(220 ILCS 5/16-104)
Sec. 16-104.
Delivery services transition plan.
An
electric utility shall provide delivery services to retail
customers in accordance with the provisions of this Section.
(a) Each electric utility shall offer delivery services
to retail customers located in its service area in accordance
with the following provisions:
(1) On or before October 1, 1999, the electric |
| utility shall offer delivery services (i) to any non-residential retail customer whose average monthly maximum electrical demand on the electric utility's system during the 6 months with the customer's highest monthly maximum demands in the 12 months ending June 30, 1999 equals or exceeds 4 megawatts; (ii) to any non-governmental, non-residential, commercial retail customers under common ownership doing business at 10 or more separate locations within the electric utility's service area, if the aggregate coincident average monthly maximum electrical demand of all such locations during the 6 months with the customer's highest monthly maximum electrical demands during the 12 months ending June 30, 1999 equals or exceeds 9.5 megawatts, provided, however, that an electric utility's obligation to offer delivery services under this clause (ii) shall not exceed 3.5% of the maximum electric demand on the electric utility's system in the 12 months ending June 30, 1999; and (iii) to non-residential retail customers whose annual electric energy use comprises 33% of the kilowatt-hour sales, excluding the kilowatt-hour sales to customers described in clauses (i) and (ii), to each non-residential retail customer class of the electric utility.
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(2) On or before October 1, 2000, the electric
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| utility shall offer delivery services to the eligible governmental customers described in subsections (a) and (b) of Section 16-125A if the aggregate coincident average monthly maximum electrical demand of such customers during the 6 months with the customers' highest monthly maximum electrical demands during the 12 months ending June 30, 2000 equals or exceeds 9.5 megawatts.
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(2.5) On or before June 1, 2000, an electric utility
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| serving more than 1,000,000 customers in this State shall offer delivery services to retail customers whose annual electric energy use comprises 33% of the kilowatt hour sales to that group of retail customers that are classified under Division D, Groups 20 through 39 of the Standard Industrial Classifications set forth in the Standard Industrial Classification Manual published by the United States Office of Management and Budget, excluding the kilowatt-hour sales to those customers that are eligible for delivery services pursuant to clause (1)(i), and shall offer delivery services to its remaining retail customers classified under Division D, Groups 20 through 39 on or before October 1, 2000.
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(3) On or before December 31, 2000, the electric
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| utility shall offer delivery services to all remaining nonresidential retail customers in its service area.
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(4) On or before May 1, 2002, the electric utility
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| shall offer delivery services to all residential retail customers in its service area.
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The loads and kilowatt-hour sales used for purposes of
this subsection shall be those for the 12 months ending
June 30, 1999 for nonresidential retail customers.
The electric
utility shall identify those customers to be offered delivery
service pursuant to clause (1)(iii) and paragraph (2.5) of subsection (a) of
this Section and Section 16-111(e)(B)(iii) pursuant to a lottery or other
random
nondiscriminatory
selection
process set forth in the electric
utility's delivery services implementation plan pursuant to
Section 16-105, which process may include a registration process giving each
nonresidential
customer the opportunity to register for eligibility for delivery services
under this Section, with a lottery of registered customers to be conducted if
the annual electric energy use of all registered customers exceeds the limit
set forth in clause (1)(iii) or clause (2.5) or Section 16-111(e)(B)(iii), as
applicable; provided that the provision of this amendatory Act
of 1999 as it relates to the registration and lottery process under clause
(1)(iii) is not intended to nor does it make any change in the meaning of this
Section, but is intended to remove possible ambiguities, thereby confirming the
existing meaning of this Section prior to the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1999.
Provided, that non-residential retail
customers under common ownership at separate locations within
the electric utility's service area may elect, prior to the
date the electric utility conducts the lottery or other random
selection process for purposes of clause (1)(iii), to
designate themselves as a common ownership group, to be
excluded from such lottery and to instead participate in a
separate lottery for such common ownership group pursuant to
which delivery services will be offered to non-residential
retail customers comprising 33% of the total kilowatt-hour sales to the
common ownership group on or before
October 1, 1999. For purposes of this
subsection (a), an electric utility may define "common
ownership" to exclude sites which are not part of the same
business, provided, that auxiliary establishments as defined
in the Standard Industrial Classification Manual published by
the United States Office of Management and Budget shall not be
excluded.
(b) The electric utility shall allow the aggregation of loads that are
eligible for delivery services so long as
such aggregation meets the criteria for delivery of electric
power and energy applicable to the electric utility
established by the regional reliability council to which the
electric utility belongs, by an independent
system operating organization to which the electric utility
belongs, or by another organization responsible for overseeing
the integrity and reliability of the transmission system, as
such criteria are in effect from time to time. The Commission
may adopt rules and regulations governing the criteria for
aggregation of the loads utilizing delivery services, but its
failure to do so shall not preclude any eligible customer from
electing delivery services. The electric utility shall allow such aggregation
for any
voluntary grouping of customers, including without limitation those having a
common agent with
contractual authority to purchase electric power and energy
and delivery services on behalf of all customers in the
grouping.
(c) An electric utility shall allow a retail customer
that generates power for its own use to include the electrical
demand obtained from the customer's cogeneration or self-generation facilities
that is coincident with the retail
customer's maximum monthly electrical demand on the electric
utility's system in any determination of the customer's
maximum monthly electrical demand for purposes of determining
when such retail customer shall be offered delivery services pursuant to clause
(i) of subparagraph (1) of subsection (a) of this Section.
(d) The Commission shall establish charges, terms and
conditions for delivery services in accordance with Section
16-108.
(e) Subject to the terms and conditions which the
electric utility is entitled to impose in accordance with
Section 16-108, a retail customer that is eligible to elect
delivery services pursuant to subsection (a) may place all or
a portion of its electric power and energy requirements on
delivery services.
(f) An electric utility may require a retail customer
who elects to (i) use an alternative retail electric supplier
or another electric utility for some but not all of its
electric power or energy requirements, and (ii) use the
electric utility for any portion of its remaining electric
power and energy requirements, to place the portion of the
customer's electric power or energy requirement that is to be
served by the electric utility on a tariff containing charges
that are set to recover the lowest reasonably available cost
to the electric utility of acquiring electric power and energy
on the wholesale electric market to serve such remaining
portion of the customer's electric power and energy
requirement, reasonable compensation for arranging for and
providing such electric power or energy, and the electric
utility's other costs of providing service to such remaining
electric power and energy requirement.
(Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 12-16-97; 91-50, eff. 6-30-99.)
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