26100.63100.
(a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a)
(1) The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with
Section 38500) of the Health and Safety Code) requires the reduction of statewide greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020.
(b)
(2) As a result of the act and complimentary policies, California has established itself as a leader in the development of clean technologies, helping to drive innovation and deployment of a variety of greenhouse gas emissions reducing technologies.
(c)
(3) However, there exist barriers to the widespread adoption and commercial scale deployment of these technologies and, as a result, cleaner, lower-carbon, cheaper, and more reliable energy remains unavailable to many California consumers and businesses.
(d)
(4) Among the most critical barriers is the availability of financing options for consumers and businesses, and the lack of familiarity and perceived risk for investors due to limited data, and, often, small and expensive financial transactions.
(e)
(5) To achieve the state’s climate goals, the state should better optimize our limited public dollars to attract more private investment, so that each dollar of public funds provides multiple dollars of private capital.
(f)
(6) A statewide financing entity focused on fostering private investments in low-carbon projects can provide significant leveraging of private dollars to make public funds go further.
(g)
(7) A statewide financing entity in California could accelerate the transition to a low-carbon economy, achieve the state’s climate goals, and improve access for all Californians to cleaner energy. A financing entity could help achieve all of the following goals:
(1)
(A) Evaluate, coordinate, and increase private investment in greenhouse gas emissions reduction projects that are not currently able to obtain financing in the capital markets at a
reasonable cost and with a reasonable rate of return to project developers at scale and with significant private sector participation.
(2)
(B) Lower rates and decrease costs for utility ratepayers within the state, expand the accessibility and affordability of clean energy for end users, ensure the reliability and safety of the state’s energy and water supplies, increase the climate resilience of the state’s infrastructure, increase the use of clean energy, promote energy efficiency, and advance the state’s energy- and infrastructure-related economy.
(3)
(C) Foster increasingly efficient, low-cost capital financing at scale and with maximum private sector participation for eligible projects through the creation, where appropriate, of financial performance data, standardized contracts, underwriting standards, and measurement and verification protocols.
(4)
(D) Coordinate with, and enhance, existing clean energy financing programs to fill financing gaps not currently filled by existing programs or
markets and further enhance the scale and scope of existing programs or markets to enabling financing at scale and with maximum private sector participation.
(5)
(E) Implement a variety of financing tools, including, but not limited to, loans, loan guarantees, securitization, warehousing, and other forms of financing support and risk management, to support greenhouse gas emissions reduction projects necessary to advance the state’s policy objectives, including the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions within the state.
(b) Moneys appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes of this chapter from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund shall be expended consistent with the appropriation processes and criteria established by the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund Investment Plan and Communities Revitalization Act (Chapter 4.1 (commencing with Section 39710) of Part 2 of Division 26 of the Health and Safety Code) to ensure investments made pursuant to this chapter benefit disadvantaged communities identified pursuant to Section 39711 of the Health and Safety Code.
26101.63101.
For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms mean the following:(a) “Account” means the California Climate Solutions Accelerator Account established pursuant to Section 63130.
(a)
(b) “Clean agriculture project” means a project, product, service, function, or measure, or an aggregation of projects, products, services, functions, or measures, having the primary purpose of deploying a product or service that avoids or reduces emissions of greenhouse gases directly or indirectly caused by the production or processing of crops or livestock.
(b)
(c) “Clean energy infrastructure project” means the construction, alteration, or repair of types of infrastructure necessary for the deployment of technologies, products, or services, that will avoid or reduce
emissions of greenhouse gases, including, but not limited to, the following:
(1) Electric transmission and distribution facilities interconnected to renewable energy projects or system efficiency projects.
(2) Hydrogen transportation and distribution systems.
(3) Car sharing, ridesharing, and bicycle sharing facilities.
(4) Improvements to infrastructure used for the transportation of passengers, goods, or freight.
(c)
(d) “Demand response project” means a project, product, service, function, or measure, or an aggregation of projects, products, services, functions, or measures, that results in reductions in greenhouse gas emissions by reducing electric usage by end-use customers in the state from their normal consumption pattern in response to any of the following:
(1) Changes in the price of electricity over time.
(2) Incentive payments designed to induce lower electricity use at times of high market prices or when system reliability is jeopardized.
(d)
(e) “Energy efficiency project” means a project, product, service, function, or measure, or an aggregation of projects, products, services, functions, or measures, that results in the reduction of energy usage required to achieve the same level of service or output prior to the application of the project, product, service, function, or measure, and reduces emissions of greenhouse gas relative to emissions that would have occurred prior to the application of the project, product, service, function, or measure, including, but not limited to, either of the following:
(1) Water capture, conveyance, distribution, use, reuse, and recycling.
(2) Wastewater collection, treatment, and disposal.
(e)“Fund” means the California Climate Technology and Infrastructure Finance Fund established pursuant to Section 26130.
(f) “Greenhouse gas emissions reduction project” means a project, product, service, function, or measure, or an aggregation of projects, products, services, functions, or measures, that avoids or reduces emissions of greenhouse gases, including, but not limited to, any of the following:
(1) Energy efficiency projects.
(2) Clean energy infrastructure projects.
(3) Innovation energy technology projects.
(4) Renewable and small scale distributed energy projects.
(5) System efficiency projects.
(6) Clean agriculture projects.
(7) Low-carbon transportation projects.
(8) Demand response projects.
(9) Land-based greenhouse gas sequestration projects.
(10) A combination of the projects specified in paragraphs (1) to (9), inclusive.
(g) “Innovation energy technology project” means a project having either of the following primary purposes:
(1) Deployment of a technology, infrastructure, practice, product, or service that avoids or
reduces emissions of greenhouse gases and that employs new or significantly improved technologies or practices, as compared to technologies or practices that are in general use in the commercial marketplace in the United States at the time the project is approved by the authority bank pursuant to this chapter.
(2) Manufacturing of a commercially ready energy technology or product that avoids or reduces emissions of air pollutants and
greenhouse gases and that incorporates an innovative manufacturing process or processes not in general use in the commercial marketplace in the United States at the time the project is approved by the authority bank pursuant to this chapter.
(h) “Land-based greenhouse gas sequestration project” means a project, product, service, function, or measure, or an aggregation of projects, products, services, functions, or measures, having a primary purpose of developing, constructing, or deploying a project in forests, grasslands, wetlands, or other habitat types in California for which a carbon credit or offset protocol has been adopted by the state board.
reducing greenhouse gas emissions, including carbon sequestration in forests, urban forests, grasslands, wetlands, or other habitat types in California.
(i) “Low-carbon transportation project” means a project, product, service, function, or measure, or an aggregation of projects, products, services, functions, or measures, that results in reductions in greenhouse gas emissions from the transportation of people, goods, freight, or off-road equipment.
(j)“Program” means the California Climate Technology and Infrastructure Financing Program developed pursuant to Section 26110.
(k)
(j) “Renewable energy project” means the development, construction, deployment,
or alteration of an eligible renewable energy resource, as defined in Section 399.12 of the Public Utilities Code, that avoids or reduces greenhouse gas emissions.
(l)
(k) “State board” means the State Air Resources Board.
(m)
(l) “System efficiency project” means the
development, construction, deployment, alteration, or repair of a distributed generation, energy storage, smart grid, advanced battery, microgrid, fuel cell, water pumping, or combined heat and power, technology or system that results in the reductions of greenhouse gas emissions.