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ENERGY ACTION PLAN II

1. Require that all cost-effective energy efficiency is integrated into utilities' resource plans on an equal basis with supply-side resource options.

2. Adopt 2006-2008 energy efficiency program portfolios and funding by late 2005.

3. Expand efforts to improve public awareness and adoption of energy efficiency measures.

4. Promote a balanced portfolio of baseload energy, demand, and peak demand reductions to obtain both reliability and long-term resource benefits of energy efficiency for both electricity and natural gas.

5. Integrate demand response programs with energy efficiency programs.

6. Implement actions outlined in the Governor's Green Buildings Action Plan to improve building performance and reduce grid-based electrical energy purchases in all State and commercial buildings by 20 percent by 2015.3

7. Work with customer-owned utilities in the implementation of all cost-effective energy efficiency programs so that they treat energy efficiency savings as a resource and help California reach its goal of a reduction in per capita electricity use.

8. Adopt new appliance standards by 2006, supplementing those adopted in December 2004.

9. Adopt new building standards for implementation in 2008 that consider, among other measures, demand response technologies, integrated photovoltaic systems, and other clean on-site generation.

10. Increase the availability of State-sponsored low-interest loans for energy efficiency and clean distributed generation projects.

11. Improve energy efficiency programs for low income, non-English speaking, and other hard-to-reach communities.

12. Adopt verifiable performance-based incentives in 2006 for IOU energy efficiency investments, with risks and rewards based on performance that will align the utility incentives with customer interests.

13. Update utility evaluation, measurement and verification protocols to assure that energy efficiency continues to be fully integrated into resource planning, emission reduction benefits are quantified, and compliance goals are verified.

14. Identify opportunities and support programs to reduce electricity demand related to the water supply system during peak hours and opportunities to reduce the energy needed to operate water conveyance and treatment systems.

15. By October 1, 2005, adopt the report on improving efficiency in existing buildings, as required by Assembly Bill 549, and pursue legislation and regulations to implement its recommendations.

1. Issue decisions on the proposals for statewide installation of advanced metering infrastructure for all small commercial and residential IOU customers by mid-2006 and expedite adoption of concomitant tariffs for any approved meter deployment.

2. Expedite decisions on dynamic pricing tariffs for summer 2006 for customers with installed advanced metering systems and encourage load shifting that does not result in increases in overall consumption.

3. Educate Californians about the time sensitivity of energy use and the ways to take advantage of dynamic pricing tariffs and other demand response programs.

4. Create standardized measurement and evaluation mechanisms to ensure that demand response savings are verifiable.

5. Provide that the utilities' demand response investment opportunities offer returns commensurate with investments in traditional plant.

6. Integrate demand response into retail sellers' electricity resource procurement efforts so that these programs are considered equally with supply options.

7. Provide customer access to their energy use information and allow participation in demand response programs, regardless of retail provider.

8. Evaluate and, if appropriate, incorporate demand response technologies such as programmable communicating thermostats into the 2008 building standards.

9. Incorporate demand response appropriately and consistently into the planning protocols of the CPUC, the CEC, and the CAISO.

10. Encourage the integration of demand response programs into the CAISO's operations through a capacity market or other mechanisms.

11. Coordinate IOU demand-response programs with customer-owned utility demand-response efforts to provide a comprehensive, statewide contribution to California's resource adequacy portfolio.

1. Expeditiously approve contracts from the initial IOU RPS solicitations and interim renewable solicitations, and approve agreements for any necessary supplemental energy payments.

2. Expeditiously approve the IOU RPS solicitations for 2005 and the next three years so that California IOUs will meet the accelerated RPS goal of 20 percent renewables by 2010.

3. Consider improvements to the renewables solicitation process.

4. Ensure that operations protocols do not discriminate against renewable resources and study the effects of increasing penetration of renewable resources on the reliable operation of the electricity grid.

5. Develop a comprehensive resource development and regulatory policy reform plan for cost-effectively achieving the Governor's goal of reaching 33 percent renewables by 2020 and provide that all load serving entities continuously work toward this goal.

6. Monitor and support existing renewable resources, including facilitating re-powering projects and addressing contract renewals in a timely fashion.

7. Ensure new transmission lines are built to access renewable resources through a comprehensive, integrated transmission planning process, including the creation of state-led study groups to examine tapping particular resource regions.

8. Implement a cost-effective program to achieve the 3,000 MW goal of the Governor's "Million Solar Roofs" initiative.4

9. Implement RPS standards for energy service providers and community choice aggregators so that all load serving entities are contributing proportionally to California's renewable goals.

10. Work with customer-owned utilities in the development of their renewable plans and incorporate their results into a comprehensive statewide RPS review.

11. Complete the Western Renewable Generation Information System to accurately account for renewable generation through an electronic certificate tracking system.

12. Implement a renewable energy certificates trading system for meeting RPS goals.

1. Ensure that all load serving entities meet the state's adopted reserve and resource adequacy requirements of a 15-17 percent planning reserve no later than June 2006, through a reasonable mix of short-, medium- and long-term resource commitments.

2. Provide for the continued operation of cost-effective and environmentally -sound existing generation needed to meet current reliability needs, including combined heat and power generation.

3. After incorporating higher loading order resources, encourage the development of cost-effective, highly-efficient, and environmentally-sound supply resources to provide reliability and consistency with the State's energy priorities.

4. Establish appropriate incentives for the development and operation of new generation to replace the least efficient and least environmentally-sound of California's aging power plants.

5. Manage California's aging electricity infrastructure to coordinate maintenance and outages and to provide orderly retirements.

6. Adopt a long-term policy for existing and new qualifying facility resources, including better integration of these resources into CAISO tariffs.

7. Promote adequate investment in the utility distribution system, with an emphasis on translating those expenditures into higher levels of reliability.

8. Encourage development of environmentally-sound combined heat and power resources and distributed generation projects.

9. Take necessary actions to improve the State's transmission line planning and permitting processes by integrating the CAISO's transmission planning and modeling capabilities and the CEC's environmental and planning expertise with the CPUC's ratemaking function. Provide that the new process eliminates bottlenecks, improves reliability, lowers energy costs, and accesses new renewable resources.5

10. Coordinate the state's transmission planning process with regional efforts in the interconnected western states.

11. Establish a statewide transmission corridor planning process, coordinated with applicable federal agencies, to create and protect critical transmission corridors for potential development in the future.

12. Apply the environmental adder as a resource selection criterion in IOU procurement decisions to more appropriately value the risk of future environmental regulation in long-term investment decisions made now.

13. Acknowledge the interdependent nature of the energy needs among all the Western states, Canadian provinces, and Mexico by collaborating with our regional partners on regional resource and transmission planning, in particular by addressing cost allocation, planning, and routing of inter-regional transmission projects.

1. Restructure the IOU rate-making process to reduce the number of proceedings, create more transparency in consumer electricity rates, adopt rates based on clear cost-causation principles, and identify steps to reduce electricity costs.

2. Complete and refine, as necessary, the current IOU electricity procurement process to provide that it is transparent, fair, proceeds in a timely fashion, and achieves California's resource adequacy requirements.

3. Complete and implement, by February 2007, the CAISO's Market Redesign and Technology Upgrade to reform California's wholesale electricity market and to ensure adequate market power mitigation to protect California consumers.

4. Promote the continued viability and efficient operation of the existing direct access market for retail electricity supply.

5. Develop rules to promote an effective core/non-core retail market structure, including mechanisms to guard against cost-shifting, preserve reliability, pursue energy efficiency goals, achieve RPS goals, and maintain the loading order for all load serving entities.

6. Develop capacity markets, with tradable capacity rights and obligations, to create appropriate incentives and flexibility for power plant development and utility procurement.

1. Adopt additional natural gas and electric efficiency programs and standards to reduce the reliance on natural gas for various end uses.

2. Establish a program to encourage solar hot water heating to reduce the reliance on natural gas for water heating.

3. Provide that the natural gas delivery and storage system is sufficient to meet California's peak demand needs.

4. Encourage the development of additional in-state natural gas storage to enhance reliability and mitigate price volatility.

5. Continue the State's LNG Interagency Permitting Working Group and develop a process to facilitate the prompt and environmentally-sensitive evaluation and siting of needed LNG facilities.

6. Establish standards for the timing of and payment for new transmission and storage capacity additions and for access to natural gas transmission systems.

7. Evaluate the appropriateness of current rules for natural gas quality.

1. Transform RD&D projects on energy efficiency technologies into energy efficiency tools and standards.

2. Allocate and prioritize RD&D funding for energy efficiency and demand response, including new communication and control technologies, planning models, end-use technologies, and validation methodologies.

3. Align RD&D funding with public policy goals for new renewable technologies and greenhouse gas mitigation technologies, including efficiency, renewable generation technologies, and energy storage.

4. Align public purpose funded natural gas RD&D to reflect supply policies affecting biogas and syngas; to improve long-term storage reservoir management, safety and efficiency; and to ensure high quality natural gas.

5. Support RD&D to improve the efficiency of petroleum-fueled vehicles and to reduce the cost and promote the availability of non-petroleum fuels.

6. Support coal technology research and development, and continue to develop methods for capturing and storing significant amounts of CO2, either as an integral part of the energy conversion process or in pairing with external CO2 sequestration.

7. Encourage the development of cost-effective dry-cooling technologies and reduce once-through cooling practices to minimize the impact of new generation on California's water resources.

8. Align RD&D funding with public policy goals for transmission technology development to maximize efficient use of the bulk electricity grid.

1. Implement the motor vehicle greenhouse gas regulations.

2. Implement all strategies identified by the Climate Action Team as needed to meet the Governor's GHG emission reduction goals.

3. Report to the Governor and the Legislature in January 2006, and biennially thereafter to provide regular updates on the progress made toward meeting the Governor's target and other directives in Executive Order S-3-05.

4. Report to the Governor on the findings of the Climate Action Team subgroup on cap and trade options for the State.

5. Consider 2010, 2020, and 2050 GHG reduction targets for retail sellers of electricity to contribute to meeting the Governor's GHG emission reduction targets.

6. Coordinate with the Climate Action Team on the regulatory proceeding that is considering establishment of a cap and trade program for IOUs.

7. Ensure that energy supplies serving California, from any source, are consistent with the Governor's climate change goals.

8. Participate in public outreach efforts to educate the public and businesses in California on climate change impacts and actions to mitigate emissions and encourage stakeholder participation in the development of programs to meet California's climate change goals.

9. Encourage all participants in the electricity, natural gas, and transportation fuels industries, as well as other regulated industries, to participate in the California Climate Action Registry and to improve reporting of GHG emissions.

10. Identify western state policies and strategies to achieve production of 30,000 MW of clean energy across the west by 2015, consistent with the Western Governors' Association Clean and Diversified Energy Advisory Committee and West Coast Climate Initiative goals.6,7

11. Identify methodologies to quantify the expected costs and benefits of climate change policies.

1. IMPLEMENT A VOLUNTARY DYNAMIC PRICING SYSTEM TO REDUCE PEAK DEMAND BY AS MUCH AS 1,500 TO 2,000 MEGAWATTS BY 2007.

4. MAKE EVERY NEW STATE BUILDING A MODEL OF ENERGY EFFICIENCY.

5. CREATE CUSTOMER INCENTIVES FOR AGGRESSIVE ENERGY DEMAND REDUCTION.

6. INCREASE LOCAL GOVERNMENT CONSERVATION AND ENERGY EFFICIENCY PROGRAMS.

7. INCORPORATE, AS APPROPRIATE PER PUBLIC RESOURCES CODE SECTION 25402, DISTRIBUTED GENERATION OR RENEWABLE TECHNOLOGIES INTO ENERGY EFFICIENCY STANDARDS FOR NEW BUILDING CONSTRUCTION.

1. ADD A NET ANNUAL AVERAGE OF UP TO 600 MW OF NEW RENEWABLE RESOURCES TO THE IOU'S PORTFOLIOS.

2. ESTABLISH KEY RPS IMPLEMENTATION RULES FOR IOUS BY JUNE 30, 2003.

3. FACILITATE AN ORDERLY AND COST-EFFECTIVE EXPANSION OF THE TRANSMISSION SYSTEM TO CONNECT POTENTIAL RENEWABLE RESOURCES TO LOAD.

4. INITIATE THE DEVELOPMENT OF RPS COMPLIANCE RULES FOR ENERGY SERVICE PROVIDERS AND COMMUNITY CHOICE AGGREGATORS.

5. COORDINATE IMPLEMENTATION WITH ALL RELEVANT STATE AGENCIES AND WITH MUNICIPAL UTILITIES TO FACILITATE THEIR ACHIEVEMENT OF THE STANDARD.

6. ENCOURAGE COMPANIES THAT INVEST IN ENERGY CONSERVATION AND RESOURCE EFFICIENCY TO REGISTER WITH THE STATE'S CLIMATE CHANGE REGISTRY.

1. ADD NEW GENERATION RESOURCES TO MEET ANTICIPATED DEMAND GROWTH, MODERNIZE OLD, INEFFICIENT AND DIRTY PLANTS AND ACHIEVE AND MAINTAIN RESERVE LEVELS IN THE 15 PERCENT-18 PERCENT RANGE. CURRENT ESTIMATES SHOW A STATEWIDE NEED FOR 1500 - 2000 MW PER YEAR.

3. WORK WITH THE CAISO TO ENSURE THE DEVELOPMENT OF A WORKABLE, COMPETITIVE WHOLESALE ENERGY MARKET THAT HAS MEANINGFUL MARKET POWER MITIGATION RULES.

4. MONITOR THE ELECTRICITY MARKET TO IDENTIFY ANY EXERCISE OF MARKET POWER AND MANIPULATION, AND WORK TO IMPROVE FERC-ESTABLISHED MARKET RULES TO CORRECT ANY OBSERVED ABUSES.

1. THE AGENCIES WILL COLLABORATE, IN PARTNERSHIP WITH OTHER STATE, LOCAL, AND NON-GOVERNMENTAL AGENCIES WITH ENERGY RESPONSIBILITIES, IN THE CALIFORNIA ENERGY COMMISSION'S INTEGRATED ENERGY PLANNING PROCESS TO DETERMINE THE STATEWIDE NEED FOR PARTICULAR BULK TRANSMISSION PROJECTS. THIS COLLABORATION WILL BUILD UPON THE CALIFORNIA INDEPENDENT SYSTEM OPERATOR'S ANNUAL TRANSMISSION PLAN AND EVALUATE TRANSMISSION, GENERATION AND DEMAND SIDE ALTERNATIVES. IT IS INTENDED TO ENSURE THAT STATE OBJECTIVES ARE EVALUATED AND BALANCED IN DETERMINING TRANSMISSION INVESTMENTS THAT BEST MEET THE NEEDS OF CALIFORNIA ELECTRICITY USERS.

4. THE ENERGY COMMISSION WILL WORK WITH MUNICIPAL UTILITIES TO HELP ENSURE COMPLETION OF TRANSMISSION EXPANSION OR UPGRADE PROJECTS IN THEIR SYSTEMS FOR WHICH THE COLLABORATIVE TRANSMISSION ASSESSMENT PROCESS FINDS A NEED.

1 EAP I can be viewed at the CPUC's website at < http://www.cpuc.ca.gov/PUBLISHED/REPORT/28715.htm> or at the CEC's website at < http://www.energy.ca.gov/energy_action_plan/2003-05-08_ACTION_PLAN.PDF>. 2 The Consumer Power and Conservation Financing Authority was a co-agency in EAP I. Funding for the agency was eliminated in SB 1113 (Chesbro) Chapter 208, the 2004-2005 budget. No additional funding is proposed in the Governor's 2005-2006 budget. 3 See Executive Order S-20-04, dated December 14, 2004, at < http://www.dot.ca.gov/hq/energy/ExecOrderS-20-04.htm>.

4 View the Governor's press release at < http://www.governor.ca.gov/state/govsite/gov_htmldisplay.jsp?sCatTitle=Press%20Release&sFilePath=/govsite/spotlight/august20_update.html>.

5 The CEC does not agree with this specific language and proposes to implement this recommendation through legislation by December 2005. 6 See WGA Policy Resolution 04-14, June 22, 2004, at < http://www.westgov.org/wga/policy/04/clean-energy.pdf>. 7 See WGA's Clean and Diversified Energy Initiative webpage at < http://www.westgov.org/wga/initiatives/cdeac/index.htm>. Also see < http://www.climatechange.ca.gov/westcoast/index.html> for information on the West Coast Governors' Initiative.

8 Some contracts allow the generators to increase output in an incremental fashion. Final output is determined by how many units are brought on line per contract.

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