(1) Each qualifying utility shall pursue all available
conservation that is cost-effective, reliable, and feasible.
(a) By January 1, 2010, using methodologies consistent with
those used by the Pacific Northwest electric power and
conservation planning council in its most recently published
regional power plan, each qualifying utility shall identify its
achievable cost-effective conservation potential through 2019.
At least every two years thereafter, the qualifying utility shall
review and update this assessment for the subsequent ten-year
period.
(b) Beginning January 2010, each qualifying utility shall
establish and make publicly available a biennial acquisition
target for cost-effective conservation consistent with its
identification of achievable opportunities in (a) of this
subsection, and meet that target during the subsequent two-year
period. At a minimum, each biennial target must be no lower than
the qualifying utility's pro rata share for that two-year period
of its cost-effective conservation potential for the subsequent
ten-year period.
(c) In meeting its conservation targets, a qualifying
utility may count high-efficiency cogeneration owned and used by
a retail electric customer to meet its own needs.
High-efficiency cogeneration is the sequential production of
electricity and useful thermal energy from a common fuel source,
where, under normal operating conditions, the facility has a
useful thermal energy output of no less than thirty-three percent
of the total energy output. The reduction in load due to
high-efficiency cogeneration shall be: (i) Calculated as the
ratio of the fuel chargeable to power heat rate of the
cogeneration facility compared to the heat rate on a new and
clean basis of a best-commercially available technology
combined-cycle natural gas-fired combustion turbine; and (ii)
counted towards meeting the biennial conservation target in the
same manner as other conservation savings.
(d) The commission may determine if a conservation program
implemented by an investor-owned utility is cost-effective based
on the commission's policies and practice.
(e) The commission may rely on its standard practice for
review and approval of investor-owned utility conservation
targets.
(2)(a) Each qualifying utility shall use eligible renewable
resources or acquire equivalent renewable energy credits, or a
combination of both, to meet the following annual targets:
(i) At least three percent of its load by January 1, 2012,
and each year thereafter through December 31, 2015;
(ii) At least nine percent of its load by January 1, 2016,
and each year thereafter through December 31, 2019; and
(iii) At least fifteen percent of its load by January 1,
2020, and each year thereafter.
(b) A qualifying utility may count distributed generation at
double the facility's electrical output if the utility: (i) Owns
or has contracted for the distributed generation and the
associated renewable energy credits; or (ii) has contracted to
purchase the associated renewable energy credits.
(c) In meeting the annual targets in (a) of this subsection,
a qualifying utility shall calculate its annual load based on the
average of the utility's load for the previous two years.
(d) A qualifying utility shall be considered in compliance
with an annual target in (a) of this subsection if: (i) The
utility's weather-adjusted load for the previous three years on
average did not increase over that time period; (ii) after
December 7, 2006, the utility did not commence or renew ownership
or incremental purchases of electricity from resources other than
renewable resources other than on a daily spot price basis and
the electricity is not offset by equivalent renewable energy
credits; and (iii) the utility invested at least one percent of
its total annual retail revenue requirement that year on eligible
renewable resources, renewable energy credits, or a combination
of both.
(e) The requirements of this section may be met for any
given year with renewable energy credits produced during that
year, the preceding year, or the subsequent year. Each renewable
energy credit may be used only once to meet the requirements of
this section.
(f) In complying with the targets established in (a) of this
subsection, a qualifying utility may not count:
(i) Eligible renewable resources or distributed generation
where the associated renewable energy credits are owned by a
separate entity; or
(ii) Eligible renewable resources or renewable energy
credits obtained for and used in an optional pricing program such
as the program established in RCW 19.29A.090.
(g) Where fossil and combustible renewable resources are
cofired in one generating unit located in the Pacific Northwest
where the cofiring commenced after March 31, 1999, the unit shall
be considered to produce eligible renewable resources in direct
proportion to the percentage of the total heat value represented
by the heat value of the renewable resources.
(h)(i) A qualifying utility that acquires an eligible
renewable resource or renewable energy credit may count that
acquisition at one and two-tenths times its base value:
(A) Where the eligible renewable resource comes from a
facility that commenced operation after December 31, 2005; and
(B) Where the developer of the facility used apprenticeship
programs approved by the council during facility construction.
(ii) The council shall establish minimum levels of labor
hours to be met through apprenticeship programs to qualify for
this extra credit.
(i) A qualifying utility shall be considered in compliance
with an annual target in (a) of this subsection if events beyond
the reasonable control of the utility that could not have been
reasonably anticipated or ameliorated prevented it from meeting
the renewable energy target. Such events include weather-related
damage, mechanical failure, strikes, lockouts, and actions of a
governmental authority that adversely affect the generation,
transmission, or distribution of an eligible renewable resource
under contract to a qualifying utility.
(3) Utilities that become qualifying utilities after
December 31, 2006, shall meet the requirements in this section on
a time frame comparable in length to that provided for qualifying
utilities as of December 7, 2006.
[2007 c 1 § 4 (Initiative Measure No. 937, approved November 7, 2006).]