Colorado Code § 40-2-138

Projects for the production of clean hydrogen - proceeding - hydrogen hub projects - rules - reports - definitions
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(1) As used in this section, unless the context
otherwise requires:
(a) "Clean hydrogen" means:
(I) Green hydrogen, as defined in section 40-3.2-108 (2)(j); or
(II) Hydrogen that is produced through a process that results in lifecycle greenhouse gas
emissions rates that are within the lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions rate ranges set forth in 26
U.S.C. secs. 45V (b)(2)(C) and 45V (b)(2)(D), as amended.
(b) (I) "Clean hydrogen project" means a project that results in the production of clean
hydrogen by an investor-owned utility.
(II) "Clean hydrogen project" may include pipelines, electrolyzers, environmental
controls, monitoring equipment, dedicated renewable energy sources for electrolysis, the
purchase of clean hydrogen from third parties, and an upgrade to a turbine at an electric
generating station if that upgrade is part of a state or federal application for a regional clean
hydrogen hub under 42 U.S.C. sec. 16161a.
(c) "Cumulative impacts" means the incremental effects of a clean hydrogen project on
the environment, including effects on air quality, water quality, water resource availability,
climate, and public health, that a clean hydrogen project has when added to the impacts from
other past, present, and reasonably foreseeable future development of any type on the relevant
area, including an airshed or watershed, as determined by rule by the commission, or on a
disproportionately impacted community.
(d) "Disproportionately impacted community" has the meaning set forth in section 24-4-
109 (2)(b)(II).
(e) (I) "Hard to decarbonize end use" means industrial uses that include:
(A) The generation of heat of at least one hundred fifty degrees Celsius for industrial
purposes; and
(B) Addition as feedstock for industrial purposes, including manufacture of steel,
ammonia, fertilizer, and chemicals.
(II) "Hard to decarbonize end use" does not include the direct use of hydrogen for
residential or commercial heating.
(f) "Hydrogen hub project" means a project that is part of an application for federal
funding by a partnership of regulated utilities, private partners, and companies and may include
state or federal government agencies in collaboration with other states that is designed to utilize
available federal funds and tax credits, which may include the production, transport, and use of
clean hydrogen.
(g) "Lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions rate" means lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions,
as defined in 26 U.S.C. sec. 45V (c)(1)(A), as amended, measured in accordance with any
applicable federal internal revenue service regulations or guidance.
(h) "Office" means the Colorado energy office created in section 24-38.5-101.
(i) "Qualified use" means the use of clean hydrogen in the state for:
(I) Hard to decarbonize end uses;
(II) The operation of a heavy-duty motor vehicle, as defined in section 25-7.5-102 (11);
and
(III) Aviation.
(2) The commission shall initiate an investigatory proceeding, no later than September 1,
2023, to consider:
(a) The potential for clean hydrogen projects operated by investor-owned utilities subject
to regulation by the commission to contribute to meeting the greenhouse gas emission reduction
goals described in section 25-7-102 (2)(g), including lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions rates,
with a preference for qualified uses;
(b) The impact of clean hydrogen projects on the emission of air pollutants other than
greenhouse gases and human health;
(c) Potential markets for clean hydrogen in Colorado;
(d) The impact of clean hydrogen production on water quality and quantity in Colorado;
(e) The potential impacts of pipeline leakage and best practices for mitigation;
(f) The potential for the development of clean hydrogen to help create or sustain jobs in
Colorado, including utility jobs;
(g) The cost, capabilities, and market availability of clean hydrogen technologies,
including pipeline investments;
(h) The appropriate roles for investor-owned utilities in the production, sale, or use of
clean hydrogen, including considering whether costs may be recovered from ratepayers;
(i) The potential impact of investor-owned utility investments in a clean hydrogen
project on ratepayers, including on bills, rates, and rate stability, and options for avoiding
potential cross-subsidization and cost shifting across rate classes;
(j) Principles and requirements for any tariffs for the sale of clean hydrogen to third
parties, including principles and requirements to ensure that costs arising from the development,
production, transport, and delivery of the clean hydrogen under those tariffs are not borne by
customers who do not take service from those tariffs;
(k) The process and data necessary and available to implement a requirement for the
adoption of methods for:
(I) The measurement of lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions rates, including for hourly
matching of electricity used;
(II) The tracking of the deployment of new renewable energy resources or use of
curtailed renewable energy to meet electricity requirements for production of clean hydrogen in
the same load balancing area; and
(III) The commission to determine when at least two hundred megawatts of electrolyzers
are operational in the state;
(l) The process and data necessary for an investor-owned utility to conduct a cumulative
impact analysis of a clean hydrogen project and any process necessary to avoid adverse
cumulative impacts on disproportionately impacted communities, if any, which may include the
commission considering:
(I) The time frame over which a cumulative impact analysis should be conducted;
(II) The geographical scope of a cumulative impact analysis; and
(III) Whether the cumulative impact analysis should be compared to alternative projects;
(m) Requirements for any application for a clean hydrogen project, in addition to the
requirements described in subsection (3)(a)(VI) of this section and subject to subsections (4) and
(5) of this section;
(n) Any data or information necessary or available to evaluate a clean hydrogen project
against alternative projects, including how to measure, track, and report lifecycle greenhouse gas
emissions rates, cumulative impacts, and the cumulative impacts and individual impacts on jobs,
local economic benefits, and water use by clean hydrogen projects under the commission's
jurisdiction;
(o) Opportunities to encourage non-utility production of clean hydrogen in Colorado,
including opportunities for an investor-owned utility to propose a tariff for the sale of renewable
energy that would otherwise be curtailed; and
(p) Any other relevant issues that the commission determines are necessary to consider.
(3) (a) No later than December 1, 2024, unless the office files a notice with the
commission stating that the federal department of energy has extended or otherwise altered the
deadline regarding funding for a hydrogen hub project, the commission shall adopt rules that:
(I) Unless the commission determines that investor-owned utilities should not develop
clean hydrogen projects for cost recovery from ratepayers, establish requirements for the
presentation of a clean hydrogen project to the commission for the commission's approval;
(II) Establish requirements for lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions rate accounting for
clean hydrogen projects;
(III) Address the appropriate role of investor-owned utilities in the production, sale, and
use of clean hydrogen, including whether and how costs may be recovered from ratepayers and
appropriate treatment of revenues from clean hydrogen sales;
(IV) Address how investor-owned utilities may use competitive solicitations in a clean
hydrogen project and any limitations for the use of competitive solicitations to develop the clean
hydrogen project;
(V) Establish a requirement that any planned or potential use for the clean hydrogen in
buildings or gas distribution systems of an investor-owned utility be proposed to and approved
by the commission through a clean heat plan, as defined in section 40-3.2-108 (2)(b); and
(VI) Address what is required in an application by an investor-owned utility for a clean
hydrogen project, subject to subsections (4) and (5) of this section, including:
(A) A comparison of a clean hydrogen project to alternative projects, including an
analysis of the costs and benefits of the clean hydrogen project compared to alternative projects;
(B) A description of how the investor-owned utility will measure and track the annual
and cumulative lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions rates and the emission of other air pollutants
in accordance with the rules adopted pursuant to subsection (3)(a)(II) of this section;
(C) A description of how the investor-owned utility will: Minimize the lifecycle
greenhouse gas emissions rates of the clean hydrogen project, conduct leak detection throughout
the life of the clean hydrogen project, and conduct a cumulative impact analysis of the clean
hydrogen project;
(D) An assessment of the annual water volume that will be used in the clean hydrogen
project, including the source of water to be used;
(E) A description of any planned uses, including potential end uses by the investor-
owned utility's customers, of the clean hydrogen produced through the clean hydrogen project,
with a preference for qualified uses;
(F) A description of any planned sales of clean hydrogen to non-utility customers, with a
preference for qualified uses;
(G) A description of the proposed method of cost recovery for the clean hydrogen
project, including information regarding which rate classes will cover the costs of the clean
hydrogen project;
(H) A description of the total revenue requirement for the clean hydrogen project;
(I) A description of the rate and bill impacts of the clean hydrogen project;
(J) A description of any tariffs for the sale of clean hydrogen produced by the clean
hydrogen project;
(K) A proposal for the allocation of revenues received from the sale of clean hydrogen
produced by the clean hydrogen project to non-utility customers among customers and the
investor-owned utility, including which party bears the risk that the amount of revenue
anticipated from the clean hydrogen project is not ultimately received;
(L) A cumulative impact analysis framework; and
(M) If the investor-owned utility plans to use a competitive solicitation process as part of
the clean hydrogen project, a description of how the planned competitive solicitation process
will be used and in what circumstances the process will be used.
(b) (I) The rules adopted by the commission pursuant to subsection (3)(a)(II) of this
section must include requirements for:
(A) The matching of electrolyzer energy consumption with electricity production on an
hourly basis, if the technology is available;
(B) Identifying the applicable energy source, if the investor-owned utility is reporting
the energy source as resulting in zero emissions for clean hydrogen production and
demonstrating that the electricity used to produce clean hydrogen comes from renewable energy
that would otherwise have been curtailed or not delivered to load or from new zero carbon
generation that began production no more than thirty-six months before the start of the
operations of the electrolyzer; and
(C) The deliverability of renewable energy used by the electrolyzer into the same load
balancing area as the electrolyzer.
(II) The commission shall make the rules adopted by the commission pursuant to
subsection (3)(a)(II) of this section effective no later than January 1, 2028, or no later than one
year after the deployment of hydrogen electrolyzers in the state exceeds two hundred megawatts,
whichever is earlier.
(c) (I) In developing the rules pursuant to subsection (3)(a) of this section, the
commission shall consider the potential for federal funding for clean hydrogen projects and that
clean hydrogen projects implemented by investor-owned utilities may be necessary to secure
federal funding.
(II) In developing the rules pursuant to subsection (3)(a)(II) of this section, the
commission shall consider what information and market mechanisms are necessary and available
for hydrogen producers to comply with the rules. If the federal internal revenue service issues
guidance that meets or exceeds the rules, the commission shall adopt rules that comply with the
guidance.
(d) If the office files the notice described in subsection (3)(a) of this section with the
commission, the commission shall coordinate with the office to determine an appropriate date
for the adoption of the rules described in subsection (3)(a) of this section.
(4) (a) The commission shall allow an investor-owned utility to present to the
commission a stand-alone application for a clean hydrogen project for which an investor-owned
utility has applied for federal funding as part of a hydrogen hub project at any time before June
1, 2024, unless the office files a notice with the commission stating that the federal department
of energy has extended or otherwise altered the deadline regarding funding for a hydrogen hub
project. The application may only address elements of a hydrogen hub project that are not
located in the Denver metropolitan area.
(b) The application process described in subsection (4)(a) of this section must be
consistent with the requirements of subsection (3) of this section. An investor-owned utility
seeking approval of a clean hydrogen project pursuant to subsection (4)(a) of this section shall
also demonstrate that a time-sensitive review of the investor-owned utility's application is
necessary based on the timing requirements for obtaining necessary funding, not including tax
credits, from, or a partnership with, a federal or state agency for the acquisition of necessary
facilities and that the funding or partnership cannot be accomplished through any pending or
future electric resource planning process.
(c) If the funding or partnership described in subsection (4)(b) of this section, including
any associated contracts, awards, or timing requirements, allows for competitive solicitations as
part of the development of the clean hydrogen project, the commission may direct the investor-
owned utility to issue a solicitation to acquire the necessary projects or facilities for the clean
hydrogen project. The commission shall review any approved competitive solicitation process
and bids received prior to the investor-owned utility's acquisition of the necessary facilities for
the clean hydrogen project. An investor-owned utility that filed the clean hydrogen project
application pursuant to subsection (4)(a) of this section may submit a bid in response to a
solicitation pursuant to this subsection (4)(c).
(5) (a) In reviewing, approving, denying, or amending an application pursuant to this
section, the commission shall consider, at a minimum:
(I) Whether it is in the public interest for an investor-owned utility to invest in the
elements of the clean hydrogen project as set forth in the application;
(II) The potential contribution of the clean hydrogen project in meeting the greenhouse
gas emission reduction goals described in section 25-7-102 (2)(g), including lifecycle
greenhouse gas emissions rates;
(III) The impacts of the clean hydrogen project compared to alternative projects,
including:
(A) Rate and bill impacts;
(B) The impacts on rate stability; and
(C) Any other impacts identified by the commission pursuant to this subsection (5)(a);
(IV) The use of competitive solicitations, if any;
(V) If the clean hydrogen project contemplates the sale of clean hydrogen, the potential
for cross-subsidization and cost shifting across rate classes;
(VI) The impacts of the clean hydrogen project on the utility workforce in the state,
including the use of "best value" employment metrics pursuant to section 40-2-129;
(VII) The impacts of the clean hydrogen project on a community's tax base and
revenues;
(VIII) The uses of the clean hydrogen produced by the clean hydrogen project, with a
preference for qualified uses;
(IX) The public health and safety impacts of the clean hydrogen project; and
(X) The availability of federal funding for the clean hydrogen project.
(b) The commission shall review any clean hydrogen project application submitted
pursuant to this section in accordance with any applicable electric resource planning rules.
(c) In reviewing, approving, denying, or amending an application pursuant to this
section, if the clean hydrogen project is proposed to be sited in an area that would affect a
disproportionately impacted community, the commission shall weigh the applicant's cumulative
impacts analysis and determine whether, on balance, the clean hydrogen project will have a
positive effect on the disproportionately impacted community. Any proposal that will have net
negative cumulative impacts on any disproportionately impacted community must be denied.
The commission's determination must include a plain language summary of its determination.
(6) Notwithstanding any provision of this section to the contrary, an investor-owned
utility shall provide notice to the commission of any application for federal funding as part of a
hydrogen hub project, including:
(a) Any hydrogen hub project milestones;
(b) A description of any deadlines for submission of materials to support the application,
including whether any additional filings will be required; and
(c) To the extent known or consistent with any requirements or limitations of the federal
department of energy or any related joint memorandums of understanding or other contracts
entered into by the investor-owned utility and the state, information regarding when funding
awards will be determined.
(7) (a) An investor-owned utility that operates a clean hydrogen project approved
pursuant to this section shall submit to the commission an annual report that shows:
(I) The lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions rates from the clean hydrogen project;
(II) The greenhouse gas emissions from the clean hydrogen project;
(III) Any emission of other air pollutants from the clean hydrogen project;
(IV) The water use of the clean hydrogen project;
(V) Production volumes and sales of hydrogen, including types of customers and uses;
(VI) Project development and cost updates for projects with cost recovery from
ratepayers; and
(VII) Net cumulative impact updates for projects located in disproportionately impacted
communities.
(b) If the clean hydrogen project includes the production and the use or consumption of
clean hydrogen by the investor-owned utility, the investor-owned utility shall report the lifecycle
greenhouse gas emissions rates of the clean hydrogen project separately by each production
facility and use.
(c) The annual report must include information that allows the office to make the
verifications required pursuant to section 39-22-557 (4)(a)(II).

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