Summary |
The bill requires the office of future of work to create a grant
program, in coordination with the Colorado energy office, for lineworker apprenticeship programs (grant program). In connection with the grant program, the office of future of work must create a competitive application process and select apprenticeship programs that meet certain training and matching requirements. On July 1, 2024, the state treasurer
must transfer $800,000 from the general fund to the Colorado lineworker apprenticeship grant program cash fund, which is created in the bill, for the purposes of the grant program.
The bill also requires an investor-owned electric utility that serves
500,000 customers or more in the state (qualifying retail utility) to upgrade the qualifying retail utility's distribution systems as necessary to support the:
Achievement of the state's beneficial and transportation electrification and decarbonization goals; and
Implementation of federal, state, regional, and local air quality and decarbonization targets, standards, plans, and regulations (decarbonization targets and standards).
In connection with these goals and decarbonization targets and
standards, a qualifying retail utility is required to:
Commence a data collection process to inform future energization timelines;
Adopt certain cost caps;
Propose to the public utilities commission (commission) the use of an optional flexible interconnection or energization tariff or phased interconnection or energization agreement by a customer as an alternative to system upgrades that would otherwise be required for interconnection or energization; and
Establish a procedure for customers with a hybrid facility to complete the interconnection and energization process through a single application.
A qualifying retail utility is required to identify interconnection
and load hosting capacity for distributed energy resources for disproportionately impacted communities within its service territory.
Prior to the establishment of the grid modernization adjustment
clause, a qualifying retail utility shall recover forecasted investments placed into service and costs incurred for certain capital investment and operations and maintenance expenses (distribution activities) for a period of time ending on December 31, 2025. Recovery of the costs associated with the distribution activities must occur through the transmission cost adjustment clause or another existing adjustment clause, subject to certain conditions.
Current law requires certain utilities to file a distribution system
plan (plan) with the commission. The bill also requires the plans of a qualifying retail utility to create sufficient hosting capacity across its electrical distribution system to support the implementation of the decarbonization targets and standards and certain other laws, rules, plans, and policies.
In developing a plan, a qualifying retail utility must consult with
and provide compensated opportunities to disproportionately impacted
communities.
As part of a plan proceeding, a qualifying retail utility is required
to present at least 2 future planning scenarios with corresponding investments to show future different states of the distribution system. In evaluating a qualifying retail utility's plans, the commission must evaluate whether the plan satisfies certain criteria. In addition, the plan must include a performance-based framework, which must consist of certain specified components.
A qualifying retail utility must include in the qualifying retail
utility's plan an analysis of current and future qualified staffing levels necessary to comply with state laws regarding distribution system planning (adequate staffing levels). The commission must review whether each qualifying retail utility's plan has adequate staffing levels before the qualifying retail utility's plan may proceed.
A qualifying retail utility must ensure that, in any projects
undertaken to implement a plan, all labor is performed by the employees of the qualifying retail utility or by a contractor that meets certain labor requirements.
The commission must open a rule-making to consider and establish
rules regarding energization timelines; interconnection; interconnection, energization, and electrification of end uses; and maximum individual cost caps or fees.
Subject to commission review and approval, a qualifying retail
utility is required to recover certain projected costs related to distribution activities as part of the qualifying retail utility's plans. If the commission finds that the distribution activities benefit or advance the decarbonization targets and standards or state energy policy goals, recovery of the costs must occur through the grid modernization adjustment clause. For distribution system activities that do not benefit or advance the decarbonization targets and standards or state energy policy goals, recovery of the costs may occur through the grid modernization adjustment clause if the qualifying retail utility meets the criteria established in the performance-based framework in the qualifying retail utility's approved plan. A qualifying retail utility is required to make an annual grid modernization adjustment clause advice letter filing with the commission no later than November 1 of each year with an effective date of January 1 of the subsequent year.
No later than February 1, 2025, a qualifying retail utility is
required to create and file with the commission an application to implement a virtual power plant program, including a tariff for performance-based compensation for a qualified virtual power plant. The virtual power plant program and tariff must include and implement certain requirements. A qualifying retail utility may apply to recover certain business costs to facilitate a virtual power plant program through the grid modernization adjustment clause.
By January 1, 2025, a qualifying retail utility is required to file a
plan with the commission to implement programs for the undergrounding of utility distribution infrastructure (undergrounding) in nonfranchised areas in the state using 1% of an area's gross electric revenues from the prior year. A qualifying retail utility must also consider the public benefit of undergrounding in its plans.
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