Nevada Code § 704.741

Plan to increase supply or decrease demands: Submission not less than triennially; joint plans by certain affiliated utilities; contents prescribed by regulation; requirements
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1. A utility which supplies electricity in
this State shall, on or before June 1 of every third year, or more often if
necessary, in the manner specified by the Commission, submit a plan to increase
its supply of electricity or decrease the demands made on its system by its
customers to the Commission. Two or more utilities that are affiliated through
common ownership and that have an interconnected system for the transmission of
electricity shall submit a joint plan.
2. The Commission shall, by regulation:
(a) Prescribe the contents of such a plan,
including, but not limited to, the methods or formulas which are used by the
utility or utilities to:
(1) Forecast the future demands, except
that a forecast of the future retail electric demands of the utility or
utilities must not include the amount of energy and capacity proposed pursuant
to subsection 6 as annual limits on the total amount of energy and capacity
that eligible customers may be authorized to purchase from providers of new
electric resources through transactions approved by the Commission pursuant to
an application submitted pursuant to NRS
704B.310 on or after May 16, 2019; and
(2) Determine the best combination of
sources of supply to meet the demands or the best method to reduce them;
(b) Designate renewable energy zones and revise
the designated renewable energy zones as the Commission deems necessary; and
(c) Establish requirements governing the manner
in which and circumstances under which an amendment may be filed with the
Commission to modify an approved plan.
3. The Commission shall require the
utility or utilities to include in the plan:
(a) An energy efficiency program for residential
customers which reduces the consumption of electricity or any fossil fuel and
which includes, without limitation, the use of new solar thermal energy
sources.
(b) A proposal for the expenditure of not less
than 10 percent of the total expenditures related to energy efficiency and
conservation programs on energy efficiency measures for customers of the
electric utility in low-income households and residential customers and public
schools in historically underserved communities, through both targeted programs
and programs directed at residential customers and public schools in general.
(c) A comparison of a diverse set of scenarios of
the best combination of sources of supply to meet the demands or the best
methods to reduce the demands, which must include:
(1) At least one scenario of low carbon
dioxide emissions that:
(I) Uses sources of supply that
result in, by 2050, an amount of energy production from zero carbon dioxide
emission resources that equals the forecasted demand for electricity by
customers of the utility;
(II) Includes the deployment of
distributed generation; and
(III) If the plan is submitted on or
before June 1, 2027, uses sources of supply that result in, by the year 2030,
an 80 percent reduction in carbon dioxide emissions from the generation of
electricity to meet the demands of customers of the utility as compared to the
amount of such emissions in the year 2005.
(2) At least one scenario that provides
for the construction or acquisition of energy resources through contract or
ownership to be placed into service to close an open position utilizing
dedicated energy resources in this State and dedicated energy resources
delivered through firm transmission. A significant share of the renewable
energy facilities and energy storage systems included in the scenario must be
owned by the utility.
A
requirement to include a particular scenario in the plan pursuant to this
paragraph, or the compliance of a utility with such a requirement, shall not be
construed as indicating a preference by the Commission or the utility for a
particular scenario.
(d) An analysis of the effects of the
requirements of NRS 704.766 to 704.776 , inclusive, on the reliability of
the distribution system of the utility or utilities and the costs to the
utility or utilities to provide electric service to all customers. The analysis
must include an evaluation of the costs and benefits of addressing issues of
reliability through investment in the distribution system.
(e) A list of the utilitys or utilities assets
described in NRS 704.7338 .
(f) A surplus asset retirement plan as required
by NRS 704.734 .
4. For each scenario considered pursuant
to subsection 3, the plan must include, without limitation:
(a) For each energy resource proposed:
(1) A description of each energy resource
to be constructed, acquired or contracted for by the utility, including,
without limitation, the location of the energy resource, the technology to be
used by the energy resource to generate electricity, the anticipated capacity
of the energy resource and the anticipated date by which the energy resource will
be placed into service;
(2) The cost of constructing or acquiring,
operating and maintaining the energy resource or, if the energy resource is
contracted for by the utility, the price of the energy to be supplied by the
energy resource;
(3) Whether the energy resource will be
owned by the utility or utilized by the utility pursuant to a contract with a
third party; and
(4) Any other information required by the
Commission to evaluate the prudence of the scenario.
(b) An evaluation of the impact that the
implementation of the scenario will have on:
(1) The ability of the utility to decrease
its reliance on market purchases to meet the utilitys open energy load
requirements, including, without limitation, any appropriate reserves, and the
forecast of energy needs over the next 10 years;
(2) The ability of the utility to reliably
integrate into its supply portfolio larger amounts of electricity from variable
energy resources, including, without limitation, solar, geothermal, hydropower
and wind energy resources;
(3) The ability of the utility to access
energy markets or geographic locations that have excess capacity to import into
this State through firm transmission to ensure additional reliability in times
of increased energy needs;
(4) The ability of the utility to increase
access to carbon-free energy, support compliance with the renewable portfolio
standard and advance the goals for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions
set forth in NRS 445B.380 and 704.7820 through a balanced portfolio of
energy supply and demand-side resources;
(5) The ability of the utility to
demonstrate to a regional entity that the utility has adequate resources to
meet the forecast for energy needs over the next 10 years;
(6) The ability of the utility to advance
cost-effective demand-side management;
(7) The rates charged to the customers of
the utility, provided that, in implementing the plan, the utility must endeavor
to mitigate costs for the benefit of customers to the extent possible by
utilizing federal funding and tax credits available to utilities or third
parties for the development of electric resources; and
(8) The benefits from high-quality jobs,
job training and apprenticeships provided by the projects included in the plan,
whether constructed or operated by the utility or a third-party developer.
5. The Commission shall require the
utility or utilities to include in the plan a distributed resources plan. The
distributed resources plan must:
(a) Evaluate the locational benefits and costs of
distributed resources. This evaluation must be based on reductions or increases
in local generation capacity needs, avoided or increased investments in
distribution infrastructure, safety benefits, reliability benefits and any
other savings the distributed resources provide to the electricity grid for
this State or costs to customers of the electric utility or utilities.
(b) Propose or identify standard tariffs,
contracts or other mechanisms for the deployment of cost-effective distributed
resources that satisfy the objectives for distribution planning.
(c) Propose cost-effective methods of effectively
coordinating existing programs approved by the Commission, incentives and
tariffs to maximize the locational benefits and minimize the incremental costs
of distributed resources.
(d) Identify any additional spending necessary to
integrate cost-effective distributed resources into distribution planning
consistent with the goal of yielding a net benefit to the customers of the
electric utility or utilities.
(e) Identify barriers to the deployment of
distributed resources, including, without limitation, safety standards related
to technology or operation of the distribution system in a manner that ensures
reliable service.
(f) Include a transportation electrification plan
as required by NRS 704.7867 .
6. The Commission shall require the
utility or utilities to include in the plan a proposal for annual limits on the
total amount of energy and capacity that eligible customers may be authorized
to purchase from providers of new electric resources through transactions
approved by the Commission pursuant to an application submitted pursuant to NRS 704B.310 on or after May 16, 2019. In
developing the proposal and the forecasts in the plan, the utility or utilities
must use a sensitivity analysis that, at a minimum, addresses load growth,
import capacity, system constraints and the effect of eligible customers
purchasing less energy and capacity than authorized by the proposed annual
limit. The proposal in the plan must include, without limitation:
(a) A forecast of the load growth of the utility
or utilities;
(b) The number of eligible customers that are
currently being served by or anticipated to be served by the utility or
utilities;
(c) Information concerning the infrastructure of
the utility or utilities that is available to accommodate market-based new
electric resources;
(d) Proposals to ensure the stability of rates
and the availability and reliability of electric service; and
(e) For each year of the plan, impact fees
applicable to each megawatt or each megawatt hour to account for costs
reflected in the base tariff general rate and base tariff energy rate paid by
end-use customers of the electric utility.
7. The annual limits proposed pursuant to
subsection 6 shall not apply to energy and capacity sales to an eligible
customer if the eligible customer:
(a) Was not an end-use customer of the electric
utility at any time before June 12, 2019; and
(b) Would have a peak load of 10 megawatts or
more in the service territory of an electric utility within 2 years of
initially taking electric service.
8. As used in this section:
(a) Distributed generation system has the
meaning ascribed to it in NRS 701.380 .
(b) Distributed resources means distributed
generation systems, energy efficiency, energy storage, electric vehicles and
demand-response technologies.
(c) Eligible customer has the meaning ascribed
to it in NRS 704B.080 .
(d) Energy has the meaning ascribed to it in NRS 704B.090 .
(e) Energy storage system has the meaning
ascribed to it in NRS 704.793 .
(f) Historically underserved community has the
meaning ascribed to it in NRS 704.78343 .
(g) Low-income household has the meaning
ascribed to it in NRS 704.78347 .
(h) New electric resource has the meaning
ascribed to it in NRS 704B.110 .
(i) Provider of new electric resources has the
meaning ascribed to it in NRS 704B.130 .
(j) Renewable energy zones means specific
geographic zones where renewable energy resources are sufficient to develop
generation capacity and where transmission constrains the delivery of
electricity from those resources to customers.
(k) Sensitivity analysis means a set of methods
or procedures which results in a determination or estimation of the sensitivity
of a result to a change in given data or a given assumption.

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