HF4874
Electric cooperatives and municipal utilities; recovery of fixed costs clarified with respect to net metered facilities, meter aggregation allowed for electric cooperatives and municipal utilities, commission authority clarified with respect to electric cooperative practices, member access to cooperative documents and meetings improved, and electronic voting and voting by mail required for cooperative board directors.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: SF5030
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
This bill aims to update rules for electric cooperatives, municipal utilities, and public utilities regarding net metering and net metered facilities. It clarifies how fixed costs can be recovered, how net metered generation is compensated, and how rates should be set. It also includes provisions to improve member access to cooperative documents and meetings, and to require electronic voting and voting by mail for cooperative board directors.
Main Provisions
Net metering cost recovery for small facilities
- For qualifying facilities under 40 kW, utilities may bill for net energy at the usual rate and may add a separate, reasonable fixed-cost recovery charge. The fixed-cost charge must be tied to the most recent cost-of-service study and cannot be charged by other means.
- The cost-of-service study must be publicly available upon request when these charges are added.
Net metering compensation for small facilities (cooperatives/municipal utilities)
- For qualifying facilities under 40 kW, compensation for net input into the utility system is set using rates described in later paragraphs.
Net metering compensation for small facilities (public utilities)
- For qualifying facilities under 1,000 kW, net energy is billed at the standard rate for the class.
- If net input is more than 40 kW but less than 1,000 kW, compensation is determined under specified paragraphs (c or d).
Rate-setting principles
- The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (or equivalent body) must consider fixed distribution costs that aren’t covered by the basic monthly charge and ensure charges to qualifying facilities are not discriminatory compared with other customers.
- Net input rates must be based on avoided costs per federal rules (CFR) and other relevant factors.
Optional compensation at average retail energy rate
- A qualifying facility under 40 kW may opt to be compensated at the average retail utility energy rate (excluding special rates). This provides an alternative to avoided-cost-based compensation.
Interconnection with nongenerating utilities
- If a non-generating utility has a sole-source contract with a municipal power agency or a generation and transmission utility, the nongenerating utility may treat its purchases of net input as if made on behalf of its supplier and must be reimbursed by that supplier for any extra costs.
Credit carry-forward for small net metered facilities
- Facilities under 40 kW interconnected to a cooperative/municipal utility may have net input credited as kilowatt-hour credits on the customer’s bill, carried forward to future bills. Credits expire at the end of the calendar year, with no additional compensation thereafter.
Option to be governed by different provisions
- Qualifying facilities under certain capacity thresholds interconnected to public utilities (≤1,000 kW) or cooperatives/municipal utilities (≤40 kW) may elect to be governed by a different subdivision (subdivision 4).
Significant Changes to Existing Law
-Creates a formal framework for recovering fixed costs tied to net metered facilities, with requirements that cost-of-service studies be used and publicly available. - Introduces rate-setting protections to avoid discriminatory treatment of net metered customers relative to other customers. - Adds an explicit option for small net metered facilities to receive compensation based on the average retail energy rate, rather than avoided costs. - Requires improvements in transparency and governance for cooperatives, including document access and electronic/vote-by-mail requirements for board elections. - Clarifies how interconnections with other utilities affect payment responsibilities and cost recovery.
Effects on Stakeholders
- For customers with small net-metered facilities, options and potential changes include: fixed-cost charges, compensation based on avoided costs or average retail rate, and the possibility of kilowatt-hour credit carry-forward with yearly expiration.
- For electric cooperatives and municipal utilities, the bill clarifies how fixed costs can be recovered and how net metering should be priced, while adding governance and transparency requirements.
- For regulators, the bill reinforces rate-setting criteria (avoided costs, non-discrimination) and expands oversight through required cost-of-service studies.
Implementation Considerations
- Utilities will need to revise rate schedules to reflect fixed-cost recovery options and the new compensation methods.
- Public availability of cost-of-service studies may increase transparency and public scrutiny.
- Municipalities and cooperatives must adopt electronic voting and mail-in voting processes for board elections, and improve access to cooperative documents.
Relevant Terms - net metered facility - qualifying facility - fixed costs - cost-of-service study - avoided costs - per kilowatt-hour rate - average retail utility energy rate - net input - kilowatt-hour (kWh) credits - calendar year expiration - cooperative electric association - municipal utility - public utility - meter aggregation - electronic voting - voting by mail - interconnection - nongenerating utility - sole-source contract - transmission and generation utility - non-discriminatory charges
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 09, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Energy Finance and Policy | |
| Showing the 5 most recent stages. This bill has 1 stages in total. Log in to view all stages | |||||
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Progress through the legislative process
Sponsors
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