BILL NUMBER: AB 590 AMENDED
BILL TEXT
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY MAY 4, 2015
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY APRIL 21, 2015
INTRODUCED BY Assembly Members Dahle and Salas
(Coauthors: Assembly Members Brough, Chávez, Gordon, Olsen, Mark
Stone, and Wood)
FEBRUARY 24, 2015
An act to add Section 16428.81 to the Government Code, relating to
greenhouse gases.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
AB 590, as amended, Dahle. Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.
The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 designates the
State Air Resources Board as the state agency charged with
monitoring and regulating sources of emissions of greenhouse gases.
The act authorizes the state board to include the use of market-based
compliance mechanisms. Existing law requires all moneys, except for
fines and penalties, collected by the state board from the auction or
sale of allowances as part of a market-based compliance mechanism to
be deposited in the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.
This bill would create the Biomass State Cost Share Account within
the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund. The bill would require certain
amounts to be transferred from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund to
the Biomass State Cost Share Account for the 2015-16 through 2019-20
fiscal years. The moneys in the account, upon appropriation, would be
available for expenditure by the State Energy Resources Conservation
and Development Commission for the purposes of maintaining the
current level of biomass power generation in the state and
revitalizing currently idle facilities in strategically located
regions. The bill would establish requirements for an applicant to
receive funding from the account for a facility's eligible electrical
generation.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
(a) California leads the nation in bioenergy production, with
one-half of the industry located in this state, which has an abundant
supply of bioenergy resources.
(b) Biomass power generation provides electric ratepayers with
clean, renewable energy that supplies the grid 24 hours a day, seven
days a week regardless of atmospheric conditions. These benefits are
paid for through contracts with the state's electric utilities.
(c) Biomass power generation also provides valuable,
environmentally preferred wood waste disposal service for the
disposal of 7.5 to 8 million tons of California's annual solid waste
stream and the avoidance of 1.5 to 3.5 million tons annually of
biogenic CO2 emissions. By diverting biomass residues away from open
burning, landfill burial, and accumulation in forests, the state
benefits from reduced criteria air pollutants and greenhouse gas
emissions, landfill capacity use, forest and watershed improvement,
rural employment and economic development, and energy diversity and
security. These services have been provided without compensation in
the past, as the electricity market was able to fully underwrite the
cost.
(d) Numerous studies have shown a link between particulate matter
(PM) exposure and asthma morbidity outcomes in children, and between
exposure to ambient PM and increased heart and lung disease and death
and health effects on the central nervous system. The latest study
was provided by scientists at the California Environmental Protection
Agency's Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment. Diverting
wood material from open burning to biomass power production is an
essential PM reduction strategy for many air districts around the
state.
(e) The environmental services provided by biomass power
production are clearly valuable to society and therefore provide the
rationale for a state policy to pay for biomass power generation
commensurate with its provision of waste disposal services.
(f) Biomass power generation fits in the Cap and Trade Auction
Proceeds Investment Plan in the categories of forest and ecosystem
management, agricultural management, and waste diversion, and is
identified as a recommended investment.
SEC. 2. Section 16428.81 is added to the Government Code, to read:
16428.81. (a) There is hereby created the Biomass State Cost
Share Account within the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund established
pursuant to Section 16428.8.
(b) The following amounts shall be transferred from the Greenhouse
Gas Reduction Fund to the Biomass State Cost Share Account:
(1) In the 2015-16 fiscal year, seventy-four million dollars
($74,000,000).
(2) In the 2016-17 fiscal year, one hundred eighteen million
dollars ($118,000,000).
(3) In the 2017-18, 2018-19, and 2019-20 fiscal years, one hundred
twenty million dollars ($120,000,000) in each of those fiscal years.
(c) The moneys in the Biomass State Cost Share Account, upon
appropriation by the Legislature, shall be available to the State
Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission for
expenditure for the purposes of maintaining the current level of
biomass power generation in the state and revitalizing currently idle
facilities in strategically located regions. Protecting these
existing resources will help the state meet its goals to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions, protect existing jobs, and provide waste
disposal benefits.
(d) To be eligible for funding from the Biomass State Cost Share
Account, a facility's solid fuel biomass electrical generation shall
satisfy all both of the following
requirements:
(1) The energy is generated on and after January 1, 2016.
(2) The energy is generated within the state and sold to customers
within the state.
(3) The energy is net-metered generation. "Net-metered generation"
for purposes of this section means energy that is sold to the grid
and is not used onsite for the facility's own electrical demand.
(e) A facility seeking funding from the Biomass State Cost Share
Account shall submit an application to the commission that
demonstrates that it is a solid fuel biomass facility and is
California Renewables Portfolio Standard (RPS) Program certified. An
applicant shall submit monthly invoices to the commission to document
eligible generation and the fuel used for that generation. The
commission shall review the submitted invoices and make monthly
incentive payments to each applicant based on the eligible generation
and the applicable production incentive rate.