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Bill > S336
NJ S336
NJ S336Establishes Office of Clean Energy Equity in BPU; directs establishment of certain clean energy, energy efficiency, and energy storage programs for overburdened communities; makes change to community solar program.
summary
Introduced
01/11/2022
01/11/2022
In Committee
02/10/2022
02/10/2022
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/08/2024
01/08/2024
Introduced Session
2022-2023 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill would establish the Office of Clean Energy Equity ("office") in the Board of Public Utilities ("BPU"). The office would be charged with promoting, guiding, and overseeing the equitable deployment of clean energy, energy efficiency, and energy storage programs and technologies in overburdened communities, and the equitable provision of the tangible benefits of clean energy, increased energy efficiency, and energy storage at the household and community level, including clean energy asset ownership, energy cost savings, and employment and economic opportunities, to overburdened communities. The bill would require the BPU to: (1) establish onsite solar or community solar programs, which benefit 250,000 low income households or 35 percent of the low income households in the State, whichever is larger, by 2030, with the goal of reducing these households' average energy burden to below six percent of household income; and (2) require the establishment of a minimum of 1,600 megawatt hours of energy storage to benefit overburdened communities by 2030. In addition, the BPU, in cooperation with the office, would be required to: integrate workforce development training into all clean energy and energy storage programs established by the BPU; provide outreach and recruitment campaign grants to community-based organizations to increase participation in clean energy and energy efficiency programs; develop, in coordination with community-based organizations, outreach materials in multiple languages; appoint a community liaison and establish an advisory board consisting of representatives of overburdened communities to review and evaluate the clean energy and energy storage programs available to overburdened communities; and coordinate with the Department of Labor and Workforce Development and the Department of Community Affairs (DCA) concerning their responsibilities pursuant to sections 2 and 3 of the bill. The bill would require the BPU to direct no less than 10 percent of the BPU's annual total clean energy budget, or at least $50 million annually, whichever is greater, to the office for the purposes of the bill. The BPU would be authorized to allocate additional funding, staff, and resources to the office as it determines appropriate. In addition, the bill would require the Department of Labor and Workforce Development, in consultation with the office and the New Jersey Economic Development Authority, to establish a program to provide grants to community-based, diversity-focused nonprofit organizations, community colleges, and vocational-technical schools to develop solar energy or clean energy paid workforce training programs that provide training to at least 2,500 individuals from overburdened communities by 2025. The department shall require, as a condition of a grant award, that the programs be updated every two years to ensure that they prepare participants adequately for the current job market in the solar energy or clean energy industry. The bill would also direct the Department of Labor and Workforce Development, in coordination with community-based organizations, to develop programs to provide entrepreneurial training, mentoring, apprenticeships, investment capital, loans, or other training, capacity building, technical, and financial support to residents of overburdened communities to help launch new clean energy enterprises or establish careers in the clean energy workforce. Under the bill, the DCA, in consultation with the office, would require all new construction located in an overburdened community to be solar ready, subject to any specific exemptions that the department and the BPU deem reasonable and necessary and that the department adopts as rules and regulations. The bill would also require the department to give preference to applications for onsite, community solar, energy storage, or other clean energy projects that are sited in overburdened communities or include minority or women-owned businesses. Lastly, the bill would amend the current law establishing the Community Solar Energy Pilot Program to require that the eventual permanent community solar program provide for access to solar energy projects for low and moderate income customers, in accordance with the requirements of the bill. The bill would also require that the permanent community solar energy program be established by rule or regulation no later than the date on which the BPU adopts rules and regulations establishing a permanent successor to the solar renewable energy credit program (SREC) program. In addition, the bill would require that the program be consistent with any land use provisions of the permanent successor to the SREC program currently being developed by the BPU.
AI Summary
This bill establishes the Office of Clean Energy Equity in the Board of Public Utilities (BPU) to promote and oversee the equitable deployment of clean energy, energy efficiency, and energy storage programs and technologies in overburdened communities. It requires the BPU to establish solar or community solar programs to benefit 250,000 low-income households by 2030, and to require the establishment of 1,600 megawatt hours of energy storage in overburdened communities by 2030. The bill also directs the Department of Labor and Workforce Development to establish clean energy workforce training programs and provide entrepreneurial support for residents of overburdened communities. Additionally, it requires the Department of Community Affairs to make new construction in overburdened communities "solar ready" and give preference to clean energy projects in those communities or with minority/women-owned businesses. Finally, the bill amends the current community solar program law to ensure access for low- and moderate-income customers.
Committee Categories
Agriculture and Natural Resources, Budget and Finance
Sponsors (12)
Ronald Rice (D)*,
Troy Singleton (D)*,
Jim Beach (D),
Sandra Cunningham (D),
Patrick Diegnan (D),
Vin Gopal (D),
Linda Greenstein (D),
Nellie Pou (D),
Teresa Ruiz (D),
Bob Smith (D),
Shirley Turner (D),
Andrew Zwicker (D),
Last Action
Referred to Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee (on 02/10/2022)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/bill-search/2022/S336 |
| Fiscal Estimate 3/2/22; 1R | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/Bills/2022/S0500/336_E1.PDF |
| BillText | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/Bills/2022/S0500/336_R1.HTM |
| Bill | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/Bills/2022/S0500/336_R1.PDF |
| Statement SEN 2/10/22 | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/Bills/2022/S0500/336_S1.PDF |
| BillText | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/Bills/2022/S0500/336_I1.HTM |
| Bill | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/Bills/2022/S0500/336_I1.PDF |
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