Introduced
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To mandate that electric utilities acquire at least 4 percent of their power from “renewable” sources, growing to at least 8 percent by 2013. The Public Service Commission would be authorized to regulate the duration and terms of contracts under which utilities obtain such power, in general mandating that the contract be for at least 20 years (to allow the provider to get financing to establish the renewable source). The bill would also authorize trading of renewable energy “credits” between utilities that exceed or fall short of the mandated quantity, and would impose fines of $50 for each megawatt hour that a utility falls short in production or credits. Finally, it would require utilities to provide rebates to solar electricity generation providers, and to pay for these by tacking extra fees onto the electricity bills of customers. "Renewable energy" is defined as that generated by biomass, geothermal, solar, wind, hydroelectric, and gas captured from the decomposition of waste. It does not include nuclear power.
Referred to the Committee on Energy Policy and Public Utilities
Substitute offered
The substitute passed by voice vote
Substitute offered
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To adopt a version of the bill that raises the amount of "renewable" energy sources utilities would be mandated to acquire.
The substitute failed 16 to 20 (details)
Failed in the Senate 19 to 18 (details)
To mandate that electric utilities acquire at least 7 percent of their power from “renewable” and "clean" sources (including "carbon capture" coal plants) by 2015, and allow the costs to be passed on to customers. The bill would authorize income and business tax credits ($2 per month for indiduals, $11 for small business, $125 for large firms) to compensate for these more costly energy sources. It would also authorize trading of renewable energy “credits” between utilities that exceed or fall short of the mandated quantity; and establish expedited approval approval processes for wind-generated electric power; establish procedures for ending the cross-subsidation of residential gas customers by commercial ones; and more. See also House Bill 5524, which mostly repeals the 2000 law authorizing competition between electricity producers.
Motion to reconsider
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The vote by which the bill was defeated.
The motion passed by voice vote
Received
Passed in the Senate 20 to 15 (details)
To mandate that electric utilities acquire at least 7 percent of their power from “renewable” and "clean" sources (including "carbon capture" coal plants) by 2015, and allow the costs to be passed on to customers. The bill would authorize income and business tax credits ($2 per month for indiduals, $11 for small business, $125 for large firms) to compensate for these more costly energy sources. It would also authorize trading of renewable energy “credits” between utilities that exceed or fall short of the mandated quantity; and establish expedited approval approval processes for wind-generated electric power; establish procedures for ending the cross-subsidation of residential gas customers by commercial ones; and more. See also House Bill 5524, which mostly repeals the 2000 law authorizing competition between electricity producers.
Referred to the Committee on Energy and Technology
Substitute offered
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To replace the previous version of the bill with one that contains the higher "renewable energy" mandates of House Bill 5548 and related bills.
The substitute passed by voice vote
Amendment offered
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To tie-bar the bill to House Bill 5524, meaning this bill cannot become law unless that one does also. HB 5524 would mostly end the state’s electric competition law that allows customers to choose an alternative provider.
The amendment passed by voice vote
Passed in the House 86 to 21 (details)
To mandate that Michigan electric utilities acquire 10 percent of their power from "renewable" sources by the end of 2015. The bill's provisions are essentially the same as <a href="http://www.michiganvotes.org/2007-HB-5546">House Bill 5548</a>. The bill is tie-barred to House Bill 5524, which would mostly end the state’s electric competition law that allows customers to choose an alternative provider.
Failed in the Senate 10 to 18 (details)
To not concur with the House-passed version of the bill, which is essentially the same as <a href="http://www.michiganvotes.org/2007-HB-5546">House Bill 5548</a> in imposing a 10 percent "renewables" mandate with more rigid definitions.
Passed in the House 83 to 24 (details)
To adopt a compromise version of the bill reported by a House-Senate conference committee. This would impose a 10 percent “renewable” energy mandate on electric utilities by 2015, including solar, biomass, wind, hydro, geothermal, advanced coal systems and more. The Public Service Commission would have the authority to suspend the mandate if it judges the extra cost on utilities to be too high, and utilities could not raise monthly bills more than $3 for residential customers, $16.58 for small business and $187.50 for larger firms. Temporary, means-tested income tax credits would be available to partially offset these price hikes (see <a href="http://www.michiganvotes.org/2008-SB-1048">Senate Bill 1048</a>). The bill is tie-barred to <a href="http://www.michiganvotes.org/2008-HB-5524">House Bill 5524</a>, which would guarantee DTE and Consumers Power at least 90 percent of the utility business in the areas they serve, and which phases out over five years a current law requiring commercial electricity users to subsidize residential rates.
Passed in the Senate 26 to 10 (details)