104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
SB4028

 

Introduced 2/6/2026, by Sen. Donald P. DeWitte

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
220 ILCS 5/16-108

    Amends the Public Utilities Act. In provisions concerning the recovery of costs associated with the provision of delivery and other services, provide that the Illinois Commerce Commission shall, within 180 days after the effective date of the amendatory Act, initiate and complete a rulemaking proceeding to revise 83 Ill. Adm. Code 466 and 83 Ill. Adm. Code 467 to address barriers to timely and cost-effective interconnections for distributed generation facilities with a nameplate capacity of at least 40 kilowatts but no greater than 2 megawatts, including stand-alone solar photovoltaic systems, battery energy storage, hybrid gas-electric systems, and renewable natural gas integrations. Requires the revisions to include certain factors. Provides that the Commission shall coordinate the revisions with a Future of Gas proceeding pursuant to the final Order of the Commission in Docket No. 24-0158 to ensure compatibility with gas decarbonization pathways and to prioritize market-driven distributed resources that enhance reliability and affordability. Provides that the revised rules shall take effect no later than July 1, 2026. Effective immediately.


LRB104 19039 AAS 32484 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB4028LRB104 19039 AAS 32484 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
5Section 16-108 as follows:
 
6    (220 ILCS 5/16-108)
7    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 104-458)
8    Sec. 16-108. Recovery of costs associated with the
9provision of delivery and other services.
10    (a) An electric utility shall file a delivery services
11tariff with the Commission at least 210 days prior to the date
12that it is required to begin offering such services pursuant
13to this Act. An electric utility shall provide the components
14of delivery services that are subject to the jurisdiction of
15the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission at the same prices,
16terms and conditions set forth in its applicable tariff as
17approved or allowed into effect by that Commission. The
18Commission shall otherwise have the authority pursuant to
19Article IX to review, approve, and modify the prices, terms
20and conditions of those components of delivery services not
21subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory
22Commission, including the authority to determine the extent to
23which such delivery services should be offered on an unbundled

 

 

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1basis. In making any such determination the Commission shall
2consider, at a minimum, the effect of additional unbundling on
3(i) the objective of just and reasonable rates, (ii) electric
4utility employees, and (iii) the development of competitive
5markets for electric energy services in Illinois.
6    (b) The Commission shall enter an order approving, or
7approving as modified, the delivery services tariff no later
8than 30 days prior to the date on which the electric utility
9must commence offering such services. The Commission may
10subsequently modify such tariff pursuant to this Act.
11    (c) The electric utility's tariffs shall define the
12classes of its customers for purposes of delivery services
13charges. Delivery services shall be priced and made available
14to all retail customers electing delivery services in each
15such class on a nondiscriminatory basis regardless of whether
16the retail customer chooses the electric utility, an affiliate
17of the electric utility, or another entity as its supplier of
18electric power and energy. Charges for delivery services shall
19be cost based, and shall allow the electric utility to recover
20the costs of providing delivery services through its charges
21to its delivery service customers that use the facilities and
22services associated with such costs. Such costs shall include
23the costs of owning, operating and maintaining transmission
24and distribution facilities. The Commission shall also be
25authorized to consider whether, and if so to what extent, the
26following costs are appropriately included in the electric

 

 

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1utility's delivery services rates: (i) the costs of that
2portion of generation facilities used for the production and
3absorption of reactive power in order that retail customers
4located in the electric utility's service area can receive
5electric power and energy from suppliers other than the
6electric utility, and (ii) the costs associated with the use
7and redispatch of generation facilities to mitigate
8constraints on the transmission or distribution system in
9order that retail customers located in the electric utility's
10service area can receive electric power and energy from
11suppliers other than the electric utility. Nothing in this
12subsection shall be construed as directing the Commission to
13allocate any of the costs described in (i) or (ii) that are
14found to be appropriately included in the electric utility's
15delivery services rates to any particular customer group or
16geographic area in setting delivery services rates.
17    (d) The Commission shall establish charges, terms and
18conditions for delivery services that are just and reasonable
19and shall take into account customer impacts when establishing
20such charges. In establishing charges, terms and conditions
21for delivery services, the Commission shall take into account
22voltage level differences. A retail customer shall have the
23option to request to purchase electric service at any delivery
24service voltage reasonably and technically feasible from the
25electric facilities serving that customer's premises provided
26that there are no significant adverse impacts upon system

 

 

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1reliability or system efficiency. A retail customer shall also
2have the option to request to purchase electric service at any
3point of delivery that is reasonably and technically feasible
4provided that there are no significant adverse impacts on
5system reliability or efficiency. Such requests shall not be
6unreasonably denied.
7    (e) Electric utilities shall recover the costs of
8installing, operating or maintaining facilities for the
9particular benefit of one or more delivery services customers,
10including without limitation any costs incurred in complying
11with a customer's request to be served at a different voltage
12level, directly from the retail customer or customers for
13whose benefit the costs were incurred, to the extent such
14costs are not recovered through the charges referred to in
15subsections (c) and (d) of this Section.
16    (f) An electric utility shall be entitled but not required
17to implement transition charges in conjunction with the
18offering of delivery services pursuant to Section 16-104. If
19an electric utility implements transition charges, it shall
20implement such charges for all delivery services customers and
21for all customers described in subsection (h), but shall not
22implement transition charges for power and energy that a
23retail customer takes from cogeneration or self-generation
24facilities located on that retail customer's premises, if such
25facilities meet the following criteria:
26        (i) the cogeneration or self-generation facilities

 

 

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1    serve a single retail customer and are located on that
2    retail customer's premises (for purposes of this
3    subparagraph and subparagraph (ii), an industrial or
4    manufacturing retail customer and a third party contractor
5    that is served by such industrial or manufacturing
6    customer through such retail customer's own electrical
7    distribution facilities under the circumstances described
8    in subsection (vi) of the definition of "alternative
9    retail electric supplier" set forth in Section 16-102,
10    shall be considered a single retail customer);
11        (ii) the cogeneration or self-generation facilities
12    either (A) are sized pursuant to generally accepted
13    engineering standards for the retail customer's electrical
14    load at that premises (taking into account standby or
15    other reliability considerations related to that retail
16    customer's operations at that site) or (B) if the facility
17    is a cogeneration facility located on the retail
18    customer's premises, the retail customer is the thermal
19    host for that facility and the facility has been designed
20    to meet that retail customer's thermal energy requirements
21    resulting in electrical output beyond that retail
22    customer's electrical demand at that premises, comply with
23    the operating and efficiency standards applicable to
24    "qualifying facilities" specified in title 18 Code of
25    Federal Regulations Section 292.205 as in effect on the
26    effective date of this amendatory Act of 1999;

 

 

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1        (iii) the retail customer on whose premises the
2    facilities are located either has an exclusive right to
3    receive, and corresponding obligation to pay for, all of
4    the electrical capacity of the facility, or in the case of
5    a cogeneration facility that has been designed to meet the
6    retail customer's thermal energy requirements at that
7    premises, an identified amount of the electrical capacity
8    of the facility, over a minimum 5-year period; and
9        (iv) if the cogeneration facility is sized for the
10    retail customer's thermal load at that premises but
11    exceeds the electrical load, any sales of excess power or
12    energy are made only at wholesale, are subject to the
13    jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
14    and are not for the purpose of circumventing the
15    provisions of this subsection (f).
16If a generation facility located at a retail customer's
17premises does not meet the above criteria, an electric utility
18implementing transition charges shall implement a transition
19charge until December 31, 2006 for any power and energy taken
20by such retail customer from such facility as if such power and
21energy had been delivered by the electric utility. Provided,
22however, that an industrial retail customer that is taking
23power from a generation facility that does not meet the above
24criteria but that is located on such customer's premises will
25not be subject to a transition charge for the power and energy
26taken by such retail customer from such generation facility if

 

 

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1the facility does not serve any other retail customer and
2either was installed on behalf of the customer and for its own
3use prior to January 1, 1997, or is both predominantly fueled
4by byproducts of such customer's manufacturing process at such
5premises and sells or offers an average of 300 megawatts or
6more of electricity produced from such generation facility
7into the wholesale market. Such charges shall be calculated as
8provided in Section 16-102, and shall be collected on each
9kilowatt-hour delivered under a delivery services tariff to a
10retail customer from the date the customer first takes
11delivery services until December 31, 2006 except as provided
12in subsection (h) of this Section. Provided, however, that an
13electric utility, other than an electric utility providing
14service to at least 1,000,000 customers in this State on
15January 1, 1999, shall be entitled to petition for entry of an
16order by the Commission authorizing the electric utility to
17implement transition charges for an additional period ending
18no later than December 31, 2008. The electric utility shall
19file its petition with supporting evidence no earlier than 16
20months, and no later than 12 months, prior to December 31,
212006. The Commission shall hold a hearing on the electric
22utility's petition and shall enter its order no later than 8
23months after the petition is filed. The Commission shall
24determine whether and to what extent the electric utility
25shall be authorized to implement transition charges for an
26additional period. The Commission may authorize the electric

 

 

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1utility to implement transition charges for some or all of the
2additional period, and shall determine the mitigation factors
3to be used in implementing such transition charges; provided,
4that the Commission shall not authorize mitigation factors
5less than 110% of those in effect during the 12 months ended
6December 31, 2006. In making its determination, the Commission
7shall consider the following factors: the necessity to
8implement transition charges for an additional period in order
9to maintain the financial integrity of the electric utility;
10the prudence of the electric utility's actions in reducing its
11costs since the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997;
12the ability of the electric utility to provide safe, adequate
13and reliable service to retail customers in its service area;
14and the impact on competition of allowing the electric utility
15to implement transition charges for the additional period.
16    (g) The electric utility shall file tariffs that establish
17the transition charges to be paid by each class of customers to
18the electric utility in conjunction with the provision of
19delivery services. The electric utility's tariffs shall define
20the classes of its customers for purposes of calculating
21transition charges. The electric utility's tariffs shall
22provide for the calculation of transition charges on a
23customer-specific basis for any retail customer whose average
24monthly maximum electrical demand on the electric utility's
25system during the 6 months with the customer's highest monthly
26maximum electrical demands equals or exceeds 3.0 megawatts for

 

 

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1electric utilities having more than 1,000,000 customers, and
2for other electric utilities for any customer that has an
3average monthly maximum electrical demand on the electric
4utility's system of one megawatt or more, and (A) for which
5there exists data on the customer's usage during the 3 years
6preceding the date that the customer became eligible to take
7delivery services, or (B) for which there does not exist data
8on the customer's usage during the 3 years preceding the date
9that the customer became eligible to take delivery services,
10if in the electric utility's reasonable judgment there exists
11comparable usage information or a sufficient basis to develop
12such information, and further provided that the electric
13utility can require customers for which an individual
14calculation is made to sign contracts that set forth the
15transition charges to be paid by the customer to the electric
16utility pursuant to the tariff.
17    (h) An electric utility shall also be entitled to file
18tariffs that allow it to collect transition charges from
19retail customers in the electric utility's service area that
20do not take delivery services but that take electric power or
21energy from an alternative retail electric supplier or from an
22electric utility other than the electric utility in whose
23service area the customer is located. Such charges shall be
24calculated, in accordance with the definition of transition
25charges in Section 16-102, for the period of time that the
26customer would be obligated to pay transition charges if it

 

 

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1were taking delivery services, except that no deduction for
2delivery services revenues shall be made in such calculation,
3and usage data from the customer's class shall be used where
4historical usage data is not available for the individual
5customer. The customer shall be obligated to pay such charges
6on a lump sum basis on or before the date on which the customer
7commences to take service from the alternative retail electric
8supplier or other electric utility, provided, that the
9electric utility in whose service area the customer is located
10shall offer the customer the option of signing a contract
11pursuant to which the customer pays such charges ratably over
12the period in which the charges would otherwise have applied.
13    (i) An electric utility shall be entitled to add to the
14bills of delivery services customers charges pursuant to
15Sections 9-221, 9-222 (except as provided in Section 9-222.1),
16and Section 16-114 of this Act, Section 5-5 of the Electricity
17Infrastructure Maintenance Fee Law, Section 6-5 of the
18Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency, and Coal Resources
19Development Law of 1997, and Section 13 of the Energy
20Assistance Act.
21    (i-5) An electric utility required to impose the Coal to
22Solar and Energy Storage Initiative Charge provided for in
23subsection (c-5) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
24Act shall add such charge to the bills of its delivery services
25customers pursuant to the terms of a tariff conforming to the
26requirements of subsection (c-5) of Section 1-75 of the

 

 

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1Illinois Power Agency Act and this subsection (i-5) and filed
2with and approved by the Commission. The electric utility
3shall file its proposed tariff with the Commission on or
4before July 1, 2022 to be effective, after review and approval
5or modification by the Commission, beginning January 1, 2023.
6On or before December 1, 2022, the Commission shall review the
7electric utility's proposed tariff, including by conducting a
8docketed proceeding if deemed necessary by the Commission, and
9shall approve the proposed tariff or direct the electric
10utility to make modifications the Commission finds necessary
11for the tariff to conform to the requirements of subsection
12(c-5) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and this
13subsection (i-5). The electric utility's tariff shall provide
14for imposition of the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage
15Initiative Charge on a per-kilowatthour basis to all
16kilowatthours delivered by the electric utility to its
17delivery services customers. The tariff shall provide for the
18calculation of the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage Initiative
19Charge to be in effect for the year beginning January 1, 2023
20and each year beginning January 1 thereafter, sufficient to
21collect the electric utility's estimated payment obligations
22for the delivery year beginning the following June 1 under
23contracts for purchase of renewable energy credits entered
24into pursuant to subsection (c-5) of Section 1-75 of the
25Illinois Power Agency Act and the obligations of the
26Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, or any

 

 

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1successor department or agency, which for purposes of this
2subsection (i-5) shall be referred to as the Department, to
3make grant payments during such delivery year from the Coal to
4Solar and Energy Storage Initiative Fund pursuant to grant
5contracts entered into pursuant to subsection (c-5) of Section
61-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, and using the electric
7utility's kilowatthour deliveries to its delivery services
8customers during the delivery year ended May 31 of the
9preceding calendar year. On or before November 1 of each year
10beginning November 1, 2022, the Department shall notify the
11electric utilities of the amount of the Department's estimated
12obligations for grant payments during the delivery year
13beginning the following June 1 pursuant to grant contracts
14entered into pursuant to subsection (c-5) of Section 1-75 of
15the Illinois Power Agency Act; and each electric utility shall
16incorporate in the calculation of its Coal to Solar and Energy
17Storage Initiative Charge the fractional portion of the
18Department's estimated obligations equal to the electric
19utility's kilowatthour deliveries to its delivery services
20customers in the delivery year ended the preceding May 31
21divided by the aggregate deliveries of both electric utilities
22to delivery services customers in such delivery year. The
23electric utility shall remit on a monthly basis to the State
24Treasurer, for deposit in the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage
25Initiative Fund provided for in subsection (c-5) of Section
261-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, the electric utility's

 

 

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1collections of the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage Initiative
2Charge estimated to be needed by the Department for grant
3payments pursuant to grant contracts entered into pursuant to
4subsection (c-5) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
5Act. The initial charge under the electric utility's tariff
6shall be effective for kilowatthours delivered beginning
7January 1, 2023, and thereafter shall be revised to be
8effective January 1, 2024 and each January 1 thereafter, based
9on the payment obligations for the delivery year beginning the
10following June 1. The tariff shall provide for the electric
11utility to make an annual filing with the Commission on or
12before November 15 of each year, beginning in 2023, setting
13forth the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage Initiative Charge
14to be in effect for the year beginning the following January 1.
15The electric utility's tariff shall also provide that the
16electric utility shall make a filing with the Commission on or
17before August 1 of each year beginning in 2024 setting forth a
18reconciliation, for the delivery year ended the preceding May
1931, of the electric utility's collections of the Coal to Solar
20and Energy Storage Initiative Charge against actual payments
21for renewable energy credits pursuant to contracts entered
22into, and the actual grant payments by the Department pursuant
23to grant contracts entered into, pursuant to subsection (c-5)
24of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. The tariff
25shall provide that any excess or shortfall of collections to
26payments shall be deducted from or added to, on a

 

 

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1per-kilowatthour basis, the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage
2Initiative Charge, over the 6-month period beginning October 1
3of that calendar year.
4    (j) If a retail customer that obtains electric power and
5energy from cogeneration or self-generation facilities
6installed for its own use on or before January 1, 1997,
7subsequently takes service from an alternative retail electric
8supplier or an electric utility other than the electric
9utility in whose service area the customer is located for any
10portion of the customer's electric power and energy
11requirements formerly obtained from those facilities
12(including that amount purchased from the utility in lieu of
13such generation and not as standby power purchases, under a
14cogeneration displacement tariff in effect as of the effective
15date of this amendatory Act of 1997), the transition charges
16otherwise applicable pursuant to subsections (f), (g), or (h)
17of this Section shall not be applicable in any year to that
18portion of the customer's electric power and energy
19requirements formerly obtained from those facilities,
20provided, that for purposes of this subsection (j), such
21portion shall not exceed the average number of kilowatt-hours
22per year obtained from the cogeneration or self-generation
23facilities during the 3 years prior to the date on which the
24customer became eligible for delivery services, except as
25provided in subsection (f) of Section 16-110.
26    (k) The electric utility shall be entitled to recover

 

 

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1through tariffed charges all of the costs associated with the
2purchase of zero emission credits from zero emission
3facilities to meet the requirements of subsection (d-5) of
4Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and all of the
5costs associated with the purchase of carbon mitigation
6credits from carbon-free energy resources to meet the
7requirements of subsection (d-10) of Section 1-75 of the
8Illinois Power Agency Act. Such costs shall include the costs
9of procuring the zero emission credits and carbon mitigation
10credits from carbon-free energy resources, as well as the
11reasonable costs that the utility incurs as part of the
12procurement processes and to implement and comply with plans
13and processes approved by the Commission under subsections
14(d-5) and (d-10). The costs shall be allocated across all
15retail customers through a single, uniform cents per
16kilowatt-hour charge applicable to all retail customers, which
17shall appear as a separate line item on each customer's bill.
18Beginning June 1, 2017, the electric utility shall be entitled
19to recover through tariffed charges all of the costs
20associated with the purchase of renewable energy resources to
21meet the renewable energy resource standards of subsection (c)
22of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, under
23procurement plans as approved in accordance with that Section
24and Section 16-111.5 of this Act. Such costs shall include the
25costs of procuring the renewable energy resources, as well as
26the reasonable costs that the utility incurs as part of the

 

 

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1procurement processes and to implement and comply with plans
2and processes approved by the Commission under such Sections.
3The costs associated with the purchase of renewable energy
4resources shall be allocated across all retail customers in
5proportion to the amount of renewable energy resources the
6utility procures for such customers through a single, uniform
7cents per kilowatt-hour charge applicable to such retail
8customers, which shall appear as a separate line item on each
9such customer's bill. The credits, costs, and penalties
10associated with the self-direct renewable portfolio standard
11compliance program described in subparagraph (R) of paragraph
12(1) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
13Agency Act shall be allocated to approved eligible self-direct
14customers by the utility in a cents per kilowatt-hour credit,
15cost, or penalty, which shall appear as a separate line item on
16each such customer's bill.
17    Notwithstanding whether the Commission has approved the
18initial long-term renewable resources procurement plan as of
19June 1, 2017, an electric utility shall place new tariffed
20charges into effect beginning with the June 2017 monthly
21billing period, to the extent practicable, to begin recovering
22the costs of procuring renewable energy resources, as those
23charges are calculated under the limitations described in
24subparagraph (E) of paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of Section
251-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. Notwithstanding the
26date on which the utility places such new tariffed charges

 

 

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1into effect, the utility shall be permitted to collect the
2charges under such tariff as if the tariff had been in effect
3beginning with the first day of the June 2017 monthly billing
4period. For the delivery years commencing June 1, 2017, June
51, 2018, June 1, 2019, and each delivery year thereafter, the
6electric utility shall deposit into a separate interest
7bearing account of a financial institution the monies
8collected under the tariffed charges. Money collected from
9customers for the procurement of renewable energy resources in
10a given delivery year may be spent by the utility for the
11procurement of renewable resources over any of the following 5
12delivery years, after which unspent money shall be credited
13back to retail customers. The electric utility shall spend all
14money collected in earlier delivery years that has not yet
15been returned to customers, first, before spending money
16collected in later delivery years. Any interest earned shall
17be credited back to retail customers under the reconciliation
18proceeding provided for in this subsection (k), provided that
19the electric utility shall first be reimbursed from the
20interest for the administrative costs that it incurs to
21administer and manage the account. Any taxes due on the funds
22in the account, or interest earned on it, will be paid from the
23account or, if insufficient monies are available in the
24account, from the monies collected under the tariffed charges
25to recover the costs of procuring renewable energy resources.
26Monies deposited in the account shall be subject to the

 

 

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1review, reconciliation, and true-up process described in this
2subsection (k) that is applicable to the funds collected and
3costs incurred for the procurement of renewable energy
4resources.
5    The electric utility shall be entitled to recover all of
6the costs identified in this subsection (k) through automatic
7adjustment clause tariffs applicable to all of the utility's
8retail customers that allow the electric utility to adjust its
9tariffed charges consistent with this subsection (k). The
10determination as to whether any excess funds were collected
11during a given delivery year for the purchase of renewable
12energy resources, and the crediting of any excess funds back
13to retail customers, shall not be made until after the close of
14the delivery year, which will ensure that the maximum amount
15of funds is available to implement the approved long-term
16renewable resources procurement plan during a given delivery
17year. The amount of excess funds eligible to be credited back
18to retail customers shall be reduced by an amount equal to the
19payment obligations required by any contracts entered into by
20an electric utility under contracts described in subsection
21(b) of Section 1-56 and subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the
22Illinois Power Agency Act, even if such payments have not yet
23been made and regardless of the delivery year in which those
24payment obligations were incurred. Notwithstanding anything to
25the contrary, including in tariffs authorized by this
26subsection (k) in effect before the effective date of this

 

 

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1amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, all unspent
2funds as of May 31, 2021, excluding any funds credited to
3customers during any utility billing cycle that commences
4prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd
5General Assembly, shall remain in the utility account and
6shall on a first in, first out basis be used toward utility
7payment obligations under contracts described in subsection
8(b) of Section 1-56 and subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the
9Illinois Power Agency Act. The electric utility's collections
10under such automatic adjustment clause tariffs to recover the
11costs of renewable energy resources, zero emission credits
12from zero emission facilities, and carbon mitigation credits
13from carbon-free energy resources shall be subject to separate
14annual review, reconciliation, and true-up against actual
15costs by the Commission under a procedure that shall be
16specified in the electric utility's automatic adjustment
17clause tariffs and that shall be approved by the Commission in
18connection with its approval of such tariffs. The procedure
19shall provide that any difference between the electric
20utility's collections for zero emission credits and carbon
21mitigation credits under the automatic adjustment charges for
22an annual period and the electric utility's actual costs of
23zero emission credits from zero emission facilities and carbon
24mitigation credits from carbon-free energy resources for that
25same annual period shall be refunded to or collected from, as
26applicable, the electric utility's retail customers in

 

 

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1subsequent periods.
2    Nothing in this subsection (k) is intended to affect,
3limit, or change the right of the electric utility to recover
4the costs associated with the procurement of renewable energy
5resources for periods commencing before, on, or after June 1,
62017, as otherwise provided in the Illinois Power Agency Act.
7    The funding available under this subsection (k), if any,
8for the programs described under subsection (b) of Section
91-56 of the Illinois Power Agency Act shall not reduce the
10amount of funding for the programs described in subparagraph
11(O) of paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the
12Illinois Power Agency Act. If funding is available under this
13subsection (k) for programs described under subsection (b) of
14Section 1-56 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, then the
15long-term renewable resources plan shall provide for the
16Agency to procure contracts in an amount that does not exceed
17the funding, and the contracts approved by the Commission
18shall be executed by the applicable utility or utilities.
19    (l) A utility that has terminated any contract executed
20under subsection (d-5) or (d-10) of Section 1-75 of the
21Illinois Power Agency Act shall be entitled to recover any
22remaining balance associated with the purchase of zero
23emission credits prior to such termination, and such utility
24shall also apply a credit to its retail customer bills in the
25event of any over-collection.
26    (m)(1) An electric utility that recovers its costs of

 

 

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1procuring zero emission credits from zero emission facilities
2through a cents-per-kilowatthour charge under subsection (k)
3of this Section shall be subject to the requirements of this
4subsection (m). Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, such
5electric utility shall, beginning on April 30, 2018, and each
6April 30 thereafter until April 30, 2026, calculate whether
7any reduction must be applied to such cents-per-kilowatthour
8charge that is paid by retail customers of the electric
9utility that have opted out of subsections (a) through (j) of
10Section 8-103B of this Act under subsection (l) of Section
118-103B. Such charge shall be reduced for such customers for
12the next delivery year commencing on June 1 based on the amount
13necessary, if any, to limit the annual estimated average net
14increase for the prior calendar year due to the future energy
15investment costs to no more than 1.3% of 5.98 cents per
16kilowatt-hour, which is the average amount paid per
17kilowatthour for electric service during the year ending
18December 31, 2015 by Illinois industrial retail customers, as
19reported to the Edison Electric Institute.
20    The calculations required by this subsection (m) shall be
21made only once for each year, and no subsequent rate impact
22determinations shall be made.
23    (2) For purposes of this Section, "future energy
24investment costs" shall be calculated by subtracting the
25cents-per-kilowatthour charge identified in subparagraph (A)
26of this paragraph (2) from the sum of the

 

 

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1cents-per-kilowatthour charges identified in subparagraph (B)
2of this paragraph (2):
3        (A) The cents-per-kilowatthour charge identified in
4    the electric utility's tariff placed into effect under
5    Section 8-103 of the Public Utilities Act that, on
6    December 1, 2016, was applicable to those retail customers
7    that have opted out of subsections (a) through (j) of
8    Section 8-103B of this Act under subsection (l) of Section
9    8-103B.
10        (B) The sum of the following cents-per-kilowatthour
11    charges applicable to those retail customers that have
12    opted out of subsections (a) through (j) of Section 8-103B
13    of this Act under subsection (l) of Section 8-103B,
14    provided that if one or more of the following charges has
15    been in effect and applied to such customers for more than
16    one calendar year, then each charge shall be equal to the
17    average of the charges applied over a period that
18    commences with the calendar year ending December 31, 2017
19    and ends with the most recently completed calendar year
20    prior to the calculation required by this subsection (m):
21            (i) the cents-per-kilowatthour charge to recover
22        the costs incurred by the utility under subsection
23        (d-5) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
24        Act, adjusted for any reductions required under this
25        subsection (m); and
26            (ii) the cents-per-kilowatthour charge to recover

 

 

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1        the costs incurred by the utility under Section
2        16-107.6 of the Public Utilities Act.
3        If no charge was applied for a given calendar year
4    under item (i) or (ii) of this subparagraph (B), then the
5    value of the charge for that year shall be zero.
6    (3) If a reduction is required by the calculation
7performed under this subsection (m), then the amount of the
8reduction shall be multiplied by the number of years reflected
9in the averages calculated under subparagraph (B) of paragraph
10(2) of this subsection (m). Such reduction shall be applied to
11the cents-per-kilowatthour charge that is applicable to those
12retail customers that have opted out of subsections (a)
13through (j) of Section 8-103B of this Act under subsection (l)
14of Section 8-103B beginning with the next delivery year
15commencing after the date of the calculation required by this
16subsection (m).
17    (4) The electric utility shall file a notice with the
18Commission on May 1 of 2018 and each May 1 thereafter until May
191, 2026 containing the reduction, if any, which must be
20applied for the delivery year which begins in the year of the
21filing. The notice shall contain the calculations made
22pursuant to this Section. By October 1 of each year beginning
23in 2018, each electric utility shall notify the Commission if
24it appears, based on an estimate of the calculation required
25in this subsection (m), that a reduction will be required in
26the next year.

 

 

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1    (n)(1) The Commission shall, within 180 days after the
2effective date of this amendatory Act of the 104th General
3Assembly, initiate and complete a rulemaking proceeding to
4revise 83 Ill. Adm. Code 466 and 83 Ill. Adm. Code 467 to
5address barriers to timely and cost-effective interconnections
6for distributed generation facilities with a nameplate
7capacity of at least 40 kilowatts but no greater than 2
8megawatts, including stand-alone solar photovoltaic systems,
9battery energy storage, hybrid gas-electric systems, and
10renewable natural gas integrations. The revisions shall
11include:
12        (A) capping interconnection study costs at 150% of the
13    initial feasibility estimate or $50,000 per study,
14    whichever is lesser, requiring electric distribution
15    companies to justify estimates in advance, and prohibiting
16    overhead markups on labor or materials;
17        (B) permitting applicants to self-supply
18    interconnection studies or self-build system upgrades if
19    an electric distribution company cannot complete them
20    within 90 days or at capped costs, as long as such studies
21    and upgrades meet the technical standards for electric
22    distribution companies and are subject to Commission
23    review for compliance;
24        (C) enhancing transparency by requiring electric
25    distribution companies to provide anonymized queue data,
26    model assumptions, and progress reports under

 

 

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1    confidentiality agreements, while maintaining system
2    security;
3        (D) updating definitions to explicitly include
4    stand-alone solar photovoltaic systems, battery energy
5    storage, and hybrid gas-electric systems as distributed
6    generation facilities and clarifying that lower-voltage
7    facilities that qualify as transmission facilities under
8    FERC Order 888 shall be treated as transmission
9    facilities;
10        (E) mandating that all interconnection agreements be
11    filed with the Commission within 30 days after the
12    execution of the agreement, with provisions allowing
13    applicants to file unexecuted agreements in initiating a
14    rate case proceeding; and
15        (F) adding a pro forma attachment affirming that
16    interconnecting facilities, including storage, comply with
17    the requirements for non-taxable status under 26 U.S.C.
18    45.
19    (2) The Commission shall coordinate the revisions under
20this subsection (n) with a Future of Gas proceeding pursuant
21to the final Order of the Commission in Docket No. 24-0158 to
22ensure compatibility with gas decarbonization pathways and to
23prioritize market-driven distributed resources that enhance
24reliability and affordability. The revised rules shall take
25effect no later than July 1, 2026.
26(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21.)
 

 

 

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1    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 104-458)
2    Sec. 16-108. Recovery of costs associated with the
3provision of delivery and other services.
4    (a) An electric utility shall file a delivery services
5tariff with the Commission at least 210 days prior to the date
6that it is required to begin offering such services pursuant
7to this Act. An electric utility shall provide the components
8of delivery services that are subject to the jurisdiction of
9the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission at the same prices,
10terms and conditions set forth in its applicable tariff as
11approved or allowed into effect by that Commission. The
12Commission shall otherwise have the authority pursuant to
13Article IX to review, approve, and modify the prices, terms
14and conditions of those components of delivery services not
15subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory
16Commission, including the authority to determine the extent to
17which such delivery services should be offered on an unbundled
18basis. In making any such determination the Commission shall
19consider, at a minimum, the effect of additional unbundling on
20(i) the objective of just and reasonable rates, (ii) electric
21utility employees, and (iii) the development of competitive
22markets for electric energy services in Illinois.
23    (b) The Commission shall enter an order approving, or
24approving as modified, the delivery services tariff no later
25than 30 days prior to the date on which the electric utility

 

 

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1must commence offering such services. The Commission may
2subsequently modify such tariff pursuant to this Act.
3    (c) The electric utility's tariffs shall define the
4classes of its customers for purposes of delivery services
5charges. Delivery services shall be priced and made available
6to all retail customers electing delivery services in each
7such class on a nondiscriminatory basis regardless of whether
8the retail customer chooses the electric utility, an affiliate
9of the electric utility, or another entity as its supplier of
10electric power and energy. Charges for delivery services shall
11be cost based, and shall allow the electric utility to recover
12the costs of providing delivery services through its charges
13to its delivery service customers that use the facilities and
14services associated with such costs. Such costs shall include
15the costs of owning, operating and maintaining transmission
16and distribution facilities. The Commission shall also be
17authorized to consider whether, and if so to what extent, the
18following costs are appropriately included in the electric
19utility's delivery services rates: (i) the costs of that
20portion of generation facilities used for the production and
21absorption of reactive power in order that retail customers
22located in the electric utility's service area can receive
23electric power and energy from suppliers other than the
24electric utility, and (ii) the costs associated with the use
25and redispatch of generation facilities to mitigate
26constraints on the transmission or distribution system in

 

 

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1order that retail customers located in the electric utility's
2service area can receive electric power and energy from
3suppliers other than the electric utility. Nothing in this
4subsection shall be construed as directing the Commission to
5allocate any of the costs described in (i) or (ii) that are
6found to be appropriately included in the electric utility's
7delivery services rates to any particular customer group or
8geographic area in setting delivery services rates.
9    (d) The Commission shall establish charges, terms and
10conditions for delivery services that are just and reasonable
11and shall take into account customer impacts when establishing
12such charges. In establishing charges, terms and conditions
13for delivery services, the Commission shall take into account
14voltage level differences. A retail customer shall have the
15option to request to purchase electric service at any delivery
16service voltage reasonably and technically feasible from the
17electric facilities serving that customer's premises provided
18that there are no significant adverse impacts upon system
19reliability or system efficiency. A retail customer shall also
20have the option to request to purchase electric service at any
21point of delivery that is reasonably and technically feasible
22provided that there are no significant adverse impacts on
23system reliability or efficiency. Such requests shall not be
24unreasonably denied.
25    (e) Electric utilities shall recover the costs of
26installing, operating or maintaining facilities for the

 

 

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1particular benefit of one or more delivery services customers,
2including without limitation any costs incurred in complying
3with a customer's request to be served at a different voltage
4level, directly from the retail customer or customers for
5whose benefit the costs were incurred, to the extent such
6costs are not recovered through the charges referred to in
7subsections (c) and (d) of this Section.
8    (f) An electric utility shall be entitled but not required
9to implement transition charges in conjunction with the
10offering of delivery services pursuant to Section 16-104. If
11an electric utility implements transition charges, it shall
12implement such charges for all delivery services customers and
13for all customers described in subsection (h), but shall not
14implement transition charges for power and energy that a
15retail customer takes from cogeneration or self-generation
16facilities located on that retail customer's premises, if such
17facilities meet the following criteria:
18        (i) the cogeneration or self-generation facilities
19    serve a single retail customer and are located on that
20    retail customer's premises (for purposes of this
21    subparagraph and subparagraph (ii), an industrial or
22    manufacturing retail customer and a third party contractor
23    that is served by such industrial or manufacturing
24    customer through such retail customer's own electrical
25    distribution facilities under the circumstances described
26    in subsection (vi) of the definition of "alternative

 

 

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1    retail electric supplier" set forth in Section 16-102,
2    shall be considered a single retail customer);
3        (ii) the cogeneration or self-generation facilities
4    either (A) are sized pursuant to generally accepted
5    engineering standards for the retail customer's electrical
6    load at that premises (taking into account standby or
7    other reliability considerations related to that retail
8    customer's operations at that site) or (B) if the facility
9    is a cogeneration facility located on the retail
10    customer's premises, the retail customer is the thermal
11    host for that facility and the facility has been designed
12    to meet that retail customer's thermal energy requirements
13    resulting in electrical output beyond that retail
14    customer's electrical demand at that premises, comply with
15    the operating and efficiency standards applicable to
16    "qualifying facilities" specified in title 18 Code of
17    Federal Regulations Section 292.205 as in effect on the
18    effective date of this amendatory Act of 1999;
19        (iii) the retail customer on whose premises the
20    facilities are located either has an exclusive right to
21    receive, and corresponding obligation to pay for, all of
22    the electrical capacity of the facility, or in the case of
23    a cogeneration facility that has been designed to meet the
24    retail customer's thermal energy requirements at that
25    premises, an identified amount of the electrical capacity
26    of the facility, over a minimum 5-year period; and

 

 

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1        (iv) if the cogeneration facility is sized for the
2    retail customer's thermal load at that premises but
3    exceeds the electrical load, any sales of excess power or
4    energy are made only at wholesale, are subject to the
5    jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
6    and are not for the purpose of circumventing the
7    provisions of this subsection (f).
8If a generation facility located at a retail customer's
9premises does not meet the above criteria, an electric utility
10implementing transition charges shall implement a transition
11charge until December 31, 2006 for any power and energy taken
12by such retail customer from such facility as if such power and
13energy had been delivered by the electric utility. Provided,
14however, that an industrial retail customer that is taking
15power from a generation facility that does not meet the above
16criteria but that is located on such customer's premises will
17not be subject to a transition charge for the power and energy
18taken by such retail customer from such generation facility if
19the facility does not serve any other retail customer and
20either was installed on behalf of the customer and for its own
21use prior to January 1, 1997, or is both predominantly fueled
22by byproducts of such customer's manufacturing process at such
23premises and sells or offers an average of 300 megawatts or
24more of electricity produced from such generation facility
25into the wholesale market. Such charges shall be calculated as
26provided in Section 16-102, and shall be collected on each

 

 

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1kilowatt-hour delivered under a delivery services tariff to a
2retail customer from the date the customer first takes
3delivery services until December 31, 2006 except as provided
4in subsection (h) of this Section. Provided, however, that an
5electric utility, other than an electric utility providing
6service to at least 1,000,000 customers in this State on
7January 1, 1999, shall be entitled to petition for entry of an
8order by the Commission authorizing the electric utility to
9implement transition charges for an additional period ending
10no later than December 31, 2008. The electric utility shall
11file its petition with supporting evidence no earlier than 16
12months, and no later than 12 months, prior to December 31,
132006. The Commission shall hold a hearing on the electric
14utility's petition and shall enter its order no later than 8
15months after the petition is filed. The Commission shall
16determine whether and to what extent the electric utility
17shall be authorized to implement transition charges for an
18additional period. The Commission may authorize the electric
19utility to implement transition charges for some or all of the
20additional period, and shall determine the mitigation factors
21to be used in implementing such transition charges; provided,
22that the Commission shall not authorize mitigation factors
23less than 110% of those in effect during the 12 months ended
24December 31, 2006. In making its determination, the Commission
25shall consider the following factors: the necessity to
26implement transition charges for an additional period in order

 

 

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1to maintain the financial integrity of the electric utility;
2the prudence of the electric utility's actions in reducing its
3costs since the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997;
4the ability of the electric utility to provide safe, adequate
5and reliable service to retail customers in its service area;
6and the impact on competition of allowing the electric utility
7to implement transition charges for the additional period.
8    (g) The electric utility shall file tariffs that establish
9the transition charges to be paid by each class of customers to
10the electric utility in conjunction with the provision of
11delivery services. The electric utility's tariffs shall define
12the classes of its customers for purposes of calculating
13transition charges. The electric utility's tariffs shall
14provide for the calculation of transition charges on a
15customer-specific basis for any retail customer whose average
16monthly maximum electrical demand on the electric utility's
17system during the 6 months with the customer's highest monthly
18maximum electrical demands equals or exceeds 3.0 megawatts for
19electric utilities having more than 1,000,000 customers, and
20for other electric utilities for any customer that has an
21average monthly maximum electrical demand on the electric
22utility's system of one megawatt or more, and (A) for which
23there exists data on the customer's usage during the 3 years
24preceding the date that the customer became eligible to take
25delivery services, or (B) for which there does not exist data
26on the customer's usage during the 3 years preceding the date

 

 

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1that the customer became eligible to take delivery services,
2if in the electric utility's reasonable judgment there exists
3comparable usage information or a sufficient basis to develop
4such information, and further provided that the electric
5utility can require customers for which an individual
6calculation is made to sign contracts that set forth the
7transition charges to be paid by the customer to the electric
8utility pursuant to the tariff.
9    (h) An electric utility shall also be entitled to file
10tariffs that allow it to collect transition charges from
11retail customers in the electric utility's service area that
12do not take delivery services but that take electric power or
13energy from an alternative retail electric supplier or from an
14electric utility other than the electric utility in whose
15service area the customer is located. Such charges shall be
16calculated, in accordance with the definition of transition
17charges in Section 16-102, for the period of time that the
18customer would be obligated to pay transition charges if it
19were taking delivery services, except that no deduction for
20delivery services revenues shall be made in such calculation,
21and usage data from the customer's class shall be used where
22historical usage data is not available for the individual
23customer. The customer shall be obligated to pay such charges
24on a lump sum basis on or before the date on which the customer
25commences to take service from the alternative retail electric
26supplier or other electric utility, provided, that the

 

 

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1electric utility in whose service area the customer is located
2shall offer the customer the option of signing a contract
3pursuant to which the customer pays such charges ratably over
4the period in which the charges would otherwise have applied.
5    (i) An electric utility shall be entitled to add to the
6bills of delivery services customers charges pursuant to
7Sections 9-221, 9-222 (except as provided in Section 9-222.1),
8and Section 16-114 of this Act, Section 5-5 of the Electricity
9Infrastructure Maintenance Fee Law, Section 6-5 of the
10Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency, and Coal Resources
11Development Law of 1997, and Section 13 of the Energy
12Assistance Act.
13    (i-5) An electric utility required to impose the Coal to
14Solar and Energy Storage Initiative Charge provided for in
15subsection (c-5) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
16Act shall add such charge to the bills of its delivery services
17customers pursuant to the terms of a tariff conforming to the
18requirements of subsection (c-5) of Section 1-75 of the
19Illinois Power Agency Act and this subsection (i-5) and filed
20with and approved by the Commission. The electric utility
21shall file its proposed tariff with the Commission on or
22before July 1, 2022 to be effective, after review and approval
23or modification by the Commission, beginning January 1, 2023.
24On or before December 1, 2022, the Commission shall review the
25electric utility's proposed tariff, including by conducting a
26docketed proceeding if deemed necessary by the Commission, and

 

 

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1shall approve the proposed tariff or direct the electric
2utility to make modifications the Commission finds necessary
3for the tariff to conform to the requirements of subsection
4(c-5) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and this
5subsection (i-5). The electric utility's tariff shall provide
6for imposition of the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage
7Initiative Charge on a per-kilowatthour basis to all
8kilowatthours delivered by the electric utility to its
9delivery services customers. The tariff shall provide for the
10calculation of the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage Initiative
11Charge to be in effect for the year beginning January 1, 2023
12and each year beginning January 1 thereafter, sufficient to
13collect the electric utility's estimated payment obligations
14for the delivery year beginning the following June 1 under
15contracts for purchase of renewable energy credits entered
16into pursuant to subsection (c-5) of Section 1-75 of the
17Illinois Power Agency Act and the obligations of the
18Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, or any
19successor department or agency, which for purposes of this
20subsection (i-5) shall be referred to as the Department, to
21make grant payments during such delivery year from the Coal to
22Solar and Energy Storage Initiative Fund pursuant to grant
23contracts entered into pursuant to subsection (c-5) of Section
241-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, and using the electric
25utility's kilowatthour deliveries to its delivery services
26customers during the delivery year ended May 31 of the

 

 

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1preceding calendar year. On or before November 1 of each year
2beginning November 1, 2022, the Department shall notify the
3electric utilities of the amount of the Department's estimated
4obligations for grant payments during the delivery year
5beginning the following June 1 pursuant to grant contracts
6entered into pursuant to subsection (c-5) of Section 1-75 of
7the Illinois Power Agency Act; and each electric utility shall
8incorporate in the calculation of its Coal to Solar and Energy
9Storage Initiative Charge the fractional portion of the
10Department's estimated obligations equal to the electric
11utility's kilowatthour deliveries to its delivery services
12customers in the delivery year ended the preceding May 31
13divided by the aggregate deliveries of both electric utilities
14to delivery services customers in such delivery year. The
15electric utility shall remit on a monthly basis to the State
16Treasurer, for deposit in the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage
17Initiative Fund provided for in subsection (c-5) of Section
181-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, the electric utility's
19collections of the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage Initiative
20Charge estimated to be needed by the Department for grant
21payments pursuant to grant contracts entered into pursuant to
22subsection (c-5) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
23Act. The initial charge under the electric utility's tariff
24shall be effective for kilowatthours delivered beginning
25January 1, 2023, and thereafter shall be revised to be
26effective January 1, 2024 and each January 1 thereafter, based

 

 

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1on the payment obligations for the delivery year beginning the
2following June 1. The tariff shall provide for the electric
3utility to make an annual filing with the Commission on or
4before November 15 of each year, beginning in 2023, setting
5forth the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage Initiative Charge
6to be in effect for the year beginning the following January 1.
7The electric utility's tariff shall also provide that the
8electric utility shall make a filing with the Commission on or
9before August 1 of each year beginning in 2024 setting forth a
10reconciliation, for the delivery year ended the preceding May
1131, of the electric utility's collections of the Coal to Solar
12and Energy Storage Initiative Charge against actual payments
13for renewable energy credits pursuant to contracts entered
14into, and the actual grant payments by the Department pursuant
15to grant contracts entered into, pursuant to subsection (c-5)
16of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. The tariff
17shall provide that any excess or shortfall of collections to
18payments shall be deducted from or added to, on a
19per-kilowatthour basis, the Coal to Solar and Energy Storage
20Initiative Charge, over the 6-month period beginning October 1
21of that calendar year.
22    (j) If a retail customer that obtains electric power and
23energy from cogeneration or self-generation facilities
24installed for its own use on or before January 1, 1997,
25subsequently takes service from an alternative retail electric
26supplier or an electric utility other than the electric

 

 

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1utility in whose service area the customer is located for any
2portion of the customer's electric power and energy
3requirements formerly obtained from those facilities
4(including that amount purchased from the utility in lieu of
5such generation and not as standby power purchases, under a
6cogeneration displacement tariff in effect as of the effective
7date of this amendatory Act of 1997), the transition charges
8otherwise applicable pursuant to subsections (f), (g), or (h)
9of this Section shall not be applicable in any year to that
10portion of the customer's electric power and energy
11requirements formerly obtained from those facilities,
12provided, that for purposes of this subsection (j), such
13portion shall not exceed the average number of kilowatt-hours
14per year obtained from the cogeneration or self-generation
15facilities during the 3 years prior to the date on which the
16customer became eligible for delivery services, except as
17provided in subsection (f) of Section 16-110.
18    (k) The electric utility shall be entitled to recover
19through tariffed charges all of the costs associated with the
20purchase of zero emission credits from zero emission
21facilities to meet the requirements of subsection (d-5) of
22Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and all of the
23costs associated with the purchase of carbon mitigation
24credits from carbon-free energy resources to meet the
25requirements of subsection (d-10) of Section 1-75 of the
26Illinois Power Agency Act. Such costs shall include the costs

 

 

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1of procuring the zero emission credits and carbon mitigation
2credits from carbon-free energy resources, as well as the
3reasonable costs that the utility incurs as part of the
4procurement processes and to implement and comply with plans
5and processes approved by the Commission under subsections
6(d-5) and (d-10). The costs shall be allocated across all
7retail customers through a single, uniform cents per
8kilowatt-hour charge applicable to all retail customers, which
9shall appear as a separate line item on each customer's bill.
10The electric utility shall be entitled to recover through
11tariffed charges approved by the Commission all of the prudent
12and reasonable costs associated with energy storage resources
13procurements to meet the energy storage system portfolio
14standard of subsection (d-20) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois
15Power Agency Act. Such costs shall include the contract costs
16for the energy storage system resources and the prudent and
17reasonable costs that the utility incurs as part of the
18procurement processes and in implementing and complying with
19plans and processes approved by the Commission under
20subsection (d-20). The costs associated with the purchase of
21energy storage system resources shall be allocated across all
22retail customers in proportion to the amount of energy storage
23system resources the utility procures for such customers
24through a single, uniform cents per kilowatt-hour charge
25applicable to such retail customers, which shall appear as a
26separate line item on each customer's bill. Beginning June 1,

 

 

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12017, the electric utility shall be entitled to recover
2through tariffed charges all of the costs associated with the
3purchase of renewable energy resources to meet the renewable
4energy resource standards of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of
5the Illinois Power Agency Act, under procurement plans as
6approved in accordance with that Section and Section 16-111.5
7of this Act. Such costs shall include the costs of procuring
8the renewable energy resources, as well as the reasonable
9costs that the utility incurs as part of the procurement
10processes and to implement and comply with plans and processes
11approved by the Commission under such Sections. The costs
12associated with the purchase of renewable energy resources
13shall be allocated across all retail customers in proportion
14to the amount of renewable energy resources the utility
15procures for such customers through a single, uniform cents
16per kilowatt-hour charge applicable to such retail customers,
17which shall appear as a separate line item on each such
18customer's bill. The credits, costs, and penalties associated
19with the self-direct renewable portfolio standard compliance
20program described in subparagraph (R) of paragraph (1) of
21subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
22Act shall be allocated to approved eligible self-direct
23customers by the utility in a cents per kilowatt-hour credit,
24cost, or penalty, which shall appear as a separate line item on
25each such customer's bill.
26    Notwithstanding whether the Commission has approved the

 

 

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1initial long-term renewable resources procurement plan as of
2June 1, 2017, an electric utility shall place new tariffed
3charges into effect beginning with the June 2017 monthly
4billing period, to the extent practicable, to begin recovering
5the costs of procuring renewable energy resources, as those
6charges are calculated under the limitations described in
7subparagraph (E) of paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of Section
81-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. Notwithstanding the
9date on which the utility places such new tariffed charges
10into effect, the utility shall be permitted to collect the
11charges under such tariff as if the tariff had been in effect
12beginning with the first day of the June 2017 monthly billing
13period. For the delivery years commencing June 1, 2017, June
141, 2018, June 1, 2019, and each delivery year thereafter, the
15electric utility shall deposit into a separate interest
16bearing account of a financial institution the monies
17collected under the tariffed charges. Money collected from
18customers for the procurement of renewable energy resources in
19a given delivery year may be spent by the utility for the
20procurement of renewable resources over any of the following 5
21delivery years, after which unspent money shall be credited
22back to retail customers. The electric utility shall spend all
23money collected in earlier delivery years that has not yet
24been returned to customers, first, before spending money
25collected in later delivery years. Any interest earned shall
26be credited back to retail customers under the reconciliation

 

 

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1proceeding provided for in this subsection (k), provided that
2the electric utility shall first be reimbursed from the
3interest for the administrative costs that it incurs to
4administer and manage the account. Any taxes due on the funds
5in the account, or interest earned on it, will be paid from the
6account or, if insufficient monies are available in the
7account, from the monies collected under the tariffed charges
8to recover the costs of procuring renewable energy resources.
9Monies deposited in the account shall be subject to the
10review, reconciliation, and true-up process described in this
11subsection (k) that is applicable to the funds collected and
12costs incurred for the procurement of renewable energy
13resources.
14    The electric utility shall be entitled to recover all of
15the costs identified in this subsection (k) through automatic
16adjustment clause tariffs applicable to all of the utility's
17retail customers that allow the electric utility to adjust its
18tariffed charges consistent with this subsection (k). The
19determination as to whether any excess funds were collected
20during a given delivery year for the purchase of renewable
21energy resources, and the crediting of any excess funds back
22to retail customers, shall not be made until after the close of
23the delivery year, which will ensure that the maximum amount
24of funds is available to implement the approved long-term
25renewable resources procurement plan during a given delivery
26year. The amount of excess funds eligible to be credited back

 

 

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1to retail customers shall be reduced by an amount equal to the
2payment obligations required by any contracts entered into by
3an electric utility under contracts described in subsection
4(b) of Section 1-56 and subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the
5Illinois Power Agency Act, even if such payments have not yet
6been made and regardless of the delivery year in which those
7payment obligations were incurred. Notwithstanding anything to
8the contrary, including in tariffs authorized by this
9subsection (k) in effect before the effective date of this
10amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, all unspent
11funds as of May 31, 2021, excluding any funds credited to
12customers during any utility billing cycle that commences
13prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd
14General Assembly, shall remain in the utility account and
15shall on a first in, first out basis be used toward utility
16payment obligations under contracts described in subsection
17(b) of Section 1-56 and subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the
18Illinois Power Agency Act. The electric utility's collections
19under such automatic adjustment clause tariffs to recover the
20costs of renewable energy resources, zero emission credits
21from zero emission facilities, energy storage resources, and
22carbon mitigation credits from carbon-free energy resources
23shall be subject to separate annual review, reconciliation,
24and true-up against actual costs by the Commission under a
25procedure that shall be specified in the electric utility's
26automatic adjustment clause tariffs and that shall be approved

 

 

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1by the Commission in connection with its approval of such
2tariffs. The procedure shall provide that any difference
3between the electric utility's collections for energy storage
4resources, zero emission credits, and carbon mitigation
5credits under the automatic adjustment charges for an annual
6period and the electric utility's actual costs of energy
7storage resources, zero emission credits from zero emission
8facilities, and carbon mitigation credits from carbon-free
9energy resources for that same annual period shall be refunded
10to or collected from, as applicable, the electric utility's
11retail customers in subsequent periods.
12    Nothing in this subsection (k) is intended to affect,
13limit, or change the right of the electric utility to recover
14the costs associated with the procurement of renewable energy
15resources for periods commencing before, on, or after June 1,
162017, as otherwise provided in the Illinois Power Agency Act.
17    The funding available under this subsection (k), if any,
18for the programs described under subsection (b) of Section
191-56 of the Illinois Power Agency Act shall not reduce the
20amount of funding for the programs described in subparagraph
21(O) of paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of the
22Illinois Power Agency Act. If funding is available under this
23subsection (k) for programs described under subsection (b) of
24Section 1-56 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, then the
25long-term renewable resources plan shall provide for the
26Agency to procure contracts in an amount that does not exceed

 

 

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1the funding, and the contracts approved by the Commission
2shall be executed by the applicable utility or utilities.
3    (l) A utility that has terminated any contract executed
4under subsection (d-5) or (d-10) of Section 1-75 of the
5Illinois Power Agency Act shall be entitled to recover any
6remaining balance associated with the purchase of zero
7emission credits prior to such termination, and such utility
8shall also apply a credit to its retail customer bills in the
9event of any over-collection.
10    (m)(1) An electric utility that recovers its costs of
11procuring zero emission credits from zero emission facilities
12through a cents-per-kilowatthour charge under subsection (k)
13of this Section shall be subject to the requirements of this
14subsection (m). Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, such
15electric utility shall, beginning on April 30, 2018, and each
16April 30 thereafter until April 30, 2026, calculate whether
17any reduction must be applied to such cents-per-kilowatthour
18charge that is paid by retail customers of the electric
19utility that have opted out of subsections (a) through (j) of
20Section 8-103B of this Act under subsection (l) of Section
218-103B. Such charge shall be reduced for such customers for
22the next delivery year commencing on June 1 based on the amount
23necessary, if any, to limit the annual estimated average net
24increase for the prior calendar year due to the future energy
25investment costs to no more than 1.3% of 5.98 cents per
26kilowatt-hour, which is the average amount paid per

 

 

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1kilowatthour for electric service during the year ending
2December 31, 2015 by Illinois industrial retail customers, as
3reported to the Edison Electric Institute.
4    The calculations required by this subsection (m) shall be
5made only once for each year, and no subsequent rate impact
6determinations shall be made.
7    (2) For purposes of this Section, "future energy
8investment costs" shall be calculated by subtracting the
9cents-per-kilowatthour charge identified in subparagraph (A)
10of this paragraph (2) from the sum of the
11cents-per-kilowatthour charges identified in subparagraph (B)
12of this paragraph (2):
13        (A) The cents-per-kilowatthour charge identified in
14    the electric utility's tariff placed into effect under
15    Section 8-103 of the Public Utilities Act that, on
16    December 1, 2016, was applicable to those retail customers
17    that have opted out of subsections (a) through (j) of
18    Section 8-103B of this Act under subsection (l) of Section
19    8-103B.
20        (B) The sum of the following cents-per-kilowatthour
21    charges applicable to those retail customers that have
22    opted out of subsections (a) through (j) of Section 8-103B
23    of this Act under subsection (l) of Section 8-103B,
24    provided that if one or more of the following charges has
25    been in effect and applied to such customers for more than
26    one calendar year, then each charge shall be equal to the

 

 

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1    average of the charges applied over a period that
2    commences with the calendar year ending December 31, 2017
3    and ends with the most recently completed calendar year
4    prior to the calculation required by this subsection (m):
5            (i) the cents-per-kilowatthour charge to recover
6        the costs incurred by the utility under subsection
7        (d-5) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
8        Act, adjusted for any reductions required under this
9        subsection (m); and
10            (ii) the cents-per-kilowatthour charge to recover
11        the costs incurred by the utility under Section
12        16-107.6 of the Public Utilities Act.
13        If no charge was applied for a given calendar year
14    under item (i) or (ii) of this subparagraph (B), then the
15    value of the charge for that year shall be zero.
16    (3) If a reduction is required by the calculation
17performed under this subsection (m), then the amount of the
18reduction shall be multiplied by the number of years reflected
19in the averages calculated under subparagraph (B) of paragraph
20(2) of this subsection (m). Such reduction shall be applied to
21the cents-per-kilowatthour charge that is applicable to those
22retail customers that have opted out of subsections (a)
23through (j) of Section 8-103B of this Act under subsection (l)
24of Section 8-103B beginning with the next delivery year
25commencing after the date of the calculation required by this
26subsection (m).

 

 

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1    (4) The electric utility shall file a notice with the
2Commission on May 1 of 2018 and each May 1 thereafter until May
31, 2026 containing the reduction, if any, which must be
4applied for the delivery year which begins in the year of the
5filing. The notice shall contain the calculations made
6pursuant to this Section. By October 1 of each year beginning
7in 2018, each electric utility shall notify the Commission if
8it appears, based on an estimate of the calculation required
9in this subsection (m), that a reduction will be required in
10the next year.
11    (n)(1) The Commission shall, within 180 days after the
12effective date of this amendatory Act of the 104th General
13Assembly, initiate and complete a rulemaking proceeding to
14revise 83 Ill. Adm. Code 466 and 83 Ill. Adm. Code 467 to
15address barriers to timely and cost-effective interconnections
16for distributed generation facilities with a nameplate
17capacity of at least 40 kilowatts but no greater than 2
18megawatts, including stand-alone solar photovoltaic systems,
19battery energy storage, hybrid gas-electric systems, and
20renewable natural gas integrations. The revisions shall
21include:
22        (A) capping interconnection study costs at 150% of the
23    initial feasibility estimate or $50,000 per study,
24    whichever is lesser, requiring electric distribution
25    companies to justify estimates in advance, and prohibiting
26    overhead markups on labor or materials;

 

 

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1        (B) permitting applicants to self-supply
2    interconnection studies or self-build system upgrades if
3    an electric distribution company cannot complete them
4    within 90 days or at capped costs, as long as such studies
5    and upgrades meet the technical standards for electric
6    distribution companies and are subject to Commission
7    review for compliance;
8        (C) enhancing transparency by requiring electric
9    distribution companies to provide anonymized queue data,
10    model assumptions, and progress reports under
11    confidentiality agreements, while maintaining system
12    security;
13        (D) updating definitions to explicitly include
14    stand-alone solar photovoltaic systems, battery energy
15    storage, and hybrid gas-electric systems as distributed
16    generation facilities and clarifying that lower-voltage
17    facilities that qualify as transmission facilities under
18    FERC Order 888 shall be treated as transmission
19    facilities;
20        (E) mandating that all interconnection agreements be
21    filed with the Commission within 30 days after the
22    execution of the agreement, with provisions allowing
23    applicants to file unexecuted agreements in initiating a
24    rate case proceeding; and
25        (F) adding a pro forma attachment affirming that
26    interconnecting facilities, including storage, comply with

 

 

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1    the requirements for non-taxable status under 26 U.S.C.
2    45.
3    (2) The Commission shall coordinate the revisions under
4this subsection (n) with a Future of Gas proceeding pursuant
5to the final Order of the Commission in Docket No. 24-0158 to
6ensure compatibility with gas decarbonization pathways and to
7prioritize market-driven distributed resources that enhance
8reliability and affordability. The revised rules shall take
9effect no later than July 1, 2026.
10(Source: P.A. 104-458, eff. 6-1-26.)
 
11    Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
12changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
13that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
14represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
15not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
16made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
17Public Act.
 
18    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
19becoming law.