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Sen. Rachel Ventura
Filed: 5/18/2023
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1 | | AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 2875
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2 | | AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 2875 by replacing |
3 | | everything after the enacting clause with the following:
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4 | | "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be referred to as
the |
5 | | Thermal Energy Network and Jobs Act.
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6 | | Section 5. Legislative findings and intent. |
7 | | (a) The General Assembly finds and
declares that:
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8 | | (1) This State has a strong interest in ensuring that |
9 | | emissions of greenhouse gases from buildings are reduced |
10 | | because buildings are one of this State's largest sources |
11 | | of greenhouse gases due to the combustion of
fossil fuels |
12 | | for heating, domestic hot water production, cooking, and |
13 | | other end uses.
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14 | | (2) The decarbonization of buildings must be pursued |
15 | | in a manner that
is affordable and accessible, preserves |
16 | | and creates living-wage jobs, and
retains the knowledge |
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1 | | and experience of the existing utility union workforce.
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2 | | (3) Thermal energy networks have the potential to |
3 | | decarbonize buildings
at the community and utility scale |
4 | | and help achieve the goals of Public Act 102-662 (also |
5 | | known as the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act).
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6 | | (4) Thermal energy networks consist of pipe loops |
7 | | between multiple
buildings and energy sources, which carry |
8 | | water and can be connected to by building owners to |
9 | | support heating and cooling and hot water services. |
10 | | Building owners can connect to the loops to support water
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11 | | heating and cooling and hot water services.
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12 | | (5) Many utilities in this State have been seeking to |
13 | | develop thermal energy networks but have encountered legal |
14 | | and regulatory barriers.
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15 | | (6) This State has a strong interest in ensuring an |
16 | | adequate supply
of reliable electrical power and, |
17 | | therefore, needs to promote the development of alternative |
18 | | power sources and take steps to assure reliable
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19 | | deliverability. Thermal energy networks are highly |
20 | | efficient because
they use and exchange thermal energy |
21 | | from many underground sources
and buildings, including |
22 | | recycled thermal energy, which minimizes impacts on
the |
23 | | electricity grid.
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24 | | (7) Access to thermal energy networks has the |
25 | | potential to reduce the
upfront and operating costs of |
26 | | building electrification for customers. |
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1 | | (8) Thermal loop technology provides benefits to |
2 | | participants and non-participants alike including societal |
3 | | benefits to the environment and the market benefits |
4 | | associated with the reduction of both the volume and peak |
5 | | demand of electricity and natural gas.
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6 | | (8) A utility's access to capital, the utility's |
7 | | experience with networked
infrastructure in public |
8 | | rights-of-way, and the requirement that the utility
serve |
9 | | all customers positions the utility well to develop and |
10 | | scale thermal
energy networks that are accessible to all |
11 | | customers and to coordinate
the development of thermal |
12 | | energy networks with any orderly rightsizing of the
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13 | | utility gas system.
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14 | | (9) This State also has an interest in the efficient |
15 | | and
reliable delivery of energy and the energy |
16 | | infrastructure of the State,
which interest is |
17 | | acknowledged throughout the Public Utilities Act. Utility |
18 | | corporations and other power suppliers share these |
19 | | interests and, moreover, have a duty to protect |
20 | | proprietary interests in the projects they fund. Such |
21 | | investments of ratepayer resources can be protected by |
22 | | establishing effective contractor qualification and |
23 | | performance standards, including requirements for |
24 | | prevailing wage rates, bona fide apprenticeship criteria, |
25 | | and project labor agreements.
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26 | | (10) The construction industry is highly skilled and |
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1 | | labor intensive,
and the installation of modern thermal |
2 | | energy networks involves particularly complex work. |
3 | | Therefore, effective qualification standards
for craft |
4 | | labor personnel employed on these projects are critically
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5 | | needed to promote successful project delivery.
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6 | | (11) Finally, these findings are especially vital now |
7 | | because the construction industry is experiencing |
8 | | widespread skill shortages across the country, which are |
9 | | crippling existing capital projects and threatening |
10 | | projects planned for the future. The construction of |
11 | | thermal energy networks will utilize many of the same |
12 | | skills that the current utility and building trades |
13 | | workforces already possess.
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14 | | (b) It is the intent of the General Assembly that passage |
15 | | of this Act is for the following purposes: |
16 | | (1) to remove the legal barriers to utility |
17 | | development of thermal
energy networks and require the |
18 | | Illinois Commerce Commission, within 18 months after the |
19 | | effective date of this amendatory Act of the 103rd General |
20 | | Assembly, to begin to authorize and direct utilities to |
21 | | immediately commence piloting thermal energy networks in |
22 | | each and every utility territory to the extent |
23 | | practicable;
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24 | | (2) to direct and authorize the Illinois Commerce |
25 | | Commission to develop a regulatory structure for utility |
26 | | thermal energy networks that scales affordable and |
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1 | | accessible building electrification, protects customers, |
2 | | and balances the role of incumbent monopoly utilities with |
3 | | other market and public actors;
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4 | | (3) to promote the successful planning and delivery of |
5 | | thermal energy
networks and protect critical investments |
6 | | in such projects by requiring the use of appropriate |
7 | | quality craft labor policies that ensure the development |
8 | | of and access to an adequate supply of well trained, |
9 | | highly skilled craft persons needed to support timely, |
10 | | reliable, high-quality projects;
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11 | | (4) to promote strong economic development and good |
12 | | jobs for local
residents in the expanding decarbonized |
13 | | sector by requiring application of progressive State labor |
14 | | and employment policies that ensure public utility |
15 | | investments and related State subsidies create |
16 | | unparalleled skill training and employment opportunities |
17 | | for residents in project areas through the use of local |
18 | | prevailing wage standards and successful, bona fide |
19 | | apprenticeship programs or project labor agreements that |
20 | | incorporate prevailing wage and training standards and |
21 | | provide additional benefits for project owners and |
22 | | workers; and
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23 | | (5) to promote the use of preapprenticeship programs |
24 | | that will fortify and expand existing apprenticeship |
25 | | programs through systematic outreach efforts to recruit |
26 | | and assist persons from underrepresented and low income |
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1 | | communities by providing such persons with remedial |
2 | | education, social services, and unique opportunities for |
3 | | direct access into high-quality apprenticeship programs |
4 | | and gainful employment in the growing building |
5 | | decarbonization workforce.
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6 | | Section 900. The Public Utilities Act is amended by |
7 | | changing Sections 3-101 and by adding Sections 3-127, 3-128, |
8 | | and 8-513 as follows:
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9 | | (220 ILCS 5/3-101) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 3-101)
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10 | | Sec. 3-101. Definitions. Unless otherwise specified, the |
11 | | terms set forth
in Sections 3-102 through 3-128 3-126 are used |
12 | | in this Act as therein defined.
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13 | | (Source: P.A. 97-96, eff. 7-13-11; 97-239, eff. 8-2-11; |
14 | | 97-813, eff. 7-13-12.)
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15 | | (220 ILCS 5/3-127 new) |
16 | | Sec. 3-127. Thermal energy. "Thermal energy" means piped
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17 | | noncombustible fluids used for transferring heat into and out |
18 | | of buildings for the purpose of reducing any resultant
onsite |
19 | | greenhouse gas emissions of all types of heating and cooling |
20 | | processes, including, but not limited to, comfort heating and |
21 | | cooling, domestic hot water, and refrigeration. |
22 | | (220 ILCS 5/3-128 new) |
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1 | | Sec. 3-128. Thermal energy network. "Thermal energy
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2 | | network" means all real estate, fixtures, and personal |
3 | | property operated, owned, used, or to be used for, in |
4 | | connection with, or to facilitate a utility-scale distribution |
5 | | infrastructure project that supplies thermal energy. |
6 | | (220 ILCS 5/8-513 new) |
7 | | Sec. 8-513. Pilot thermal energy network development. |
8 | | (a) The Illinois Commerce Commission shall initiate a |
9 | | proceeding within 6 months after the effective date of this |
10 | | amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly to support the |
11 | | development of pilot thermal energy networks. The Commission |
12 | | shall consider matters in the proceeding, including, but not |
13 | | limited to, the appropriate ownership, market, and rate |
14 | | structures for pilot thermal energy networks and whether the |
15 | | provision of thermal energy services by thermal network energy |
16 | | providers is in the public interest. |
17 | | (b) Within 10 months after the effective date of this |
18 | | amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly, any gas public |
19 | | utility, electric public utility, or combination public |
20 | | utility serving over 100,000 customers shall file with the |
21 | | Commission a petition seeking Commission approval of at least |
22 | | one and no more than 3 proposed pilot thermal energy network |
23 | | projects. Designs for the projects should coordinate and |
24 | | maximize the value of existing State energy efficiency and |
25 | | weatherization programs and take advantage of federal funding |
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1 | | opportunities to the extent practicable. No later than 20 |
2 | | months after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
3 | | 103rd General Assembly, the Commission shall enter an order |
4 | | approving, approving with modification, or rejecting each |
5 | | proposed pilot thermal energy network project and shall direct |
6 | | the public utility to implement the pilot thermal energy |
7 | | network projects as approved or approved as modified. In |
8 | | considering whether to approve or approve as modified each |
9 | | pilot thermal energy network project, the Commission shall |
10 | | consider whether the pilot thermal energy network project is |
11 | | in the public interest, whether the pilot thermal energy |
12 | | network project will develop information useful for the |
13 | | Commission in adopting rules governing thermal energy
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14 | | networks, whether the pilot thermal energy network project |
15 | | furthers climate justice and emissions reduction, whether the |
16 | | pilot thermal energy network project advances financial and |
17 | | technical approaches to equitable and
affordable building |
18 | | electrification, and whether the pilot thermal energy network |
19 | | project creates benefits to customers and society at large, |
20 | | including, but not limited to, public health benefits in areas |
21 | | with disproportionate environmental or public health burdens, |
22 | | job retention and creation, reliability, and increased
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23 | | affordability of renewable thermal energy options. After the |
24 | | filing of a petition, a
utility may request the Commission to |
25 | | grant additional time for
approval of the pilot thermal energy |
26 | | network project, which shall be approved for at least 6 months |
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1 | | upon request or up to 12 months upon a showing that
additional |
2 | | time would benefit the development of the pilot thermal energy |
3 | | network project. |
4 | | (c) If a utility proposes 3 pilot thermal energy network |
5 | | projects, at least one project shall be proposed in |
6 | | economically disadvantaged communities as defined in Section |
7 | | 5-35 of the Energy Transition Act and at least one shall be |
8 | | focused on existing electric heat customers. Each public |
9 | | utility shall coordinate with other public utilities and |
10 | | consultants with expertise on successful pilot projects to |
11 | | ensure that the pilot projects are diverse and designed to |
12 | | inform the Commission's decisions in the proceeding on the |
13 | | various ownership, market, and rate structures for thermal |
14 | | energy networks. The pilot project proposals shall be made |
15 | | publicly available on the Commission's website. Utilities are
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16 | | encouraged to develop plans that enable and facilitate access |
17 | | to
thermal loop technology benefits, including access by to |
18 | | low and moderate income households. As part of any pilot |
19 | | project proposed
under this Section, a public utility may |
20 | | propose to include customer rebates, incentives, associated |
21 | | tariffs, and proposed regulatory treatment, in a manner |
22 | | similar to Commission approved electric energy
efficiency |
23 | | plans described in Section 8-103B. |
24 | | (d) Any gas public utility, electric public utility, or |
25 | | combination public utility constructing or operating a |
26 | | Commission-approved pilot thermal energy network project shall |
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1 | | report to the Commission, on a quarterly basis and until |
2 | | completion of the pilot thermal energy network project, as |
3 | | determined by the Commission, the status of each pilot thermal |
4 | | energy network project. The Commission shall post and make |
5 | | publicly available the reports on its website. The report |
6 | | shall include, but not be limited to: |
7 | | (1) the stage of development of each pilot project; |
8 | | (2) the barriers to development; |
9 | | (3) the number of customers served; |
10 | | (4) the costs of the pilot project; |
11 | | (5) the number of jobs retained or created by the |
12 | | pilot project; and |
13 | | (6) any other information the Commission deems to
be |
14 | | in the public interest or considers likely to prove useful |
15 | | or relevant to the rulemaking described in subsection (h). |
16 | | (e) Any gas public utility, electric public utility, or |
17 | | combination public utility constructing or operating a |
18 | | Commission-approved pilot thermal energy network project shall |
19 | | demonstrate that it has entered into a labor peace agreement |
20 | | with a bona fide labor organization that is actively engaged |
21 | | in representing its employees. The labor peace agreement shall |
22 | | apply to the employees necessary for the ongoing maintenance |
23 | | and operation of the thermal energy network. The labor peace |
24 | | agreement shall be an ongoing material condition of |
25 | | authorization to maintain and operate the thermal energy |
26 | | networks. |
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1 | | (f) Any contractor or subcontractor that performs work on
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2 | | a pilot thermal energy network under this Section shall be a
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3 | | responsible bidder as described in Section 30-22 of the
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4 | | Illinois Procurement Code and shall certify that not less than |
5 | | prevailing wage, as determined under the Prevailing Wage Act, |
6 | | was or will be paid to employees who are engaged in |
7 | | construction activities associated with the pilot thermal |
8 | | energy network project. The contractor or subcontractor
shall |
9 | | submit evidence to the Commission that it complied with the |
10 | | requirements of this subsection. |
11 | | (g) For any pending application for a thermal energy |
12 | | network, the contractor or subcontractor shall submit evidence |
13 | | that the contractor or subcontractor has entered into a fully |
14 | | executed project labor agreement with the applicable local |
15 | | building trades council. The Commission shall not approve any |
16 | | pending applications until the contractor or subcontractor has |
17 | | submitted the information required under this subsection. |
18 | | (h) Within 4 years after the completion of the |
19 | | construction of all thermal energy network projects under this |
20 | | Section, the Commission shall adopt rules to, at a minimum: |
21 | | (1) create fair market access rules for
thermal energy |
22 | | networks to accept thermal energy and that do
not increase |
23 | | greenhouse gas emissions or copollutants; |
24 | | (2) to the extent it is in the public interest to do |
25 | | so, exempt small-scale thermal energy networks from active |
26 | | regulation by the Commission; |
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1 | | (3) promote the training and transition of utility
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2 | | workers impacted by this amendatory Act of the 103rd
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3 | | General Assembly; and |
4 | | (4) encourage third-party participation and
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5 | | competition where it will maximize benefits to customers. |
6 | | (i) A gas public utility, electric public utility, or |
7 | | combination public utility required to develop any pilot |
8 | | thermal energy network project under this Section shall be |
9 | | permitted to recover all reasonable and prudently incurred |
10 | | costs associated with the development, construction, and |
11 | | operation of one or more pilot thermal energy network projects |
12 | | through general rates set pursuant to Section 9-201 or through |
13 | | rates set in a Multi-Year Rate Plan pursuant to Section |
14 | | 16-108.18. The Commission shall have broad discretion in |
15 | | approving proposed pilot projects that are consistent with the |
16 | | public interest and shall have the discretion to approve all |
17 | | tariffs and issue other regulatory approvals as necessary to |
18 | | permit a pilot program that facilitates a
full review of |
19 | | technologies and associated policies with respect
to thermal |
20 | | network technology in Illinois.
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21 | | Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
22 | | becoming law.".
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