summary
Introduced
01/14/2025
01/14/2025
In Committee
02/18/2025
02/18/2025
Crossed Over
02/13/2025
02/13/2025
Passed
05/07/2025
05/07/2025
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
05/19/2025
05/19/2025
Introduced Session
126th General Assembly
Bill Summary
Amend The South Carolina Code Of Laws By Enacting The "south Carolina Energy Security Act" By Amending Section 58-3-140, Relating To The Public Service Commission's Powers To Regulate Public Utilities, So As To Establish A Schedule For Certain Testimony And Discovery In Contested Proceedings, To Permit Electrical Utility Customers To Address The Commission As Public Witnesses, And To Establish Requirements For An Independent Third-party Consultant Hired By The Commission; By Amending Section 58-3-250, Relating To Service Of Orders And Decisions On Parties, So As To Make A Technical Change; By Amending Section 58-4-10, Relating To The Office Of Regulatory Staff And Its Representation Of Public Interest Before The Commission, So As To Establish Its Considerations For Public Interest; By Adding Section 58-4-150 So As To Require The Office Of Regulatory Staff To Prepare A Comprehensive State Energy Assessment And Action Plan And To Establish Requirements For This Plan; By Adding Section 58-33-195 So As To Encourage Dominion Energy, The Public Service Authority, Duke Energy Carolinas, And Duke Energy Progress To Evaluate Certain Electrical Generation Facilities And Provide For Considerations Related To These Facilities; By Adding Section 58-31-205 So As To Permit The Public Service Authority To Jointly Own One Or More Natural Gas-fired Generation Facilities And Related Transmission Facilities With Dominion Energy South Carolina In Colleton County, And To Provide Requirements For Joint Ownership; By Adding Section 6-29-1220 So As To Establish Requirements For Solar Energy System Plans If A County Does Not Have Related Rural Zoning Or Ordinances For The Development And Operation Of Solar Energy Systems Requiring More Than Thirteen Acres Of Land; By Amending Article 9 Of Chapter 7, Title 13, Relating To The Governor's Nuclear Advisory Council, So As To Establish The Council In The Sc Nexus For Advanced Resilient Energy At The Department Of Commerce, To Provide For Its Duties And Membership, And To Provide For The Council's Director; By Adding Article 24 To Chapter 27, Title 58 So As To Allow Electric Utilities To Request The Public Service Commission Adjust Their Rates Annually, Adjust Utility Rates, Establish The Baseline Rate Order And Requirements For Adjustments In Rates, To Provide Protections For Customers, And To Authorize Additional Positions For The Office Of Regulatory Staff; By Adding Section 58-33-196 So As To Encourage Consideration Of Deployment Of Fusion Energy And Advanced Nuclear Facilities And To Provide Related Requirements; By Adding Section 58-37-70 So As To Permit The Evaluation Of Small Modular Nuclear Facilities In This State And To Establish Requirements; By Adding Article 3 To Chapter 37, Title 58 So As To Provide For State Agency Review Of Energy Infrastructure Project Applications, To Establish Requirements, To Provide A Sunset Provision, And To Designate All Sections Currently In Chapter 37 As Article 1, Entitled "planning For Energy Supply"; By Amending Section 58-40-10, Relating To The Definition Of "customer-generator," So As To Establish Characteristics For A "customer-generator"; By Amending Section 58-41-30, Relating To Voluntary Renewable Energy Programs, So As To Provide Additional Requirements And Considerations For These Programs; By Amending Section 58-41-10, Relating To Definitions, So As To Add The Definition Of "energy Storage Facilities"; By Amending Section 58-41-20, Relating To The Review Of And Approval Proceedings For Electrical Utilities' Avoided Cost Methodologies, Standard Offers, Form Contracts, And Commitment To Sell Forms, So As To Reiterate The Section; By Adding Chapter 42 To Title 58 So As To Establish Competitive Procurement Program Standards For Renewable Energy And Energy Storage, And To Require The Public Service Commission To Open A Docket To Establish A Competitive Procurement Program For Energy Storage Facilities; By Amending Section 58-33-20, Relating To Definitions, So As To Add The Definition "like Facility" And Amend The Definition Of "major Utility Facility," So As To Reiterate The Definition; By Amending Article 3 Of Chapter 33, Title 58, Relating To Certification Of Major Utility Facilities, So As To Provide For A Like Facility, To Establish Requirements And Considerations For Proposed Facilities, To Provide What Actions May Be Taken Without Permission From The Commission, And To Make Technical Changes; By Amending Section 58-37-40, Relating To Integrated Resource Plans, So As To Add Consideration Of A Utility's Transmission Report, To Establish Procedural Requirements And Evaluation By The Commission, And Require Parties To Bear Their Own Costs; By Amending Section 58-3-260, Relating To Communications Between The Commission And Parties, So As To Modify Requirements For Allowable Ex Parte Communications And Briefings, And To Permit Commission Tours Of Utility Plants Or Other Facilities Under Certain Circumstances; By Amending Section 58-3-270, Relating To Ex Parte Communication Complaint Proceedings At The Administrative Law Court, So As To Permit An Order Tolling Any Deadlines On A Proceeding Subject To A Complaint If True To The Extent The Proceeding Was Prejudiced So That The Commission Could Not Consider The Matter Impartially; By Amending Section 58-33-310, Relating To An Appeal From A Final Order Or Decision Of The Commission Issued Pursuant To Chapter 33, Title 58, So As To Establish A Timeline For A Petition For Rehearing Or Reconsideration, And To Require A Final Order Be Immediately Appealable To The South Carolina Supreme Court; By Amending Section 58-33-320, Relating To Judicial Jurisdiction, So As To Reiterate The Section; By Adding Section 58-4-160 So As To Require The Office Of Regulatory Staff To Conduct A Study To Evaluate Various Third-party Administrator Models For Energy Efficiency And Demand-side Management Programs; By Amending Section 58-37-10, Relating To Definitions, So As To Add A Reference To "demand-side Management Program" And Provide Definitions For "cost-effective" And "demand-side Management Pilot Program"; By Amending Section 58-37-20, Relating To Commission Procedures Encouraging Energy Efficiency Programs, So As To Expand Commission Considerations For Cost-effective, Demand-side Management And Energy Efficiency Programs, Require Each Investor-owned Electrical Utility To Submit An Annual Report To The Commission Regarding Its Demand-side Management Programs, And To Require The Commission To Review These Portfolios On At Least A Triennial Basis; By Amending Section 58-37-30, Relating To Reports On Demand-side Activities, So As To Make Technical And Conforming Changes; By Adding Section 58-37-35 So As To Permit Programs And Customer Incentives To Encourage Or Promote Demand-side Management Programs For Customer-sited Distributed Energy Resources, And To Provide Considerations For These Programs; By Amending Section 58-37-50, Relating To Agreements For Energy Efficiency And Conservation Measures, So As To Establish Certain Terms And Rate Recovery For Agreements For Financing And Installing Energy Efficiency And Conservation Measures, And For Application To A Residence Occupied Before The Measures Are Taken; By Amending Section 58-3-70, Relating To Compensation Of Public Service Commission Members, So As To Establish Salaries In Amounts Equal To Ninety Percent Of Supreme Court Associate Justices; By Adding Section 58-41-50 So As To Provide Requirements And Consideration For Co-located Resources Between An Electrical Utility And Its Customer Under Certain Circumstances; To Encourage Development Of A Diverse Mix Of Long-lead, Clean Generation Resources, And To Permit The Public Service Commission To Find Certain Actions In The Public Interest To Permit An Electrical Utility To Capture Available Incentives For Ratepayers; To Permit Deferral Of Certain Reasonable And Prudent Costs For Consideration By The Public Service Commission; By Amending Section 58-40-10, Relating To Definitions, So As To Amend The Definition Of "renewable Energy Resource"; By Adding Chapter 43 To Title 58, So As To Establish Considerations For Electricity Rate And Conditions For Certain Economic Development Projects; By Adding Section 58-37-135 So As To Transfer A Pending Appeal Regarding Energy Infrastructure Permits To The South Carolina Supreme Court; By Amending Section 58-3-530, Relating To The Public Utilities Review Committee's Duties, So As To Require An Annual Review Of The Division Of Consumer Advocacy Related To Its Representation Of Consumers In Utility Matters; By Adding Section 58-3-65 So As To Establish The Public Service Commission's Chief Clerk's Salary Be Based On Recommendations By The Agency Head Salary Commission; By Adding Section 58-33-200 So As To Require The Office Of Regulatory Staff To Retain An Independent Construction Analyst For Any Construction Project Budget Of At Least Five Hundred Million Dollars; To Require A Report By The Office Of Regulatory Staff Regarding The Implementation Of Article 24, Chapter 27, Title 58; To Require Dominion Energy To Evaluate Converting The Wateree Generation Station To Biomass-fired Generation, And To Provide A Report To The General Assembly And The Public Service Commission; And By Amending Section 58-4-50, Relating To Office Of Regulatory Staff Duties, So As To Include Consideration Of Public Service Commission Requirements For Settlement Negotiations. - Ratified Title
AI Summary
This bill, known as the "South Carolina Energy Security Act," is a comprehensive piece of legislation aimed at reforming and modernizing the state's electrical utility regulations and energy policy. The bill proposes multiple significant changes to South Carolina's energy landscape, focusing on several key areas: utility regulation, renewable energy procurement, economic development, and energy infrastructure. Here is a summary of the bill's key provisions:
This bill reduces the Public Service Commission from seven to three commissioners, establishes new procedures for utility rate reviews and energy procurement, encourages the development of nuclear and advanced energy technologies, and creates frameworks for economic development rates and competitive energy procurement. The legislation promotes renewable energy and energy storage by requiring utilities to conduct competitive solicitations for renewable energy and storage resources, with a focus on balancing utility and independent third-party ownership. It also establishes new guidelines for utility integrated resource planning, demand-side management programs, and energy efficiency initiatives. The bill creates mechanisms for utilities to offer special rates to qualifying and transformational customers to attract and retain businesses, and it encourages the exploration of co-located energy resources. Additionally, the legislation establishes a comprehensive state energy assessment process, updates regulations around utility communication and ex parte communications, and provides for the potential development of small modular nuclear reactors. The bill aims to balance economic development, grid reliability, environmental considerations, and ratepayer interests by providing utilities with more flexibility while maintaining regulatory oversight.
Committee Categories
Business and Industry, Justice
Sponsors (28)
Murrell Smith (R)*,
Carl Anderson (D),
Lucas Atkinson (D),
Don Chapman (R),
Cal Forrest (R),
Gil Gatch (R),
Jerry Govan (D),
Kevin Hardee (R),
Bill Herbkersman (R),
Lee Hewitt (R),
Bill Hixon (R),
Roger Kirby (D),
Randy Ligon (R),
Steven Long (R),
Cody Mitchell (R),
Scott Montgomery (R),
Brandon Newton (R),
Weston Newton (R),
Tommy Pope (R),
Robby Robbins (R),
Carla Schuessler (R),
Mark Smith (R),
Bill Taylor (R),
David Weeks (D),
Robert Williams (D),
Mark Willis (R),
Chris Wooten (R),
Richie Yow (R),
Last Action
Act No. 41 (on 05/19/2025)
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