BILL NUMBER: SBX1 37 AMENDED
BILL TEXT
AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 8, 2001
AMENDED IN SENATE APRIL 2, 2001
INTRODUCED BY Senator Brulte
FEBRUARY 7, 2001
An act to add Section 25402.6 Sections
25402.6 and 25402.7 to the Public Resources Code, and
to amend Section 399.15 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to
energy relating to energy resources.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 37, as amended, Brulte. California Energy Commission: building
efficiency standards.
(1) Existing
Existing law requires the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission to prescribe, by regulation,
various energy efficiency design standards for residential and
nonresidential buildings.
This bill would require the commission to monitor
compliance with building energy efficiency standards by checking
compliance documentation with actual construction in the field
upon the receipt of a complaint by a local building
official, to assist the official in determining compliance with
building energy efficiency standards including, if necessary, site
visits .
This bill would require the commission to investigate options and
develop a plan to decrease wasteful peak load energy consumption in
existing residential and nonresidential buildings. The bill would
require the commission to report its findings, on or before January
1, 2002, to the Legislature.
The bill would require the commission to certify energy
consultants, installers, field verifiers, and nonresidential building
standards agents, as it determines appropriate, to ensure compliance
with all applicable building energy efficiency standards.
(2) Existing law requires the Public Utilities Commission, in
consultation with the Independent System Operator, to consult with
the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission
and adopt energy conservation initiatives to reduce demand for
electricity and reduce load during peak demand periods.
This bill would add, as another initiative, support for building
standards and other cost-effective energy efficiency regulations and
support for development of the infrastructure to implement those
standards and other regulations support development of
building standards and other regulations, relating to reducing
wasteful, uneconomic, inefficient, or unnecessary consumption of
energy, including appropriate research, development, and training, to
implement those standards and other regulations .
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. Section 25402.6 is added to the Public Resources Code,
to read:
25402.6. (a) In conjunction with the existing activities of local
building departments, the commission shall, upon the receipt of a
complaint by a local building official, monitor compliance
with the building energy efficiency standards by checking compliance
documentation with actual construction in the field.
official, assist the official in determining compliance with building
energy efficiency standards including, if necessary, site visits.
(b) The commission shall investigate options and develop a plan to
decrease wasteful load energy consumption in existing residential
and nonresidential buildings. On or before January 1, 2002, the
commission shall report its findings to the Legislature, including,
but not limited to, any changes in law necessary to implement the
plan to decrease wasteful peak load energy consumption in existing
residential and nonresidential buildings.
(c) The commission shall certify energy consultants, installers,
SEC. 2. Section 25402.7 is added to the Public Resources Code, to
read:
25402.7. The commission shall support development of building
standards and other regulations pursuant to Section 25402 and
subdivision (b) of Section 25553 including appropriate research,
development, and training to implement those standards and other
regulations. field verifiers, and nonresidential
building standards agents, as it determines appropriate, to ensure
compliance with building energy efficiency standards. To the extent
feasible, the commission shall approve private organizations to
conduct the certification program the commission is required to carry
out under this section. The certification program shall include a
complaint response process.
SEC. 2. Section 399.15 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to
read:
399.15. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, within 180
days of the effective date of this section, the commission, in
consultation with the Independent System Operator, shall take all of
the following actions, and shall include the reasonable costs
involved in taking those actions in the distribution revenue
requirements of utilities regulated by the commission, as
appropriate:
(a) (1) Identify and undertake those actions necessary to reduce
or remove constraints on the state's existing electrical transmission
and distribution system, including, but not limited to,
reconductoring of transmission lines, the addition of capacitors to
increase voltage, the reinforcement of existing transmission
capacity, and the installation of new transformer banks. The
commission shall, in consultation with the Independent System
Operator, give first priority to those geographical regions where
congestion reduces or impedes electrical transmission and supply.
(2) Consistent with the existing statutory authority of the
commission, the commission shall afford electrical corporations a
reasonable opportunity to fully recover costs it determines are
reasonable and prudent to plan, finance, construct, operate, and
maintain any facilities under its jurisdiction required by this
section.
(b) In consultation with the State Energy Resources Conservation
and Development Commission, adopt energy conservation demand-side
management and other initiatives in order to reduce demand for
electricity and reduce load during peak demand periods. Those
initiatives shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
(1) Expansion and acceleration of residential and commercial
weatherization programs.
(2) Expansion and acceleration of programs to inspect and improve
the operating efficiency of heating, ventilation, and
air-conditioning equipment in new and existing buildings, to ensure
that these systems achieve the maximum feasible cost-effective energy
efficiency.
(3) Expansion and acceleration of programs to improve energy
efficiency in new buildings, in order to achieve the maximum feasible
reductions in uneconomic energy and peak electricity consumption.
(4) Incentives to equip commercial buildings with the capacity to
automatically shut down or dim nonessential lighting and
incrementally raise thermostats during peak electricity demand
period.
(5) Evaluation of installing local infrastructure to link
temperature setback thermostats to real-time price signals.
(6) Incentives for load control and distributed generation to be
paid for enhancing reliability.
(7) Differential incentives for renewable or super clean
distributed generation resources.
(8) Reevaluation of all efficiency cost-effectiveness tests in
light of increases in wholesale electricity costs and of natural gas
costs to explicitly include the system value of reduced load on
reducing market clearing prices and volatility.
(9) Support for building standards and other regulations pursuant
to Section 25402 and subdivision (b) of Section 25553 of the Public
Resources Code and for development of the infrastructure to implement
those standards and other regulations.
(c) In consultation with the Energy Resources Conservation and
Development Commission, adopt and implement a residential,
commercial, and industrial peak reduction program that encourages
electric customers to reduce electricity consumption during peak
power periods.