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Bill > HF2668


IA HF2668

IA HF2668
A bill for an act relating to the regulation of public utilities, including virtual power plants and integrated resource planning.(Formerly HF 2365.)


summary

Introduced
02/23/2026
In Committee
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

91st General Assembly

Bill Summary

This bill relates to the regulation of public utilities, including customer-owned resources, virtual power plants, and integrated resource planning. The bill recognizes that customer-owned generation and storage is vital to cost-effectively meeting rising demand for electricity. The bill describes virtual power plants as collections of customer-owned distributed generation and energy storage resources managed by a common control mechanism within a utility’s service territory. The bill provides that virtual power plants are not public utilities and requires the commission to adopt rules establishing standards and processes for approval and oversight. The bill prohibits the commission from approving or allowing continued operation of a virtual power plant if the virtual power plant does not benefit customers in the service territory. The bill requires each rate-regulated public utility to file an integrated resource plan every five years, with the first plan due July 1, 2028. The bill directs the commission to adopt rules governing the development and evaluation of integrated resource plans. The plans must include 5-year and 20-year planning horizons and a quantitative comparative analysis of multiple resource mixes to serve anticipated customer needs using industry best practices. The rules adopted by the commission must also address a determination of eligibility for access to modeling software and data, including the ability for eligible parties to have alternative scenarios and a process to best balance and represent the input of the respective parties. The bill provides the rules adopted must also include requirements for annual reporting on plan performance, as well as mechanisms for plan updates or modifications in response to material changes and any other rule for the development and evaluation of integrated resource plans the commission deems necessary or appropriate. The bill directs the commission to maximize public access to information while protecting only necessary confidential information through uniform disclosure agreements. The bill requires any deviation from an integrated resource plan to be demonstrated to be in the best interest of the customers when rate recovery approval is sought. The bill allows the commission or consumer advocate to employ additional staff or contract for professional services with persons who are not state employees for the development of rules for the filing and review of resource plans or to aid the commission in the review and approval, disapproval, or modification of a plan. The costs of the additional staff services shall be assessed to the utilities.

AI Summary

This bill aims to modernize the regulation of public utilities by incorporating new technologies and planning processes. It clarifies that virtual power plants, which are collections of customer-owned electricity generation and storage devices managed together, are not considered public utilities themselves, but the commission, or Public Utilities Commission, must establish rules for their approval and oversight, ensuring they benefit customers in their service territory. The bill also mandates that rate-regulated public utilities must file integrated resource plans every five years, with the first due in July 2028. These plans will require a detailed analysis of various resource mixes for both short-term (5-year) and long-term (20-year) horizons, using industry best practices and including considerations for energy efficiency, demand response, and distributed generation. The commission will also develop rules for access to modeling software and data for eligible parties, allowing them to propose alternative scenarios, and will ensure public access to information while protecting necessary confidential data. Any deviation from an approved integrated resource plan will need to be proven to be in the best interest of customers. Finally, the bill allows the commission to hire additional staff or contract with external professionals to assist in developing and reviewing these plans, with the costs being passed on to the utilities.

Sponsors (0)

No sponsors listed

Other Sponsors (1)

Commerce (House)

Last Action

Introduced, placed on calendar. H.J. 374. (on 02/23/2026)

bill text


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