An Act To Improve Efficiency through Electric Rate Design and Advanced Technology
Sec. 1. 35-A MRSA §3152, sub-§1, as amended by PL 2013, c. 369, Pt. F, §§2 to 4, is further amended to read:
Sec. 2. 35-A MRSA §3153-A, sub-§1, as corrected by RR 2009, c. 2, §103, is amended to read:
Sec. 3. 35-A MRSA §3154, sub-§1, as amended by PL 1999, c. 398, Pt. A, §59 and affected by §§104 and 105, is further amended to read:
Sec. 4. 35-A MRSA §3209, sub-§5 is enacted to read:
Sec. 5. 35-A MRSA §10110, sub-§7, as enacted by PL 2009, c. 372, Pt. B, §3, is amended to read:
Sec. 6. 35-A MRSA §10110, sub-§10, as amended by PL 2013, c. 369, Pt. A, §24, is further amended to read:
summary
This bill requires the Public Utilities Commission to promote recovery of fixed transmission and distribution costs through fixed customer costs, to the extent practicable and economically efficient, and to examine and make appropriate changes to transmission and distribution utility rate class designations to the extent such changes would improve equity and economic efficiency. The bill further requires the commission to implement transmission and distribution rates that vary by time of day and season or other relevant cost drivers, to the extent practicable, to achieve economic efficiency. The bill requires investor-owned transmission and distribution utilities to submit specific rate design proposals to the commission by January 1, 2019 and provides that such plans must include proposals for implementing cost-effective programs and load-control technologies to optimize distribution circuit and transmission system load profiles and rates or programs that encourage incremental usage if such uses would lower rates for all customer classes. The bill removes the requirement that transmission and distribution utilities' proposals include cost-effective conversions of electric space heat systems.
The bill also removes the requirement that rate design changes implemented pursuant to the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 35-A, section 3153-A be implemented on a temporary, pilot or experimental basis and requires the commission to implement policies and practices to encourage competitive electricity providers to offer residential and commercial customers supply prices reflective of real-time market price variations.
The bill provides that any Efficiency Maine Trust funds targeted to low-income residential transmission and distribution customers that remain unspent at the end of a fiscal year may, at the commission's discretion, be returned to investor-owned transmission and distribution utilities to offset bill increases to low-income transmission and distribution customers resulting from the bill's rate design changes. The bill also provides that Efficiency Maine Trust funds targeted to low-income residential transmission and distribution customers that are uncommitted 2 years after having been collected must be returned to those customers.