HB 77

1
A bill to be entitled
2An act relating to renewable energy; creating s. 366.91,
3F.S.; providing legislative findings; providing
4definitions; requiring public utilities, municipal
5utilities, and rural electric cooperatives to offer a
6purchase contract to producers of renewable energy;
7requiring the Florida Public Service Commission to
8establish requirements relating to the purchase of
9capacity and energy by public utilities from renewable
10energy producers; authorizing the commission to adopt
11rules; providing requirements for contracts; requiring
12that a producer pay the costs for interconnection;
13amending s. 366.11, F.S.; specifying that requirements for
14the purchase of renewable energy apply to municipal
15utilities; amending s. 403.7061, F.S.; revising a permit
16requirement for a waste-to-energy facility; encouraging
17specified applicants for a landfill permit to consider
18construction of a waste-to-energy facility; providing an
19effective date.
20
21Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
22
23     Section 1.  Section 366.91, Florida Statutes, is created to
24read:
25     366.91  Renewable energy.--
26     (1)  The Legislature finds that it is in the public
27interest to promote the development of renewable energy
28resources in this state. Renewable energy resources have the
29potential to help diversify fuel types to meet Florida's growing
30dependency on natural gas for electric production, minimize the
31volatility of fuel costs, encourage investment within the state,
32improve environmental conditions, and make Florida a leader in
33new and innovative technologies.
34     (2)  As used in this section, the term:
35     (a)  "Biomass" means a power source that is comprised of,
36but not limited to, combustible residues or gases from forest-
37products manufacturing, agricultural and orchard crops, waste
38products from livestock and poultry operations and food
39processing, urban wood waste, municipal solid waste, municipal
40liquid waste treatment operations, and landfill gas.
41     (b)  "Renewable energy" means electrical energy produced
42from a method that uses one or more of the following fuels or
43energy sources: hydrogen produced from sources other than fossil
44fuels, biomass, solar energy, geothermal energy, wind energy,
45ocean energy, and hydroelectric power. The term includes the
46alternative energy resource, waste heat, from sulfuric acid
47manufacturing operations.
48     (3)  On or before January 1, 2006, each public utility must
49continuously offer a purchase contract to producers of renewable
50energy. The commission shall establish requirements relating to
51the purchase of capacity and energy by public utilities from
52renewable energy producers and may adopt rules to administer
53this section. The contract shall contain payment provisions for
54energy and capacity which are based upon the utility's full
55avoided costs, as defined in s. 366.051; however, capacity
56payments are not required if, due to the operational
57characteristics of the renewable energy generator or the
58anticipated peak and off-peak availability and capacity factor
59of the utility's avoided unit, the producer is unlikely to
60provide any capacity value to the utility or the electric grid
61during the contract term. Each contract must provide a contract
62term of at least 10 years. Prudent and reasonable costs
63associated with a renewable energy contract shall be recovered
64from the ratepayers of the contracting utility, without
65differentiation among customer classes, through the appropriate
66cost-recovery clause mechanism administered by the commission.
67     (4)  On or before January 1, 2006, each municipal electric
68utility and rural electric cooperative whose annual sales, as of
69July 1, 1993, to retail customers were greater than 2,000
70gigawatt hours must continuously offer a purchase contract to
71producers of renewable energy containing payment provisions for
72energy and capacity which are based upon the utility's or
73cooperative's full avoided costs, as determined by the governing
74body of the municipal utility or cooperative; however, capacity
75payments are not required if, due to the operational
76characteristics of the renewable energy generator or the
77anticipated peak and off-peak availability and capacity factor
78of the utility's avoided unit, the producer is unlikely to
79provide any capacity value to the utility or the electric grid
80during the contract term. Each contract must provide a contract
81term of at least 10 years.
82     (5)  A contracting producer of renewable energy must pay
83the actual costs of its interconnection with the transmission
84grid or distribution system.
85     Section 2.  Subsection (1) of section 366.11, Florida
86Statutes, is amended to read:
87     366.11  Certain exemptions.--
88     (1)  No provision of this chapter shall apply in any
89manner, other than as specified in ss. 366.04, 366.05(7) and
90(8), 366.051, 366.055, 366.093, 366.095, 366.14, and 366.80-
91366.85, and 366.91, to utilities owned and operated by
92municipalities, whether within or without any municipality, or
93by cooperatives organized and existing under the Rural Electric
94Cooperative Law of the state, or to the sale of electricity,
95manufactured gas, or natural gas at wholesale by any public
96utility to, and the purchase by, any municipality or cooperative
97under and pursuant to any contracts now in effect or which may
98be entered into in the future, when such municipality or
99cooperative is engaged in the sale and distribution of
100electricity or manufactured or natural gas, or to the rates
101provided for in such contracts.
102     Section 3.  Section 403.7061, Florida Statutes, is amended
103to read:
104     403.7061  Requirements for review of new waste-to-energy
105facility capacity by the Department of Environmental
106Protection.--
107     (1)  The Legislature recognizes the need to use an
108integrated approach to municipal solid waste management.
109Accordingly, the solid waste management legislation adopted in
1101988 was guided by policies intended to foster integrated solid
111waste management by using waste reduction, recycling, waste-to-
112energy facilities, and landfills. Progress is being made in the
113state using this integrated approach to municipal solid waste
114management, and this approach should be continued. Waste-to-
115energy facilities will continue to be an integral part of the
116state's solid waste management practices. However, the state is
117committed to achieving its recycling and waste reduction goals
118and must ensure that waste-to-energy facilities are fully
119integrated with the state's waste management goals. Therefore,
120the Legislature finds that the department should evaluate
121applications for waste-to-energy facilities in accordance with
122the new criteria in subsection (3) to confirm that the
123facilities are part of an integrated waste management plan.
124     (2)  Notwithstanding any other provisions of state law, the
125department shall not issue a construction permit or
126certification to build a waste-to-energy facility or expand an
127existing waste-to-energy facility unless the facility meets the
128requirements set forth in subsection (3). Any construction
129permit issued by the department between January 1, 1993, and May
13012, 1993, which does not address these new requirements shall be
131invalid. These new requirements do not apply to the issuance of
132permits or permit modifications to retrofit existing facilities
133with new or improved pollution control equipment to comply with
134state or federal law. The department shall initiate rulemaking
135to incorporate the criteria in subsection (3) into its permit
136review process.
137     (3)  An applicant must provide reasonable assurance that
138the construction of a new waste-to-energy facility or the
139expansion of an existing waste-to-energy facility will comply
140with the following criteria subsections:
141     (a)  The facility is a necessary part of the local
142government's integrated solid waste management program in the
143jurisdiction where the facility is located and cannot be avoided
144through feasible and practical efforts to use recycling or waste
145reduction.
146     (b)  The use of capacity at existing waste-to-energy
147facilities within reasonable transportation distance of the
148proposed facility must have been evaluated and found not to be
149economically feasible when compared to the use of the proposed
150facility for the expected life of the proposed facility. This
151paragraph does not apply to:
152     1.  Applications to build or expand waste-to-energy
153facilities received by the department before March 1, 1993, or
154amendments to such applications that do not increase combustion
155capacity beyond that requested as of March 1, 1993; or
156     2.  Any modification to waste-to-energy facility
157construction or operating permits or certifications or
158conditions thereto, including certifications under ss. 403.501-
159403.518, that do not increase combustion capacity above that
160amount applied for before March 1, 1993.
161     (c)  The county in which the facility is located has
162implemented and maintains a solid waste management and recycling
163program that is designed to will achieve the 30-percent waste
164reduction goal set forth in s. 403.706(4) by the time the
165facility begins operation. For the purposes of this section, the
166provisions of s. 403.706(4)(c) for counties having with
167populations of 100,000 75,000 or fewer less do not apply.
168     (d)  The local government in which the facility is located
169has implemented a mulching, composting, or other waste reduction
170program for yard trash.
171     (e)  The local governments served by the facility will have
172implemented or participated in a separation program designed to
173remove small-quantity generator and household hazardous waste,
174mercury containing devices, and mercuric-oxide batteries from
175the waste stream prior to incineration, by the time the facility
176begins operation.
177     (f)  The local government in which the facility is located
178has implemented a program to procure products or materials with
179recycled content, pursuant to s. 403.7065.
180     (g)  A program will exist in the local government in which
181the facility is located for collecting and recycling recovered
182material from the institutional, commercial, and industrial
183sectors by the time the facility begins operation.
184     (h)  The facility will be in compliance with applicable
185local ordinances and with the approved state and local
186comprehensive plans required by chapter 163.
187     (i)  The facility is in substantial compliance with its
188permit, conditions of certification, and any agreements or
189orders resulting from environmental enforcement actions by state
190agencies.
191     (4)  For the purposes of this section, the term "waste-to-
192energy facility" means a facility that uses an enclosed device
193using controlled combustion to thermally break down solid,
194liquid, or gaseous combustible solid waste to an ash residue
195that contains little or no combustible material and that
196produces electricity, steam, or other energy as a result. The
197term does not include facilities that primarily burn fuels other
198than solid waste even if such facilities also burn some solid
199waste as a fuel supplement. The term also does not include
200facilities that burn vegetative, agricultural, or silvicultural
201wastes, bagasse, clean dry wood, methane or other landfill gas,
202wood fuel derived from construction or demolition debris, or
203waste tires, alone or in combination with fossil fuels.
204     Section 4.  Requirements relating to solid waste disposal
205facility permitting.--Local government applicants for a permit
206to construct or expand a Class I landfill are encouraged to
207consider construction of a waste-to-energy facility as an
208alternative to additional landfill space.
209     Section 5.  This act shall take effect October 1, 2005.


CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.