1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to renewable energy; creating s. 366.91, |
3 | F.S.; providing legislative findings; providing |
4 | definitions; requiring public utilities, municipal |
5 | utilities, and rural electric cooperatives to offer a |
6 | purchase contract to producers of renewable energy; |
7 | requiring the Florida Public Service Commission to |
8 | establish requirements relating to the purchase of |
9 | capacity and energy by public utilities from renewable |
10 | energy producers; authorizing the commission to adopt |
11 | rules; providing requirements for contracts; requiring |
12 | that a producer pay the costs for interconnection; |
13 | amending s. 366.11, F.S.; specifying that requirements for |
14 | the purchase of renewable energy apply to municipal |
15 | utilities; amending s. 403.7061, F.S.; revising a permit |
16 | requirement for a waste-to-energy facility; encouraging |
17 | specified applicants for a landfill permit to consider |
18 | construction of a waste-to-energy facility; providing an |
19 | effective date. |
20 |
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21 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
22 |
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23 | Section 1. Section 366.91, Florida Statutes, is created to |
24 | read: |
25 | 366.91 Renewable energy.-- |
26 | (1) The Legislature finds that it is in the public |
27 | interest to promote the development of renewable energy |
28 | resources in this state. Renewable energy resources have the |
29 | potential to help diversify fuel types to meet Florida's growing |
30 | dependency on natural gas for electric production, minimize the |
31 | volatility of fuel costs, encourage investment within the state, |
32 | improve environmental conditions, and make Florida a leader in |
33 | new and innovative technologies. |
34 | (2) As used in this section, the term: |
35 | (a) "Biomass" means a power source that is comprised of, |
36 | but not limited to, combustible residues or gases from forest- |
37 | products manufacturing, agricultural and orchard crops, waste |
38 | products from livestock and poultry operations and food |
39 | processing, urban wood waste, municipal solid waste, municipal |
40 | liquid waste treatment operations, and landfill gas. |
41 | (b) "Renewable energy" means electrical energy produced |
42 | from a method that uses one or more of the following fuels or |
43 | energy sources: hydrogen produced from sources other than fossil |
44 | fuels, biomass, solar energy, geothermal energy, wind energy, |
45 | ocean energy, and hydroelectric power. The term includes the |
46 | alternative energy resource, waste heat, from sulfuric acid |
47 | manufacturing operations. |
48 | (3) On or before January 1, 2006, each public utility must |
49 | continuously offer a purchase contract to producers of renewable |
50 | energy. The commission shall establish requirements relating to |
51 | the purchase of capacity and energy by public utilities from |
52 | renewable energy producers and may adopt rules to administer |
53 | this section. The contract shall contain payment provisions for |
54 | energy and capacity which are based upon the utility's full |
55 | avoided costs, as defined in s. 366.051; however, capacity |
56 | payments are not required if, due to the operational |
57 | characteristics of the renewable energy generator or the |
58 | anticipated peak and off-peak availability and capacity factor |
59 | of the utility's avoided unit, the producer is unlikely to |
60 | provide any capacity value to the utility or the electric grid |
61 | during the contract term. Each contract must provide a contract |
62 | term of at least 10 years. Prudent and reasonable costs |
63 | associated with a renewable energy contract shall be recovered |
64 | from the ratepayers of the contracting utility, without |
65 | differentiation among customer classes, through the appropriate |
66 | cost-recovery clause mechanism administered by the commission. |
67 | (4) On or before January 1, 2006, each municipal electric |
68 | utility and rural electric cooperative whose annual sales, as of |
69 | July 1, 1993, to retail customers were greater than 2,000 |
70 | gigawatt hours must continuously offer a purchase contract to |
71 | producers of renewable energy containing payment provisions for |
72 | energy and capacity which are based upon the utility's or |
73 | cooperative's full avoided costs, as determined by the governing |
74 | body of the municipal utility or cooperative; however, capacity |
75 | payments are not required if, due to the operational |
76 | characteristics of the renewable energy generator or the |
77 | anticipated peak and off-peak availability and capacity factor |
78 | of the utility's avoided unit, the producer is unlikely to |
79 | provide any capacity value to the utility or the electric grid |
80 | during the contract term. Each contract must provide a contract |
81 | term of at least 10 years. |
82 | (5) A contracting producer of renewable energy must pay |
83 | the actual costs of its interconnection with the transmission |
84 | grid or distribution system. |
85 | Section 2. Subsection (1) of section 366.11, Florida |
86 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
87 | 366.11 Certain exemptions.-- |
88 | (1) No provision of this chapter shall apply in any |
89 | manner, 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- |
91 | 366.85, and 366.91, to utilities owned and operated by |
92 | municipalities, whether within or without any municipality, or |
93 | by cooperatives organized and existing under the Rural Electric |
94 | Cooperative Law of the state, or to the sale of electricity, |
95 | manufactured gas, or natural gas at wholesale by any public |
96 | utility to, and the purchase by, any municipality or cooperative |
97 | under and pursuant to any contracts now in effect or which may |
98 | be entered into in the future, when such municipality or |
99 | cooperative is engaged in the sale and distribution of |
100 | electricity or manufactured or natural gas, or to the rates |
101 | provided for in such contracts. |
102 | Section 3. Section 403.7061, Florida Statutes, is amended |
103 | to read: |
104 | 403.7061 Requirements for review of new waste-to-energy |
105 | facility capacity by the Department of Environmental |
106 | Protection.-- |
107 | (1) The Legislature recognizes the need to use an |
108 | integrated approach to municipal solid waste management. |
109 | Accordingly, the solid waste management legislation adopted in |
110 | 1988 was guided by policies intended to foster integrated solid |
111 | waste management by using waste reduction, recycling, waste-to- |
112 | energy facilities, and landfills. Progress is being made in the |
113 | state using this integrated approach to municipal solid waste |
114 | management, and this approach should be continued. Waste-to- |
115 | energy facilities will continue to be an integral part of the |
116 | state's solid waste management practices. However, the state is |
117 | committed to achieving its recycling and waste reduction goals |
118 | and must ensure that waste-to-energy facilities are fully |
119 | integrated with the state's waste management goals. Therefore, |
120 | the Legislature finds that the department should evaluate |
121 | applications for waste-to-energy facilities in accordance with |
122 | the new criteria in subsection (3) to confirm that the |
123 | facilities are part of an integrated waste management plan. |
124 | (2) Notwithstanding any other provisions of state law, the |
125 | department shall not issue a construction permit or |
126 | certification to build a waste-to-energy facility or expand an |
127 | existing waste-to-energy facility unless the facility meets the |
128 | requirements set forth in subsection (3). Any construction |
129 | permit issued by the department between January 1, 1993, and May |
130 | 12, 1993, which does not address these new requirements shall be |
131 | invalid. These new requirements do not apply to the issuance of |
132 | permits or permit modifications to retrofit existing facilities |
133 | with new or improved pollution control equipment to comply with |
134 | state or federal law. The department shall initiate rulemaking |
135 | to incorporate the criteria in subsection (3) into its permit |
136 | review process. |
137 | (3) An applicant must provide reasonable assurance that |
138 | the construction of a new waste-to-energy facility or the |
139 | expansion of an existing waste-to-energy facility will comply |
140 | with the following criteria subsections: |
141 | (a) The facility is a necessary part of the local |
142 | government's integrated solid waste management program in the |
143 | jurisdiction where the facility is located and cannot be avoided |
144 | through feasible and practical efforts to use recycling or waste |
145 | reduction. |
146 | (b) The use of capacity at existing waste-to-energy |
147 | facilities within reasonable transportation distance of the |
148 | proposed facility must have been evaluated and found not to be |
149 | economically feasible when compared to the use of the proposed |
150 | facility for the expected life of the proposed facility. This |
151 | paragraph does not apply to: |
152 | 1. Applications to build or expand waste-to-energy |
153 | facilities received by the department before March 1, 1993, or |
154 | amendments to such applications that do not increase combustion |
155 | capacity beyond that requested as of March 1, 1993; or |
156 | 2. Any modification to waste-to-energy facility |
157 | construction or operating permits or certifications or |
158 | conditions thereto, including certifications under ss. 403.501- |
159 | 403.518, that do not increase combustion capacity above that |
160 | amount applied for before March 1, 1993. |
161 | (c) The county in which the facility is located has |
162 | implemented and maintains a solid waste management and recycling |
163 | program that is designed to will achieve the 30-percent waste |
164 | reduction goal set forth in s. 403.706(4) by the time the |
165 | facility begins operation. For the purposes of this section, the |
166 | provisions of s. 403.706(4)(c) for counties having with |
167 | populations of 100,000 75,000 or fewer less do not apply. |
168 | (d) The local government in which the facility is located |
169 | has implemented a mulching, composting, or other waste reduction |
170 | program for yard trash. |
171 | (e) The local governments served by the facility will have |
172 | implemented or participated in a separation program designed to |
173 | remove small-quantity generator and household hazardous waste, |
174 | mercury containing devices, and mercuric-oxide batteries from |
175 | the waste stream prior to incineration, by the time the facility |
176 | begins operation. |
177 | (f) The local government in which the facility is located |
178 | has implemented a program to procure products or materials with |
179 | recycled content, pursuant to s. 403.7065. |
180 | (g) A program will exist in the local government in which |
181 | the facility is located for collecting and recycling recovered |
182 | material from the institutional, commercial, and industrial |
183 | sectors by the time the facility begins operation. |
184 | (h) The facility will be in compliance with applicable |
185 | local ordinances and with the approved state and local |
186 | comprehensive plans required by chapter 163. |
187 | (i) The facility is in substantial compliance with its |
188 | permit, conditions of certification, and any agreements or |
189 | orders resulting from environmental enforcement actions by state |
190 | agencies. |
191 | (4) For the purposes of this section, the term "waste-to- |
192 | energy facility" means a facility that uses an enclosed device |
193 | using controlled combustion to thermally break down solid, |
194 | liquid, or gaseous combustible solid waste to an ash residue |
195 | that contains little or no combustible material and that |
196 | produces electricity, steam, or other energy as a result. The |
197 | term does not include facilities that primarily burn fuels other |
198 | than solid waste even if such facilities also burn some solid |
199 | waste as a fuel supplement. The term also does not include |
200 | facilities that burn vegetative, agricultural, or silvicultural |
201 | wastes, bagasse, clean dry wood, methane or other landfill gas, |
202 | wood fuel derived from construction or demolition debris, or |
203 | waste tires, alone or in combination with fossil fuels. |
204 | Section 4. Requirements relating to solid waste disposal |
205 | facility permitting.--Local government applicants for a permit |
206 | to construct or expand a Class I landfill are encouraged to |
207 | consider construction of a waste-to-energy facility as an |
208 | alternative to additional landfill space. |
209 | Section 5. This act shall take effect October 1, 2005. |