104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
SB3273

 

Introduced 2/3/2026, by Sen. Bill Cunningham

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
220 ILCS 5/16-107.5
220 ILCS 5/17-900

    Amends the Public Utilities Act. Sets forth procedures for the processing of interconnection requests from applicants for distributed renewable generation projects on public school land. Provides that, for all net metering credits or other credits owed to a customer who has elected to install a distributed renewable generation project on public school land, all credits intended for the benefit of the consumer must be credited by the public utility or retail energy supplier within 90 days after the public utility or retail energy supplier determines that the criteria for the credit have been met. Provides that the Illinois Commerce Commission shall adopt revisions to its standards for the interconnection of eligible renewable generating equipment and net metering credit rules to conform with the requirements of the provisions of the amendatory Act. In provisions concerning customer self-generation of electricity, provides that, for distributed renewable generation projects on public school land, any fees for interconnection applications charged by the electric cooperative or municipal system must be substantially similar to the fees charged by public utilities for the interconnection of the same or similar projects and must not exceed 150% of the cost of the base interconnection fees of the other public utilities. Effective immediately.


LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB3273LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The Public Utilities Act is amended by changing
5Sections 16-107.5 and 17-900 as follows:
 
6    (220 ILCS 5/16-107.5)
7    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 104-458)
8    Sec. 16-107.5. Net electricity metering.
9    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that a program
10to provide net electricity metering, as defined in this
11Section, for eligible customers can encourage private
12investment in renewable energy resources, stimulate economic
13growth, enhance the continued diversification of Illinois'
14energy resource mix, and protect the Illinois environment.
15Further, to achieve the goals of this Act that robust options
16for customer-site distributed generation continue to thrive in
17Illinois, the General Assembly finds that a predictable
18transition must be ensured for customers between full net
19metering at the retail electricity rate to the distribution
20generation rebate described in Section 16-107.6.
21    (b) As used in this Section, (i) "community renewable
22generation project" shall have the meaning set forth in
23Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act; (ii) "eligible

 

 

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1customer" means a retail customer that owns, hosts, or
2operates, including any third-party owned systems, a solar,
3wind, or other eligible renewable electrical generating
4facility that is located on the customer's premises or
5customer's side of the billing meter and is intended primarily
6to offset the customer's own current or future electrical
7requirements; (iii) "electricity provider" means an electric
8utility or alternative retail electric supplier; (iv)
9"eligible renewable electrical generating facility" means a
10generator, which may include the co-location of an energy
11storage system, that is interconnected under rules adopted by
12the Commission and is powered by solar electric energy, wind,
13dedicated crops grown for electricity generation, agricultural
14residues, untreated and unadulterated wood waste, livestock
15manure, anaerobic digestion of livestock or food processing
16waste, fuel cells or microturbines powered by renewable fuels,
17or hydroelectric energy; (v) "net electricity metering" (or
18"net metering") means the measurement, during the billing
19period applicable to an eligible customer, of the net amount
20of electricity supplied by an electricity provider to the
21customer or provided to the electricity provider by the
22customer or subscriber; (vi) "subscriber" shall have the
23meaning as set forth in Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power
24Agency Act; (vii) "subscription" shall have the meaning set
25forth in Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act; (viii)
26"energy storage system" means commercially available

 

 

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1technology that is capable of absorbing energy and storing it
2for a period of time for use at a later time, including, but
3not limited to, electrochemical, thermal, and
4electromechanical technologies, and may be interconnected
5behind the customer's meter or interconnected behind its own
6meter; and (ix) "future electrical requirements" means modeled
7electrical requirements upon occupation of a new or vacant
8property, and other reasonable expectations of future
9electrical use, as well as, for occupied properties, a
10reasonable approximation of the annual load of 2 electric
11vehicles and, for non-electric heating customers, a reasonable
12approximation of the incremental electric load associated with
13fuel switching. The approximations shall be applied to the
14appropriate net metering tariff and do not need to be unique to
15each individual eligible customer. The utility shall submit
16these approximations to the Commission for review,
17modification, and approval.
18    (c) A net metering facility shall be equipped with
19metering equipment that can measure the flow of electricity in
20both directions at the same rate.
21        (1) For eligible customers whose electric service has
22    not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113
23    of this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery
24    service is provided and measured on a kilowatt-hour basis
25    and electric supply service is not provided based on
26    hourly pricing, this shall typically be accomplished

 

 

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1    through use of a single, bi-directional meter. If the
2    eligible customer's existing electric revenue meter does
3    not meet this requirement, the electricity provider shall
4    arrange for the local electric utility or a meter service
5    provider to install and maintain a new revenue meter at
6    the electricity provider's expense, which may be the smart
7    meter described by subsection (b) of Section 16-108.5 of
8    this Act.
9        (2) For eligible customers whose electric service has
10    not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113
11    of this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery
12    service is provided and measured on a kilowatt demand
13    basis and electric supply service is not provided based on
14    hourly pricing, this shall typically be accomplished
15    through use of a dual channel meter capable of measuring
16    the flow of electricity both into and out of the
17    customer's facility at the same rate and ratio. If such
18    customer's existing electric revenue meter does not meet
19    this requirement, then the electricity provider shall
20    arrange for the local electric utility or a meter service
21    provider to install and maintain a new revenue meter at
22    the electricity provider's expense, which may be the smart
23    meter described by subsection (b) of Section 16-108.5 of
24    this Act.
25        (3) For all other eligible customers, until such time
26    as the local electric utility installs a smart meter, as

 

 

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1    described by subsection (b) of Section 16-108.5 of this
2    Act, the electricity provider may arrange for the local
3    electric utility or a meter service provider to install
4    and maintain metering equipment capable of measuring the
5    flow of electricity both into and out of the customer's
6    facility at the same rate and ratio, typically through the
7    use of a dual channel meter. If the eligible customer's
8    existing electric revenue meter does not meet this
9    requirement, then the costs of installing such equipment
10    shall be paid for by the customer.
11    (d) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
12credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
13or provided by eligible customers whose electric service has
14not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
15this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery service
16is provided and measured on a kilowatt-hour basis and electric
17supply service is not provided based on hourly pricing in the
18following manner:
19        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
20    during the billing period exceeds the amount of
21    electricity produced by the customer, the electricity
22    provider shall charge the customer for the net electricity
23    supplied to and used by the customer as provided in
24    subsection (e-5) of this Section.
25        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a
26    customer during the billing period exceeds the amount of

 

 

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1    electricity used by the customer during that billing
2    period, the electricity provider supplying that customer
3    shall apply a 1:1 kilowatt-hour credit to a subsequent
4    bill for service to the customer for the net electricity
5    supplied to the electricity provider. The electricity
6    provider shall continue to carry over any excess
7    kilowatt-hour credits earned and apply those credits to
8    subsequent billing periods to offset any
9    customer-generator consumption in those billing periods
10    until all credits are used or until the end of the
11    annualized period.
12        (3) At the end of the year or annualized over the
13    period that service is supplied by means of net metering,
14    or in the event that the retail customer terminates
15    service with the electricity provider prior to the end of
16    the year or the annualized period, any remaining credits
17    in the customer's account shall expire.
18    (d-5) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
19credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
20or provided by eligible customers whose electric service has
21not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
22this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery service
23is provided and measured on a kilowatt-hour basis and electric
24supply service is provided based on hourly pricing or
25time-of-use rates in the following manner:
26        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer

 

 

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1    during any hourly period or time-of-use period exceeds the
2    amount of electricity produced by the customer, the
3    electricity provider shall charge the customer for the net
4    electricity supplied to and used by the customer according
5    to the terms of the contract or tariff to which the same
6    customer would be assigned to or be eligible for if the
7    customer was not a net metering customer.
8        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a
9    customer during any hourly period or time-of-use period
10    exceeds the amount of electricity used by the customer
11    during that hourly period or time-of-use period, the
12    energy provider shall apply a credit for the net
13    kilowatt-hours produced in such period. The credit shall
14    consist of an energy credit and a delivery service credit.
15    The energy credit shall be valued at the same price per
16    kilowatt-hour as the electric service provider would
17    charge for kilowatt-hour energy sales during that same
18    hourly period or time-of-use period. The delivery credit
19    shall be equal to the net kilowatt-hours produced in such
20    hourly period or time-of-use period times a credit that
21    reflects all kilowatt-hour based charges in the customer's
22    electric service rate, excluding energy charges.
23    (e) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
24credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
25whose electric service has not been declared competitive
26pursuant to Section 16-113 of this Act as of July 1, 2011 and

 

 

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1whose electric delivery service is provided and measured on a
2kilowatt demand basis and electric supply service is not
3provided based on hourly pricing in the following manner:
4        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
5    during the billing period exceeds the amount of
6    electricity produced by the customer, then the electricity
7    provider shall charge the customer for the net electricity
8    supplied to and used by the customer as provided in
9    subsection (e-5) of this Section. The customer shall
10    remain responsible for all taxes, fees, and utility
11    delivery charges that would otherwise be applicable to the
12    net amount of electricity used by the customer.
13        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a
14    customer during the billing period exceeds the amount of
15    electricity used by the customer during that billing
16    period, then the electricity provider supplying that
17    customer shall apply a 1:1 kilowatt-hour credit that
18    reflects the kilowatt-hour based charges in the customer's
19    electric service rate to a subsequent bill for service to
20    the customer for the net electricity supplied to the
21    electricity provider. The electricity provider shall
22    continue to carry over any excess kilowatt-hour credits
23    earned and apply those credits to subsequent billing
24    periods to offset any customer-generator consumption in
25    those billing periods until all credits are used or until
26    the end of the annualized period.

 

 

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1        (3) At the end of the year or annualized over the
2    period that service is supplied by means of net metering,
3    or in the event that the retail customer terminates
4    service with the electricity provider prior to the end of
5    the year or the annualized period, any remaining credits
6    in the customer's account shall expire.
7    (e-5) An electricity provider shall provide electric
8service to eligible customers who utilize net metering at
9non-discriminatory rates that are identical, with respect to
10rate structure, retail rate components, and any monthly
11charges, to the rates that the customer would be charged if not
12a net metering customer. An electricity provider shall not
13charge net metering customers any fee or charge or require
14additional equipment, insurance, or any other requirements not
15specifically authorized by interconnection standards
16authorized by the Commission, unless the fee, charge, or other
17requirement would apply to other similarly situated customers
18who are not net metering customers. The customer will remain
19responsible for all taxes, fees, and utility delivery charges
20that would otherwise be applicable to the net amount of
21electricity used by the customer. Subsections (c) through (e)
22of this Section shall not be construed to prevent an
23arms-length agreement between an electricity provider and an
24eligible customer that sets forth different prices, terms, and
25conditions for the provision of net metering service,
26including, but not limited to, the provision of the

 

 

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1appropriate metering equipment for non-residential customers.
2    (f) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsections (c)
3through (e-5) of this Section, an electricity provider must
4require dual-channel metering for customers operating eligible
5renewable electrical generating facilities to whom the
6provisions of neither subsection (d), (d-5), nor (e) of this
7Section apply. In such cases, electricity charges and credits
8shall be determined as follows:
9        (1) The electricity provider shall assess and the
10    customer remains responsible for all taxes, fees, and
11    utility delivery charges that would otherwise be
12    applicable to the gross amount of kilowatt-hours supplied
13    to the eligible customer by the electricity provider.
14        (2) Each month that service is supplied by means of
15    dual-channel metering, the electricity provider shall
16    compensate the eligible customer for any excess
17    kilowatt-hour credits at the electricity provider's
18    avoided cost of electricity supply over the monthly period
19    or as otherwise specified by the terms of a power-purchase
20    agreement negotiated between the customer and electricity
21    provider.
22        (3) For all eligible net metering customers taking
23    service from an electricity provider under contracts or
24    tariffs employing hourly or time-of-use rates, any monthly
25    consumption of electricity shall be calculated according
26    to the terms of the contract or tariff to which the same

 

 

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1    customer would be assigned to or be eligible for if the
2    customer was not a net metering customer. When those same
3    customer-generators are net generators during any discrete
4    hourly or time-of-use period, the net kilowatt-hours
5    produced shall be valued at the same price per
6    kilowatt-hour as the electric service provider would
7    charge for retail kilowatt-hour sales during that same
8    time-of-use period.
9    (g) For purposes of federal and State laws providing
10renewable energy credits or greenhouse gas credits, the
11eligible customer shall be treated as owning and having title
12to the renewable energy attributes, renewable energy credits,
13and greenhouse gas emission credits related to any electricity
14produced by the qualified generating unit. The electricity
15provider may not condition participation in a net metering
16program on the signing over of a customer's renewable energy
17credits; provided, however, this subsection (g) shall not be
18construed to prevent an arms-length agreement between an
19electricity provider and an eligible customer that sets forth
20the ownership or title of the credits.
21    (h) Within 120 days after the effective date of this
22amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, the Commission
23shall establish standards for net metering and, if the
24Commission has not already acted on its own initiative,
25standards for the interconnection of eligible renewable
26generating equipment to the utility system. The

 

 

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1interconnection standards shall address any procedural
2barriers, delays, and administrative costs associated with the
3interconnection of customer-generation while ensuring the
4safety and reliability of the units and the electric utility
5system. The Commission shall consider the Institute of
6Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Standard 1547 and
7the issues of (i) reasonable and fair fees and costs, (ii)
8clear timelines for major milestones in the interconnection
9process, (iii) nondiscriminatory terms of agreement, and (iv)
10any best practices for interconnection of distributed
11generation.
12    (h-5) Within 90 days after the effective date of this
13amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, the Commission
14shall:
15        (1) establish an Interconnection Working Group. The
16    working group shall include representatives from electric
17    utilities, developers of renewable electric generating
18    facilities, other industries that regularly apply for
19    interconnection with the electric utilities,
20    representatives of distributed generation customers, the
21    Commission Staff, and such other stakeholders with a
22    substantial interest in the topics addressed by the
23    Interconnection Working Group. The Interconnection Working
24    Group shall address at least the following issues:
25            (A) cost and best available technology for
26        interconnection and metering, including the

 

 

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1        standardization and publication of standard costs;
2            (B) transparency, accuracy and use of the
3        distribution interconnection queue and hosting
4        capacity maps;
5            (C) distribution system upgrade cost avoidance
6        through use of advanced inverter functions;
7            (D) predictability of the queue management process
8        and enforcement of timelines;
9            (E) benefits and challenges associated with group
10        studies and cost sharing;
11            (F) minimum requirements for application to the
12        interconnection process and throughout the
13        interconnection process to avoid queue clogging
14        behavior;
15            (G) process and customer service for
16        interconnecting customers adopting distributed energy
17        resources, including energy storage;
18            (H) options for metering distributed energy
19        resources, including energy storage;
20            (I) interconnection of new technologies, including
21        smart inverters and energy storage;
22            (J) collect, share, and examine data on Level 1
23        interconnection costs, including cost and type of
24        upgrades required for interconnection, and use this
25        data to inform the final standardized cost of Level 1
26        interconnection; and

 

 

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1            (K) such other technical, policy, and tariff
2        issues related to and affecting interconnection
3        performance and customer service as determined by the
4        Interconnection Working Group.
5        The Commission may create subcommittees of the
6    Interconnection Working Group to focus on specific issues
7    of importance, as appropriate. The Interconnection Working
8    Group shall report to the Commission on recommended
9    improvements to interconnection rules and tariffs and
10    policies as determined by the Interconnection Working
11    Group at least every 6 months. Such reports shall include
12    consensus recommendations of the Interconnection Working
13    Group and, if applicable, additional recommendations for
14    which consensus was not reached. The Commission shall use
15    the report from the Interconnection Working Group to
16    determine whether processes should be commenced to
17    formally codify or implement the recommendations;
18        (2) create or contract for an Ombudsman to resolve
19    interconnection disputes through non-binding arbitration.
20    The Ombudsman may be paid in full or in part through fees
21    levied on the initiators of the dispute; and
22        (3) determine a single standardized cost for Level 1
23    interconnections, which shall not exceed $200.
24    (h-7) After an electric distribution company determines
25that an interconnection request from an applicant for a
26distributed renewable generation project on public school land

 

 

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1has been completed, the electric distribution company must
2immediately, without assigning the project to the queue, begin
3all evaluations, reviews, and screenings of the
4interconnection request. The electric distribution company
5must complete all interconnection-related evaluations,
6reviews, and screenings within 30 days after the electric
7distribution company determines that the interconnection
8request is complete and, as soon as practicable thereafter,
9must disclose to the applicant all necessary
10interconnection-related upgrades, costs, and construction
11schedules. If the electric distribution company determines
12that there is no requirement for the construction of
13facilities by the electric distribution company on its own
14system, the electric distribution company shall provide the
15applicant with an interconnection agreement. If the electric
16distribution company determines that only minor system
17modifications are required, the electric distribution company
18shall provide the applicant with an interconnection agreement
19within 10 days after the applicant elects to continue the
20application and pays any necessary fees. If the electric
21distribution company determines that more than minor
22modifications are necessary and no interconnection facilities
23study is needed, the electric distribution company shall
24provide the applicant with an interconnection agreement within
2520 days after the applicant elects to continue the application
26and pays any necessary fees. If the electric distribution

 

 

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1company determines that more than minor modifications are
2necessary and an interconnection facilities study is needed,
3the electric distribution company shall provide the applicant
4with an interconnection agreement within 30 days after the
5applicant elects to continue the application and pays any
6necessary fees.
7    For all net metering credits or other credits owed to a
8customer who has elected to install a distributed renewable
9generation project on public school land, all credits intended
10for the benefit of the consumer must be credited by the public
11utility or retail energy supplier within 90 days after the
12public utility or retail energy supplier determines that the
13criteria for the credit have been met.
14    As soon as practicable after the effective date of this
15amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, the Commission
16shall adopt revisions to its standards for the interconnection
17of eligible renewable generating equipment and net metering
18credit rules to conform with the requirements of this
19amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly.
20    As used in this subsection:
21    "Electric distribution company" means any electric utility
22subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission.
23    "Public schools" has the meaning set forth in Section 1-3
24of the School Code and includes public institutions of higher
25education, as defined in the Board of Higher Education Act.
26    (i) All electricity providers shall begin to offer net

 

 

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1metering no later than April 1, 2008.
2    (j) An electricity provider shall provide net metering to
3eligible customers according to subsections (d), (d-5), and
4(e). Eligible renewable electrical generating facilities for
5which eligible customers registered for net metering before
6January 1, 2025 shall continue to receive net metering
7services according to subsections (d), (d-5), and (e) of this
8Section for the lifetime of the system, regardless of whether
9those retail customers change electricity providers or whether
10the retail customer benefiting from the system changes. On and
11after January 1, 2025, any eligible customer that applies for
12net metering and previously would have qualified under
13subsections (d), (d-5), or (e) shall only be eligible for net
14metering as described in subsection (n).
15    (k) Each electricity provider shall maintain records and
16report annually to the Commission the total number of net
17metering customers served by the provider, as well as the
18type, capacity, and energy sources of the generating systems
19used by the net metering customers. Nothing in this Section
20shall limit the ability of an electricity provider to request
21the redaction of information deemed by the Commission to be
22confidential business information.
23    (l)(1) Notwithstanding the definition of "eligible
24customer" in item (ii) of subsection (b) of this Section, each
25electricity provider shall allow net metering as set forth in
26this subsection (l) and for the following projects, provided

 

 

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1that only electric utilities serving more than 200,000
2customers as of January 1, 2021 shall provide net metering for
3projects that are eligible for subparagraph (C) of this
4paragraph (1) and have energized after the effective date of
5this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly:
6        (A) properties owned or leased by multiple customers
7    that contribute to the operation of an eligible renewable
8    electrical generating facility through an ownership or
9    leasehold interest of at least 200 watts in such facility,
10    such as a community-owned wind project, a community-owned
11    biomass project, a community-owned solar project, or a
12    community methane digester processing livestock waste from
13    multiple sources, provided that the facility is also
14    located within the utility's service territory;
15        (B) individual units, apartments, or properties
16    located in a single building that are owned or leased by
17    multiple customers and collectively served by a common
18    eligible renewable electrical generating facility, such as
19    an office or apartment building, a shopping center or
20    strip mall served by photovoltaic panels on the roof; and
21        (C) subscriptions to community renewable generation
22    projects, including community renewable generation
23    projects on the customer's side of the billing meter of a
24    host facility and partially used for the customer's own
25    load.
26    In addition, the nameplate capacity of the eligible

 

 

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1renewable electric generating facility that serves the demand
2of the properties, units, or apartments identified in
3paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection (l) shall not exceed
45,000 kilowatts in nameplate capacity in total. Any eligible
5renewable electrical generating facility or community
6renewable generation project that is powered by photovoltaic
7electric energy and installed after the effective date of this
8amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly must be installed
9by a qualified person in compliance with the requirements of
10Section 16-128A of the Public Utilities Act and any rules or
11regulations adopted thereunder.
12    (2) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, an
13electricity provider shall provide credits for the electricity
14produced by the projects described in paragraph (1) of this
15subsection (l). The electricity provider shall provide credits
16that include at least energy supply, capacity, transmission,
17and, if applicable, the purchased energy adjustment on the
18subscriber's monthly bill equal to the subscriber's share of
19the production of electricity from the project, as determined
20by paragraph (3) of this subsection (l). For customers with
21transmission or capacity charges not charged on a
22kilowatt-hour basis, the electricity provider shall prepare a
23reasonable approximation of the kilowatt-hour equivalent value
24and provide that value as a monetary credit. The electricity
25provider shall submit these approximation methodologies to the
26Commission for review, modification, and approval.

 

 

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1Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, customers on payment
2plans or participating in budget billing programs shall have
3credits applied on a monthly basis.
4    (3) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary and
5regardless of whether a subscriber to an eligible community
6renewable generation project receives power and energy service
7from the electric utility or an alternative retail electric
8supplier, for projects eligible under paragraph (C) of
9subparagraph (1) of this subsection (l), electric utilities
10serving more than 200,000 customers as of January 1, 2021
11shall provide the monetary credits to a subscriber's
12subsequent bill for the electricity produced by community
13renewable generation projects. The electric utility shall
14provide monetary credits to a subscriber's subsequent bill at
15the utility's total price to compare equal to the subscriber's
16share of the production of electricity from the project, as
17determined by paragraph (5) of this subsection (l). For the
18purposes of this subsection, "total price to compare" means
19the rate or rates published by the Illinois Commerce
20Commission for energy supply for eligible customers receiving
21supply service from the electric utility, and shall include
22energy, capacity, transmission, and the purchased energy
23adjustment. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary,
24customers on payment plans or participating in budget billing
25programs shall have credits applied on a monthly basis. Any
26applicable credit or reduction in load obligation from the

 

 

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1production of the community renewable generating projects
2receiving a credit under this subsection shall be credited to
3the electric utility to offset the cost of providing the
4credit. To the extent that the credit or load obligation
5reduction does not completely offset the cost of providing the
6credit to subscribers of community renewable generation
7projects as described in this subsection, the electric utility
8may recover the remaining costs through its Multi-Year Rate
9Plan. All electric utilities serving 200,000 or fewer
10customers as of January 1, 2021 shall only provide the
11monetary credits to a subscriber's subsequent bill for the
12electricity produced by community renewable generation
13projects if the subscriber receives power and energy service
14from the electric utility. Alternative retail electric
15suppliers providing power and energy service to a subscriber
16located within the service territory of an electric utility
17not subject to Sections 16-108.18 and 16-118 shall provide the
18monetary credits to the subscriber's subsequent bill for the
19electricity produced by community renewable generation
20projects.
21    (4) If requested by the owner or operator of a community
22renewable generating project, an electric utility serving more
23than 200,000 customers as of January 1, 2021 shall enter into a
24net crediting agreement with the owner or operator to include
25a subscriber's subscription fee on the subscriber's monthly
26electric bill and provide the subscriber with a net credit

 

 

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1equivalent to the total bill credit value for that generation
2period minus the subscription fee, provided the subscription
3fee is structured as a fixed percentage of bill credit value.
4The net crediting agreement shall set forth payment terms from
5the electric utility to the owner or operator of the community
6renewable generating project, and the electric utility may
7charge a net crediting fee to the owner or operator of a
8community renewable generating project that may not exceed 2%
9of the bill credit value. Notwithstanding anything to the
10contrary, an electric utility serving 200,000 customers or
11fewer as of January 1, 2021 shall not be obligated to enter
12into a net crediting agreement with the owner or operator of a
13community renewable generating project.
14    (5) For the purposes of facilitating net metering, the
15owner or operator of the eligible renewable electrical
16generating facility or community renewable generation project
17shall be responsible for determining the amount of the credit
18that each customer or subscriber participating in a project
19under this subsection (l) is to receive in the following
20manner:
21        (A) The owner or operator shall, on a monthly basis,
22    provide to the electric utility the kilowatthours of
23    generation attributable to each of the utility's retail
24    customers and subscribers participating in projects under
25    this subsection (l) in accordance with the customer's or
26    subscriber's share of the eligible renewable electric

 

 

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1    generating facility's or community renewable generation
2    project's output of power and energy for such month. The
3    owner or operator shall electronically transmit such
4    calculations and associated documentation to the electric
5    utility, in a format or method set forth in the applicable
6    tariff, on a monthly basis so that the electric utility
7    can reflect the monetary credits on customers' and
8    subscribers' electric utility bills. The electric utility
9    shall be permitted to revise its tariffs to implement the
10    provisions of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General
11    Assembly. The owner or operator shall separately provide
12    the electric utility with the documentation detailing the
13    calculations supporting the credit in the manner set forth
14    in the applicable tariff.
15        (B) For those participating customers and subscribers
16    who receive their energy supply from an alternative retail
17    electric supplier, the electric utility shall remit to the
18    applicable alternative retail electric supplier the
19    information provided under subparagraph (A) of this
20    paragraph (3) for such customers and subscribers in a
21    manner set forth in such alternative retail electric
22    supplier's net metering program, or as otherwise agreed
23    between the utility and the alternative retail electric
24    supplier. The alternative retail electric supplier shall
25    then submit to the utility the amount of the charges for
26    power and energy to be applied to such customers and

 

 

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1    subscribers, including the amount of the credit associated
2    with net metering.
3        (C) A participating customer or subscriber may provide
4    authorization as required by applicable law that directs
5    the electric utility to submit information to the owner or
6    operator of the eligible renewable electrical generating
7    facility or community renewable generation project to
8    which the customer or subscriber has an ownership or
9    leasehold interest or a subscription. Such information
10    shall be limited to the components of the net metering
11    credit calculated under this subsection (l), including the
12    bill credit rate, total kilowatthours, and total monetary
13    credit value applied to the customer's or subscriber's
14    bill for the monthly billing period.
15    (l-5) Within 90 days after the effective date of this
16amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, each electric
17utility subject to this Section shall file a tariff or tariffs
18to implement the provisions of subsection (l) of this Section,
19which shall, consistent with the provisions of subsection (l),
20describe the terms and conditions under which owners or
21operators of qualifying properties, units, or apartments may
22participate in net metering. The Commission shall approve, or
23approve with modification, the tariff within 120 days after
24the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General
25Assembly.
26    (m) Nothing in this Section shall affect the right of an

 

 

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1electricity provider to continue to provide, or the right of a
2retail customer to continue to receive service pursuant to a
3contract for electric service between the electricity provider
4and the retail customer in accordance with the prices, terms,
5and conditions provided for in that contract. Either the
6electricity provider or the customer may require compliance
7with the prices, terms, and conditions of the contract.
8    (n) On and after January 1, 2025, the net metering
9services described in subsections (d), (d-5), and (e) of this
10Section shall no longer be offered, except as to those
11eligible renewable electrical generating facilities for which
12retail customers are receiving net metering service under
13these subsections at the time the net metering services under
14those subsections are no longer offered; those systems shall
15continue to receive net metering services described in
16subsections (d), (d-5), and (e) of this Section for the
17lifetime of the system, regardless of if those retail
18customers change electricity providers or whether the retail
19customer benefiting from the system changes. The electric
20utility serving more than 200,000 customers as of January 1,
212021 is responsible for ensuring the billing credits continue
22without lapse for the lifetime of systems, as required in
23subsection (o). Those retail customers that begin taking net
24metering service after the date that net metering services are
25no longer offered under such subsections shall be subject to
26the provisions set forth in the following paragraphs (1)

 

 

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1through (3) of this subsection (n):
2        (1) An electricity provider shall charge or credit for
3    the net electricity supplied to eligible customers or
4    provided by eligible customers whose electric supply
5    service is not provided based on hourly pricing in the
6    following manner:
7            (A) If the amount of electricity used by the
8        customer during the monthly billing period exceeds the
9        amount of electricity produced by the customer, then
10        the electricity provider shall charge the customer for
11        the net kilowatt-hour based electricity charges
12        reflected in the customer's electric service rate
13        supplied to and used by the customer as provided in
14        paragraph (3) of this subsection (n).
15            (B) If the amount of electricity produced by a
16        customer during the monthly billing period exceeds the
17        amount of electricity used by the customer during that
18        billing period, then the electricity provider
19        supplying that customer shall apply a 1:1
20        kilowatt-hour energy or monetary credit kilowatt-hour
21        supply charges to the customer's subsequent bill. The
22        customer shall choose between 1:1 kilowatt-hour or
23        monetary credit at the time of application. For the
24        purposes of this subsection, "kilowatt-hour supply
25        charges" means the kilowatt-hour equivalent values for
26        energy, capacity, transmission, and the purchased

 

 

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1        energy adjustment, if applicable. Notwithstanding
2        anything to the contrary, customers on payment plans
3        or participating in budget billing programs shall have
4        credits applied on a monthly basis. The electricity
5        provider shall continue to carry over any excess
6        kilowatt-hour or monetary energy credits earned and
7        apply those credits to subsequent billing periods. For
8        customers with transmission or capacity charges not
9        charged on a kilowatt-hour basis, the electricity
10        provider shall prepare a reasonable approximation of
11        the kilowatt-hour equivalent value and provide that
12        value as a monetary credit. The electricity provider
13        shall submit these approximation methodologies to the
14        Commission for review, modification, and approval.
15            (C) (Blank).
16        (2) An electricity provider shall charge or credit for
17    the net electricity supplied to eligible customers or
18    provided by eligible customers whose electric supply
19    service is provided based on hourly pricing in the
20    following manner:
21            (A) If the amount of electricity used by the
22        customer during any hourly period exceeds the amount
23        of electricity produced by the customer, then the
24        electricity provider shall charge the customer for the
25        net electricity supplied to and used by the customer
26        as provided in paragraph (3) of this subsection (n).

 

 

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1            (B) If the amount of electricity produced by a
2        customer during any hourly period exceeds the amount
3        of electricity used by the customer during that hourly
4        period, the energy provider shall calculate an energy
5        credit for the net kilowatt-hours produced in such
6        period, and shall apply that credit as a monetary
7        credit to the customer's subsequent bill. The value of
8        the energy credit shall be calculated using the same
9        price per kilowatt-hour as the electric service
10        provider would charge for kilowatt-hour energy sales
11        during that same hourly period and shall also include
12        values for capacity and transmission. For customers
13        with transmission or capacity charges not charged on a
14        kilowatt-hour basis, the electricity provider shall
15        prepare a reasonable approximation of the
16        kilowatt-hour equivalent value and provide that value
17        as a monetary credit. The electricity provider shall
18        submit these approximation methodologies to the
19        Commission for review, modification, and approval.
20        Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, customers on
21        payment plans or participating in budget billing
22        programs shall have credits applied on a monthly
23        basis.
24        (3) An electricity provider shall provide electric
25    service to eligible customers who utilize net metering at
26    non-discriminatory rates that are identical, with respect

 

 

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1    to rate structure, retail rate components, and any monthly
2    charges, to the rates that the customer would be charged
3    if not a net metering customer. An electricity provider
4    shall charge the customer for the net electricity supplied
5    to and used by the customer according to the terms of the
6    contract or tariff to which the same customer would be
7    assigned or be eligible for if the customer was not a net
8    metering customer. An electricity provider shall not
9    charge net metering customers any fee or charge or require
10    additional equipment, insurance, or any other requirements
11    not specifically authorized by interconnection standards
12    authorized by the Commission, unless the fee, charge, or
13    other requirement would apply to other similarly situated
14    customers who are not net metering customers. The customer
15    remains responsible for the gross amount of delivery
16    services charges, supply-related charges that are kilowatt
17    based, and all taxes and fees related to such charges. The
18    customer also remains responsible for all taxes and fees
19    that would otherwise be applicable to the net amount of
20    electricity used by the customer. Paragraphs (1) and (2)
21    of this subsection (n) shall not be construed to prevent
22    an arms-length agreement between an electricity provider
23    and an eligible customer that sets forth different prices,
24    terms, and conditions for the provision of net metering
25    service, including, but not limited to, the provision of
26    the appropriate metering equipment for non-residential

 

 

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1    customers. Nothing in this paragraph (3) shall be
2    interpreted to mandate that a utility that is only
3    required to provide delivery services to a given customer
4    must also sell electricity to such customer.
5    (o) Within 90 days after the effective date of this
6amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, each electric
7utility subject to this Section shall file a tariff, which
8shall, consistent with the provisions of this Section, propose
9the terms and conditions under which a customer may
10participate in net metering. The tariff for electric utilities
11serving more than 200,000 customers as of January 1, 2021
12shall also provide a streamlined and transparent bill
13crediting system for net metering to be managed by the
14electric utilities. The terms and conditions shall include,
15but are not limited to, that an electric utility shall manage
16and maintain billing of net metering credits and charges
17regardless of if the eligible customer takes net metering
18under an electric utility or alternative retail electric
19supplier. The electric utility serving more than 200,000
20customers as of January 1, 2021 shall process and approve all
21net metering applications, even if an eligible customer is
22served by an alternative retail electric supplier; and the
23utility shall forward application approval to the appropriate
24alternative retail electric supplier. Eligibility for net
25metering shall remain with the owner of the utility billing
26address such that, if an eligible renewable electrical

 

 

SB3273- 31 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1generating facility changes ownership, the net metering
2eligibility transfers to the new owner. The electric utility
3serving more than 200,000 customers as of January 1, 2021
4shall manage net metering billing for eligible customers to
5ensure full crediting occurs on electricity bills, including,
6but not limited to, ensuring net metering crediting begins
7upon commercial operation date, net metering billing transfers
8immediately if an eligible customer switches from an electric
9utility to alternative retail electric supplier or vice versa,
10and net metering billing transfers between ownership of a
11valid billing address. All transfers referenced in the
12preceding sentence shall include transfer of all banked
13credits. All electric utilities serving 200,000 or fewer
14customers as of January 1, 2021 shall manage net metering
15billing for eligible customers receiving power and energy
16service from the electric utility to ensure full crediting
17occurs on electricity bills, ensuring net metering crediting
18begins upon commercial operation date, net metering billing
19transfers immediately if an eligible customer switches from an
20electric utility to alternative retail electric supplier or
21vice versa, and net metering billing transfers between
22ownership of a valid billing address. Alternative retail
23electric suppliers providing power and energy service to
24eligible customers located within the service territory of an
25electric utility serving 200,000 or fewer customers as of
26January 1, 2021 shall manage net metering billing for eligible

 

 

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1customers to ensure full crediting occurs on electricity
2bills, including, but not limited to, ensuring net metering
3crediting begins upon commercial operation date, net metering
4billing transfers immediately if an eligible customer switches
5from an electric utility to alternative retail electric
6supplier or vice versa, and net metering billing transfers
7between ownership of a valid billing address.
8(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21.)
 
9    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 104-458)
10    Sec. 16-107.5. Net electricity metering.
11    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that a program
12to provide net electricity metering, as defined in this
13Section, for eligible customers can encourage private
14investment in renewable energy resources, stimulate economic
15growth, enhance the continued diversification of Illinois'
16energy resource mix, and protect the Illinois environment.
17Further, to achieve the goals of this Act that robust options
18for customer-site distributed generation and storage continue
19to thrive in Illinois, the General Assembly finds that a
20predictable transition must be ensured for customers between
21full net metering at the retail electricity rate to the
22distribution generation rebate described in Section 16-107.6.
23    (b) As used in this Section:
24        (i) "Community renewable generation project" shall
25    have the meaning set forth in Section 1-10 of the Illinois

 

 

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1    Power Agency Act.
2        (ii) "Eligible customer" means a retail customer that
3    owns, hosts, or operates, including any third-party owned
4    systems, a solar, wind, or other eligible renewable
5    electrical generating facility or an eligible storage
6    device that is located on the customer's premises or
7    customer's side of the billing meter and is intended
8    primarily to offset the customer's own current or future
9    electrical requirements.
10        (iii) "Electricity provider" means an electric utility
11    or alternative retail electric supplier.
12        (iv) "Eligible renewable electrical generating
13    facility" means a generator, which may include the
14    colocation of an energy storage system, that is
15    interconnected under rules adopted by the Commission and
16    is powered by solar electric energy, wind, dedicated crops
17    grown for electricity generation, agricultural residues,
18    untreated and unadulterated wood waste, livestock manure,
19    anaerobic digestion of livestock or food processing waste,
20    fuel cells or microturbines powered by renewable fuels, or
21    hydroelectric energy.
22        (v) "Net electricity metering" (or "net metering")
23    means the measurement, during the billing period
24    applicable to an eligible customer, of the net amount of
25    electricity supplied by an electricity provider to the
26    customer or provided to the electricity provider by the

 

 

SB3273- 34 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1    customer or subscriber.
2        (vi) "Subscriber" shall have the meaning as set forth
3    in Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act.
4        (vii) "Subscription" shall have the meaning set forth
5    in Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act.
6        (viii) "Energy storage system" means commercially
7    available technology that is capable of absorbing energy
8    and storing it for a period of time for use at a later
9    time, including, but not limited to, electrochemical,
10    thermal, and electromechanical technologies, and may be
11    interconnected behind the customer's meter or
12    interconnected behind its own meter.
13        (ix) "Future electrical requirements" means modeled
14    electrical requirements upon occupation of a new or vacant
15    property, and other reasonable expectations of future
16    electrical use, as well as, for occupied properties, a
17    reasonable approximation of the annual load of 2 electric
18    vehicles and, for non-electric heating customers, a
19    reasonable approximation of the incremental electric load
20    associated with fuel switching. The approximations shall
21    be applied to the appropriate net metering tariff and do
22    not need to be unique to each individual eligible
23    customer. The utility shall submit these approximations to
24    the Commission for review, modification, and approval.
25        (x) "Vehicle storage system" means a vehicle that when
26    connected to an electric utility's distribution system is

 

 

SB3273- 35 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1    capable of being an energy storage system, as defined in
2    Section 16-107.6.
3    (c) A net metering facility shall be equipped with
4metering equipment that can measure the flow of electricity in
5both directions at the same rate.
6        (1) For eligible customers whose electric service has
7    not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113
8    of this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery
9    service is provided and measured on a kilowatt-hour basis
10    and electric supply service is not provided based on
11    hourly pricing, this shall typically be accomplished
12    through use of a single, bi-directional meter. If the
13    eligible customer's existing electric revenue meter does
14    not meet this requirement, the electricity provider shall
15    arrange for the local electric utility or a meter service
16    provider to install and maintain a new revenue meter at
17    the electricity provider's expense, which may be the smart
18    meter described by subsection (b) of Section 16-108.5 of
19    this Act.
20        (2) For eligible customers whose electric service has
21    not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113
22    of this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery
23    service is provided and measured on a kilowatt demand
24    basis and electric supply service is not provided based on
25    hourly pricing, this shall typically be accomplished
26    through use of a dual channel meter capable of measuring

 

 

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1    the flow of electricity both into and out of the
2    customer's facility at the same rate and ratio. If such
3    customer's existing electric revenue meter does not meet
4    this requirement, then the electricity provider shall
5    arrange for the local electric utility or a meter service
6    provider to install and maintain a new revenue meter at
7    the electricity provider's expense, which may be the smart
8    meter described by subsection (b) of Section 16-108.5 of
9    this Act.
10        (3) For all other eligible customers, until such time
11    as the local electric utility installs a smart meter, as
12    described by subsection (b) of Section 16-108.5 of this
13    Act, the electricity provider may arrange for the local
14    electric utility or a meter service provider to install
15    and maintain metering equipment capable of measuring the
16    flow of electricity both into and out of the customer's
17    facility at the same rate and ratio, typically through the
18    use of a dual channel meter. If the eligible customer's
19    existing electric revenue meter does not meet this
20    requirement, then the costs of installing such equipment
21    shall be paid for by the customer.
22    (d) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
23credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
24or provided by eligible customers whose electric service has
25not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
26this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery service

 

 

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1is provided and measured on a kilowatt-hour basis and electric
2supply service is not provided based on hourly pricing in the
3following manner:
4        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
5    during the billing period exceeds the amount of
6    electricity produced by the customer, the electricity
7    provider shall charge the customer for the net electricity
8    supplied to and used by the customer as provided in
9    subsection (e-5) of this Section.
10        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a
11    customer during the billing period exceeds the amount of
12    electricity used by the customer during that billing
13    period, the electricity provider supplying that customer
14    shall apply a 1:1 kilowatt-hour credit to a subsequent
15    bill for service to the customer for the net electricity
16    supplied to the electricity provider. The electricity
17    provider shall continue to carry over any excess
18    kilowatt-hour credits earned and apply those credits to
19    subsequent billing periods to offset any
20    customer-generator consumption in those billing periods
21    until all credits are used or until the end of the
22    annualized period.
23        (3) At the end of the year or annualized over the
24    period that service is supplied by means of net metering,
25    or in the event that the retail customer terminates
26    service with the electricity provider prior to the end of

 

 

SB3273- 38 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1    the year or the annualized period, any remaining credits
2    in the customer's account shall expire.
3    (d-5) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
4credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
5or provided by eligible customers whose electric service has
6not been declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of
7this Act as of July 1, 2011 and whose electric delivery service
8is provided and measured on a kilowatt-hour basis and electric
9supply service is provided based on hourly pricing or
10time-of-use rates in the following manner:
11        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
12    during any hourly period or time-of-use period exceeds the
13    amount of electricity produced by the customer, the
14    electricity provider shall charge the customer for the net
15    electricity supplied to and used by the customer according
16    to the terms of the contract or tariff to which the same
17    customer would be assigned to or be eligible for if the
18    customer was not a net metering customer.
19        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a
20    customer during any hourly period or time-of-use period
21    exceeds the amount of electricity used by the customer
22    during that hourly period or time-of-use period, the
23    energy provider shall apply a credit for the net
24    kilowatt-hours produced in such period. The credit shall
25    consist of an energy credit and a delivery service credit.
26    The energy credit shall be valued at the same price per

 

 

SB3273- 39 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1    kilowatt-hour as the electric service provider would
2    charge for kilowatt-hour energy sales during that same
3    hourly period or time-of-use period. The delivery credit
4    shall be equal to the net kilowatt-hours produced in such
5    hourly period or time-of-use period times a credit that
6    reflects all kilowatt-hour based charges in the customer's
7    electric service rate, excluding energy charges.
8    (e) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
9credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
10whose electric service has not been declared competitive
11pursuant to Section 16-113 of this Act as of July 1, 2011 and
12whose electric delivery service is provided and measured on a
13kilowatt demand basis and electric supply service is not
14provided based on hourly pricing in the following manner:
15        (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
16    during the billing period exceeds the amount of
17    electricity produced by the customer, then the electricity
18    provider shall charge the customer for the net electricity
19    supplied to and used by the customer as provided in
20    subsection (e-5) of this Section. The customer shall
21    remain responsible for all taxes, fees, and utility
22    delivery charges that would otherwise be applicable to the
23    net amount of electricity used by the customer.
24        (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a
25    customer during the billing period exceeds the amount of
26    electricity used by the customer during that billing

 

 

SB3273- 40 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1    period, then the electricity provider supplying that
2    customer shall apply a 1:1 kilowatt-hour credit that
3    reflects the kilowatt-hour based charges in the customer's
4    electric service rate to a subsequent bill for service to
5    the customer for the net electricity supplied to the
6    electricity provider. The electricity provider shall
7    continue to carry over any excess kilowatt-hour credits
8    earned and apply those credits to subsequent billing
9    periods to offset any customer-generator consumption in
10    those billing periods until all credits are used or until
11    the end of the annualized period.
12        (3) At the end of the year or annualized over the
13    period that service is supplied by means of net metering,
14    or in the event that the retail customer terminates
15    service with the electricity provider prior to the end of
16    the year or the annualized period, any remaining credits
17    in the customer's account shall expire.
18    (e-5) An electricity provider shall provide electric
19service to eligible customers who utilize net metering at
20non-discriminatory rates that are identical, with respect to
21rate structure, retail rate components, and any monthly
22charges, to the rates that the customer would be charged if not
23a net metering customer. An electricity provider shall not
24charge net metering customers any fee or charge or require
25additional equipment, insurance, or any other requirements not
26specifically authorized by interconnection standards

 

 

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1authorized by the Commission, unless the fee, charge, or other
2requirement would apply to other similarly situated customers
3who are not net metering customers. The customer will remain
4responsible for all taxes, fees, and utility delivery charges
5that would otherwise be applicable to the net amount of
6electricity used by the customer. Subsections (c) through (e)
7of this Section shall not be construed to prevent an
8arms-length agreement between an electricity provider and an
9eligible customer that sets forth different prices, terms, and
10conditions for the provision of net metering service,
11including, but not limited to, the provision of the
12appropriate metering equipment for non-residential customers.
13    (f) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsections (c)
14through (e-5) of this Section, an electricity provider must
15require dual-channel metering for customers operating eligible
16renewable electrical generating facilities to whom the
17provisions of neither subsection (d), (d-5), nor (e) of this
18Section apply. In such cases, electricity charges and credits
19shall be determined as follows:
20        (1) The electricity provider shall assess and the
21    customer remains responsible for all taxes, fees, and
22    utility delivery charges that would otherwise be
23    applicable to the gross amount of kilowatt-hours supplied
24    to the eligible customer by the electricity provider.
25        (2) Each month that service is supplied by means of
26    dual-channel metering, the electricity provider shall

 

 

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1    compensate the eligible customer for any excess
2    kilowatt-hour credits at the electricity provider's
3    avoided cost of electricity supply over the monthly period
4    or as otherwise specified by the terms of a power-purchase
5    agreement negotiated between the customer and electricity
6    provider.
7        (3) For all eligible net metering customers taking
8    service from an electricity provider under contracts or
9    tariffs employing hourly or time-of-use rates, any monthly
10    consumption of electricity shall be calculated according
11    to the terms of the contract or tariff to which the same
12    customer would be assigned to or be eligible for if the
13    customer was not a net metering customer. When those same
14    customer-generators are net generators during any discrete
15    hourly or time-of-use period, the net kilowatt-hours
16    produced shall be valued at the same price per
17    kilowatt-hour as the electric service provider would
18    charge for retail kilowatt-hour sales during that same
19    time-of-use period.
20    (g) For purposes of federal and State laws providing
21renewable energy credits or greenhouse gas credits, the
22eligible customer shall be treated as owning and having title
23to the renewable energy attributes, renewable energy credits,
24and greenhouse gas emission credits related to any electricity
25produced by the qualified generating unit. The electricity
26provider may not condition participation in a net metering

 

 

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1program on the signing over of a customer's renewable energy
2credits; provided, however, this subsection (g) shall not be
3construed to prevent an arms-length agreement between an
4electricity provider and an eligible customer that sets forth
5the ownership or title of the credits.
6    (h) Within 120 days after the effective date of this
7amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, the Commission
8shall establish standards for net metering and, if the
9Commission has not already acted on its own initiative,
10standards for the interconnection of eligible renewable
11generating equipment to the utility system. The
12interconnection standards shall address any procedural
13barriers, delays, and administrative costs associated with the
14interconnection of customer-generation while ensuring the
15safety and reliability of the units and the electric utility
16system. The Commission shall consider the Institute of
17Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Standard 1547 and
18the issues of (i) reasonable and fair fees and costs, (ii)
19clear timelines for major milestones in the interconnection
20process, (iii) nondiscriminatory terms of agreement, and (iv)
21any best practices for interconnection of distributed
22generation.
23    (h-7) After an electric distribution company determines
24that an interconnection request from an applicant for a
25distributed renewable generation project on public school land
26has been completed, the electric distribution company must

 

 

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1immediately, without assigning the project to the queue, begin
2all evaluations, reviews, and screenings of the
3interconnection request. The electric distribution company
4must complete all interconnection-related evaluations,
5reviews, and screenings within 30 days after the electric
6distribution company determines that the interconnection
7request is complete and, as soon as practicable thereafter,
8must disclose to the applicant all necessary
9interconnection-related upgrades, costs, and construction
10schedules. If the electric distribution company determines
11that there is no requirement for the construction of
12facilities by the electric distribution company on its own
13system, the electric distribution company shall provide the
14applicant with an interconnection agreement. If the electric
15distribution company determines that only minor system
16modifications are required, the electric distribution company
17shall provide the applicant with an interconnection agreement
18within 10 days after the applicant elects to continue the
19application and pays any necessary fees. If the electric
20distribution company determines that more than minor
21modifications are necessary and no interconnection facilities
22study is needed, the electric distribution company shall
23provide the applicant with an interconnection agreement within
2420 days after the applicant elects to continue the application
25and pays any necessary fees. If the electric distribution
26company determines that more than minor modifications are

 

 

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1necessary and an interconnection facilities study is needed,
2the electric distribution company shall provide the applicant
3with an interconnection agreement within 30 days after the
4applicant elects to continue the application and pays any
5necessary fees.
6    For all net metering credits or other credits owed to a
7customer who has elected to install a distributed renewable
8generation project on public school land, all credits intended
9for the benefit of the consumer must be credited by the public
10utility or retail energy supplier within 90 days after the
11public utility or retail energy supplier determines that the
12criteria for the credit have been met.
13    As soon as practicable after the effective date of this
14amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, the Commission
15shall adopt revisions to its standards for the interconnection
16of eligible renewable generating equipment and net metering
17credit rules to conform with the requirements of this
18amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly.
19    As used in this subsection:
20    "Electric distribution company" means any electric utility
21subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission.
22    "Public schools" has the meaning set forth in Section 1-3
23of the School Code and includes public institutions of higher
24education, as defined in the Board of Higher Education Act.
25    (i) All electricity providers shall begin to offer net
26metering no later than April 1, 2008.

 

 

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1    (j) An electricity provider shall provide net metering to
2eligible customers according to subsections (d), (d-5), and
3(e). Eligible renewable electrical generating facilities for
4which eligible customers registered for net metering before
5January 1, 2025 shall continue to receive net metering
6services according to subsections (d), (d-5), and (e) of this
7Section for the lifetime of the system, regardless of whether
8those retail customers change electricity providers or whether
9the retail customer benefiting from the system changes. On and
10after January 1, 2025, any eligible customer that applies for
11net metering and previously would have qualified under
12subsections (d), (d-5), or (e) shall only be eligible for net
13metering as described in subsection (n).
14    (k) Each electricity provider shall maintain records and
15report annually to the Commission the total number of net
16metering customers served by the provider, as well as the
17type, capacity, and energy sources of the generating systems
18used by the net metering customers. Nothing in this Section
19shall limit the ability of an electricity provider to request
20the redaction of information deemed by the Commission to be
21confidential business information.
22    (l)(1) Notwithstanding the definition of "eligible
23customer" in item (ii) of subsection (b) of this Section, each
24electricity provider shall allow net metering as set forth in
25this subsection (l) and for the following projects, provided
26that only electric utilities serving more than 200,000

 

 

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1customers as of January 1, 2021 shall provide net metering for
2projects that are eligible for subparagraph (C) of this
3paragraph (1) and have energized after the effective date of
4this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly:
5        (A) properties owned or leased by multiple customers
6    that contribute to the operation of an eligible renewable
7    electrical generating facility through an ownership or
8    leasehold interest of at least 200 watts in such facility,
9    such as a community-owned wind project, a community-owned
10    biomass project, a community-owned solar project, or a
11    community methane digester processing livestock waste from
12    multiple sources, provided that the facility is also
13    located within the utility's service territory;
14        (B) individual units, apartments, or properties
15    located in a single building that are owned or leased by
16    multiple customers and collectively served by a common
17    eligible renewable electrical generating facility, such as
18    an office or apartment building, a shopping center or
19    strip mall served by photovoltaic panels on the roof; and
20        (C) subscriptions to community renewable generation
21    projects, including community renewable generation
22    projects on the customer's side of the billing meter of a
23    host facility and partially used for the customer's own
24    load.
25    In addition, the nameplate capacity of the eligible
26renewable electric generating facility that serves the demand

 

 

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1of the properties, units, or apartments identified in
2paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection (l) shall not exceed
35,000 kilowatts in nameplate capacity in total. Any eligible
4renewable electrical generating facility or community
5renewable generation project that is powered by photovoltaic
6electric energy and installed after the effective date of this
7amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly must be installed
8by a qualified person in compliance with the requirements of
9Section 16-128A of the Public Utilities Act and any rules or
10regulations adopted thereunder.
11    (2) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, an
12electricity provider shall provide credits for the electricity
13produced by the projects described in paragraph (1) of this
14subsection (l). The electricity provider shall provide credits
15that include at least energy supply, capacity, transmission,
16and, if applicable, the purchased energy adjustment on the
17subscriber's monthly bill equal to the subscriber's share of
18the production of electricity from the project, as determined
19by paragraph (3) of this subsection (l). For customers with
20transmission or capacity charges not charged on a
21kilowatt-hour basis, the electricity provider shall prepare a
22reasonable approximation of the kilowatt-hour equivalent value
23and provide that value as a monetary credit. The electricity
24provider shall submit these approximation methodologies to the
25Commission for review, modification, and approval.
26Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, customers on payment

 

 

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1plans or participating in budget billing programs shall have
2credits applied on a monthly basis.
3    (3) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary and
4regardless of whether a subscriber to an eligible community
5renewable generation project receives power and energy service
6from the electric utility or an alternative retail electric
7supplier, for projects eligible under paragraph (C) of
8subparagraph (1) of this subsection (l), electric utilities
9serving more than 200,000 customers as of January 1, 2021
10shall provide the monetary credits to a subscriber's
11subsequent bill for the electricity produced by community
12renewable generation projects. The electric utility shall
13provide monetary credits to a subscriber's subsequent bill at
14the utility's total price to compare equal to the subscriber's
15share of the production of electricity from the project, as
16determined by paragraph (5) of this subsection (l). For the
17purposes of this subsection, "total price to compare" means
18the rate or rates published by the Illinois Commerce
19Commission for energy supply for eligible customers receiving
20supply service from the electric utility, and shall include
21energy, capacity, transmission, and the purchased energy
22adjustment. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary,
23customers on payment plans or participating in budget billing
24programs shall have credits applied on a monthly basis. Any
25applicable credit or reduction in load obligation from the
26production of the community renewable generating projects

 

 

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1receiving a credit under this subsection shall be credited to
2the electric utility to offset the cost of providing the
3credit. To the extent that the credit or load obligation
4reduction does not completely offset the cost of providing the
5credit to subscribers of community renewable generation
6projects as described in this subsection, the electric utility
7may recover the remaining costs through its Multi-Year Rate
8Plan. All electric utilities serving 200,000 or fewer
9customers as of January 1, 2021 shall only provide the
10monetary credits to a subscriber's subsequent bill for the
11electricity produced by community renewable generation
12projects if the subscriber receives power and energy service
13from the electric utility. Alternative retail electric
14suppliers providing power and energy service to a subscriber
15located within the service territory of an electric utility
16not subject to Sections 16-108.18 and 16-118 shall provide the
17monetary credits to the subscriber's subsequent bill for the
18electricity produced by community renewable generation
19projects.
20    (4) If requested by the owner or operator of a community
21renewable generating project, an electric utility serving more
22than 200,000 customers as of January 1, 2021 shall enter into a
23net crediting agreement with the owner or operator to include
24a subscriber's subscription fee on the subscriber's monthly
25electric bill and provide the subscriber with a net credit
26equivalent to the total bill credit value for that generation

 

 

SB3273- 51 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1period minus the subscription fee, provided the subscription
2fee is structured as a fixed percentage of bill credit value.
3The net crediting agreement shall set forth payment terms from
4the electric utility to the owner or operator of the community
5renewable generating project, and the electric utility may
6charge a net crediting fee to the owner or operator of a
7community renewable generating project that may not exceed 1%
8of the subscription fee. Notwithstanding anything to the
9contrary, an electric utility serving 200,000 customers or
10fewer as of January 1, 2021 shall not be obligated to enter
11into a net crediting agreement with the owner or operator of a
12community renewable generating project. An electric utility
13shall use the same net crediting format for subscribers on
14payment plans and subscribers participating in budget billing
15programs. For the purposes of this paragraph (4), "net
16crediting" means a program offered by an electric utility
17under which the electric utility, upon authorization by or on
18behalf of a subscriber, remits the cash value of the
19subscription fee to the owner or operator of the community
20renewable generation facility without regard to whether the
21subscriber has paid the subscriber's monthly electric bill and
22places the cash value of the remaining bill credit on the
23subscriber's bill.
24    (5) For the purposes of facilitating net metering, the
25owner or operator of the eligible renewable electrical
26generating facility or community renewable generation project

 

 

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1shall be responsible for determining the amount of the credit
2that each customer or subscriber participating in a project
3under this subsection (l) is to receive in the following
4manner:
5        (A) The owner or operator shall, on a monthly basis,
6    provide to the electric utility the kilowatthours of
7    generation attributable to each of the utility's retail
8    customers and subscribers participating in projects under
9    this subsection (l) in accordance with the customer's or
10    subscriber's share of the eligible renewable electric
11    generating facility's or community renewable generation
12    project's output of power and energy for such month. The
13    owner or operator shall electronically transmit such
14    calculations and associated documentation to the electric
15    utility, in a format or method set forth in the applicable
16    tariff, on a monthly basis so that the electric utility
17    can reflect the monetary credits on customers' and
18    subscribers' electric utility bills. The electric utility
19    shall be permitted to revise its tariffs to implement the
20    provisions of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General
21    Assembly. The owner or operator shall separately provide
22    the electric utility with the documentation detailing the
23    calculations supporting the credit in the manner set forth
24    in the applicable tariff.
25        (B) For those participating customers and subscribers
26    who receive their energy supply from an alternative retail

 

 

SB3273- 53 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1    electric supplier, the electric utility shall remit to the
2    applicable alternative retail electric supplier the
3    information provided under subparagraph (A) of this
4    paragraph (3) for such customers and subscribers in a
5    manner set forth in such alternative retail electric
6    supplier's net metering program, or as otherwise agreed
7    between the utility and the alternative retail electric
8    supplier. The alternative retail electric supplier shall
9    then submit to the utility the amount of the charges for
10    power and energy to be applied to such customers and
11    subscribers, including the amount of the credit associated
12    with net metering.
13        (C) A participating customer or subscriber may provide
14    authorization as required by applicable law that directs
15    the electric utility to submit information to the owner or
16    operator of the eligible renewable electrical generating
17    facility or community renewable generation project to
18    which the customer or subscriber has an ownership or
19    leasehold interest or a subscription. Such information
20    shall be limited to the components of the net metering
21    credit calculated under this subsection (l), including the
22    bill credit rate, total kilowatthours, and total monetary
23    credit value applied to the customer's or subscriber's
24    bill for the monthly billing period.
25    (l-5) Within 90 days after the effective date of this
26amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, each electric

 

 

SB3273- 54 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1utility subject to this Section shall file a tariff or tariffs
2to implement the provisions of subsection (l) of this Section,
3which shall, consistent with the provisions of subsection (l),
4describe the terms and conditions under which owners or
5operators of qualifying properties, units, or apartments may
6participate in net metering. The Commission shall approve, or
7approve with modification, the tariff within 120 days after
8the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General
9Assembly.
10    (l-10) Within 30 days after the effective date of this
11amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, each electricity
12provider shall modify its tariffs to allow net metering as set
13forth in this subsection for an energy storage system or
14vehicle storage system energized after the effective date of
15this amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly with a
16nameplate capacity of not more than 5,000 kilowatts. If the
17Commission chooses to suspend the modified tariffs, the
18Commission shall issue a final order approving, or approving
19with modification, the modified tariffs no later than 90 days
20after the Commission initiates the docket.
21    An energy storage system or vehicle storage system
22eligible for net metering under this subsection may be
23interconnected behind the meter of a retail customer or at the
24distribution system level of an electric utility as follows:
25        (A) if the energy storage system or vehicle storage
26    system is interconnected behind the meter of a retail

 

 

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1    customer, in order to receive net metering under this
2    subsection, the eligible customer behind whose meter the
3    energy storage system is interconnected must receive
4    service from an electricity provider under an hourly
5    supply tariff, a time-of-use supply tariff, or a
6    time-of-use contract with an alternative retail electric
7    supplier; or
8        (B) if the energy storage system or vehicle storage
9    system is interconnected at the distribution system level
10    of an electric utility and not behind the meter of a retail
11    customer, the energy storage system or vehicle storage
12    system must receive service from an electricity provider
13    as a retail customer under an hourly supply tariff
14    authorized by Section 16-107, a supply tariff or contract
15    on substantially similar terms and conditions with an
16    alternative retail electric supplier, a time-of-use supply
17    tariff, or a time-of-use supply contract with an
18    alternative retail electric supplier.
19    If the energy storage system or vehicle storage system is
20interconnected behind the meter of an eligible customer, the
21eligible customer shall receive net metering based on hourly
22or time-of-use rates in accordance with the terms of
23subsection (d-5) or (f) or paragraph (2) of subsection (n) of
24this Section, as applicable to the eligible customer. If the
25energy storage system or vehicle storage system is
26interconnected at the distribution system level of an electric

 

 

SB3273- 56 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1utility and not behind the meter of a retail customer, then the
2energy storage system or vehicle storage system shall receive
3net metering pursuant to the terms of subsection (f) of this
4Section.
5    (m) Nothing in this Section shall affect the right of an
6electricity provider to continue to provide, or the right of a
7retail customer to continue to receive service pursuant to a
8contract for electric service between the electricity provider
9and the retail customer in accordance with the prices, terms,
10and conditions provided for in that contract. Either the
11electricity provider or the customer may require compliance
12with the prices, terms, and conditions of the contract.
13    (n) On and after January 1, 2025, the net metering
14services described in subsections (d), (d-5), and (e) of this
15Section shall no longer be offered, except as to those
16eligible renewable electrical generating facilities for which
17retail customers are receiving net metering service under
18these subsections at the time the net metering services under
19those subsections are no longer offered; those systems shall
20continue to receive net metering services described in
21subsections (d), (d-5), and (e) of this Section for the
22lifetime of the system, regardless of if those retail
23customers change electricity providers or whether the retail
24customer benefiting from the system changes. The electric
25utility serving more than 200,000 customers as of January 1,
262021 is responsible for ensuring the billing credits continue

 

 

SB3273- 57 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1without lapse for the lifetime of systems, as required in
2subsection (o). Those retail customers that begin taking net
3metering service after the date that net metering services are
4no longer offered under such subsections shall be subject to
5the provisions set forth in the following paragraphs (1)
6through (3) of this subsection (n):
7        (1) An electricity provider shall charge or credit for
8    the net electricity supplied to eligible customers or
9    provided by eligible customers whose electric supply
10    service is not provided based on hourly pricing in the
11    following manner:
12            (A) If the amount of electricity used by the
13        customer during the monthly billing period exceeds the
14        amount of electricity produced by the customer, then
15        the electricity provider shall charge the customer for
16        the net kilowatt-hour based electricity charges
17        reflected in the customer's electric service rate
18        supplied to and used by the customer as provided in
19        paragraph (3) of this subsection (n).
20            (B) If the amount of electricity produced by a
21        customer during the monthly billing period exceeds the
22        amount of electricity used by the customer during that
23        billing period, then the electricity provider
24        supplying that customer shall apply a 1:1
25        kilowatt-hour energy or monetary credit kilowatt-hour
26        supply charges to the customer's subsequent bill. The

 

 

SB3273- 58 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1        customer shall choose between 1:1 kilowatt-hour or
2        monetary credit at the time of application. For the
3        purposes of this subsection, "kilowatt-hour supply
4        charges" means the kilowatt-hour equivalent values for
5        energy, capacity, transmission, and the purchased
6        energy adjustment, if applicable. Notwithstanding
7        anything to the contrary, customers on payment plans
8        or participating in budget billing programs shall have
9        credits applied on a monthly basis. The electricity
10        provider shall continue to carry over any excess
11        kilowatt-hour or monetary energy credits earned and
12        apply those credits to subsequent billing periods. For
13        customers with transmission or capacity charges not
14        charged on a kilowatt-hour basis, the electricity
15        provider shall prepare a reasonable approximation of
16        the kilowatt-hour equivalent value and provide that
17        value as a monetary credit. The electricity provider
18        shall submit these approximation methodologies to the
19        Commission for review, modification, and approval.
20            (C) (Blank).
21        (2) An electricity provider shall charge or credit for
22    the net electricity supplied to eligible customers or
23    provided by eligible customers whose electric supply
24    service is provided based on hourly pricing in the
25    following manner:
26            (A) If the amount of electricity used by the

 

 

SB3273- 59 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1        customer during any hourly period exceeds the amount
2        of electricity produced by the customer, then the
3        electricity provider shall charge the customer for the
4        net electricity supplied to and used by the customer
5        as provided in paragraph (3) of this subsection (n).
6            (B) If the amount of electricity produced by a
7        customer during any hourly period exceeds the amount
8        of electricity used by the customer during that hourly
9        period, the energy provider shall calculate an energy
10        credit for the net kilowatt-hours produced in such
11        period, and shall apply that credit as a monetary
12        credit to the customer's subsequent bill. The value of
13        the energy credit shall be calculated using the same
14        price per kilowatt-hour as the electric service
15        provider would charge for kilowatt-hour energy sales
16        during that same hourly period and shall also include
17        values for capacity and transmission. For customers
18        with transmission or capacity charges not charged on a
19        kilowatt-hour basis, the electricity provider shall
20        prepare a reasonable approximation of the
21        kilowatt-hour equivalent value and provide that value
22        as a monetary credit. The electricity provider shall
23        submit these approximation methodologies to the
24        Commission for review, modification, and approval.
25        Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, customers on
26        payment plans or participating in budget billing

 

 

SB3273- 60 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1        programs shall have credits applied on a monthly
2        basis.
3        (3) An electricity provider shall provide electric
4    service to eligible customers who utilize net metering at
5    non-discriminatory rates that are identical, with respect
6    to rate structure, retail rate components, and any monthly
7    charges, to the rates that the customer would be charged
8    if not a net metering customer. An electricity provider
9    shall charge the customer for the net electricity supplied
10    to and used by the customer according to the terms of the
11    contract or tariff to which the same customer would be
12    assigned or be eligible for if the customer was not a net
13    metering customer. An electricity provider shall not
14    charge net metering customers any fee or charge or require
15    additional equipment, insurance, or any other requirements
16    not specifically authorized by interconnection standards
17    authorized by the Commission, unless the fee, charge, or
18    other requirement would apply to other similarly situated
19    customers who are not net metering customers. The customer
20    remains responsible for the gross amount of delivery
21    services charges, supply-related charges that are kilowatt
22    based, and all taxes and fees related to such charges. The
23    customer also remains responsible for all taxes and fees
24    that would otherwise be applicable to the net amount of
25    electricity used by the customer. Paragraphs (1) and (2)
26    of this subsection (n) shall not be construed to prevent

 

 

SB3273- 61 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1    an arms-length agreement between an electricity provider
2    and an eligible customer that sets forth different prices,
3    terms, and conditions for the provision of net metering
4    service, including, but not limited to, the provision of
5    the appropriate metering equipment for non-residential
6    customers. Nothing in this paragraph (3) shall be
7    interpreted to mandate that a utility that is only
8    required to provide delivery services to a given customer
9    must also sell electricity to such customer.
10    (o) Within 90 days after the effective date of this
11amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, each electric
12utility subject to this Section shall file a tariff, which
13shall, consistent with the provisions of this Section, propose
14the terms and conditions under which a customer may
15participate in net metering. The tariff for electric utilities
16serving more than 200,000 customers as of January 1, 2021
17shall also provide a streamlined and transparent bill
18crediting system for net metering to be managed by the
19electric utilities. The terms and conditions shall include,
20but are not limited to, that an electric utility shall manage
21and maintain billing of net metering credits and charges
22regardless of if the eligible customer takes net metering
23under an electric utility or alternative retail electric
24supplier. The electric utility serving more than 200,000
25customers as of January 1, 2021 shall process and approve all
26net metering applications, even if an eligible customer is

 

 

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1served by an alternative retail electric supplier; and the
2utility shall forward application approval to the appropriate
3alternative retail electric supplier. Eligibility for net
4metering shall remain with the owner of the utility billing
5address such that, if an eligible renewable electrical
6generating facility changes ownership, the net metering
7eligibility transfers to the new owner. The electric utility
8serving more than 200,000 customers as of January 1, 2021
9shall manage net metering billing for eligible customers to
10ensure full crediting occurs on electricity bills, including,
11but not limited to, ensuring net metering crediting begins
12upon commercial operation date, net metering billing transfers
13immediately if an eligible customer switches from an electric
14utility to alternative retail electric supplier or vice versa,
15and net metering billing transfers between ownership of a
16valid billing address. All transfers referenced in the
17preceding sentence shall include transfer of all banked
18credits. All electric utilities serving 200,000 or fewer
19customers as of January 1, 2021 shall manage net metering
20billing for eligible customers receiving power and energy
21service from the electric utility to ensure full crediting
22occurs on electricity bills, ensuring net metering crediting
23begins upon commercial operation date, net metering billing
24transfers immediately if an eligible customer switches from an
25electric utility to alternative retail electric supplier or
26vice versa, and net metering billing transfers between

 

 

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1ownership of a valid billing address. Alternative retail
2electric suppliers providing power and energy service to
3eligible customers located within the service territory of an
4electric utility serving 200,000 or fewer customers as of
5January 1, 2021 shall manage net metering billing for eligible
6customers to ensure full crediting occurs on electricity
7bills, including, but not limited to, ensuring net metering
8crediting begins upon commercial operation date, net metering
9billing transfers immediately if an eligible customer switches
10from an electric utility to alternative retail electric
11supplier or vice versa, and net metering billing transfers
12between ownership of a valid billing address.
13(Source: P.A. 104-458, eff. 6-1-26.)
 
14    (220 ILCS 5/17-900)
15    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 104-458)
16    Sec. 17-900. Customer self-generation of electricity.
17    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that municipal
18systems and electric cooperatives shall continue to be
19governed by their respective governing bodies, but that such
20governing bodies should recognize and implement policies to
21provide the opportunity for their residential and small
22commercial customers who wish to self-generate electricity and
23for reasonable credits to customers for excess electricity,
24balanced against the rights of the other non-self-generating
25customers. This includes creating consistent, fair policies

 

 

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1that are accessible to all customers and transparent, fair
2processes for raising and addressing any concerns.
3    (b) Customers have the right to install renewable
4generating facilities to be located on the customer's premises
5or customer's side of the billing meter and that are intended
6primarily to offset the customer's own electrical requirements
7and produce, consume, and store their own renewable energy
8without discriminatory repercussions from an electric
9cooperative or municipal system. This includes a customer's
10rights to:
11        (1) generate, consume, and deliver excess renewable
12    energy to the distribution grid and reduce his or her use
13    of electricity obtained from the grid;
14        (2) use technology to store energy at his or her
15    residence;
16        (3) interconnect his or her electrical system that
17    generates renewable energy, stores energy, or any
18    combination thereof, with the electricity meter on the
19    customer's premises that is provided by an electric
20    cooperative or municipal system:
21            (A) in a timely manner;
22            (B) in accordance with requirements established by
23        the electric cooperative or municipal utility to
24        ensure the safety of utility workers; and
25            (C) after providing written notice to the electric
26        cooperative or municipal utility system providing

 

 

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1        service in the service territory, installing a
2        nomenclature plate on the electrical meter panel and
3        meeting all applicable State and local safety and
4        electrical code requirements associated with
5        installing a parallel distributed generation system;
6        and
7        (4) receive fair credit for excess energy delivered to
8    the distribution grid.
9    (c) The policies of municipal systems and electric
10cooperatives regarding self-generation and credits for excess
11electricity may reasonably differ from those required of other
12entities by Article XVI of the Public Utilities Act or other
13Acts. The credits must recognize the value of self-generation
14to the distribution grid and benefits to other customers.
15    (d) Within 180 days after this amendatory Act of the 102nd
16General Assembly, each electric cooperative and municipal
17system shall update its policies for the interconnection and
18fair crediting of customer self-generation and storage if
19necessary, to comply with the standards of subsection (b) of
20this Section. Each electric cooperative and municipal system
21shall post its updated policies to a public-facing area of its
22website.
23    (e) An electric cooperative or municipal system customer
24who produces, consumes, and stores his or her own renewable
25energy shall not face discriminatory rate design, fees or
26charges, treatment, or excessive compliance requirements that

 

 

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1would unreasonably affect that customer's right to
2self-generate electricity as provided for in this Section.
3    For distributed renewable generation project on public
4school land, any fees for interconnection applications charged
5by the electric cooperative or municipal system must be
6substantially similar to the fees charged by public utilities
7for the interconnection of the same or similar projects and
8must not exceed 150% of the cost of the base interconnection
9fees of the public utilities.
10    (f) An electric cooperative or municipal utility system
11customer shall have a right to appeal any decision related to
12self-generation and storage that violates these rights to
13self-generation and non-discrimination pursuant to the
14provisions of this Section through a complaint under the
15Administrative Review Law or similar legal process.
16(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21.)
 
17    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 104-458)
18    Sec. 17-900. Customer self-generation of electricity.
19    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that municipal
20systems and electric cooperatives shall continue to be
21governed by their respective governing bodies, but that such
22governing bodies should recognize and implement policies to
23provide the opportunity for their residential and small
24commercial customers who wish to self-generate electricity and
25for reasonable credits to customers for excess electricity,

 

 

SB3273- 67 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1balanced against the rights of the other non-self-generating
2customers. This includes creating consistent, fair policies
3that are accessible to all customers and transparent, fair
4processes for raising and addressing any concerns.
5    (b) Customers have the right to install renewable
6generating facilities to be located on the customer's premises
7or customer's side of the billing meter and that are intended
8primarily to offset the customer's own electrical requirements
9and produce, consume, and store their own renewable energy
10without discriminatory repercussions from an electric
11cooperative or municipal system. This includes a customer's
12rights to:
13        (1) generate, consume, and deliver excess renewable
14    energy to the distribution grid and reduce his or her use
15    of electricity obtained from the grid;
16        (2) use technology to store energy;
17        (3) interconnect his or her electrical system that
18    generates renewable energy, stores energy, or any
19    combination thereof, with the electricity meter on the
20    customer's premises that is provided by an electric
21    cooperative or municipal system:
22            (A) in a timely manner;
23            (B) in accordance with requirements established by
24        the electric cooperative or municipal utility to
25        ensure the safety of utility workers; and
26            (C) after providing written notice to the electric

 

 

SB3273- 68 -LRB104 18411 AAS 31853 b

1        cooperative or municipal utility system providing
2        service in the service territory, installing a
3        nomenclature plate on the electrical meter panel and
4        meeting all applicable State and local safety and
5        electrical code requirements associated with
6        installing a parallel distributed generation system;
7        (4) receive fair credit for excess energy delivered to
8    the distribution grid; and
9        (5) for residential and small commercial customers,
10    interconnect renewable energy systems sized up to and
11    including 25 kW AC.
12    (c) The policies of municipal systems and electric
13cooperatives regarding self-generation and credits for excess
14electricity may reasonably differ from those required of other
15entities by Article XVI of the Public Utilities Act or other
16Acts. The credits must recognize the value of self-generation
17to the distribution grid and benefits to other customers.
18    (c-5) The policies of municipal systems and electric
19cooperatives regarding self-generation and credits for excess
20electricity shall not require customers to name the municipal
21system or electric cooperative as an additional insured on the
22customer's insurance policies or have any minimum liability
23limit requirement in connection with the installation and
24operation of renewable generating facilities if the renewable
25generating facilities meet the safety standards listed in the
26applicable interconnection agreement and the contractor used

 

 

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1to install the renewable generating facilities is licensed and
2possesses commercial general liability insurance coverage of
3at least $1,000,000 per occurrence and $2,000,000 in the
4aggregate per year.
5    (d) Within 180 days after this amendatory Act of the 102nd
6General Assembly, each electric cooperative and municipal
7system shall update its policies for the interconnection and
8fair crediting of customer self-generation and storage if
9necessary, to comply with the standards of subsection (b) of
10this Section. Each electric cooperative and municipal system
11shall post its updated policies to a public-facing area of its
12website.
13    (e) An electric cooperative or municipal system customer
14who produces, consumes, and stores his or her own renewable
15energy shall not face discriminatory rate design, fees or
16charges, treatment, or excessive compliance requirements that
17would unreasonably affect that customer's right to
18self-generate electricity as provided for in this Section.
19    For distributed renewable generation project on public
20school land, any fees for interconnection applications charged
21by the electric cooperative or municipal system must be
22substantially similar to the fees charged by public utilities
23for the interconnection of the same or similar projects and
24must not exceed 150% of the cost of the base interconnection
25fees of the public utilities.
26    (f) An electric cooperative or municipal utility system

 

 

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1customer shall have a right to appeal any decision related to
2self-generation and storage that violates these rights to
3self-generation and non-discrimination pursuant to the
4provisions of this Section through a complaint under the
5Administrative Review Law or similar legal process.
6(Source: P.A. 104-458, eff. 6-1-26.)
 
7    Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
8changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
9that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
10represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
11not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
12made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
13Public Act.
 
14    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
15becoming law.