Maryland Code § PU-7-513

Section PU-7-513
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) (1) In accordance with this subsection, an electric company shall be
provided a fair opportunity to recover all of its prudently incurred and verifiable net
transition costs, subject to full mitigation, following the Commission's determination
under subsection (b) of this section.
(2) A competitive transition charge, or other appropriate mechanism
that the Commission determines, may be included for customers who access the
transmission or distribution system of the electric company in whose distribution
territory the customer is located. The costs authorized by the Commission to be
recovered shall be allocated to customer classes in a manner that, as nearly as
reasonably possible, does not exceed the cost of providing the service to those classes
of customers, avoiding where reasonably possible any interclass or intraclass cross
subsidy.
(3) (i) The competitive transition charge may be included on bills
to customers for a period determined by the Commission.
(ii) The Commission may establish recovery periods of
different lengths for each electric company and for different categories of transition
costs.
(4) A competitive transition charge, or other appropriate mechanism
determined by the Commission, may not apply to any on-site generated electricity to
the extent of:
(i) the existing facilities' installed generating capacity as of
January 1, 1999;
(ii) the generating capacity of an existing facility to be
installed under a legally binding contract:
1. executed on or before January 1, 1999; or
2. executed on or before September 29, 1999, if the
Commission, on a case by case review of the evidence, determines that negotiations
in good faith concerning the contract were ongoing as of January 1, 1999; or

(iii) for a facility with a capacity of 500 kilowatts or less:
1. the first 80 megawatts of the aggregate statewide
generating capacity of on-site generating facilities;
2. the generating capacity of the facility if the facility:
A. is installed between January 1, 2000, and December
31, 2003;
B. derives electricity from fuel cells, photovoltaics,
wind machines, or microturbines; and
C. has an energy conversion efficiency greater than
40%; or
3. the generating capacity of the facility if the facility:
A. is installed after January 1, 2004;
B. derives electricity from fuel cells, photovoltaics,
wind machines, or microturbines; and
C. has an energy conversion efficiency greater than
50%.
(b) The Commission shall determine the transition costs and the amounts
of the transition costs that an electric company shall be provided an opportunity to
recover under its restructuring plan through the competitive transition charge or
other appropriate mechanism.
(c) (1) After July 1, 1999, an electric company may apply to the
Commission for a qualified rate order for some or all of its transition costs.
(2) If the Commission issues a qualified rate order and the transition
bonds approved by that order are successfully issued:
(i) the electric company shall impose and collect, through its
customer bills, the intangible transition charges approved by the qualified rate order;
and
(ii) at the same time, the electric company's competitive
transition charge shall be reduced by an amount equal to that portion of the
competitive transition charge related to the transition costs for which transition

bonds have been successfully issued, together with any costs of capital related to the
transition costs for which recovery was provided in the competitive transition charge,
as provided in the qualified rate order.
(d) (1) The Commission shall establish procedures for the annual review
of the competitive transition charge for each electric company to reconcile the annual
revenues received from the charge with the annual amortization of transition costs
approved by the Commission under this section to take account of actual kilowatt-
hour sales in the prior year compared with previously estimated kilowatt-hour sales.
The Commission shall adjust the competitive transition charge based on any under
recovery or over recovery with respect to the authorized amortization amount.
(2) Nothing in this subtitle may be construed as preventing the
Commission from approving for an investor-owned electric company:
(i) an adjustment mechanism proposed by the investor-owned
electric company in its initial restructuring proposal filed prior to January 1, 1999,
that takes into account differences other than differences in kilowatt-hour sales,
taking into consideration any requirements related to any transition bonds;
(ii) an adjustment that takes into account generation asset
sales by an electric company or an affiliate to a nonaffiliate that are consummated on
or before June 30, 2005; or
(iii) any other mechanism as part of a settlement.
(e) (1) In determining the appropriate transition costs or benefits for
each electric company's generation-related assets, the Commission shall:
(i) conduct public hearings; and
(ii) consider, in addition to other appropriate evidence of value:
1. book value and fair market value;
2. auctions and sales of comparable assets;
3. appraisals;
4. the revenue the company would receive under rate-
of-return regulation;
5. the revenue the company would receive in a
restructured electricity supply market; and

6. computer simulations provided to the Commission.
(2) The Commission shall determine any equitable allocation of costs
or benefits between shareholders and ratepayers. In determining the allocation of
transition costs or benefits, the Commission shall consider the following factors:
(i) the prudence and verifiability of the original investment;
(ii) whether the investment continues to be used and useful;
(iii) whether the loss is one of which investors can be said to
have reasonably borne the risk; and
(iv) whether investors have already been compensated for the
risk.
(f) This section does not apply to rate stabilization costs established or
qualified rate orders issued under Part III or Part IV of this subtitle.

‹ Prev All Maryland sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.