S-1475.1
SUBSTITUTE SENATE BILL 5562
State of Washington 68th Legislature 2023 Regular Session
By Senate Environment, Energy & Technology (originally sponsored by
Senators Nguyen, Lovelett, Hunt, Keiser, Liias, SaldaƱa, Wellman, and
C. Wilson)
READ FIRST TIME 02/15/23.
1 AN ACT Relating to supporting Washington's clean energy economy
2 and transitioning to a clean, affordable, and reliable energy future;
3 amending RCW 80.28.010; adding a new chapter to Title 80 RCW;
4 creating a new section; prescribing penalties; and declaring an
5 emergency.
6 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
7 NEW SECTION. Sec. 1. (1) The legislature finds that the state's
8 gas and electrical companies face transformational change brought on
9 by new technology, emerging opportunities for customers, and state
10 clean energy laws. Chapter 19.405 RCW, the Washington clean energy
11 transformation act, and chapter 70A.65 RCW, the Washington climate
12 commitment act, mean these companies must find innovative and
13 creative solutions to equitably serve their customers, provide clean
14 energy, reduce emissions, and keep rates fair, just, reasonable, and
15 sufficient.
16 (2) Gas companies with over 500,000 customers that are also
17 electrical companies, or large combination utilities, play an
18 important role in providing affordable and reliable heating and other
19 energy services, and in leading the implementation of state climate
20 policies. As the state transitions to cleaner sources of energy,
21 large combination utilities are an important partner in helping their
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1 customers make smart energy choices, and actively supporting the
2 replacement of fossil fuel-based space and water heating equipment
3 with high-efficiency nonemitting equipment. Programs to accelerate
4 the adoption of efficient, nonemitting appliances have the potential
5 to allow large combination utilities to optimize the use of energy
6 infrastructure, improve the management of energy loads, better manage
7 the integration of variable renewable energy resources, reduce
8 greenhouse gas emissions from the buildings sector, mitigate the
9 environmental impacts of utility operations and power purchases, and
10 improve health outcomes for occupants. Legislative clarity is
11 important for utilities to offer programs and services, including
12 incentives, in the decarbonization of homes and buildings for their
13 customers.
14 (3) In order to meet the statewide greenhouse gas limits in the
15 energy sectors of the economy, more resources must be directed toward
16 achieving decarbonization of residential and commercial heating
17 loads, while continuing to protect customers, especially low-income
18 customers and vulnerable communities. The legislature finds that
19 regulatory innovation may be needed to remove barriers that large
20 combination utilities may face to meet the state's public policy
21 objectives and expectations. The enactment of chapter 188, Laws of
22 2021 (Engrossed Substitute Senate Bill No. 5295) began that
23 regulatory transition from traditional cost-of-service regulation,
24 with investor-owned gas and electrical companies using forward-
25 looking multiyear rate plans and taking steps toward performance-
26 based regulation. These steps are intended to provide certainty and
27 stability to both customers and to investor-owned gas and electrical
28 companies, aligning public policy objectives with investments,
29 safety, and reliability.
30 (4) The legislature finds that as Washington transitions to 100
31 percent clean electricity and as the state implements the Washington
32 climate commitment act, switching from fossil fuel-based heating
33 equipment to high-efficiency nonemitting equipment will reduce
34 climate impacts and fuel price risks for customers in the long term.
35 This new paradigm requires a thoughtful transition to decarbonize the
36 energy system to ensure that customers are protected, are not subject
37 to sudden price shocks, and continue to receive needed energy
38 services. This transition will require careful and integrated
39 planning across utilities and with customers as well as new
40 regulatory tools.
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1 (5) It is the intent of the legislature to require large
2 combination utilities to decarbonize their systems by: (a)
3 Prioritizing the most efficient and cost-effective measures to
4 achieve emissions reductions at the lowest reasonable cost to
5 customers; (b) investing in the energy supply, storage, delivery, and
6 demand-side resources that will be needed to serve any increase in
7 electrical demand affordably and reliably; (c) maintaining safety and
8 reliability as the gas system undergoes transformational changes; (d)
9 integrating zero-carbon and carbon-neutral fuels to serve high heat
10 and industrial loads that require gaseous fuels; (e) managing peak
11 demand of the electric system; and (f) ensuring an equitable
12 distribution of benefits to, and reduction of burdens for,
13 overburdened communities that have historically been underserved by
14 utility energy efficiency programs, and may be disproportionately
15 impacted by rising fuel and equipment costs or experience high energy
16 burden.
17 (6) It is the intent of the legislature to support this
18 transition by adopting requirements for large combination utilities
19 to conduct integrated system planning to develop specific actions
20 supporting gas system decarbonization and electrification. These
21 plans must be approved, rejected, or approved subject to conditions
22 by the utilities and transportation commission. Once approved, an
23 integrated system plan may be included in a multiyear rate plan.
24 Sec. 2. RCW 80.28.010 and 2011 c 214 s 11 are each amended to
25 read as follows:
26 (1) All charges made, demanded, or received by any gas company,
27 electrical company, wastewater company, or water company for gas,
28 electricity or water, or for any service rendered or to be rendered
29 in connection therewith, shall be just, fair, reasonable and
30 sufficient. Reasonable charges necessary to cover the cost of
31 administering the collection of voluntary donations for the purposes
32 of supporting the development and implementation of evergreen
33 community management plans and ordinances under RCW 80.28.300 must be
34 deemed as prudent and necessary for the operation of a utility.
35 (2)(a) Every gas company, electrical company, wastewater company,
36 and water company shall furnish and supply such service,
37 instrumentalities and facilities as shall be safe, adequate and
38 efficient, and in all respects just and reasonable.
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1 (b) No large gas company that serves more than 500,000 retail
2 natural gas customers in the state of Washington on June 30, 2023,
3 may furnish or supply gas service, instrumentalities, and facilities
4 to any commercial or residential location that did not receive gas
5 service or have filed applications for gas service as of June 30,
6 2023.
7 (3) All rules and regulations issued by any gas company,
8 electrical company, wastewater company, or water company, affecting
9 or pertaining to the sale or distribution of its product or service,
10 must be just and reasonable.
11 (4) Utility service for residential space heating shall not be
12 terminated between November 15th through March 15th if the customer:
13 (a) Notifies the utility of the inability to pay the bill,
14 including a security deposit. This notice should be provided within
15 five business days of receiving a payment overdue notice unless there
16 are extenuating circumstances. If the customer fails to notify the
17 utility within five business days and service is terminated, the
18 customer can, by paying reconnection charges, if any, and fulfilling
19 the requirements of this section, receive the protections of this
20 chapter;
21 (b) Provides self-certification of household income for the prior
22 twelve months to a grantee of the department of commerce, which
23 administers federally funded energy assistance programs. The grantee
24 shall determine that the household income does not exceed the maximum
25 allowed for eligibility under the state's plan for low-income energy
26 assistance under 42 U.S.C. 8624 and shall provide a dollar figure
27 that is seven percent of household income. The grantee may verify
28 information provided in the self-certification;
29 (c) Has applied for home heating assistance from applicable
30 government and private sector organizations and certifies that any
31 assistance received will be applied to the current bill and future
32 utility bills;
33 (d) Has applied for low-income weatherization assistance to the
34 utility or other appropriate agency if such assistance is available
35 for the dwelling;
36 (e) Agrees to a payment plan and agrees to maintain the payment
37 plan. The plan will be designed both to pay the past due bill by the
38 following October 15th and to pay for continued utility service. If
39 the past due bill is not paid by the following October 15th, the
40 customer is not eligible for protections under this chapter until the
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1 past due bill is paid. The plan may not require monthly payments in
2 excess of seven percent of the customer's monthly income plus one-
3 twelfth of any arrearage accrued from the date application is made
4 and thereafter during November 15th through March 15th. A customer
5 may agree to pay a higher percentage during this period, but shall
6 not be in default unless payment during this period is less than
7 seven percent of monthly income plus one-twelfth of any arrearage
8 accrued from the date application is made and thereafter. If
9 assistance payments are received by the customer subsequent to
10 implementation of the plan, the customer shall contact the utility to
11 reformulate the plan; and
12 (f) Agrees to pay the moneys owed even if he or she moves.
13 (5) The utility shall:
14 (a) Include in any notice that an account is delinquent and that
15 service may be subject to termination, a description of the
16 customer's duties in this section;
17 (b) Assist the customer in fulfilling the requirements under this
18 section;
19 (c) Be authorized to transfer an account to a new residence when
20 a customer who has established a plan under this section moves from
21 one residence to another within the same utility service area;
22 (d) Be permitted to disconnect service if the customer fails to
23 honor the payment program. Utilities may continue to disconnect
24 service for those practices authorized by law other than for
25 nonpayment as provided for in this subsection. Customers who qualify
26 for payment plans under this section who default on their payment
27 plans and are disconnected can be reconnected and maintain the
28 protections afforded under this chapter by paying reconnection
29 charges, if any, and by paying all amounts that would have been due
30 and owing under the terms of the applicable payment plan, absent
31 default, on the date on which service is reconnected; and
32 (e) Advise the customer in writing at the time it disconnects
33 service that it will restore service if the customer contacts the
34 utility and fulfills the other requirements of this section.
35 (6) A payment plan implemented under this section is consistent
36 with RCW 80.28.080.
37 (7) Every gas company and electrical company shall offer
38 residential customers the option of a budget billing or equal payment
39 plan. The budget billing or equal payment plan shall be offered low-
40 income customers eligible under the state's plan for low-income
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1 energy assistance prepared in accordance with 42 U.S.C. 8624(C)(1)
2 without limiting availability to certain months of the year, without
3 regard to the length of time the customer has occupied the premises,
4 and without regard to whether the customer is the tenant or owner of
5 the premises occupied.
6 (8) Every gas company, electrical company, wastewater company,
7 and water company shall construct and maintain such facilities in
8 connection with the manufacture and distribution of its product, or
9 provision of its services, as will be efficient and safe to its
10 employees and the public.
11 (9) An agreement between the customer and the utility, whether
12 oral or written, does not waive the protections afforded under this
13 chapter.
14 (10) In establishing rates or charges for water service, water
15 companies as defined in RCW 80.04.010 may consider the achievement of
16 water conservation goals and the discouragement of wasteful water use
17 practices.
18 NEW SECTION. Sec. 3. The definitions in this section apply
19 throughout this chapter unless the context clearly requires
20 otherwise.
21 (1) "Alternative energy resource" means biogas, renewable natural
22 gas, renewable syngas, renewable hydrogen, carbon dioxide removal,
23 carbon-free district energy, any electrification programs approved as
24 part of an electrification plan pursuant to section 5 of this act,
25 and any carbon-neutral fuel as defined in statute.
26 (2) "Carbon dioxide equivalent" has the same meaning as defined
27 in RCW 70A.65.010.
28 (3) "Carbon dioxide removal" has the same meaning as defined in
29 RCW 70A.65.010.
30 (4) "Combination utility" means a public service company that is
31 both an electrical company and a large gas company that serves more
32 than 800,000 retail electric customers and 500,000 retail natural gas
33 customers in the state of Washington as of June 30, 2023.
34 (5) "Commission" means the utilities and transportation
35 commission.
36 (6) "Cost target" means: (a) With respect to a gas
37 decarbonization plan for a large gas company, the cost target
38 identified in section 7(1) of this act; and (b) with respect to an
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1 electrification plan for a combination utility, the cost target
2 identified in section 7(2) of this act.
3 (7) "Costs of greenhouse gas emissions" means the costs of
4 greenhouse gas emissions established in RCW 80.28.395.
5 (8) "Carbon-free district energy" means a network of hot water
6 pipes and cold water pipes used to provide thermal energy to multiple
7 buildings that does not result in the emissions of greenhouse gases.
8 (9) "Electrical company" has the same meaning as defined in RCW
9 80.04.010.
10 (10) "Electrification" means the installation by a combination
11 utility of electric end-use equipment provided that installation: (a)
12 Will result in a net reduction in statewide greenhouse gas emissions
13 over the life of the equipment as compared to the most efficient
14 commercially available natural gas or alternative energy resource
15 alternative; and (b) reduces the sales of natural gas by the large
16 gas company. Electrification programs of a combination utility may
17 include, but are not limited to, programs that facilitate deep energy
18 retrofits or the installation of electric air-source heat pumps with
19 gas backups in existing buildings. However, electric air-source heat
20 pumps with gas backups may not be part of any plan filed pursuant to
21 section 5 of this act.
22 (11) "Emissions baseline" means the actual cumulative greenhouse
23 gas emissions of a large gas company, calculated pursuant to chapter
24 173-441 WAC, for the five-year period beginning January 1, 2018, and
25 ending December 31, 2022.
26 (12) "Emissions reduction period" means one of five periods of
27 five calendar years each, with the five periods beginning on January
28 1st of calendar years 2030, 2035, 2040, 2045, and 2050, respectively.
29 (13) "Gas company" has the same meaning as defined in RCW
30 80.04.010.
31 (14) "Greenhouse gas" has the same meaning as defined in RCW
32 70A.45.010.
33 (15) "Highly impacted community" has the same meaning as defined
34 in RCW 19.405.020.
35 (16) "Large gas company" means a gas company that serves more
36 than 500,000 retail natural gas customers in the state of Washington
37 on June 30, 2023.
38 (17) "Renewable hydrogen" has the same meaning as defined in RCW
39 19.405.020.
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1 (18) "Low-income" has the same meaning as defined in RCW
2 19.405.020.
3 (19) "Multiyear rate plan" means a multiyear rate plan of a gas
4 company filed with the commission pursuant to RCW 80.28.425.
5 (20) "Natural gas" has the same meaning as defined in RCW
6 19.405.020.
7 (21) "Renewable natural gas" has the same meaning as defined in
8 RCW 19.405.020.
9 (22) "Renewable resource" has the same meaning as defined in RCW
10 19.405.020.
11 (23) "Renewable syngas" means any fuel derived by processing:
12 (a) Manure of agricultural livestock, including litter, wood
13 shavings, straw, rice hulls, bedding material, and other materials
14 incidentally collected with the manure;
15 (b) Any nonhazardous, cellulosic, or ot