Maryland Code § PU-7-306.2

Section PU-7-306.2
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(a) (1) In this section the following words have the meanings indicated.

(2) (i) "Agrivoltaics" means the simultaneous use of areas of land:
1. that are maintained in agricultural use in
accordance with COMAR 18.02.03 or the Maryland Assessment Procedures Manual;
and
2. for both solar power generation and:
A. raising grains, fruits, herbs, melons, mushrooms,
nuts, seeds, tobacco, or vegetables;
B. raising poultry, including chickens and turkeys, for
meat or egg production;
C. dairy production, such as the raising of milking
cows;
D. raising livestock, including cattle, sheep, goats, or
pigs;
E. horse boarding, breeding, or training;
F. turf farming;
G. raising ornamental shrubs, plants, or flowers,
including aquatic plants;
H. aquaculture;
I. silviculture; or
J. any other activity recognized as an agricultural
activity under COMAR 18.02.03 or the Maryland Assessment Procedures Manual.
(ii) "Agrivoltaics" does not include the simultaneous use of
areas of land for both solar power generation and:
1. apiaries; or
2. pollinator habitat.
(3) "Baseline annual usage" means:

(i) a subscriber's accumulated electricity use in kilowatt-
hours for the 12 months before the subscriber's most recent subscription; or
(ii) for a subscriber that does not have a record of 12 months of
electricity use at the time of the subscriber's most recent subscription, an estimate of
the subscriber's accumulated 12 months of electricity use in kilowatt-hours,
determined in a manner the Commission approves.
(4) "Community solar energy generating system" means a solar
energy system that:
(i) is connected to the electric distribution system serving the
State;
(ii) is located in the same electric service territory as its
subscribers;
(iii) is attached to the electric meter of a subscriber or is a
separate facility with its own electric meter;
(iv) credits its generated electricity, or the value of its
generated electricity, to the bills of the subscribers to that system through virtual net
energy metering;
(v) has at least two subscribers but no limit to the maximum
number of subscribers;
(vi) does not have subscriptions larger than 200 kilowatts
constituting more than 60% of its kilowatt-hour output;
(vii) has a generating capacity that does not exceed 5
megawatts as measured by the alternating current rating of the system's inverter;
(viii) may be owned by any person; and
(ix) with respect to community solar energy generating
systems constructed under the Program, serves at least 40% of its kilowatt-hour
output to LMI subscribers unless the solar energy system is wholly owned by the
subscribers to the solar energy system.
(5) "Consolidated billing" means a payment mechanism that requires
an electric company to, at the request of a subscriber organization or subscription
coordinator:

(i) include the monthly subscription charge of a subscriber
organization or subscription coordinator on the monthly bills rendered by the electric
company for electric service and supply to subscribers; and
(ii) remit payment for those charges to the subscriber
organization or subscription coordinator.
(6) "Critical area" has the meaning stated in § 8-1802 of the Natural
Resources Article.
(7) "LMI subscriber" means a subscriber that:
(i) is low-income;
(ii) is moderate-income; or
(iii) resides in a census tract that is:
1. an overburdened community; and
2. an underserved community.
(8) "Low-income" means:
(i) having an annual household income that is at or below
200% of the federal poverty level; or
(ii) being certified as eligible for any federal, State, or local
assistance program that limits participation to households whose income is at or
below 200% of the federal poverty level.
(9) "Moderate-income" means having an annual household income
that is at or below 80% of the median income for Maryland.
(10) "Overburdened community" has the meaning stated in § 1-701 of
the Environment Article.
(11) "Pilot program" means the program established under this
section before July 1, 2023, and effective until the start of the Program established
under subsection (d)(20) of this section.
(12) "Program" means the Community Solar Energy Generating
Systems Program.

(13) "Queue" means:
(i) the pilot program queue an electric company is required to
maintain under COMAR 20.62.03.04; and
(ii) a queue an electric company may be required to maintain
under the Program.
(14) "Subscriber" means a retail customer of an electric company that:
(i) holds a subscription to a community solar energy
generating system; and
(ii) has identified one or more individual meters or accounts to
which the subscription shall be attributed.
(15) "Subscriber organization" means:
(i) a person that owns or operates a community solar energy
generating system; or
(ii) the collective group of subscribers of a community solar
energy generating system.
(16) "Subscription" means the portion of the electricity generated by a
community solar energy generating system that is credited to a subscriber.
(17) "Subscription coordinator" means a person that:
(i) markets community solar energy generating systems or
otherwise provides services related to community solar energy generating systems
under its own brand name;
(ii) performs any administrative action to allocate
subscriptions, connect subscribers with community solar energy generating systems,
or enroll customers in the Program; or
(iii) manages interactions between a subscriber organization
and an electric company or electricity supplier relating to subscribers.
(18) "Underserved community" has the meaning stated in § 1-701 of
the Environment Article.

(19) "Unsubscribed energy" means any community solar energy
generating system output in kilowatt-hours that is not allocated to any subscriber.
(20) "Virtual net energy metering" means measurement of the
difference between the kilowatt-hours or value of electricity that is supplied by an
electric company and the kilowatt-hours or value of electricity attributable to a
subscription to a community solar energy generating system and fed back to the
electric grid over the subscriber's billing period, as calculated under the tariffs
established under subsections (e)(2), (f)(2), and (g)(2) of this section.
(b) The General Assembly finds that:
(1) community solar energy generating systems:
(i) provide residents and businesses, including those that
lease property, increased access to local solar electricity while encouraging private
investment in solar resources;
(ii) enhance continued diversification of the State's energy
resource mix to achieve the State's renewable energy portfolio standard and
Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Act goals; and
(iii) provide electric companies and ratepayers the opportunity
to realize the many benefits associated with distributed energy; and
(2) it is in the public interest that the State enable the development
and deployment of energy generation from community solar energy generating
systems in order to:
(i) allow renters and low-income and moderate-income retail
electric customers to own an interest in a community solar energy generating system;
(ii) facilitate market entry for all potential subscribers while
giving priority to subscribers who are the most sensitive to market barriers; and
(iii) encourage developers to promote participation by renters
and low-income and moderate-income retail electric customers.
(c) A community solar energy generating system, subscriber, subscriber
organization, or subscription coordinator is not:
(1) an electric company;
(2) an electricity supplier; or

(3) a generating station if:
(i) the generating capacity of the community solar energy
generating system does not exceed 2 megawatts; or
(ii) the community solar energy generating system is located
on the rooftop of a building.
(d) (1) (i) The Commission shall establish and maintain a
Community Solar Energy Generating Systems Program.
(ii) The structure of the Program is as provided in this
subsection.
(2) All rate classes may participate in the Program.
(3) Subscribers served by electric standard offer service, community
choice aggregators, and electricity suppliers may hold subscriptions to the same
community solar energy generating system.
(4) A subscriber organization or subscription coordinator acting on
behalf of a subscriber organization shall:
(i) determine how to allocate subscriptions to subscribers; and
(ii) notify an electric company and, if applicable, a relevant
electricity supplier about the allocation of subscriptions in accordance with the
regulations the Commission adopts under subsection (e) of this section.
(5) An electric company shall use the tariff structure under
subsections (e)(2), (f)(2), and (g)(2) of this section to provide each subscriber with the
credits.
(6) A subscriber shall:
(i) receive credit for virtual net excess generation; and
(ii) accrue virtual net excess generation in the same manner
as an eligible customer-generator under § 7-306(f) of this subtitle.
(7) (i) Any unsubscribed energy generated by a community solar
energy generating system that is not owned by an electric company shall create
banked bill credits tracked by the electric company that, within 1 year after the date

that the banked bill credit was created, may be allocated to one or more subscribers
by the subscriber organization or subscription coordinator associated with the
community solar energy generating system.
(ii) The generation associated with a banked bill credit not
allocated to a subscriber within 1 year after the date that the banked bill credit was
created shall be purchased under the electric company's process for purchasing the
output from qualifying facilities at the amount it would have cost the electric
company to procure the energy.
(8) An electric company shall use energy generated from a
community solar energy generating system to offset purchases from wholesale
electricity suppliers for standard offer service.
(9) All costs associated with small generator interconnection
standards under COMAR 20.50.09 are the responsibility of the subscriber
organization.
(10) A subscriber organization may petition an electric company to
coordinate the interconnection and commencement of operations of a community
solar energy generating system after the Commission adopts regulations required
under subsection (e) of this section.
(11) A subscriber organization may contract with a third party for the
third party to finance, build, own, or operate a community solar energy generating
system.
(12) A municipal utility or cooperative utility may participate in the
Program.
(13) (i) Except as provided in subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph,
a community solar energy generating system may not be located on the same or an
adjacent parcel of land as an existing or proposed community solar energy generating
system if the total installed capacity of all community solar energy generating
systems on the same or adjacent parcel would exceed 5 megawatts.
(ii) The prohibition under subparagraph (i) of this paragraph
does not apply to projects constructed:
1. on the rooftops of buildings;
2. in areas that are zoned for industrial use;
3. on brownfields locations and clean fill sites;

4. over parking lots or roadways;
5. on multilevel parking structures;
6. on or over transportation or public rights-of-way;
7. at airports;
8. on land that:
A. was previously zoned for industrial use or is
ecologically compromised; and
B. is not targeted for mitigation or restoration; or
9. in any location if the combined capacity of all
community solar energy generating systems on the same or adjacent parcel does not
exceed 10 megawatts and:
A. at least 75% of the aggregate capacity of the co-
located community solar energy generating systems serves LMI subscribers;
B. for a site without a community solar energy
generating system installed before the start of the Program under paragraph (20) of
this subsection, all of the community solar energy generating systems installed after
the start of the Program are used for agrivoltaics; or
C. for a site with a community solar energy generating
system installed before the start of the Program under paragraph (20) of this
subsection, each new community solar energy generating system installed after the
start of the Program is used for agrivoltaics.
(14) A subscriber organization or subscription coordinator may elect
for a subscriber or a community solar energy generating system represented by the
subscriber organization or subscription coordinator to participate in consolidated
billing.
(15) An electric company shall provide access to customer billing and
usage data to a subscriber organization or subscription coordinator if the customer
provides to the electric company affirmative consent that is accompanied by a written
or electronic signature.

(16) (i) An electric company may require a reasonable fee for
subscriber organizations or subscription coordinators that use consolidated billing.
(ii) The fee under subparagraph (i) of this paragraph may not
exceed 1% of the bill credit value to the subscriber unless the Commission determines
a higher fee is just and reasonable based on substantial evidence presented by the
electric company.
(iii) An electric company may adjust the fee under
subparagraph (i) of this paragraph not more than once per year.
(iv) The fee for consolidated billing assessed to a subscriber
organization or subscription coordinator may not exceed the fee that was in effect
when the subscriber organization or subscription coordinator elected for the
community solar energy generating system represented by the subscriber
organization or subscription coordinator to participate in consolidated billing.
(17) A subscriber organization or subscription coordinator may not
prohibit a subscriber from enrolling with an electricity supplier for electric service or
supply.
(18) A community solar energy generating system on an electric
company queue under the pilot program shall retain the queue position under the
Program.
(19) In constructing or operating a community solar energy generating
system, a person shall address critical area, climate resilience, and forest
conservation concerns by complying with the Forest Conservation Act and other
relevant State and local environmental laws and regulations pertaining to the critical
area, climate resilience, and forest conservation.
(20) The Program shall begin on the earlier of:
(i) the date of submission of the first petition of a subscriber
organization under paragraph (10) of this subsection after the Commission adopts
the regulations required under subsection (f) of this section; or
(ii) 6 months after the Commission adopts those regulations.
(e) On or before May 15, 2016, the Commission shall adopt regulations to
implement this section, including regulations for:
(1) consumer protection;

(2) a tariff structure for an electric company to provide a subscriber
with the kilowatt-hours or value of the subscriber's subscription, as the Commission
determines;
(3) a calculation for virtual net energy metering as the Commission
determines;
(4) a protocol for electric companies, electricity suppliers, and
subscriber organizations to communicate the information necessary to calculate and
provide the monthly electric bill credits and net excess generation payments required
by this section; and
(5) a protocol for a subscriber organization to coordinate with an
electric company for the interconnection and commencement of operations of a
community solar energy generating system.
(f) (1) Subject to subsection (h) of this section, to implement the
Program, the Commission shall, on or before January 1, 2025, adopt revisions to the
regulations adopted under subsection (e) of this section for the pilot program,
including revisions that:
(i) remove all Program categories, project generating capacity
limits, yearly programmatic and electric company-specific capacity limits, and sunset
dates so that the total number and capacity of community solar energy generating
systems is subject only to the overall limitation for all net metering projects
established under § 7-306(d) of this subtitle;
(ii) authorize all community solar energy generating systems,
including those constructed during the pilot program, to operate and generate
subscription credits until the community solar energy generating system is
decommissioned;
(iii) adjust co-location restrictions to comply with subsection
(d)(13) of this section;
(iv) allow a subscriber organization or subscription coordinator
to verify the income of a prospective subscriber for eligibility as an LMI subscriber
under the Program by using one of the following methods:
1. self-attestation by the prospective subscriber that
does not need to be under oath or penalty of perjury;

2. requiring the prospective subscriber to provide
evidence of eligibility for or enrollment in at least one of the following government
assistance programs:
A. the Maryland Energy Assistance Program;
B. the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program;
C. Medicaid;
D. Head Start;
E. free and reduced price school meals;
F. the federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance
Program;
G. EmPOWER Maryland low- or moderate-income
incentives;
H. telephone lifeline service;
I. the Fuel Fund of Maryland; or
J. any additional federal, State, or local assistance
program that the Commission determines will further the purposes of the Program;
3. pay stubs;
4. income tax documents;
5. proof of residence in an affordable housing facility;
6. proof of residence within a census tract that is:
A. an overburdened community; and
B. an underserved community;
7. any verification method that was available under
the pilot program; or
8. any additional methods approved by the
Commission to verify income;

(v) require all electric companies to use:
1. bill credits applied as a reduction in metered
kilowatt-hours; or
2. monetary bill credits that provide not less than the
value to the subscriber of the credit had it been applied to the subscriber's bill as a
reduction in metered kilowatt-hours; and
(vi) establish procedures for the Commission to:
1. collect data from subscriber organizations, when
applying to the Commission for admission to the Program, on:
A. the type and quantity of forest cover on the site of a
proposed community solar energy generating system; and
B. any anticipated impacts that the construction of the
proposed community solar energy generating system will have on trees and forest
cover at the site of the proposed community solar energy generating system; and
2. make the data collected under item 1 of this item
available to the public in a format aggregated by county.
(2) On or before July 1, 2025, the Commission shall approve electric
company tariff modifications that are consistent with the regulations adopted under
this subsection.
(g) (1) Subject to subsection (h) of this section, on or before July 1, 2025,
the Commission shall adopt regulations that:
(i) implement consolidated billing by electric companies that
must be in effect by January 1, 2026, including protocols for purchase of receivables
or net crediting;
(ii) require all electric companies to report billing and crediting
errors to the Commission on a regular schedule;
(iii) impose specific timing requirements for application of bill
credits to subscriber bills and application of rollover credits;

(iv) implement data exchange protocols for electric companies,
subscriber organizations, and subscription coordinators, including required data
fields for electric company allocation reports;
(v) for subscribers enrolled in budget billing, require electric
companies to apply community solar credits to the monthly amount due rather than
the underlying balance;
(vi) require all electric companies to show applied and banked
credits on each bill rendered to a subscriber; and
(vii) implement any additional changes the Commission
determines will improve billing and crediting processes for subscribers, subscriber
organizations, and subscription coordinators.
(2) On or before January 1, 2026, the Commission shall approve
electric company tariff modifications that are consistent with the regulations adopted
under this subsection.
(h) The Commission shall convene a stakeholder workgroup to provide
recommendations regarding the regulations to be adopted by the Commission under
subsections (f) and (g) of this section.
(i) The Commission shall consider and implement methodologies to allow
the tenants of master-metered residential facilities to participate in the Program and
benefit directly from any associated electric bill savings.
(j) (1) Subject to regulations or orders of the Commission, a contract
relating to a community solar energy generating system, subscriber organization, or
subscription coordinator that is entered into during the pilot program or the Program
shall remain in effect according to the terms of the contract, including after the
termination of the pilot program or the Program.
(2) (i) This paragraph applies to electric companies, electric
cooperatives, and municipal utilities that participate in the Program.
(ii) A subscriber who has a change in the service address
associated with the subscriber's subscription may maintain the subscription for the
new address if the new address is within the same electric territory as the old address.
(iii) An electric company or a subscriber organization may not
terminate a subscriber's subscription due to a change of address for the service
address associated with the subscription if the requirements under subparagraph (ii)
of this paragraph are met.

(iv) An electric company shall make any changes necessary to
accommodate a subscriber's change of address on notification by a subscriber
organization.
(3) On and after October 1, 2023, in accordance with the operational
and billing requirements in subsection (d) of this section:
(i) a subscriber organization may continue the operation of a
community solar energy generating system that began operation during the pilot
program, including the creation and trading of subscriptions; and
(ii) in accordance with the tariffs established under
subsections (e)(2), (f)(2), and (g)(2) of this section, an electric company shall continue
to facilitate the operation of a community solar energy generating system that began
operation during the pilot program.
(k) The cumulative installed nameplate capacity under the pilot program
and the Program shall count toward the overall limitation for all net metering
projects established under § 7-306(d) of this subtitle.
(l) (1) (i) A subscriber organization or subscription coordinator may
not require an LMI subscriber to undergo a credit check or pay a sign-up fee to
subscribe to a community solar energy generating system.
(ii) A subscriber organization or subscription coordinator
shall:
1. verify the eligibility of an LMI subscriber in
accordance with subsection (f)(1)(iv) of this section; and
2. retain records of each determination of eligibility for
an LMI subscriber to be made available to the Commission on request.
(2) A subscriber who a subscriber organization determined was
eligible to participate as a low-income or moderate-income subscriber under the pilot
program shall remain eligible as an LMI subscriber under the Program.
(3) (i) A community solar energy generating system constructed
under the pilot program in a category requiring that at least 30% of its kilowatt-hour
output serve low-income or moderate-income subscribers shall continue to serve at
least 30% of its kilowatt-hour output to low-income or moderate-income subscribers.

(ii) A community solar energy generating system constructed
under the pilot program in a category requiring that at least 51% of its kilowatt-hour
output serve low-income or moderate-income subscribers shall continue to serve at
least 51% of its kilowatt-hour output to low-income or moderate-income subscribers.
(m) (1) A subscriber organization or subscription coordinator may not
charge:
(i) a residential subscriber who is not participating in
consolidated billing a subscription rate that is more than the monetary value of the
bill credit on a bill issued by the electric company to the subscriber for electric service;
or
(ii) an LMI subscriber a subscription rate that is more than
90% of the monetary value of the bill credit on a bill issued by the electric company
to the subscriber for electric service.
(2) A subscriber organization or subscription coordinator that elects
for a subscriber to participate in consolidated billing may not set a subscription
charge that is more than the monetary value of the bill credit on a bill issued by the
electric company to the subscriber.
(n) The developer of a community solar energy generating system with a
generating capacity over 1 megawatt, as measured in alternating current, shall
ensure that workers are paid not less than the prevailing wage rate determined under
Title 17, Subtitle 2 of the State Finance and Procurement Article, unless the
community solar energy generating system is subject to a project labor agreement
that:
(1) binds all contractors and subcontractors on the community solar
energy generating system through the inclusion of specifications in all relevant
solicitation provisions and contract documents;
(2) allows all contractors and subcontractors to compete for contracts
and subcontracts on the project without regard to whether they are otherwise parties
to collective bargaining agreements;
(3) establishes uniform terms and conditions of employment for all
construction labor employed on the projects;
(4) guarantees against strikes, lockouts, and similar job disruptions;
(5) establishes mutually binding procedures for resolving labor
disputes; and

(6) includes any other provisions negotiated by the parties to promote
successful delivery of the community solar energy generating system.

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