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2.0. ERMUSR 08-29-2018
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2.0. ERMUSR 08-29-2018
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ERMUSR
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8/29/2018
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Sta e Regulatory Initiatives <br /> On I ay 21, 2001, the Minnesota Legislature passed the Minnesota Energy Security and Reliability Act <br /> (the "Act") which was signed by the Governor into law on May 29, 2001 and became Chapter 212 of <br /> La s of Minnesota 2001. Although the Act constituted the most extensive re-write of the State's law on <br /> ene gy policy in 25 years, the focus was primarily on promoting conservation and renewables rather than <br /> on I reating a more effective process for securing needed transmission and generation facilities. In part, to <br /> add ess the issue of the need for substantial new investment in transmission, the Minnesota Legislature <br /> also passed the Omnibus Energy Bill, Laws of Minnesota 2005, Chapter 97 (the "Omnibus Energy Bill"), <br /> cod fled in Minnesota Statutes Chapter 216B, as amended, whose provisions took effect August 1, 2005. <br /> The following discussion of some major provisions that affect municipal utilities is a summary and is <br /> qua ified in its entirety by reference to the Act and the Omnibus Energy Bill. <br /> Dis ributed Generation. The Omnibus Energy Bill establishes the terms and conditions that govern the <br /> interconnection and parallel operation of on-site distributed generation. The Public Utility Commission <br /> of ti e State of Minnesota(the"PUC")has established generic standards for utility tariffs providing for the <br /> st. dardized interconnection of facilities and reasonable interconnection agreements. Municipal utilities <br /> and cooperatives must adopt tariffs of their own, which must address the same issues as those addressed <br /> by he PUC. The Act requires all utilities to keep records of applications for interconnections and to <br /> ann ally report interconnection activity to the Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Commerce <br /> (the"DOC"). <br /> Re ewables. Renewables are generally defined as solar, wind, or hydroelectric facilities; however, the <br /> Om ibus Energy Bill allows for biogas projects to be eligible for the renewal energy production incentive <br /> and promotes the use of soy-diesel and hydrogen as energy sources. The Act, amended in 2010, allows for <br /> all tilities to offer its customers one or more options to secure electric energy from renewables or high <br /> effi,iency, low emissions distributed generation such as fuel cells and micro-turbines fueled by renewable <br /> fuel.. The DOC Commissioner must certify the applicable power source as renewable. Electric utilities <br /> una.le to supply their customers with the renewable option must provide an explanation to the PUC. The <br /> Om ibus Energy Bill makes a number of changes designed to promote the use of renewable resources, <br /> whi h include expediting regulatory approval of transmission projects related to renewable generation, <br /> estaio fishing a framework for a (non-binding) wind energy tariff for community-based energy for <br /> devā¢lopment projects, requiring utility participation in a wind integration study, requiring the adjustment of <br /> po er purchase agreements to account for production tax payments, and requiring a study of the use of <br /> bio-diesel fuel to heat homes. The 2005 Minnesota Legislature authorized a study to determine if the State <br /> cou d reliably and cost-effectively integrate a Renewable Energy Standard ("RES") mandate. This study <br /> was delivered late in 2006 and the 2007 Minnesota Legislature, acting on the strength of the study results, <br /> pas.ed into law the Net Generation Energy Act("NGEA"), Laws of Minnesota 2007, Chapter 3,which will <br /> req ire 25%renewable electric generation by the year 2025,with intervening steps to reach the standard. <br /> Co sumer Protection. Changes were made to the list of concerns that a municipal or an electric <br /> coo.erative must address before disconnecting a residential customer for non-payment during the winter <br /> hea ing season. The Act also requires all utilities to offer a payment agreement to residential customers <br /> for oast due bills or for making up undercharges, if the undercharge is caused through no fault of the <br /> cus omer. If a utility has more than 3,000 customers, it must provide budget billing for residential <br /> cus omers. <br /> Conservation Improvement Program ("CIP"). In 2007, the State established new conservation of energy <br /> policy that sets CIP goals for all energy utilities in the State to reduce energy consumption by 1.5% per <br /> ye. . While not a mandate with penalties, this new law will guide the expansion of utility incentives to <br /> dri e energy efficiency at the consumer level. The 1.5% is an annual target and shouldn't be viewed <br /> cu ulatively. NGEA also increases mandatory CIP expenditures from 1% to 1.5% of gross revenues. <br /> CIprogress reports submitted to DOC,Division of Energy Resources, have received favorable response. <br /> - 8 - <br /> 17 <br />
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