(a)  The general assembly finds and declares that electricity and gas revenues shall be fully decoupled from sales pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and further finds and declares that any decoupling proposal submitted by an electric distribution company as defined in §?39-1-2(a)(12) or gas distribution company included as a public utility in §?39-1-2(a)(20) that has greater than one hundred thousand (100,000) customers, shall be for the following purposes:

(1)  Increasing efficiency in the operations and management of the electric and gas distribution system;

(2)  Achieving the goals established in the electric distribution company‘s plan for system reliability and energy efficiency and conservation procurement as required pursuant to §?39-1-27.7(d);

(3)  Increasing investment in least-cost resources that will reduce long-term electricity demand;

(4)  Reducing risks for both customers and the distribution company including, but not limited to, societal risks, weather risks, and economic risks;

(5)  Increasing investment in end-use energy efficiency;

(6)  Eliminating disincentives to support energy-efficiency programs;

(7)  Facilitating and encouraging investment in utility infrastructure, safety, and reliability; and

(8)  Considering the reduction of fixed, recurring customer charges and transition to increased unit charges that more accurately reflect the long-term costs of energy production and delivery.

Terms Used In Rhode Island General Laws 39-1-27.7.1

  • Commission: means the public utilities commission. See Rhode Island General Laws 39-1-2
  • Company: means and includes a person, firm, partnership, corporation, quasi-municipal corporation, association, joint-stock association or company, and his, her, its, or their lessees, trustees, or receivers appointed by any court. See Rhode Island General Laws 39-1-2
  • Customer: means a company taking service from an electric distribution company at a single point of delivery or meter location. See Rhode Island General Laws 39-1-2
  • Division: means the division of public utilities and carriers. See Rhode Island General Laws 39-1-2
  • Electric distribution company: means a company engaging in the distribution of electricity or owning, operating, or controlling distribution facilities and shall be a public utility pursuant to subsection (20) of this section. See Rhode Island General Laws 39-1-2
  • Fiscal year: The fiscal year is the accounting period for the government. For the federal government, this begins on October 1 and ends on September 30. The fiscal year is designated by the calendar year in which it ends; for example, fiscal year 2006 begins on October 1, 2005 and ends on September 30, 2006.
  • Public utility: means and includes every company that is an electric distribution company and every company operating or doing business in intrastate commerce and in this state as a railroad, street railway, common carrier, gas, liquefied natural gas, water, telephone, telegraph, and pipeline company, and every company owning, leasing, maintaining, managing, or controlling any plant or equipment, or any part of any plant or equipment, within this state for manufacturing, producing, transmitting, distributing, delivering, or furnishing natural or manufactured gas, directly or indirectly, to or for the public, or any cars or equipment employed on, or in connection with, any railroad or street railway for public or general use within this state, or any pipes, mains, poles, wires, conduits, fixtures, through, over, across, under, or along any public highways, parkways, or streets, public lands, waters, or parks for the transmission, transportation, or distribution of gas for sale to the public for light, heat, cooling, or power for providing audio or visual telephonic or telegraphic communication service within this state, or any pond, lake, reservoir, stream, well, or distributing plant or system employed for the distribution of water to the consuming public within this state, including the water supply board of the city of Providence; provided, that, except as provided in § 39-16-9 and in P. See Rhode Island General Laws 39-1-2

(b)  Each electric distribution company as defined by §?39-1-2(a)(12) and gas distribution company included as a public utility in §?39-1-2(a)(20) having greater than one hundred thousand (100,000) customers shall file proposals at the commission to implement the policy set forth in subsection (a) of this section. The commission shall approve these proposals, provided they contain the features and components set forth in subsection (c) of this section, and that they are consistent with the intent and objectives contained in subsection (a) of this section. Actions taken by the commission in the exercise of its ratemaking authority for electric and gas rate cases shall be within the norm of industry standards and recognize the need to maintain the financial health of the distribution company as a stand-alone entity in Rhode Island.

(c)  The proposals shall contain the following features and components:

(1)  A revenue decoupling reconciliation mechanism that reconciles annually the revenue requirement allowed in the company’s base distribution-rate case to revenues actually received for the applicable twelve-month (12) period; provided that the mechanism for gas distribution shall be determined on a revenue-per-customer basis, in a manner typically employed for gas distribution companies in the industry. Any revenues over-recovered or under-recovered shall be credited to, or recovered from, customers, as applicable; and

(2)  An annual infrastructure, safety, and reliability spending plan for each fiscal year and an annual rate-reconciliation mechanism that includes a reconcilable allowance for the anticipated capital investments and other spending pursuant to the annual pre-approved budget as developed in accordance with subsection (d) of this section.

(d)  Prior to the beginning of each fiscal year, gas and electric distribution companies shall consult with the division of public utilities and carriers regarding their infrastructure, safety, and reliability spending plan for the following fiscal year, addressing the following categories:

(1)  Capital spending on utility infrastructure;

(2)  For electric distribution companies, operation and maintenance expenses on vegetation management;

(3)  For electric distribution companies, operation and maintenance expenses on system inspection, including expenses from expected resulting repairs; and

(4)  Any other costs relating to maintaining safety and reliability that are mutually agreed upon by the division and the company.

The distribution company shall submit a plan to the division and the division shall cooperate in good faith to reach an agreement on a proposed plan for these categories of costs for the prospective fiscal year within sixty (60) days. To the extent that the company and the division mutually agree on a plan, such plan shall be filed with the commission for review and approval within ninety (90) days. If the company and the division cannot agree on a plan, the company shall file a proposed plan with the commission and the commission shall review and, if the investments and spending are found to be reasonably needed to maintain safe and reliable distribution service over the short and long term, approve the plan within ninety (90) days.

(e)  The commission shall have the following duties and powers, in addition to its existing authorities established in this title:

(1)  To maintain reasonable and adequate service-quality standards, after decoupling, that are in effect at the time of the proposal and were established pursuant to §?39-3-7.

(2)  The commission may exclude the low-income rate class from the revenue decoupling reconciliation-rate mechanism for either electric or gas distribution. The commission also may exclude customers in the large commercial and industrial rate class from the gas-distribution mechanism.

(3)  The commission may adopt performance incentives for the electric distribution company that provide a shared-savings mechanism whereby the company would receive a percentage of savings realized as a result of achieving the purposes of this section while the remaining savings are credited to customers.

(4)  The commission shall review and approve, with any necessary amendments, performance-based, energy-savings targets developed and submitted by the Rhode Island energy efficiency and resources management council. The performance-based targets shall also be used as a consideration in any shared-savings mechanism established by the commission pursuant to subsection (e)(3) of this section.

(f)  The Rhode Island energy efficiency and resources management council shall propose performance-based, energy-savings targets to the commission no later than September 1, 2010. The targets shall include, but not be limited to, specific energy kilowatt-hour savings overall and peak-demand savings for both summer and winter peak periods expressed in total megawatts as well as appropriate targets recommended in the opportunities report filed with the commission pursuant to §?39-1-27.7(d)(3). The council shall revise, as necessary, these targets on an annual basis prior to the reconciliation process established pursuant to subsection (c) of this section and submit its revisions to the commission for approval.

(g) Reporting.  Every electric distribution company, as defined in subsection (a) of this section, shall report to the governor, general assembly, division of public utilities and carriers, and public utilities commission on or before September 1, 2012. The report shall include, but not be limited to, the following elements:

(1)  A comparison of revenues from traditional rate regulation and how the revenues have differed as part of an approved decoupling structure;

(2)  A summary of how the company is achieving the performance-based targets that may have been adopted pursuant to subsection (e)(4) of this section;

(3)  A summary of any shared savings the company may have received pursuant to the performance incentives authorized in subsection (e)(3) of this section;

(4)  A summary of how the company is achieving the service-quality standards required in subsection (e)(1) of this section;

(5)  An overview of how decoupling is impacting revenue stabilization goals that have resulted from decoupling; and

(6)  A summary of any customer education programs provided.

History of Section.
P.L. 2010, ch. 15, § 1; P.L. 2010, ch. 17, § 1; P.L. 2016, ch. 451, § 1; P.L. 2016, ch. 452, § 1.