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Legislative Year: 2024 Change
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Bill Detail: SB24-207

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Title Access to Distributed Generation
Status Senate Third Reading Passed - No Amendments (04/29/2024)
Bill Subjects
  • Energy
House Sponsors A. Valdez (D)
M. Soper (R)
Senate Sponsors C. Hansen (D)
S. Fenberg (D)
House Committee
Senate Committee Transportation and Energy
Date Introduced 04/16/2024
Summary

On or after January 1, 2026, but before February 1, 2026, an
investor-owned electric utility (utility) with more than 500,000 customers
must make at least 50 megawatts of inclusive community solar capacity
available, and a utility with 500,000 or fewer customers must make at
least 4 megawatts of inclusive community solar available.
Before February 1, 2027, a utility with more than 500,000
customers must make an additional 50 megawatts of inclusive community
solar capacity available, plus any unclaimed capacity left over from the
previous allocation cycle, and a utility with 500,000 or fewer customers
must make an additional 4 megawatts of inclusive community solar
available.
Under current law, a utility customer may subscribe to a portion of
a community solar facility. The customer then receives a bill credit on the
customer's monthly utility bill in an amount proportional to the customer's
share of the community solar facility output. Current law establishes
limits on the amount of output from community solar facilities that a
utility may purchase.
The bill requires a utility to acquire the entire output of a
community solar facility that is allocated capacity on or after January 1,
2026, (new facility) and apply community solar bill credits to that new
facility's subscribers. The bill requires a new facility to:
  • Not exceed 5 megawatts of capacity, measured in
alternating current;
  • Interconnect with a utility's distribution system;
  • Comply with applicable requirements of the Colorado
Energy Sector Public Works Project Craft Labor
Requirements Act;
  • Reserve at least 51% of its capacity for income-qualified
subscribers;
  • Not allocate more than 40% of the new facility's capacity
to a single subscriber; and
  • Supply to a subscriber of the new facility no more than
120% of the expected average annual total consumption of
electricity by the subscriber.
The bill affords certain protections for subscribers of new
facilities. Subscriber organizations and subscription coordinators are
prohibited from:
  • Using credit scores, customer scores, or any utility deposit
to deny prospective residential subscribers;
  • Charging a sign-up or termination fee to residential
subscribers;
  • Engaging in misleading conduct or making false
representations toward prospective subscribers; and
  • Preventing a subscriber from transferring a subscription
within the utility's service territory if the subscriber moves
residences.
A subscriber organization shall provide an income-qualified
subscriber of a new facility with a subscription discount of at least:
  • 25% of the value of the community solar bill credit;
  • 30% of the value of the community solar bill credit if the
new facility receives federal tax credits from the federal
Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 for the specific purpose
of being located in an energy community; and
  • 50% of the value of the community solar bill credit if the
new facility receives federal tax credits from the federal
Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 specifically for
providing income-qualified households with utility bill
assistance.
The commission must also adopt a standardized form that contains
relevant information and disclosures that subscriber organizations and
subscription coordinators must provide to prospective subscribers.
The bill also directs the commission to establish:
  • Cost-sharing mechanisms for new facilities that are
connecting to the utility's distribution system, in which the
new facility is required to pay only for its proportional
share of system upgrades; and
  • Reporting requirements for a utility regarding cost-sharing
mechanisms and the cost-effectiveness of the utility's
interconnection of new facilities when submitting a
distribution system plan.
The commission may approve, conditionally approve, modify, or
reject any distribution system plans proposed by a utility based on the
utility's plans for interconnecting new facilities.
The bill authorizes the commission to approve cost recovery for
energy purchased from a community solar facility by an investor-owned
electric utility.
The bill also requires a utility with more than 500,000 customers
to acquire 50 megawatts of distributed generation paired with energy
storage by June 1, 2026, and an additional 50 megawatts of distributed
generation paired with energy storage between January 1, 2027, and June
1, 2027.

Committee Reports
with Amendments
Full Text
Full Text of Bill (pdf) (most recent)
Fiscal Notes Fiscal Notes (04/24/2024) (most recent)  
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