(1) The department of commerce, in
consultation with the *department of general administration and
the Washington State University energy program, shall administer
the jobs act.
(2) The *department of general administration must develop
guidelines that are consistent with national and international
energy savings performance standards for the implementation of
energy savings performance contracting projects by the energy
savings performance contractors by December 31, 2010.
(3) The definitions in this section apply throughout this
chapter and RCW 43.331.050 unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(a) "Cost-effectiveness" means that the present value to
higher education institutions and school districts of the energy
reasonably expected to be saved or produced by a facility,
activity, measure, or piece of equipment over its useful life,
including any compensation received from a utility or the
Bonneville power administration, is greater than the net present
value of the costs of implementing, maintaining, and operating
such facility, activity, measure, or piece of equipment over its
useful life, when discounted at the cost of public borrowing.
(b) "Energy cost savings" means savings realized in expenses
for energy use and expenses associated with water, wastewater, or
solid waste systems.
(c) "Energy equipment" means energy management systems and
any equipment, materials, or supplies that are expected, upon
installation, to reduce the energy use or energy cost of an
existing building or facility, and the services associated with
the equipment, materials, or supplies, including but not limited
to design, engineering, financing, installation, project
management, guarantees, operations, and maintenance. Reduction
in energy use or energy cost may also include reductions in the
use or cost of water, wastewater, or solid waste.
(d) "Energy savings performance contracting" means the
process authorized by chapter 39.35C RCW by which a company
contracts with a public agency to conduct energy audits and
guarantee energy savings from energy efficiency.
(e) "Innovative measures" means advanced or emerging
technologies, systems, or approaches that may not yet be in
common practice but improve energy efficiency, accelerate
deployment, or reduce energy usage, and become widely
commercially available in the future if proven successful in
demonstration programs without compromising the guaranteed
performance or measurable energy and operational cost savings
anticipated. Examples of innovative measures include, but are
not limited to, advanced energy and systems operations
monitoring, diagnostics, and controls systems for buildings;
novel heating, cooling, ventilation, and water heating systems;
advanced windows and insulation technologies, highly efficient
lighting technologies, designs, and controls; and integration of
renewable energy sources into buildings, and energy savings
verification technologies and solutions.
(f) "Operational cost savings" means savings realized from
parts, service fees, capital renewal costs, and other measurable
annual expenses to maintain and repair systems. This definition
does not mean labor savings related to existing facility staff.
(g) "Public facilities" means buildings, building
components, and major equipment or systems owned by public school
districts and public higher education institutions.
[2010 1st sp.s. c 35 § 301.]
NOTES:
*Reviser's note: The "department of general administration" was renamed the "department of enterprise services" by 2011 1st sp.s. c 43 § 107.
Contingent effective date -- 2010 1st sp.s. c 35: "This act takes effect if *Second Engrossed Substitute Senate Bill No. 6143 is enacted by the legislature during the 2010 1st special session." [2010 1st sp.s. c 35 § 601.]
*Reviser's note: Second Engrossed Substitute Senate Bill No. 6143 became chapter 23, Laws of 2010 1st sp. sess.