Energy Independence Act. Approved by voters in 2006, the Energy Independence Act (EIA), also known as Initiative 937, requires electric utilities with 25,000 or more customers to meet targets for energy conservation and using eligible renewable resources. Utilities that must comply with the EIA are called qualifying utilities. Currently, there are 18 utilities that are qualifying utilities.
Each qualifying utility must use eligible renewable resources or acquire equivalent renewable energy credits (RECs), or a combination of both, to meet the renewable energy annual target of at least 15 percent of its load by January 1, 2020, and each year thereafter.
In complying with the annual targets, qualifying utilities may not count:
A utility is not required to meet a renewable energy target if it spends at least 4 percent of its retail revenue requirement on the incremental cost of renewable energy and renewable energy credits. The cost cap for a utility that has no load growth is 1 percent.
Under the EIA, a qualifying utility's load is defined as the amount of kilowatt-hours of electricity delivered in the most recently completed year to its Washington retail customers.
Under the EIA, when calculating load for annual targets, a qualifying utility's load does not include kilowatt-hours delivered to the utility's system from a retail electric customer's voluntary renewable energy purchase when the RECs associated with the kilowatt-hours are retired on behalf of the customer.
Under a voluntary renewable energy purchase, a retail electric customer may either:
PRO: This bill fixes the EIA so that larger utilities do not have to buy extra RECs for EIA compliance and saves money. This bill provides the same approach for the EIA as in CETA. Under existing law, if customer is already buying 100 percent clean electricity through a special utility program, the utility still has to get another 15 percent of renewable energy for compliance purposes. This bill allows the utility to stop at 100 percent for that particular customer. The EIA has helped add clean energy to the state's electric energy mix and this change does not let utilities off hook. Electric utilities are at the forefront of addressing climate change and customers are appealing to utilities to address sustainability and decarbonization goals. The bill is consistent with the original intent of the EIA and will remove barriers for utilities that want to establish voluntary renewable energy programs for their customers.