SPONSOR: |
Sen. Poore & Rep. Brady |
|
Sens. Lopez, Pettyjohn, Sokola,
Townsend, ; Reps.
Bennett, Bolden, Outten,
Peterman |
DELAWARE STATE SENATE 147th GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
SENATE BILL NO. 150 |
AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 29 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO SUSTAINABLE ENERGY UTILITY. |
Section 1. Amend Chapter 80, Title 29 of the Delaware Code by making insertions as shown by underlining and deletions as shown by strike through as follows:
§ 8059. Sustainable Energy Utility.
(a) Definitions. -- As used in this section:
(1) "Agency" means any state agency, authority, or any political subdivision of the State or local government, including, but not limited to, county, city, township, village or municipal government, local school districts, and institutions of higher education, any state-supported institution, or a joint action agency composed of political subdivisions.
(2) "Contract Administrator" means an entity or person
contracted through competitive bid by the Delaware Energy Office that manages
the functions and responsibilities of the SEU.
(3) "Fiscal agent" means an entity or person contracted
by the Delaware Energy Office to assist in the financial management of the SEU.
(4) "Implementation contractor" means any entity
competitively contracted by the SEU to implement specific programs and
services.
(5) (2) "SEU Oversight Board" ("the
Board") means a the board comprised of public, academic
and private sector representatives that acts to establish and revise SEU
performance targets and to oversee SEU program planning, implementation, and
evaluation to ensure compliance with performance targets created
pursuant to this section.
(6) (3) "Sustainable Energy Utility"
("SEU") is the nonprofit entity under which the contract
administrator must operate according created pursuant to the
provisions of this section to develop and coordinate programs for energy
end-users in Delaware for the purpose of promoting the sustainable use of
energy in Delaware.
(b) Intent of legislation. -- The General Assembly finds that there remain in Delaware significant, cost-effective opportunities to acquire end-user energy efficiency savings that can lower customers' bills and reduce the environmental impacts of energy production, delivery, and use. Delaware has an opportunity to create new markets for customer-sited renewable energy generation that will help build jobs in Delaware, improve our national security, keep value within the local economy, improve energy reliability, and protect Delawareans from the damaging effects of recurrent energy price spikes.
(c) Sustainable Energy Utility administrative organization. --
(1) This section creates the "Sustainable Energy Utility"
("SEU"). The SEU program through the contractor administrator
shall design and deliver comprehensive end-user energy efficiency and
customer-sited renewable energy services to Delaware's households and
businesses. The SEU shall be unaffiliated with any of the State's electric or
gas utilities, public or private. , and it will operate through the
contract administrators under contract to the Delaware Energy Office
("Energy Office" or "DEO") under the direction of the State
Energy Coordinator. The SEU shall be known by a trade name to be determined by
the Delaware Energy Office.
(2) Routine administration of the SEU shall be managed by a
contract administrator. The funds to support an executive director
selected by the Board through an open and competitive selection process.the
SEU's activities shall be managed by a fiscal agent. This institutional
structure, with ultimate responsibility for oversight residing with the
Delaware Energy Office under the direction of the State Energy Coordinator and
the Oversight Board, as detailed in subsections (d) and (e) of this section, is
intended to protect not only the SEU's independence, but also to assure that
its performance is continually and closely monitored and that it always has the
strongest incentives to operate as efficiently as possible. The SEU contract
administrator ("CA") and fiscal agent ("FA") will be
selected by the Delaware Energy Office through an open, competitive bidding
process.
(d) Responsibilities of the Delaware Energy Office. -- The Delaware
Energy Office shall assume the following responsibilities relating to the
development, implementation, and monitoring of the SEU:
(1) The Energy Office shall prepare requests for proposals (RFPs)
to solicit bid proposals to engage each of the 2 administrator contractors: the
SEU contract administrator and the fiscal agent. The RFPs shall be open to
public comment, amended if necessary, and then submitted to the Oversight Board
for approval prior to release. To maintain independence between each of the
administrative functions, any bidder for an administrator contract, and any
bidder's affiliate, shall not concurrently hold or be awarded the other
administrator contract. Neither shall any bidder for the contract administrator
be affiliated with a utility, public or private, that operates in Delaware, or
any agency of Delaware, or any entity providing power or fuel to Delaware's
distribution utilities or residents.
a. The Energy Office shall determine and
describe in detail in the RFPs the following: the roles of each contracted
position; the relevant performance targets set by legislation, the Energy
Office or the Oversight Board; the bidding and contract procedures; the
criteria for evaluation of bid proposals; and the annual reporting
requirements. In addition, the Energy Office shall define performance
incentives such that if the SEU exceeds program targets by 120% it shall
receive a bonus, and if the SEU achieves less than 80% of program targets it
shall be charged a penalty. By written agreement between the DEO and the SEU, performance
incentives may be passed through to implementation contractors when the DEO and
SEU decide this is in the best interest of the State's development of
sustainable energy resources.
b. The Energy Office must require bidders for
the SEU contract administrator to present, in their proposals, plans including,
but not limited to: evaluation, monitoring and verification of program
performance; data collection and management; and financial management.
c. The Energy Office shall ask bidders for the
SEU contract administrator to describe how they will obtain information from,
and be responsive to, the public, and how bidders intend to resolve disputes
with stakeholders and customers.
d. The Energy Office shall evaluate the
proposals based on criteria outlined in the RFP and then select and hire the
contractors for the 2 positions.
e. The Energy Office shall determine the
contract period for each administrator position, but such periods shall be no
less than 3 years and no more than 5 years. The Energy Office may offer a
renewal contract to a current contractor for 1 additional contract term,
provided the contractor has met or exceeded expectations and the Oversight
Board approves of the renewal. The contract must be open to the public through
the RFP process after 2 consecutive terms by 1 contractor.
(2) The Energy Office shall report biannually to the Oversight
Board on the progress of the SEU and the management of the contract administrator
and fiscal agent contracts.
(3) The Energy Office shall ensure continuity of program
implementation and sufficient carry-over funding during the transition period
between the end of 1 SEU contract term and the beginning of another SEU
contract term, so that Delawareans may still have regular access to sustainable
energy services during transitional periods.
(4) The Energy Office must use the appropriate responsibilities
outlined in the subsections (f) and (g) of this section to develop additional RFP
guidelines for each contractor.
(5) The Energy Office shall develop appropriate means to issue
Renewable Energy Credits and Solar Renewable Energy Credits, as defined in §
352 of Title 26, for renewable energy technologies sited in Delaware.
(e) (d) SEU Oversight Board. --
(1)a. The business and affairs of the SEU shall be managed by or
under the direction of the SEU Oversight Board. The SEU Oversight Board shall consist of 11
members and shall include the Secretary of the Department of Natural Resources
and Environmental Control (“DNREC”) or the Secretary's designee, and the
Public Advocate or the Public Advocate's designee. The Board shall include
representation from each county. Seven members of the SEU Oversight Board
shall be appointed by and serve at the pleasure of the Governor: 1
representative from academia, 1 representative from the nonprofit community
with experience servicing the low to moderate income community, 1
representative from the nonprofit environmental community, 1 representative from
the nonprofit energy community, 1 representative from the business community,
and 2 representatives from the financial/accounting community , and may
include, but not be limited to, representatives from the nonprofit
environmental community, the nonprofit energy community, the nonprofit
community servicing the low and moderate income community, the
financing/accounting community, business, labor, and education. Two
members One member of the SEU Oversight Board shall be members of
the General Assembly: 1 from the Senate, who shall be appointed by and
serve at the pleasure of the President Pro Tempore, and 1 from the House of
Representatives who one member shall be appointed by and serve at
the pleasure of the Speaker of the House. The Board shall elect 1 of its
members to serve as a chairperson by a majority vote. The State Energy
Coordinator in the Delaware Energy Office Director of the Division of
Energy & Climate of DNREC, or the director’s designee, shall serve on
the board in an ex officio nonvoting capacity. The existing SEU Oversight
Board shall continue to serve until the Governor has appointed 7 members of the
SEU Oversight Board. The initial Board members appointed to replace the
existing SEU Oversight Board shall be appointed for terms of 2 to 4 years.
The terms of the Board members shall typically be 4 years, and shall be
staggered. The Governor may appoint members for terms of less than 4
years to ensure that the terms are staggered. The Governor may, at any
time, remove any gubernatorial appointee to the SEU Oversight Board for gross
inefficiency, malfeasance, misfeasance or nonfeasance, in office. A
gubernatorial appointee may be deemed to have resigned their position if they
are absent from 3 consecutive Board meetings without good cause. After the initial appointments to the SEU
Oversight Board have been made, any subsequent Board member appointed or
reappointed to replace any sitting Board member shall be appointed for a term
of 4 years.
b. The SEU Oversight Board shall be governed by and subject to the Delaware Freedom of Information Act [Chapter 100 of this title].
c. The SEU Oversight Board shall include a provision in its bylaws pertaining to conflicts of interest and Board members shall be required to sign conflict of interest statements.
(2) After
it has been constituted, the The SEU Oversight Board may, from
time to time, appoint an one or more advisory committees.
The An advisory committee may include representatives of
organizations which represent low and moderate income energy consumers, low and
moderate income housing consumers, civic organizations, environmental
organizations, the energy industry, the energy efficiency and energy
conservation community, the renewable energy community, marketing and public
relations, small business, agriculture, accounting, business management,
banking, finance, nonprofit communities, the general public, and the academic
community. The Board shall decide the number of advisory committee members
(including ex officio members).
a. The purpose of the advisory committee is to
Among other things, the advisory committee may provide advice to the
Board on issues of public policy and public education which may enhance the
performance and quality of service of the SEU.
b. Selection of the A candidate for an advisory
committee shall occur by require a two-thirds vote of Board
members in order to serve. Advisory committee members will be
recommended by a 3-person selection committee appointed by the Board.
Criteria for the advisory Board committee members shall include
professional experience, community service, reputation, significance to
Delaware, a diversified representation of the Delaware community and
geographical representation of the State.
c. Nominations for the advisory committee may be submitted by Board members and public solicitation.
(3) Board members shall serve without compensation except for travel allowed in paragraph (e)(8) of this section.
(4) No Board member shall receive financial gain from service on the Board.
(5) Board members shall not be employed by any organization directly or indirectly affiliated with the SEU or its contractors for a period of not less than 2 years after the end of their service on the Board.
(6) The Board shall adopt by-laws, by September 28, 2007, to govern itself.
(7) The Board shall have the following responsibilities, among others permitted by law:
a. Review and approve RFP's developed
by the Energy Office for the contracts of the SEU contract administrator and
fiscal agent.
b. a. Review and approve the annual
and contract-term SEU and performance targets recommended by
the contract administrator executive director.
c. b. Review and approve any
proposed modifications to SEU performance targets or program designs during
the contract term of the contract administrator.
d. Contract an independent professional agency
to monitor and verify results reported by the contract administrator in annual
and contract-term reports.
e. Receive biannual reports from the Energy
Office, as described in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, and offer
recommendations to the Energy Office regarding the management of the SEU.
(8) In order for the Board to meet its obligations, the SEU shall
annually set aside a budget at the beginning of the State fiscal year not to
exceed 75,000 real 2007 dollars, and not to be less than 50,000 real 2007
dollars. Use of these funds shall be limited to the following:
a. Payment of consultant fees for independent
analyses of policy and program options to improve SEU performance voted by
two-thirds of board members.
b. Supported travel by Oversight Board members
to conferences and workshops of direct relevance to sustainable energy market
development and performance. Supported travel is capped for individual members
at 3,000 real 2007 dollars and only 1 supported travel can be requested by a
member in a fiscal year.
c. Sponsorship of annual statewide
competitions by elementary, middle and/or high school students in Delaware to
recommend SEU service logos, mottos or new sustainable energy measures.
d. Other uses as voted by two-thirds of the
members of the Oversight Board that can be shown to directly improve the
performance of the SEU and/or the State's development of sustainable energy
resources.
(f) Responsibilities of the fiscal agent. -- The fiscal agent shall
assist the Energy Office with the financial management of the SEU program. The
fiscal agent is the SEU's "Treasury." The FA may be contracted by fee
only or by a fee-plus-incentive structure as determined by the Energy Office.
The primary responsibilities of the fiscal agent are to:
(1) Receive funds for the SEU from the funding sources outlined in
subsection (j) of this section, disburse these funds to the SEU contract
administrator under the direction of the Energy Office, and keep accurate
records of such transactions;
(2) Interface with bonding and revenue authorities;
(3) Oversee financial transactions involving Renewable Energy
Credits (RECs) and possible Solar Lifeline activities; and
(4) Pay SEU invoices.
(g)(e) SEU contract administrator Executive
Director responsibilities. The SEU contract administrator will manage
executive director is responsible for the day-to-day functions and
responsibilities of the SEU. The contract administrator's executive
director’s chief responsibilities are program research and design,
administration of the implementation contracts, and oversight to ensure the
implementation contractors meet include
oversight of program management, and setting and compliance with appropriate
performance and budgetary targets. The contract administrator may be
contracted by fee only or by a fee-plus-incentive structure as determined by
the Energy Office.
(1) Program research and design. --
a. The contract administrator shall undertake
a comprehensive resource analysis ("Analysis") to support initial
program planning for the SEU. The Analysis must include demographic energy use
assessments, population and economic growth estimates, energy consumption
forecasts, regional energy efficiency trend analyses, technical and economic
potential estimates, and market potential assessments. The comprehensive
resource analysis must:
1. Assess energy end-user markets, including electricity end-uses,
natural gas end-uses, clean vehicles, green buildings, weatherization, and
affordable energy services;
2. Assess energy end-user demographic sectors, including
low-income, residential, commercial, industrial, agricultural, and
transportation sectors; and
3. Assess energy end-use equipment, including appliances, lighting,
heating, cooling, industrial processes, and vehicles.
b. Using the results from the Analysis from
paragraph (g)(1)a. of this section, the contract administrator shall select
markets, end-users, and end-use equipment for the SEU to target through its
programs.
c. a. The contract administrator
executive director shall develop
a comprehensive suite of program designs. based on the Analysis and
selected markets, end-users, and end-use equipment, as described in paragraphs
(g)(1)a. and (g)(1)b. of this section. Each program design must specify, at
minimum, program goals, performance targets, an estimated budget, an
implementation strategy, and an evaluation strategy. The contract
administrator executive director is not required to design or
initiate all programs at once, but it he or she must demonstrate
how each program fits within the contract administrator's SEU’s overall
strategy to meet its own performance targets as well as the SEU's
long-term performance targets established in subsection (i) of this section.
d.b. The contract administrator
executive director is expected to fulfill the following responsibilities
through program designs, RFPs for Implementation Contractors, and
program implementation:
1. To be responsive to customers and market forces in implementing and
redesigning the programs it delivers;
2. To design a portfolio of programs to allow all energy end-users, regardless of electricity or gas retail providers, and regardless of market segment or end-use fuel, to participate in the SEU programs;
3. To promote program initiatives and market strategies that address the needs of persons or businesses facing the most significant barriers to participation;
4. To promote coordinated program delivery, including coordination
with low income weatherization programs, other efficiency programs, and
utility programs;
5. To coordinate with relevant regional and national energy efforts and markets, including markets for pollution emissions offsets and credits, and renewable energy credits;
6. To consider innovative approaches to delivering sustainable energy services, including strategies to encourage third party financing and leveraged customer contributions to the cost of program measures, as consistent with principles of sound program design;
7. To offer "one-stop shopping" and be the point-of-contact for sustainable energy services in Delaware;
8. To create a comprehensive website that provides easy access to SEU programs and information for all Delawareans, allowing them to participate in SEU programs electronically;
9. To emphasize "lost opportunity" markets, which are sustainable energy measures that can only be cost-effectively captured at particular times, such as during new construction or extensive remodeling; and
10. To emphasize market strategies to deliver services.
e. The contract administrator shall continue
to research and assess the resources and market needs for sustainable energy
services in Delaware, as described in paragraph (g)(1)a. of this section, while
program implementation is ongoing. The contract administrator and other
stakeholders will use this research to assess the impacts and effectiveness of
SEU programs; to make adjustments to SEU program performance targets; to
reassess targeted markets, end users, and end uses; and to recommend further
policy initiatives for consideration by the General Assembly.
(2) Administration of implementation
contracts. --
a. With the exception of education and public
outreach programs, which the contract administrator may implement itself with
approval of the Energy Office and Oversight Board, all other SEU programs must
be delivered by competitively selected implementation contractors.
b. a. The SEU shall propose and
adopt rules to guide the bidding process and criteria to guide bid
selection. The RFPs shall specify a contract term not to exceed the limitation
set forth in The Energy Performance Contracting Act set forth in subchapter V
of Chapter 69 of this title.
c. The contract administrator shall be
responsible for selecting winning implementation contractor bids.
d. Any entity, including electricity or gas
utilities in Delaware, may bid for an implementation contract. If an affiliate
of the contract administrator bids, or intends to bid, for an implementation
contract, both the contract administrator and its affiliate must ensure that
the affiliate does not benefit from any unfair advantage resulting from insider
information.
e. RFP's for competitively bid implementation
contracts should include provisions for performance-based incentives as
appropriate to ensure that program targets are achieved or exceeded.
f. If an implementation contractor is not
successfully selected through the RFP bidding process, the contract
administrator may implement its own program delivery process subject to
approval by the Energy Office and Oversight Board.
(3) Oversight, monitoring, and verification
and reporting. --
a. The Oversight Board must review the
contract administrator's proposed program designs, performance targets, and
RFPs before the contract administrator submits RFPs for bid. When reviewing and
approving the SEU's programs and RFPs, the Oversight Board must ensure that
program coordination between the contract administrator, implementation
contractors, and customers is as streamlined and simple as possible from the
customer's perspective. The Oversight Board shall ensure that the SEU's
programs will provide packaged-services. Rather than simply providing the most
cost-effective or easiest-to-provide services, packaged-services must be
designed to provide customers with as many relevant end-use services at once,
each time the contract administrator or the implementation contractors have
contact with a customer.
b. The contract administrator must develop and
maintain information services to collect all performance, market, and financial
data necessary to monitor and evaluate SEU performance as specified in its
contract with the Energy Office. The contract administrator must make such data
available to the Energy Office and Oversight Board upon request.
c. Consistent with the specific terms of its
contract and generally accepted accounting principles, the contract
administrator must prepare and submit detailed documentation and invoices for
administrative, management, and program costs to the fiscal agent for review in
order to receive payment.
d. The contract Administrator must develop
appropriate mechanisms to accurately evaluate, monitor, and verify program
performance and implementation contractor performance.
e. The contract administrator shall have 30
days to respond to complaints from, or disputes among, affected persons or
entities. After 30 days any unresolved complaints shall be presented to the
Energy Office and Oversight Board.
f. The contract administrator shall submit to the
Oversight Board for approval any reports produced by the contract administrator
that codify current practices or detail new practices or substantive changes in
the SEU's implementation of programs and services.
g. The contract administrator shall conduct
site visits and review the files of the implementation contractors as necessary
to ensure contract compliance.
(h) Evaluation, monitoring, and verification. -- The Energy Office
must ensure that adequate evaluation, monitoring, and verification mechanisms
are in place so that:
(1) The Energy Office and Oversight Board can verify that both SEU
and Implementation Contractor expenditures result in verifiable energy savings
over the expected lifetime of each energy-saving measure.
(2) The SEU and implementation contractors are held responsible for
the energy savings reportedly achieved through program activities and
expenditures.
a. The SEU Oversight Board shall develop a three to five year
strategic plan, with input provided by Board members, stakeholder groups across
the State, and the public at large. The strategic plan shall be made available
to the public on the SEU’s website. The SEU’s strategic plan shall include an
educational component for the general public with a continued focus on
residential energy efficiency projects.
b. The SEU shall publish a comprehensive annual report which shall
be submitted to the Governor and the General Assembly and made available to the
public on the SEU’s website.
c. The SEU shall have certified financial statements prepared at the end of each fiscal year and
make them available to the public on the SEU’s website.
d. The SEU’s financial statements shall be audited every other year
by an independent certified public accounting firm qualified to perform such an
audit, and the audit results shall be made available to the public on the SEU’s
website.
(i) SEU initial program targets. --
(1) Energy efficiency. -- By December 31, 2015, the SEU shall have
achieved an average 30% reduction in annual energy usage for SEU participants,
with a target of one-third of the participant savings occurring for residential
clients, based on January 1, 2006 baseline levels. The Energy Office and
Oversight Board may increase or accelerate this target if a comprehensive
resource analysis indicates a greater cost-effective end-user energy efficiency
potential exists or if the SEU achieves performance targets ahead of schedule.
(2) Delaware Solar Lifeline. -- For the purposes of this
subsection, a low-income household shall be defined as a household that
qualifies for Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) assistance in
Delaware. The SEU shall have the authority to administer the Delaware Solar
Lifeline program, which shall provide, by December 31, 2015, each low-income
household with a life-sustaining supply of at least 200 kilowatt-hours per
month of low-cost electricity not to exceed $.05 per kWh in real 2007 dollars
from in-state solar electric resources, the electricity generated thereof
dedicated entirely for use by low-income households in the Solar Lifeline
program. The Energy Office shall devise annual Solar Lifeline program goals
that specify a targeted amount of installed photovoltaic capacity and a
targeted number of households to be served. Such targets shall increase at a
reasonable rate each year until sufficient in-state photovoltaic capacity has
been installed to provide, by December 31, 2015, each low-income household with
at least 200 kilowatt-hours per month of low-cost solar electricity.
Implementation of the Solar Lifeline program and the obligation to meet the
December 31, 2015 target shall depend upon the DEO and SEU obtaining the
approval of the Oversight Board, as voted by a majority of board members. The
chief criterion for board approval shall be that the DEO and SEU have
identified self-sustaining funds for the program or that the General Assembly
has approved designated funds for the purpose of maintaining the Solar Lifeline
program.
(3) Affordable energy. -- The SEU shall assess strategies and
funding mechanisms to weatherize at least 800 low-income households per year,
not counting those households served with Weatherization Assistance Program
funding. The SEU shall target services to households living in single-family
owner-occupied units and mobile homes, single-family rental units, rental
buildings with 5 units or less, and large multifamily buildings with greater
than 5 units. The SEU shall target three low-income levels: 200% of the federal
poverty level, 60% of the state median income, and 80% of the state median
income.
(4) Green Buildings and Clean Vehicles. --
a. The Delaware Energy Office shall define
"green buildings" and "clean vehicles" as appropriate to
meet statewide energy efficiency targets established in paragraph (1) of this
subsection, and with consideration for current best-practice definitions.
b. To establish initial SEU performance
targets for Clean Vehicles and Green Buildings programs, the Delaware Energy
Office, under the leadership of the State Energy Coordinator, and the Oversight
Board shall either:
1. Determine appropriate initial SEU performance targets for Clean
Vehicles and Green Buildings market programs to be included in the SEU Contract
Administrator request for proposal,
2. Or the Energy Office and the Oversight Board may require that
bidders for the SEU contract administrator propose such performance targets.
(5) Customer-sited Renewable Energy. -- Targets and rebate levels
for Customer-sited Renewable Energy Technologies ("Customer-sited
Renewables") shall be established by the DEO, under the direct supervision
of the State Energy Coordinator. Customer-sited Renewables shall include solar
electric, solar thermal, geothermal and wind energy systems not to exceed in
capacity the levels specified in net-metering regulations of § 1014 of Title
26. Under the direct supervision of the State Energy Coordinator, the DEO shall
develop incentive tiers for different customer-sited renewables and customer
classes based on identified state best practices. Rebates shall not exceed 50%
of the incremental cost of Customer-sited Renewables compared to the retail
cost of electricity. Rebates shall decline over time unless the DEO and SEU
agree that doing so will prevent SEU clients from maximizing installed capacity
of Customer-sited Renewable Energy in a least-cost manner. Under the direct
supervision of the State Energy Coordinator, the DEO shall specify a certain
fraction of SEU-supported Customer-sited Renewables to be located at
residential locations. The SEU shall furnish 3 services to participants who
purchase Customer-sited Renewables. First, it shall provide incentives
sufficient to cover the incremental cost of investing in Customer-sited
Renewables, in accord with DEO incentive tiers and current retail energy
prices. Second, the SEU shall obtain, on behalf of participants, Renewable
Energy Credits ("RECs") and Solar Renewable Energy Credits
("SRECs"), as defined in § 352 of Title 26. Third, the SEU shall
negotiate the wholesale price for RECs and SRECs for SEU participants, using
its ability to aggregate Customer-sited Renewables to the best advantage of SEU
participants. For these services, the SEU shall charge a fee sufficient to pay
its costs and to maintain incremental cost investments in Customer-sited
Renewables. This fee can be assessed as a 1-time charge or an annual payment
subject to the mutual agreement of the SEU and the participant. The Energy
Office, under direct supervision of the State Energy Coordinator, shall
determine a fair and reasonable rate that the SEU may charge for aggregating
RECs and SRECs. The SEU fee shall not exceed 35% of the retail value of RECs or
SRECs.
(j) (f) Funding for the SEU. --
(1) The Delaware Energy Office shall contract DNREC may
partner with the SEU contractor administrator to assist in the
administration of some or all of the Green Energy Fund in accordance with §
8057 of this title.
(2) Bonds of the SEU. –
a. The SEU may from time to time issue bonds for any corporate purpose and all such bonds, notes, bond anticipation notes or other obligations of the SEU issued pursuant to this section shall be and are hereby declared to be negotiable for all purposes notwithstanding their payment from a limited source and without regard to any other law or laws. In anticipation of the sale of such bonds, the SEU may issue negotiable bond anticipation notes and may renew the same from time to time, but the maximum maturity of any such note, including renewals thereof, shall not exceed 5 years from the date of issue of the original note. Such notes shall be paid from any revenues of the SEU available therefor and not otherwise pledged, or from the proceeds of sale of the bonds of the SEU in anticipation of which they were issued. The notes shall be issued in the same manner as the bonds. Such notes and the resolution or resolutions authorizing the same may contain any provisions, conditions or limitations which a bond resolution of the SEU may contain.
b. The bonds and notes of every issue shall be payable solely out of the revenues of the SEU, subject only to any agreements with the holders of particular bonds or notes pledging any particular revenues and subject to any agreements with any participating facility. Notwithstanding that bonds and notes may be payable from a special fund, they shall be and be deemed to be, for all purposes, negotiable instruments subject only to the provisions of the bonds and notes for registration.
c. The bonds may be issued as serial bonds or as term bonds, or the SEU, in its discretion may issue bonds of both types. The bonds shall be authorized by resolution of the members of the SEU Oversight Board and shall bear such date or dates, mature at such time or times, not exceeding 50 years from their respective dates, bear interest at such rate or rates, payable at such time or times, be in such denominations, be in such form, either coupon or registered, carry such registration privileges, be executed in such manner, be payable in lawful money of the United States of America at such place or places, and be subject to such terms of redemption, as such resolution or resolutions may provide. Such resolution or resolutions may delegate to any combination of 3 of the members of the SEU Oversight Board, the power to determine any of the matters set forth in this paragraph (j)(2) and the power to award the bonds to a purchaser or purchasers at public sale or to negotiate a sale to a purchaser or purchasers. The bonds or notes may be sold at public or private sale for such price or prices as the SEU shall determine. Pending preparation of the definitive bonds, the SEU may issue interim receipts or certificates which shall be exchanged for such definitive bonds.
d. Neither the members of the SEU Oversight Board nor any person executing the bonds or notes shall be liable personally on the bonds or notes or be subject to any personal liability or accountability by reason of the issuance thereof.
e. The SEU shall have power, out of any funds available therefor, to purchase its bonds or notes. The SEU may hold, pledge, cancel or resell such bonds or notes subject to and in accordance with agreements with bondholders or participating facilities. The SEU may elect to have bonds issued by a conduit issuer and borrow the proceeds thereof.
f. Bonds or notes issued under this section shall not be deemed to constitute a debt or liability of the State or of any political subdivisions thereof or a pledge of the faith and credit of the State or of any such political subdivision, but shall be payable solely from the funds herein provided therefor. All such bonds or notes shall contain on the face thereof a statement to the effect that neither the State nor any political subdivision thereof shall be obligated to pay the same or the interest thereon and that neither the faith and credit nor the taxing power of the State or of any political subdivision thereof is pledged to the payment of the principal of or the interest on such bonds. The issuance of bonds under this section shall not directly or indirectly or contingently obligate the State or any political subdivision thereof to levy or to pledge any form of taxation whatever therefor, or to make any appropriation for their payment. Nothing contained in this section shall prevent or be construed to prevent the SEU from pledging its full faith and credit or the full faith and credit of a participating facility to the payment of bonds or issue of bonds authorized pursuant to this section.
g. Interest on bonds or notes issued under this section shall be exempt from income taxation by this State or any political subdivision thereof.
(3) Revenue sources contributing to the SEU for the purpose of paying bond debt may include but not be limited to funds from shared savings agreements with SEU participants and partial proceeds from the sale of Renewable Energy Credits or Solar Renewable Energy Credits in local and regional markets. The Green Energy Fund shall provide equity leverage for the SEU.
(4) Staffing necessary for the DEO to fulfill its responsibilities
in this section shall be funded from the Delaware Energy Answers program and by
existing program funding within the Department of Natural Resources and
Environmental Control.
(5) (4) Incentives provided through the SEU or
proceeds from the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative shall be exempt from
taxation by the State and by the counties and municipalities of the State.
(k) (g) Contracts with the State or agencies. -- The
State or any agency may enter into contracts with the SEU or a qualified
provider (as defined in § 6972(5) of this title) for the purpose of acquiring,
constructing, operating, or providing a project, undertaken by an
implementation contractor or qualified provider, including arrangements for
paying the costs of such project, which costs may include debt service
requirements of the SEU relating to that project. If the SEU procures an
implementation a contract in accordance with subsection (g) (e)
of this section, a contract between the SEU and the State or an agency that
provides the benefit of the implementation contract to the State or
agency may be entered into by the State or agency without additional
competitive procurement.
No obligation of the State or an agency under an installment payment agreement, a guaranteed energy performance contract or any other agreement entered into in connection with a project under this Chapter 80 or Chapter 69 of this title shall constitute or create a debt of the State or agency. No such obligation of the State or an agency shall constitute a tax supported obligation or a bond or a note of the State as provided in Chapter 74 of this title.
SYNOPSIS
This bill is intended to implement the recommendations of the General Assembly’s Joint Sunset Committee following its review of the Sustainable Energy Utility. The Committee recommended that the statute governing the SEU, Title 29, Section 8059 be amended to a) allow greater flexibility in the composition of the Board, b) include language about staggering the terms of Board members, c) provide standards for the removal of Board members, and d) state that Board members appointed by the Governor may be deemed to have resigned if they are absent from three consecutive Board meetings without good cause. The bill also implements the Committee’s recommendation that the organizational structure of the SEU be changed from the current model, which requires a contract administrator and a fiscal agent. Instead, the SEU’s day-to-day business shall be managed by an executive director, who reports directly to the SEU Oversight Board. The Executive Director will handle certain responsibilities previously assigned to the contract administrator and fiscal agent. The bill also implements the Committee’s recommendations that a) the SEU submit a public annual report to the Governor and the General Assembly, b) prepare certified financial statements each year, c) the SEU’s financial statements be audited every other year by an independent certified public accounting firm, d) the SEU prepare a three to five year strategic plan with input from stakeholder groups and the public, which plan shall include an educational component for the general public and a continued focus on residential energy efficiency projects, and e) the SEU Oversight Board is authorized to appoint an advisory committee or committees to assist the Board from time to time. |
Author: Senator Poore