efficient by using
design elements, including, but not limited to, energy-efficient
siding, insulation, products certified as energy efficient zone
heating products by the State Energy Resources Conservation and
Development Commission, and double-paned windows.
   25433.5.  (a) In consultation with the Public Utilities
Commission, the commission shall do both of the following for the
purpose of full or partial funding of an eligible construction or
retrofit project:
   (1) Establish a grant program to provide financial assistance to
eligible low-income individuals.
   (2) Establish a 2-percent interest per annum loan program to
provide financial assistance to a small business owner, residential
property owner, or individual who is not eligible for a grant
pursuant to paragraph (1)    .  The loans shall be available to a
small business owner who has a gross annual income that does not
exceed one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) or to an individual or
residential property owner who has a gross annual household income
that does not exceed one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000).
   (b) (1) The commission shall use the design guidelines adopted
pursuant to clause (ii) of subparagraph (D) of paragraph (3) of
subdivision (d) of Section 14 of the act that added this section as
standards to determine eligible energy-efficiency projects.
   (2) The award of a grant pursuant to this section is subject to
appeal to the commission upon a showing that the commission applied
factors, other than those adopted by the commission, in making the
award.
   (3) The grant or loan recipient shall commit to using the grant or
loan for the purpose for which the grant or loan was awarded.
   (4) Any action taken by an applicant to apply for, or to become or
remain eligible to receive, a grant award, including satisfying
conditions specified by the commission, does not constitute the
rendering of goods, services, or a direct benefit to the commission.

   (5) The amount of any grant awarded pursuant to this article to a
low-income individual does not constitute income for purposes of
calculating the recipient's gross income for the tax year during
which the grant is received.
   25434.  The commission may contract with one or more business
entities capable of supplying or providing goods or services
necessary for the commission to carry out the responsibilities for
the programs conducted pursuant to this article, and shall contract
with one or more business entities to evaluate the effectiveness of
the programs implemented pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section
25433.5.  The commission may select an entity on a sole source basis
for one or both of those purposes if the cost to the state will be
reasonable and the commission determines that it is in the best
interest of the state.
   25434.5.  As used in this article, the following terms have the
following meanings:
   (a) "Eligible construction or retrofit project" means a project
for making improvements to a home or building in existence on the
effective date of the act adding this section, through an addition,
alteration, or repair, which effectively increases the energy
efficiency or reduces the energy consumption of the home or building
as specified by the commission's guidelines under Section 25495
clause (ii) of subparagraph (D) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (d)
of Section 14 of the act that added this section.
   The improvements shall be deemed to be cost-effective.
   (b) "Low income" means an individual with a gross annual income
equal to or less than 200 percent of the federal poverty level.
   (c) "Small business" means any small business as defined in
paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section 14837 of the Government
Code.

      Article 3.  Small Business Energy Efficient Refrigeration Loan
Program

   25435.  The commission shall administer the Small Business Energy
Efficient Refrigeration Loan Program, as provided for in Section
25436.
   25436.  (a) Within 45 days of the effective date of this chapter,
the commission shall implement a Small Business Energy Efficient
Refrigeration Loan Program for qualifying small businesses to
purchase and install energy efficient refrigeration equipment.
   (b) The program shall offer loans at 3 percent interest on terms
that will ensure the small business owner will repay the loan over
time in accordance with terms established by the Energy Commission,
but in no event may the term exceed the useful life of the purchase.

   (c) The commission may enter into agreements with lending
institutions and qualifying vendors to facilitate making and
administering loans.  Any loan made by the commission for the
purchase of equipment shall be secured against the equipment
purchased.  
  SEC. 6.  Section 26003 of the Public Resources Code is amended to
read: 
   26003.  As used in this division, unless the context otherwise
requires:
   (a) "Authority" means the California Alternative Energy and
Advanced Transportation Financing Authority established pursuant to
Section 26004, and any board, commission, department, or officer
succeeding to the functions of the authority, or to which the powers
conferred upon the authority by this division shall be given.
   (b) "Cost" as applied to a project or portion thereof financed
under this division means all or any part of the cost of construction
and acquisition of all lands, structures, real or personal property
or an interest therein, rights, rights-of-way, franchises, easements,
and interests acquired or used for a project; the cost of
demolishing or removing any buildings or structures on land so
acquired, including the cost of acquiring any lands to which those
buildings or structures may be moved; the cost of all machinery,
equipment, and furnishings, financing charges, interest prior to,
during, and for a period after, completion of construction as
determined by the authority; provisions for working capital; reserves
for principal and interest and for extensions, enlargements,
additions, replacements, renovations, and improvements; the cost of
architectural, engineering, financial, accounting, auditing and legal
services, plans, specifications, estimates, administrative expenses,
and other expenses necessary or incident to determining the
feasibility of constructing any project or incident to the
construction, acquisition, or financing of any project.
   (c)  "Participating party" means any city, county, person,
company, corporation, partnership, firm, or other entity or group of
entities engaged in operations within this state which require
financing pursuant to the terms of this division to aid and assist in
the promotion of alternative energy sources or advanced
transportation technologies in the state.
   (d)  (1) "Alternative sources" means the application of
cogeneration technology, as defined in Section 25134; the
conservation of energy; or the use of solar, biomass, wind,
geothermal, hydroelectricity under 30 megawatts  and meeting the
criteria set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 15352 of the
Government Code  , or any other source of energy, the efficient
use of which will reduce the use of fossil and nuclear fuels.
   (2) "Alternative sources" does not include any hydroelectric
facility that does not meet state laws pertaining to the control,
appropriation, use, and distribution of water, including, but not
limited to, the obtaining of applicable licenses and permits.

   (e)  
   (d)  "Advanced transportation technologies" means emerging
commercially competitive transportation-related technologies
identified by the authority as capable of creating long-term, high
value-added jobs for Californians while enhancing the state's
commitment to energy conservation, pollution reduction, and
transportation efficiency.  Those technologies may include, but are
not limited to, any of the following:
   (1) Intelligent vehicle highway systems.
   (2) Advanced telecommunications for transportation.
   (3) Command, control, and communications for public transit
vehicles and systems.
   (4) Electric vehicles and ultra-low emission vehicles.
   (5) High-speed rail and magnetic levitation passenger systems.
   (6) Fuel cells.  
   (f)  
   (e) "Financial assistance" includes, but is not limited to,
either, or any combination, of the following:
   (1)  Loans, loan loss reserves, interest rate reductions, proceeds
of bonds issued by the authority, insurance, guarantees or other
credit enhancements or liquidity facilities, contributions of money,
property, labor, or other items of value, or any combination thereof,
as determined by, and approved by the resolution of, the board.
   (2) Any other type of assistance the authority determines is
appropriate.
   (f) "Participating party" means either of the following:
   (1) Any person or any entity or group of entities engaged in
business or operations in the state, whether organized for profit or
not for profit, that applies for financial assistance from the
authority for the purpose of implementing a project in a manner
prescribed by the authority.
   (2) Any public agency or nonprofit corporation that applies for
financial assistance from the authority for the purpose of
implementing a project in a manner prescribed by the authority.
   (g)  "Project" means any land, building, improvement thereto,
rehabilitation, work, property, or structure, real or personal,
stationary or mobile, including, but not limited to, machinery and
equipment, whether or not in existence or under construction, that
utilizes, or is designed to utilize, an alternative source, or that
is utilized for the design, technology transfer, manufacture,
production, assembly, distribution, or service of advanced
transportation technologies.  
   (g)  
   (h) "Public agency" means any federal or state agency, board, or
commission, or any county, city and county, city, regional agency,
public district, or other political subdivision.
   (i) (1) "Renewable energy" means any device or technology that
conserves or produces heat, processes heat, space heating, water
heating, steam, space cooling, refrigeration, mechanical energy,
electricity, or energy in any form convertible to these uses, that
does not expend or use conventional energy fuels, and that uses any
of the following electrical generation technologies:
   (A) Biomass.
   (B) Solar thermal.
   (C) Photovoltaic.
   (D) Wind.
   (E) Geothermal.
   (2) For purposes of this subdivision, "conventional energy fuel"
means any fuel derived from petroleum deposits, including, but not
limited to, oil, heating oil, gasoline, fuel oil, or natural gas,
including liquefied natural gas, or nuclear fissionable materials.
   (3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), for purposes of this section,
"renewable energy" also means ultra-low emission equipment for energy
generation based on thermal energy systems such as natural gas
turbines and fuel cells.
   (j)  "Revenue" means all rents, receipts, purchase payments,
loan repayments, and all other income or receipts derived by the
authority from the sale, lease, or other disposition of alternative
source or advanced transportation technology facilities, or the
making of loans to finance alternative source or advanced
transportation technology facilities, and any income or revenue
derived from the investment of any money in any fund or account of
the authority.  
   (h) "Public agency" means any federal or state agency, board, or
commission, or any county, city and county, city, regional agency,
public district, or other political subdivision.   
  SEC. 7.  Section 26011.5 of the Public Resources Code is amended to
read: 
   26011.5.  The authority  , in consultation with the State
Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission,  shall
establish criteria for the selection of projects to receive
financing assistance from the authority.  In the selection of
projects, the authority shall, in accordance with the legislative
                                           intent, provide financial
assistance under this division in a manner consistent with sound
financial practice.  In developing project selection criteria, the
authority shall consider, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (a) The technological feasibility of the projects.
   (b) The economic soundness of the projects and a realistic
expectation that all financial obligations can and will be met by the
participating parties.
   (c) The contribution that the projects can make to a reduction or
more efficient use of fossil fuels.
   (d) The contribution that the project can make toward
diversifying California's energy resources by fostering renewable
energy systems that can substitute, or preferably eliminate, the
demand for conventional energy fuels.
   (e)  Any other such factors that the authority finds
significant in achieving the purposes and objectives of this
division.   
  SEC. 8.  Section 26011.6 is added to the Public Resources Code, to
read:
   26011.6.  (a) The authority shall establish a renewable energy
program to provide financial assistance to public power entities,
independent generators, utilities, or businesses manufacturing
components or systems, or both, to generate new and renewable energy
sources, develop clean and efficient distributed generation, and
demonstrate the economic feasibility of new technologies, such as
solar, photovoltaic, wind, and ultra-low emission equipment.  The
authority shall give preference to utility-scale projects that can be
rapidly deployed to provide a significant contribution as a
renewable energy supply.
   (b) The authority shall make every effort to expedite the
operation of renewable energy systems, and shall adopt regulations
for purposes of this section and Sections 26011.5 and 26011.7 as
emergency regulations in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with
Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
Code.  For purposes of that Chapter 3.5, including Section 11349.6 of
the Government Code, the adoption of the regulations shall be
considered by the Office of Administrative Law to be necessary for
the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety,
and general welfare.  Notwithstanding the 120-day limitation
specified in subdivision (e) of Section 11346.1 of the Government
Code, the regulations shall be repealed 180 days after their
effective date, unless the authority complies with Sections 11346.2
to 11347.3, inclusive, as provided in subdivision (e) of Section
11346.1 of the Government Code.
   (c) The authority shall consult with the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission regarding the financing of
projects to avoid duplication of other renewable energy projects.
   (d) The authority shall ensure that any financed project shall
offer its power within California on a long- term contract basis.
 
  SEC. 9.  Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to
read: 
   739.  (a) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of
gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant
portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential
customer.  In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take
into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose
residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone
or by both electricity and gas.  The commission shall develop a
separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers.
For these purposes, "all-electric residential customers" are
residential customers having electrical service only or whose space
heating is provided by electricity, or both.  The commission shall
also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone
and season.
   (b) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited
allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas
and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support
equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary
patients.  A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment
shall be given a higher energy allocation than the average
residential customer.
   (2) "Life-support equipment" means that equipment which utilizes
mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a
vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for
mobility both within and outside of buildings.  "Life-support
equipment," as used in this subdivision, includes all of the
following:  all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis
machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads
and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers,
compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.
   (3) The limited additional allowance shall also be made available
to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the
increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.
   (4) The limited additional allowance shall also be made available
to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased
heating and cooling needs of those persons.
   (5) The limited additional allowance shall also be made available
to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating
needs of those persons.
   (6) The limited allowance shall also be made available to persons
who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a
compromised immune system, provided that a licensed physician and
surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative
Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating
or cooling allowance, or both, made available pursuant to this
subdivision is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person
or prevent deterioration of the person's medical condition.
   (c) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas
corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline
rates.  The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block
of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline
quantity.  In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid
excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall
establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for
the respective blocks of usage.
   (2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including
baseline rates, the commission shall assure that the rates are
sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to
recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential
customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity
and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is
desirable  and while observing the principle that conservation is
desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.
   (3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require
that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric,
and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any
charges on residential consumption that are independent of
consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to the effective
date of the act that added this paragraph  .
   (d) As used in this section:
   (1) "Baseline quantity" means a quantity of electricity or gas for
residential customers to be established by the commission based on
from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these
commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for
all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be
established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential
consumption during the winter heating season.  In establishing the
baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic
and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas
service.  The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities
as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these
ratios.
   (2) "Residential customer" means those customers receiving
electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and
excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of
customer.
   (e) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged
therefor, are exempt from this section.
   (f) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to
prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate
schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.   
  SEC. 10.  Section 739.10 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to
read:
   739.10.  The commission shall ensure that errors in estimates of
demand elasticity or sales do not result in material over or
undercollections of the electrical corporations.
   SEC. 10.5. Section 739.11 is added to the Public Utilities Code,
to read:
   739.11.  (a) For purposes of this section, "real time metering"
means a system for measuring a customer's usage of electricity on at
least an hourly basis, variably pricing that electricity based on the
cost of acquisition or production, and regularly providing and
updating that usage and pricing information to the customer.
   (b) The commission shall conduct a pilot study of real time
metering for nonresidential customers.  The purpose of the study is
to determine the effectiveness of real time metering in reducing
energy demand and overall energy consumption, to examine customer
response, to determine how real time metering should be implemented,
and to determine whether more widespread use of real time metering is
in the public interest.  The study shall not duplicate the study
required pursuant to Section 393 of the Public Utilities Code.  The
study shall include rates that vary as the cost of electricity varies
and provide appropriate telemetry and other equipment. The study
shall include agricultural, large commercial, and industrial customer
classes, and may include other customer classes if the commission
determines that to do so would be in the public interest.  The
commission shall report to the Legislature on the results of the
study by June 30, 2002.
   (c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
2003, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2003, deletes or extends
that date.  
  SEC. 11.  Section 2827 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to
read: 
   2827.  (a) The Legislature finds and declares that a program to
provide net energy metering for eligible customer-generators is one
way to encourage  substantial  private investment in
renewable energy resources, stimulate in-state economic growth, 
reduce demand for electricity during peak consumption periods, help
stabilize California's energy supply infrastructure,  enhance
the continued diversification of California's energy resource mix,
and reduce interconnection and administrative costs for electricity
suppliers.
   (b) As used in this section, the following definitions apply:
   (1) "Electric service provider" means an  electric
  electrical  corporation, as defined in Section
218, a local publicly owned electric utility, as defined in Section
9604, or an electrical cooperative, as defined in Section 2776.
 "Electric service provider" also means an   or
any other  entity that offers electrical service  to
residential and small commercial customers, as defined in Section
394, if that entity offers net energy metering.  Any entity that
offers net energy metering to residential and small commercial
customers shall comply with this section. 
   (2) "Eligible customer-generator" means a residential customer, or
a small commercial customer as defined in subdivision (h) of Section
331,  commercial, industrial, or agricultural customer  of
an electric service provider, who uses a solar or a wind turbine
electrical generating facility, or a hybrid system of both, with a
capacity of not more than  10 kilowatts   one
megawatt  that is located on the customer's  owned, leased,
or rented  premises, is interconnected and operates in parallel
with the electric grid, and is intended primarily to offset part or
all of the customer's own electrical requirements.
   (3) "Net energy metering" means measuring the difference between
the electricity supplied through the electric grid and the
electricity generated by an eligible customer-generator and fed back
to the electric grid over a 12-month period as described in
subdivision (e).  Net energy metering shall be accomplished using a
single meter capable of registering the flow of electricity in two
directions.  An additional meter or meters to monitor the flow of
electricity in each direction may be installed with the consent of
the customer-generator, at the expense of the electric service
provider, and the additional metering shall be used only to provide
the information necessary to accurately bill or credit the
customer-generator pursuant to subdivision (e), or to collect solar
or wind electric generating system performance information for
research purposes.  If the existing electrical meter of an eligible
customer-generator is not capable of measuring the flow of
electricity in two directions, the customer-generator shall be
responsible for all expenses involved in purchasing and installing a
meter that is able to measure electricity flow in two directions.  If
an additional meter or meters are installed, the net energy metering
calculation shall yield a result identical to that of a single
meter.  An eligible customer-generator who already owns an existing
solar or wind turbine electrical generating facility, or a hybrid
system of both, is eligible to receive net energy metering service in
accordance with this section.  
   (4) "Ratemaking authority" means, for an electrical corporation as
defined in Section 218, or an electrical cooperative as defined in
Section 2776, the commission, and for a local publicly owned electric
utility as defined in Section 9604, the local elected body
responsible for regulating the rates of the utility. 
   (c) (1) Every electric service provider shall develop a standard
contract or tariff providing for net energy metering, and shall make
this contract available to eligible customer-generators, upon
request, on a first-come-first-served basis until the time
that the total rated generating capacity used by eligible
customer-generators equals one-tenth of 1 percent of the electric
service provider's aggregate customer peak demand  .

   (2) On an annual basis, beginning in 1999, every electric service
provider shall make available to the ratemaking authority information
on the total rated generating capacity used by eligible
customer-generators that are customers of that provider in the
provider's service area.  For those electric service providers who
are operating pursuant to Section 394, they shall make available to
the ratemaking authority the information required by this paragraph
for each eligible customer-generator that is their customer for each
service area of an electric corporation, local publicly owned
electric utility, or electrical cooperative, in which the customer
has net energy metering.  The ratemaking authority shall develop a
process for making the information required by this paragraph
available to energy service providers, and for using that information
to determine when, pursuant to paragraph (3), a service provider
 
   (2) If a customer participates in direct transactions pursuant to
paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 365 with an electric
supplier that does not provide distribution service for the direct
transactions, the service provider that provides distribution service
for an eligible customer-generator  is not obligated to provide
net energy metering to  additional customer-generators in
its service area   the customer  .
   (3)  Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an electric service
provider is not obligated to provide net energy metering to
additional customer-generators in its service area when the combined
total peak demand of all customer-generators served by all the
electric service providers in that service area furnishing net energy
metering to eligible customer-generators equals one-tenth of 1
percent of the aggregate customer peak demand of those electric
service providers.
   (4)  If a customer participates in direct transactions
pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 365 with an
electric supplier  that does not offer net energy metering
and is therefore not an electric service provider, the customer is
not an eligible customer-generator and the electric corporation, as
defined in Section 218, that provides distribution service for the
direct transactions, is not obligated to provide net energy metering
to the customer.
   (5) If a customer participates in direct transactions pursuant to
paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 365 with an electric
supplier that offers net energy metering and is therefore an electric
service provider  , and the customer is an eligible
customer-generator, the  electric corporation, as defined in
Section 218,   service provider  that provides
distribution service for the direct transactions may recover from the
customer's electric service provider the incremental costs of
metering and billing service related to net energy metering in an
amount set by the commission.
   (d) Each net energy metering contract or tariff shall be
identical, with respect to rate structure, all retail rate
components, and any monthly charges, to the contract or tariff to
which the same customer would be assigned if such customer was not an
eligible customer-generator  , except that eligible
customer-generators shall not be assessed standby charges on the
electrical generating capacity or the kilowatthour production of an
eligible solar or wind electrical generating facility  .  The
charges for all retail rate components for eligible
customer-generators shall be based exclusively on the
customer-generator's net kilowatthour consumption over a 12-month
period, without regard to the customer-generator's choice of electric
service provider  that offers net energy metering and is
subject to this section pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (b),
in accordance with subdivision (e)  .  Any new or
additional demand charge, standby charge, customer charge, minimum
monthly charge, interconnection charge, or other charge that would
increase an eligible customer-generator's costs beyond those of other
customers in the rate class to which the eligible customer-generator
would otherwise be assigned are contrary to the intent of this
legislation, and shall not form a part of net energy metering
contracts or tariffs.
   (e)  The   For eligible residential and small
commercial customer-generators, the  net energy metering
calculation shall be made by measuring the difference between the
electricity supplied to the eligible customer-generator and the
electricity generated by the eligible customer-generator and fed back
to the electric grid over a 12-month period.  The following rules
shall apply to the annualized net metering calculation:
   (1) The eligible  residential or small commercial 
customer-generator shall, at the end of each 12-month period
following the date of final interconnection of the eligible
customer-generator's system with an electric service provider, and at
each anniversary date thereafter, be billed for electricity used
during that period.  The electric service provider shall determine if
the eligible  residential or small commercial 
customer-generator was a net consumer or a net producer of
electricity during that period.
   (2) At the end of each 12-month period, where the electricity
supplied during the period by the electric service provider exceeds
the electricity generated by the eligible  residential or small
commercial  customer-generator during that same period, the
eligible  residential or small commercial 
customer-generator is a net electricity consumer and the electric
service provider shall be owed compensation for the eligible
customer-generator's net kilowatthour consumption over that same
period.  The compensation owed for the eligible  residential or
small commercial  customer-generator's  net 12-month
kilowatthour  consumption shall be calculated as follows:
   (A) For  all  eligible customer-generators taking service
under tariffs employing "baseline" and "over baseline" rates, any
net monthly consumption of electricity shall be calculated according
to the terms of the contract or tariff to which the same customer
would be assigned to or be eligible for if the customer was not an
eligible customer-generator.  If those same customer-generators are
net generators over a billing period, the net kilowatthours generated
shall be valued at the same price per kilowatthour as the electric
service provider would charge for the baseline quantity of
electricity during that billing period, and if the number of
kilowatthours generated exceeds the baseline quantity, the excess
shall be valued at the same price per kilowatthour as the electric
service provider would charge for electricity over the baseline
quantity during that billing period.
   (B) For  all  eligible customer-generators taking service
under tariffs employing "time of use" rates, any net monthly
consumption of electricity shall be calculated according to the terms
of the contract or tariff to which the same customer would be
assigned to or be eligible for if the customer was not an eligible
customer-generator.  When those same customer-generators are net
generators during any discrete time of use period, the net
kilowatthours produced shall be valued at the same price per
kilowatthour as the electric service provider would charge for retail
kilowatthour sales during that same time of use period.  If the
eligible customer-generator's time of use electrical meter is unable
to measure the flow of electricity in two directions, paragraph (3)
of subdivision (b) shall apply.
   (C) For all  residential or small commercial 
customer-generators and for each monthly period, the net balance of
moneys owed to the electric service provider for net consumption of
electricity or credits owed to the customer-generator for net
generation of electricity shall be carried forward until the end of
each 12-month period.   For all commercial, industrial, and
agricultural customer-generators the net balance of moneys owed shall
be paid in accordance with the electric service provider's normal
billing cycle, except that if the commercial, industrial, or
agricultural customer-generator is a net electricity producer over a
normal billing cycle, any excess kilowatthours generated during the
billing cycle shall be carried over to the following billing period,
valued according to the procedures set forth in this section, and
appear as a credit on the customer-generator's account, until the end
of the annual period when paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) shall
apply. 
   (3) At the end of each 12-month period, where the electricity
generated by the eligible customer-generator during the 12-month
period exceeds the electricity supplied by the electric service
provider during that same period, the eligible customer-generator is
a net electricity producer and the electric service provider shall
retain any excess kilowatthours generated during the prior 12-month
period.  The eligible customer-generator shall not be owed any
compensation for those excess kilowatthours unless the electric
service provider enters into a purchase agreement with the eligible
customer-generator for those excess kilowatthours.
   (4) The electric service provider shall provide every eligible
 residential or small commercial  customer-generator with
net electricity consumption information with each regular bill.  That
information shall include the current monetary balance owed the
electric service provider for net electricity consumed since the last
12-month period ended. Notwithstanding subdivision (e), an electric
service provider shall permit that customer to pay monthly for net
energy consumed.
   (5) If an eligible  residential or small commercial 
customer-generator  terminates the customer relationship with the
electric service provider, the electric service provider shall
reconcile the eligible customer-generator's consumption and
production of electricity during any part of a 12-month period
following the last reconciliation, according to the requirements set
forth in this subdivision, except that those requirements shall apply
only to the months since the most recent 12-month bill.
   (6) If an electric service provider providing net metering to a
 residential or small commercial  customer-generator ceases
providing that electrical service to that customer during any
12-month period, and the customer-generator enters into a new net
metering contract or tariff with a new electric service provider, the
12-month period, with respect to that new electric service provider,
shall commence on the date on which the new electric service
provider first supplies electric service to the customer-generator.
   (f) A solar or wind turbine electrical generating system, or a
hybrid system of both, used by an eligible customer-generator shall
meet all applicable safety and performance standards established by
the National Electrical Code, the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers, and accredited testing laboratories such as
Underwriters Laboratories and, where applicable, rules of the
                                      Public Utilities Commission
regarding safety and reliability.  A customer-generator whose solar
or wind turbine electrical generating system, or a hybrid system of
both, meets those standards and rules shall not be required to
install additional controls, perform or pay for additional tests, or
purchase additional liability insurance. 
   (g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
2003, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2003, deletes or extends
that date.   
  SEC. 12.  Section 2827 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to
read:
   2827.  (a) The Legislature finds and declares that a program to
provide net energy metering for eligible customer-generators is one
way to encourage private investment in renewable energy resources,
stimulate in-state economic growth, enhance the continued
diversification of California's energy resource mix, and reduce
interconnection and administrative costs for electricity suppliers.
   (b) As used in this section, the following definitions apply:
   (1) "Electric service provider" means an electric corporation, as
defined in Section 218, a local publicly owned electric utility, as
defined in Section 9604, or an electrical cooperative, as defined in
Section 2776. "Electric service provider" also means an entity that
offers electrical service to residential and small commercial
customers, as defined in Section 394, if that entity offers net
energy metering.  Any entity that offers net energy metering to
residential and small commercial customers shall comply with this
section.
   (2) "Eligible customer-generator" means a residential customer, or
a small commercial customer as defined in subdivision (h) of Section
331, of an electric service provider, who uses a solar or a wind
turbine electrical generating facility, or a hybrid system of both,
with a capacity of not more than 10 kilowatts that is located on the
customer's premises, is interconnected and operates in parallel with
the electric grid, and is intended primarily to offset part or all of
the customer's own electrical requirements.
   (3) "Net energy metering" means measuring the difference between
the electricity supplied through the electric grid and the
electricity generated by an eligible customer-generator and fed back
to the electric grid over a 12-month period as described in
subdivision (e).  Net energy metering shall be accomplished using a
single meter capable of registering the flow of electricity in two
directions.  An additional meter or meters to monitor the flow of
electricity in each direction may be installed with the consent of
the customer-generator, at the expense of the electric service
provider, and the additional metering shall be used only to provide
the information necessary to accurately bill or credit the
customer-generator pursuant to subdivision (e), or to collect solar
or wind electric generating system performance information for
research purposes.  If the existing electrical meter of an eligible
customer-generator is not capable of measuring the flow of
electricity in two directions, the customer-generator shall be
responsible for all expenses involved in purchasing and installing a
meter that is able to measure electricity flow in two directions.  If
an additional meter or meters are installed, the net energy metering
calculation shall yield a result identical to that of a single
meter.  An eligible customer-generator who already owns an existing
solar or wind turbine electrical generating facility, or a hybrid
system of both, is eligible to receive net energy metering service in
accordance with this section.
   (4) "Ratemaking authority" means, for an electrical corporation as
defined in Section 218, or an electrical cooperative as defined in
Section 2776, the commission, and for a local publicly owned electric
utility as defined in Section 9604, the local elected body
responsible for regulating the rates of the utility.
   (c) (1) Every electric service provider shall develop a standard
contract or tariff providing for net energy metering, and shall make
this contract available to eligible customer-generators, upon
request, on a first-come-first-served basis until the time that the
total rated generating capacity used by eligible customer-generators
equals one-tenth of 1 percent of the electric service provider's
aggregate customer peak demand.
   (2) On an annual basis, beginning in 1999, every electric service
provider shall make available to the ratemaking authority information
on the total rated generating capacity used by eligible
customer-generators that are customers of that provider in the
provider's service area.  For those electric service providers who
are operating pursuant to Section 394, they shall make available to
the ratemaking authority the information required by this paragraph
for each eligible customer- generator that is their customer for each
service area of an electric corporation, local publicly owned
electric utility, or electrical cooperative, in which the customer
has net energy metering.  The ratemaking authority shall develop a
process for making the information required by this paragraph
available to energy service providers, and for using that information
to determine when, pursuant to paragraph (3), a service provider is
not obligated to provide net energy metering to additional
customer-generators in its service area.
   (3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an electric service provider is
not obligated to provide net energy metering to additional
customer-generators in its service area when the combined total peak
demand of all customer-generators served by all the electric service
providers in that service area furnishing net energy metering to
eligible customer-generators equals one-tenth of 1 percent of the
aggregate customer peak demand of those electric service providers.
   (4) If a customer participates in direct transactions pursuant to
paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 365 with an electric
supplier that does not offer net energy metering and is therefore not
an electric service provider, the customer is not an eligible
customer-generator and the electric corporation, as defined in
Section 218, that provides distribution service for the direct
transactions, is not obligated to provide net energy metering to the
customer.
   (5) If a customer participates in direct transactions pursuant to
paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 365 with an electric
supplier that offers net energy metering and is therefore an electric
service provider, and the customer is an eligible
customer-generator, the electric corporation, as defined in Section
218, that provides distribution service for the direct transactions
may recover from the customer's electric service provider the
incremental costs of metering and billing service related to net
energy metering in an amount set by the commission.
   (d) Each net energy metering contract or tariff shall be
identical, with respect to rate structure, all retail rate
components, and any monthly charges, to the contract or tariff to
which the same customer would be assigned if such customer was not an
eligible customer-generator.  The charges for all retail rate
components for eligible customer-generators shall be based
exclusively on the customer-generator's net kilowatthour consumption
over a 12-month period, without regard to the customer-generator's
choice of electric service provider that offers net energy metering
and is subject to this section pursuant to paragraph (1) of
subdivision (b), in accordance with subdivision (e).  Any new or
additional demand charge, standby charge, customer charge, minimum
monthly charge, interconnection charge, or other charge that would
increase an eligible customer-generator's costs beyond those of other
customers in the rate class to which the eligible customer-generator
would otherwise be assigned are contrary to the intent of this
legislation, and shall not form a part of net energy metering
contracts or tariffs.
   (e) The net energy metering calculation shall be made by measuring
the difference between the electricity supplied to the eligible
customer-generator and the electricity generated by the eligible
customer-generator and fed back to the electric grid over a 12-month
period.  The following rules shall apply to the annualized net
metering calculation:
   (1) The eligible customer-generator shall, at the end of each
12-month period following the date of final interconnection of the
eligible customer-generator's system with an electric service
provider, and at each anniversary date thereafter, be billed for
electricity used during that period.  The electric service provider
shall determine if the eligible customer-generator was a net consumer
or a net producer of electricity during that period.
   (2) At the end of each 12-month period, where the electricity
supplied during the period by the electric service provider exceeds
the electricity generated by the eligible customer-generator during
that same period, the eligible customer-generator is a net
electricity consumer and the electric service provider shall be owed
compensation for the eligible customer-generator's net kilowatthour
consumption over that same period.  The compensation owed for the
eligible customer-generator's net 12-month kilowatthour consumption
shall be calculated as follows:
   (A) For eligible customer-generators taking service under tariffs
employing "baseline" and "over baseline" rates, any net monthly
consumption of electricity shall be calculated according to the terms
of the contract or tariff to which the same customer would be
assigned to or be eligible for if the customer was not an eligible
customer- generator.  If those same customer-generators are net
generators over a billing period, the net kilowatthours generated
shall be valued at the same price per kilowatthour as the electric
service provider would charge for the baseline quantity of
electricity during that billing period, and if the number  of
kilowatthours generated exceeds the baseline quantity, the excess
shall be valued at the same price per kilowatthour as the electric
service provider would charge for electricity over the baseline
quantity during that billing period.
   (B) For eligible customer-generators taking service under tariffs
employing "time of use" rates, any net monthly consumption of
electricity shall be calculated according to the terms of the
contract or tariff to which the same customer would be assigned to or
be eligible for if the customer was not an eligible
customer-generator.  When those same customer-generators are net
generators during any discrete time of use period, the net
kilowatthours produced shall be valued at the same price per
kilowatthour as the electric service provider would charge for retail
kilowatthour sales during that same time of use period.  If the
eligible customer-generator's time of use electrical meter is unable
to measure the flow of electricity in two directions, paragraph (3)
of subdivision (b) shall apply.
   (C) For all customer-generators and for each monthly period, the
net balance of moneys owed to the electric service provider for net
consumption of electricity or credits owed to the customer-generator
for net generation of electricity shall be carried forward until the
end of each 12-month period.
   (3)  At the end of each 12-month period, where the electricity
generated by the eligible customer-generator during the 12-month
period exceeds the electricity supplied by the electric service
provider during that same period, the eligible customer-generator is
a net electricity producer and the electric service provider shall
retain any excess kilowatthours generated during the prior 12-month
period.  The eligible customer-generator shall not be owed any
compensation for those excess kilowatthours unless the electric
service provider enters into a purchase agreement with the eligible
customer-generator for those excess kilowatthours.
   (4)  The electric service provider shall provide every eligible
customer-generator with net electricity consumption information with
each regular bill.  That information shall include the current
monetary balance owed the electric service provider for net
electricity consumed since the last 12-month period ended.
Notwithstanding subdivision (e), an electric service provider shall
permit that customer to pay monthly for net energy consumed.
   (5) If an eligible customer-generator terminates the customer
relationship with the electric service provider, the electric service
provider shall reconcile the eligible customer-generator's
consumption and production of electricity during any part of a
12-month period following the last reconciliation, according to the
requirements set forth in this subdivision, except that those
requirements shall apply only to the months since the most recent 12-
month bill.
   (6) If an electric service provider providing net metering to a
customer-generator ceases providing that electrical service to that
customer during any 12-month period, and the customer-generator
enters into a new net metering contract or tariff with a new electric
service provider, the 12-month period, with respect to that new
electric service provider, shall commence on the date on which the
new electric service provider first supplies electric service to the
customer-generator.
   (f) A solar or wind turbine electrical generating system, or a
hybrid system of both, used by an eligible customer-generator shall
meet all applicable safety and performance standards established by
the National Electrical Code, the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers, and accredited testing laboratories such as
Underwriters Laboratories and, where applicable, rules of the Public
Utilities Commission regarding safety and reliability.  A
customer-generator whose solar or wind turbine electrical generating
system, or a hybrid system of both, meets those standards and rules
shall not be required to install additional controls, perform or pay
for additional tests, or purchase additional liability insurance.
   (g) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2003.
  SEC. 12.5.  Section 2827.5 is added to the Public Utilities Code,
to read:
   2827.5.  The Legislature finds and declares that the repeal of the
provisions of the net metering program for large customers merely
reflects a legislative desire to revisit and more closely evaluate
the cumulative value and effect of the state's policy regarding
renewable energy sources on the economics of investment in solar and
wind sources for large net metering customers and to ensure further
legislative discussion regarding this issue.
  SEC. 12.6.  Section 2827.7 is added to the Public Utilities Code,
to read:
   2827.7.  Generation eligible for net metering that is installed on
or before December 31, 2002, shall be entitled, for the life of the
installation, to the net metering terms in effect on the date of
installation.
  SEC. 13.  No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution for certain
costs  that may be incurred by a local agency or school district
because in that regard this act creates a new crime or infraction,
eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime
or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government
Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of
Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
   However, notwithstanding Section 17610 of the Government Code, if
the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains
other costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies
and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7
(commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the
Government Code.  If the statewide cost of the claim for
reimbursement does not exceed one million dollars ($1,000,000),
reimbursement shall be made from the State Mandates Claims Fund.
  SEC. 14.  The sum of four hundred eight million six hundred fifty
thousand dollars ($408,650,000) is hereby appropriated or
reappropriated to the Controller from the following sources:
   (a) Twenty-five million one hundred fifty thousand dollars
($25,150,000) from the Proposition 98 Reversion Account,
reappropriated on a one-time basis from the Proposition 98 Reversion
Account from moneys appropriated in the 2000-01 fiscal year to
community colleges.
   (b) Three hundred sixty-eight million five hundred thousand
dollars ($368,500,000) from the General Fund.
   (c) The moneys reappropriated from the Proposition 98 Reversion
Account shall be allocated to the Chancellor of the California
Community Colleges who shall allocate those funds as follows:
   (1) Twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) to be expended for
the purposes of implementing Article 2 (commencing with Section
81610) of Chapter 3 of Part 49 of Division 7 of Title 3 of the
Education Code.  The Chancellor, in consultation with the State
Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, shall
allocate the funds in this paragraph to all community college
districts statewide in an amount equivalent to a district's share of
the total gross square footage of all permanent structures reported
on the system's October 2000 Space Inventory Report. Notwithstanding
any other provision of law, due to the urgent need to realize the
necessary energy savings by the summer of 2001 these funds shall be
made available to the districts within one week of the effective date
of this act.  Any funds allocated pursuant to this paragraph that
are unencumbered by October 30, 2001, shall revert to the General
Fund on that date.
   (2) One hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) as a grant to
the Community College League of California to provide a statewide
database of community college district utility usage for immediate
application.  The data base shall be accessible to the Chancellor's
Office of the California Community Colleges as well as to all
community college districts statewide to assist in conservation,
facilities planning and energy management.  The data base shall track
the usage of electricity and natural gas, and may track the usage of
water, sewer and other utilities.  The data base shall further
provide an ongoing audit of utility billings to check for billing
errors and to ensure that districts recover potential billings that
exceed cost of actual usage.
   (d) The moneys appropriated from the General Fund shall be
allocated as follows:
   (1) The sum of forty million dollars ($40,000,000) shall be
deposited in the Renewable Energy Loan Loss Reserve Fund for the
purposes of Article 4 (commencing with Section 15350) of Chapter 1 of
Part 6.7 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
   (2) (A) The sum of forty million dollars ($40,000,000) shall be
allocated to the California Conservation Corps for costs associated
with the purchase, distribution, and installation of subcompact
fluorescent lights, other energy savings measures, and water-saving
devices for the purposes of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 14420)
of Division 12 of the Public Resources Code.  It is the intent of
the Legislature that the California Conservation Corps complete the
distribution of the purchased materials by August 31, 2001.
   (B) The California Conservation Corps, in implementing the
provisions of subparagraph (A), shall consult with the Department of
Community Services and Development and the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission, and shall provide for broad
geographic distribution of the purchased materials throughout the
state, identify neighborhoods and areas with dense populations that
can easily be served in large numbers, and take into account
community need.
   (C) The California Conservation Corps shall report to the
Legislature on or before October 31, 2001, on the use of the funds
allocated pursuant to this paragraph, the cost-effectiveness of the
activities, and the number of homes and businesses reached.
   (3) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) shall be
allocated to the Department of Community Services and Development for
disbursement in the forms of grants to community-based organizations
for the purposes of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 14420) of
Division 12 of the Public Resources Code, including, but not limited
to, the rapid installation of energy efficiency measures.
   (4) The sum of one hundred fifty-four million five hundred
thousand dollars ($154,500,000) shall be allocated to the State
Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission for
allocation in accordance with the following schedule:
   (A) Fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) shall be expended in
accordance with Article 2 (commencing with Section 25433) of Chapter
5.3 of Division 15 of the Public Resources Code.
   (B) Fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) shall be expended for
electric metering programs.  Thirty-five million dollars
($35,000,000) shall be used to provide time-of-use or real time
meters for customers whose usage is greater than 200 kilowatt.
Fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000) shall be provided to the Public
Utilities Commission to fund the program described in Section 739.11
of the Public Utilities Code, which may be used for the purchase and
installation of meters, related equipment, and other associated
costs.
   (C) Fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) shall be expended for the
Small Business Energy Efficient Refrigeration Loan Program provided
for in Section 25436 of the Public Resources Code.
   (5) (A) The sum of fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) shall be
allocated to the State Energy Conservation Assistance Account created
by Section 25416 of the Public Resources Code for expenditure by the
State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission to
provide three percent loans, and grants, as determined by the
commission, pursuant to Chapter 5.2 (commencing with Section 25410)
of Division 15 of the Public Resources Code.
   (B) In allocating the funds pursuant to this paragraph, the State
Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission shall do the
following:
   (i) Give priority to applications for energy conservation projects
or energy conservation measures that can be completed on or before
September 1, 2001.
   (ii) Give priority to local governmental entities that do not have
a local utility tax when making grants or loans to those entities.
   (6) The sum of four million five hundred thousand dollars
($4,500,000) is hereby allocated to the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission) for
expenditure to complete the Southeast Geysers Effluent Injection
System (SEGIS), Phase 2 Project of the Basin 2000 Project in Lake
County.  This appropriation is to enable Basin 2000 to come online in
December 2001, to produce an additional 10 megawatts (MW) of
geothermal power, which it and the Northern California Power Agency,
the sole partner with the Lake County Sanitation District, commit to
selling to the state at their cost to help with California's
electricity crisis.
   (7) The sum of twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) shall be
allocated to the California Alternative Energy
                     and Advanced Transportation Financing Authority
for the purpose of implementing Section 26011.6 of the Public
Resources Code.
   (8) (A) The State Energy Resources Conservation and Development
Commission shall expand programs to promote clean distributed
generation technologies neither owned nor controlled by electrical
corporations. Pursuant to subparagraphs (B) and (C), the incentives
that the commission shall develop pursuant to this section shall
address existing barriers to the increased use of these technologies,
including, but not limited to, incentives to help reduce the initial
system purchase price, develop low-cost financing mechanisms, offset
interconnection fees charged by electrical corporations, and
streamline the utility interconnection process by reducing
administrative delay.
   (B) The sum of fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000) shall be
deposited in the Emerging Renewable Resources Account in the
Renewable Resource Trust Fund established pursuant to Section 445 of
the Public Utilities Code. Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the
Government Code, the money deposited in the Emerging Renewable
Resources Account by this subparagraph is hereby continuously
appropriated to the State Energy Resources Conservation and
Development Commission, without regard to fiscal year, for the
purposes specified in subparagraph (C).
   (C) The sum of fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000) shall be
transferred from the Renewable Resource Trust Fund to the Emerging
Renewable Resources Account in the Renewable Resource Trust Fund
established under Section 445 of the Public Utilities Code.
   (D) The money allocated pursuant this paragraph  may be expended
by the commission only for the following purposes:
   (i) Twenty-two million dollars ($22,000,000) for rebates available
for small distributed emerging technologies that are eligible for
funding pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 383.5 of the Public
Utilities Code that have a peak generating capacity of 10 kilowatts
or less.  The commission shall determine the maximum rebate level for
small systems to be awarded pursuant to this clause.  Within the
maximum rebate level, the commission may provide for different rebate
levels, such as higher rebate levels for systems installed and
operational within a specified timeframe, or for targeted end-use
customers that need additional financial support, such as for public
schools and state and local governmental facilities.
   (ii) Eight million dollars ($8,000,000) for rebates for small
distributed emerging technologies that are eligible for funding
pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 383.5 of the Public Utilities
Code that have a peak generating capacity of 10 kilowatts or less and
that are located at a customer site receiving distribution service
from a local publicly owned electric utility, as defined in Section
9604 of the Public Utilities Code.  The commission shall determine
the maximum rebate level for small systems to be awarded pursuant to
this clause.  Within the maximum rebate level, the commission may
provide for different rebate levels, such as higher rebate levels for
systems installed and operational within a specified timeframe, or
for targeted end-use customers that need additional financial
support, such as for public schools and state and local governmental
facilities.
   (iii) The commission shall ensure that projects eligible for
rebates pursuant to clauses (i) and (ii) shall not also receive
rebates from similar programs adopted by the Public Utilities
Commission.
   (D) Notwithstanding subdivision (d) of Section 383.5 of the Public
Utilities Code, the commission may increase the maximum rebate
levels for distributed emerging technologies eligible for funding
under subdivision (d) of Section 383.5 of the Public Utilities Code
that have a peak generating capacity greater than 10 kilowatts, if
the commission determines that an increase is appropriate to further
stimulate the installation of emerging renewable technologies in
general or for targeted end-use customers that need additional
financial support, such as public schools and state and local
governmental facilities.  The maximum incentive levels established by
the commission may vary based on system size and type of end-use
consumer.
   (E) For purposes of this paragraph, "commission" means the State
Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission.
   (9) In order to achieve a reduction in peak electricity demand,
the sum of twenty-four million dollars ($24,000,000) shall be
allocated to the Department of Corrections to install systems to
retrofit generating units to improve the environmental performance of
existing electrical generating units.
   (e) Funds appropriated pursuant to paragraph (4) of subdivision
(d) shall be expended pursuant to guidelines adopted by the Energy
Resources Conservation and Development Commission.  The guidelines
shall be exempt from the requirements of Chapter 3.5 (commencing with
Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
Code and shall do all of the following:
   (1) Establish cost-effectiveness criteria for the programs funded.
  Within 10 days from the date of the adoption of criteria pursuant
to this paragraph, the commission shall provide a copy of the
criteria to the Chairperson of the Legislative Budget Committee, to
the chairpersons of the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of
both houses of the Legislature, and to the Governor.
   (2) Establish design guidelines for energy efficiency for programs
to be eligible for funding under Section 25433 of the Public
Resources Code.  These guidelines shall exceed those standards
established in Part 6 of Title 24 of the California Code of
Regulations.
   (3) Allow reasonable flexibility to shift funds among program
categories in order to achieve the maximum feasible amount of energy
conservation, peak load reduction, and energy efficiency by the
earliest feasible date.
   (4) Establish matching fund criteria where appropriate to ensure
that entities eligible to receive funds appropriated pursuant to
paragraph (4) of subdivision (d) pay an appropriate share of the cost
of acquiring or installing measures to achieve the maximum feasible
amount of energy conservation, peak load reduction, and energy
efficiency by the earliest feasible date.
   (5) Establish mechanisms and criteria that ensure that funds
expended pursuant to this subdivision through electric and gas
corporations are not seized by the creditors of those corporations in
the event of a bankruptcy. In implementing this paragraph, the
commission shall adopt mechanisms such as the segregation of funds by
the electric and gas corporations, the holding of those funds in
trust until they are expended, and the reversion of funds to the
General Fund in the event of a bankruptcy.
   (6) Establish tracking and auditing procedures to ensure that
funds are expended in a manner consistent with this section.
  SEC. 14.5.  (a) Any contracts entered into on or before September
1, 2001, pursuant to this act due to the energy crisis are exempt
from the following requirements of the Government Code and the Public
Contracts Code:
   (1) Services contracts are exempt from Article 4 (commencing with
Section 10335) of Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 2 of the Public
Contract Code.
   (2) Consulting services contracts are exempt from Article 5
(commencing with Section 10359) of Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 2
of the Public Contract Code.
   (3) Architectural and engineering contracts are exempt from
Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 4525) of Division 5 of Title 1 of
the Government Code, and from Section 6106.5 of the Public Contract
Code.
   (4) All contracts are exempt from Section 10295 of the Public
Contract Code, relating to approval from the Department of General
Services.
   (5) All contracts are exempt from Chapter 6 (commencing with
Section 14825) of Part 5.5 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
Code, relating to advertising.
   (b) Grants may be awarded for projects or programs that include a
group of related projects, or to a party who aggregates projects that
directly benefit from the grant.  The grants do not constitute the
rendering of goods or services or a direct benefit to the agency
making the grant.  A party who aggregates projects may retain for
administrative costs not more than 21/2 percent of the funds expended
by the party.
   (c) Approval of contracts and grants may be delegated to the
agency executive director or an agency committee up to a maximum
amount that is established by the respective commission or agency.
   (d) Administrative costs for agencies participating in programs or
projects pursuant to this act shall not exceed 21/2 percent of the
amount allocated to the agency.
   (e) Each participating agency receiving funds under this act shall
file reports with the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the chairs
of the appropriations committees, and the Governor, as follows:
   (1) An interim report by January 1, 2002.
   (2) A final report by July 1, 2002.
   (3) Annual reports for continuing programs, if the agency or
program is not otherwise required to file annual reports by this act
or any other provision of law.
  SEC. 15.  This act is an urgency statute necessary for the
immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within
the meaning of Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into
immediate effect.  The facts constituting the necessity are:
   In order to prevent rolling blackouts, and the shortage of
electrical generating capacity in the state that endangers the
health, welfare, and safety of the people of this state, it is
necessary that this act take effect immediately.   
amended by Section 1 of Chapter 1 of the 2001-02 First Extraordinary
Session, is amended to read:
   335.  In order to ensure that the interests of the people of
California are served, a five-member Electricity Oversight Board is
hereby created as provided in Section 336.  For purposes of this
chapter, any reference to the Oversight Board shall mean the
Electricity Oversight Board.  Its functions shall be all of the
following:
   (a) To oversee the Independent System Operator and the Power
Exchange.
   (b) To determine the composition and terms of service and to
exercise the exclusive right to decline to confirm the appointments
of specific members of the governing board of the Power Exchange.
   (c) To serve as an appeal board for majority decisions of the
Independent System Operator governing board, as they relate to
matters subject to exclusive state jurisdiction, as specified in
Section 339.
   (d) Those members of the Power Exchange governing board whose
appointments the Oversight Board has the exclusive right to decline
to confirm include proposed governing board members representing
agricultural end users, industrial end users, commercial end users,
residential end users, end users at large, nonmarket participants,
and public interest groups.
  SEC. 2.  Section 337 of the Public Utilities Code, as amended by
Section 3 of Chapter 1 of the 2001-02 First Extraordinary Session, is
amended to read:
   337.  (a)  The Independent System Operator governing board shall
be composed of a five-member independent governing board of directors
appointed by the Governor and subject to confirmation by the Senate.
Any reference in this chapter or in any other provision of law to
the Independent System Operator governing board means the independent
governing board appointed under this subdivision.
   (b) A member of the independent governing board appointed under
subdivision (a) may not be affiliated with any actual or potential
participant in any market administered by the Independent System
Operator.  A member of the governing board of the Power Exchange
shall not be considered to be affiliated with a participant solely as
a consequence of that individual's service on the governing board of
the Power Exchange.
   (c) (1) All appointments shall be for three-year terms.
   (2) There is no limit on the number of terms that may be served by
any member.
   (d) The Oversight Board shall require the articles of
incorporation and bylaws of the Independent System Operator to be
revised in accordance with this section, and shall make filings with
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission as the Oversight Board
determines to be necessary.
   (e) For the purposes of the initial appointments to the
Independent System Operator governing board, as provided in
subdivision (a), the Governor shall appoint one member to a one-year
term, two members to a two-year term, and two members to a three-year
term.
  SEC. 3.  Section 341.2 of the Public Utilities Code, as amended by
Section 4 of Chapter 1 of the 2001-02 First Extraordinary Session, is
amended to read:
   341.2.  The Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing
with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2
of the Government Code) applies to meetings of the Oversight Board.
In addition to the allowances of that act, the Oversight Board may
hold a closed session to consider the appointment of one or more
candidates to the governing board of the Power Exchange, deliberate
on matters involving the removal of a member of the governing board
of the Power Exchange, or to consider a matter based on information
that has received a grant of confidential status pursuant to
regulations of the Oversight Board, provided that any action taken on
such a matter shall be taken by vote in an open session.