HF3777
Commission required to promote affordable service and consider customers' ability to pay rates.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: SF3992
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
This bill aims to make energy rates more affordable for Minnesota households while ensuring utilities remain financially sustainable. It requires the state public utilities commission to consider customers’ ability to pay, promote energy conservation and renewable energy, and align rate-setting with specified energy goals. It also updates how the commission determines whether rates are just and reasonable.
Main Provisions
- Redefines “Reasonable rate” to require rates that are just and reasonable, not unreasonably preferential, prejudicial, or discriminatory, and that are sufficient, equitable, and consistently applied to a class of consumers.
- Mandates that ratemaking promote affordable service for all Minnesotans and encourage energy conservation and renewable energy use, helping to advance related energy policy goals.
- Requires that any doubt about rate reasonableness be resolved in favor of the consumer.
- Allows utilities to treat two or more municipalities served by them as a single class for rate purposes if populations and service conditions are similar or comparable.
- Adds a new framework for how the commission analyzes and sets rates:
- The commission must consider the public need for adequate, efficient, and reasonable service and the utility’s need for revenue to cover costs, including depreciation.
- The commission must specifically consider customers’ ability to pay when evaluating the return on investment.
- The rate base calculation must reflect:
- Original cost of utility property included in the base.
- Prudent acquisition costs.
- Depreciation allowances.
- Construction work in progress (CWIP) and other capital-related items.
- Offsets from capital provided by sources other than investors.
- Other capital-related expenses.
- The commission should not allow an allowance based on the estimated current replacement value of the property.
- Provides that if a generating facility is ordered to terminate earlier than its physical life to comply with a state or federal energy statute or policy, the commission may allow recovery of the facility’s positive net book value.
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- Places heightened emphasis on customer affordability and ability to pay in rate decisions.
- Explicitly ties rate-setting to energy conservation and renewable energy goals.
- Introduces a consumer-favorable default when assessing rate reasonableness (doubt resolved for consumers).
- Clarifies rate-classing options by allowing municipalities to be treated as a single class when appropriate.
- Tightens how rate base is determined by prioritizing original cost, prudent acquisition costs, CWIP, and depreciation, while excluding current replacement value and certain non-investor capital offsets.
Potential Impacts
- Consumers: Potential for more affordable and predictable rates due to emphasis on affordability and ability to pay; clearer consideration of how rates affect households.
- Utilities: Must provide detailed justification for costs, including consideration of depreciation, CWIP, and other capital factors; may influence how rate bases are calculated and how early discontinuation of facilities is treated financially.
- Energy policy: Strengthens linkage between rate design and broader goals for energy conservation and renewable energy use.
Implementation Considerations
- The commission will need to apply these criteria when reviewing rate cases, balancing consumer protections with utility financial health.
- Utilities may need to adjust financial planning and reporting to demonstrate ability to pay, depreciation, CWIP, and other capital considerations.
Relevant Terms - reasonable rate - just and reasonable - affordable service - energy conservation - renewable energy - public utility - two or more public utilities jointly - class for ratemaking - discrimination (unreasonably preferential/prejudicial) - consumer protection - public need for adequate efficient and reasonable service - revenue sufficient to meet costs - depreciation - rate base - original cost - prudent acquisition cost - construction work in progress (CWIP) - offsets from non-investor capital - current replacement value (excluded) - net book value - positive net book value - state energy statute - state or federal energy policy - Minnesota Statutes 216B.03 and 216B.16 subdivision 6 - commission (Public Utilities Commission)
Past committee meetings
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Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| February 26, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Energy Finance and Policy | |
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Meeting documents
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Citations
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Progress through the legislative process
Sponsors
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