HB 305
Page 1
AN ACT
RELATING TO ENERGY; AMENDING SECTIONS OF THE NMSA 1978 TO
PROVIDE FOR ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND LOAD MANAGEMENT FOR PUBLIC
UTILITY CUSTOMERS.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. Section 62-3-1 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1967,
Chapter 96, Section 2) is amended to read:
"62-3-1. DECLARATION OF POLICY.--
A. Public utilities, as defined in Section 62-3-3
NMSA 1978, are affected with the public interest in that,
among other things:
(1) a substantial portion of public
utilities' business and activities involves the rendition of
essential public services to a large number of the general
public;
(2) public utilities' financing involves the
investment of large sums of money, including capital obtained
from many members of the general public; and
(3) the development and extension of public
utilities' business directly affects the development, growth
and expansion of the general welfare, business and industry of
the state.
B. It is the declared policy of the state that the
public interest, the interest of consumers and the interest of
pg_0002
HB 305
Page 2
investors require the regulation and supervision of public
utilities to the end that reasonable and proper services shall
be available at fair, just and reasonable rates and to the end
that capital and investment may be encouraged and attracted so
as to provide for the construction, development and extension,
without unnecessary duplication and economic waste, of proper
plants and facilities and demand-side resources for the
rendition of service to the general public and to industry."
Section 2. Section 62-8-6 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1941,
Chapter 84, Section 42, as amended) is amended to read:
"62-8-6. DISCRIMINATION.--No public utility shall, as
to rates or services, make or grant any unreasonable
preference or advantage to any corporation or person within
any classification or subject any corporation or person within
any classification to any unreasonable prejudice or
disadvantage. No public utility shall establish and maintain
any unreasonable differences as to rates of service either as
between localities or as between classes of service. Nothing
shall prohibit, however, the commission from approving
economic development rates and rates designed to retain load
or from approving energy efficiency programs designed to
reduce the burden of energy costs on low-income customers
pursuant to the Efficient Use of Energy Act."
Section 3. Section 62-17-2 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2005,
Chapter 341, Section 2) is amended to read:
pg_0003
HB 305
Page 3
"62-17-2. FINDINGS.--The legislature finds that:
A. energy efficiency and load management are
cost-effective resources that are an essential component of
the balanced resource portfolio that public utilities must
achieve to provide affordable and reliable energy to public
utility consumers;
B. energy efficiency and load management in New
Mexico are resources that are currently underutilized, and it
is necessary and appropriate to provide rate treatment and
financial incentives to public utilities to develop all cost-
effective and achievable energy efficiency and load management
resources;
C. public and municipal utility energy efficiency
and load management programs present opportunities to increase
New Mexico's energy security, protect New Mexico energy
consumers from price increases, preserve the state's natural
resources and pursue an improved environment in New Mexico;
D. energy efficiency and load management programs
by public utilities in accordance with the Efficient Use of
Energy Act can bring significant economic benefits to New
Mexico;
E. it serves the public interest to support public
utility development of all cost-effective energy efficiency
and load management by removing, to the extent possible,
regulatory disincentives and allowing recovery of costs for
pg_0004
HB 305
Page 4
reasonable and prudently incurred expenses of energy
efficiency and load management programs and also allowing
public utilities the opportunity to earn a profit on cost-
effective energy efficiency and load management resource
development that, with satisfactory program performance, is
financially more attractive than developing supply-side
resources, while at the same time ensuring it is done in a
manner that balances the public interest, consumers' interests
and investors' interests;
F. utility energy efficiency and load management
programs for economically disadvantaged New Mexicans, in
conjunction with low-income weatherization programs managed by
the state of New Mexico, will reduce the burden of utility
costs on low-income customers;
G. cost-effective energy efficiency and load
management programs undertaken by public utilities can provide
significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, regulated
air emissions, water consumption and natural resource
depletion, and can avoid or delay the need for more expensive
generation, transmission and distribution infrastructure;
H. New Mexico should participate in regional
efforts to reduce energy consumption by twenty percent by 2020
through programs to reduce energy consumption;
I. public utility resource planning to meet
New Mexico's energy service needs should be identified and
pg_0005
HB 305
Page 5
evaluated on an ongoing basis in accordance with the
principles of integrated resource planning; and
J. it is necessary and appropriate to allow
distribution cooperative utilities to participate in the
implementation of energy efficiency programs in ways that
differ from rules applicable to public utilities that are not
customer owned."
Section 4. Section 62-17-3 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2005,
Chapter 341, Section 3) is amended to read:
"62-17-3. POLICY.--It is the policy of the Efficient
Use of Energy Act that public utilities, distribution
cooperative utilities and municipal utilities include all
cost-effective energy efficiency and load management programs
in their energy resource portfolios, that regulatory
disincentives to public utility development of cost-effective
energy efficiency and load management be removed in a manner
that balances the public interest, consumers' interests and
investors' interests and that the commission provide public
utilities an opportunity to earn a profit on cost-effective
energy efficiency and load management resources that, with
satisfactory program performance, is financially more
attractive to the utility than supply-side resources."
Section 5. Section 62-17-4 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2005,
Chapter 341, Section 4) is amended to read:
"62-17-4. DEFINITIONS.--As used in the Efficient Use of
pg_0006
HB 305
Page 6
Energy Act:
A. "achievable" means those energy efficiency or
load management resources available to the utility using its
best efforts;
B. "commission" means the public regulation
commission;
C. "cost-effective" means that the energy
efficiency or load management program meets the total resource
cost test;
D. "customer" means a utility customer at a
single, contiguous field, location or facility, regardless of
the number of meters at that field, location or facility;
E. "distribution cooperative utility" means a
utility with distribution facilities organized as a rural
electric cooperative pursuant to Laws 1937, Chapter 100 or the
Rural Electric Cooperative Act or similarly organized in other
states;
F. "energy efficiency" means measures, including
energy conservation measures, or programs that target consumer
behavior, equipment or devices to result in a decrease in
consumption of electricity and natural gas without reducing
the amount or quality of energy services;
G. "large customer" means a customer with
electricity consumption greater than seven thousand megawatt-
hours per year or natural gas use greater than three hundred
pg_0007
HB 305
Page 7
sixty thousand decatherms per year;
H. "load management" means measures or programs
that target equipment or devices to result in decreased peak
electricity demand or shift demand from peak to off-peak
periods;
I. "public utility" means a public utility that is
not also a distribution cooperative utility; and
J. "total resource cost test" means a standard
that is met if the monetary costs that are borne by the
utility and the participants and that are incurred to develop,
acquire and operate energy efficiency or load management
resources on a life-cycle basis are less than the avoided
monetary costs associated with developing, acquiring and
operating the associated supply-side resources. In developing
this test for energy efficiency and load management programs
directed to low-income customers, the commission shall either
quantify or assign a reasonable value to reductions in working
capital, reduced collection costs, lower bad-debt expense,
improved customer service effectiveness and other appropriate
factors as utility system economic benefits."
Section 6. Section 62-17-5 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2005,
Chapter 341, Section 5, as amended) is amended to read:
"62-17-5. COMMISSION APPROVAL--ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND
LOAD MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS--DISINCENTIVES.--
A. Pursuant to the findings and purpose of the
pg_0008
HB 305
Page 8
Efficient Use of Energy Act, the commission shall consider
public utility acquisition of cost-effective energy efficiency
and load management resources to be in the public interest.
B. The commission shall direct public utilities to
evaluate and implement cost-effective programs that reduce
energy demand and consumption.
C. Before the commission approves an energy
efficiency and load management program for a public utility,
it must find that the portfolio of programs is cost-effective
and designed to provide every affected customer class with the
opportunity to participate and benefit economically. The
commission shall determine the cost-effectiveness of energy
efficiency and load management measures using the total
resource cost test.
D. The commission shall act expeditiously on
public utility requests for approval of energy efficiency or
load management programs.
E. Public utilities shall obtain commission
approval of energy efficiency and load management programs
before they are implemented. Public utilities proposing new
energy efficiency and load management programs shall, before
seeking commission approval, solicit nonbinding
recommendations on the design, implementation and use of
third-party energy service contractors through competitive
bidding on the programs from commission staff, the attorney
pg_0009
HB 305
Page 9
general, the energy, minerals and natural resources department
and other interested parties. The commission may for good
cause require utilities to solicit competitive bids for energy
efficiency and load management resources.
F. The commission shall, upon petition or its own
motion, identify regulatory disincentives or barriers for
public utility expenditures on energy efficiency and load
management measures and ensure that they are removed in a
manner that balances the public interest, consumers' interests
and investors' interests. The commission shall also provide
public utilities an opportunity to earn a profit on cost-
effective energy efficiency and load management resource
development that, with satisfactory program performance, is
financially more attractive to the utility than supply-side
utility resources.
G. Public utilities providing electricity and
natural gas service to New Mexico customers shall, subject to
commission approval, acquire all cost-effective and achievable
energy efficiency and load management resources available in
their service territories. This requirement, however, for
public utilities providing electricity service, shall not be
less than savings of five percent of 2005 total retail
kilowatt-hour sales to New Mexico customers in calendar year
2014 and ten percent of 2005 total retail kilowatt-hour sales
to New Mexico customers in 2020 as a result of energy
pg_0010
HB 305
Page 10
efficiency and load management programs implemented starting
in 2007.
H. A utility that determines it cannot achieve the
minimum requirements established in Subsection G of this
section shall report to the commission on why it cannot meet
those requirements and shall propose alternative requirements
based on acquiring all cost-effective and achievable energy
efficiency and load management resources. If the commission
determines, after hearing, that the minimum requirements of
Subsection G of this section exceed the achievable amount of
energy efficiency and load management available to the
utility, the commission shall establish lower minimum energy
savings requirements for the utility based on the maximum
amount of energy efficiency and load management that it
determines can be achieved."
Section 7. Section 62-17-6 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2005,
Chapter 341, Section 6, as amended) is amended to read:
"62-17-6. COST RECOVERY.--
A. A public utility that undertakes cost-effective
energy efficiency and load management programs shall have the
option of recovering its prudent and reasonable costs along
with commission-approved incentives for demand-side resources
and load management programs implemented after the effective
date of the Efficient Use of Energy Act through an approved
tariff rider or in base rates, or by a combination of the two.
pg_0011
HB 305
Page 11
Program costs and incentives may be deferred for future
recovery through creation of a regulatory asset. The only
limit to the tariff rider or customer impact for any utility
customer is that it shall not exceed seventy-five thousand
dollars ($75,000) per year without the customer's consent.
Unless otherwise ordered by the commission, a tariff rider
approved by the commission shall require language on customer
bills explaining program benefits.
B. The tariff rider shall be applied on a monthly
basis, unless otherwise allowed by the commission.
C. A tariff rider proposed by a public utility to
fund approved energy efficiency and load management programs
shall go into effect thirty days after filing, unless
suspended by the commission for a period not to exceed one
hundred eighty days. If the tariff rider is not approved or
suspended within thirty days after filing, it shall be deemed
approved as a matter of law. If the commission has not acted
to approve or disapprove the tariff rider by the end of an
ordered suspension period, it shall be deemed approved as a
matter of law. The commission shall approve utility
reconciliations of the tariff rider annually."
Section 8. Section 62-17-8 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2005,
Chapter 341, Section 8) is amended to read:
"62-17-8. MEASUREMENT AND VERIFICATION.--
A. A public utility shall submit to the commission
pg_0012
HB 305
Page 12
an annual report that provides information relating to the
actions taken by the public utility to comply with the
standards of the Efficient Use of Energy Act. The report
shall include documentation of program expenditures, customer
participation levels, estimated energy savings, demand
reductions and customer monetary savings resulting from
programs, evaluation of the cost-effectiveness of
expenditures, evaluation of the cost-effectiveness of self-
directed programs, a qualitative assessment of program
effectiveness and any other information the commission may
require pursuant to its rulemaking authority.
B. At least every three years, a public utility
shall submit to the commission a comprehensive measurement,
verification and program evaluation report prepared by an
independent program evaluator. In preparing the report, the
independent program evaluator shall measure and verify energy
and demand savings, determine cost-effectiveness of the
programs, assess the performance of the public utility in
implementing energy efficiency and load management programs
and, as appropriate, provide recommendations on how program
performance can be improved.
C. The commission may direct a public utility to
modify or terminate a particular energy efficiency or load
management program if, after an adequate period for
implementation of the program, the commission determines the
pg_0013
HB 305
Page 13
program is not sufficiently meeting its goals and purposes.
Termination of a program or programs shall be accomplished in
a manner that allows the utility to fully recover its
reasonable and prudent program costs."
Section 9. Section 62-17-11 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2005,
Chapter 341, Section 11) is amended to read:
"62-17-11. DISTRIBUTION COOPERATIVE UTILITIES.--
A. Distribution cooperative utilities shall
periodically examine the potential to assist their customers
in reducing energy consumption or peak electricity demand in a
cost-effective manner. Based on these studies, by January 1,
2009, distribution cooperative utilities shall establish
energy efficiency and load management targets and begin to
implement cost-effective energy efficiency and load management
programs that are economically feasible and practical for
their members and customers. Approval for such programs shall
reside with the governing body of each distribution
cooperative utility and not with the commission.
B. Each distribution cooperative utility shall
file with the commission concurrently with its annual report,
a report that describes all of the distribution cooperative
utility's programs or measures that promote energy efficiency,
conservation or load management. The report shall set forth
the costs of each of the programs or measures for the previous
calendar year and the resulting effect on the consumption of
pg_0014
electricity. In offering or implementing energy efficiency,
conservation or load management programs, a distribution
cooperative utility shall attempt to minimize any cross-
subsidies between customer classes.
C. Each distribution cooperative utility shall
include in the report required by Subsection B of this section
a description of all programs or measures to promote energy
efficiency, conservation or load management that are planned
and the anticipated date for implementation.
D. Costs resulting from programs or measures to
promote energy efficiency, conservation or load management may
be recovered by the distribution cooperative utility through
its general rates. In requesting approval to recover such
costs in general rates, the distribution cooperative utility
may elect to use the procedure set forth in Subsection G of
Section 62-8-7 NMSA 1978."
HB 305
Page 14