Public Act 097-0616
 
SB1652 EnrolledLRB097 09323 ASK 49458 b

    AN ACT concerning public utilities.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Illinois Power Agency Act is amended by
changing Section 1-10, 1-56, and 1-75 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 3855/1-10)
    Sec. 1-10. Definitions.
    "Agency" means the Illinois Power Agency.
    "Agency loan agreement" means any agreement pursuant to
which the Illinois Finance Authority agrees to loan the
proceeds of revenue bonds issued with respect to a project to
the Agency upon terms providing for loan repayment installments
at least sufficient to pay when due all principal of, interest
and premium, if any, on those revenue bonds, and providing for
maintenance, insurance, and other matters in respect of the
project.
    "Authority" means the Illinois Finance Authority.
    "Clean coal facility" means an electric generating
facility that uses primarily coal as a feedstock and that
captures and sequesters carbon emissions at the following
levels: at least 50% of the total carbon emissions that the
facility would otherwise emit if, at the time construction
commences, the facility is scheduled to commence operation
before 2016, at least 70% of the total carbon emissions that
the facility would otherwise emit if, at the time construction
commences, the facility is scheduled to commence operation
during 2016 or 2017, and at least 90% of the total carbon
emissions that the facility would otherwise emit if, at the
time construction commences, the facility is scheduled to
commence operation after 2017. The power block of the clean
coal facility shall not exceed allowable emission rates for
sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, particulates
and mercury for a natural gas-fired combined-cycle facility the
same size as and in the same location as the clean coal
facility at the time the clean coal facility obtains an
approved air permit. All coal used by a clean coal facility
shall have high volatile bituminous rank and greater than 1.7
pounds of sulfur per million btu content, unless the clean coal
facility does not use gasification technology and was operating
as a conventional coal-fired electric generating facility on
June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 95-1027).
    "Clean coal SNG facility" means a facility that uses a
gasification process to produce substitute natural gas, that
sequesters at least 90% of the total carbon emissions that the
facility would otherwise emit and that uses petroleum coke or
coal as a feedstock, with all such coal having a high
bituminous rank and greater than 1.7 pounds of sulfur per
million btu content.
    "Commission" means the Illinois Commerce Commission.
    "Costs incurred in connection with the development and
construction of a facility" means:
        (1) the cost of acquisition of all real property and
    improvements in connection therewith and equipment and
    other property, rights, and easements acquired that are
    deemed necessary for the operation and maintenance of the
    facility;
        (2) financing costs with respect to bonds, notes, and
    other evidences of indebtedness of the Agency;
        (3) all origination, commitment, utilization,
    facility, placement, underwriting, syndication, credit
    enhancement, and rating agency fees;
        (4) engineering, design, procurement, consulting,
    legal, accounting, title insurance, survey, appraisal,
    escrow, trustee, collateral agency, interest rate hedging,
    interest rate swap, capitalized interest and other
    financing costs, and other expenses for professional
    services; and
        (5) the costs of plans, specifications, site study and
    investigation, installation, surveys, other Agency costs
    and estimates of costs, and other expenses necessary or
    incidental to determining the feasibility of any project,
    together with such other expenses as may be necessary or
    incidental to the financing, insuring, acquisition, and
    construction of a specific project and placing that project
    in operation.
    "Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic
Opportunity.
    "Director" means the Director of the Illinois Power Agency.
    "Demand-response" means measures that decrease peak
electricity demand or shift demand from peak to off-peak
periods.
    "Distributed renewable energy generation device" means a
device that is:
        (1) powered by wind, solar thermal energy,
    photovoltaic cells and panels, biodiesel, crops and
    untreated and unadulterated organic waste biomass, tree
    waste, and hydropower that does not involve new
    construction or significant expansion of hydropower dams;
        (2) interconnected at the distribution system level of
    either an electric utility as defined in this Section, an
    alternative retail electric supplier as defined in Section
    16-102 of the Public Utilities Act, a municipal utility as
    defined in Section 3-105 of the Public Utilities Act, or a
    rural electric cooperative as defined in Section 3-119 of
    the Public Utilities Act;
        (3) located on the customer side of the customer's
    electric meter and is primarily used to offset that
    customer's electricity load; and
        (4) limited in nameplate capacity to no more than 2,000
    kilowatts.
    "Energy efficiency" means measures that reduce the amount
of electricity or natural gas required to achieve a given end
use.
    "Electric utility" has the same definition as found in
Section 16-102 of the Public Utilities Act.
    "Facility" means an electric generating unit or a
co-generating unit that produces electricity along with
related equipment necessary to connect the facility to an
electric transmission or distribution system.
    "Governmental aggregator" means one or more units of local
government that individually or collectively procure
electricity to serve residential retail electrical loads
located within its or their jurisdiction.
    "Local government" means a unit of local government as
defined in Article VII of Section 1 of the Illinois
Constitution.
    "Municipality" means a city, village, or incorporated
town.
    "Person" means any natural person, firm, partnership,
corporation, either domestic or foreign, company, association,
limited liability company, joint stock company, or association
and includes any trustee, receiver, assignee, or personal
representative thereof.
    "Project" means the planning, bidding, and construction of
a facility.
    "Public utility" has the same definition as found in
Section 3-105 of the Public Utilities Act.
    "Real property" means any interest in land together with
all structures, fixtures, and improvements thereon, including
lands under water and riparian rights, any easements,
covenants, licenses, leases, rights-of-way, uses, and other
interests, together with any liens, judgments, mortgages, or
other claims or security interests related to real property.
    "Renewable energy credit" means a tradable credit that
represents the environmental attributes of a certain amount of
energy produced from a renewable energy resource.
    "Renewable energy resources" includes energy and its
associated renewable energy credit or renewable energy credits
from wind, solar thermal energy, photovoltaic cells and panels,
biodiesel, crops and untreated and unadulterated organic waste
biomass, tree waste, hydropower that does not involve new
construction or significant expansion of hydropower dams, and
other alternative sources of environmentally preferable
energy. For purposes of this Act, landfill gas produced in the
State is considered a renewable energy resource. "Renewable
energy resources" does not include the incineration or burning
of tires, garbage, general household, institutional, and
commercial waste, industrial lunchroom or office waste,
landscape waste other than tree waste, railroad crossties,
utility poles, or construction or demolition debris, other than
untreated and unadulterated waste wood.
    "Revenue bond" means any bond, note, or other evidence of
indebtedness issued by the Authority, the principal and
interest of which is payable solely from revenues or income
derived from any project or activity of the Agency.
    "Sequester" means permanent storage of carbon dioxide by
injecting it into a saline aquifer, a depleted gas reservoir,
or an oil reservoir, directly or through an enhanced oil
recovery process that may involve intermediate storage in a
salt dome.
    "Servicing agreement" means (i) in the case of an electric
utility, an agreement between the owner of a clean coal
facility and such electric utility, which agreement shall have
terms and conditions meeting the requirements of paragraph (3)
of subsection (d) of Section 1-75, and (ii) in the case of an
alternative retail electric supplier, an agreement between the
owner of a clean coal facility and such alternative retail
electric supplier, which agreement shall have terms and
conditions meeting the requirements of Section 16-115(d)(5) of
the Public Utilities Act.
    "Substitute natural gas" or "SNG" means a gas manufactured
by gasification of hydrocarbon feedstock, which is
substantially interchangeable in use and distribution with
conventional natural gas.
    "Total resource cost test" or "TRC test" means a standard
that is met if, for an investment in energy efficiency or
demand-response measures, the benefit-cost ratio is greater
than one. The benefit-cost ratio is the ratio of the net
present value of the total benefits of the program to the net
present value of the total costs as calculated over the
lifetime of the measures. A total resource cost test compares
the sum of avoided electric utility costs, representing the
benefits that accrue to the system and the participant in the
delivery of those efficiency measures, as well as other
quantifiable societal benefits, including avoided natural gas
utility costs, to the sum of all incremental costs of end-use
measures that are implemented due to the program (including
both utility and participant contributions), plus costs to
administer, deliver, and evaluate each demand-side program, to
quantify the net savings obtained by substituting the
demand-side program for supply resources. In calculating
avoided costs of power and energy that an electric utility
would otherwise have had to acquire, reasonable estimates shall
be included of financial costs likely to be imposed by future
regulations and legislation on emissions of greenhouse gases.
(Source: P.A. 95-481, eff. 8-28-07; 95-913, eff. 1-1-09;
95-1027, eff. 6-1-09; 96-33, eff. 7-10-09; 96-159, eff.
8-10-09; 96-784, eff. 8-28-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    (20 ILCS 3855/1-56)
    Sec. 1-56. Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy
Resources Fund.
    (a) The Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources
Fund is created as a special fund in the State treasury.
    (b) The Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources
Fund shall be administered by the Agency to procure renewable
energy resources. Prior to June 1, 2011, resources procured
pursuant to this Section shall be procured from facilities
located in Illinois, provided the resources are available from
those facilities. If resources are not available in Illinois,
then they shall be procured in states that adjoin Illinois. If
resources are not available in Illinois or in states that
adjoin Illinois, then they may be purchased elsewhere.
Beginning June 1, 2011, resources procured pursuant to this
Section shall be procured from facilities located in Illinois
or states that adjoin Illinois. If resources are not available
in Illinois or in states that adjoin Illinois, then they may be
procured elsewhere. To the extent available, at least 75% of
these renewable energy resources shall come from wind
generation. Of the renewable energy resources procured
pursuant to this Section at least the following specified
percentages shall come from photovoltaics on the following
schedule: 0.5% by June 1, 2012; 1.5% by June 1, 2013; 3% by
June 1, 2014; and 6% by June 1, 2015 and thereafter. Of the
renewable energy resources procured pursuant to this Section,
at least the following percentages shall come from distributed
renewable energy generation devices: 0.5% by June 1, 2013,
0.75% by June 1, 2014, and 1% by June 1, 2015 and thereafter.
To the extent available, half of the renewable energy resources
procured from distributed renewable energy generation shall
come from devices of less than 25 kilowatts in nameplate
capacity. Renewable energy resources procured from distributed
generation devices may also count towards the required
percentages for wind and solar photovoltaics. Procurement of
renewable energy resources from distributed renewable energy
generation devices shall be done on an annual basis through
multi-year contracts of no less than 5 years, and shall consist
solely of renewable energy credits.
    The Agency shall create credit requirements for suppliers
of distributed renewable energy. In order to minimize the
administrative burden on contracting entities, the Agency
shall solicit the use of third-party organizations to aggregate
distributed renewable energy into groups of no less than one
megawatt in installed capacity. These third-party
organizations shall administer contracts with individual
distributed renewable energy generation device owners. An
individual distributed renewable energy generation device
owner shall have the ability to measure the output of his or
her distributed renewable energy generation device.
    (c) The Agency shall procure renewable energy resources at
least once each year in conjunction with a procurement event
for electric utilities required to comply with Section 1-75 of
the Act and shall, whenever possible, enter into long-term
contracts on an annual basis for a portion of the incremental
requirement for the given procurement year.
    (d) The price paid to procure renewable energy credits
using monies from the Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy
Resources Fund shall not exceed the winning bid prices paid for
like resources procured for electric utilities required to
comply with Section 1-75 of this Act.
    (e) All renewable energy credits procured using monies from
the Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources Fund shall
be permanently retired.
    (f) The procurement process described in this Section is
exempt from the requirements of the Illinois Procurement Code,
pursuant to Section 20-10 of that Code.
    (g) All disbursements from the Illinois Power Agency
Renewable Energy Resources Fund shall be made only upon
warrants of the Comptroller drawn upon the Treasurer as
custodian of the Fund upon vouchers signed by the Director or
by the person or persons designated by the Director for that
purpose. The Comptroller is authorized to draw the warrant upon
vouchers so signed. The Treasurer shall accept all warrants so
signed and shall be released from liability for all payments
made on those warrants.
    (h) The Illinois Power Agency Renewable Energy Resources
Fund shall not be subject to sweeps, administrative charges, or
chargebacks, including, but not limited to, those authorized
under Section 8h of the State Finance Act, that would in any
way result in the transfer of any funds from this Fund to any
other fund of this State or in having any such funds utilized
for any purpose other than the express purposes set forth in
this Section.
(Source: P.A. 96-159, eff. 8-10-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10;
96-1437, eff. 8-17-10.)
 
    (20 ILCS 3855/1-75)
    Sec. 1-75. Planning and Procurement Bureau. The Planning
and Procurement Bureau has the following duties and
responsibilities:
        (a) The Planning and Procurement Bureau shall each
    year, beginning in 2008, develop procurement plans and
    conduct competitive procurement processes in accordance
    with the requirements of Section 16-111.5 of the Public
    Utilities Act for the eligible retail customers of electric
    utilities that on December 31, 2005 provided electric
    service to at least 100,000 customers in Illinois. For the
    purposes of this Section, the term "eligible retail
    customers" has the same definition as found in Section
    16-111.5(a) of the Public Utilities Act.
            (1) The Agency shall each year, beginning in 2008,
        as needed, issue a request for qualifications for
        experts or expert consulting firms to develop the
        procurement plans in accordance with Section 16-111.5
        of the Public Utilities Act. In order to qualify an
        expert or expert consulting firm must have:
                (A) direct previous experience assembling
            large-scale power supply plans or portfolios for
            end-use customers;
                (B) an advanced degree in economics,
            mathematics, engineering, risk management, or a
            related area of study;
                (C) 10 years of experience in the electricity
            sector, including managing supply risk;
                (D) expertise in wholesale electricity market
            rules, including those established by the Federal
            Energy Regulatory Commission and regional
            transmission organizations;
                (E) expertise in credit protocols and
            familiarity with contract protocols;
                (F) adequate resources to perform and fulfill
            the required functions and responsibilities; and
                (G) the absence of a conflict of interest and
            inappropriate bias for or against potential
            bidders or the affected electric utilities.
            (2) The Agency shall each year, as needed, issue a
        request for qualifications for a procurement
        administrator to conduct the competitive procurement
        processes in accordance with Section 16-111.5 of the
        Public Utilities Act. In order to qualify an expert or
        expert consulting firm must have:
                (A) direct previous experience administering a
            large-scale competitive procurement process;
                (B) an advanced degree in economics,
            mathematics, engineering, or a related area of
            study;
                (C) 10 years of experience in the electricity
            sector, including risk management experience;
                (D) expertise in wholesale electricity market
            rules, including those established by the Federal
            Energy Regulatory Commission and regional
            transmission organizations;
                (E) expertise in credit and contract
            protocols;
                (F) adequate resources to perform and fulfill
            the required functions and responsibilities; and
                (G) the absence of a conflict of interest and
            inappropriate bias for or against potential
            bidders or the affected electric utilities.
            (3) The Agency shall provide affected utilities
        and other interested parties with the lists of
        qualified experts or expert consulting firms
        identified through the request for qualifications
        processes that are under consideration to develop the
        procurement plans and to serve as the procurement
        administrator. The Agency shall also provide each
        qualified expert's or expert consulting firm's
        response to the request for qualifications. All
        information provided under this subparagraph shall
        also be provided to the Commission. The Agency may
        provide by rule for fees associated with supplying the
        information to utilities and other interested parties.
        These parties shall, within 5 business days, notify the
        Agency in writing if they object to any experts or
        expert consulting firms on the lists. Objections shall
        be based on:
                (A) failure to satisfy qualification criteria;
                (B) identification of a conflict of interest;
            or
                (C) evidence of inappropriate bias for or
            against potential bidders or the affected
            utilities.
            The Agency shall remove experts or expert
        consulting firms from the lists within 10 days if there
        is a reasonable basis for an objection and provide the
        updated lists to the affected utilities and other
        interested parties. If the Agency fails to remove an
        expert or expert consulting firm from a list, an
        objecting party may seek review by the Commission
        within 5 days thereafter by filing a petition, and the
        Commission shall render a ruling on the petition within
        10 days. There is no right of appeal of the
        Commission's ruling.
            (4) The Agency shall issue requests for proposals
        to the qualified experts or expert consulting firms to
        develop a procurement plan for the affected utilities
        and to serve as procurement administrator.
            (5) The Agency shall select an expert or expert
        consulting firm to develop procurement plans based on
        the proposals submitted and shall award one-year
        contracts to those selected with an option for the
        Agency for a one-year renewal.
            (6) The Agency shall select an expert or expert
        consulting firm, with approval of the Commission, to
        serve as procurement administrator based on the
        proposals submitted. If the Commission rejects, within
        5 days, the Agency's selection, the Agency shall submit
        another recommendation within 3 days based on the
        proposals submitted. The Agency shall award a one-year
        contract to the expert or expert consulting firm so
        selected with Commission approval with an option for
        the Agency for a one-year renewal.
        (b) The experts or expert consulting firms retained by
    the Agency shall, as appropriate, prepare procurement
    plans, and conduct a competitive procurement process as
    prescribed in Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act,
    to ensure adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and
    environmentally sustainable electric service at the lowest
    total cost over time, taking into account any benefits of
    price stability, for eligible retail customers of electric
    utilities that on December 31, 2005 provided electric
    service to at least 100,000 customers in the State of
    Illinois.
        (c) Renewable portfolio standard.
            (1) The procurement plans shall include
        cost-effective renewable energy resources. A minimum
        percentage of each utility's total supply to serve the
        load of eligible retail customers, as defined in
        Section 16-111.5(a) of the Public Utilities Act,
        procured for each of the following years shall be
        generated from cost-effective renewable energy
        resources: at least 2% by June 1, 2008; at least 4% by
        June 1, 2009; at least 5% by June 1, 2010; at least 6%
        by June 1, 2011; at least 7% by June 1, 2012; at least
        8% by June 1, 2013; at least 9% by June 1, 2014; at
        least 10% by June 1, 2015; and increasing by at least
        1.5% each year thereafter to at least 25% by June 1,
        2025. To the extent that it is available, at least 75%
        of the renewable energy resources used to meet these
        standards shall come from wind generation and,
        beginning on June 1, 2011, at least the following
        percentages of the renewable energy resources used to
        meet these standards shall come from photovoltaics on
        the following schedule: 0.5% by June 1, 2012, 1.5% by
        June 1, 2013; 3% by June 1, 2014; and 6% by June 1,
        2015 and thereafter. Of the renewable energy resources
        procured pursuant to this Section, at least the
        following percentages shall come from distributed
        renewable energy generation devices: 0.5% by June 1,
        2013, 0.75% by June 1, 2014, and 1% by June 1, 2015 and
        thereafter. To the extent available, half of the
        renewable energy resources procured from distributed
        renewable energy generation shall come from devices of
        less than 25 kilowatts in nameplate capacity.
        Renewable energy resources procured from distributed
        generation devices may also count towards the required
        percentages for wind and solar photovoltaics.
        Procurement of renewable energy resources from
        distributed renewable energy generation devices shall
        be done on an annual basis through multi-year contracts
        of no less than 5 years, and shall consist solely of
        renewable energy credits.
            The Agency shall create credit requirements for
        suppliers of distributed renewable energy. In order to
        minimize the administrative burden on contracting
        entities, the Agency shall solicit the use of
        third-party organizations to aggregate distributed
        renewable energy into groups of no less than one
        megawatt in installed capacity. These third-party
        organizations shall administer contracts with
        individual distributed renewable energy generation
        device owners. An individual distributed renewable
        energy generation device owner shall have the ability
        to measure the output of his or her distributed
        renewable energy generation device. For purposes of
        this subsection (c), "cost-effective" means that the
        costs of procuring renewable energy resources do not
        cause the limit stated in paragraph (2) of this
        subsection (c) to be exceeded and do not exceed
        benchmarks based on market prices for renewable energy
        resources in the region, which shall be developed by
        the procurement administrator, in consultation with
        the Commission staff, Agency staff, and the
        procurement monitor and shall be subject to Commission
        review and approval.
            (2) For purposes of this subsection (c), the
        required procurement of cost-effective renewable
        energy resources for a particular year shall be
        measured as a percentage of the actual amount of
        electricity (megawatt-hours) supplied by the electric
        utility to eligible retail customers in the planning
        year ending immediately prior to the procurement. For
        purposes of this subsection (c), the amount paid per
        kilowatthour means the total amount paid for electric
        service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For
        purposes of this subsection (c), the total amount paid
        for electric service includes without limitation
        amounts paid for supply, transmission, distribution,
        surcharges, and add-on taxes.
            Notwithstanding the requirements of this
        subsection (c), the total of renewable energy
        resources procured pursuant to the procurement plan
        for any single year shall be reduced by an amount
        necessary to limit the annual estimated average net
        increase due to the costs of these resources included
        in the amounts paid by eligible retail customers in
        connection with electric service to:
                (A) in 2008, no more than 0.5% of the amount
            paid per kilowatthour by those customers during
            the year ending May 31, 2007;
                (B) in 2009, the greater of an additional 0.5%
            of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2008 or 1%
            of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2007;
                (C) in 2010, the greater of an additional 0.5%
            of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2009 or
            1.5% of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2007;
                (D) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5%
            of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2010 or 2%
            of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2007; and
                (E) thereafter, the amount of renewable energy
            resources procured pursuant to the procurement
            plan for any single year shall be reduced by an
            amount necessary to limit the estimated average
            net increase due to the cost of these resources
            included in the amounts paid by eligible retail
            customers in connection with electric service to
            no more than the greater of 2.015% of the amount
            paid per kilowatthour by those customers during
            the year ending May 31, 2007 or the incremental
            amount per kilowatthour paid for these resources
            in 2011.
            No later than June 30, 2011, the Commission shall
        review the limitation on the amount of renewable energy
        resources procured pursuant to this subsection (c) and
        report to the General Assembly its findings as to
        whether that limitation unduly constrains the
        procurement of cost-effective renewable energy
        resources.
            (3) Through June 1, 2011, renewable energy
        resources shall be counted for the purpose of meeting
        the renewable energy standards set forth in paragraph
        (1) of this subsection (c) only if they are generated
        from facilities located in the State, provided that
        cost-effective renewable energy resources are
        available from those facilities. If those
        cost-effective resources are not available in
        Illinois, they shall be procured in states that adjoin
        Illinois and may be counted towards compliance. If
        those cost-effective resources are not available in
        Illinois or in states that adjoin Illinois, they shall
        be purchased elsewhere and shall be counted towards
        compliance. After June 1, 2011, cost-effective
        renewable energy resources located in Illinois and in
        states that adjoin Illinois may be counted towards
        compliance with the standards set forth in paragraph
        (1) of this subsection (c). If those cost-effective
        resources are not available in Illinois or in states
        that adjoin Illinois, they shall be purchased
        elsewhere and shall be counted towards compliance.
            (4) The electric utility shall retire all
        renewable energy credits used to comply with the
        standard.
            (5) Beginning with the year commencing June 1,
        2010, an electric utility subject to this subsection
        (c) shall apply the lesser of the maximum alternative
        compliance payment rate or the most recent estimated
        alternative compliance payment rate for its service
        territory for the corresponding compliance period,
        established pursuant to subsection (d) of Section
        16-115D of the Public Utilities Act to its retail
        customers that take service pursuant to the electric
        utility's hourly pricing tariff or tariffs. The
        electric utility shall retain all amounts collected as
        a result of the application of the alternative
        compliance payment rate or rates to such customers,
        and, beginning in 2011, the utility shall include in
        the information provided under item (1) of subsection
        (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act the
        amounts collected under the alternative compliance
        payment rate or rates for the prior year ending May 31.
        Notwithstanding any limitation on the procurement of
        renewable energy resources imposed by item (2) of this
        subsection (c), the Agency shall increase its spending
        on the purchase of renewable energy resources to be
        procured by the electric utility for the next plan year
        by an amount equal to the amounts collected by the
        utility under the alternative compliance payment rate
        or rates in the prior year ending May 31.
    (d) Clean coal portfolio standard.
        (1) The procurement plans shall include electricity
    generated using clean coal. Each utility shall enter into
    one or more sourcing agreements with the initial clean coal
    facility, as provided in paragraph (3) of this subsection
    (d), covering electricity generated by the initial clean
    coal facility representing at least 5% of each utility's
    total supply to serve the load of eligible retail customers
    in 2015 and each year thereafter, as described in paragraph
    (3) of this subsection (d), subject to the limits specified
    in paragraph (2) of this subsection (d). It is the goal of
    the State that by January 1, 2025, 25% of the electricity
    used in the State shall be generated by cost-effective
    clean coal facilities. For purposes of this subsection (d),
    "cost-effective" means that the expenditures pursuant to
    such sourcing agreements do not cause the limit stated in
    paragraph (2) of this subsection (d) to be exceeded and do
    not exceed cost-based benchmarks, which shall be developed
    to assess all expenditures pursuant to such sourcing
    agreements covering electricity generated by clean coal
    facilities, other than the initial clean coal facility, by
    the procurement administrator, in consultation with the
    Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement
    monitor and shall be subject to Commission review and
    approval.
            (A) A utility party to a sourcing agreement shall
        immediately retire any emission credits that it
        receives in connection with the electricity covered by
        such agreement.
            (B) Utilities shall maintain adequate records
        documenting the purchases under the sourcing agreement
        to comply with this subsection (d) and shall file an
        accounting with the load forecast that must be filed
        with the Agency by July 15 of each year, in accordance
        with subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public
        Utilities Act.
            (C) A utility shall be deemed to have complied with
        the clean coal portfolio standard specified in this
        subsection (d) if the utility enters into a sourcing
        agreement as required by this subsection (d).
        (2) For purposes of this subsection (d), the required
    execution of sourcing agreements with the initial clean
    coal facility for a particular year shall be measured as a
    percentage of the actual amount of electricity
    (megawatt-hours) supplied by the electric utility to
    eligible retail customers in the planning year ending
    immediately prior to the agreement's execution. For
    purposes of this subsection (d), the amount paid per
    kilowatthour means the total amount paid for electric
    service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis. For purposes
    of this subsection (d), the total amount paid for electric
    service includes without limitation amounts paid for
    supply, transmission, distribution, surcharges and add-on
    taxes.
        Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection
    (d), the total amount paid under sourcing agreements with
    clean coal facilities pursuant to the procurement plan for
    any given year shall be reduced by an amount necessary to
    limit the annual estimated average net increase due to the
    costs of these resources included in the amounts paid by
    eligible retail customers in connection with electric
    service to:
                (A) in 2010, no more than 0.5% of the amount
            paid per kilowatthour by those customers during
            the year ending May 31, 2009;
                (B) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5%
            of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2010 or 1%
            of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2009;
                (C) in 2012, the greater of an additional 0.5%
            of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2011 or
            1.5% of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2009;
                (D) in 2013, the greater of an additional 0.5%
            of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2012 or 2%
            of the amount paid per kilowatthour by those
            customers during the year ending May 31, 2009; and
                (E) thereafter, the total amount paid under
            sourcing agreements with clean coal facilities
            pursuant to the procurement plan for any single
            year shall be reduced by an amount necessary to
            limit the estimated average net increase due to the
            cost of these resources included in the amounts
            paid by eligible retail customers in connection
            with electric service to no more than the greater
            of (i) 2.015% of the amount paid per kilowatthour
            by those customers during the year ending May 31,
            2009 or (ii) the incremental amount per
            kilowatthour paid for these resources in 2013.
            These requirements may be altered only as provided
            by statute. No later than June 30, 2015, the
            Commission shall review the limitation on the
            total amount paid under sourcing agreements, if
            any, with clean coal facilities pursuant to this
            subsection (d) and report to the General Assembly
            its findings as to whether that limitation unduly
            constrains the amount of electricity generated by
            cost-effective clean coal facilities that is
            covered by sourcing agreements.
        (3) Initial clean coal facility. In order to promote
    development of clean coal facilities in Illinois, each
    electric utility subject to this Section shall execute a
    sourcing agreement to source electricity from a proposed
    clean coal facility in Illinois (the "initial clean coal
    facility") that will have a nameplate capacity of at least
    500 MW when commercial operation commences, that has a
    final Clean Air Act permit on the effective date of this
    amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, and that will
    meet the definition of clean coal facility in Section 1-10
    of this Act when commercial operation commences. The
    sourcing agreements with this initial clean coal facility
    shall be subject to both approval of the initial clean coal
    facility by the General Assembly and satisfaction of the
    requirements of paragraph (4) of this subsection (d) and
    shall be executed within 90 days after any such approval by
    the General Assembly. The Agency and the Commission shall
    have authority to inspect all books and records associated
    with the initial clean coal facility during the term of
    such a sourcing agreement. A utility's sourcing agreement
    for electricity produced by the initial clean coal facility
    shall include:
            (A) a formula contractual price (the "contract
        price") approved pursuant to paragraph (4) of this
        subsection (d), which shall:
                (i) be determined using a cost of service
            methodology employing either a level or deferred
            capital recovery component, based on a capital
            structure consisting of 45% equity and 55% debt,
            and a return on equity as may be approved by the
            Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which in any
            case may not exceed the lower of 11.5% or the rate
            of return approved by the General Assembly
            pursuant to paragraph (4) of this subsection (d);
            and
                (ii) provide that all miscellaneous net
            revenue, including but not limited to net revenue
            from the sale of emission allowances, if any,
            substitute natural gas, if any, grants or other
            support provided by the State of Illinois or the
            United States Government, firm transmission
            rights, if any, by-products produced by the
            facility, energy or capacity derived from the
            facility and not covered by a sourcing agreement
            pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection (d) or
            item (5) of subsection (d) of Section 16-115 of the
            Public Utilities Act, whether generated from the
            synthesis gas derived from coal, from SNG, or from
            natural gas, shall be credited against the revenue
            requirement for this initial clean coal facility;
            (B) power purchase provisions, which shall:
                (i) provide that the utility party to such
            sourcing agreement shall pay the contract price
            for electricity delivered under such sourcing
            agreement;
                (ii) require delivery of electricity to the
            regional transmission organization market of the
            utility that is party to such sourcing agreement;
                (iii) require the utility party to such
            sourcing agreement to buy from the initial clean
            coal facility in each hour an amount of energy
            equal to all clean coal energy made available from
            the initial clean coal facility during such hour
            times a fraction, the numerator of which is such
            utility's retail market sales of electricity
            (expressed in kilowatthours sold) in the State
            during the prior calendar month and the
            denominator of which is the total retail market
            sales of electricity (expressed in kilowatthours
            sold) in the State by utilities during such prior
            month and the sales of electricity (expressed in
            kilowatthours sold) in the State by alternative
            retail electric suppliers during such prior month
            that are subject to the requirements of this
            subsection (d) and paragraph (5) of subsection (d)
            of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act,
            provided that the amount purchased by the utility
            in any year will be limited by paragraph (2) of
            this subsection (d); and
                (iv) be considered pre-existing contracts in
            such utility's procurement plans for eligible
            retail customers;
            (C) contract for differences provisions, which
        shall:
                (i) require the utility party to such sourcing
            agreement to contract with the initial clean coal
            facility in each hour with respect to an amount of
            energy equal to all clean coal energy made
            available from the initial clean coal facility
            during such hour times a fraction, the numerator of
            which is such utility's retail market sales of
            electricity (expressed in kilowatthours sold) in
            the utility's service territory in the State
            during the prior calendar month and the
            denominator of which is the total retail market
            sales of electricity (expressed in kilowatthours
            sold) in the State by utilities during such prior
            month and the sales of electricity (expressed in
            kilowatthours sold) in the State by alternative
            retail electric suppliers during such prior month
            that are subject to the requirements of this
            subsection (d) and paragraph (5) of subsection (d)
            of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act,
            provided that the amount paid by the utility in any
            year will be limited by paragraph (2) of this
            subsection (d);
                (ii) provide that the utility's payment
            obligation in respect of the quantity of
            electricity determined pursuant to the preceding
            clause (i) shall be limited to an amount equal to
            (1) the difference between the contract price
            determined pursuant to subparagraph (A) of
            paragraph (3) of this subsection (d) and the
            day-ahead price for electricity delivered to the
            regional transmission organization market of the
            utility that is party to such sourcing agreement
            (or any successor delivery point at which such
            utility's supply obligations are financially
            settled on an hourly basis) (the "reference
            price") on the day preceding the day on which the
            electricity is delivered to the initial clean coal
            facility busbar, multiplied by (2) the quantity of
            electricity determined pursuant to the preceding
            clause (i); and
                (iii) not require the utility to take physical
            delivery of the electricity produced by the
            facility;
            (D) general provisions, which shall:
                (i) specify a term of no more than 30 years,
            commencing on the commercial operation date of the
            facility;
                (ii) provide that utilities shall maintain
            adequate records documenting purchases under the
            sourcing agreements entered into to comply with
            this subsection (d) and shall file an accounting
            with the load forecast that must be filed with the
            Agency by July 15 of each year, in accordance with
            subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of the Public
            Utilities Act.
                (iii) provide that all costs associated with
            the initial clean coal facility will be
            periodically reported to the Federal Energy
            Regulatory Commission and to purchasers in
            accordance with applicable laws governing
            cost-based wholesale power contracts;
                (iv) permit the Illinois Power Agency to
            assume ownership of the initial clean coal
            facility, without monetary consideration and
            otherwise on reasonable terms acceptable to the
            Agency, if the Agency so requests no less than 3
            years prior to the end of the stated contract term;
                (v) require the owner of the initial clean coal
            facility to provide documentation to the
            Commission each year, starting in the facility's
            first year of commercial operation, accurately
            reporting the quantity of carbon emissions from
            the facility that have been captured and
            sequestered and report any quantities of carbon
            released from the site or sites at which carbon
            emissions were sequestered in prior years, based
            on continuous monitoring of such sites. If, in any
            year after the first year of commercial operation,
            the owner of the facility fails to demonstrate that
            the initial clean coal facility captured and
            sequestered at least 50% of the total carbon
            emissions that the facility would otherwise emit
            or that sequestration of emissions from prior
            years has failed, resulting in the release of
            carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the owner of
            the facility must offset excess emissions. Any
            such carbon offsets must be permanent, additional,
            verifiable, real, located within the State of
            Illinois, and legally and practicably enforceable.
            The cost of such offsets for the facility that are
            not recoverable shall not exceed $15 million in any
            given year. No costs of any such purchases of
            carbon offsets may be recovered from a utility or
            its customers. All carbon offsets purchased for
            this purpose and any carbon emission credits
            associated with sequestration of carbon from the
            facility must be permanently retired. The initial
            clean coal facility shall not forfeit its
            designation as a clean coal facility if the
            facility fails to fully comply with the applicable
            carbon sequestration requirements in any given
            year, provided the requisite offsets are
            purchased. However, the Attorney General, on
            behalf of the People of the State of Illinois, may
            specifically enforce the facility's sequestration
            requirement and the other terms of this contract
            provision. Compliance with the sequestration
            requirements and offset purchase requirements
            specified in paragraph (3) of this subsection (d)
            shall be reviewed annually by an independent
            expert retained by the owner of the initial clean
            coal facility, with the advance written approval
            of the Attorney General. The Commission may, in the
            course of the review specified in item (vii),
            reduce the allowable return on equity for the
            facility if the facility wilfully fails to comply
            with the carbon capture and sequestration
            requirements set forth in this item (v);
                (vi) include limits on, and accordingly
            provide for modification of, the amount the
            utility is required to source under the sourcing
            agreement consistent with paragraph (2) of this
            subsection (d);
                (vii) require Commission review: (1) to
            determine the justness, reasonableness, and
            prudence of the inputs to the formula referenced in
            subparagraphs (A)(i) through (A)(iii) of paragraph
            (3) of this subsection (d), prior to an adjustment
            in those inputs including, without limitation, the
            capital structure and return on equity, fuel
            costs, and other operations and maintenance costs
            and (2) to approve the costs to be passed through
            to customers under the sourcing agreement by which
            the utility satisfies its statutory obligations.
            Commission review shall occur no less than every 3
            years, regardless of whether any adjustments have
            been proposed, and shall be completed within 9
            months;
                (viii) limit the utility's obligation to such
            amount as the utility is allowed to recover through
            tariffs filed with the Commission, provided that
            neither the clean coal facility nor the utility
            waives any right to assert federal pre-emption or
            any other argument in response to a purported
            disallowance of recovery costs;
                (ix) limit the utility's or alternative retail
            electric supplier's obligation to incur any
            liability until such time as the facility is in
            commercial operation and generating power and
            energy and such power and energy is being delivered
            to the facility busbar;
                (x) provide that the owner or owners of the
            initial clean coal facility, which is the
            counterparty to such sourcing agreement, shall
            have the right from time to time to elect whether
            the obligations of the utility party thereto shall
            be governed by the power purchase provisions or the
            contract for differences provisions;
                (xi) append documentation showing that the
            formula rate and contract, insofar as they relate
            to the power purchase provisions, have been
            approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory
            Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal
            Power Act;
                (xii) provide that any changes to the terms of
            the contract, insofar as such changes relate to the
            power purchase provisions, are subject to review
            under the public interest standard applied by the
            Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to
            Sections 205 and 206 of the Federal Power Act; and
                (xiii) conform with customary lender
            requirements in power purchase agreements used as
            the basis for financing non-utility generators.
        (4) Effective date of sourcing agreements with the
    initial clean coal facility. Any proposed sourcing
    agreement with the initial clean coal facility shall not
    become effective unless the following reports are prepared
    and submitted and authorizations and approvals obtained:
                (i) Facility cost report. The owner of the
            initial clean coal facility shall submit to the
            Commission, the Agency, and the General Assembly a
            front-end engineering and design study, a facility
            cost report, method of financing (including but
            not limited to structure and associated costs),
            and an operating and maintenance cost quote for the
            facility (collectively "facility cost report"),
            which shall be prepared in accordance with the
            requirements of this paragraph (4) of subsection
            (d) of this Section, and shall provide the
            Commission and the Agency access to the work
            papers, relied upon documents, and any other
            backup documentation related to the facility cost
            report.
                (ii) Commission report. Within 6 months
            following receipt of the facility cost report, the
            Commission, in consultation with the Agency, shall
            submit a report to the General Assembly setting
            forth its analysis of the facility cost report.
            Such report shall include, but not be limited to, a
            comparison of the costs associated with
            electricity generated by the initial clean coal
            facility to the costs associated with electricity
            generated by other types of generation facilities,
            an analysis of the rate impacts on residential and
            small business customers over the life of the
            sourcing agreements, and an analysis of the
            likelihood that the initial clean coal facility
            will commence commercial operation by and be
            delivering power to the facility's busbar by 2016.
            To assist in the preparation of its report, the
            Commission, in consultation with the Agency, may
            hire one or more experts or consultants, the costs
            of which shall be paid for by the owner of the
            initial clean coal facility. The Commission and
            Agency may begin the process of selecting such
            experts or consultants prior to receipt of the
            facility cost report.
                (iii) General Assembly approval. The proposed
            sourcing agreements shall not take effect unless,
            based on the facility cost report and the
            Commission's report, the General Assembly enacts
            authorizing legislation approving (A) the
            projected price, stated in cents per kilowatthour,
            to be charged for electricity generated by the
            initial clean coal facility, (B) the projected
            impact on residential and small business
            customers' bills over the life of the sourcing
            agreements, and (C) the maximum allowable return
            on equity for the project; and
                (iv) Commission review. If the General
            Assembly enacts authorizing legislation pursuant
            to subparagraph (iii) approving a sourcing
            agreement, the Commission shall, within 90 days of
            such enactment, complete a review of such sourcing
            agreement. During such time period, the Commission
            shall implement any directive of the General
            Assembly, resolve any disputes between the parties
            to the sourcing agreement concerning the terms of
            such agreement, approve the form of such
            agreement, and issue an order finding that the
            sourcing agreement is prudent and reasonable.
    The facility cost report shall be prepared as follows:
            (A) The facility cost report shall be prepared by
        duly licensed engineering and construction firms
        detailing the estimated capital costs payable to one or
        more contractors or suppliers for the engineering,
        procurement and construction of the components
        comprising the initial clean coal facility and the
        estimated costs of operation and maintenance of the
        facility. The facility cost report shall include:
                (i) an estimate of the capital cost of the core
            plant based on one or more front end engineering
            and design studies for the gasification island and
            related facilities. The core plant shall include
            all civil, structural, mechanical, electrical,
            control, and safety systems.
                (ii) an estimate of the capital cost of the
            balance of the plant, including any capital costs
            associated with sequestration of carbon dioxide
            emissions and all interconnects and interfaces
            required to operate the facility, such as
            transmission of electricity, construction or
            backfeed power supply, pipelines to transport
            substitute natural gas or carbon dioxide, potable
            water supply, natural gas supply, water supply,
            water discharge, landfill, access roads, and coal
            delivery.
            The quoted construction costs shall be expressed
        in nominal dollars as of the date that the quote is
        prepared and shall include (1) capitalized financing
        costs during construction, (2) taxes, insurance, and
        other owner's costs, and (3) an assumed escalation in
        materials and labor beyond the date as of which the
        construction cost quote is expressed.
            (B) The front end engineering and design study for
        the gasification island and the cost study for the
        balance of plant shall include sufficient design work
        to permit quantification of major categories of
        materials, commodities and labor hours, and receipt of
        quotes from vendors of major equipment required to
        construct and operate the clean coal facility.
            (C) The facility cost report shall also include an
        operating and maintenance cost quote that will provide
        the estimated cost of delivered fuel, personnel,
        maintenance contracts, chemicals, catalysts,
        consumables, spares, and other fixed and variable
        operations and maintenance costs.
                (a) The delivered fuel cost estimate will be
            provided by a recognized third party expert or
            experts in the fuel and transportation industries.
                (b) The balance of the operating and
            maintenance cost quote, excluding delivered fuel
            costs will be developed based on the inputs
            provided by duly licensed engineering and
            construction firms performing the construction
            cost quote, potential vendors under long-term
            service agreements and plant operating agreements,
            or recognized third party plant operator or
            operators.
                The operating and maintenance cost quote
            (including the cost of the front end engineering
            and design study) shall be expressed in nominal
            dollars as of the date that the quote is prepared
            and shall include (1) taxes, insurance, and other
            owner's costs, and (2) an assumed escalation in
            materials and labor beyond the date as of which the
            operating and maintenance cost quote is expressed.
            (D) The facility cost report shall also include (i)
        an analysis of the initial clean coal facility's
        ability to deliver power and energy into the applicable
        regional transmission organization markets and (ii) an
        analysis of the expected capacity factor for the
        initial clean coal facility.
            (E) Amounts paid to third parties unrelated to the
        owner or owners of the initial clean coal facility to
        prepare the core plant construction cost quote,
        including the front end engineering and design study,
        and the operating and maintenance cost quote will be
        reimbursed through Coal Development Bonds.
        (5) Re-powering and retrofitting coal-fired power
    plants previously owned by Illinois utilities to qualify as
    clean coal facilities. During the 2009 procurement
    planning process and thereafter, the Agency and the
    Commission shall consider sourcing agreements covering
    electricity generated by power plants that were previously
    owned by Illinois utilities and that have been or will be
    converted into clean coal facilities, as defined by Section
    1-10 of this Act. Pursuant to such procurement planning
    process, the owners of such facilities may propose to the
    Agency sourcing agreements with utilities and alternative
    retail electric suppliers required to comply with
    subsection (d) of this Section and item (5) of subsection
    (d) of Section 16-115 of the Public Utilities Act, covering
    electricity generated by such facilities. In the case of
    sourcing agreements that are power purchase agreements,
    the contract price for electricity sales shall be
    established on a cost of service basis. In the case of
    sourcing agreements that are contracts for differences,
    the contract price from which the reference price is
    subtracted shall be established on a cost of service basis.
    The Agency and the Commission may approve any such utility
    sourcing agreements that do not exceed cost-based
    benchmarks developed by the procurement administrator, in
    consultation with the Commission staff, Agency staff and
    the procurement monitor, subject to Commission review and
    approval. The Commission shall have authority to inspect
    all books and records associated with these clean coal
    facilities during the term of any such contract.
        (6) Costs incurred under this subsection (d) or
    pursuant to a contract entered into under this subsection
    (d) shall be deemed prudently incurred and reasonable in
    amount and the electric utility shall be entitled to full
    cost recovery pursuant to the tariffs filed with the
    Commission.
        (e) The draft procurement plans are subject to public
    comment, as required by Section 16-111.5 of the Public
    Utilities Act.
        (f) The Agency shall submit the final procurement plan
    to the Commission. The Agency shall revise a procurement
    plan if the Commission determines that it does not meet the
    standards set forth in Section 16-111.5 of the Public
    Utilities Act.
        (g) The Agency shall assess fees to each affected
    utility to recover the costs incurred in preparation of the
    annual procurement plan for the utility.
        (h) The Agency shall assess fees to each bidder to
    recover the costs incurred in connection with a competitive
    procurement process.
(Source: P.A. 95-481, eff. 8-28-07; 95-1027, eff. 6-1-09;
96-159, eff. 8-10-09; 96-1437, eff. 8-17-10.)
 
    Section 10. The Public Utilities Act is amended by changing
Sections 8-103, 16-107.5, 16-111.5, 16-111.7, and 16-128 and by
adding Sections 8-103A, 16-108.5, 16-108.6, 16-108.7,
16-108.8, 16-111.5B, and 16-128A as follows:
 
    (220 ILCS 5/8-103)
    Sec. 8-103. Energy efficiency and demand-response
measures.
    (a) It is the policy of the State that electric utilities
are required to use cost-effective energy efficiency and
demand-response measures to reduce delivery load. Requiring
investment in cost-effective energy efficiency and
demand-response measures will reduce direct and indirect costs
to consumers by decreasing environmental impacts and by
avoiding or delaying the need for new generation, transmission,
and distribution infrastructure. It serves the public interest
to allow electric utilities to recover costs for reasonably and
prudently incurred expenses for energy efficiency and
demand-response measures. As used in this Section,
"cost-effective" means that the measures satisfy the total
resource cost test. The low-income measures described in
subsection (f)(4) of this Section shall not be required to meet
the total resource cost test. For purposes of this Section, the
terms "energy-efficiency", "demand-response", "electric
utility", and "total resource cost test" shall have the
meanings set forth in the Illinois Power Agency Act. For
purposes of this Section, the amount per kilowatthour means the
total amount paid for electric service expressed on a per
kilowatthour basis. For purposes of this Section, the total
amount paid for electric service includes without limitation
estimated amounts paid for supply, transmission, distribution,
surcharges, and add-on-taxes.
    (b) Electric utilities shall implement cost-effective
energy efficiency measures to meet the following incremental
annual energy savings goals:
        (1) 0.2% of energy delivered in the year commencing
    June 1, 2008;
        (2) 0.4% of energy delivered in the year commencing
    June 1, 2009;
        (3) 0.6% of energy delivered in the year commencing
    June 1, 2010;
        (4) 0.8% of energy delivered in the year commencing
    June 1, 2011;
        (5) 1% of energy delivered in the year commencing June
    1, 2012;
        (6) 1.4% of energy delivered in the year commencing
    June 1, 2013;
        (7) 1.8% of energy delivered in the year commencing
    June 1, 2014; and
        (8) 2% of energy delivered in the year commencing June
    1, 2015 and each year thereafter.
    (c) Electric utilities shall implement cost-effective
demand-response measures to reduce peak demand by 0.1% over the
prior year for eligible retail customers, as defined in Section
16-111.5 of this Act, and for customers that elect hourly
service from the utility pursuant to Section 16-107 of this
Act, provided those customers have not been declared
competitive. This requirement commences June 1, 2008 and
continues for 10 years.
    (d) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsections (b)
and (c) of this Section, an electric utility shall reduce the
amount of energy efficiency and demand-response measures
implemented in any single year by an amount necessary to limit
the estimated average increase in the amounts paid by retail
customers in connection with electric service due to the cost
of those measures to:
        (1) in 2008, no more than 0.5% of the amount paid per
    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
    31, 2007;
        (2) in 2009, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
    year ending May 31, 2008 or 1% of the amount paid per
    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
    31, 2007;
        (3) in 2010, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
    year ending May 31, 2009 or 1.5% of the amount paid per
    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
    31, 2007;
        (4) in 2011, the greater of an additional 0.5% of the
    amount paid per kilowatthour by those customers during the
    year ending May 31, 2010 or 2% of the amount paid per
    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
    31, 2007; and
        (5) thereafter, the amount of energy efficiency and
    demand-response measures implemented for any single year
    shall be reduced by an amount necessary to limit the
    estimated average net increase due to the cost of these
    measures included in the amounts paid by eligible retail
    customers in connection with electric service to no more
    than the greater of 2.015% of the amount paid per
    kilowatthour by those customers during the year ending May
    31, 2007 or the incremental amount per kilowatthour paid
    for these measures in 2011.
    No later than June 30, 2011, the Commission shall review
the limitation on the amount of energy efficiency and
demand-response measures implemented pursuant to this Section
and report to the General Assembly its findings as to whether
that limitation unduly constrains the procurement of energy
efficiency and demand-response measures.
    (e) Electric utilities shall be responsible for overseeing
the design, development, and filing of energy efficiency and
demand-response plans with the Commission. Electric utilities
shall implement 100% of the demand-response measures in the
plans. Electric utilities shall implement 75% of the energy
efficiency measures approved by the Commission, and may, as
part of that implementation, outsource various aspects of
program development and implementation. The remaining 25% of
those energy efficiency measures approved by the Commission
shall be implemented by the Department of Commerce and Economic
Opportunity, and must be designed in conjunction with the
utility and the filing process. The Department may outsource
development and implementation of energy efficiency measures.
A minimum of 10% of the entire portfolio of cost-effective
energy efficiency measures shall be procured from units of
local government, municipal corporations, school districts,
and community college districts. The Department shall
coordinate the implementation of these measures.
    The apportionment of the dollars to cover the costs to
implement the Department's share of the portfolio of energy
efficiency measures shall be made to the Department once the
Department has executed grants or contracts for energy
efficiency measures and provided supporting documentation for
those grants and the contracts to the utility.
    The details of the measures implemented by the Department
shall be submitted by the Department to the Commission in
connection with the utility's filing regarding the energy
efficiency and demand-response measures that the utility
implements.
    A utility providing approved energy efficiency and
demand-response measures in the State shall be permitted to
recover costs of those measures through an automatic adjustment
clause tariff filed with and approved by the Commission. The
tariff shall be established outside the context of a general
rate case. Each year the Commission shall initiate a review to
reconcile any amounts collected with the actual costs and to
determine the required adjustment to the annual tariff factor
to match annual expenditures.
    Each utility shall include, in its recovery of costs, the
costs estimated for both the utility's and the Department's
implementation of energy efficiency and demand-response
measures. Costs collected by the utility for measures
implemented by the Department shall be submitted to the
Department pursuant to Section 605-323 of the Civil
Administrative Code of Illinois and shall be used by the
Department solely for the purpose of implementing these
measures. A utility shall not be required to advance any moneys
to the Department but only to forward such funds as it has
collected. The Department shall report to the Commission on an
annual basis regarding the costs actually incurred by the
Department in the implementation of the measures. Any changes
to the costs of energy efficiency measures as a result of plan
modifications shall be appropriately reflected in amounts
recovered by the utility and turned over to the Department.
    The portfolio of measures, administered by both the
utilities and the Department, shall, in combination, be
designed to achieve the annual savings targets described in
subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, as modified by
subsection (d) of this Section.
    The utility and the Department shall agree upon a
reasonable portfolio of measures and determine the measurable
corresponding percentage of the savings goals associated with
measures implemented by the utility or Department.
    No utility shall be assessed a penalty under subsection (f)
of this Section for failure to make a timely filing if that
failure is the result of a lack of agreement with the
Department with respect to the allocation of responsibilities
or related costs or target assignments. In that case, the
Department and the utility shall file their respective plans
with the Commission and the Commission shall determine an
appropriate division of measures and programs that meets the
requirements of this Section.
    If the Department is unable to meet incremental annual
performance goals for the portion of the portfolio implemented
by the Department, then the utility and the Department shall
jointly submit a modified filing to the Commission explaining
the performance shortfall and recommending an appropriate
course going forward, including any program modifications that
may be appropriate in light of the evaluations conducted under
item (7) of subsection (f) of this Section. In this case, the
utility obligation to collect the Department's costs and turn
over those funds to the Department under this subsection (e)
shall continue only if the Commission approves the
modifications to the plan proposed by the Department.
    (f) No later than November 15, 2007, each electric utility
shall file an energy efficiency and demand-response plan with
the Commission to meet the energy efficiency and
demand-response standards for 2008 through 2010. No later than
October 1, 2010, each electric utility shall file an energy
efficiency and demand-response plan with the Commission to meet
the energy efficiency and demand-response standards for 2011
through 2013. Every 3 years thereafter, each electric utility
shall file, no later than September October 1, an energy
efficiency and demand-response plan with the Commission. If a
utility does not file such a plan by September October 1 of an
applicable year, it shall face a penalty of $100,000 per day
until the plan is filed. Each utility's plan shall set forth
the utility's proposals to meet the utility's portion of the
energy efficiency standards identified in subsection (b) and
the demand-response standards identified in subsection (c) of
this Section as modified by subsections (d) and (e), taking
into account the unique circumstances of the utility's service
territory. The Commission shall seek public comment on the
utility's plan and shall issue an order approving or
disapproving each plan within 5 3 months after its submission.
If the Commission disapproves a plan, the Commission shall,
within 30 days, describe in detail the reasons for the
disapproval and describe a path by which the utility may file a
revised draft of the plan to address the Commission's concerns
satisfactorily. If the utility does not refile with the
Commission within 60 days, the utility shall be subject to
penalties at a rate of $100,000 per day until the plan is
filed. This process shall continue, and penalties shall accrue,
until the utility has successfully filed a portfolio of energy
efficiency and demand-response measures. Penalties shall be
deposited into the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund. In submitting
proposed energy efficiency and demand-response plans and
funding levels to meet the savings goals adopted by this Act
the utility shall:
        (1) Demonstrate that its proposed energy efficiency
    and demand-response measures will achieve the requirements
    that are identified in subsections (b) and (c) of this
    Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e).
        (2) Present specific proposals to implement new
    building and appliance standards that have been placed into
    effect.
        (3) Present estimates of the total amount paid for
    electric service expressed on a per kilowatthour basis
    associated with the proposed portfolio of measures
    designed to meet the requirements that are identified in
    subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, as modified by
    subsections (d) and (e).
        (4) Coordinate with the Department to present a
    portfolio of energy efficiency measures proportionate to
    the share of total annual utility revenues in Illinois from
    households at or below 150% of the poverty level. The
    energy efficiency programs shall be targeted to households
    with incomes at or below 80% of area median income.
        (5) Demonstrate that its overall portfolio of energy
    efficiency and demand-response measures, not including
    programs covered by item (4) of this subsection (f), are
    cost-effective using the total resource cost test and
    represent a diverse cross-section of opportunities for
    customers of all rate classes to participate in the
    programs.
        (6) Include a proposed cost-recovery tariff mechanism
    to fund the proposed energy efficiency and demand-response
    measures and to ensure the recovery of the prudently and
    reasonably incurred costs of Commission-approved programs.
        (7) Provide for an annual independent evaluation of the
    performance of the cost-effectiveness of the utility's
    portfolio of measures and the Department's portfolio of
    measures, as well as a full review of the 3-year results of
    the broader net program impacts and, to the extent
    practical, for adjustment of the measures on a
    going-forward basis as a result of the evaluations. The
    resources dedicated to evaluation shall not exceed 3% of
    portfolio resources in any given year.
    (g) No more than 3% of energy efficiency and
demand-response program revenue may be allocated for
demonstration of breakthrough equipment and devices.
    (h) This Section does not apply to an electric utility that
on December 31, 2005 provided electric service to fewer than
100,000 customers in Illinois.
    (i) If, after 2 years, an electric utility fails to meet
the efficiency standard specified in subsection (b) of this
Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e), it shall make
a contribution to the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance
Program. The combined total liability for failure to meet the
goal shall be $1,000,000, which shall be assessed as follows: a
large electric utility shall pay $665,000, and a medium
electric utility shall pay $335,000. If, after 3 years, an
electric utility fails to meet the efficiency standard
specified in subsection (b) of this Section, as modified by
subsections (d) and (e), it shall make a contribution to the
Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program. The combined total
liability for failure to meet the goal shall be $1,000,000,
which shall be assessed as follows: a large electric utility
shall pay $665,000, and a medium electric utility shall pay
$335,000. In addition, the responsibility for implementing the
energy efficiency measures of the utility making the payment
shall be transferred to the Illinois Power Agency if, after 3
years, or in any subsequent 3-year period, the utility fails to
meet the efficiency standard specified in subsection (b) of
this Section, as modified by subsections (d) and (e). The
Agency shall implement a competitive procurement program to
procure resources necessary to meet the standards specified in
this Section as modified by subsections (d) and (e), with costs
for those resources to be recovered in the same manner as
products purchased through the procurement plan as provided in
Section 16-111.5. The Director shall implement this
requirement in connection with the procurement plan as provided
in Section 16-111.5.
    For purposes of this Section, (i) a "large electric
utility" is an electric utility that, on December 31, 2005,
served more than 2,000,000 electric customers in Illinois; (ii)
a "medium electric utility" is an electric utility that, on
December 31, 2005, served 2,000,000 or fewer but more than
100,000 electric customers in Illinois; and (iii) Illinois
electric utilities that are affiliated by virtue of a common
parent company are considered a single electric utility.
    (j) If, after 3 years, or any subsequent 3-year period, the
Department fails to implement the Department's share of energy
efficiency measures required by the standards in subsection
(b), then the Illinois Power Agency may assume responsibility
for and control of the Department's share of the required
energy efficiency measures. The Agency shall implement a
competitive procurement program to procure resources necessary
to meet the standards specified in this Section, with the costs
of these resources to be recovered in the same manner as
provided for the Department in this Section.
    (k) No electric utility shall be deemed to have failed to
meet the energy efficiency standards to the extent any such
failure is due to a failure of the Department or the Agency.
(Source: P.A. 95-481, eff. 8-28-07; 95-876, eff. 8-21-08;
96-33, eff. 7-10-09; 96-159, eff. 8-10-09; 96-1000, eff.
7-2-10.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/8-103A new)
    Sec. 8-103A. Energy efficiency analysis. Beginning in
2013, an electric utility subject to the requirements of
Section 8-103 of this Act shall include in its energy
efficiency and demand-response plan submitted pursuant to
subsection (f) of Section 8-103 an analysis of additional
cost-effective energy efficiency measures that could be
implemented, by customer class, absent the limitations set
forth in subsection (d) of Section 8-103. In seeking public
comment on the electric utility's plan pursuant to subsection
(f) of Section 8-103, the Commission shall include, beginning
in 2013, the assessment of additional cost-effective energy
efficiency measures submitted pursuant to this Section. For
purposes of this Section, the term "energy efficiency" shall
have the meaning set forth in Section 1-10 of the Illinois
Power Agency Act, and the term "cost-effective" shall have the
meaning set forth in subsection (a) of Section 8-103 of this
Act.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/16-107.5)
    Sec. 16-107.5. Net electricity metering.
    (a) The Legislature finds and declares that a program to
provide net electricity metering, as defined in this Section,
for eligible customers can encourage private investment in
renewable energy resources, stimulate economic growth, enhance
the continued diversification of Illinois' energy resource
mix, and protect the Illinois environment.
    (b) As used in this Section, (i) "eligible customer" means
a retail customer that owns or operates a solar, wind, or other
eligible renewable electrical generating facility with a rated
capacity of not more than 2,000 kilowatts that is located on
the customer's premises and is intended primarily to offset the
customer's own electrical requirements; (ii) "electricity
provider" means an electric utility or alternative retail
electric supplier; (iii) "eligible renewable electrical
generating facility" means a generator powered by solar
electric energy, wind, dedicated crops grown for electricity
generation, agricultural residues, untreated and unadulterated
wood waste, landscape trimmings, livestock manure, anaerobic
digestion of livestock or food processing waste, fuel cells or
microturbines powered by renewable fuels, or hydroelectric
energy; and (iv) "net electricity metering" (or "net metering")
means the measurement, during the billing period applicable to
an eligible customer, of the net amount of electricity supplied
by an electricity provider to the customer's premises or
provided to the electricity provider by the customer.
    (c) A net metering facility shall be equipped with metering
equipment that can measure the flow of electricity in both
directions at the same rate.
        (1) For eligible residential customers whose electric
    service has not been declared competitive pursuant to
    Section 16-113 of this Act and whose electric delivery
    service is provided and measured on a kilowatt-hour basis
    and electric supply service is not provided based on hourly
    pricing, this shall typically be accomplished through use
    of a single, bi-directional meter. If the eligible
    customer's existing electric revenue meter does not meet
    this requirement, the electricity provider shall arrange
    for the local electric utility or a meter service provider
    to install and maintain a new revenue meter at the
    electricity provider's expense.
        (2) For eligible customers whose electric service has
    not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
    this Act and whose electric delivery service is provided
    and measured on a kilowatt demand basis and electric supply
    service is not provided based on hourly pricing, this shall
    typically be accomplished through use of a dual channel
    meter capable of measuring the flow of electricity both
    into and out of the customer's facility at the same rate
    and ratio. If such customer's existing electric revenue
    meter does not meet this requirement, then the electricity
    provider shall arrange for the local electric utility or a
    meter service provider to install and maintain a new
    revenue meter at the electricity provider's expense.
        (3) For all other eligible customers, For
    non-residential customers, the electricity provider may
    arrange for the local electric utility or a meter service
    provider to install and maintain metering equipment
    capable of measuring the flow of electricity both into and
    out of the customer's facility at the same rate and ratio,
    typically through the use of a dual channel meter. If the
    eligible customer's existing electric revenue meter does
    not meet this requirement, then the costs of installing
    such equipment shall be paid for by the customer. For
    generators with a nameplate rating of 40 kilowatts and
    below, the costs of installing such equipment shall be paid
    for by the electricity provider. For generators with a
    nameplate rating over 40 kilowatts and up to 2,000
    kilowatts capacity, the costs of installing such equipment
    shall be paid for by the customer. Any subsequent revenue
    meter change necessitated by any eligible customer shall be
    paid for by the customer.
    (d) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
or provided by eligible customers whose electric service has
not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of the
Act and whose electric delivery service is provided and
measured on a kilowatt-hour basis and electric supply service
is not provided based on hourly pricing in the following
manner:
        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
    during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
    produced by the customer, the electricity provider shall
    charge the customer for the net electricity supplied to and
    used by the customer as provided in subsection (e-5) (e) of
    this Section.
        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a customer
    during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
    used by the customer during that billing period, the
    electricity provider supplying that customer shall apply a
    1:1 kilowatt-hour credit to a subsequent bill for service
    to the customer for the net electricity supplied to the
    electricity provider. The electricity provider shall
    continue to carry over any excess kilowatt-hour credits
    earned and apply those credits to subsequent billing
    periods to offset any customer-generator consumption in
    those billing periods until all credits are used or until
    the end of the annualized period.
        (3) At the end of the year or annualized over the
    period that service is supplied by means of net metering,
    or in the event that the retail customer terminates service
    with the electricity provider prior to the end of the year
    or the annualized period, any remaining credits in the
    customer's account shall expire.
    (e) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
whose electric service has not been declared competitive
pursuant to Section 16-113 of this Act and whose electric
delivery service is provided and measured on a kilowatt demand
basis and electric supply service is not provided based on
hourly pricing in the following manner:
        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
    during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
    produced by the customer, then the electricity provider
    shall charge the customer for the net electricity supplied
    to and used by the customer as provided in subsection (e-5)
    of this Section, provided that the electricity provider
    shall assess and the customer remains responsible for all
    taxes, fees, and utility delivery charges that would
    otherwise be applicable to the gross amount of
    kilowatt-hours supplied to the eligible customer by the
    electricity provider.
        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a customer
    during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
    used by the customer during that billing period, then the
    electricity provider supplying that customer shall apply a
    1:1 kilowatt-hour credit that reflects the kilowatt-hour
    based charges in the customer's electric service rate to a
    subsequent bill for service to the customer for the net
    electricity supplied to the electricity provider. The
    electricity provider shall continue to carry over any
    excess kilowatt-hour credits earned and apply those
    credits to subsequent billing periods to offset any
    customer-generator consumption in those billing periods
    until all credits are used or until the end of the
    annualized period.
        (3) At the end of the year or annualized over the
    period that service is supplied by means of net metering,
    or in the event that the retail customer terminates service
    with the electricity provider prior to the end of the year
    or the annualized period, any remaining credits in the
    customer's account shall expire.
    (e-5) An electricity provider shall provide electric
service to eligible net metering customers whose electric
service has not been declared competitive pursuant to Section
16-113 of this Act and whose electric supply service is not
provided based on hourly pricing who utilize net metering
electric service at non-discriminatory rates that are
identical, with respect to rate structure, retail rate
components, and any monthly charges, to the rates that the
customer would be charged if not a net metering customer. An
electricity provider shall not charge net metering customers
any fee or charge or require additional equipment, insurance,
or any other requirements not specifically authorized by
interconnection standards authorized by the Commission, unless
the fee, charge, or other requirement would apply to other
similarly situated customers who are not net metering
customers. The customer will remain responsible for all taxes,
fees, and utility delivery charges that would otherwise be
applicable to the net amount of electricity used by the
customer. Subsections (c) through (e) of this Section shall not
be construed to prevent an arms-length agreement between an
electricity provider and an eligible customer that sets forth
different prices, terms, and conditions for the provision of
net metering service, including, but not limited to, the
provision of the appropriate metering equipment for
non-residential customers.
    (f) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsections (c)
through (e-5) (e) of this Section, an electricity provider must
require dual-channel metering for customers operating eligible
renewable electrical generating facilities with a nameplate
rating up to 2,000 kilowatts and to whom the provisions of
neither subsection (d) nor (e) of this Section apply
non-residential customers operating eligible renewable
electrical generating facilities with a nameplate rating over
40 kilowatts and up to 2,000 kilowatts. In such cases,
electricity charges and credits shall be determined as follows:
        (1) The electricity provider shall assess and the
    customer remains responsible for all taxes, fees, and
    utility delivery charges that would otherwise be
    applicable to the gross amount of kilowatt-hours supplied
    to the eligible customer by the electricity provider.
        (2) Each month that service is supplied by means of
    dual-channel metering, the electricity provider shall
    compensate the eligible customer for any excess
    kilowatt-hour credits at the electricity provider's
    avoided cost of electricity supply over the monthly period
    or as otherwise specified by the terms of a power-purchase
    agreement negotiated between the customer and electricity
    provider.
        (3) For all eligible net metering customers taking
    service from an electricity provider under contracts or
    tariffs employing time of use rates, any 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 a net metering customer. When those same
    customer-generators are net generators during any discrete
    time of use period, the net kilowatt-hours produced shall
    be valued at the same price per kilowatt-hour as the
    electric service provider would charge for retail
    kilowatt-hour sales during that same time of use period.
    (g) For purposes of federal and State laws providing
renewable energy credits or greenhouse gas credits, the
eligible customer shall be treated as owning and having title
to the renewable energy attributes, renewable energy credits,
and greenhouse gas emission credits related to any electricity
produced by the qualified generating unit. The electricity
provider may not condition participation in a net metering
program on the signing over of a customer's renewable energy
credits; provided, however, this subsection (g) shall not be
construed to prevent an arms-length agreement between an
electricity provider and an eligible customer that sets forth
the ownership or title of the credits.
    (h) Within 120 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, the Commission
shall establish standards for net metering and, if the
Commission has not already acted on its own initiative,
standards for the interconnection of eligible renewable
generating equipment to the utility system. The
interconnection standards shall address any procedural
barriers, delays, and administrative costs associated with the
interconnection of customer-generation while ensuring the
safety and reliability of the units and the electric utility
system. The Commission shall consider the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Standard 1547 and
the issues of (i) reasonable and fair fees and costs, (ii)
clear timelines for major milestones in the interconnection
process, (iii) nondiscriminatory terms of agreement, and (iv)
any best practices for interconnection of distributed
generation.
    (i) All electricity providers shall begin to offer net
metering no later than April 1, 2008.
    (j) An electricity provider shall provide net metering to
eligible customers until the load of its net metering customers
equals 5% 1% of the total peak demand supplied by that
electricity provider during the previous year. Electricity
providers are authorized to offer net metering beyond the 5% 1%
level if they so choose. The number of new eligible customers
with generators that have a nameplate rating of 40 kilowatts
and below will be limited to 200 total new billing accounts for
the utilities (Ameren Companies, ComEd, and MidAmerican) for
the period of April 1, 2008 through March 31, 2009.
    (k) Each electricity provider shall maintain records and
report annually to the Commission the total number of net
metering customers served by the provider, as well as the type,
capacity, and energy sources of the generating systems used by
the net metering customers. Nothing in this Section shall limit
the ability of an electricity provider to request the redaction
of information deemed by the Commission to be confidential
business information. Each electricity provider shall notify
the Commission when the total generating capacity of its net
metering customers is equal to or in excess of the 5% 1% cap
specified in subsection (j) of this Section.
    (l) Notwithstanding the definition of "eligible customer"
in item (i) of subsection (b) of this Section, each electricity
provider shall consider whether to allow meter aggregation for
the purposes of net metering on:
        (1) properties owned or leased by multiple customers
    that contribute to the operation of an eligible renewable
    electrical generating facility, such as a community-owned
    wind project, a community-owned biomass project, a
    community-owned solar project, or a community methane
    digester processing livestock waste from multiple sources;
    and
        (2) individual units, apartments, or properties owned
    or leased by multiple customers and collectively served by
    a common eligible renewable electrical generating
    facility, such as an apartment building served by
    photovoltaic panels on the roof.
    For the purposes of this subsection (l), "meter
aggregation" means the combination of reading and billing on a
pro rata basis for the types of eligible customers described in
this Section.
    (m) Nothing in this Section shall affect the right of an
electricity provider to continue to provide, or the right of a
retail customer to continue to receive service pursuant to a
contract for electric service between the electricity provider
and the retail customer in accordance with the prices, terms,
and conditions provided for in that contract. Either the
electricity provider or the customer may require compliance
with the prices, terms, and conditions of the contract.
(Source: P.A. 95-420, eff. 8-24-07.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/16-108.5 new)
    Sec. 16-108.5. Infrastructure investment and
modernization; regulatory reform.
    (a) The General Assembly recognizes that for well over a
century Illinois residents and businesses have been
well-served by and have benefitted from a comprehensive
electric utility system. The General Assembly finds that
electric utilities are now entering a new construction cycle
that is needed to refurbish, rebuild, modernize, and expand
systems to continue to provide safe, reliable, and affordable
service to the State's current and future utility customers in
this newly digitized age. In particular, the General Assembly
finds that it is the policy of this State that significant
investments must be made in the State's electric grid over the
next decade to modernize and upgrade transmission and
distribution facilities in the State. These investments will
ensure that the State's electric utility infrastructure will
promote future economic development in the State and that the
State's electric utilities will be able to continue to provide
quality electric service to their customers, including
innovative technological offerings that will enhance customer
experience and choice such as smart meters that are dependent
on a modernized or Smart Grid. These investments, including
programs to reinforce the safety and security of high voltage
transmission lines, will also ensure that the State's electric
utility infrastructure continues to be safe and reliable. The
introduction of performance metrics will further ensure that
reliability and other indicators are not just maintained but
improved over the next decade.
    The General Assembly further recognizes that, in addition
to attracting capital and businesses to the State, these
investments will create training opportunities for the
citizens of this State, all of which will create new employment
opportunities for Illinoisans at a time when they are most
needed, especially for minority-owned and female-owned
business enterprises. The General Assembly further finds that
regulatory reform measures that increase predictability,
stability, and transparency in the ratemaking process are
needed to promote prudent, long-term infrastructure investment
and to mutually benefit the State's electric utilities and
their customers, regulators, and investors.
    (b) For purposes of this Section, "participating utility"
means an electric utility or a combination utility serving more
than 1,000,000 customers in Illinois that voluntarily elects
and commits to undertake the infrastructure investment program
consisting of the commitments and obligations described in this
subsection (b), notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act and without obtaining any approvals from the Commission or
any other agency other than as set forth in this Section,
regardless of whether any such approval would otherwise be
required. "Combination utility" means a utility that, as of
January 1, 2011, provided electric service to at least one
million retail customers in Illinois and gas service to at
least 500,000 retail customers in Illinois. A participating
utility shall recover the expenditures made under the
infrastructure investment program through the ratemaking
process, including, but not limited to, the performance-based
formula rate and process set forth in this Section.
    During the infrastructure investment program's peak
program year, a participating utility other than a combination
utility shall create 2,000 full-time equivalent jobs in
Illinois, and a participating utility that is a combination
utility shall create 450 full-time equivalent jobs in Illinois
related to the provision of electric service, including direct
jobs, contractor positions, and induced jobs. For purposes of
this Section, "peak program year" means the consecutive
12-month period with the highest number of full-time equivalent
jobs that occurs between the beginning of investment year 2 and
the end of investment year 4.
    A participating utility shall meet one of the following
commitments, as applicable:
        (1) Beginning no later than 180 days after a
    participating utility other than a combination utility
    files a performance-based formula rate tariff pursuant to
    subsection (c) of this Section, or, beginning no later than
    January 1, 2012 if such utility files such
    performance-based formula rate tariff within 14 days of the
    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General
    Assembly, the participating utility shall, except as
    provided in subsection (b-5):
            (A) over a 5-year period, invest an estimated
        $1,100,000,000 in electric system upgrades,
        modernization projects, and training facilities,
        including, but not limited to:
                (i) distribution infrastructure improvements
            totaling an estimated $1,000,000,000, including
            underground residential distribution cable
            injection and replacement and mainline cable
            system refurbishment and replacement projects;
                (ii) training facility construction or upgrade
            projects totaling an estimated $10,000,000,
            provided that, at a minimum, one such facility
            shall be located in a municipality having a
            population of more than 2 million residents and one
            such facility shall be located in a municipality
            having a population of more than 150,000 residents
            but fewer than 170,000 residents; any such new
            facility located in a municipality having a
            population of more than 2 million residents must be
            designed for the purpose of obtaining, and the
            owner of the facility shall apply for,
            certification under the United States Green
            Building Council's Leadership in Energy Efficiency
            Design Green Building Rating System; and
                (iii) wood pole inspection, treatment, and
            replacement programs; and
            (B) over a 10-year period, invest an estimated
        $1,500,000,000 to upgrade and modernize its
        transmission and distribution infrastructure and in
        Smart Grid electric system upgrades, including, but
        not limited to:
                (i) additional smart meters;
                (ii) distribution automation;
                (iii) associated cyber secure data
            communication network; and
                (iv) substation micro-processor relay
            upgrades.
        (2) Beginning no later than 180 days after a
    participating utility that is a combination utility files a
    performance-based formula rate tariff pursuant to
    subsection (c) of this Section, or, beginning no later than
    January 1, 2012 if such utility files such
    performance-based formula rate tariff within 14 days of the
    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General
    Assembly, the participating utility shall, except as
    provided in subsection (b-5):
            (A) over a 10-year period, invest an estimated
        $265,000,000 in electric system upgrades,
        modernization projects, and training facilities,
        including, but not limited to:
                (i) distribution infrastructure improvements
            totaling an estimated $245,000,000, which may
            include bulk supply substations, transformers,
            reconductoring, and rebuilding overhead
            distribution and sub-transmission lines,
            underground residential distribution cable
            injection and replacement and mainline cable
            system refurbishment and replacement projects;
                (ii) training facility construction or upgrade
            projects totaling an estimated $1,000,000; any
            such new facility must be designed for the purpose
            of obtaining, and the owner of the facility shall
            apply for, certification under the United States
            Green Building Council's Leadership in Energy
            Efficiency Design Green Building Rating System;
            and
                (iii) wood pole inspection, treatment, and
            replacement programs; and
            (B) over a 10-year period, invest an estimated
        $360,000,000 to upgrade and modernize its transmission
        and distribution infrastructure and in Smart Grid
        electric system upgrades, including, but not limited
        to:
                (i) additional smart meters;
                (ii) distribution automation;
                (iii) associated cyber secure data
            communication network; and
                (iv) substation micro-processor relay
            upgrades.
    For purposes of this Section, "Smart Grid electric system
upgrades" shall have the meaning set forth in subsection (a) of
Section 16-108.6 of this Act.
    The investments in the infrastructure investment program
described in this subsection (b) shall be incremental to the
participating utility's annual capital investment program, as
defined by, for purposes of this subsection (b), the
participating utility's average capital spend for calendar
years 2008, 2009, and 2010 as reported in the applicable
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) Form 1; provided
that where one or more utilities have merged, the average
capital spend shall be determined using the aggregate of the
merged utilities' capital spend reported in FERC Form 1 for the
years 2008, 2009, and 2010.
    Within 60 days after filing a tariff under subsection (c)
of this Section, a participating utility shall submit to the
Commission its plan, including scope, schedule, and staffing,
for satisfying its infrastructure investment program
commitments pursuant to this subsection (b). The submitted plan
shall include a schedule and staffing plan for the next
calendar year. The plan shall also include a plan for the
creation, operation, and administration of a Smart Grid test
bed as described in subsection (c) of Section 16-108.8. The
plan need not allocate the work equally over the respective
periods, but should allocate material increments throughout
such periods commensurate with the work to be undertaken. No
later than April 1 of each subsequent year, the utility shall
submit to the Commission a report that includes any updates to
the plan, a schedule for the next calendar year, the
expenditures made for the prior calendar year and cumulatively,
and the number of full-time equivalent jobs created for the
prior calendar year and cumulatively. If the utility is
materially deficient in satisfying a schedule or staffing plan,
then the report must also include a corrective action plan to
address the deficiency. The fact that the plan, implementation
of the plan, or a schedule changes shall not imply the
imprudence or unreasonableness of the infrastructure
investment program, plan, or schedule.
    With respect to the participating utility's peak job
commitment, if, after considering the utility's corrective
action plan and compliance thereunder, the Commission enters an
order finding, after notice and hearing, that a participating
utility did not satisfy its peak job commitment described in
this subsection (b) for reasons that are reasonably within its
control, then the Commission shall also determine, after
consideration of the evidence, including, but not limited to,
evidence submitted by the Department of Commerce and Economic
Opportunity and the utility, the deficiency in the number of
full-time equivalent jobs during the peak program year due to
such failure. The Commission shall notify the Department of any
proceeding that is initiated pursuant to this paragraph. For
each full-time equivalent job deficiency during the peak
program year that the Commission finds as set forth in this
paragraph, the participating utility shall, within 30 days
after the entry of the Commission's order, pay $3,000 to a fund
for training grants administered under Section 605-800 of The
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity Law, which
shall not be a recoverable expense.
    With respect to the participating utility's investment
amount commitments, if, after considering the utility's
corrective action plan and compliance thereunder, the
Commission enters an order finding, after notice and hearing,
that a participating utility is not satisfying its investment
amount commitments described in this subsection (b), then the
utility shall no longer be eligible to annually update the
performance-based formula rate tariff pursuant to subsection
(d) of this Section. In such event, the then current rates
shall remain in effect until such time as new rates are set
pursuant to Article IX of this Act, subject to retroactive
adjustment, with interest, to reconcile rates charged with
actual costs.
    If the Commission finds that a participating utility is no
longer eligible to update the performance-based formula rate
tariff pursuant to subsection (d) of this Section, or the
performance-based formula rate is otherwise terminated, then
the participating utility's voluntary commitments and
obligations under this subsection (b) shall immediately
terminate, except for the utility's obligation to pay an amount
already owed to the fund for training grants pursuant to a
Commission order.
    In meeting the obligations of this subsection (b), to the
extent feasible and consistent with State and federal law, the
investments under the infrastructure investment program should
provide employment opportunities for all segments of the
population and workforce, including minority-owned and
female-owned business enterprises, and shall not, consistent
with State and federal law, discriminate based on race or
socioeconomic status.
    (b-5) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the Commission
from investigating the prudence and reasonableness of the
expenditures made under the infrastructure investment program
during the annual review required by subsection (d) of this
Section and shall, as part of such investigation, determine
whether the utility's actual costs under the program are
prudent and reasonable. The fact that a participating utility
invests more than the minimum amounts specified in subsection
(b) of this Section or its plan shall not imply imprudence or
unreasonableness.
    If the participating utility finds that it is implementing
its plan for satisfying the infrastructure investment program
commitments described in subsection (b) of this Section at a
cost below the estimated amounts specified in subsection (b) of
this Section, then the utility may file a petition with the
Commission requesting that it be permitted to satisfy its
commitments by spending less than the estimated amounts
specified in subsection (b) of this Section. The Commission
shall, after notice and hearing, enter its order approving, or
approving as modified, or denying each such petition within 150
days after the filing of the petition.
    In no event, absent General Assembly approval, shall the
capital investment costs incurred by a participating utility
other than a combination utility in satisfying its
infrastructure investment program commitments described in
subsection (b) of this Section exceed $3,000,000,000 or, for a
participating utility that is a combination utility,
$720,000,000. If the participating utility's updated cost
estimates for satisfying its infrastructure investment program
commitments described in subsection (b) of this Section exceed
the limitation imposed by this subsection (b-5), then it shall
submit a report to the Commission that identifies the increased
costs and explains the reason or reasons for the increased
costs no later than the year in which the utility estimates it
will exceed the limitation. The Commission shall review the
report and shall, within 90 days after the participating
utility files the report, report to the General Assembly its
findings regarding the participating utility's report. If the
General Assembly does not amend the limitation imposed by this
subsection (b-5), then the utility may modify its plan so as
not to exceed the limitation imposed by this subsection (b-5)
and may propose corresponding changes to the metrics
established pursuant to subparagraphs (5) through (8) of
subsection (f) of this Section, and the Commission may modify
the metrics and incremental savings goals established pursuant
to subsection (f) of this Section accordingly.
    (c) A participating utility may elect to recover its
delivery services costs through a performance-based formula
rate approved by the Commission, which shall specify the cost
components that form the basis of the rate charged to customers
with sufficient specificity to operate in a standardized manner
and be updated annually with transparent information that
reflects the utility's actual costs to be recovered during the
applicable rate year, which is the period beginning with the
first billing day of January and extending through the last
billing day of the following December. In the event the utility
recovers a portion of its costs through automatic adjustment
clause tariffs on the effective date of this amendatory Act of
the 97th General Assembly, the utility may elect to continue to
recover these costs through such tariffs, but then these costs
shall not be recovered through the performance-based formula
rate.
    The performance-based formula rate shall be implemented
through a tariff filed with the Commission consistent with the
provisions of this subsection (c) that shall be applicable to
all delivery services customers. The Commission shall initiate
and conduct an investigation of the tariff in a manner
consistent with the provisions of this subsection (c) and the
provisions of Article IX of this Act to the extent they do not
conflict with this subsection (c). Except in the case where the
Commission finds, after notice and hearing, that a
participating utility is not satisfying its investment amount
commitments under subsection (b) of this Section, the
performance-based formula rate shall remain in effect at the
discretion of the utility. The performance-based formula rate
approved by the Commission shall do the following:
        (1) Provide for the recovery of the utility's actual
    costs of delivery services that are prudently incurred and
    reasonable in amount consistent with Commission practice
    and law. The sole fact that a cost differs from that
    incurred in a prior calendar year or that an investment is
    different from that made in a prior calendar year shall not
    imply the imprudence or unreasonableness of that cost or
    investment.
        (2) Reflect the utility's actual capital structure for
    the applicable calendar year, excluding goodwill, subject
    to a determination of prudence and reasonableness
    consistent with Commission practice and law.
        (3) Include a cost of equity, which shall be calculated
    as the sum of the following:
            (A) the average for the applicable calendar year of
        the monthly average yields of 30-year U.S. Treasury
        bonds published by the Board of Governors of the
        Federal Reserve System in its weekly H.15 Statistical
        Release or successor publication; and
            (B) 600 basis points.
        At such time as the Board of Governors of the Federal
    Reserve System ceases to include the monthly average yields
    of 30-year U.S. Treasury bonds in its weekly H.15
    Statistical Release or successor publication, the monthly
    average yields of the U.S. Treasury bonds then having the
    longest duration published by the Board of Governors in its
    weekly H.15 Statistical Release or successor publication
    shall instead be used for purposes of this paragraph (3).
        (4) Permit and set forth protocols, subject to a
    determination of prudence and reasonableness consistent
    with Commission practice and law, for the following:
            (A) recovery of incentive compensation expense
        that is based on the achievement of operational
        metrics, including metrics related to budget controls,
        outage duration and frequency, safety, customer
        service, efficiency and productivity, and
        environmental compliance. Incentive compensation
        expense that is based on net income or an affiliate's
        earnings per share shall not be recoverable under the
        performance-based formula rate;
            (B) recovery of pension and other post-employment
        benefits expense, provided that such costs are
        supported by an actuarial study;
            (C) recovery of severance costs, provided that if
        the amount is over $3,700,000 for a participating
        utility that is a combination utility or $10,000,000
        for a participating utility that serves more than 3
        million retail customers, then the full amount shall be
        amortized consistent with subparagraph (F) of this
        paragraph (4);
            (D) investment return on pension assets net of
        deferred tax benefits equal to the utility's long-term
        debt cost of capital as of the end of the applicable
        calendar year;
            (E) recovery of the expenses related to the
        Commission proceeding under this subsection (c) to
        approve this performance-based formula rate and
        initial rates or to subsequent proceedings related to
        the formula, provided that the recovery shall be
        amortized over a 3-year period; recovery of expenses
        related to the annual Commission proceedings under
        subsection (d) of this Section to review the inputs to
        the performance-based formula rate shall be expensed
        and recovered through the performance-based formula
        rate;
            (F) amortization over a 5-year period of the full
        amount of each charge or credit that exceeds $3,700,000
        for a participating utility that is a combination
        utility or $10,000,000 for a participating utility
        that serves more than 3 million retail customers in the
        applicable calendar year and that relates to a
        workforce reduction program's severance costs, changes
        in accounting rules, changes in law, compliance with
        any Commission-initiated audit, or a single storm or
        other similar expense, provided that any unamortized
        balance shall be reflected in rate base. For purposes
        of this subparagraph (F), changes in law includes any
        enactment, repeal, or amendment in a law, ordinance,
        rule, regulation, interpretation, permit, license,
        consent, or order, including those relating to taxes,
        accounting, or to environmental matters, or in the
        interpretation or application thereof by any
        governmental authority occurring after the effective
        date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General
        Assembly;
            (G) recovery of existing regulatory assets over
        the periods previously authorized by the Commission;
            (H) historical weather normalized billing
        determinants; and
            (I) allocation methods for common costs.
        (5) Provide that if the participating utility's earned
    rate of return on common equity related to the provision of
    delivery services for the prior rate year (calculated using
    costs and capital structure approved by the Commission as
    provided in subparagraph (2) of this subsection (c),
    consistent with this Section, in accordance with
    Commission rules and orders, including, but not limited to,
    adjustments for goodwill, and after any Commission-ordered
    disallowances and taxes) is more than 50 basis points
    higher than the rate of return on common equity calculated
    pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection (c) (after
    adjusting for any penalties to the rate of return on common
    equity applied pursuant to the performance metrics
    provision of subsection (f) of this Section), then the
    participating utility shall apply a credit through the
    performance-based formula rate that reflects an amount
    equal to the value of that portion of the earned rate of
    return on common equity that is more than 50 basis points
    higher than the rate of return on common equity calculated
    pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection (c) (after
    adjusting for any penalties to the rate of return on common
    equity applied pursuant to the performance metrics
    provision of subsection (f) of this Section) for the prior
    rate year, adjusted for taxes. If the participating
    utility's earned rate of return on common equity related to
    the provision of delivery services for the prior rate year
    (calculated using costs and capital structure approved by
    the Commission as provided in subparagraph (2) of this
    subsection (c), consistent with this Section, in
    accordance with Commission rules and orders, including,
    but not limited to, adjustments for goodwill, and after any
    Commission-ordered disallowances and taxes) is more than
    50 basis points less than the return on common equity
    calculated pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection (c)
    (after adjusting for any penalties to the rate of return on
    common equity applied pursuant to the performance metrics
    provision of subsection (f) of this Section), then the
    participating utility shall apply a charge through the
    performance-based formula rate that reflects an amount
    equal to the value of that portion of the earned rate of
    return on common equity that is more than 50 basis points
    less than the rate of return on common equity calculated
    pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection (c) (after
    adjusting for any penalties to the rate of return on common
    equity applied pursuant to the performance metrics
    provision of subsection (f) of this Section) for the prior
    rate year, adjusted for taxes.
        (6) Provide for an annual reconciliation, with
    interest as described in subsection (d) of this Section, of
    the revenue requirement reflected in rates for each
    calendar year, beginning with the calendar year in which
    the utility files its performance-based formula rate
    tariff pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section, with
    what the revenue requirement would have been had the actual
    cost information for the applicable calendar year been
    available at the filing date.
    The utility shall file, together with its tariff, final
data based on its most recently filed FERC Form 1, plus
projected plant additions and correspondingly updated
depreciation reserve and expense for the calendar year in which
the tariff and data are filed, that shall populate the
performance-based formula rate and set the initial delivery
services rates under the formula. For purposes of this Section,
"FERC Form 1" means the Annual Report of Major Electric
Utilities, Licensees and Others that electric utilities are
required to file with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
under the Federal Power Act, Sections 3, 4(a), 304 and 209,
modified as necessary to be consistent with 83 Ill. Admin. Code
Part 415 as of May 1, 2011. Nothing in this Section is intended
to allow costs that are not otherwise recoverable to be
recoverable by virtue of inclusion in FERC Form 1.
    After the utility files its proposed performance-based
formula rate structure and protocols and initial rates, the
Commission shall initiate a docket to review the filing. The
Commission shall enter an order approving, or approving as
modified, the performance-based formula rate, including the
initial rates, as just and reasonable within 270 days after the
date on which the tariff was filed, or, if the tariff is filed
within 14 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act
of the 97th General Assembly, then by May 31, 2012. Such review
shall be based on the same evidentiary standards, including,
but not limited to, those concerning the prudence and
reasonableness of the costs incurred by the utility, the
Commission applies in a hearing to review a filing for a
general increase in rates under Article IX of this Act. The
initial rates shall take effect within 30 days after the
Commission's order approving the performance-based formula
rate tariff.
    Until such time as the Commission approves a different rate
design and cost allocation pursuant to subsection (e) of this
Section, rate design and cost allocation across customer
classes shall be consistent with the Commission's most recent
order regarding the participating utility's request for a
general increase in its delivery services rates.
    Subsequent changes to the performance-based formula rate
structure or protocols shall be made as set forth in Section
9-201 of this Act, but nothing in this subsection (c) is
intended to limit the Commission's authority under Article IX
and other provisions of this Act to initiate an investigation
of a participating utility's performance-based formula rate
tariff, provided that any such changes shall be consistent with
paragraphs (1) through (6) of this subsection (c). Any change
ordered by the Commission shall be made at the same time new
rates take effect following the Commission's next order
pursuant to subsection (d) of this Section, provided that the
new rates take effect no less than 30 days after the date on
which the Commission issues an order adopting the change.
    A participating utility that files a tariff pursuant to
this subsection (c) must submit a one-time $200,000 filing fee
at the time the Chief Clerk of the Commission accepts the
filing, which shall be a recoverable expense.
    In the event the performance-based formula rate is
terminated, the then current rates shall remain in effect until
such time as new rates are set pursuant to Article IX of this
Act, subject to retroactive rate adjustment, with interest, to
reconcile rates charged with actual costs. At such time that
the performance-based formula rate is terminated, the
participating utility's voluntary commitments and obligations
under subsection (b) of this Section shall immediately
terminate, except for the utility's obligation to pay an amount
already owed to the fund for training grants pursuant to a
Commission order issued under subsection (b) of this Section.
    (d) Subsequent to the Commission's issuance of an order
approving the utility's performance-based formula rate
structure and protocols, and initial rates under subsection (c)
of this Section, the utility shall file, on or before May 1 of
each year, with the Chief Clerk of the Commission its updated
cost inputs to the performance-based formula rate for the
applicable rate year and the corresponding new charges. Each
such filing shall conform to the following requirements and
include the following information:
        (1) The inputs to the performance-based formula rate
    for the applicable rate year shall be based on final
    historical data reflected in the utility's most recently
    filed annual FERC Form 1 plus projected plant additions and
    correspondingly updated depreciation reserve and expense
    for the calendar year in which the inputs are filed. The
    filing shall also include a reconciliation of the revenue
    requirement that was in effect for the prior rate year (as
    set by the cost inputs for the prior rate year) with the
    actual revenue requirement for the prior rate year (as
    reflected in the applicable FERC Form 1 that reports the
    actual costs for the prior rate year). Any over-collection
    or under-collection indicated by such reconciliation shall
    be reflected as a credit against, or recovered as an
    additional charge to, respectively, with interest, the
    charges for the applicable rate year. Provided, however,
    that the first such reconciliation shall be for the
    calendar year in which the utility files its
    performance-based formula rate tariff pursuant to
    subsection (c) of this Section and shall reconcile (i) the
    revenue requirement or requirements established by the
    rate order or orders in effect from time to time during
    such calendar year (weighted, as applicable) with (ii) the
    revenue requirement for that calendar year calculated
    pursuant to the performance-based formula rate using (A)
    actual costs for that year as reflected in the applicable
    FERC Form 1, and (B) for the first such reconciliation
    only, the cost of equity approved by the Commission in such
    order or orders in effect during that year (weighted, as
    applicable). The first such reconciliation is not intended
    to provide for the recovery of costs previously excluded
    from rates based on a prior Commission order finding of
    imprudence or unreasonableness. Each reconciliation shall
    be certified by the participating utility in the same
    manner that FERC Form 1 is certified. The filing shall also
    include the charge or credit, if any, resulting from the
    calculation required by paragraph (6) of subsection (c) of
    this Section.
        Notwithstanding anything that may be to the contrary,
    the intent of the reconciliation is to ultimately reconcile
    the revenue requirement reflected in rates for each
    calendar year, beginning with the calendar year in which
    the utility files its performance-based formula rate
    tariff pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section, with
    what the revenue requirement would have been had the actual
    cost information for the applicable calendar year been
    available at the filing date.
        (2) The new charges shall take effect beginning on the
    first billing day of the following January billing period
    and remain in effect through the last billing day of the
    next December billing period regardless of whether the
    Commission enters upon a hearing pursuant to this
    subsection (d).
        (3) The filing shall include relevant and necessary
    data and documentation for the applicable rate year that is
    consistent with the Commission's rules applicable to a
    filing for a general increase in rates or any rules adopted
    by the Commission to implement this Section. Normalization
    adjustments shall not be required. Notwithstanding any
    other provision of this Section or Act or any rule or other
    requirement adopted by the Commission, a participating
    utility that is a combination utility with more than one
    rate zone shall not be required to file a separate set of
    such data and documentation for each rate zone and may
    combine such data and documentation into a single set of
    schedules.
    Within 45 days after the utility files its annual update of
cost inputs to the performance-based formula rate, the
Commission shall have the authority, either upon complaint or
its own initiative, but with reasonable notice, to enter upon a
hearing concerning the prudence and reasonableness of the costs
incurred by the utility to be recovered during the applicable
rate year that are reflected in the inputs to the
performance-based formula rate derived from the utility's FERC
Form 1. During the course of the hearing, each objection shall
be stated with particularity and evidence provided in support
thereof, after which the utility shall have the opportunity to
rebut the evidence. Discovery shall be allowed consistent with
the Commission's Rules of Practice, which Rules shall be
enforced by the Commission or the assigned hearing examiner.
The Commission shall apply the same evidentiary standards,
including, but not limited to, those concerning the prudence
and reasonableness of the costs incurred by the utility, in the
hearing as it would apply in a hearing to review a filing for a
general increase in rates under Article IX of this Act. The
Commission shall not, however, have the authority in a
proceeding under this subsection (d) to consider or order any
changes to the structure or protocols of the performance-based
formula rate approved pursuant to subsection (c) of this
Section. In a proceeding under this subsection (d), the
Commission shall enter its order no later than the earlier of
240 days after the utility's filing of its annual update of
cost inputs to the performance-based formula rate or December
31. The Commission's determinations of the prudence and
reasonableness of the costs incurred for the applicable
calendar year shall be final upon entry of the Commission's
order and shall not be subject to reopening, reexamination, or
collateral attack in any other Commission proceeding, case,
docket, order, rule or regulation, provided, however, that
nothing in this subsection (d) shall prohibit a party from
petitioning the Commission to rehear or appeal to the courts
the order pursuant to the provisions of this Act.
    In the event the Commission does not, either upon complaint
or its own initiative, enter upon a hearing within 45 days
after the utility files the annual update of cost inputs to its
performance-based formula rate, then the costs incurred for the
applicable calendar year shall be deemed prudent and
reasonable, and the filed charges shall not be subject to
reopening, reexamination, or collateral attack in any other
proceeding, case, docket, order, rule, or regulation.
    A participating utility's first filing of the updated cost
inputs, and any Commission investigation of such inputs
pursuant to this subsection (d) shall proceed notwithstanding
the fact that the Commission's investigation under subsection
(c) of this Section is still pending and notwithstanding any
other law, order, rule, or Commission practice to the contrary.
    (e) Nothing in subsections (c) or (d) of this Section shall
prohibit the Commission from investigating, or a participating
utility from filing, revenue-neutral tariff changes related to
rate design of a performance-based formula rate that has been
placed into effect for the utility. Following approval of a
participating utility's performance-based formula rate tariff
pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section, the utility shall
make a filing with the Commission within one year after the
effective date of the performance-based formula rate tariff
that proposes changes to the tariff to incorporate the findings
of any final rate design orders of the Commission applicable to
the participating utility and entered subsequent to the
Commission's approval of the tariff. The Commission shall,
after notice and hearing, enter its order approving, or
approving with modification, the proposed changes to the
performance-based formula rate tariff within 240 days after the
utility's filing. Following such approval, the utility shall
make a filing with the Commission during each subsequent 3-year
period that either proposes revenue-neutral tariff changes or
re-files the existing tariffs without change, which shall
present the Commission with an opportunity to suspend the
tariffs and consider revenue-neutral tariff changes related to
rate design.
    (f) Within 30 days after the filing of a tariff pursuant to
subsection (c) of this Section, each participating utility
shall develop and file with the Commission multi-year metrics
designed to achieve, ratably over a 10-year period, improvement
over baseline performance values as follows:
        (1) Twenty percent improvement in the System Average
    Interruption Frequency Index, using a baseline of the
    average of the data from 2001 through 2010.
        (2) Fifteen percent improvement in the system Customer
    Average Interruption Duration Index, using a baseline of
    the average of the data from 2001 through 2010.
        (3) For a participating utility other than a
    combination utility, 20% improvement in the System Average
    Interruption Frequency Index for its Southern Region,
    using a baseline of the average of the data from 2001
    through 2010. For purposes of this paragraph (C), Southern
    Region shall have the meaning set forth in the
    participating utility's most recent report filed pursuant
    to Section 16-125 of this Act.
        (4) Seventy-five percent improvement in the total
    number of customers who exceed the service reliability
    targets as set forth in subparagraphs (A) through (C) of
    paragraph (4) of subsection (b) of 83 Ill. Admin. Code Part
    411.140 as of May 1, 2011, using 2010 as the baseline year.
        (5) Reduction in issuance of estimated electric bills:
    90% improvement for a participating utility other than a
    combination utility, and 56% improvement for a
    participating utility that is a combination utility, using
    a baseline of the average number of estimated bills for the
    years 2008 through 2010.
        (6) Consumption on inactive meters: 90% improvement
    for a participating utility other than a combination
    utility, and 56% improvement for a participating utility
    that is a combination utility, using a baseline of the
    average unbilled kilowatthours for the years 2009 and 2010.
        (7) Unaccounted for energy: 50% improvement for a
    participating utility other than a combination utility
    using a baseline of the non-technical line loss unaccounted
    for energy kilowatthours for the year 2009.
        (8) Uncollectible expense: reduce uncollectible
    expense by at least $30,000,000 for a participating utility
    other than a combination utility and by at least $3,500,000
    for a participating utility that is a combination utility,
    using a baseline of the average uncollectible expense for
    the years 2008 through 2010.
        (9) Opportunities for minority-owned and female-owned
    business enterprises: design a performance metric
    regarding the creation of opportunities for minority-owned
    and female-owned business enterprises consistent with
    State and federal law using a base performance value of the
    percentage of the participating utility's capital
    expenditures that were paid to minority-owned and
    female-owned business enterprises in 2010.
    The definitions set forth in 83 Ill. Admin. Code Part
411.20 as of May 1, 2011 shall be used for purposes of
calculating performance under paragraphs (1) through (3) of
this subsection (f), provided, however, that the participating
utility may exclude up to 9 extreme weather event days from
such calculation for each year. For purposes of this Section,
an extreme weather event day is a 24-hour calendar day
(beginning at 12:00 a.m. and ending at 11:59 p.m.) during which
any weather event (e.g., storm, tornado) caused interruptions
for 10,000 or more of the participating utility's customers for
3 hours or more. If there are more than 9 extreme weather event
days in a year, then the utility may choose no more than 9
extreme weather event days to exclude, provided that the same
extreme weather event days are excluded from each of the
calculations performed under paragraphs (1) through (3) of this
subsection (f).
    The metrics shall include incremental performance goals
for each year of the 10-year period, which shall be designed to
demonstrate that the utility is on track to achieve the
performance goal in each category at the end of the 10-year
period. The utility shall elect when the 10-year period shall
commence, provided that it begins no later than 14 months
following the date on which the utility begins investing
pursuant to subsection (b) of this Section.
    The metrics and performance goals set forth in
subparagraphs (5) through (8) of this subsection (f) are based
on the assumptions that the participating utility may fully
implement the technology described in subsection (b) of this
Section, including utilizing the full functionality of such
technology and that there is no requirement for personal
on-site notification. If the utility is unable to meet the
metrics and performance goals set forth in subparagraphs (5)
through (8) of this subsection (f) for such reasons, and the
Commission so finds after notice and hearing, then the utility
shall be excused from compliance, but only to the limited
extent achievement of the affected metrics and performance
goals was hindered by the less than full implementation.
    (f-5) The financial penalties applicable to the metrics
described in subparagraphs (1) through (8) of subsection (f) of
this Section, as applicable, shall be applied through an
adjustment to the participating utility's return on equity as
follows:
        (1) With respect to each of the incremental annual
    performance goals established pursuant to paragraph (1) of
    subsection (f) of this Section, for each year that a
    participating utility other than a combination utility
    does not achieve the annual goal, the participating
    utility's return on equity shall be reduced by 5 basis
    points for such unachieved goal for the following 12-month
    period, and for each year that a participating utility that
    is a combination utility does not achieve the annual goal,
    the participating utility's return on equity shall be
    reduced by 10 basis points for each such unachieved goal
    for the following 12-month period.
        (2) With respect to each of the incremental annual
    performance goals established pursuant to subparagraphs
    (2), (3), and (4) of subsection (f) of this Section, as
    applicable, for each year that the participating utility
    does not achieve each such goal, the participating
    utility's return on equity shall be reduced by 5 basis
    points for each such unachieved goal for the following
    12-month period. With respect to each of the incremental
    annual performance goals established pursuant to
    subparagraph (5) of subsection (f) of this Section, for
    each year that the participating utility does not achieve
    at least 95% of each such goal, the participating utility's
    return on equity shall be reduced by 5 basis points for
    each such unachieved goal for the following 12-month
    period.
        (3) With respect to each of the incremental annual
    performance goals established pursuant to paragraphs (6),
    (7), and (8) of subsection (f) of this Section, as
    applicable, the performance under each such goal shall be
    calculated in terms of the percentage of the goal achieved.
    The percentage of goal achieved for each of the goals shall
    be aggregated, and an average percentage value calculated,
    for each year of the 10-year period. If the utility does
    not achieve an average percentage value in a given year of
    at least 95%, the participating utility's return on equity
    shall be reduced by 5 basis points for the following
    12-month period.
    The financial penalties shall be applied as described in
this subsection (f-5) through a separate tariff mechanism,
which shall be filed by the utility together with its metrics.
In the event the formula rate tariff established pursuant to
subsection (c) of this Section terminates, the utility's
obligations under subsection (f) of this Section and this
subsection (f-5) shall also terminate, provided, however, that
the tariff mechanism established pursuant to subsection (f) of
this Section and this subsection (f-5) shall remain in effect
until any penalties due and owing at the time of such
termination are applied.
    The Commission shall, after notice and hearing, enter an
order within 120 days after the metrics are filed approving, or
approving with modification, a participating utility's tariff
or mechanism to satisfy the metrics set forth in subsection (f)
of this Section. On June 1 of each subsequent year, each
participating utility shall file a report with the Commission
that includes, among other things, a description of how the
participating utility performed under each metric and an
identification of any extraordinary events that adversely
impacted the utility's performance. Whenever a participating
utility does not satisfy the metrics required pursuant to
subsection (f) of this Section, the Commission shall, after
notice and hearing, enter an order approving financial
penalties in accordance with this subsection (f-5). The
Commission-approved financial penalties shall be applied
beginning with the next rate year. Nothing in this Section
shall authorize the Commission to reduce or otherwise obviate
the imposition of financial penalties for failing to achieve
one or more of the metrics established pursuant to subparagraph
(1) through (4) of subsection (f) of this Section.
    (g) On or before July 31, 2014, each participating utility
shall file a report with the Commission that sets forth the
average annual increase in the average amount paid per
kilowatthour for residential eligible retail customers,
exclusive of the effects of energy efficiency programs,
comparing the 12-month period ending May 31, 2012; the 12-month
period ending May 31, 2013; and the 12-month period ending May
31, 2014. For a participating utility that is a combination
utility with more than one rate zone, the weighted average
aggregate increase shall be provided. The report shall be filed
together with a statement from an independent auditor attesting
to the accuracy of the report. The cost of the independent
auditor shall be borne by the participating utility and shall
not be a recoverable expense.
    In the event that the average annual increase exceeds 2.5%
as calculated pursuant to this subsection (g), then Sections
16-108.5, 16-108.6, 16-108.7, and 16-108.8 of this Act, other
than this subsection, shall be inoperative as they relate to
the utility and its service area as of the date of the report
due to be submitted pursuant to this subsection and the utility
shall no longer be eligible to annually update the
performance-based formula rate tariff pursuant to subsection
(d) of this Section. In such event, the then current rates
shall remain in effect until such time as new rates are set
pursuant to Article IX of this Act, subject to retroactive
adjustment, with interest, to reconcile rates charged with
actual costs, and the participating utility's voluntary
commitments and obligations under subsection (b) of this
Section shall immediately terminate, except for the utility's
obligation to pay an amount already owed to the fund for
training grants pursuant to a Commission order issued under
subsection (b) of this Section.
    In the event that the average annual increase is 2.5% or
less as calculated pursuant to this subsection (g), then the
performance-based formula rate shall remain in effect as set
forth in this Section.
    For purposes of this Section, the amount per kilowatthour
means the total amount paid for electric service expressed on a
per kilowatthour basis, and the total amount paid for electric
service includes without limitation amounts paid for supply,
transmission, distribution, surcharges, and add-on taxes
exclusive of any increases in taxes or new taxes imposed after
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General
Assembly. For purposes of this Section, "eligible retail
customers" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 16-111.5
of this Act.
    The fact that this Section becomes inoperative as set forth
in this subsection shall not be construed to mean that the
Commission may reexamine or otherwise reopen prudence or
reasonableness determinations already made.
    (h) Sections 16-108.5, 16-108.6, 16-108.7, and 16-108.8 of
this Act, other than this subsection, are inoperative after
December 31, 2017 for every participating utility, after which
time a participating utility shall no longer be eligible to
annually update the performance-based formula rate tariff
pursuant to subsection (d) of this Section. At such time, the
then current rates shall remain in effect until such time as
new rates are set pursuant to Article IX of this Act, subject
to retroactive adjustment, with interest, to reconcile rates
charged with actual costs.
    By December 31, 2017, the Commission shall prepare and file
with the General Assembly a report on the infrastructure
program and the performance-based formula rate. The report
shall include the change in the average amount per kilowatthour
paid by residential customers between June 1, 2011 and May 31,
2017. If the change in the total average rate paid exceeds 2.5%
compounded annually, the Commission shall include in the report
an analysis that shows the portion of the change due to the
delivery services component and the portion of the change due
to the supply component of the rate. The report shall include
separate sections for each participating utility.
    In the event Sections 16-108.5, 16-108.6, 16-108.7, and
16-108.8 of this Act do not become inoperative after December
31, 2017, then these Sections are inoperative after December
31, 2022 for every participating utility, after which time a
participating utility shall no longer be eligible to annually
update the performance-based formula rate tariff pursuant to
subsection (d) of this Section. At such time, the then current
rates shall remain in effect until such time as new rates are
set pursuant to Article IX of this Act, subject to retroactive
adjustment, with interest, to reconcile rates charged with
actual costs.
    The fact that this Section becomes inoperative as set forth
in this subsection shall not be construed to mean that the
Commission may reexamine or otherwise reopen prudence or
reasonableness determinations already made.
    (i) While a participating utility may use, develop, and
maintain broadband systems and the delivery of broadband
services, voice-over-internet-protocol services,
telecommunications services, and cable and video programming
services for use in providing delivery services and Smart Grid
functionality or application to its retail customers,
including, but not limited to, the installation,
implementation and maintenance of Smart Grid electric system
upgrades as defined in Section 16-108.6 of this Act, a
participating utility is prohibited from offering to its retail
customers broadband services or the delivery of broadband
services, voice-over-internet-protocol services,
telecommunications services, or cable or video programming
services, unless they are part of a service directly related to
delivery services or Smart Grid functionality or applications
as defined in Section 16-108.6 of this Act, and from recovering
the costs of such offerings from retail customers.
    (j) Nothing in this Section is intended to legislatively
overturn the opinion issued in Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Ill.
Commerce Comm'n, Nos. 2-08-0959, 2-08-1037, 2-08-1137,
1-08-3008, 1-08-3030, 1-08-3054, 1-08-3313 cons. (Ill. App.
Ct. 2d Dist. Sept. 30, 2010). This amendatory Act of the 97th
General Assembly shall not be construed as creating a contract
between the General Assembly and the participating utility, and
shall not establish a property right in the participating
utility.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/16-108.6 new)
    Sec. 16-108.6. Provisions relating to Smart Grid Advanced
Metering Infrastructure Deployment Plan.
    (a) For purposes of this Section and Sections 16-108.7 and
16-108.8 of this Act:
    "Advanced Metering Infrastructure" or "AMI" means the
communications hardware and software and associated system
software that enables Smart Grid functions by creating a
network between advanced meters and utility business systems
and allowing collection and distribution of information to
customers and other parties in addition to providing
information to the utility itself.
    "Cost-beneficial" means a determination that the benefits
of a participating utility's Smart Grid AMI Deployment Plan
exceed the costs of the Smart Grid AMI Deployment Plan as
initially filed with the Commission or as subsequently modified
by the Commission. This standard is met if the present value of
the total benefits of the Smart Grid AMI Deployment Plan
exceeds the present value of the total costs of the Smart Grid
AMI Deployment Plan. The total cost shall include all utility
costs reasonably associated with the Smart Grid AMI Deployment
Plan. The total benefits shall include the sum of avoided
electricity costs, including avoided utility operational
costs, avoided consumer power, capacity, and energy costs, and
avoided societal costs associated with the production and
consumption of electricity, as well as other societal benefits,
including the greater integration of renewable and distributed
power resources, reductions in the emissions of harmful
pollutants and associated avoided health-related costs, other
benefits associated with energy efficiency measures,
demand-response activities, and the enabling of greater
penetration of alternative fuel vehicles.
    "Participating utility" has the meaning set forth in
Section 16-108.5 of this Act.
    "Smart Grid" means investments and policies that together
promote one or more of the following goals:
        (1) Increased use of digital information and controls
    technology to improve reliability, security, and
    efficiency of the electric grid.
        (2) Dynamic optimization of grid operations and
    resources, with full cyber security.
        (3) Deployment and integration of distributed
    resources and generation, including renewable resources.
        (4) Development and incorporation of demand-response,
    demand-side resources, and energy efficiency resources.
        (5) Deployment of "smart" technologies (real-time,
    automated, interactive technologies that optimize the
    physical operation of appliances and consumer devices) for
    metering, communications concerning grid operations and
    status, and distribution automation.
        (6) Integration of "smart" appliances and consumer
    devices.
        (7) Deployment and integration of advanced electricity
    storage and peak-shaving technologies, including plug-in
    electric and hybrid electric vehicles, thermal-storage air
    conditioning and renewable energy generation.
        (8) Provision to consumers of timely information and
    control options.
        (9) Development of open access standards for
    communication and interoperability of appliances and
    equipment connected to the electric grid, including the
    infrastructure serving the grid.
        (10) Identification and lowering of unreasonable or
    unnecessary barriers to adoption of Smart Grid
    technologies, practices, services, and business models
    that support energy efficiency, demand-response, and
    distributed generation.
    "Smart Grid Advisory Council" means the group of
stakeholders formed pursuant to subsection (b) of this Section
for the purposes of advising and working with participating
utilities on the development and implementation of a Smart Grid
Advanced Metering Infrastructure Deployment Plan.
    "Smart Grid electric system upgrades" means any of the
following:
        (1) metering devices, sensors, control devices, and
    other devices integrated with and attached to an electric
    utility system that are capable of engaging in Smart Grid
    functions;
        (2) other monitoring and communications devices that
    enable Smart Grid functions, including, but not limited to,
    distribution automation;
        (3) software that enables devices or computers to
    engage in Smart Grid functions;
        (4) associated cyber secure data communication
    network, including enhancements to cyber-security
    technologies and measures;
        (5) substation micro-processor relay upgrades;
        (6) devices that allow electric or hybrid-electric
    vehicles to engage in Smart Grid functions; or
        (7) devices that enable individual consumers to
    incorporate distributed and micro-generation.
    "Smart Grid electric system upgrades" does not include
expenditures for: (1) electricity generation, transmission, or
distribution infrastructure or equipment that does not
directly relate to or support installing, implementing or
enabling Smart Grid functions; (2) physical interconnection of
generators or other devices to the grid except those that are
directly related to enabling Smart Grid functions; or (3)
ongoing or routine operation, billing, customer relations,
security, and maintenance.
    "Smart Grid functions" means:
        (1) the ability to develop, store, send, and receive
    digital information concerning or enabling grid
    operations, electricity use, costs, prices, time of use,
    nature of use, storage, or other information relevant to
    device, grid, or utility operations, to or from or by means
    of the electric utility system through one or a combination
    of devices and technologies;
        (2) the ability to develop, store, send, and receive
    digital information concerning electricity use, costs,
    prices, time of use, nature of use, storage, or other
    information relevant to device, grid, or utility
    operations to or from a computer or other control device;
        (3) the ability to measure or monitor electricity use
    as a function of time of day, power quality characteristics
    such as voltage level, current, cycles per second, or
    source or type of generation and to store, synthesize, or
    report that information by digital means;
        (4) the ability to sense and localize disruptions or
    changes in power flows on the grid and communicate such
    information instantaneously and automatically for purposes
    of enabling automatic protective responses to sustain
    reliability and security of grid operations;
        (5) the ability to detect, prevent, communicate with
    regard to, respond to, or recover from system security
    threats, including cyber-security threats and terrorism,
    using digital information, media, and devices;
        (6) the ability of any device or machine to respond to
    signals, measurements, or communications automatically or
    in a manner programmed by its owner or operator without
    independent human intervention;
        (7) the ability to use digital information to operate
    functionalities on the electric utility grid that were
    previously electro-mechanical or manual;
        (8) the ability to use digital controls to manage and
    modify electricity demand, enable congestion management,
    assist in voltage control, provide operating reserves, and
    provide frequency regulation; or
        (9) the ability to integrate electric plug-in
    vehicles, distributed generation, and storage in a safe and
    cost-effective manner on the electric grid.
    (b) Within 30 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, the Smart Grid
Advisory Council shall be established, which shall consist of 7
total voting members with each member possessing either
technical, business or consumer expertise in Smart Grid issues
and each having been the single appointment of one of the
following: the Governor, the Speaker of the House, the Minority
Leader of the House, the President of the Senate, the Minority
Leader of the Senate, the Illinois Science and Technology
Coalition, and the Citizens Utility Board. The Governor shall
designate one of the members of the Council to serve as
chairman, and that person shall serve as the chairman at the
pleasure of the Governor. The members shall not be compensated
for serving on the Smart Grid Advisory Council. The Smart Grid
Advisory Council shall have the following duties:
        (1) Serve as an advisor to participating utilities
    subject to this Section and in the manner described in this
    Section, and the recommendations provided by the Council,
    although non-binding, shall be considered by the
    utilities.
        (2) Serve as trustees of the trust or foundation
    established pursuant to Section 16-108.7 of this Act with
    the duties enumerated thereunder.
    (c) After consultation with the Smart Grid Advisory
Council, each participating utility shall file a Smart Grid
Advanced Metering Infrastructure Deployment Plan ("AMI Plan")
with the Commission within 180 days after the effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly or by November
1, 2011, whichever is later, or in the case of a combination
utility as defined in Section 16-108.5, by April 1, 2012,
provided that a participating utility shall not file its plan
until the evaluation report on the Pilot Program described in
this subsection (c) is issued. The AMI Plan shall provide for
investment over a 10-year period that is sufficient to
implement the AMI Plan across its entire service territory in a
manner that is consistent with subsection (b) of Section
16-108.5 of this Act. The AMI Plan shall contain:
        (1) the participating utility's Smart Grid AMI vision
    statement that is consistent with the goal of developing a
    cost-beneficial Smart Grid;
        (2) a statement of Smart Grid AMI strategy that
    includes a description of how the utility evaluates and
    prioritizes technology choices to create customer value,
    including a plan to enhance and enable customers' ability
    to take advantage of Smart Grid functions beginning at the
    time an account has billed successfully on the AMI network;
        (3) a deployment schedule and plan that includes
    deployment of AMI to all customers for a participating
    utility other than a combination utility, and to 62% of all
    customers for a participating utility that is a combination
    utility;
        (4) annual milestones and metrics for the purposes of
    measuring the success of the AMI Plan in enabling Smart
    Grid functions; and enhancing consumer benefits from Smart
    Grid AMI; and
        (5) a plan for the consumer education to be implemented
    by the participating utility.
    The AMI Plan shall be fully consistent with the standards
of the National Institute of Standard and Technology (NIST) for
Smart Grid interoperability that are in effect at the time the
participating utility files its AMI Plan, shall include open
standards and internet protocol to the maximum extent possible
consistent with cyber security, and shall maximize, to the
extent possible, a flexible smart meter platform that can
accept remote device upgrades and contain sufficient internal
memory capacity for additional storage capabilities, functions
and services without the need for physical access to the meter.
    The AMI Plan shall secure the privacy of personal
information and establish the right of consumers to consent to
the disclosure of personal energy information to third parties
through electronic, web-based, and other means in accordance
with State and federal law and regulations regarding consumer
privacy and protection of consumer data.
    After notice and hearing, the Commission shall, within 60
days of the filing of an AMI Plan, issue its order approving,
or approving with modification, the AMI Plan if the Commission
finds that the AMI Plan contains the information required in
paragraphs (1) through (5) of this subsection (c) and further
finds that the implementation of the AMI Plan will be
cost-beneficial consistent with the principles established
through the Illinois Smart Grid Collaborative, giving weight to
the results of any Commission-approved pilot designed to
examine the benefits and costs of AMI deployment. A
participating utility's decision to invest pursuant to an AMI
Plan approved by the Commission shall not be subject to
prudence reviews in subsequent Commission proceedings. Nothing
in this subsection (c) is intended to limit the Commission's
ability to review the reasonableness of the costs incurred
under the AMI Plan. A participating utility shall be allowed to
recover the reasonable costs it incurs in implementing a
Commission-approved AMI Plan, including the costs of retired
meters, and may recover such costs through its tariffs,
including the performance-based formula rate tariff approved
pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 16-108.5 of this Act.
    (d) The AMI Plan shall secure the privacy of the customer's
personal information. "Personal information" for this purpose
consists of the customer's name, address, telephone number, and
other personally identifying information, as well as
information about the customer's electric usage. Electric
utilities, their contractors or agents, and any third party who
comes into possession of such personal information by virtue of
working on Smart Grid technology shall not disclose such
personal information to be used in mailing lists or to be used
for other commercial purposes not reasonably related to the
conduct of the utility's business. Electric utilities shall
comply with the consumer privacy requirements of the Personal
Information Protection Act. In the event a participating
utility receives revenues from the sale of information obtained
through Smart Grid technology that is not personal information,
the participating utility shall use such revenues to offset the
revenue requirement.
    (e) On April 1 of each year beginning in 2013 and after
consultation with the Smart Grid Advisory Council, each
participating utility shall submit a report regarding the
progress it has made toward completing implementation of its
AMI Plan. This report shall:
        (1) describe the AMI investments made during the prior
    12 months and the AMI investments planned to be made in the
    following 12 months;
        (2) provide sufficient detail to determine the
    utility's progress in meeting the metrics and milestones
    identified by the utility in its AMI Plan; and
        (3) identify any updates to the AMI Plan.
    Within 21 days after the utility files its annual report,
the Commission shall have authority, either upon complaint or
its own initiative, but with reasonable notice, to enter upon
an investigation regarding the utility's progress in
implementing the AMI Plan as described in paragraph (1) of this
subsection (e). If the Commission finds, after notice and
hearing, that the participating utility's progress in
implementing the AMI Plan is materially deficient for the given
plan year, then the Commission shall issue an order requiring
the participating utility to devise a corrective action plan,
subject to Commission approval and oversight, to bring
implementation back on schedule consistent with the AMI Plan.
The Commission's order must be entered within 90 days after the
utility files its annual report. If the Commission does not
initiate an investigation within 21 days after the utility
files its annual report, then the filing shall be deemed
accepted by the Commission. The utility shall not be required
to suspend implementation of its AMI Plan during any Commission
investigation.
    The participating utility's annual report regarding AMI
Plan year 10 shall contain a statement verifying that the
implementation of its AMI Plan is complete, provided, however,
that if the utility is subject to a corrective action plan that
extends the implementation period beyond 10 years, the utility
shall include the verification statement in its final annual
report. Following the date of a Commission order approving the
final annual report or the date on which the final report is
deemed accepted by the Commission, the utility's annual
reporting obligations under this subsection (d) shall
terminate, provided, however, that the utility shall have a
continuing obligation to provide information, upon request, to
the Commission and Smart Grid Advisory Council regarding the
AMI Plan.
    (f) Each participating utility shall pay a pro rata share,
based on number of customers, of $5,000,000 per year to the
trust or foundation established pursuant to Section 16-108.7 of
this Act for each plan year of the AMI Plan, which shall be
used for purposes of providing customer education regarding
smart meters and related consumer-facing technologies and
services and 70% of which shall be a recoverable expense;
provided that other reasonable amounts expended by the utility
for such consumer education shall not be subject to the 70%
limitation of this subsection.
    (g) Within 60 days after the Commission approves a
participating utility's AMI Plan pursuant to subsection (c) of
this Section, the participating utility, after consultation
with the Smart Grid Advisory Council, shall file a proposed
tariff with the Commission that offers an opt-in market-based
peak time rebate program to all residential retail customers
with smart meters that is designed to provide, in a
competitively neutral manner, rebates to those residential
retail customers that curtail their use of electricity during
specific periods that are identified as peak usage periods. The
total amount of rebates shall be the amount of compensation the
utility obtains through markets or programs at the applicable
regional transmission organization. The utility shall make all
reasonable attempts to secure funding for the peak time rebate
program through markets or programs at the applicable regional
transmission organization. The rules and procedures for
consumers to opt-in to the peak time rebate program shall
include electronic sign-up, be designed to maximize
participation, and be included on the utility's website. The
Commission shall monitor the performance of programs
established pursuant to this subsection (g) and shall order the
termination or modification of a program if it determines that
the program is not, after a reasonable period of time for
development of at least 4 years, resulting in net benefits to
the residential customers of the participating utility.
    (h) If Section 16-108.5 of this Act becomes inoperative
with respect to one or more participating utilities as set
forth in subsection (g) or (h) of that Section, then Sections
16-108.5, 16-108.6, 16-108.7, and 16-108.8 of this Act shall
become inoperative as to each affected utility and its service
area on the same date as Section 16-108.5 becomes inoperative.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/16-108.7 new)
    Sec. 16-108.7. Illinois Science and Energy Innovation
Trust.
    (a) Within 90 days of the effective date of this amendatory
Act of the 97th General Assembly, the members of the Smart Grid
Advisory Council established pursuant to Section 16-108.6 of
this Act, or a majority of the members thereof, shall cause to
be established an Illinois science and energy innovation trust
or foundation for the purposes of providing financial and
technical support and assistance to entities, public or
private, within the State of Illinois including, but not
limited to, units of State and local government, educational
and research institutions, corporations, and charitable,
educational, environmental and community organizations, for
programs and projects that support, encourage or utilize
innovative technologies or other methods of modernizing the
State's electric grid that will benefit the public by promoting
economic development in Illinois. Such activities shall be
supported through grants, loans, contracts, or other programs
designed to assist and further benefit technological advances
in the area of electric grid modernization and operation. The
trust or foundation shall also be eligible for receipt of other
energy and environmental grant opportunities, from public or
private sources. The trust or foundation shall not be a
governmental entity.
    (b) Funds received by the trust or foundation pursuant to
subsection (f) of Section 16-108.6 of this Act shall be used
solely for the purpose of providing consumer education
regarding smart meters and related consumer-facing
technologies and services and the peak time rebate program
described in subsection (g) of Section 16-108.6 of this Act.
Thirty percent of such funds received from each participating
utility shall be used by the trust or foundation for purposes
of providing such education to each participating utility's
low-income retail customers, including low-income senior
citizens.
    The trust or foundation shall use all funds received
pursuant to subsection (f) of Section 16-108.6 of this Act in a
manner that reflects the unique needs and characteristics of
each participating utility's service territory and in
proportion to each participating utility's payment.
    (c) Such trust or foundation shall be governed by a
declaration of trust or articles of incorporation and bylaws
which shall, at a minimum, provide the following:
        (1) There shall initially be 7 trustees of the trust or
    foundation, which shall consist of the members of the Smart
    Grid Advisory Council established pursuant to Section
    16-108.6 of this Act. Subsequently, the participating
    utilities shall appoint one trustee and the Clean Energy
    Trust shall appoint one non-voting trustee who shall
    provide expertise regarding early stage investment in
    Smart Grid projects.
        (2) All trustees shall be entitled to reimbursement for
    reasonable expenses incurred on behalf of the trust in the
    performance of their duties as trustees. All such
    reimbursements shall be paid out of the trust.
        (3) Trustees shall be appointed within 60 days after
    the creation of the trust or foundation and shall serve for
    a term of 5 years commencing upon the date of their
    respective appointments, until their respective successors
    are appointed and qualified.
        (4) A vacancy in the office of trustee shall be filled
    by the person holding the office responsible for appointing
    the trustee whose death or resignation creates the vacancy,
    and a trustee appointed to fill a vacancy shall serve the
    remainder of the term of the trustee whose resignation or
    death created the vacancy.
        (5) The trust or foundation shall have an indefinite
    term and shall terminate at such time as no trust assets
    remain.
        (6) The allocation and disbursement of funds for the
    various purposes for which the trust or foundation is
    established shall be determined by the trustees in
    accordance with the declaration of trust or the articles of
    incorporation and bylaws.
        (7) The trust or foundation shall be authorized to
    employ an executive director and other employees, or
    contract management of the trust or foundation in its
    entirety to an outside organization found suitable by the
    trustees, to enter into leases, contracts and other
    obligations on behalf of the trust or foundation, and to
    incur expenses that the trustees deem necessary or
    appropriate for the fulfillment of the purposes for which
    the trust or foundation is established, provided, however,
    that salaries and administrative expenses incurred on
    behalf of the trust or foundation shall not exceed 3% of
    the trust's principal value, or $750,000, whichever is
    greater, in any given year. The trustees shall not be
    compensated by the trust or foundation.
        (8) The trustees may create and appoint advisory boards
    or committees to assist them with the administration of the
    trust or foundation, and to advise and make recommendations
    to them regarding the contribution and disbursement of the
    trust or foundation funds.
        (9) All funds dispersed by the trust or foundation for
    programs and projects to meet the objectives of the trust
    or foundation as enumerated in this Section shall be
    subject to a peer-review process as determined by the
    trustees. This process shall be designed to determine, in
    an objective and unbiased manner, those programs and
    projects that best fit the objectives of the trust or
    foundation. In each fiscal year the trustees shall
    determine, based solely on the information provided
    through the peer-review process, a budget for programs and
    projects for that fiscal year.
        (10) The trustees shall administer a Smart Grid
    education fund from which it shall make grants to qualified
    not-for-profit organizations for the purpose of educating
    customers with regard to smart meters and related
    consumer-facing technologies and services. In making such
    grants the trust or foundation shall strongly encourage
    grantees to coordinate to the extent practicable and
    consider recommendations from the participating utilities
    regarding the development and implementation of customer
    education plans.
        (11) One of the objectives of the trust or foundation
    is to remain self-funding. In order to meet this objective,
    the trustees may sign agreements with those entities
    receiving funding that provide for license fees,
    royalties, or other payments to the trust or foundation
    from such entities that receive support for their product
    development from the trust or foundation. Such payments,
    however, shall be contingent on the commercialization of
    such products, services, or technologies enabled by the
    funding provided by the trust or foundation.
    (d) The trustees shall notify each participating utility as
defined in Section 16-108.5 of this Act of the formation of the
trust or foundation. Within 90 days after receipt of the
notification, each participating utility that is not a
combination utility as defined in Section 16-108.5 of this Act
shall contribute $15,000,000 to the trust or foundation, and
each participating utility that is a combination utility, as
defined in Section 16-108.5 of this Act, shall contribute
$7,500,000 to the trust or foundation established pursuant to
this Section. Such contributions shall not be a recoverable
expense.
    (e) If Section 16-108.5 of this Act becomes inoperative
with respect to one or more participating utilities as set
forth in subsection (g) or (h) of that Section, then Sections
16-108.5, 16-108.6, 16-108.7, and 16-108.8 of this Act shall
become inoperative as to each affected utility and its service
area on the same date as Section 16-108.5 becomes inoperative.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/16-108.8 new)
    Sec. 16-108.8. Illinois Smart Grid test bed.
    (a) Within 180 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, each participating
utility, as defined by Section 16-108.5 of this Act, shall
create or otherwise designate a Smart Grid test bed, which may
be located at one or more places within the utility's system,
for the purposes of allowing for the testing of Smart Grid
technologies. The objectives of this test bed shall be to:
        (1) provide an open, unbiased opportunity for testing
    programs, technologies, business models, and other Smart
    Grid-related activities;
        (2) provide on-grid locations for the testing of
    potentially innovative Smart Grid-related technologies and
    services, including but not limited to those funded by the
    trust or foundation established pursuant to Section
    16-108.7 of this Act;
        (3) facilitate testing of business models or services
    that help integrate Smart Grid-related technologies into
    the electric grid, especially those business models that
    may help promote new products and services for retail
    customers;
        (4) offer opportunities to test and showcase Smart Grid
    technologies and services, especially those likely to
    support the economic development goals of the State of
    Illinois.
    (b) The test bed shall reside in one or more locations on
the participating utility's network. Such locations shall be
chosen by the utility to maximize the opportunity for real-time
and real-world testing of Smart Grid technologies and services
taking into account the safety and security of the
participating utility's grid and grid operations.
    (c) The participating utility, with input from the Smart
Grid Advisory Council established pursuant to Section 16-108.6
of this Act, shall, as part of its filing under subsection (b)
of Section 16-108.5, include a plan for the creation,
operation, and administration of the test bed. This plan shall
address the following:
        (1) how the utility proposes to comply with each of the
    objectives set forth in subsection (a) of this Section;
        (2) the proposed location or locations of the test bed;
        (3) the process by which the utility will receive,
    review, and qualify proposals to use the test bed;
        (4) the criteria by which the utility proposes to
    qualify proposals to use the test bed, including, but not
    limited to, safety, reliability, security, customer data
    security, privacy, and economic development
    considerations;
        (5) the engineering and operations support that the
    utility will provide to test bed users, including provision
    of customer data; and
        (6) the estimated costs to establish, administer and
    promote the availability of the test bed.
    (d) The test bed should be open to all qualified entities
wishing to test programs, technologies, business models, and
other Smart Grid-related activities, provided that the utility
retains control of its grid and operations and may reject any
programs, technologies, business models, and other Smart
Grid-related activities that threaten the reliability, safety,
security, or operations of its network, or that would threaten
the security of customer-identifiable data in the judgment of
the utility. The number of technologies and entities
participating in the test bed at any time may be limited by the
utility based on its determination of its ability to maintain a
secure, safe, and reliable grid.
    (e) At a minimum, the test bed shall have the ability to
receive live signals from PJM Interconnection LLC or other
applicable regional transmission organization, the ability to
test new applications in a utility scale environment (to
include ramp rate regulations for distributed wind and solar
resources), critical peak price response, and market-based
power dispatch.
    (f) At the end of the fourth year of operation the test bed
shall be subject to an independent evaluation to determine if
the test bed is meeting the objectives of this Section or is
likely to meet the objectives in the future. The evaluation
shall include the performance of the utility as test bed
operator. Subject to the findings, the utility and the trust or
foundation established pursuant to Section 16-108.7 of this Act
may choose to continue operating the test bed.
    (g) The utility shall be entitled to recover all prudently
incurred and reasonable costs associated with evaluation of
proposals, engineering, construction, operation, and
administration of the test bed through the performance-based
formula rate tariff established pursuant to Section 16-108.5 of
this Act.
    (h) The utility is authorized to charge fees to users of
the test bed that shall recover the costs associated with the
incremental costs to the utility associated with
administration of the test bed, provided, however, that any
such fees collected by the utility shall be used to offset the
costs to be recovered pursuant to subsection (g) of this
Section.
    (i) On a quarterly basis, the utility shall provide the
trust or foundation established pursuant to Section 16-108.7 of
this Act with a report summarizing test bed activities,
customers, discoveries, and other information as shall be
mutually deemed relevant.
    (j) To the extent practicable, the utility and trust or
foundation established pursuant to Section 16-108.7 of this Act
shall jointly pursue resources that enhance the capabilities
and capacity of the test bed.
    (k) If Section 16-108.5 of this Act becomes inoperative
with respect to one or more participating utilities as set
forth in subsection (g) or (h) of that Section, then Sections
16-108.5, 16-108.6, 16-108.7, and 16-108.8 of this Act shall
become inoperative as to each affected utility and its service
area on the same date as Section 16-108.5 become inoperative.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/16-111.5)
    Sec. 16-111.5. Provisions relating to procurement.
    (a) An electric utility that on December 31, 2005 served at
least 100,000 customers in Illinois shall procure power and
energy for its eligible retail customers in accordance with the
applicable provisions set forth in Section 1-75 of the Illinois
Power Agency Act and this Section. "Eligible retail customers"
for the purposes of this Section means those retail customers
that purchase power and energy from the electric utility under
fixed-price bundled service tariffs, other than those retail
customers whose service is declared or deemed competitive under
Section 16-113 and those other customer groups specified in
this Section, including self-generating customers, customers
electing hourly pricing, or those customers who are otherwise
ineligible for fixed-price bundled tariff service. Those
customers that are excluded from the definition of "eligible
retail customers" shall not be included in the procurement plan
load requirements, and the utility shall procure any supply
requirements, including capacity, ancillary services, and
hourly priced energy, in the applicable markets as needed to
serve those customers, provided that the utility may include in
its procurement plan load requirements for the load that is
associated with those retail customers whose service has been
declared or deemed competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
this Act to the extent that those customers are purchasing
power and energy during one of the transition periods
identified in subsection (b) of Section 16-113 of this Act.
    (b) A procurement plan shall be prepared for each electric
utility consistent with the applicable requirements of the
Illinois Power Agency Act and this Section. For purposes of
this Section, Illinois electric utilities that are affiliated
by virtue of a common parent company are considered to be a
single electric utility. Each procurement plan shall analyze
the projected balance of supply and demand for eligible retail
customers over a 5-year period with the first planning year
beginning on June 1 of the year following the year in which the
plan is filed. The plan shall specifically identify the
wholesale products to be procured following plan approval, and
shall follow all the requirements set forth in the Public
Utilities Act and all applicable State and federal laws,
statutes, rules, or regulations, as well as Commission orders.
Nothing in this Section precludes consideration of contracts
longer than 5 years and related forecast data. Unless specified
otherwise in this Section, in the procurement plan or in the
implementing tariff, any procurement occurring in accordance
with this plan shall be competitively bid through a request for
proposals process. Approval and implementation of the
procurement plan shall be subject to review and approval by the
Commission according to the provisions set forth in this
Section. A procurement plan shall include each of the following
components:
        (1) Hourly load analysis. This analysis shall include:
            (i) multi-year historical analysis of hourly
        loads;
            (ii) switching trends and competitive retail
        market analysis;
            (iii) known or projected changes to future loads;
        and
            (iv) growth forecasts by customer class.
        (2) Analysis of the impact of any demand side and
    renewable energy initiatives. This analysis shall include:
            (i) the impact of demand response programs, both
        current and projected;
            (ii) supply side needs that are projected to be
        offset by purchases of renewable energy resources, if
        any; and
            (iii) the impact of energy efficiency programs,
        both current and projected.
        (3) A plan for meeting the expected load requirements
    that will not be met through preexisting contracts. This
    plan shall include:
            (i) definitions of the different retail customer
        classes for which supply is being purchased;
            (ii) the proposed mix of demand-response products
        for which contracts will be executed during the next
        year. The cost-effective demand-response measures
        shall be procured whenever the cost is lower than
        procuring comparable capacity products, provided that
        such products shall:
                (A) be procured by a demand-response provider
            from eligible retail customers;
                (B) at least satisfy the demand-response
            requirements of the regional transmission
            organization market in which the utility's service
            territory is located, including, but not limited
            to, any applicable capacity or dispatch
            requirements;
                (C) provide for customers' participation in
            the stream of benefits produced by the
            demand-response products;
                (D) provide for reimbursement by the
            demand-response provider of the utility for any
            costs incurred as a result of the failure of the
            supplier of such products to perform its
            obligations thereunder; and
                (E) meet the same credit requirements as apply
            to suppliers of capacity, in the applicable
            regional transmission organization market;
            (iii) monthly forecasted system supply
        requirements, including expected minimum, maximum, and
        average values for the planning period;
            (iv) the proposed mix and selection of standard
        wholesale products for which contracts will be
        executed during the next year, separately or in
        combination, to meet that portion of its load
        requirements not met through pre-existing contracts,
        including but not limited to monthly 5 x 16 peak period
        block energy, monthly off-peak wrap energy, monthly 7 x
        24 energy, annual 5 x 16 energy, annual off-peak wrap
        energy, annual 7 x 24 energy, monthly capacity, annual
        capacity, peak load capacity obligations, capacity
        purchase plan, and ancillary services;
            (v) proposed term structures for each wholesale
        product type included in the proposed procurement plan
        portfolio of products; and
            (vi) an assessment of the price risk, load
        uncertainty, and other factors that are associated
        with the proposed procurement plan; this assessment,
        to the extent possible, shall include an analysis of
        the following factors: contract terms, time frames for
        securing products or services, fuel costs, weather
        patterns, transmission costs, market conditions, and
        the governmental regulatory environment; the proposed
        procurement plan shall also identify alternatives for
        those portfolio measures that are identified as having
        significant price risk.
        (4) Proposed procedures for balancing loads. The
    procurement plan shall include, for load requirements
    included in the procurement plan, the process for (i)
    hourly balancing of supply and demand and (ii) the criteria
    for portfolio re-balancing in the event of significant
    shifts in load.
    (c) The procurement process set forth in Section 1-75 of
the Illinois Power Agency Act and subsection (e) of this
Section shall be administered by a procurement administrator
and monitored by a procurement monitor.
        (1) The procurement administrator shall:
            (i) design the final procurement process in
        accordance with Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
        Agency Act and subsection (e) of this Section following
        Commission approval of the procurement plan;
            (ii) develop benchmarks in accordance with
        subsection (e)(3) to be used to evaluate bids; these
        benchmarks shall be submitted to the Commission for
        review and approval on a confidential basis prior to
        the procurement event;
            (iii) serve as the interface between the electric
        utility and suppliers;
            (iv) manage the bidder pre-qualification and
        registration process;
            (v) obtain the electric utilities' agreement to
        the final form of all supply contracts and credit
        collateral agreements;
            (vi) administer the request for proposals process;
            (vii) have the discretion to negotiate to
        determine whether bidders are willing to lower the
        price of bids that meet the benchmarks approved by the
        Commission; any post-bid negotiations with bidders
        shall be limited to price only and shall be completed
        within 24 hours after opening the sealed bids and shall
        be conducted in a fair and unbiased manner; in
        conducting the negotiations, there shall be no
        disclosure of any information derived from proposals
        submitted by competing bidders; if information is
        disclosed to any bidder, it shall be provided to all
        competing bidders;
            (viii) maintain confidentiality of supplier and
        bidding information in a manner consistent with all
        applicable laws, rules, regulations, and tariffs;
            (ix) submit a confidential report to the
        Commission recommending acceptance or rejection of
        bids;
            (x) notify the utility of contract counterparties
        and contract specifics; and
            (xi) administer related contingency procurement
        events.
        (2) The procurement monitor, who shall be retained by
    the Commission, shall:
            (i) monitor interactions among the procurement
        administrator, suppliers, and utility;
            (ii) monitor and report to the Commission on the
        progress of the procurement process;
            (iii) provide an independent confidential report
        to the Commission regarding the results of the
        procurement event;
            (iv) assess compliance with the procurement plans
        approved by the Commission for each utility that on
        December 31, 2005 provided electric service to a least
        100,000 customers in Illinois;
            (v) preserve the confidentiality of supplier and
        bidding information in a manner consistent with all
        applicable laws, rules, regulations, and tariffs;
            (vi) provide expert advice to the Commission and
        consult with the procurement administrator regarding
        issues related to procurement process design, rules,
        protocols, and policy-related matters; and
            (vii) consult with the procurement administrator
        regarding the development and use of benchmark
        criteria, standard form contracts, credit policies,
        and bid documents.
    (d) Except as provided in subsection (j), the planning
process shall be conducted as follows:
        (1) Beginning in 2008, each Illinois utility procuring
    power pursuant to this Section shall annually provide a
    range of load forecasts to the Illinois Power Agency by
    July 15 of each year, or such other date as may be required
    by the Commission or Agency. The load forecasts shall cover
    the 5-year procurement planning period for the next
    procurement plan and shall include hourly data
    representing a high-load, low-load and expected-load
    scenario for the load of the eligible retail customers. The
    utility shall provide supporting data and assumptions for
    each of the scenarios.
        (2) Beginning in 2008, the Illinois Power Agency shall
    prepare a procurement plan by August 15th of each year, or
    such other date as may be required by the Commission. The
    procurement plan shall identify the portfolio of
    demand-response and power and energy products to be
    procured. Cost-effective demand-response measures shall be
    procured as set forth in item (iii) of subsection (b) of
    this Section. Copies of the procurement plan shall be
    posted and made publicly available on the Agency's and
    Commission's websites, and copies shall also be provided to
    each affected electric utility. An affected utility shall
    have 30 days following the date of posting to provide
    comment to the Agency on the procurement plan. Other
    interested entities also may comment on the procurement
    plan. All comments submitted to the Agency shall be
    specific, supported by data or other detailed analyses,
    and, if objecting to all or a portion of the procurement
    plan, accompanied by specific alternative wording or
    proposals. All comments shall be posted on the Agency's and
    Commission's websites. During this 30-day comment period,
    the Agency shall hold at least one public hearing within
    each utility's service area for the purpose of receiving
    public comment on the procurement plan. Within 14 days
    following the end of the 30-day review period, the Agency
    shall revise the procurement plan as necessary based on the
    comments received and file the procurement plan with the
    Commission and post the procurement plan on the websites.
        (3) Within 5 days after the filing of the procurement
    plan, any person objecting to the procurement plan shall
    file an objection with the Commission. Within 10 days after
    the filing, the Commission shall determine whether a
    hearing is necessary. The Commission shall enter its order
    confirming or modifying the procurement plan within 90 days
    after the filing of the procurement plan by the Illinois
    Power Agency.
        (4) The Commission shall approve the procurement plan,
    including expressly the forecast used in the procurement
    plan, if the Commission determines that it will ensure
    adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and
    environmentally sustainable electric service at the lowest
    total cost over time, taking into account any benefits of
    price stability.
    (e) The procurement process shall include each of the
following components:
        (1) Solicitation, pre-qualification, and registration
    of bidders. The procurement administrator shall
    disseminate information to potential bidders to promote a
    procurement event, notify potential bidders that the
    procurement administrator may enter into a post-bid price
    negotiation with bidders that meet the applicable
    benchmarks, provide supply requirements, and otherwise
    explain the competitive procurement process. In addition
    to such other publication as the procurement administrator
    determines is appropriate, this information shall be
    posted on the Illinois Power Agency's and the Commission's
    websites. The procurement administrator shall also
    administer the prequalification process, including
    evaluation of credit worthiness, compliance with
    procurement rules, and agreement to the standard form
    contract developed pursuant to paragraph (2) of this
    subsection (e). The procurement administrator shall then
    identify and register bidders to participate in the
    procurement event.
        (2) Standard contract forms and credit terms and
    instruments. The procurement administrator, in
    consultation with the utilities, the Commission, and other
    interested parties and subject to Commission oversight,
    shall develop and provide standard contract forms for the
    supplier contracts that meet generally accepted industry
    practices. Standard credit terms and instruments that meet
    generally accepted industry practices shall be similarly
    developed. The procurement administrator shall make
    available to the Commission all written comments it
    receives on the contract forms, credit terms, or
    instruments. If the procurement administrator cannot reach
    agreement with the applicable electric utility as to the
    contract terms and conditions, the procurement
    administrator must notify the Commission of any disputed
    terms and the Commission shall resolve the dispute. The
    terms of the contracts shall not be subject to negotiation
    by winning bidders, and the bidders must agree to the terms
    of the contract in advance so that winning bids are
    selected solely on the basis of price.
        (3) Establishment of a market-based price benchmark.
    As part of the development of the procurement process, the
    procurement administrator, in consultation with the
    Commission staff, Agency staff, and the procurement
    monitor, shall establish benchmarks for evaluating the
    final prices in the contracts for each of the products that
    will be procured through the procurement process. The
    benchmarks shall be based on price data for similar
    products for the same delivery period and same delivery
    hub, or other delivery hubs after adjusting for that
    difference. The price benchmarks may also be adjusted to
    take into account differences between the information
    reflected in the underlying data sources and the specific
    products and procurement process being used to procure
    power for the Illinois utilities. The benchmarks shall be
    confidential but shall be provided to, and will be subject
    to Commission review and approval, prior to a procurement
    event.
        (4) Request for proposals competitive procurement
    process. The procurement administrator shall design and
    issue a request for proposals to supply electricity in
    accordance with each utility's procurement plan, as
    approved by the Commission. The request for proposals shall
    set forth a procedure for sealed, binding commitment
    bidding with pay-as-bid settlement, and provision for
    selection of bids on the basis of price.
        (5) A plan for implementing contingencies in the event
    of supplier default or failure of the procurement process
    to fully meet the expected load requirement due to
    insufficient supplier participation, Commission rejection
    of results, or any other cause.
            (i) Event of supplier default: In the event of
        supplier default, the utility shall review the
        contract of the defaulting supplier to determine if the
        amount of supply is 200 megawatts or greater, and if
        there are more than 60 days remaining of the contract
        term. If both of these conditions are met, and the
        default results in termination of the contract, the
        utility shall immediately notify the Illinois Power
        Agency that a request for proposals must be issued to
        procure replacement power, and the procurement
        administrator shall run an additional procurement
        event. If the contracted supply of the defaulting
        supplier is less than 200 megawatts or there are less
        than 60 days remaining of the contract term, the
        utility shall procure power and energy from the
        applicable regional transmission organization market,
        including ancillary services, capacity, and day-ahead
        or real time energy, or both, for the duration of the
        contract term to replace the contracted supply;
        provided, however, that if a needed product is not
        available through the regional transmission
        organization market it shall be purchased from the
        wholesale market.
            (ii) Failure of the procurement process to fully
        meet the expected load requirement: If the procurement
        process fails to fully meet the expected load
        requirement due to insufficient supplier participation
        or due to a Commission rejection of the procurement
        results, the procurement administrator, the
        procurement monitor, and the Commission staff shall
        meet within 10 days to analyze potential causes of low
        supplier interest or causes for the Commission
        decision. If changes are identified that would likely
        result in increased supplier participation, or that
        would address concerns causing the Commission to
        reject the results of the prior procurement event, the
        procurement administrator may implement those changes
        and rerun the request for proposals process according
        to a schedule determined by those parties and
        consistent with Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
        Agency Act and this subsection. In any event, a new
        request for proposals process shall be implemented by
        the procurement administrator within 90 days after the
        determination that the procurement process has failed
        to fully meet the expected load requirement.
            (iii) In all cases where there is insufficient
        supply provided under contracts awarded through the
        procurement process to fully meet the electric
        utility's load requirement, the utility shall meet the
        load requirement by procuring power and energy from the
        applicable regional transmission organization market,
        including ancillary services, capacity, and day-ahead
        or real time energy or both; provided, however, that if
        a needed product is not available through the regional
        transmission organization market it shall be purchased
        from the wholesale market.
        (6) The procurement process described in this
    subsection is exempt from the requirements of the Illinois
    Procurement Code, pursuant to Section 20-10 of that Code.
    (f) Within 2 business days after opening the sealed bids,
the procurement administrator shall submit a confidential
report to the Commission. The report shall contain the results
of the bidding for each of the products along with the
procurement administrator's recommendation for the acceptance
and rejection of bids based on the price benchmark criteria and
other factors observed in the process. The procurement monitor
also shall submit a confidential report to the Commission
within 2 business days after opening the sealed bids. The
report shall contain the procurement monitor's assessment of
bidder behavior in the process as well as an assessment of the
procurement administrator's compliance with the procurement
process and rules. The Commission shall review the confidential
reports submitted by the procurement administrator and
procurement monitor, and shall accept or reject the
recommendations of the procurement administrator within 2
business days after receipt of the reports.
    (g) Within 3 business days after the Commission decision
approving the results of a procurement event, the utility shall
enter into binding contractual arrangements with the winning
suppliers using the standard form contracts; except that the
utility shall not be required either directly or indirectly to
execute the contracts if a tariff that is consistent with
subsection (l) of this Section has not been approved and placed
into effect for that utility.
    (h) The names of the successful bidders and the load
weighted average of the winning bid prices for each contract
type and for each contract term shall be made available to the
public at the time of Commission approval of a procurement
event. The Commission, the procurement monitor, the
procurement administrator, the Illinois Power Agency, and all
participants in the procurement process shall maintain the
confidentiality of all other supplier and bidding information
in a manner consistent with all applicable laws, rules,
regulations, and tariffs. Confidential information, including
the confidential reports submitted by the procurement
administrator and procurement monitor pursuant to subsection
(f) of this Section, shall not be made publicly available and
shall not be discoverable by any party in any proceeding,
absent a compelling demonstration of need, nor shall those
reports be admissible in any proceeding other than one for law
enforcement purposes.
    (i) Within 2 business days after a Commission decision
approving the results of a procurement event or such other date
as may be required by the Commission from time to time, the
utility shall file for informational purposes with the
Commission its actual or estimated retail supply charges, as
applicable, by customer supply group reflecting the costs
associated with the procurement and computed in accordance with
the tariffs filed pursuant to subsection (l) of this Section
and approved by the Commission.
    (j) Within 60 days following the effective date of this
amendatory Act, each electric utility that on December 31, 2005
provided electric service to at least 100,000 customers in
Illinois shall prepare and file with the Commission an initial
procurement plan, which shall conform in all material respects
to the requirements of the procurement plan set forth in
subsection (b); provided, however, that the Illinois Power
Agency Act shall not apply to the initial procurement plan
prepared pursuant to this subsection. The initial procurement
plan shall identify the portfolio of power and energy products
to be procured and delivered for the period June 2008 through
May 2009, and shall identify the proposed procurement
administrator, who shall have the same experience and expertise
as is required of a procurement administrator hired pursuant to
Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. Copies of the
procurement plan shall be posted and made publicly available on
the Commission's website. The initial procurement plan may
include contracts for renewable resources that extend beyond
May 2009.
        (i) Within 14 days following filing of the initial
    procurement plan, any person may file a detailed objection
    with the Commission contesting the procurement plan
    submitted by the electric utility. All objections to the
    electric utility's plan shall be specific, supported by
    data or other detailed analyses. The electric utility may
    file a response to any objections to its procurement plan
    within 7 days after the date objections are due to be
    filed. Within 7 days after the date the utility's response
    is due, the Commission shall determine whether a hearing is
    necessary. If it determines that a hearing is necessary, it
    shall require the hearing to be completed and issue an
    order on the procurement plan within 60 days after the
    filing of the procurement plan by the electric utility.
        (ii) The order shall approve or modify the procurement
    plan, approve an independent procurement administrator,
    and approve or modify the electric utility's tariffs that
    are proposed with the initial procurement plan. The
    Commission shall approve the procurement plan if the
    Commission determines that it will ensure adequate,
    reliable, affordable, efficient, and environmentally
    sustainable electric service at the lowest total cost over
    time, taking into account any benefits of price stability.
    (k) In order to promote price stability for residential and
small commercial customers during the transition to
competition in Illinois, and notwithstanding any other
provision of this Act, each electric utility subject to this
Section shall enter into one or more multi-year financial swap
contracts that become effective on the effective date of this
amendatory Act. These contracts may be executed with generators
and power marketers, including affiliated interests of the
electric utility. These contracts shall be for a term of no
more than 5 years and shall, for each respective utility or for
any Illinois electric utilities that are affiliated by virtue
of a common parent company and that are thereby considered a
single electric utility for purposes of this subsection (k),
not exceed in the aggregate 3,000 megawatts for any hour of the
year. The contracts shall be financial contracts and not energy
sales contracts. The contracts shall be executed as
transactions under a negotiated master agreement based on the
form of master agreement for financial swap contracts sponsored
by the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc.
and shall be considered pre-existing contracts in the
utilities' procurement plans for residential and small
commercial customers. Costs incurred pursuant to a contract
authorized by this subsection (k) shall be deemed prudently
incurred and reasonable in amount and the electric utility
shall be entitled to full cost recovery pursuant to the tariffs
filed with the Commission.
    (k-5) In order to promote price stability for residential
and small commercial customers during the infrastructure
investment program described in subsection (b) of Section
16-108.5 of this Act, and notwithstanding any other provision
of this Act or the Illinois Power Agency Act, for each electric
utility that serves more than one million retail customers in
Illinois, the Illinois Power Agency shall conduct a procurement
event within 120 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly and may procure
contracts for energy and renewable energy credits for the
period June 1, 2013 through December 31, 2017 that satisfy the
requirements of this subsection (k-5), including the
benchmarks described in this subsection. These contracts shall
be entered into as the result of a competitive procurement
event, and, to the extent that any provisions of this Section
or the Illinois Power Agency Act do not conflict with this
subsection (k-5), such provisions shall apply to the
procurement event. The energy contracts shall be for 24 hour by
7 day supply over a term that runs from the first delivery year
through December 31, 2017. For a utility that serves over 2
million customers, the energy contracts shall be multi-year
with pricing escalating at 2.5% per annum. The energy contracts
may be designed as financial swaps or may require physical
delivery.
    Within 30 days of the effective date of this amendatory Act
of the 97th General Assembly, each such utility shall submit to
the Agency updated load forecasts for the period June 1, 2013
through December 31, 2017. The megawatt volume of the contracts
shall be based on the updated load forecasts of the minimum
monthly on-peak or off-peak average load requirements shown in
the forecasts, taking into account any existing energy
contracts in effect as well as the expected migration of the
utility's customers to alternative retail electric suppliers.
The renewable energy credit volume shall be based on the number
of credits that would satisfy the requirements of subsection
(c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, subject
to the rate impact caps and other provisions of subsection (c)
of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. The
evaluation of contract bids in the competitive procurement
events for energy and for renewable energy credits shall
incorporate price benchmarks set collaboratively by the
Agency, the procurement administrator, the staff of the
Commission, and the procurement monitor. If the contracts are
swap contracts, then they shall be executed as transactions
under a negotiated master agreement based on the form of master
agreement for financial swap contracts sponsored by the
International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Costs
incurred pursuant to a contract authorized by this subsection
(k-5) shall be deemed prudently incurred and reasonable in
amount and the electric utility shall be entitled to full cost
recovery pursuant to the tariffs filed with the Commission.
    The cost of administering the procurement event described
in this subsection (k-5) shall be paid by the winning supplier
or suppliers to the procurement administrator through a
supplier fee. In the event that there is no winning supplier
for a particular utility, such utility will pay the procurement
administrator for the costs associated with the procurement
event, and those costs shall not be a recoverable expense.
Nothing in this subsection (k-5) is intended to alter the
recovery of costs for any other procurement event.
    (l) An electric utility shall recover its costs incurred
under this Section, including, but not limited to, the costs of
procuring power and energy demand-response resources under
this Section. The utility shall file with the initial
procurement plan its proposed tariffs through which its costs
of procuring power that are incurred pursuant to a
Commission-approved procurement plan and those other costs
identified in this subsection (l), will be recovered. The
tariffs shall include a formula rate or charge designed to pass
through both the costs incurred by the utility in procuring a
supply of electric power and energy for the applicable customer
classes with no mark-up or return on the price paid by the
utility for that supply, plus any just and reasonable costs
that the utility incurs in arranging and providing for the
supply of electric power and energy. The formula rate or charge
shall also contain provisions that ensure that its application
does not result in over or under recovery due to changes in
customer usage and demand patterns, and that provide for the
correction, on at least an annual basis, of any accounting
errors that may occur. A utility shall recover through the
tariff all reasonable costs incurred to implement or comply
with any procurement plan that is developed and put into effect
pursuant to Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and
this Section, including any fees assessed by the Illinois Power
Agency, costs associated with load balancing, and contingency
plan costs. The electric utility shall also recover its full
costs of procuring electric supply for which it contracted
before the effective date of this Section in conjunction with
the provision of full requirements service under fixed-price
bundled service tariffs subsequent to December 31, 2006. All
such costs shall be deemed to have been prudently incurred. The
pass-through tariffs that are filed and approved pursuant to
this Section shall not be subject to review under, or in any
way limited by, Section 16-111(i) of this Act.
    (m) The Commission has the authority to adopt rules to
carry out the provisions of this Section. For the public
interest, safety, and welfare, the Commission also has
authority to adopt rules to carry out the provisions of this
Section on an emergency basis immediately following the
effective date of this amendatory Act.
    (n) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, any
affiliated electric utilities that submit a single procurement
plan covering their combined needs may procure for those
combined needs in conjunction with that plan, and may enter
jointly into power supply contracts, purchases, and other
procurement arrangements, and allocate capacity and energy and
cost responsibility therefor among themselves in proportion to
their requirements.
    (o) On or before June 1 of each year, the Commission shall
hold an informal hearing for the purpose of receiving comments
on the prior year's procurement process and any recommendations
for change.
    (p) An electric utility subject to this Section may propose
to invest, lease, own, or operate an electric generation
facility as part of its procurement plan, provided the utility
demonstrates that such facility is the least-cost option to
provide electric service to eligible retail customers. If the
facility is shown to be the least-cost option and is included
in a procurement plan prepared in accordance with Section 1-75
of the Illinois Power Agency Act and this Section, then the
electric utility shall make a filing pursuant to Section 8-406
of this the Act, and may request of the Commission any
statutory relief required thereunder. If the Commission grants
all of the necessary approvals for the proposed facility, such
supply shall thereafter be considered as a pre-existing
contract under subsection (b) of this Section. The Commission
shall in any order approving a proposal under this subsection
specify how the utility will recover the prudently incurred
costs of investing in, leasing, owning, or operating such
generation facility through just and reasonable rates charged
to eligible retail customers. Cost recovery for facilities
included in the utility's procurement plan pursuant to this
subsection shall not be subject to review under or in any way
limited by the provisions of Section 16-111(i) of this Act.
Nothing in this Section is intended to prohibit a utility from
filing for a fuel adjustment clause as is otherwise permitted
under Section 9-220 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 95-481, eff. 8-28-07; 95-1027, eff. 6-1-09.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/16-111.5B new)
    Sec. 16-111.5B. Provisions relating to energy efficiency
procurement.
    (a) Beginning in 2012, procurement plans prepared pursuant
to Section 16-111.5 of this Act shall be subject to the
following additional requirements:
        (1) The analysis included pursuant to paragraph (2) of
    subsection (b) of Section 16-111.5 shall also include the
    impact of energy efficiency building codes or appliance
    standards, both current and projected.
        (2) The procurement plan components described in
    subsection (b) of Section 16-111.5 shall also include an
    assessment of opportunities to expand the programs
    promoting energy efficiency measures that have been
    offered under plans approved pursuant to Section 8-103 of
    this Act or to implement additional cost-effective energy
    efficiency programs or measures.
        (3) In addition to the information provided pursuant to
    paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of this
    Act, each Illinois utility procuring power pursuant to that
    Section shall annually provide to the Illinois Power Agency
    by July 15 of each year, or such other date as may be
    required by the Commission or Agency, an assessment of
    cost-effective energy efficiency programs or measures that
    could be included in the procurement plan. The assessment
    shall include the following:
            (A) A comprehensive energy efficiency potential
        study for the utility's service territory that was
        completed within the past 3 years.
            (B) Beginning in 2014, the most recent analysis
        submitted pursuant to Section 8-103A of this Act and
        approved by the Commission under subsection (f) of
        Section 8-103 of this Act.
            (C) Identification of new or expanded
        cost-effective energy efficiency programs or measures
        that are incremental to those included in energy
        efficiency and demand-response plans approved by the
        Commission pursuant to Section 8-103 of this Act and
        that would be offered to eligible retail customers.
            (D) Analysis showing that the new or expanded
        cost-effective energy efficiency programs or measures
        would lead to a reduction in the overall cost of
        electric service.
            (E) Analysis of how the cost of procuring
        additional cost-effective energy efficiency measures
        compares over the life of the measures to the
        prevailing cost of comparable supply.
            (F) An energy savings goal, expressed in
        megawatt-hours, for the year in which the measures will
        be implemented.
        In preparing such assessments, a utility shall conduct
    an annual solicitation process for purposes of requesting
    proposals from third-party vendors, the results of which
    shall be provided to the Agency as part of the assessment,
    including documentation of all bids received. The utility
    shall develop requests for proposals consistent with the
    manner in which it develops requests for proposals under
    plans approved pursuant to Section 8-103 of this Act, which
    considers input from the Agency and interested
    stakeholders.
        (4) The Illinois Power Agency shall include in the
    procurement plan prepared pursuant to paragraph (2) of
    subsection (d) of Section 16-111.5 of this Act energy
    efficiency programs and measures it determines are
    cost-effective and the associated annual energy savings
    goal included in the annual solicitation process and
    assessment submitted pursuant to paragraph (3) of this
    subsection (a).
        (5) Pursuant to paragraph (4) of subsection (d) of
    Section 16-111.5 of this Act, the Commission shall also
    approve the energy efficiency programs and measures
    included in the procurement plan, including the annual
    energy savings goal, if the Commission determines they
    fully capture the potential for all achievable
    cost-effective savings, to the extent practicable, and
    otherwise satisfy the requirements of Section 8-103 of this
    Act.
        In the event the Commission approves the procurement of
    additional energy efficiency, it shall reduce the amount of
    power to be procured under the procurement plan to reflect
    the additional energy efficiency and shall direct the
    utility to undertake the procurement of such energy
    efficiency, which shall not be subject to the requirements
    of subsection (e) of Section 16-111.5 of this Act. The
    utility shall consider input from the Agency and interested
    stakeholders on the procurement and administration
    process.
        (6) An electric utility shall recover its costs
    incurred under this Section related to the implementation
    of energy efficiency programs and measures approved by the
    Commission in its order approving the procurement plan
    under Section 16-111.5 of this Act, including, but not
    limited to, all costs associated with complying with this
    Section and all start-up and administrative costs and the
    costs for any evaluation, measurement, and verification of
    the measures, from eligible retail customers through the
    automatic adjustment clause tariff established pursuant to
    Section 8-103 of this Act, provided, however, that the
    limitations described in subsection (d) of that Section
    shall not apply to the costs incurred pursuant to this
    Section or Section 16-111.7 of this Act.
    (b) For purposes of this Section, the term "energy
efficiency" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 1-10 of
the Illinois Power Agency Act, and the term "cost-effective"
shall have the meaning set forth in subsection (a) of Section
8-103 of this Act. In addition, the estimated costs to acquire
an additional energy efficiency measure, when divided by the
number of kilowatt-hours expected to be saved over the life of
the measure, shall be less than or equal to the electricity
costs that would be avoided as a result of the energy
efficiency measure.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/16-111.7)
    Sec. 16-111.7. On-bill financing program; electric
utilities.
    (a) The Illinois General Assembly finds that Illinois homes
and businesses have the potential to save energy through
conservation and cost-effective energy efficiency measures.
Programs created pursuant to this Section will allow utility
customers to purchase cost-effective energy efficiency
measures, including measures set forth in a
Commission-approved energy efficiency and demand-response plan
under Section 8-103 of this Act and that are cost-effective as
that term is defined by that Section, with no required initial
upfront payment, and to pay the cost of those products and
services over time on their utility bill.
    (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, an
electric utility serving more than 100,000 customers on January
1, 2009 shall offer a Commission-approved on-bill financing
program ("program") that allows its eligible retail customers,
as that term is defined in Section 16-111.5 of this Act, who
own a residential single family home, duplex, or other
residential building with 4 or less units, or condominium at
which the electric service is being provided (i) to borrow
funds from a third party lender in order to purchase electric
energy efficiency measures approved under the program for
installation in such home or condominium without any required
upfront payment and (ii) to pay back such funds over time
through the electric utility's bill. Based upon the process
described in subsection (b-5) of this Section, small commercial
retail customers, as that term is defined in Section 16-102 of
this Act, who own the premises at which electric service is
being provided may be included in such program. After receiving
a request from an electric utility for approval of a proposed
program and tariffs pursuant to this Section, the Commission
shall render its decision within 120 days. If no decision is
rendered within 120 days, then the request shall be deemed to
be approved.
    (b-5) Within 30 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the Commission
shall convene a workshop process during which interested
participants may discuss issues related to the program,
including program design, eligible electric energy efficiency
measures, vendor qualifications, and a methodology for
ensuring ongoing compliance with such qualifications,
financing, sample documents such as request for proposals,
contracts and agreements, dispute resolution, pre-installment
and post-installment verification, and evaluation. The
workshop process shall be completed within 150 days after the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General
Assembly.
    (c) Not later than 60 days following completion of the
workshop process described in subsection (b-5) of this Section,
each electric utility subject to subsection (b) of this Section
shall submit a proposed program to the Commission that contains
the following components:
        (1) A list of recommended electric energy efficiency
    measures that will be eligible for on-bill financing. An
    eligible electric energy efficiency measure ("measure")
    shall be defined by the following:
            (A) the measure would be applied to or replace
        electric energy-using equipment; and either
            (B) application of the measure to equipment and
        systems will have estimated electricity savings
        (determined by rates in effect at the time of
        purchase), that are sufficient to cover the costs of
        implementing the measures, including finance charges
        and any program fees not recovered pursuant to
        subsection (f) of this Section; to . To assist the
        electric utility in identifying or approving measures,
        the utility may consult with the Department of Commerce
        and Economic Opportunity, as well as with retailers,
        technicians, and installers of electric energy
        efficiency measures and energy auditors (collectively
        "vendors"); or .
            (C) the measure is included in a
        Commission-approved energy efficiency and
        demand-response plan under Section 8-103 of this Act
        and is cost-effective as that term is defined by that
        Section.
        (2) The electric utility shall issue a request for
    proposals ("RFP") to lenders for purposes of providing
    financing to participants to pay for approved measures. The
    RFP criteria shall include, but not be limited to, the
    interest rate, origination fees, and credit terms. The
    utility shall select the winning bidders based on its
    evaluation of these criteria, with a preference for those
    bids containing the rates, fees, and terms most favorable
    to participants;
        (3) The utility shall work with the lenders selected
    pursuant to the RFP process, and with vendors, to establish
    the terms and processes pursuant to which a participant can
    purchase eligible electric energy efficiency measures
    using the financing obtained from the lender. The vendor
    shall explain and offer the approved financing packaging to
    those customers identified in subsection (b) of this
    Section and shall assist customers in applying for
    financing. As part of the process, vendors shall also
    provide to participants information about any other
    incentives that may be available for the measures.
        (4) The lender shall conduct credit checks or undertake
    other appropriate measures to limit credit risk, and shall
    review and approve or deny financing applications
    submitted by customers identified in subsection (b) of this
    Section. Following the lender's approval of financing and
    the participant's purchase of the measure or measures, the
    lender shall forward payment information to the electric
    utility, and the utility shall add as a separate line item
    on the participant's utility bill a charge showing the
    amount due under the program each month.
        (5) A loan issued to a participant pursuant to the
    program shall be the sole responsibility of the
    participant, and any dispute that may arise concerning the
    loan's terms, conditions, or charges shall be resolved
    between the participant and lender. Upon transfer of the
    property title for the premises at which the participant
    receives electric service from the utility or the
    participant's request to terminate service at such
    premises, the participant shall pay in full its electric
    utility bill, including all amounts due under the program,
    provided that this obligation may be modified as provided
    in subsection (g) of this Section. Amounts due under the
    program shall be deemed amounts owed for residential and,
    as appropriate, small commercial electric service.
        (6) The electric utility shall remit payment in full to
    the lender each month on behalf of the participant. In the
    event a participant defaults on payment of its electric
    utility bill, the electric utility shall continue to remit
    all payments due under the program to the lender, and the
    utility shall be entitled to recover all costs related to a
    participant's nonpayment through the automatic adjustment
    clause tariff established pursuant to Section 16-111.8 of
    this Act. In addition, the electric utility shall retain a
    security interest in the measure or measures purchased
    under the program, and the utility retains its right to
    disconnect a participant that defaults on the payment of
    its utility bill.
        (7) The total outstanding amount financed under the
    program shall not exceed $2.5 million for an electric
    utility or electric utilities under a single holding
    company, provided that the electric utility or electric
    utilities may petition the Commission for an increase in
    such amount.
    (d) A program approved by the Commission shall also include
the following criteria and guidelines for such program:
        (1) guidelines for financing of measures installed
    under a program, including, but not limited to, RFP
    criteria and limits on both individual loan amounts and the
    duration of the loans;
        (2) criteria and standards for identifying and
    approving measures;
        (3) qualifications of vendors that will market or
    install measures, as well as a methodology for ensuring
    ongoing compliance with such qualifications;
        (4) sample contracts and agreements necessary to
    implement the measures and program; and
        (5) the types of data and information that utilities
    and vendors participating in the program shall collect for
    purposes of preparing the reports required under
    subsection (g) of this Section.
    (e) The proposed program submitted by each electric utility
shall be consistent with the provisions of this Section that
define operational, financial and billing arrangements between
and among program participants, vendors, lenders, and the
electric utility.
    (f) An electric utility shall recover all of the prudently
incurred costs of offering a program approved by the Commission
pursuant to this Section, including, but not limited to, all
start-up and administrative costs and the costs for program
evaluation. All prudently incurred costs under this Section
shall be recovered from the residential and small commercial
retail customer classes eligible to participate in the program
through the automatic adjustment clause tariff established
pursuant to Section 8-103 of this Act.
    (g) An independent evaluation of a program shall be
conducted after 3 years of the program's operation. The
electric utility shall retain an independent evaluator who
shall evaluate the effects of the measures installed under the
program and the overall operation of the program, including but
not limited to customer eligibility criteria and whether the
payment obligation for permanent electric energy efficiency
measures that will continue to provide benefits of energy
savings should attach to the meter location. As part of the
evaluation process, the evaluator shall also solicit feedback
from participants and interested stakeholders. The evaluator
shall issue a report to the Commission on its findings no later
than 4 years after the date on which the program commenced, and
the Commission shall issue a report to the Governor and General
Assembly including a summary of the information described in
this Section as well as its recommendations as to whether the
program should be discontinued, continued with modification or
modifications or continued without modification, provided that
any recommended modifications shall only apply prospectively
and to measures not yet installed or financed.
    (h) An electric utility offering a Commission-approved
program pursuant to this Section shall not be required to
comply with any other statute, order, rule, or regulation of
this State that may relate to the offering of such program,
provided that nothing in this Section is intended to limit the
electric utility's obligation to comply with this Act and the
Commission's orders, rules, and regulations, including Part
280 of Title 83 of the Illinois Administrative Code.
    (i) The source of a utility customer's electric supply
shall not disqualify a customer from participation in the
utility's on-bill financing program. Customers of alternative
retail electric suppliers may participate in the program under
the same terms and conditions applicable to the utility's
supply customers.
(Source: P.A. 96-33, eff. 7-10-09.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/16-128)
    Sec. 16-128. Provisions related to utility employees
during the mandatory transition period.
    (a) The General Assembly finds:
        (1) The reliability and safety of the electric system
    has depended and depends on a workforce of skilled and
    dedicated employees, equipped with technical training and
    experience.
        (2) The integrity and reliability of the system has
    also requires depended on the industry's commitment to
    invest in regular inspection and maintenance, to assure
    that it can withstand the demands of heavy service
    requirements and emergency situations.
        (3) It is in the State's interest to protect the
    interests of utility employees who have and continue to
    dedicate dedicated themselves to assuring reliable service
    to the citizens of this State, and who might otherwise be
    economically displaced in a restructured industry.
    The General Assembly further finds that it is necessary to
assure that employees of electric utilities and employees of
contractors or subcontractors performing work on behalf of an
electric utility operating in the deregulated industry have the
requisite skills, knowledge, training, experience, and
competence to provide reliable and safe electrical service
under this Act and therefore that alternative retail electric
suppliers shall be required to demonstrate the competence of
their employees to work in the industry.
    The General Assembly also finds that it is necessary to
assure that employees of alternative retail electric suppliers
and employees of contractors or subcontractors performing work
on behalf of an alternative retail electric supplier operating
in the deregulated industry have the requisite skills,
knowledge, training, experience, and competence to provide
reliable and safe electrical service under this Act.
    To ensure that these findings and prerequisites for
reliable and safe electrical service continue to prevail, each
alternative retail electric supplier, electric utility, and
contractors and subcontractors performing work on behalf of an
electric utility or alternative retail electric supplier must
demonstrate the competence of their respective employees to
work on the distribution system.
    The knowledge, skill, training, experience, and competence
levels to be demonstrated shall be consistent with those
generally required of or by the electric utilities in this
State as of January 1, 2007, with respect to their employees
and employees of contractors or subcontractors performing work
on their behalf. Nothing in this Section shall prohibit an
electric utility from establishing knowledge, skill, training,
experience, and competence levels greater than those required
as of January 1, 2007.
    An adequate Adequate demonstration of requisite knowledge,
skill, training, experience, and competence shall include, at a
minimum, such factors as completion or current participation
and ultimate completion by the employee of an accredited or
otherwise recognized apprenticeship program for the particular
craft, trade or skill, or specified and several years of
employment with an electric utility performing a particular
work function that is utilized by an electric utility.
    Notwithstanding any law, tariff, Commission rule, order,
or decision to the contrary, the Commission shall have an
affirmative statutory obligation to ensure that an electric
utility is employing employees, contractors, and
subcontractors with employees who meet the requirements of
subsection (a) of this Section when installing, constructing,
operating, and maintaining generation, transmission, or
distribution facilities and equipment within this State
pursuant to any provision in this Act or any Commission order,
rule, or decision.
    For purposes of this Section, "distribution facilities and
equipment" means any and all of the facilities and equipment,
including, but not limited to, substations, distribution
feeder circuits, switches, meters, protective equipment,
primary circuits, distribution transformers, line extensions
and service extensions both above or below ground, conduit,
risers, elbows, transformer pads, junction boxes, manholes,
pedestals, conductors, and all associated fittings that
connect the transmission or distribution system to either the
weatherhead on the retail customer's building or other
structure for above ground service or to the terminals on the
meter base of the retail customer's building or other structure
for below ground service.
    To implement this requirement for alternative retail
electric suppliers, the Commission, in determining that an
applicant meets the standards for certification as an
alternative retail electric supplier, shall require the
applicant to demonstrate (i) that the applicant is licensed to
do business, and bonded, in the State of Illinois; and (ii)
that the employees of the applicant that will be installing,
operating, and maintaining generation, transmission, or
distribution facilities within this State, or any entity with
which the applicant has contracted to perform those functions
within this State, have the requisite knowledge, skills,
training, experience, and competence to perform those
functions in a safe and responsible manner in order to provide
safe and reliable service, in accordance with the criteria
stated above.
    (b) The General Assembly finds, based on experience in
other industries that have undergone similar transitions, that
the introduction of competition into the State's electric
utility industry may result in workforce reductions by electric
utilities which may adversely affect persons who have been
employed by this State's electric utilities in functions
important to the public convenience and welfare. The General
Assembly further finds that the impacts on employees and their
communities of any necessary reductions in the utility
workforce directly caused by this restructuring of the electric
industry shall be mitigated to the extent practicable through
such means as offers of voluntary severance, retraining, early
retirement, outplacement and related benefits. Therefore,
before any such reduction in the workforce during the
transition period, an electric utility shall present to its
employees or their representatives a workforce reduction plan
outlining the means by which the electric utility intends to
mitigate the impact of such workforce reduction on its
employees.
    (c) In the event of a sale, purchase, or any other transfer
of ownership during the mandatory transition period of one or
more Illinois divisions or business units, and/or generating
stations or generating units, of an electric utility, the
electric utility's contract and/or agreements with the
acquiring entity or persons shall require that the entity or
persons hire a sufficient number of non-supervisory employees
to operate and maintain the station, division or unit by
initially making offers of employment to the non-supervisory
workforce of the electric utility's division, business unit,
generating station and/or generating unit at no less than the
wage rates, and substantially equivalent fringe benefits and
terms and conditions of employment that are in effect at the
time of transfer of ownership of said division, business unit,
generating station, and/or generating units; and said wage
rates and substantially equivalent fringe benefits and terms
and conditions of employment shall continue for at least 30
months from the time of said transfer of ownership unless the
parties mutually agree to different terms and conditions of
employment within that 30-month period. The utility shall offer
a transition plan to those employees who are not offered jobs
by the acquiring entity because that entity has a need for
fewer workers. If there is litigation concerning the sale, or
other transfer of ownership of the electric utility's
divisions, business units, generating station, or generating
units, the 30-month period will begin on the date the acquiring
entity or persons take control or management of the divisions,
business units, generating station or generating units of the
electric utility.
    (d) If a utility transfers ownership during the mandatory
transition period of one or more Illinois divisions, business
units, generating stations or generating units of an electric
utility to a majority-owned subsidiary, that subsidiary shall
continue to employ the utility's employees who were employed by
the utility at such division, business unit or generating
station at the time of the transfer under the same terms and
conditions of employment as those employees enjoyed at the time
of the transfer. If ownership of the subsidiary is subsequently
sold or transferred to a third party during the transition
period, the transition provisions outlined in subsection (c)
shall apply.
    (e) The plant transfer provisions set forth above shall not
apply to any generating station which was the subject of a
sales agreement entered into before January 1, 1997.
(Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 12-16-97.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/16-128A new)
    Sec. 16-128A. Certification of installers.
    (a) Within 18 months of the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, the Commission
shall adopt rules, including emergency rules, establishing
certification requirements ensuring that entities installing
distributed generation facilities are in compliance with the
requirements of subsection (a) of Section 16-128 of this Act.
    For purposes of this Section, the phrase "entities
installing distributed generation facilities" shall include,
but not be limited to, all entities that are exempt from the
definition of "alternative retail electric supplier" under
item (v) of Section 16-102 of this Act. For purposes of this
Section, the phrase "self-installer" means an individual who
(i) leases or purchases a cogeneration facility for his or her
own personal use and (ii) installs such cogeneration or
self-generation facility on his or her own premises without the
assistance of any other person.
    (b) In addition to any authority granted to the Commission
under this Act, the Commission is also authorized to: (1)
determine which entities are subject to certification under
this Section; (2) impose reasonable certification fees and
penalties; (3) adopt disciplinary procedures; (4) investigate
any and all activities subject to this Section, including
violations thereof; (5) adopt procedures to issue or renew, or
to refuse to issue or renew, a certification or to revoke,
suspend, place on probation, reprimand, or otherwise
discipline a certified entity under this Act or take other
enforcement action against an entity subject to this Section;
and (6) prescribe forms to be issued for the administration and
enforcement of this Section.
    (c) No electric utility shall provide a retail customer
with net metering service related to interconnection of that
customer's distributed generation facility unless the customer
provides the electric utility with (i) a certification that the
customer installing the distributed generation facility was a
self-installer or (ii) evidence that the distributed
generation facility was installed by an entity certified under
this Section that is also in good standing with the Commission.
For purposes of this subsection, a retail customer includes
that customer's employees, officers, and agents. An electric
utility shall file a tariff or tariffs with the Commission
setting forth the documentation that a retail customer must
provide to an electric utility. The provisions of this
subsection (c) shall apply on or after the effective date of
the Commission's rules prescribed pursuant to subsection (a) of
this Section.
    (d) Within 180 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, the Commission
shall initiate a rulemaking proceeding to establish
certification requirements that shall be applicable to vendors
that install electric vehicle charging stations.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.