Simplifying Policy Management
complex regulation and policy
With Policy Pulse, you get:
- AI Summaries: View AI summaries of legislative and regulatory documents and proceedings as soon as they are made public
- Growing National Coverage: Delivers intelligence across energy regulatory bodies nationwide, starting with comprehensive California coverage - including legislative branches, CPUC, CEC, CARB, and CAISO, with new states added regularly
- Personalized Alerts: Get alerts summarizing new decisions right to your inbox
- AI Assistant: Query bills and proceedings using an internal chatbot to gain insight and find exactly what you’re looking for
- Legislative and Agency Timelines: Visualize a bill or proceeding’s progress in an instant with interactive timelines
Weekly Digest
Application of PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY (U39E) for Review of the Disadvantaged Communities – Green Tariff, Community Solar Green Tariff and Green Tariff Shared Renewables Programs.
Renewable Energy Programs Update
The recent documents related to A22-05-022 provide a comprehensive update on the state of renewable energy programs in California, focusing on the Net Value Billing Tariff (NVBT) and community solar projects. Here's a breakdown of the key points and positions from various stakeholders:
Overview of Renewable Energy Programs
- The NVBT and community solar projects are at the forefront, with discussions on their potential to expand renewable energy access.
- Criticisms target the Avoided Cost Calculator (ACC) for not fully recognizing the benefits of NVBT and potentially undermining renewable energy efforts.
Comments on Proposed Decision
- The Coalition for Community Solar Access expresses concerns about the proposed decision not aligning with Assembly Bill 2316 and the potential cost shifts to nonparticipating customers.
- Solar Landscape Origination LLC criticizes Pacific Gas and Electric Company's green tariff programs, suggesting modifications to better serve low-income households and increase the capacity of the Disadvantaged Communities Green Tariff Program (DAC-GT).
FERC Orders and Cases
Discussions include FERC orders related to electric storage and distributed energy resources, emphasizing that community solar facilities and utilities do not engage in wholesale sales.
Treatment of Credits
The treatment of credits from net metering and community solar is debated, with a focus on retail rate design under state jurisdiction.
Solar for All Program and National Community Solar Partnership
The document highlights the importance of targeting low-income households and recommends utilizing various funding sources for renewable energy projects.
Potential Modifications to the NVBT
Suggestions include implementing a net surplus compensation framework and applying it to all surplus energy at the end of the NVBT facility’s Relevant Period.
Recommendations for the NVBT Program
The NVBT program is praised for its flexibility and contribution to peak load reductions, with a call for the Commission to confirm NVBT resources as load modifiers.
Use of Funding Sources
Recommendations include utilizing state and federal funding sources like AB 102 and the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund for renewable energy projects.
Targeting Low-Income Households
Emphasizes the importance of automatic enrollment and flat monetary credits on bills for existing program participants.
Challenges with PURPA Prices
Discusses the challenges with PURPA prices in attracting developers to community solar projects and suggests using additional funds to incentivize participation.
Stakeholder Comments
- Valta Energy and The Clean Coalition support the NVBT for its potential to democratize access to solar energy and promote equitable distribution of economic benefits.
- Concerns are raised about the commercial viability of the Community Renewable Energy Program (CREP) and the adequacy of compensation under PURPA’s framework.
Concusion
The documents collectively underscore the potential savings and advantages of deploying NVBT for renewable energy programs in California. Stakeholders urge the Commission to modify or reject the Proposed Decision based on these findings, highlighting the need for a program that benefits all ratepayers, promotes energy efficiency, and ensures participation from low-income households.
Bill to cut California's industrial emissions, shift to zero-emission tech, and prioritize disadvantaged communities by 2045
Renewable Energy Programs Update
The recent documents related to A22-05-022 provide a comprehensive update on the state of renewable energy programs in California, focusing on the Net Value Billing Tariff (NVBT) and community solar projects. Here's a breakdown of the key points and positions from various stakeholders:
Overview of Renewable Energy Programs
- The NVBT and community solar projects are at the forefront, with discussions on their potential to expand renewable energy access.
- Criticisms target the Avoided Cost Calculator (ACC) for not fully recognizing the benefits of NVBT and potentially undermining renewable energy efforts.
Comments on Proposed Decision
- The Coalition for Community Solar Access expresses concerns about the proposed decision not aligning with Assembly Bill 2316 and the potential cost shifts to nonparticipating customers.
- Solar Landscape Origination LLC criticizes Pacific Gas and Electric Company's green tariff programs, suggesting modifications to better serve low-income households and increase the capacity of the Disadvantaged Communities Green Tariff Program (DAC-GT).
FERC Orders and Cases
Discussions include FERC orders related to electric storage and distributed energy resources, emphasizing that community solar facilities and utilities do not engage in wholesale sales.
Treatment of Credits
The treatment of credits from net metering and community solar is debated, with a focus on retail rate design under state jurisdiction.
Solar for All Program and National Community Solar Partnership
The document highlights the importance of targeting low-income households and recommends utilizing various funding sources for renewable energy projects.
Potential Modifications to the NVBT
Suggestions include implementing a net surplus compensation framework and applying it to all surplus energy at the end of the NVBT facility’s Relevant Period.
Recommendations for the NVBT Program
The NVBT program is praised for its flexibility and contribution to peak load reductions, with a call for the Commission to confirm NVBT resources as load modifiers.
Use of Funding Sources
Recommendations include utilizing state and federal funding sources like AB 102 and the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund for renewable energy projects.
Targeting Low-Income Households
Emphasizes the importance of automatic enrollment and flat monetary credits on bills for existing program participants.
Challenges with PURPA Prices
Discusses the challenges with PURPA prices in attracting developers to community solar projects and suggests using additional funds to incentivize participation.
Stakeholder Comments
- Valta Energy and The Clean Coalition support the NVBT for its potential to democratize access to solar energy and promote equitable distribution of economic benefits.
- Concerns are raised about the commercial viability of the Community Renewable Energy Program (CREP) and the adequacy of compensation under PURPA’s framework.
Concusion
The documents collectively underscore the potential savings and advantages of deploying NVBT for renewable energy programs in California. Stakeholders urge the Commission to modify or reject the Proposed Decision based on these findings, highlighting the need for a program that benefits all ratepayers, promotes energy efficiency, and ensures participation from low-income households.
Streamline approval process for upgrading transmission facilities by allowing advanced reconductoring projects without construction permits, reducing costs and improving efficiency
Renewable Energy Programs Update
The recent documents related to A22-05-022 provide a comprehensive update on the state of renewable energy programs in California, focusing on the Net Value Billing Tariff (NVBT) and community solar projects. Here's a breakdown of the key points and positions from various stakeholders:
Overview of Renewable Energy Programs
- The NVBT and community solar projects are at the forefront, with discussions on their potential to expand renewable energy access.
- Criticisms target the Avoided Cost Calculator (ACC) for not fully recognizing the benefits of NVBT and potentially undermining renewable energy efforts.
Comments on Proposed Decision
- The Coalition for Community Solar Access expresses concerns about the proposed decision not aligning with Assembly Bill 2316 and the potential cost shifts to nonparticipating customers.
- Solar Landscape Origination LLC criticizes Pacific Gas and Electric Company's green tariff programs, suggesting modifications to better serve low-income households and increase the capacity of the Disadvantaged Communities Green Tariff Program (DAC-GT).
FERC Orders and Cases
Discussions include FERC orders related to electric storage and distributed energy resources, emphasizing that community solar facilities and utilities do not engage in wholesale sales.
Treatment of Credits
The treatment of credits from net metering and community solar is debated, with a focus on retail rate design under state jurisdiction.
Solar for All Program and National Community Solar Partnership
The document highlights the importance of targeting low-income households and recommends utilizing various funding sources for renewable energy projects.
Potential Modifications to the NVBT
Suggestions include implementing a net surplus compensation framework and applying it to all surplus energy at the end of the NVBT facility’s Relevant Period.
Recommendations for the NVBT Program
The NVBT program is praised for its flexibility and contribution to peak load reductions, with a call for the Commission to confirm NVBT resources as load modifiers.
Use of Funding Sources
Recommendations include utilizing state and federal funding sources like AB 102 and the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund for renewable energy projects.
Targeting Low-Income Households
Emphasizes the importance of automatic enrollment and flat monetary credits on bills for existing program participants.
Challenges with PURPA Prices
Discusses the challenges with PURPA prices in attracting developers to community solar projects and suggests using additional funds to incentivize participation.
Stakeholder Comments
- Valta Energy and The Clean Coalition support the NVBT for its potential to democratize access to solar energy and promote equitable distribution of economic benefits.
- Concerns are raised about the commercial viability of the Community Renewable Energy Program (CREP) and the adequacy of compensation under PURPA’s framework.
Concusion
The documents collectively underscore the potential savings and advantages of deploying NVBT for renewable energy programs in California. Stakeholders urge the Commission to modify or reject the Proposed Decision based on these findings, highlighting the need for a program that benefits all ratepayers, promotes energy efficiency, and ensures participation from low-income households.
Application of PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY (U39E) for Review of the Disadvantaged Communities – Green Tariff, Community Solar Green Tariff and Green Tariff Shared Renewables Programs.
Renewable Energy Programs Update
The recent documents related to A22-05-022 provide a comprehensive update on the state of renewable energy programs in California, focusing on the Net Value Billing Tariff (NVBT) and community solar projects. Here's a breakdown of the key points and positions from various stakeholders:
Overview of Renewable Energy Programs
- The NVBT and community solar projects are at the forefront, with discussions on their potential to expand renewable energy access.
- Criticisms target the Avoided Cost Calculator (ACC) for not fully recognizing the benefits of NVBT and potentially undermining renewable energy efforts.
Comments on Proposed Decision
- The Coalition for Community Solar Access expresses concerns about the proposed decision not aligning with Assembly Bill 2316 and the potential cost shifts to nonparticipating customers.
- Solar Landscape Origination LLC criticizes Pacific Gas and Electric Company's green tariff programs, suggesting modifications to better serve low-income households and increase the capacity of the Disadvantaged Communities Green Tariff Program (DAC-GT).
FERC Orders and Cases
Discussions include FERC orders related to electric storage and distributed energy resources, emphasizing that community solar facilities and utilities do not engage in wholesale sales.
Treatment of Credits
The treatment of credits from net metering and community solar is debated, with a focus on retail rate design under state jurisdiction.
Solar for All Program and National Community Solar Partnership
The document highlights the importance of targeting low-income households and recommends utilizing various funding sources for renewable energy projects.
Potential Modifications to the NVBT
Suggestions include implementing a net surplus compensation framework and applying it to all surplus energy at the end of the NVBT facility’s Relevant Period.
Recommendations for the NVBT Program
The NVBT program is praised for its flexibility and contribution to peak load reductions, with a call for the Commission to confirm NVBT resources as load modifiers.
Use of Funding Sources
Recommendations include utilizing state and federal funding sources like AB 102 and the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund for renewable energy projects.
Targeting Low-Income Households
Emphasizes the importance of automatic enrollment and flat monetary credits on bills for existing program participants.
Challenges with PURPA Prices
Discusses the challenges with PURPA prices in attracting developers to community solar projects and suggests using additional funds to incentivize participation.
Stakeholder Comments
- Valta Energy and The Clean Coalition support the NVBT for its potential to democratize access to solar energy and promote equitable distribution of economic benefits.
- Concerns are raised about the commercial viability of the Community Renewable Energy Program (CREP) and the adequacy of compensation under PURPA’s framework.
Concusion
The documents collectively underscore the potential savings and advantages of deploying NVBT for renewable energy programs in California. Stakeholders urge the Commission to modify or reject the Proposed Decision based on these findings, highlighting the need for a program that benefits all ratepayers, promotes energy efficiency, and ensures participation from low-income households.
Bill to cut California's industrial emissions, shift to zero-emission tech, and prioritize disadvantaged communities by 2045
Renewable Energy Programs Update
The recent documents related to A22-05-022 provide a comprehensive update on the state of renewable energy programs in California, focusing on the Net Value Billing Tariff (NVBT) and community solar projects. Here's a breakdown of the key points and positions from various stakeholders:
Overview of Renewable Energy Programs
- The NVBT and community solar projects are at the forefront, with discussions on their potential to expand renewable energy access.
- Criticisms target the Avoided Cost Calculator (ACC) for not fully recognizing the benefits of NVBT and potentially undermining renewable energy efforts.
Comments on Proposed Decision
- The Coalition for Community Solar Access expresses concerns about the proposed decision not aligning with Assembly Bill 2316 and the potential cost shifts to nonparticipating customers.
- Solar Landscape Origination LLC criticizes Pacific Gas and Electric Company's green tariff programs, suggesting modifications to better serve low-income households and increase the capacity of the Disadvantaged Communities Green Tariff Program (DAC-GT).
FERC Orders and Cases
Discussions include FERC orders related to electric storage and distributed energy resources, emphasizing that community solar facilities and utilities do not engage in wholesale sales.
Treatment of Credits
The treatment of credits from net metering and community solar is debated, with a focus on retail rate design under state jurisdiction.
Solar for All Program and National Community Solar Partnership
The document highlights the importance of targeting low-income households and recommends utilizing various funding sources for renewable energy projects.
Potential Modifications to the NVBT
Suggestions include implementing a net surplus compensation framework and applying it to all surplus energy at the end of the NVBT facility’s Relevant Period.
Recommendations for the NVBT Program
The NVBT program is praised for its flexibility and contribution to peak load reductions, with a call for the Commission to confirm NVBT resources as load modifiers.
Use of Funding Sources
Recommendations include utilizing state and federal funding sources like AB 102 and the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund for renewable energy projects.
Targeting Low-Income Households
Emphasizes the importance of automatic enrollment and flat monetary credits on bills for existing program participants.
Challenges with PURPA Prices
Discusses the challenges with PURPA prices in attracting developers to community solar projects and suggests using additional funds to incentivize participation.
Stakeholder Comments
- Valta Energy and The Clean Coalition support the NVBT for its potential to democratize access to solar energy and promote equitable distribution of economic benefits.
- Concerns are raised about the commercial viability of the Community Renewable Energy Program (CREP) and the adequacy of compensation under PURPA’s framework.
Concusion
The documents collectively underscore the potential savings and advantages of deploying NVBT for renewable energy programs in California. Stakeholders urge the Commission to modify or reject the Proposed Decision based on these findings, highlighting the need for a program that benefits all ratepayers, promotes energy efficiency, and ensures participation from low-income households.
Streamline approval process for upgrading transmission facilities by allowing advanced reconductoring projects without construction permits, reducing costs and improving efficiency
Renewable Energy Programs Update
The recent documents related to A22-05-022 provide a comprehensive update on the state of renewable energy programs in California, focusing on the Net Value Billing Tariff (NVBT) and community solar projects. Here's a breakdown of the key points and positions from various stakeholders:
Overview of Renewable Energy Programs
- The NVBT and community solar projects are at the forefront, with discussions on their potential to expand renewable energy access.
- Criticisms target the Avoided Cost Calculator (ACC) for not fully recognizing the benefits of NVBT and potentially undermining renewable energy efforts.
Comments on Proposed Decision
- The Coalition for Community Solar Access expresses concerns about the proposed decision not aligning with Assembly Bill 2316 and the potential cost shifts to nonparticipating customers.
- Solar Landscape Origination LLC criticizes Pacific Gas and Electric Company's green tariff programs, suggesting modifications to better serve low-income households and increase the capacity of the Disadvantaged Communities Green Tariff Program (DAC-GT).
FERC Orders and Cases
Discussions include FERC orders related to electric storage and distributed energy resources, emphasizing that community solar facilities and utilities do not engage in wholesale sales.
Treatment of Credits
The treatment of credits from net metering and community solar is debated, with a focus on retail rate design under state jurisdiction.
Solar for All Program and National Community Solar Partnership
The document highlights the importance of targeting low-income households and recommends utilizing various funding sources for renewable energy projects.
Potential Modifications to the NVBT
Suggestions include implementing a net surplus compensation framework and applying it to all surplus energy at the end of the NVBT facility’s Relevant Period.
Recommendations for the NVBT Program
The NVBT program is praised for its flexibility and contribution to peak load reductions, with a call for the Commission to confirm NVBT resources as load modifiers.
Use of Funding Sources
Recommendations include utilizing state and federal funding sources like AB 102 and the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund for renewable energy projects.
Targeting Low-Income Households
Emphasizes the importance of automatic enrollment and flat monetary credits on bills for existing program participants.
Challenges with PURPA Prices
Discusses the challenges with PURPA prices in attracting developers to community solar projects and suggests using additional funds to incentivize participation.
Stakeholder Comments
- Valta Energy and The Clean Coalition support the NVBT for its potential to democratize access to solar energy and promote equitable distribution of economic benefits.
- Concerns are raised about the commercial viability of the Community Renewable Energy Program (CREP) and the adequacy of compensation under PURPA’s framework.
Concusion
The documents collectively underscore the potential savings and advantages of deploying NVBT for renewable energy programs in California. Stakeholders urge the Commission to modify or reject the Proposed Decision based on these findings, highlighting the need for a program that benefits all ratepayers, promotes energy efficiency, and ensures participation from low-income households.
Order Instituting Rulemaking Regarding Policies, Procedures and Rules for the Self-Generation Incentive Program and Related Issues.
Last Week's New Decision +1
Decision
California Public Utilities Commission Extends Deadline for Rulemaking R.20-05-012
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) has extended the statutory deadline for Rulemaking R.20-05-012. R.20-05-012 was opened on May 28, 2020; its then-current statutory completion date was June 1, 2026. The Commission found the proceeding cannot be completed by that date and determined additional time is needed. Under its authority in Pub. Util. Code § 1701.5(a),...
the CPUC extends the deadline for completing R.20-05-012 to September 30, 2026.
The order is effective May 14, 2026, and is adopted at the CPUC’s San Francisco location. Commissioners signing the decision are President Darcie L. Houck, Karen Douglas, and Christine Harada.
The single actionable directive is that the statutory deadline for this proceeding is officially extended to September 30, 2026.
Order Instituting Rulemaking to Consider Distributed Energy Resource Program Cost-Effectiveness Issues, Data Access and Use, and Equipment Performance Standards.
Last Week's New Comments +8
Overview
This is a sampling of parties’ positions in CPUC R.22-11-013 on the 2026 Avoided Cost Calculator (ACC) Staff Proposal. This week’s comments are a continuation of last week’s discussion and this digest incorporates both last week’s and this week’s comments. The filings continue to focus on greenhouse-gas (GHG) valuation, whether and how to use the Social Cost of Carbon (SCC) in the ACC, the integrated calculation methodology, hourly generation-capacity...
allocation, and process/timing concerns. Several parties support parts of the Staff Proposal, but there remains substantial disagreement over the appropriate interim GHG value, whether the SCC should function as a cap or floor, and whether the current schedule provides enough transparency for adoption.
GHG valuation and gas-electric alignment
- SoCalGas supports temporarily aligning the gas ACC GHG avoided cost value with the electric ACC GHG value until a gas-specific methodology is developed, arguing the electric-sector value is the more robust interim calculation.
- PG&E supports using a single cross-sector GHG value in the ACC and says the electric-sector value is the most robust available near-term proxy, while noting a longer-term gas-specific approach would be preferable.
- SEIA supports eliminating the GHG Re-Balancing Adjustment and using one consistent GHG value across the electric and gas ACC models based on the electric-sector marginal GHG value.
- CUE opposes applying the electric-sector GHG value to gas-sector emissions reductions and says the electric IRP value does not measure the marginal cost of abating direct gas-sector emissions.
- NRDC, BayREN/3C-REN, and CAL ADVOCATES continue to oppose replacing the gas-sector value with the electric-sector proxy, arguing it would understate gas-sector decarbonization costs and weaken cost-effectiveness for electrification and gas-efficiency measures.
SCC as a cap or floor for GHG avoided costs
- SCE supports using the High SCC as a cap on ACC GHG avoided costs and says the cap should be applied as a post-processing adjustment rather than inside the integrated calculation.
- CUE also supports a High SCC cap, but says it should operate as a real guardrail and not simply re-label capped GHG value as capacity value without independent justification.
- PG&E supports an SCC-based cap on an interim basis, while suggesting the Commission work with CARB on a more durable framework and, longer term, consider a California-based cap tied to state planning.
- SDG&E opposes using the Federal SCC as the cap reference, arguing it measures damages rather than marginal abatement cost and is too volatile for ACC design.
- SoCalGas opposes using the SCC as either a floor or a cap in the ACC, saying SCC values were adopted for an information-only societal cost test and were not intended to drive TRC-based ACC modeling.
- BayREN/3C-REN oppose the proposed SCC cap as applied only to the demand side and argue that if any cap is adopted it should be applied consistently across supply- and demand-side resource valuation.
- CLECA recommends a Base SCC cap rather than the High SCC and says the cap must be implemented as a binding constraint within the integrated calculation, with corresponding output and recalibration shown.
GHG rebalancing adjustment
- SEIA supports removing the GHG Re-Balancing Adjustment, saying it is unnecessary if the same avoided GHG value is used across electric and gas ACC models.
- CUE supports retaining the GHG rebalancing component, arguing it reflects load-shift impacts in the electric sector and is distinct from the cross-sector price question.
- CAL ADVOCATES, BayREN/3C-REN, and SCE also continue to oppose removing rebalancing, saying it can materially affect the cost-effectiveness of electrification and fuel-switching measures.
- PG&E and NRDC support removing the adjustment, with PG&E saying a single GHG value makes the adjustment unnecessary and NRDC questioning whether the adjustment is a true marginal-cost input for the ACC.
Integrated calculation methodology and resource panel
- PG&E supports the simplified integrated calculation approach and says the Commission should consider an additional workshop, advance workpapers, and a formal comment period before adoption.
- SCE supports the Excel-based integrated calculation concept but wants more documentation, including side-by-side comparisons and updated modeling inputs.
- CLECA says the proposed 2x2 integrated calculation is structurally limited, does not optimize most years, and should be replaced with a broader linear-programming or multi-resource approach using the full IRP resource panel.
- SEIA says the integrated calculation should include additional resources beyond solar and storage and proposes an alternative multi-step protocol if a full-panel approach is not feasible this cycle.
- CUE asks for benchmark outputs, sensitivity runs, and validation materials before further methodological changes are adopted.
Hourly generation-capacity allocation
- PG&E supports replacing temperature-based day selection with energy-price-based day assignment, using LOLH instead of EUE, and differentiating weekday and weekend reliability risk.
- SCE supports the same general hourly allocation refinements but says the underlying modeling details should be reviewed before final adoption.
- SDG&E supports the proposed move to LOLH, energy-price-based day selection, and weekday/weekend differentiation.
- CAL ADVOCATES supports the conceptual changes, subject to additional review and disclosure.
- CUE supports the shift to energy-price-based day assignment but asks for more analysis on how the change affects different resource types and asks for implementation workpapers.
- SEIA says the conceptual changes are reasonable but cannot support adoption without the supporting workpapers and year-by-year outputs.
- SBUA agrees reliability risk is shifting beyond the hottest summer days, but asks for deeper analysis and alternative reliability assumptions to be tested.
Process, timing, and transparency
- PG&E and CLECA both support an additional workshop and more complete workpapers before adoption, citing concerns about transparency and the need to review final IRP inputs.
- SEIA, CUE, and CAL ADVOCATES say the current schedule does not allow enough time to review the revised model, workpapers, and supporting data.
- BayREN/3C-REN and SoCalGas argue that the substantive GHG policy questions should be resolved through Track 3 guiding principles before being embedded in the ACC update.
- CLECA and CUE both ask for formal supplemental comment opportunities after updated model runs and supporting documentation are released.
Order Instituting Rulemaking on California Advanced Electric Rate Design.
Last Week's New Ruling +1
Remote Prehearing Conference (PHC)
The ALJ set a remote PHC for Thursday, June 18, 2026, at 9:00 a.m. (designated representatives should log in by 8:45 a.m.). The PHC will determine parties, positions, scope, schedule, and other procedural matters for Rulemaking 26-04-009 (California Advanced Electric Rate Design). Join via the Webex Event link or by phone.
Key Dates and Deadlines
- April 9, 2026: Commission opened the OIR.
- May 11, 2026: Opening comments filed by...
- the parties listed below.
- June 12, 2026, by 5:00 p.m.: Deadline to email Joanna.Perez-Green@cpuc.ca.gov to designate one speaker per party (subject “R.26-04-009: Designated Representative for PHC”), including name, contact, and organization. Designated reps will receive Webex panelist invitations.
- June 15, 2026 (implied): Deadline to request expedited/daily transcripts (three days before hearing) to reporting@cpuc.ca.gov.
- Southern California Edison Company (SCE) supports a three-track structure, with concurrent near-term tracks for large-load issues and residential affordability/electrification, and a later track for longer-term structural issues.
- Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) supports staggered tracks and urges the Commission to prioritize large-load issues first, while deferring broader or more cross-cutting issues to later phases or other proceedings.
- CalCCA urges a phased approach that gives immediate priority to urgent large-load and data center issues and uses workshops to develop the record.
- Advanced Energy United supports phased treatment and says foundational issues like Base Service Charge and income verification should wait until more implementation experience exists.
- Cal Advocates supports a phased process, but also wants the proceeding to address how its schedule interacts with GRC Phase 2 timing and to require a detailed consultant scope before funding.
- SEIA supports phasing and cautions against trying to resolve the proceeding within 24 months given its breadth.
- Sierra Club supports parallel tracks, with one focused on electrification-related rate reform and another on data centers and large loads.
- TURN says the schedule is too ambitious as drafted and wants more workshops and tighter scope control to avoid duplication with GRC Phase 2 work.
- SCE supports a Track 1 focused on large loads, including data centers, service agreement terms, customer eligibility thresholds, and cost-shift protections.
- PG&E wants a timely decision on large-load rates by Q2 2027 and supports evaluating new customer-class or tariff structures for large loads.
- CalCCA says large-load and data center issues should be the first priority, especially in light of SB 57.
- CalSSA supports prioritizing SB 57/data-center issues first and wants the Commission to address departing load charges in that context.
- SEIA supports including large-load rate design in the proceeding and says the Commission should consider the needs of emerging technologies such as vehicle-to-grid exports and customer-sited storage in that context.
- Advanced Energy United says large-load rate design is urgent and should examine whether customers can “build, bring, or buy” incremental generation and provide flexibility to the grid.
- NRDC supports a separate data center customer class and recommends using pricing principles that allocate more non-marginal costs to inelastic load.
- Sierra Club supports a data-center-specific tariff and says any onsite generation for large loads should be evaluated carefully for emissions and gas-system cost impacts.
- Data Center Coalition supports large-load issues remaining in scope, but says classifications should be based on objective cost-causation evidence rather than industry labels alone.
- SCE supports moving residential affordability and electrification issues into a separate track, including CARE/FERA threshold review and work tied to the Base Service Charge working group.
- PG&E cautions against structural changes to the Base Service Charge without a stronger evidentiary record and warns that major billing-system changes may be difficult to implement quickly.
- CalCCA says Base Service Charge changes are premature because too little implementation data exists and recommends waiting for more experience before revisiting the structure.
- Advanced Energy United agrees that Base Service Charge and income-verification changes should be deferred until the current design has more operating history.
- TURN supports improving the Base Service Charge, including middle-income tiers and stronger income verification.
- NRDC supports a third-party income-verification process and further workshops on ways to improve the Base Service Charge.
- Cal Advocates supports refining income verification and wants the Commission to use a clear consultant scope and workshop process before approving funding.
- CalSSA opposes changing the Base Service Charge before the evaluation required in D.24-05-028 is complete.
- CEJA supports any Base Service Charge increases being paired with stronger income-graduation protections.
- Sierra Club wants the proceeding to update baseline methodologies and time-of-use design to better support electrification, especially in hotter climate zones and for all-electric homes.
- Advanced Energy United supports reworking TOU periods and differentials to better reflect marginal costs and encourage load shifting and electrification.
- SEIA says TOU reform should be a major priority and supports revisiting whether inclining block rates should continue.
- PG&E says default TOU rates without usage tiers are permissible under AB 205, but detailed design work should occur later.
- SCE similarly says default TOU without usage tiers is allowed and supports later policy work on TOU periods and differentials.
- TURN urges caution about removing baseline protections too quickly and wants more analysis of customer impacts before changing default TOU design.
- NRDC supports residential electrification rates, including optional equipment-specific approaches and evaluation of distributional equity.
- CalSSA supports stronger TOU price signals and says time-based rates are preferable to larger fixed charges for driving electrification and storage use.
- Sierra Club supports rate reforms that make industrial electrification more economic, including revisiting demand charges that can discourage heat pumps and thermal storage.
- NRDC supports equipment-specific or electrification-focused rate designs for industrial customers and says current structures can deter beneficial electrification.
- CalSSA supports reconsidering departing load charges because they can hinder clean energy systems and customer-sited electrification.
- PG&E says AB 2109 issues should be handled separately and kept narrowly within statutory limits.
- SCE says AB 2109 topics belong in the large-load track only to the extent they are time-sensitive, while longer-term or broader policy questions should be deferred.
- NRDC supports considering dynamic rates for industrial customers within this proceeding and wants additional workshops on income verification and residential electrification tools.
- PG&E argues dynamic-rate cost-effectiveness monitoring belongs in other proceedings rather than this OIR.
- SEIA supports keeping the marginal-cost methodology issue in the proceeding and says it would improve consistency across utilities.
- Cal Advocates wants a detailed statement of work before funding consultant modeling tools and says the current scope is too vague.
- TURN supports better public modeling tools and says the current tools need more data and functionality.
- Sierra Club wants the toolkit to model seasonality, transmission rates, and appliance-specific electrification impacts.
- SEIA supports adding export-rate design and vehicle-to-grid export issues to the proceeding, including broader treatment of customer-sited exports.
- VGIC likewise supports adding export rate design and a statewide framework for compensating exports, including bi-directional EVs.
- Advanced Energy United supports rate design that recognizes customer exports and flexibility as a grid resource.
- SCE says export compensation should be handled in a dedicated venue, though it supports exploring optional electrification and EV rate structures in the residential track.
- PG&E opposes adding export compensation or submetering issues here and says they require a broader, more coordinated review.
- Sierra Club cautions that onsite gas generation for data centers should be evaluated for emissions and gas-system cost impacts.
- NRDC supports developing tariffs that enable large-load flexibility and better allocate costs for non-marginal load.
- SCE says EITE retention, emissions leakage, comprehensive export compensation, and departing-load/interconnection issues should be handled in other proceedings or later tracks.
- PG&E similarly argues that export compensation, submetering, and marginal-cost methodology questions belong in other dockets or GRC Phase 2 work.
- SEIA says BSC modification should wait until the implementation record is available and urges adherence to the roadmap established in D.24-05-028.
- Cal Advocates opposes adding integrated low-income program and DER optimization issues, saying they duplicate work in other proceedings.
- CalCCA opposes expanding the proceeding to include Direct Access expansion and statewide caps.
- Advanced Energy United says the current Base Service Charge and income-verification structure should not be revisited until more implementation history exists.
Require Expanded Reliability Planning Assessment Including Transmission Upgrades, Grid Capacity, PUC Approvals, Construction Permits, and Interconnection Status Updates.
- Read for a second time. Ordered to a third reading.
Enhance aggregated distributed capacity resources as resource adequacy, coordinate with Cal-ISO and CEC, modify proposals, and align financing.
- Read for a second time. Ordered to a third reading.
Authorize and constrain the Public Utilities Commission to set just and reasonable rates for public utilities, including electrical corporations, ensuring oversight and fairness.
- Read for a second time. Ordered to a third reading.
California Technology Innovation and Ratepayer Protection Act: Establishes interconnection tariffs, eligibility, cost allocation, prefunding, and demand response, with map disclosures and protections.
- Read for a second time. Ordered to a third reading.
Enhance Reporting and Transparency of Taxpayer Funding for Public Utilities and Improve Ratepayer Communication.
- Read for a second time. Ordered to a third reading.
Streamline Heat Pump Installations and Inspections for Enhanced Energy Efficiency and Compliance in California
- Referred to Committees on Housing and Community Development and Local Government.
Regulate Electrical Corporations' Rates for Industrial Electrification and Enhance Transmission Cost Allocation Principles in California
- May 19, 2026, Passed (33 Ayes, 3 Noes), Ordered to the Assembly.
- Read first time in Assembly. Held at Desk.
Exempt Portable Solar Devices from Utility Interconnection Requirements and Fees, Mandating Simple Registration for Users
- 2026-05-19, Passed (35 Ayes, 1 No), Ordered to the Assembly.
- Read first time in Assembly. Held at Desk.
Require the Public Utilities Commission to allow logistics and manufacturing businesses as eligible customer-generators for multi-meter aggregation under net energy metering tariffs, with related enforcement.
- May 21, 2026, Passed (Ayes 68, Noes 0), Ordered to the Senate.
- In Senate. Read first time. Referred to Committee on Rules for assignment.
Establish Industrial Decarbonization and Energy Efficiency Grants Program by Large Electrical Corporations, Funded by Energy Efficiency Charges, with Independent Review and Local Reimbursement Provisions
- Read for a second time. Ordered to a third reading.
- 2026-05-21, Passed (Ayes 72, Noes 0), Ordered to the Senate.
- In Senate. Read first time. Referred to Committee on Rules for assignment.
Enhance transmission planning and resource integration through updated MOU/workplan alignment with FERC Order 1920-A, expanded projections, data transparency, and risk-prudent, cost-effective interconnection.
- Read for a second time. Ordered to a third reading.
- 2026-05-21, Passed, (Ayes 71, Noes 0), Ordered to the Senate.
- In Senate. Read first time. Referred to Committee on Rules for assignment.
Expand California Building Standards Commission appeals, authorize code equivalence determinations, and clarify precedents, procedures, and local interpretation transparency.
- Reported from committee chair with author's amendments: Amend, and re-refer to committee. Read second time, amended, and re-referred to Committee on Housing.
Require large electrical corporations to offer at least one dynamic rate option post-smart-meter upgrade, ensuring parity for bundled and unbundled customers.
- Read for a second time. Ordered to a third reading.
- Read for the third time and amended. Ordered to third reading.
Authorize remote inspections for 1- or 2-family dwelling permits; apply immunities; authorize audits; establish state mandate; no reimbursement.
- Read for a second time. Ordered to a third reading.
- Read for the third time and amended. Ordered to third reading.
- 2026-05-22, Passed (Ayes 62, Noes 0), Ordered to the Senate.
- Read first time in Senate. Referred to Committee on Rules for assignment.
Take the first step to simplify Policy tracking
Give Policy Pulse a Try

