ESSB 6001 -
By Representative Morris
ADOPTED 04/12/2007
Strike everything after the enacting clause and insert the following:
"NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 (1) The legislature finds that:
(a) Washington is especially vulnerable to climate change because
of the state's dependence on snow pack for summer stream flows and
because the expected rise in sea levels threatens our coastal
communities. Extreme weather, a warming Pacific Northwest, reduced
snow pack, and sea level rise are four major ways that climate change
is disrupting Washington's economy, environment, and communities;
(b) Washington's greenhouse gases emissions are continuing to
increase, despite international scientific consensus that worldwide
emissions must be reduced significantly below current levels to avert
catastrophic climate change;
(c) Washington state greenhouse gases are substantially caused by
the transportation sector of the economy;
(d) Washington has been a leader in actions to slow the increase of
greenhouse gases emissions, such as being the first state in the nation
to adopt a carbon dioxide mitigation program for new thermal electric
plants, mandating integrated resource planning for electric utilities
to include life-cycle costs of carbon dioxide emissions, adopting clean
car standards and stronger appliance energy efficiency standards,
increasing production and use of renewable liquid fuels, and increasing
renewable energy sources by electric utilities;
(e) A greenhouse gases emissions performance standard will work in
unison with the state's carbon dioxide mitigation policy, chapter 80.70
RCW and its related rules, for fossil-fueled thermal electric
generation facilities located in the state;
(f) While these actions are significant, there is a need to assess
the trend of greenhouse gases emissions statewide over the next several
decades, and to take sufficient actions so that Washington meets its
responsibility to contribute to the global actions needed to reduce the
impacts and the pace of global warming;
(g) Actions to reduce greenhouse gases emissions will spur
technology development and increase efficiency, thus resulting in
benefits to Washington's economy and businesses; and
(h) The state of Washington has an obligation to provide clear
guidance for the procurement of baseload electric generation to
alleviate regulatory uncertainty while addressing risks that can affect
the ability of electric utilities to make necessary and timely
investments to ensure an adequate, reliable, and cost-effective supply
of electricity.
(2) The legislature finds that companies that generate greenhouse
gases emissions or manufacture products that generate such emissions
are purchasing carbon credits from landowners and from other companies
that provide carbon credits. Companies that are purchasing carbon
credits would benefit from a program to trade and to bank carbon
credits. Washington forests are one of the most effective resources
that can absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Forests, and other
planted lands and waters, provide carbon storage and mitigate
greenhouse gases emissions. Washington contains the most productive
forests in the world and both public and private landowners could
benefit from a carbon storage trading and banking program.
(3) The legislature intends by this act to establish statutory
goals for the statewide reduction in greenhouse gases emissions and to
adopt the recommendations provided by the Washington climate change
challenge stakeholder group, which is charged with designing and
recommending a comprehensive set of policies to the legislature and the
governor on how to achieve the goals. The legislature further intends
by this act to authorize immediate actions in the electric power
generation sector for the reduction of greenhouse gases emissions.
(4) The legislature finds that:
(a) To the extent energy efficiency and renewable resources are
unable to satisfy increasing energy and capacity needs, the state will
rely on clean and efficient fossil fuel-fired generation and will
encourage the development of cost-effective, highly efficient, and
environmentally sound supply resources to provide reliability and
consistency with the state's energy priorities;
(b) It is vital to ensure all electric utilities internalize the
significant and underrecognized cost of emissions and to reduce
Washington consumers' exposure to costs associated with future
regulation of these emissions, which is consistent with the objectives
of integrated resource planning by electric utilities under chapter
19.280 RCW; and
(c) The state of California recently enacted a law establishing a
greenhouse gases emissions performance standard for electric utility
procurement of baseload electric generation that is based on the
emissions of a combined-cycle thermal electric generation facility
fueled by natural gas.
(5) The legislature finds that the climate change challenge
stakeholder group provides a process for identifying the policies
necessary to achieve the economic and emissions reduction goals in
section 3 of this act in a manner that maximizes economic opportunities
and job creation in Washington.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 The definitions in this section apply
throughout this chapter unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Attorney general" means the Washington state office of the
attorney general.
(2) "Auditor" means: (a) The Washington state auditor's office or
its designee for consumer-owned utilities under its jurisdiction; or
(b) an independent auditor selected by a consumer-owned utility that is
not under the jurisdiction of the state auditor.
(3) "Average available greenhouse gases emissions output" means the
level of greenhouse gases emissions as surveyed and determined by the
energy policy division of the department of community, trade, and
economic development under section 7 of this act.
(4) "Baseload electric generation" means electric generation from
a power plant that is designed and intended to provide electricity at
an annualized plant capacity factor of at least sixty percent.
(5) "Cogeneration facility" means a power plant in which the heat
or steam is also used for industrial or commercial heating or cooling
purposes and that meets federal energy regulatory commission standards
for qualifying facilities under the public utility regulatory policies
act of 1978 (16 U.S.C. Sec. 824a-3), as amended.
(6) "Combined-cycle natural gas thermal electric generation
facility" means a power plant that employs a combination of one or more
gas turbines and steam turbines in which electricity is produced in the
steam turbine from otherwise lost waste heat exiting from one or more
of the gas turbines.
(7) "Commission" means the Washington utilities and transportation
commission.
(8) "Consumer-owned utility" means a municipal utility formed under
Title 35 RCW, a public utility district formed under Title 54 RCW, an
irrigation district formed under chapter 87.03 RCW, a cooperative
formed under chapter 23.86 RCW, a mutual corporation or association
formed under chapter 24.06 RCW, or port district within which an
industrial district has been established as authorized by Title 53 RCW,
that is engaged in the business of distributing electricity to more
than one retail electric customer in the state.
(9) "Department" means the department of ecology.
(10) "Distributed generation" means electric generation connected
to the distribution level of the transmission and distribution grid,
which is usually located at or near the intended place of use.
(11) "Electric utility" means an electrical company or a consumer-owned utility.
(12) "Electrical company" means a company owned by investors that
meets the definition of RCW 80.04.010.
(13) "Governing board" means the board of directors or legislative
authority of a consumer-owned utility.
(14) "Greenhouse gases" includes carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous
oxide, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, and sulfur hexafluoride.
(15) "Long-term financial commitment" means:
(a) Either a new ownership interest in baseload electric generation
or an upgrade to a baseload electric generation facility; or
(b) A new or renewed contract for baseload electric generation with
a term of five or more years for the provision of retail power or
wholesale power to end-use customers in this state.
(16) "Plant capacity factor" means the ratio of the electricity
produced during a given time period, measured in kilowatt-hours, to the
electricity the unit could have produced if it had been operated at its
rated capacity during that period, expressed in kilowatt-hours.
(17) "Power plant" means a facility for the generation of
electricity that is permitted as a single plant by the energy facility
site evaluation council or a local jurisdiction.
(18) "Upgrade" means any modification made for the primary purpose
of increasing the electric generation capacity of a baseload electric
generation facility. "Upgrade" does not include routine or necessary
maintenance, installation of emission control equipment, installation,
replacement, or modification of equipment that improves the heat rate
of the facility, or installation, replacement, or modification of
equipment for the primary purpose of maintaining reliable generation
output capability that does not increase the heat input or fuel usage
as specified in existing generation air quality permits as of the
effective date of this section, but may result in incidental increases
in generation capacity.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 (1) The following greenhouse gases emissions
reduction and clean energy economy goals are established for Washington
state:
(a) By 2020, reduce overall greenhouse gases emissions in the state
to 1990 levels;
(b) By 2035, reduce overall greenhouse gases emissions in the state
to twenty-five percent below 1990 levels;
(c) By 2050, the state will do its part to reach global climate
stabilization levels by reducing overall emissions to fifty percent
below 1990 levels, or seventy percent below the state's expected
emissions that year; and
(d) By 2020, increase the number of clean energy sector jobs to
twenty-five thousand from the eight thousand four hundred jobs the
state had in 2004.
(2)(a) By December 31, 2007, the departments of ecology and
community, trade, and economic development shall report to the
appropriate committees of the senate and house of representatives the
total greenhouse gases emissions for 1990 and the totals in each major
sector for 1990.
(b) By December 31st of each even-numbered year beginning in 2010,
the departments of ecology and community, trade, and economic
development shall report to the governor and the appropriate committees
of the senate and house of representatives the total greenhouse gases
emissions for the preceding two years, and totals in each major source
sector.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4 (1) The governor shall develop policy
recommendations to the legislature on how the state can achieve the
greenhouse gases emissions reduction goals established under section 3
of this act. These recommendations must include, but are not limited
to:
(a) How market mechanisms, such as a load-based cap and trade
system, would assist in achieving the greenhouse gases emissions
reduction goals;
(b) How geologic injection, forest sequestration, and other carbon
sequestration options could be used to achieve state greenhouse gases
emissions reduction goals;
(c) A process for replacing the highest emitting thermal electric
plants that have exceeded their expected useful life with newer
technologies that have lower greenhouse gases emissions levels; and
(d) Methods to utilize indigenous resources, such as landfill gas,
geothermal resources, and other assets that might reduce greenhouse
gases emissions consistent with the purposes of this act.
(2) Recommendations under subsection (1) of this section shall be
submitted to the appropriate committees of the house of representatives
and the senate for consideration in the 2008 legislative session.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 (1) Beginning July 1, 2008, the greenhouse
gases emissions performance standard for all baseload electric
generation for which electric utilities enter into long-term financial
commitments on or after such date is the lower of:
(a) One thousand one hundred pounds of greenhouse gases per
megawatt-hour; or
(b) The average available greenhouse gases emissions output as
determined by the department of community, trade, and economic
development under section 7 of this act.
(2) All baseload electric generation facilities in operation as of
June 30, 2008, are deemed to be in compliance with the greenhouse gases
emissions performance standard established under this section until the
facilities are the subject of long-term financial commitments.
(3) All electric generation facilities or power plants powered by
renewable resources, as defined in RCW 19.280.020, are deemed to be in
compliance with the greenhouse gases emissions performance standard
established under this section.
(4) In determining the rate of emissions of greenhouse gases for
baseload electric generation, the total emissions associated with
producing electricity shall be included.
(5) The department shall establish an output-based methodology to
ensure that the calculation of emissions of greenhouse gases for a
cogeneration facility recognizes the total usable energy output of the
process, and includes all greenhouse gases emitted by the facility in
the production of both electrical and thermal energy. In developing
and implementing the greenhouse gases emissions performance standard,
the department shall consider and act in a manner consistent with any
rules adopted pursuant to the public utilities regulatory policy act of
1978 (16 U.S.C. Sec. 824a-3), as amended.
(6) The following greenhouse gases emissions produced by baseload
electric generation owned or contracted through a long-term financial
commitment shall not be counted as emissions of the power plant in
determining compliance with the greenhouse gases emissions performance
standard:
(a) Those emissions that are injected permanently in geological
formations;
(b) Those emissions that are permanently sequestered by other means
approved by the department; and
(c) Those emissions sequestered or mitigated as approved under
subsection (12) of this section.
(7) In adopting and implementing the greenhouse gases emissions
performance standard, the department of community, trade, and economic
development energy policy division, in consultation with the
commission, the department, the Bonneville power administration, the
western electricity coordination council, the energy facility site
evaluation council, electric utilities, public interest
representatives, and consumer representatives, shall consider the
effects of the greenhouse gases emissions performance standard on
system reliability and overall costs to electricity customers.
(8) In developing and implementing the greenhouse gases emissions
performance standard, the department shall, with assistance of the
commission, the department of community, trade, and economic
development energy policy division, and electric utilities, and to the
extent practicable, address long-term purchases of electricity from
unspecified sources in a manner consistent with this chapter.
(9) The directors of the energy facility site evaluation council
and the department shall each adopt rules under chapter 34.05 RCW in
coordination with each other to implement and enforce the greenhouse
gases emissions performance standard. The rules necessary to implement
this section shall be adopted by June 30, 2008.
(10) In adopting the rules for implementing this section, the
energy facility site evaluation council and the department shall
include criteria to be applied in evaluating the carbon sequestration
plan. The rules shall include but not be limited to:
(a) Provisions for financial assurances, as a condition of plant
operation, sufficient to ensure successful implementation of the carbon
sequestration plan, including construction and operation of necessary
equipment, and any other significant costs;
(b) Provisions for geological or other approved sequestration
commencing within five years of plant operation, including full and
sufficient technical documentation to support the planned
sequestration;
(c) Provisions for monitoring the effectiveness of the
implementation of the sequestration plan;
(d) Penalties for failure to achieve implementation of the plan on
schedule; and
(e) Provisions for public notice and comment on the carbon
sequestration plan.
(11)(a) Except as provided in (b) of this subsection, as part of
its role enforcing the greenhouse gases emissions performance standard,
the energy facility site evaluation council and the department shall
determine whether a plan for sequestration will provide safe, reliable,
and permanent protection against the greenhouse gases entering the
atmosphere from the power plant and all ancillary facilities.
(b) For facilities under its jurisdiction, the energy facility site
evaluation council shall contract for review of the carbon
sequestration plan with the department, consider the adequacy of the
plan in its adjudicative proceedings conducted under RCW 80.50.090(3),
and incorporate specific findings regarding adequacy in its
recommendation to the governor under RCW 80.50.100.
(12) A project under consideration by the energy facility site
evaluation council by the effective date of this section is required to
include all of the requirements of subsection (10) of this section in
its carbon sequestration plan submitted as part of the energy facility
site evaluation council process. A project under consideration by the
energy facility site evaluation council by the effective date of this
section that receives final site certification agreement approval under
chapter 80.50 RCW may apply to the energy facility site evaluation
council to amend the carbon sequestration plan if the project owner
determines that implementation is not feasible following a good faith
attempt to implement the plan. The application shall demonstrate the
steps taken to implement the sequestration plan and evidence of the
technological and economic barriers to successful implementation. The
energy facility site evaluation council must review this application
and make a recommendation to the governor as to whether the
sequestration plan as incorporated into the site certification
agreement is feasible. The energy facility site evaluation council
shall contract with the department in reviewing the application. If
the energy facility site evaluation council recommends the plan as no
longer feasible, the energy facility site evaluation council may
recommend other conditions consistent with (a) and (b) of this
subsection to the governor. The governor may:
(a) Deny the request;
(b) Approve an amendment to the plan and site certification to
allow up to an additional five years for the sequestration to commence;
or
(c) Approve other methods by which the project is required to fully
and permanently mitigate for the emissions in excess of the performance
standard adopted in this section, for the operating life of the plant.
Such mitigation shall be in addition to any mitigation required upon
site certification under RCW 80.70.020 and that section shall not limit
the conditions for mitigation under this subsection. The required
mitigation shall be enforced through conditions upon the amended site
certification.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 6 A new section is added to chapter 80.50 RCW
to read as follows:
The governor may issue an amendment to a site certification under
the provisions of section 5 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 7 The energy policy division of the department
of community, trade, and economic development shall survey new
combined-cycle natural gas thermal electric generation turbines
commercially available and offered for sale by manufacturers in the
United States to determine an average rate of emissions of greenhouse
gases for these turbines. The department of community, trade, and
economic development shall report the results of its survey to the
legislature on a biennial basis, starting June 30, 2008.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 8 (1) No electrical company may enter into a
long-term financial commitment unless the baseload electric generation
supplied under such a long-term financial commitment complies with the
greenhouse gases emissions performance standard established under
section 5 of this act.
(2) In order to enforce the requirements of this chapter, the
commission shall review in a general rate case or as provided in
subsection (5) of this section any long-term financial commitment
entered into by an electrical company after June 30, 2008, to determine
whether the baseload electric generation to be supplied under that
long-term financial commitment complies with the greenhouse gases
emissions performance standard established under section 5 of this act.
(3) In determining whether a long-term financial commitment is for
baseload electric generation, the commission shall consider the design
of the power plant and its intended use, based upon the electricity
purchase contract, if any, permits necessary for the operation of the
power plant, and any other matter the commission determines is relevant
under the circumstances.
(4) Upon application by an electric utility, the commission may
provide a case-by-case exemption from the greenhouse gases emissions
performance standard to address: (a) Unanticipated electric system
reliability needs; or (b) catastrophic events or threat of significant
financial harm that may arise from unforeseen circumstances.
(5) Upon application by an electrical company, the commission shall
make a determination regarding the company's proposed decision to
acquire electric generation or enter into a power purchase agreement
for electricity that complies with the greenhouse gases emissions
performance standard established under section 5 of this act, as to the
need for the resource, and the appropriateness of the specific resource
selected. The commission shall take into consideration factors such as
the company's forecasted loads, need for energy, power plant
technology, expected costs, and other associated investment decisions.
In addition, the commission shall provide for recovery of the prudently
incurred capital and operating cost of these resources and may impose
such conditions as it finds necessary to ensure that rates are fair,
just, reasonable, and sufficient, coincident with the in-service date
of the project or the effective date of the power purchase agreement.
(6) An electrical company may account for and defer for later
consideration by the commission costs incurred in connection with the
long-term financial commitment, including operating and maintenance
costs, depreciation, taxes, and cost of invested capital. The deferral
begins with the date on which the power plant begins commercial
operation or the effective date of the power purchase agreement and
ends on the effective date of the final decision by the commission
regarding recovery in rates of these deferred costs. Creation of such
a deferral account does not by itself determine whether recovery of any
or all of these costs is appropriate.
(7) In establishing rates for each electrical company regulated
under chapter 80.28 RCW, the commission may adopt policies allowing an
additional return on investments to encourage meeting energy
requirements through distributed generation to accelerate efficiencies
in electric transmission and distribution systems that reduce energy
losses and increase the efficiency of energy delivery to end-use
consumers. These policies may include but are not limited to adding an
increment of two percent to the rate of return on common equity
permitted on an electrical company's other investments for prudently
incurred investments in distributed generation, and in measures that
improve, as measured in kilowatt-hour savings, the overall efficiency
of transmission, distribution, and end-use consumption of electricity
through energy efficiency technologies, including any device,
instrument, machine, appliance, or process related to the transmission,
distribution, and consumption of electricity to increase energy
efficiency, including but not limited to smart grid technology, smart
meters, and demand response technologies. The rate of return increment
must be allowed for a period, at the commission's discretion, of at
least seven but not more than thirty years after the investment is
first placed in the rate base. Measures or projects encouraged under
this section are those for which construction or installation is begun
after July 1, 2007, and before January 1, 2017, and which, at the time
they are placed in the rate base, are reasonably expected to save,
produce, or generate energy at a total incremental system cost per unit
of energy delivered to end use that is less than or equal to the
incremental system cost per unit of energy delivered to end use from
new baseload or peaking electric generation and that the electrical
company could acquire to meet energy demand in the same time period.
(8) The commission shall apply the procedures adopted by the
department to verify the emissions of greenhouse gases from baseload
electric generation under section 5 of this act.
(9) The commission shall adopt rules for the enforcement of this
section with respect to electrical companies and adopt procedural rules
for approving costs incurred by an electrical company under subsection
(4) of this section.
(10) The commission shall adopt rules necessary to implement this
section by December 31, 2008.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 9 (1) No consumer-owned utility may enter into
a long-term financial commitment unless the baseload electric
generation supplied under such a long-term financial commitment
complies with the greenhouse gases emissions performance standard
established under section 5 of this act.
(2) The governing board shall review and make a determination on
any long-term financial commitment by the utility, pursuant to this
chapter, to determine whether the baseload electric generation to be
supplied under that long-term financial commitment complies with the
greenhouse gases emissions performance standard established under
section 5 of this act. No consumer-owned utility may enter into a
long-term financial commitment unless the baseload electric generation
to be supplied under that long-term financial commitment complies with
the greenhouse gases emissions performance standard established under
section 5 of this act.
(3) In confirming that a long-term financial commitment is for
baseload electric generation, the governing board shall consider the
design of the power plant and the intended use of the power plant based
upon the electricity purchase contract, if any, permits necessary for
the operation of the power plant, and any other matter the governing
board determines is relevant under the circumstances.
(4) The governing board may provide a case-by-case exemption from
the greenhouse gases emissions performance standard to address: (a)
Unanticipated electric system reliability needs; or (b) catastrophic
events or threat of significant financial harm that may arise from
unforeseen circumstances.
(5) The governing board shall apply the procedures adopted by the
department to verify the emissions of greenhouse gases from baseload
electric generation under section 5 of this act, and may request
assistance from the department in doing so.
(6) For consumer-owned utilities, the auditor is responsible for
auditing compliance with this chapter and rules adopted under this
chapter that apply to those utilities and the attorney general is
responsible for enforcing that compliance.
(7) In establishing rates, a governing board of a consumer-owned
utility may collect a surcharge for costs in excess of individual rate
categories to meet the greenhouse gases emissions performance standard
established under section 5 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 10 For the purposes of sections 5 through 10
of this act and RCW 80.70.020, the department, in consultation with the
department of community, trade, and economic development energy policy
division, the energy facility site evaluation council, the commission,
and the governing boards of consumer-owned utilities, shall review the
greenhouse gases emissions performance standard established in this
chapter to determine need, applicability, and effectiveness no less
than every five years following the effective date of this section, or
upon implementation of a federal or state law or rule regulating carbon
dioxide emissions of electric utilities, and report to the legislature.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 11 Sections 1 through 5 and 7 through 10 of
this act constitute a new chapter in Title
Correct the title.
EFFECT: Strikes the underlying bill.
Establishes greenhouse gases emissions reduction for 2020, 2035,
and 2050 and clean energy job goals for the state.
Requires the Departments of Ecology and Community, Trade, and
Economic Development to report to the Legislature by December 31, 2007
state greenhouse gases emissions for 1990 in total and by major sector.
Requires the Departments of Ecology and Community, Trade, and
Economic Development to report to the Governor and Legislature every
two years beginning in 2010, state greenhouse gases emissions in total
and by major section for the previous two years.
Requires the governor to develop policy recommendations on how the
state can achieve the greenhouse gases emissions reduction goals and
submit these recommendations to the legislature for consideration
during the 2008 legislative session.
Establishes a greenhouse gases emissions performance standard,
beginning July 1, 2008, for all baseload electric generation for which
electric utilities enter into long-term financial commitments.
Specifies that the greenhouse gases emissions performance standard
shall be the lower of 1,100 pounds of greenhouse gases per megawatt-
hour or the average available greenhouse gases emissions output.
Requires the Department of Community, Trade, and Economic
Development's Energy Policy Division to determine the average available
greenhouse gases emissions output by conducting a survey of new
combined-cycle natural gas thermal electric generation turbines
commercially available and offered for sale by manufacturers in the
United States and to report the results of the survey to the
legislature on a biennial basis.
Prohibits electric companies and consumer-owned electric utilities
from entering into a long-term financial commitment for baseload
electric generation that does not comply with the greenhouse gases
emissions performance standard.
Authorizes the Utilities and Transportation Commission to adopt
policies allowing for an additional return on investment to encourage
meeting energy requirements through distributed generation and
increased efficiency of energy delivery.
Permits the Utilities and Transportation Commission to add an
increment of two percent to the rate of return on common equity
permitted on an electric company's other investments for prudently
incurred investments in distributed generation and other measures.
Requires the Utilities and Transportation Commission to make a
determination regarding an electric company's proposed decision to
acquire electric generation for electricity that complies with the
greenhouse gases emissions performance standard.
Authorizes consumer-owned electric utilities to collect a surcharge
for costs in excess of individual rate categories to meet the
greenhouse gases emissions performance standard.
Requires the Directors of the Energy Facility Site Evaluation
Council and the Department of Ecology to each adopt rules in
coordination with each other to implement and enforce the greenhouse
gases emissions performance standard by June 30, 2008.
Specifies all baseload electric generation facilities in operation
as of June 30, 2008, are deemed to be in compliance with the greenhouse
gases emissions performance standard until the facilities are the
subject of long-term financial commitments.
Specifies all electric generating facilities or power plants
powered by renewable resources, as defined in RCW 19.280.020, are
deemed to be in compliance with the greenhouse gases emissions
performance standard established under this section.
Provides that the total emissions associated with producing
electricity shall be included in determining the rate of emissions of
greenhouse gases for baseload electric generation.
Requires the Department of Ecology to establish an output-based
methodology to ensure that the calculation of emissions of greenhouse
gases for a cogeneration facility recognizes the total usable energy
output of the process.
Specifies which greenhouse gases emissions produced by baseload
electric generation are not counted as emissions of the power plant in
determining compliance with the greenhouse gases emissions performance
standard:
(a) Those emissions that are injected permanently in geological
formations;
(b) Those that are permanently sequestered by other means approved
by the Department of Ecology; and
(c) Those emissions sequestered or mitigated as part of a project
under consideration by the Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council on
the effective date of this act.
Specifies that in adopting rules to implement the greenhouse gases
emissions performance standard, the Energy Facility Site Evaluation
Council and the Department of Ecology shall include criteria to be
applied in evaluating carbon sequestration plans.
Provides that a project under consideration by the Energy Facility
Site Evaluation Council by the effective date of this act may request
amendments to the project's carbon sequestration plan, if the project
owner determines that the carbon sequestration plan cannot be
implemented.
Authorizes the Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council to recommend
to the Governor for action other carbon sequestration plan conditions
such as allowing an additional five years for sequestration to begin or
other methods to fully and permanently mitigate for the emissions in
excess of the greenhouse gases emissions performance standard.
Requires the Department of Ecology, in consultation with the
Department of Community, Trade, and Economic Development Energy Policy
Division, the Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council, the Utilities
and Transportation Commission, and the governing boards of consumer-
owned electric utilities, to review at least every five years, or upon
implementation of a federal or state law or rule regulating carbon
dioxide emissions of electric utilities, the greenhouse gases emissions
performance standard to determine need, applicability, and
effectiveness.