Oregon Bulletin
January 1, 2011
Rule
Caption: Modification of the Business
Energy Tax Credit to implement caps and revise processing criteria.
Adm.
Order No.: DOE 14-2010
Filed with Sec. of
State: 11-23-2010
Certified to be
Effective: 11-23-10
Notice Publication
Date: 8-1-2010
Rules Adopted: 330-090-0350, 330-090-0450
Rules Amended: 330-090-0105, 330-090-0110, 330-090-0120,
330-090-0130, 330-090-0133, 330-090-0140, 330-090-0150
Rules Repealed: 330-090-0105(T), 330-090-0110(T), 330-090-0120(T),
330-090-0130(T), 330-090-0133(T), 330-090-0140(T), 330-090-0150(T),
330-090-0350(T), 330-090-0450(T)
Subject: These rules implement the provisions of HB 3680 (2010)
which went into effect on May 27, 2010. These rules:
(1) Implement the monetary cap for
renewable energy facility pre-certifications established in HB 3680.
(2) Create a system to prioritize
renewable energy projects based on criteria and factors to consider.
(3) Define renewable energy storage
device.
(4) Update eligible cost for wind
powered devices above 10MW and electric vehicle manufacturing.
(5) Create deadlines for applications
prior to program sunsets revised in HB 3680.
(6) Amend standards used when
considering what constitutes a single facility, including phasing, expansions
or additions to renewable energy manufacturing facilities.
(7) Clarify when final certifications
may be issued for efficient truck technology.
(8) Add clarity to existing policies
for applicants.
(9) Update calculations used for
determining discounted value of tax credits transferred under ORS 469.206.
Rules Coordinator: Kathy Stuttaford—(503) 373-2127
330-090-0105
What a BETC Is
(1) A Business Energy Tax Credit (BETC) for up to 35
percent of the eligible cost of qualifying facilities may be offset against
owed Oregon income and corporation excise taxes. Qualifying renewable energy
resource equipment manufacturing facilities and renewable energy resource
facilities including high efficiency combined heat and power facilities,
completed on or after January 1, 2007 but excluding wind facilities with an
installed capacity of more than 10 megawatts for which preliminary
certification is issued on or after January 1, 2010 are eligible for a tax
credit equal to 50 percent of eligible costs. Wind facilities with an installed
capacity of more than 10 megawatts, for which preliminary certification is
issued on or after January 1, 2010, are eligible for a tax credit equal to 5
percent of eligible costs. Qualifying homebuilder installed renewable energy
facilities are eligible for a tax credit of up to $9,000 and qualifying high
performance homes are eligible for a tax credit of up to $12,000. An Oregon
business or non-profit entity qualifying for the tax credit may transfer the
credit through the Pass-through Option in return for a cash payment.
(2) The Oregon Department of Energy (Department) must
issue a final certificate pursuant to ORS 469.215 before the credit can be
claimed. The credit is an incentive for Oregonians to invest in qualifying
facilities. Oregon Administrative Rules Chapter 330, Division 90 applies to all
BETC applications. These rules apply to all applications pending as of the
effective date of these rules and preliminary and final applications received
on or after July 1, 2009.
(3) The Department may also apply these rules to
applications currently being reviewed by the Department where a final
determination is pending or has been made, when the Department finds that its
failure to apply the new criteria set forth in these rules may hamper the
Department’s efforts to reduce the costs of the BETC program.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 469.040 &
469.165
Stats. Implemented: ORS 469.185 -
469.225
Hist.: DOE 7-1985, f. 12-31-85,
ef. 1-1-86; DOE 3-1989, f. 12-28-89, cert. ef. 1-1-90; DOE 2-1993, f. &
cert. ef. 1-28-93; DOE 5-1993, f. & cert. ef. 12-14-93; DOE 2-1995, f.
12-12-95, cert. ef. 12-15-95; DOE 3-1996, f. & cert. ef. 11-27-96; DOE
2-1997, f. 12-15-97, cert. ef. 1-1-98; DOE 2-1999, f. 12-22-99, cert. ef.
1-1-00; DOE 1-2001, f. 10-5-01, cert. ef. 10-8-01; DOE 2-2004, f. & cert.
ef. 1-21-04; DOE 3-2004, f. & cert. ef. 7-1-04; DOE 1-2005, f. 12-30-05,
cert. ef. 1-1-06; DOE 2-2006, f. 9-29-06, cert. ef. 10-1-06; DOE 3-2007, f.
11-30-07, cert. ef. 12-1-07; DOE 3-2008, f. & cert. ef. 3-21-08; DOE
4-2008, f. 6-19-08, cert. ef. 6-20-08; DOE 2-2009(Temp), f. & cert. ef.
11-3-09 thru 5-1-10; DOE 3-2010, f. & cert. ef. 4-30-10; DOE 4-2010(Temp),
f. 5-21-10, cert. ef. 5-27-10 thru 11-2-10; Administrative correction 11-23-10;
DOE 14-2010, f. & cert. ef. 11-23-10
330-090-0110
Definitions
For the purposes of Oregon Administrative Rules,
Chapter 330, Division 90, the following definitions apply unless the context
requires otherwise:
(1) “Alternative Fuel”: A motor vehicle fuel, other
than petroleum gasoline or diesel, certified by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency for roadway use that results in equivalent or lower exhaust
emissions or higher energy efficiency when used. Alternative fuels include
electricity, biofuels, hydrogen, hythane, methane, methanol, natural gas,
liquefied natural gas, liquefied petroleum gas (propane), renewable diesel and
other fuels the Director allows. Blends of these alternative fuels with
conventional fuels will only be considered an alternative fuel under these
rules when the concentration of the alternative fuel is 20 percent of the
entire volume of the blended fuel or greater. Hydrated fuels must have a water
content of 10 percent of the entire volume of the blended fuel or greater to be
considered eligible as an alternative fuel under these rules.
(2) “Alternative Fuel Fueling Station”: A renewable
energy resource facility necessary to refuel alternative fuel vehicle fleets.
This will include the facilities for mixing, storing, compressing, charging,
and dispensing alternative fuels, and any other necessary and reasonable
equipment. It can be a facility for either public or private use.
(3) “Alternative Fuel Vehicle (AFV)” is a vehicle
designed to operate on an alternative fuel and includes vehicles direct from
the factory or vehicles modified to allow the use of alternative fuels. AFV
does not include vehicles owned or leased by the State of Oregon acquired to
comply with federal requirements for fleet acquisition of alternative fueled
vehicles or vehicles leased by an investor-owned utility (IOU) to others. For
purposes of qualifying for a BETC, gasoline-hybrid AFVs purchased on or after
January 1, 2010 must also be designed for electrical plug-in.
(4) “Applicant”: An applicant means:
(a) A person who applies for a preliminary
certification of a BETC under this section includes:
(A) Individuals, corporations, associations, firms,
partnerships, limited liability companies and joint stock companies.
(B) Any cooperative, non-profit corporation, or
federal, state or local governments including school districts, water
districts, or any other special districts. These entities are qualified
applicants when they have a qualified pass-through partner, or commit to select
such a partner prior to final certification. These entities must follow all
procurement processes, including competitive bid, where applicable.
(C) A contractor installing an alternative fueled
vehicle fueling station in a dwelling.
(b) A person who applies for a final certification of a
BETC under this section must be the facility owner listed on the preliminary
certification.
(c) The tax credit certificate will be issued to a
facility owner or a qualified pass-through partner, but the tax credit may only
be claimed pursuant to ORS 315.354.
(d) An applicant for preliminary certification or final
certification or a tax credit recipient may not include any business or
non-profit corporation or cooperative that restricts membership, sales or
service on the basis of race, color, creed, religion, national origin, sexual
preference or gender.
(5) “Biofuels”: A motor vehicle or thermal combustion
fuel other than petroleum gasoline or diesel which includes ethanol or is an ethanol
blend at concentrations of 11 percent of the entire volume of the blended fuel
or greater or biodiesel or is a biodiesel blend at concentrations of 20 percent
of the entire volume of the blended fuel or greater, including:
(a) Biodiesel which is a fuel comprised of mono-alkyl
esters of long chain fatty acids derived from vegetable oils or animal fats,
designated B100, and meeting the requirements of American Standards and Testing
Measurement (ASTM) D 6751 in effect on December 1, 2007 and is registered with
the US EPA as a fuel and a fuel additive under Section 211(b) of the Clean Air
Act,
(b) Biodiesel Blends is biodiesel fuel meeting the
requirements of ASTM D 6751 in effect on December 1, 2007, blended with
petroleum-based diesel fuel, designated BXX, where XX represents the volume
percentage of biodiesel fuel in the blend,
(c) Ethanol (CH3CH2OH) is an alcohol fuel also known as
ethyl alcohol, grain alcohol, and EtOH made from starch crops or from
cellulosic biomass materials, such as grass, wood, crop residues, or used
cellulose materials where component sugars are fermented into ethanol meeting
the requirements of ASTM designation D 4806-01a; “Standard Specification for
Denatured Fuel Ethanol for Blending with Gasolines for Use as Automotive
Spark-Ignition Engine Fuel” in effect on December 1, 2007,
(d) Ethanol Blends which is ethanol fuel meeting the
requirements of ASTM D 4806, “Standard Specification for Denatured Fuel Ethanol
for Blending with Gasolines for Use as Automotive Spark-Ignition Engine Fuel”
in effect on December 1, 2007, blended with petroleum-based gasoline fuel,
designated EXX, where XX represents the volume percentage of ethanol fuel in
the blend, and
(e) “E85,” a motor vehicle fuel that is a blend of
agriculturally derived denatured ethanol and gasoline or natural gasoline that
typically contains 85 percent ethanol by volume, but at a minimum must contain
75 percent ethanol by volume. For the purposes of this chapter, the energy
content of E85 is considered to be eighty-two thousand BTUs per gallon. E85
produced for use as a motor fuel shall comply with ASTM specification D 5798-99
in effect on December 1, 2007.
(6) “Biomass”: An organic matter such as agricultural
crops and residue, wood and wood waste, animal waste, aquatic plants and
organic components of municipal and industrial wastes comprised of uncontaminated
carbohydrates and other cellulosic material, and organic by products from wood
pulping and other biologically derived materials including organic fibers that
are available on a renewable or naturally recurring basis. This definition
excludes cordwood or wood used for burning in fireplaces.
(7) “Building Automation Controls Facility”: Energy
facilities that control energy consuming equipment in a building are eligible
when energy saving features exceed standard practice and applicable building
code requirements. Eligible cost does not include costs associated with
operations, maintenance, or repair as defined in these rules. Facilities are
eligible when energy saving features meet the following requirements and
applicable code:
(a) For existing systems within their service life, the
following standards apply:
(A) The baseline will be based on the existing system’s
capabilities in fully functional and operating condition.
(B) Eligible costs will be based on the incremental
cost and energy savings of the proposed system as compared to a fully
functioning baseline system (savings and costs associated with maintenance and
repair activities are not eligible).
(b) For systems beyond service life or new buildings,
the following standards apply:
(A) Eligible costs and energy savings will be based on
the incremental cost and energy savings between the proposed system and the
baseline system.
(B) Only the components of the project that achieve
energy savings will be considered eligible. If the component does not achieve
energy savings it will not be considered an eligible cost.
(C) The baseline system must incorporate similar
technologies to the proposed system. The minimum standard or baseline system
will have the following features, plus any additional features required by
code: a start/stop program, night setback program, enthalpy control program
(economizer), lighting control program (sweep > 5,000 sq.ft.) and a variable
flow (10 hp and above).
(8) “Building Code”: Applicable state and local codes
as defined in ORS 455.010 that are in effect the date the Department receives
the application for preliminary certification.
(9) “Building Envelope”: That element of a building
which encloses conditioned spaces through which thermal energy may be
transmitted to or from the exterior or to or from unconditioned spaces.
(10) “Car Sharing Facility”: A facility in which
drivers pay to become members in order to have joint access to a fleet of cars
from a common parking area on an hourly basis. It does not include operations
conducted by a car rental agency.
(11) “Combined Heat and Power (Cogeneration)”: Means a
facility designed to generate electrical power and thermal energy from a single
fuel source with a fuel-chargeable-to-heat rate calculation demonstrating a
heat rate of 6,120 Btu/kWh or less (10 percent better than the 6,800 Btu/kWh
current standard generation). This facility may be eligible for a 35 percent
BETC. Facilities that do not meet this heat rate requirement may still qualify
in part for a credit relating to the heat recovery portion of the project. The
equation for the fuel chargeable to power heat rate calculation is FCP = (FI -
FD)/ P, where:
(a) FCP = Fuel chargeable to power heat rate.
(b) FI = Annual fuel input applicable to the
co-generation process in Btu (higher heating value).
(c) FD = Annual fuel displaced in any industrial or
commercial process, heating, or cooling application by supplying useful thermal
energy from a co-generation facility.
(d) P = Annual net electric output of the co-generation
facility in kilowatt-hours.
(12) “Commercial New Construction Facility”: An energy
facility which includes a new structure or one of the following:
(a) An addition to an existing structure, which
provides additional square footage;
(b) An alteration to an existing structure, which
changes the functional use of the entire structure;
(c) An alteration to an existing structure occurring
within six months of a change in the facility’s ownership; or
(d) A major renovation to 50 percent or more of the
square footage of an existing structure in which three or more building systems
are changed. Systems include but are not limited to: envelope, space
conditioning, lighting, water heating and process.
(13) “Commercial Process”: An energy facility that is
an energy-using system (e.g., lighting, HVAC, or water heating). Such a system
can be studied and judged on its own.
(14) “Commuter Parking Space” means a facility that is
a parking space that is:
(a) Located in an area where parking spaces are
regularly available for lease by the day or month to the public.
(b) Leased by the employer for an employee’s use:
(A) Separate from the lease for the business premises.
(B) As an integral part of the lease for the business
premises if the employer has the right to sublease the parking space to a
commuter.
(c) Owned by the employer.
(d) Not located in a lot used primarily for business
customers.
(e) Not provided to an employee for parking a vehicle
the employee regularly uses to perform the employee’s job duties.
(15) “Completed Application”: Contains all of the
information required in these rules and payments under OAR 330-090-0150. All
questions on the application must be answered. A completed application for
final certification must also include a completed, signed pass-through
partner(s) agreement form, where the facility owner chooses to transfer the tax
credit. Except as provided in OAR 330-090-0133, no application for a final
certification in which the facility owner has indicated a choice to transfer
the tax credit under ORS 469.206 is considered complete until the Department
receives both the completed final certification application form from the
facility owner and the completed pass-through partner agreement form for the
tax credit, or portion of the tax credit, being transferred to the pass-through
partner.
(16) “Completed Facility”: A facility for which all
costs have been paid or committed by a binding contract or agreement and that
is installed and operating or, in the case of a Research, Development and
Demonstration facility, which the Director determines the applicant has made
all reasonable efforts to operate, including making changes required by the
Department.
(17) “Component Parts of Electric Vehicles”: means
component parts for use solely in Electric Vehicles and not in conventional
vehicles. Component parts shall be distinguished by their absence from
conventional vehicles and shall not include components that can be used
interchangeably in both electric and conventional vehicles. For the purpose of
this definition, “conventional vehicle” is a production vehicle that is powered
with an internal combustion engine, excluding hybrids.
(18) “Cooperative Agreement Organization”: The
Department may enter into cooperative agreements with qualified public purpose,
governmental, or other organizations to assist in the development and
qualification of BETC applications, with the scope of the agreement defined by the
Department based on the qualifications of the organization and subject to
conditions specified in the agreement.
(19) “Cost”: The actual capital costs and expenses
needed to acquire, erect, design, build, modify, or install a facility that is
eligible to receive a BETC. Costs that are incurred to bring a facility up to
building code standards or otherwise repair the building in order to install
the facility are considered necessary features, and may not be eligible. Costs
financed with federal funds, subject to specific restrictions, terms and
conditions, other than costs financed by grants excluded by ORS 315.356(1), may
be eligible expenses, including but not limited to costs incurred by federal
agencies directly for capital, operating, or other expenses.
(a) Cost can include payments for:
(A) Fees
to finance, design or engineer the facility, including but not limited to debt
fees and equity fees;
(B) Title
searches, escrow fees, government fees, excluding fees required by OAR
330-090-0150, and shipping;
(C) All
materials and supplies needed for the erection, construction, installation or
acquisition of the proposed facility; and
(D) Work
performed by employees or independent contractors of the applicant based on the
following conditions:
(i) Employees
or contractors must be certified, accredited, licensed, or otherwise qualified
to do the work;
(ii) The
work must be associated with the erection, construction, installation or
acquisition of the proposed facility or in the case of a research development
and demonstration facility, the work shall be directly related to the research,
development, demonstration, facility design, monitoring, assessment, evaluation
and reporting related to the product or technology;
(iii) Project management and other similar costs may
only account for up to 15 percent of the total eligible costs; and
(iv) Costs for employee’s or contractor’s work on the
energy facility must be detailed and documented as to specific tasks, hours
worked, and compensation costs. Donated, in-kind or volunteer labor is not
eligible.
(E) Costs for legal counsel that is directly related to
the development of a qualifying facility (non-litigation related) or directly
linked to the research, development or demonstration facility (excluding
patents, copyrights, etc.); and
(F) Facilities or equipment required for vehicles to
provide transportation services to serve riders (such as a wheelchair lift
system) under the American with Disabilities Act.
(b) Cost may not include:
(A) Interest and warranty charges;
(B) Litigation or other operational-related legal fees
and court costs;
(C) Patent searches, application and filing payments;
(D) Costs to maintain, operate, or repair a facility;
(E) Administrative costs to apply for grants, loans,
tax credits or other similar funding for a facility including, but not limited
to, the BETC review charge, costs associated with the creation and development
of the CPA verification letter and costs associated with securing a
pass-through partner for the facility;
(F) Routine operational or maintenance costs associated
with the facility, other than a transportation services facility, including
services, supplies and labor;
(G) Expenses related to training, education or other
related expenses;
(H) Expenses that are directly or indirectly offset
with federal grants or fee waivers. Final certified costs will be reduced
dollar for dollar by any federal grant amount received in connection with the
facility; or
(I) Other costs the Director excludes.
(c) If a facility is built under a lease, lease-option
or lease-purchase contract, the lessee’s cost to acquire the facility is the
value paid for the facility. If that amount is not known, the cost is the sum
of:
(A) Tax credits passed through by the lessor to the
lessee;
(B) The amount paid when the facility is transferred;
and
(C) The lease payments not including taxes, insurance,
interest, and operating costs.
(D) Payments to be made in the future must be
discounted to present value.
(d) If a facility serves more than one purpose, cost
includes only items needed to save energy and/or use renewable energy
resources. This includes new or replacement equipment that costs more because
of its energy saving features. The Department may do inspections to verify
eligible costs.
(e) Incremental cost is the cost above a reasonable
minimum expected to construct a similar facility without energy efficient
features. Cost may be limited to incremental cost for conservation applications
for new facilities or for the replacement of facilities beyond their service
life, including when a code, standard or other base system is required.
(A) In commercial new construction, it is the
difference between building to code, or standard practice if this exceeds code,
and building to meet or exceed the standards for substantial energy savings.
(B) In other facilities, it is the difference between
prevailing practices for that business or industry and a more energy efficient
method.
(f) Eligible facility costs are limited by the following:
(A) Facilities must have a more than one to 15-year
simple payback period unless otherwise specified in these rules. If the simple
payback period exceeds those limits, eligible costs will be prorated down to
the highest amount that would result in a qualifying payback; and
(B) Facilities must have a simple payback of more than
one year and less than the service life of the facility.
(C) Rental dwelling weatherization facilities are
limited to a 30-year simple payback.
(D) Solar photovoltaic (PV) facilities are limited by
the maximum eligible facility cost ratio (MEC), expressed in terms of $/watt.
PV facility eligible cost shall be calculated by multiplying the appropriate
rate provided below by the facility size. Once a facility has received preliminary
certification the calculated cost shall be effective for 36 months for
facilities to be owned by the public and 12 months for all other facilities,
from the date of certification. If the Department has not received a complete
application for final certification within this time, the cost shall be
recalculated based on the rate in effect at that time the final application is
submitted. The minimum module performance certified by the manufacturer shall
be used to calculate eligible cost. The MEC for a facility rated to produce:
(i) Up to and including 30 kW is $7.50/watt.
(ii) More than 30 kW, but less than 200 kW, is -0.01 X
(system size in kW) + 7.8.
(iii) 200 kW or more is $5.80/watt.
(E) Costs for a facility, or portion thereof, that has
previously received a BETC.
(F) Costs to replace the same baseline facility more
than once.
(i) The Department may require the baseline facility to
be specifically identified and/or permanently decommissioned.
(G) For solar thermal (ST) systems,
(i) The maximum eligible cost (MEC), not including pool
heating facilities, shall be calculated using the following formula: MEC = SOC
x Number of modules x Solar Thermal Rate. Standard Oregon Conditions (SOC) is
based on the OG-100 collector performance data published by the Solar Rating
and Certification Corporation (SRCC) on the date the preliminary application is
issued. SOC is calculated using a weighted average of the values in the “Mildly
Cloudy” (1500Btu/ft2-day) test data using the following equation:
SOC=0.1(Category A)+0.2(Category B)+ 0.3(Category C)+0.4(Category D).
(ii) The system size is defined as the SOC multiplied
by the number of collectors in the system. The following thermal rates are
divided into three tiers based on the system size:
(I) For a system size of less than 100KBtu/day, the
rate is $220/KBtu/day
(II) For a system size that is 100 KBtu/day or greater,
but less than 250 KBtu/day, the rate is $210/KBtu/day
(III) For a system size greater than 250 KBtu/day, the
rate is $200/KBtu/day.
(H) Sustainable building practices facilities,
recycling market development, high performance homes, homebuilder installed
renewable energy facilities and transportation facilities, excluding efficient
truck technology, are exempt from simple payback requirements.
(I) For renewable energy facility installations, the
following are ineligible costs: roofing, re-roofing and engineering for roofing
on renewable facilities.
(g) Costs for space conditioning or individual metering
of a facility(s) are limited to incremental costs, except when existing
equipment is within its Service Life when costs will be limited to the total
eligible facility costs. Incremental costs are limited to 40 percent of the
cost to install a replacement space or hot water heating system in rental
dwellings, except as defined in (i) below.
(h) Eligible costs for transportation facilities
include, but are not limited to, telework, commuter pool vehicles, bicycles,
Transportation Management Association fees, incentive programs, transit passes,
car sharing, vanpool, individualized behavior change program, Research,
Development and Demonstration (RD&D), purchasing or otherwise obtaining
alternative fuel vehicles that are designed to transport five or more
passengers, transportation services and transportation services for K-12
students. Except for RD&D facilities, bicycle purchases, and commuter pool
vehicles with special equipment, the maximum eligible cost for transportation
facilities is the result of the cost-per-vehicle mile calculated by a formula
adopted by the Oregon Department of Energy multiplied by the estimated vehicle
miles reduced (VMR) by the facility.
(i) Costs for premium efficient appliances as defined
in this rule are limited to incremental costs. The Department may determine the
incremental cost as a portion of the facility cost based on similar facilities
up to forty percent of the purchase cost.
(j) In implementing the utility pass-through in OAR
330-090-0140(2), utilities may set a minimum eligible cost to participate. The
following requirements apply:
(A) The utility must submit exact specifications of the
limit to and receive approval by the Department prior to implementation of the
limit.
(B) The utility must provide notification to the
customer that there is no minimum when applying directly to the Department,
however, payments required by OAR 330-090-0150(3) do apply.
(k) Sustainable building practices facilities are
exempt from the previous requirements of this definition, as the eligible cost
for these facilities is calculated using data established in Table 1.
[ED. NOTE: Table reference is available from the
agency.]
(L) The sum of any rebates or cash payments under ORS
469.631 to 469.645, 469.649 to 469.659, 469.673 to 469.683, or 757.612(5)(a),
or from a public purpose organization or federal grants or credits and the BETC
may not exceed certified costs.
(20) “Cost-per-Vehicle Mile”: The total cost of one
vehicle mile driven by a single occupant. The components of calculating the
total cost include, but are not limited to, vehicle operation cost, fuel cost,
travel time, congestion and pollution. The calculation formula for the total
costs is available on the Department’s website.
(21) “Director”: The Director of the Oregon Department
of Energy or designees.
(22) “Energy Department”: The Department of Energy.
(23) “Energy Facility”: is defined in ORS 469.185 (5).
(24) “Facility”: is defined in ORS 469.185 (6) and also
includes a Research, Development & Demonstration (RD&D) facility that
complies with these rules. A facility must be located within the geographical
confines of Oregon. The dollar value of the first year energy savings must be
less than the cost of such facility, except as allowed for a Research
Development & Demonstration facility, transportation or recycling market
development.
(a) An energy conservation measure (ECM), is a facility
if it results in substantial savings in the amount of purchased energy used at
a site by a business or other eligible entity. Energy conservation measures
include equipment installed for the purpose of reducing energy use.
(b) Costs for a facility needed to obtain substantial
energy savings for a new commercial, institutional, or industrial building.
Savings will be compared to energy used by a building, unit, or industrial
process that does not have the proposed conservation. But, such buildings must
comply with the Building Code and have the same use, size, space heat fuel, and
orientation as the applicant’s building, unit, or industrial process.
(c) A space conditioning system(s) is a facility if it
provides substantial energy savings and complies with the following BETC
program requirements:
(A) A report demonstrating any mercury-switch
thermostats that is replaced or have been recycled and, if so, how.
(B) Space conditioning systems installed in an existing
dwelling unit must not involve changing the fuel source. An incremental
upgrade, as defined in these rules, of a fuel switching facility will be
allowed if the upgrade complies with these rules.
(d) For
buildings to be owned, leased, or otherwise operated and maintained by the
state, including the State System of Higher Education, to qualify for the
credit it must comply with the requirements of the State Energy-Efficient
Design Program (SEED) as defined in OAR Chapter 330, Division 130 and
associated guidelines, in addition to meeting requirements of these rules.
(e) For a solar photovoltaic facility to be eligible to
receive a BETC, all qualifying installations must meet the following minimum
facility specifications:
(A) Facility must be permitted and in compliance with
all applicable building and electrical codes.
(B) All facility equipment must be rated for the
temperature and exposure conditions in which it will operate.
(C) All facility components must be new (modules, inverter,
batteries, mounting hardware).
(D) Array mounting must not reduce the expected life or
durability of the structure on which it is located.
(E) The facility must include all building code
required signage and a customer manual.
(F) A customer manual must contain the following
information:
(i) Facility documentation, including:
(I) As-built drawings that accurately describe the
components installed and the wiring design, including wire sizes, and estimated
length of wire runs.
(II) Facility site plan that indicates array and
inverter location.
(III) Sunchart used to determine facility total solar
resource fraction.
(IV) Operation and maintenance requirements including
the name and phone number of person(s) or company to call in the case of a
facility failure.
(ii) Warranties and installation documentation
(I) Minimum two-year contractor warranty for materials
and workmanship
(II) Manufacturer’s warranty for PV modules and
inverter
(III) Permit documentation
(iii) Manuals and data sheets
(I) Bill of material listing all primary facility
components including part numbers
(II) Inverter owner’s manual
(III) Manufacturer data sheets for major components,
including but not limited to: inverters, modules, racking/mounting facility,
charge controller and batteries.
(G) All facilities must include one or more meters that
are capable of recording the facility’s total energy production. Meters must be
equivalent to American National Standards Institute (ANSI) certified revenue
meters with a 0.5 or better accuracy class and, if digital, it must have
non-volatile data memory.
(H) Array must be sized to operate within the current,
voltage and power limits approved and warranted by the inverter manufacturer.
The temperature-adjusted voltage must remain within the inverter limits at the
historical record low temperature for the location in which it is installed.
(I) Wires must be sized to keep the total voltage drop
below 2 percent on the DC conductors from the array to the inverter including
the existing wire whips on the PV modules, and/or 2 percent on the AC
conductors from the inverter to the point of interconnection (total not to
exceed 4 percent).
(J) The installing contractor must provide a minimum
24-month full warranty on parts and labor to the facility owner.
(K) The solar array must be used exclusively for
business purposes. The applicant must supply a recent utility billing statement
and a power purchase or net metering agreement, with a local utility in the
name of the business. If the system is being placed on a rental dwelling, a
signed rental agreement must be provided and the property must remain a rental
property for at least five years. Arrays erected at a location that includes a
residence that is not a rental dwelling, must be separately metered from the
residence to qualify for a BETC.
(L) Facilities participating in the pilot Feed-In
Tariff program under ORS 757.365 are not eligible to receive a BETC.
(f) For a solar thermal facility to be eligible to
receive a BETC, all qualifying installations must meet the following minimum
facility specifications:
(A) The facility must be permitted and in compliance
with all applicable building, electrical, and plumbing codes.
(B) All equipment must be rated for the temperature and
exposure conditions in which it will operate.
(C) All primary facility components must be new
(collectors, tanks, controls, pumps).
(D) Array mounting must not reduce the expected life or
durability of the structure on which it is located.
(E) The facility must include a customer manual
containing the following information:
(i) Facility documentation, including:
(I) As-built drawings that accurately describe the
components installed, including a valve chart.
(II) Facility site plan that indicates the location of
collectors and storage tank.
(III) Sunchart used to determine facility total solar
resource fraction.
(IV) Operation and maintenance requirements including
the name and phone number of person(s) or company to call in the case of a
facility failure.
(V) Permit documentation.
(ii) Warranties and installation documentation,
including:
(I) A minimum two-year contractor warranty for
materials and workmanship
(II) Manufacturer’s warranty for collector, tanks,
pumps and heat exchanger (if present) and any other components under warranty
by the manufacturer.
(III) Permit documentation.
(iii) Manuals and data sheets, including:
(I) Bill of material listing all primary facility
components, including part numbers
(II) Facility controller owner’s manual
(III) Manufacturer data sheets for major components,
including, but not limited to: collectors, tank, controllers, pumps, Btu meter,
expansion tank, etc.
(F) Facility is sized appropriately for the load. The
solar savings faction is not to exceed 0.70 for domestic water heating systems
without a means of rejecting heat once the load is met.
(G) Thermal storage is adequate to accommodate daily
use pattern. For typical domestic load profiles, this is defined as a minimum
of 1.25 gallons per square foot of collector area. For facilities with loads
that are coincident with solar generate this storage amount may be reduced if
documentation is provided.
(H) All solar storage tanks must be insulated with not
less than R15 insulation.
(I) The following standards are for pipe insulation:
(i) Collector loop insulation must be rated for
conditions in which it operates. Pipe insulation shall have a maximum K value
of 0.25 Btu in/hr. sq. ft. F° and a minimum thickness of 0.75 inches.
(ii) Potable water pipe located outdoors must be
insulated to a minimum R-value of 12. Pipe insulation must be protected with a
U-V rated tape or pipe jacket. U-V paint is not sufficiently durable.
(J) Anti-convective pipe loop or trap is required on
the inlet and outlet of the storage tank. These loops or traps shall have a
minimum 8-inch vertical drop to constitute an effective convective heat
barrier. Heat trap nipples alone are not reliable in stopping heat migration,
and will not meet this requirement.
(K) Install thermometers on collector supply and return
pipes. One movable thermometer for two wells is sufficient.
(L) Install a BTU meter capable of measuring total
delivered energy on all facilities with standard Oregon conditions rating
greater than 250 KBtu/day. A Btu meter must have a designated flow meter and
temperature sensors and be located on the load side of the system.
(M) Install a properly sized thermostatic mixing valve
on the output of the domestic hot water system to ensure that delivered
temperature does not exceed 140°F.
(N) Solar thermal facilities must be installed in
compliance with the Oregon Mechanical Specialty Code (Chapter 14 OMSC), the
Oregon Residential Specialty Code (Chapter 23), the Oregon Plumbing Specialty
Code and all other local regulations with jurisdiction.
(O) Facilities must be designed and installed for
complete automatic operation including protection from freeze damage and
overheating of collectors.
(P) Pressurized storage tanks must not be allowed to be
heated above 180°F.
(g) A facility does not include:
(A) A residential structure or dwelling that is being
used for a residence, except for residential structures that are used
exclusively as a rental dwelling or that qualify as a licensed homebuilder
installed renewable energy facility or high performance home facility.
(B) A renewable energy system or device, other than a
homebuilder installed renewable energy facility or high performance home
facility, that is placed on or at a residence, except for those used
exclusively as a rental dwelling, for the purpose of supplying energy to the
residence.
(C) Swimming pools and hot tubs used to store heat.
(D) Wood stoves.
(E) Space conditioning systems and back-up heating
systems, including systems that do not meet code or minimum standards listed in
the BETC rules.
(F) Devices and substances whose use is common in the
applicant’s business, except hog fuel boilers that replace fossil fuel boilers.
(G) Pollution control facilities and alternate energy
devices for which a tax credit or ad valorem tax relief is granted under ORS
307.405, 316.097 or 316.116.
(H) Devices or materials which are standard practice.
(I) Recycling automotive air conditioning chlorofluorocarbons
(CFC).
(J) Conservation in rental dwellings, for applicants
listed in ORS 469.205(1)(c)(A) and (B), which were issued an occupancy permit
on or after January 1, 1996.
(K) Other items the Director finds are not allowed
under ORS 469.185 to 469.225.
(25) “Facility Eligible Square Footage”: For the
purpose of calculating the tax credit amount for a Sustainable Building
Practices Facility, facility eligible square footage includes all
temperature-conditioned floor areas, and one level of parking structures or
parking structure elements of the facility. It does not include exterior square
footage beneath overhangs, awnings, canopies; walkways or unconditioned plaza
areas beneath conditioned portions of the building.
(26) “Facility Operator”: The person or people to whom
the applicant gives authority to manage a facility. Such person or people will
be the applicant’s agent for all reasons related to the facility once its
development begins.
(27) “Facility Owner”: An applicant who purchases and owns
a qualified facility.
(28) “Facility Start” prior to erection, construction,
installation or acquisition: The earliest date on or after the date of the
application that meets one of the following criteria:
(a) A non-refundable deposit will be placed on the
facility equipment;
(b) A purchase order will be placed for the equipment;
(c) A contract for the design of the facility will be
executed;
(d) A document that obligates the applicant to proceed
with a facility will be executed; or
(e) Any other type of financial commitment towards the
erection, construction, installation or acquisition of the facility. or
(f) For a Sustainable Building Practices Facility, the
eligible cost date is within 30 days of receiving the LEED registration number,
before 50 percent of Design Document for the facility are complete, or prior to
receiving building permits for the facility. or
(g) For a renewable energy facility, the applicant
shall not be considered to have started erection, construction, installation or
acquisition of a proposed facility until excavation or actual physical
construction of the renewable energy facility has begun. Eligible costs include
all costs as defined in these rules, including costs incurred prior to the
receipt by the department of the preliminary certification application related
to site and facility development and approval. Applicants who start a facility
prior to issuance of preliminary certification shall not be eligible to
reapply.
(29) “Final Certification”: Final certificate issued
after completion of an approved BETC facility.
(30) “Geothermal Energy”: Natural heat in any form
below the earth’s surface. It also means minerals in solution, or other
products of naturally heated substances below the earth’s surface. It includes:
(a) Products of geothermal processes, such as steam,
hot water, and hot brines; or
(b) Steam and gases, hot water and brine caused by
injecting substances into the earth; or
(c) Heat or other related energy in the earth; or
(d) By-products of (a) through (c).
(31) “Ground Source Heat Pump”: means a heating,
ventilating and air-conditioning system, also known as a ground water heat
pump, earth-coupled heat pump, geothermal heat pump or ground loop alternative
energy device that utilizes a subsurface closed loop heat exchanger to extract
or reject heat to the earth. A ground source heat pump is eligible for a 35
percent BETC.
(32) “High Efficiency Combined Heat and Power”
(Cogeneration): means a renewable energy resource facility designed to generate
electrical power and thermal energy from a single fuel source with a
fuel-chargeable-to-heat rate yielding annual average energy savings of 20
percent is eligible for a 50 percent BETC. The fuel chargeable-to-heat rate
calculations shall demonstrate a heat rate of 5,440 Btu/kWh or less (20 percent
better than the 6,800 Btu/kWh current standard generation). Facilities that do
not meet this requirement may still qualify for a 35 percent tax credit (see
Combined Heat and Power) or in part for a tax credit relating to the heat recovery
portion of the project. The equation for the fuel chargeable to power heat rate
calculation is FCP = (FI - FD)/ P, where:
(a) FCP = Fuel chargeable to power heat rate.
(b) FI = Annual fuel input applicable to the
co-generation process in Btu (higher heating value).
(c) FD = Annual fuel displaced in any industrial or
commercial process, heating, or cooling application by supplying useful thermal
energy from a co-generation facility
(d) P = Annual net electric output of the co-generation
facility in kilowatt-hours.
(33) “High Performance Home”: Meets the criteria in ORS
469.185(8) and 469.197 and is a home that is a dwelling unit constructed by a
licensed builder under the Oregon Residential Specialty Code with its own space
conditioning and water heating facilities and intended for sale to an end-use
homebuyer. The facility must meet the following requirements:
(a) Shall be certified through the ENERGY STAR® Homes
Northwest program.
(b) Designed and constructed to reduce net purchased
energy through use of both energy efficiency and on-site renewable energy
resources;
(c) Meet the criteria established for a
high-performance home under ORS 469.197
(d) The building shell shall be constructed to at least
the minimum values specified in the following prescriptive path:
(A) Ceilings: U≤0.030
(B) Walls: above grade U≤0.050
(C) Walls: below grade U≤0.060
(D) Floors: above grade U≤0.025
(E) Floors: on grade, [slab edge] perimeter R-15 min. 2
feet vertical or combined vertical/horizontal — heated slab also requires
R-10 foam board under slab.
(F) Windows and glass doors: U≤0.32 (weighted average).
Exception: solar glazing that is part of a passive solar design may have a
higher U-factor. Glass doors are doors that contain 50 percent or more glazing.
(G) Glazing area: glazing to floor area ratio ≤ 16
percent (including windows, skylights, and glass doors considered as glazing in
the code) for homes larger than 1,500 square feet of conditioned space floor
area and < 18 percent for homes 1,500 square feet of conditioned space floor
area and smaller.
(H) Shell tightness: 5.0 ACH50 Pa confirmed by blower
door test
(e) HVAC system and air ducts shall be incorporated
into conditioned space, or eliminate forced-air ductwork.
(f) Space conditioning equipment shall meet one of the
following requirements:
(i) Two-stage gas or propane furnace, minimum AFUE 0.92
(ii) Gas or propane boiler, minimum AFUE 0.88
(iii) Central AC SEER ≥ 14 (if installed)
(iv) Ducted heat pump ≥ HSPF 8.5, air source, and
ground source COP ≥ 3.0
(v) Ductless mini-split heat pump with inverter drive,
no incorporated electric backup heat, sized and installed as per ENERGY STAR®
Homes Northwest specifications in affect at the time the preliminary
application is issued.
(g) A Renewable Energy Facility shall provide on-site
energy savings or generation of not less than 1kWh/yr per square foot of
conditioned floor space.
(h) Water heating systems shall meet ENERGY STAR® Homes
Northwest specifications including secondary water heating equipment that backs
up solar domestic water heating facilities.
(i) Includes at least one of the following measures:
(A) Obtain certification through a Green Building
program recognized by the Department.
(B) Meet ENERGY STAR Homes Northwest Builder Option
Package #2 ventilation specifications through the use of a heat or energy
recovery ventilator, except that the sensible recovery efficiency shall be >
50 percent at 32ºF and the EUI shall be <1.5 Watts/cfm.
(C) Use a gas or propane water heater with a minimum EF
of 0.80 for primary water heating. The water heater may not also be used for
space heating or as the backup to a solar water heating facility to be
considered a qualifying measure under this section.
(j) A High performance home may meet a package of
alternate shell or HVAC measures that are equivalent to these requirements.
Shell measures may be increased to offset HVAC efficiency, however HVAC
measures may not be used to reduce minimum shell requirements.
(a) Shell measures shall be a combination of assemblies
that together have a total U x A no higher than a base case home described in
section (C)(c), above. Trade-offs will be evaluated according to the thermal
trade-off procedure in Oregon Residential Specialty Code Chapter 11, Energy
Efficiency, Table N1104.1(1).
(b) Mechanical facilities will be evaluated for
comparable annual energy use.
(k) Shall be a detached single-family dwelling unit or
a single-family dwelling unit constructed in a group of two or more attached
units in which each unit extends from foundation to roof and with open space on
at least two sides.
(34) “Homebuilder Installed Renewable Energy Facility”
is defined in ORS 469.185(9). The amount of the tax credit for
homebuilder-installed renewable energy facilities shall be capped at $9,000 per
high performance home. For purposes of this section, renewable energy resource
facilities may include: photovoltaic, solar domestic water heating, active
solar space heating, passive solar, and ground source heat pumps. The following
requirements must be met:
(a) Photovoltaic: The credit amount is based on $3 per
watt of installed capacity as determined by the Department. Eligible
installations have a Total Solar Resource Fraction of at least 75 percent using
the Total Solar Resource Fraction (TSRF) method as described in the BETC
application. Installations must be verified by a Tax Credit Certified Solar PV
Technician. This verification must cover performance, longevity, and proper
documentation of the facility design, operation and maintenance. Installers
must provide a warranty covering all parts and labor for two years.
(b) Solar domestic water heating: The credit amount is
equal to $0.60 per kWh saved annually. The savings are based on values
published by the Solar Rating and Certification Corporation (SRCC) plus 100
kWh, which are added to represent Oregon water heating loads. Solar thermal
domestic water heating installations must have a Total Solar Resource Fraction
(TSRF) of at least 75 percent and be designed to provide no less than 25
percent but not more than 70 percent of the annual domestic water heating load.
Installations must be OG-300 certified. Installations must be verified by a
solar thermal Tax Credit Certified Technician. This verification must cover
performance, longevity, and proper documentation of the facility design,
operation and maintenance. Installers must provide a warranty covering all parts
and labor of the facility for two years.
(c) Active solar space heating: The credit amount is
equal to $0.60 per kWh saved based on a calculation procedure approved by
Department staff. Active solar space heating installations must demonstrate a
whole building annual energy savings of at least 15 percent to be eligible.
Installations that combine space heating and domestic water heating are allowed
providing that the solar storage tank is not heated by a backup heat source
(e.g. gas or electric water heater). Installations must be verified by a solar
thermal Tax Credit Certified Technician. This verification must cover
performance, longevity, and proper documentation of the facility design,
operation and maintenance. Installers must provide a warranty covering all
parts and labor of the facility for two years.
(d) Passive solar: The credit amount is equal to $600
per home plus $0.60 per square foot of heated floor space. Passive solar design
strategies must demonstrate a whole building annual energy savings of at least
20 percent to be eligible. This can be achieved by either meeting the
prescriptive requirements for a passive solar home under the Residential Energy
Tax Credit or demonstrated with whole building energy modeling and certified by
a professional engineer.
(e) Ground source heat pumps: Ground source heat pumps
must have a coefficient of performance (COP) of 3.5 or greater. The savings is
based on the incremental savings over the energy savings provided by the ground
source heat pump with a COP of 3.0. The credit amount is equal to $0.60 per kWh
saved.
(f) Other: Other renewable energy resource facilities
(e.g. wind turbines, fuel cells) will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis and
the credit amount will be equal to $0.60 per kWh saved. Facilities must be
connected to home’s main service panel and installers must provide a warranty
covering all parts and labor of the facility for two years.
(35) “HVAC Equipment”: Heating, Ventilation, and Air
Conditioning (HVAC) systems are eligible for a 35 percent BETC.
(a) Eligible combustion equipment (furnaces, boilers,
water heaters, and burners) must have a minimum combustion efficiency of 86
percent Annual Fuel Use Efficiency (AFUE) rating. An exception may be granted
if the system efficiency is proven to be higher due to application of a
different distribution system (e.g.: radiant systems in high infiltration
spaces), control strategies (e.g.: pony boilers), or reduced stand-by losses
(e.g.: low-mass boilers).
(b) Heat pumps must have an energy input that is
entirely electric and be rated with a Heating Season Performance Factor (HSPF)
or Coefficient of Performance (COP) as follows or higher:
(A) Air source heat pumps: 8.5 HSPF
(B) Water source heat pumps: ten percent greater than
COP listed in Oregon Energy Efficiency Specialty Code Chapter 5, Table
503.2.3(2)
(C) Air Conditioning: ten percent greater than COP
listed in Oregon Energy Efficiency Specialty Code Chapter 5, Table 503.2.3(1)
(36) “Hybrid Electric Vehicle”: An energy facility that
is a vehicle which draws propulsion energy from onboard sources of stored
energy which include both an internal combustion engine and a rechargeable
energy storage system. The charging system for the energy storage system must
have an operating voltage of 100 Volts or higher. In addition to a hybrid drive
train, a Hybrid Electric Vehicle (HEV) must also have a regenerative braking
system. A vehicle purchased after January 1, 2010 is not eligible to receive a
BETC.
(37) “Individualized Travel Behavior Change Program”: A
facility that is a program approved by the Oregon Department of Energy that
reduces vehicle miles traveled through one-on-one contact with participants in
a specific geographical area or in a targeted group.
(38) “Lease Contract”: A contract between a lessor and
a lessee of a facility.
(a) In a lease-purchase contract the lessee owns the
facility at the end of the lease and is eligible for the BETC.
(b) In a lease or lease-option contract the lessor owns
the facility through the life of the contract and is eligible for the BETC.
(39) Lighting Facility”: An energy facility that will
reduce the affected lighting energy use by at least 25 percent or by at least
10 percent for a new facility. For non-residential structures, an eligible
facility must also report whether there will be any lamps in the facility that
will be subsequently replaced and if those lamps will be recycled, how.
(40) “Low Interest Loan”:
(a) For an electric utility, a loan with interest that
is not more than 6.5 percent per year for those measures identified as cost
effective in the utility audit. All other measures identified in the utility
audit will be financed by a rate established by the OPUC. The combined interest
rate will not exceed 12 percent.
(b) For all utilities, the loan principal or interest
rate will be reduced by the present value of the tax credit earned under these
rules. If the principal or interest is reduced to zero by applying the present
value of the credit without allotting all that value, the excess will accrue to
the owner who receives the loan. The loan will be repaid in a reasonable time
not more than 10 years after it is issued.
(c) Some utilities may offer cash payment incentives as
an option to a loan. The present value of the tax credit may be added to this incentive
as provided in OAR 330-090-0140(2) of this rule.
(41) “Mass Transit District”: A mass transit district
included in ORS 184.675(7).
(42) “Metropolitan Service District”: A metropolitan
service district included in ORS 184.675(7).
(43) “Necessary Feature”: A necessary feature does not
qualify as an eligible cost and is a feature for which the primary purpose is:
(a) Complying with the Building Code, including
remodeling or new construction that includes facilities to comply with the
Building Code;
(b) Complying with specific state or federal statues or
requirements for pollution control or recycling facility equipment. Recycling
facilities are necessary features except as noted under the definition of
“Recycling Facility” in ORS 469.185(11); or
(c) Routine maintenance or repair, such as replacing
water damaged insulation, a broken window, dry-rotted wood siding or trim.
(44) “Net Present Value”: A cash payment equivalent to
the net present value of the BETC as determined under OAR 330-090-0140. This is
also referred to as the “pass-through rate.”
(45) “Organization”: A corporation, association, firm,
partnership, limited liability company, joint stock company, cooperative,
non-profit corporation, or federal, state or local government including school
district, water district, or any other special district.
(46) “Pass-through Option”: An option that allows a
facility owner to transfer the facility’s tax credit eligibility to certain
persons or businesses in return for a cash payment equivalent to the net
present value. A tax credit may be transferred one time only, from the facility
owner to an eligible pass-through partner or partners.
(47) “Pass-through Partner”: A personal income tax
payer, individual, C corporation or S corporation that is transferred a tax
credit certificate in return for a cash payment equivalent to the net present
value of the BETC.
(48) “Preliminary Certification”: Preliminary
certificate issued upon successful completion of the first stage in obtaining a
BETC.
(49) “Premium Efficient Appliance”: An energy facility
that is an appliance that has been certified by the Department to have premium
energy efficiency characteristics. Residential appliances are listed in the
Department’s Alternative Energy Devices Systems Directory. Commercial
appliances are listed in the Department’s Premium Efficient Commercial
Appliances Directory.
(50) “Public Purpose Organization”: The entity
administering the conservation and renewable public purpose funds described in
ORS 757.612(3)(b)(A) and (B) or its agents.
(51) “Qualified Transit Pass Contract”: is defined in
ORS 469.185(10).
(52) “Recycling”: A process to change a waste stream
into a useable product or material. It does not include re-use in the same way
the product or material first was used unless it changes the product or
material. It does not include the combustion or incineration of a waste stream
or components thereof, although these processes may be a part of an “Energy
Facility” or “Waste to Energy Facility” where they include characteristics
required to meet those definitions.
(53) “Recycling Facility”: is defined in ORS
469.185(11)
(54) “Recycling Market Development Facility”:
Facilities that stimulate demand for recycled materials. It includes facilities
that meet one of the following criteria:
(a) The facility uses recycled materials as feedstock
to produce new products; or
(b) Equipment that allows reuse of pre or post consumer
waste in the production of new products; or
(c) Recycled material equipment which yields a
feedstock with new and changed characteristics for the production of new
products; or
(d) Equipment that enables a higher amount of recycled
material feedstock to be used in the manufacture of a product.
(55) “Renewable Diesel”: A diesel fuel derived from
biomass as defined in United States Energy Policy Act 2005 Section 45K (C)(3),
using the process of thermal depolymerization that meets the following:
(a) Registration requirements for fuels and chemicals
established by the EPA under Section 211 of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7454)
in effect on December 1, 2007, and
(b) Requirements of the ASTM D975 or D396 in effect on
December 1, 2007, and
(c) Has a producer’s Certificate of Analysis which
certifies that the lot, batch or produced volume for sale has an organic
content concentration of greater than 50 percent of the entire volume of the
resultant fuel and the organic feedstock material is described.
(56) “Renewable Energy Resource”: is defined in ORS
469.185(12).
(57) “Renewable Energy Resource Facility”: means an
energy facility used in the processing utilization, or storage of renewable
energy resources to:
(a) Replace a substantial part or all of an existing
use of electricity, petroleum or natural gas;
(b) Provide the initial use of energy where
electricity, petroleum or natural gas would have been used;
(c) Generate electricity to replace an existing source
of electricity or to provide a new source of electricity for sale by or use in
the trade or business;
(d) Perform a process that obtains energy resources from
material that would otherwise be solid waste as defined in ORS 459.005; or
(e) Manufacture or distribute alternative fuels,
including but not limited to electricity, ethanol, methanol, gasohol or
biodiesel.
(58) “Renewable Energy Resource Equipment Manufacturing
Facility”: means a facility as defined in ORS 469.185 (13) and subject to
standards adopted by the Oregon Department of Energy in these rules.
(59) “Renewable Energy Storage Device”: A facility that
enables the storage of energy derived from Renewable Energy Resources as
defined in ORS 469.185(12). To qualify as a renewable energy storage device a
facility does not need to be directly connected to a renewable energy resource,
but a beneficial relationship must be demonstrated between the energy output of
the resource or resources and the charge and discharge capabilities of the
facility. A Renewable Energy Storage Device includes, but is not limited to,
batteries or similar devices used to provide propulsive energy in electric
vehicles. The storage device may be designed to store energy for transmission
lines provided that the transmission lines serve, at least in part, renewable
energy resources.
(60) “Rental Dwelling”: means any property that meets
the requirements of the state building codes and contains a dwelling unit or
rooming unit with permanent living facilities. Living facilities include
facilities for sleeping, eating, cooking and sanitation, for one or more
persons, other than the property owner, which is subject to a rental agreement
that provides for meaningful compensation to the owner and which compensation
is subject to Oregon income or excise tax.
(61) “Rental Weatherization”: means energy conservation
and efficiency measures that improve the energy efficiency of a rental
dwelling. In order to qualify for a BETC, an applicant must meet requirements
(a) through (c):
(a) An applicant must be planning to perform a minimum
of two weatherization measures on the rental dwelling if one of the measures is
to replace windows on the rental dwelling. Eligible second measures include one
of the following:
(A) Adding floor insulation to R-21,
(B) Attic/ceiling/roof insulation to R-38 or cavity
fill,
(C) Wall insulation to R-13 or cavity fill,
(D) Replacing exterior doors to R-5,
(E) Duct sealing and testing by a contractor certified
by the Residential Energy Tax Credit program, or
(F) An applicant can demonstrate that the measures (A)
through (E) above have already been completed by providing an energy audit from
the Energy Trust of Oregon or the applicant’s utility, if unavailable the
Department may approve another type of energy audit.
(b) Prior to being eligible to receive a BETC for installing
a renewable facility on a rental dwelling, all standard weatherization
measures, including roof insulation to a minimum of R-38, floor to minimum of
R-21 and walls to a minimum of R-13 (where achievable on outside walls where no
insulation is present) must be completed. An applicant shall provide
appropriate documentation, such as an energy audit as described above in
section (a)(F), to verify standard weatherization measures.
(c) For purposes of meeting the requirements of ORS
469.207, when a utility audit is not available, a vendor-provided audit
demonstrating substantial savings and approved by the Department will suffice.
A self-audit based upon the following list may be substituted when accompanied
by U-values, areas, and other appropriate general information regarding the
measures, including:
(A) Caulking, weather-stripping and other prescriptive
actions to seal the heated space and ducts in a dwelling;
(B) Insulation of ceilings or attics to R-38 if
achievable in areas with R-19 or less, including insulation installed on flat
roofs and associated ventilation;
(C) Insulation of outside walls to a nominal R-13 if
achievable in areas where no insulation is present, of unfinished walls
adjacent to unheated areas to R-21 if achievable in areas where no insulation
is present, and of finished walls adjacent to unheated areas to R-11 if
achievable in areas where no insulation is present;
(D) Insulation of floors over unheated spaces to at
least R-25 if achievable in areas where no insulation is present, and materials
to support the insulation and needed ground cover and ventilation;
(E) Insulation and sealing of supply and return air
ducts in unheated spaces to at least R-8 if achievable and no insulation is
present and the ducts are in unheated areas;
(F) Insulation of water heaters, water pipes, or steam
pipes in unheated spaces and for at least 10 feet from the water heater in
unheated areas to at least R-3 if achievable and no insulation is present;
(G) Double-glazed windows (including sliding doors) with
a U-value of 0.30 or lower, when replacing single-glazed windows;
(H) Insulated exterior doors with a U-value of 0.20 or
lower (R-5 or higher);
(I) Programmable thermostats; or
(J) Blower door tests and blower door assisted whole
house air sealing or duct sealing performed by a contractor certified by the
Department’s Residential Energy Tax Credit technician certification program.
(d) If an applicant undertakes envelope measures, the
following requirements apply:
(A) Replacement windows must have a U-value of 0.30 or
less for residences.
(B) U-values must be 10 percent better (lower) than
code requirements for commercial.
(C) Insulation that exceeds code requirements or when
not required by code is an eligible measure if substantial savings and economic
criteria required in the OARs are met.
(62) “Research, Development, and Demonstration Facility
(RD&D)”: A facility that complies with (a) through (f):
(a) A facility that is not standard practice and that
is likely to produce or produces products or technologies that are likely to
qualify as a facility in Oregon when commercialized. BETC RD&D applicants’
total lifetime project costs will be determined for a defined period
established at the time of the initial application and will be capped at $20,000,000
for renewable energy RD&D and high efficiency CHP RD&D and $10,000,000
for all other RD&D project types. Additionally, eligible RD&D
facilities must comply with one or more of the following criteria:
(A) Research facilities that include a test bench research,
prototype or pilot scale construction of a theoretically proved or primary
researched technology;
(B) Development facilities that include the new
manufacture or initiation of the capability to produce or deliver facilities in
Oregon, excluding development facilities that increase established
manufacturing or production capacity in Oregon;
(C) Demonstration facilities that are likely to resolve
questions on how to apply new technology or that inform the public about new or
improved technology though pilot or production scale applications of
technology;
(D) Innovative travel reduction facilities that reduce
vehicle miles traveled. The applicant must conduct pre and post surveys that
measure travel reductions and submit the results with the application for final
certification. A transportation district, mass transit district, or
metropolitan service district within a community of 50,000 or more people may
not qualify for more than $2 million annually in eligible costs for innovative
travel reduction programs;
(E) Facilities that improve energy efficiency in a
focused geographic area through the replacement of outmoded energy equipment
with energy-efficient equipment; or
(F) Facilities in the Director’s determination are
likely to achieve Oregon Department of Energy goals.
(b) A facility that demonstrates a reasonable potential
to result in energy or conservation benefits in Oregon for which the value is
likely to exceed the value of the tax credit, based on information filed with
the application for preliminary certification.
(c) A qualifying RD&D facility that exclusively
supports renewable energy resource use will be eligible for a 50 percent BETC;
all other qualifying RD&D facilities will be eligible for a 35 percent tax
credit.
(d) Eligible costs for a Research, Development or
Demonstration facility may include:
(A) Engineering, design and administrative costs
(B) Costs inherent in a research, development and
demonstration facility that may not result directly in saved or produced
energy. Such costs may include:
(i) Facility design, monitoring, assessment, evaluation
and reporting. This includes but is not limited to: the development of
standards, specifications, policies and procedures facilitating technology
transfer; instruments, and controls.
(ii) Other equipment needed to monitor, assess or
evaluate the facility and the impacts of the facility.
(C) The following costs related to demonstration
model(s) may be considered eligible:
(i) Materials for the demonstration model(s).
(ii) The manufacturing, construction, assembly, and/or
installation of the demonstration model(s).
(iii) Testing and monitoring the demonstration
model(s).
(D) Eligible costs for a Research, Development or
Demonstration facility are not subject to OAR 330-090-0110(19)(f).
(E) Other eligible costs defined by Oregon
Administrative Rule.
(e) Ineligible costs for a Research, Development or
Demonstration facility may include:
(A) The lease or purchase of land or building(s) unless
the applicant can clearly demonstrate to the Director that the cost is
necessary and exclusive to the facility.
(B) Other ineligible costs defined by Oregon
Administrative Rule.
(f) A Research, Development or Demonstration facility
is not eligible to receive a BETC when the facility’s activities are a
refinement of an existing technology and do not represent a strategic, new or
potentially large benefit to Oregon.
(63) “Residential Dwelling”: means a structure or the
part of a structure that meets the requirements of the state building codes and
is used as a permanent home, residence or sleeping place by one or more persons
who maintain a household or by two or more persons who maintain a common
household. A BETC may not be claimed for a renewable energy facility located
in, adjacent to, or on a one or two family home unless the home is used
exclusively as a rental dwelling.
(64) “Residential Energy Tax Credit Qualifying
Equipment”: means equipment that qualifies under the standards and rules for
the Residential Energy Tax Credit from the Department. The equipment is
eligible for the BETC in either of the two following methods:
(a) A facility that consists solely of equipment that
is on the qualifying equipment list at the time of the application submittal
may apply as outlined in the Oregon Administrative Rules 330-090-0105using
operating schedules, capacity, efficiency and cost information to prove
qualification; or
(b) The facility, made up of qualifying equipment may
also effectively qualify what would otherwise be an eligible Residential Energy
Tax Credit facility through the BETC Program by using the following formula.
Residential tax credit amount (from qualifying appliance list) ÷ 0.35 = BETC
eligible cost.
(65) “Riders”: Employees, students, clients, customers,
or other individuals using transportation facilities or transportation
facilities for travel.
(66) “Service Life”: Equipment service life is as
established in the 2007 edition of the American Society of Heating, Refrigeration
and Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) Heating, Ventilating and Air
Conditioning (HVAC) Applications Handbook or as determined by the Director for
equipment not rated by ASHRAE. The Department may prorate the eligible project
cost based on the remaining service life of the equipment. If the baseline
facility has exceeded its service life, only an incremental facility will be
considered eligible for a tax credit.
(67) “Simple Payback”: The total eligible cost of a
facility divided by the expected yearly energy cost savings, stated in years.
(68) “Standard Practice”: Conventional equipment or
material applied in a way that it may be observed as a common or necessary
feature of new and existing businesses.
(a) In new commercial construction it may include but
is not limited to: electronic fluorescent ballasts; T-8 fluorescent lamps,
compact fluorescent lamps that are not hard wired; parabolic louvered
fluorescent fixtures; R-19 insulated walls in wood frame construction; variable
air volume space conditioning systems; the portion of energy management
controls that monitor for life safety, maintenance, or control process for
purposes other than saving energy.
(b) In other energy facilities it may include but not
be limited to propane powered lift trucks, electric golf carts or curbside
recycling bins.
(c) Any other equipment, material, or applications of
equipment or material as determined by the Director.
(69) “Substantial Energy Savings”: Means that the
Department has determined that:
(a) A facility, other than a lighting retrofit or
sustainable building facility and excluding Research Development &
Demonstration, transportation, recycling market development, recycling
facility, will save at least 10 percent of the energy used in a given facility;
(b) A lighting retrofit facility will reduce the
affected lighting system energy use by at least 25 percent;
(c) The energy facility is a sustainable building
practices facility as defined under “Sustainable Building Practices Facility”
of this rule; or
(d) The facility measures are measures that would
qualify under or are measures recommended in an energy audit completed under
ORS 469.631 to 469.645, 469.649 to 469.659, and 469.673 to 469.683.
(70) “Sustainable Building Practices Facility”: Means a
building facility as defined under “Commercial New Construction” of this rule
and that:
(a) Is rated and certified LEED-NC™, LEED-CS™, or
LEED-CI™ under the Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design (LEED™)
Green Building Rating System managed by the U.S. Green Building Council or is
rated and certified by a program approved by the Department that provides
comparable performance on environmental measures and equivalent or better
energy performance as documented by whole building energy modeling, is
commissioned and is verified by an independent third party. In addition, a
facility must:
(A) In achieving its LEED™ rating, the facility must
earn at least two points under Energy & Atmosphere Credit 1 (Optimize
Energy Performance).
(B) In achieving its LEED™ rating, the facility must
earn at least one point under Energy & Atmosphere Credit 3 (Enhanced
Commissioning).
(b) Each LEED-NC™ or LEED-CS™ facility must calculate
and report the building’s annual solar income in Btu (not the site income). The
calculation must account for the contribution from each face (orientation with
surfaces exposed to direct sunlight) and must take into account any existing or
reasonably expected shading (by other buildings or vegetation, e.g.) of these
surfaces. Calculations may ignore such things as rooftop or wall-mounted
mechanical facility components.
(c) Facilities using on-site renewable energy
production technologies such as photovoltaic or wind technologies may treat
these elements as a separate renewable energy resource facility for tax credit
purposes, provided that any points earned for such features in the LEED™ rating
are not required to achieve the rating on which the Sustainable Building facility
credit is to be based. In cases where subtracting such points would result in a
lowering of the LEED™ rating (e.g. from Gold to Silver), the tax credit will be
awarded on the basis of the lower rating. The rating point total, net of
renewable generation credits, can never be less than that required for a Silver
rating.
(71) “Transportation District”: A transportation
district included in ORS 184.675(7).
(72) “Transportation Facility”: A facility that reduces
energy used for traveling, including but not limited to traveling to and from
work or school, work-related travel or travel to obtain medical or other
services. A transportation facility must meet one or more of the following
criteria:
(a) Telework defined as working from home instead of
commuting a longer distance to the principal place of employment. It does not
include home-based businesses or extension of the workday. Telework equipment
must be installed to reduce employee vehicle miles traveled a minimum of 45
working days per 12 consecutive months. Eligible costs include purchase and
installation of new equipment at the telework site. Computer, facsimile device,
modem, phone, printer, software, copier, and other equipment necessary to
facilitate telework as determined by the Director are eligible costs. Eligible
cost for telework facilities does not include replacement cost for equipment at
the principal place of business when that equipment is relocated to the
telework site; fees for maintenance and operation of any equipment; office
furniture and office supplies or training costs.
(b) Telework for the purpose of reducing business
vehicle miles traveled must reduce employee business related travel by 25
percent.
(c) Commuter pool vehicles transporting three or more
riders dedicated to reducing vehicle miles traveled. The vehicle must be used a
minimum of 150 working days per 12 consecutive months. Eligible cost includes
the purchase or cost of the vehicle(s). If vehicles with special equipment are
being purchased, a copy of the sales quotation showing the additional cost for
the equipment must be submitted. The vehicle must remain in service for five
years. Where vehicles are used for business travel other than transporting
riders, eligible cost shall be reduced based on the estimated percent of miles
dedicated to reducing travel. Transportation districts, mass transit districts,
or metropolitan service districts within communities of 50,000 or more people
are not eligible if they receive other federal or state funding for the
purposes of offsetting the costs.
(d) Transit passes used by an applicant’s riders or in
fareless zones to reduce vehicle miles traveled. Eligible cost includes the
cost of the transit pass or the cost specified in the contract for providing
the fareless zone. Transportation districts, mass transit districts, or
metropolitan service districts within communities of 50,000 or more people are
not eligible. Eligible cost also includes the cost of equipment used as a
shelter for riders waiting for transit. To be eligible, the shelter must be
part of a transit pass facility. Applicants must subtract any employee
contributions for transit passes from eligible costs.
(e) Bicycle used by an applicant’s riders to reduce
vehicle miles traveled a minimum of 45 work days per 12 consecutive months.
Maximum eligible costs of $800 include purchase of bicycles and equipment used
to store bicycles. Accessory items, such as locks, panniers, rain gear helmets,
etc. are not eligible, except for bicycle lights.
(f) Fees paid by an applicant to a Transportation
Management Association (TMA) or nonprofit organization that provides
transportation services for the purpose of reducing vehicle miles traveled by a
passenger. The fee must be part of a transportation facility and cannot exceed
the cost of the transportation facility. To be eligible, the applicant must
provide verification of an agreement with the transportation provider for
specific services that reduce vehicle miles traveled.
(g) The cost of an incentive program paid by the
applicant that provides a financial incentive to a passenger for reducing
vehicle miles a minimum of 45 work days per 12 consecutive months. To be
eligible the applicant must provide a written incentive program plan for Energy
Department approval.
(h) Car sharing is defined as a program in which
drivers pay to become members in order to have joint access to a fleet of cars.
Eligible cost for car sharing includes the cost of operating a car sharing
program, including the fair market value of parking spaces used to store the cars
available for the car sharing program, but does not include the cost of the
fleet of cars. It does not include operations conducted by a car rental agency.
(i) Transportation Service is defined as a facility
that provides transportation services to reduce vehicle miles driven by a
single occupant vehicle. The eligible cost for a transportation service
facility is the cost for providing the transportation service, but does not
include the cost of the vehicle. The transportation service facility must provide
service for a minimum of 150 days per 12 consecutive months. Transportation
districts, mass transit districts, and metropolitan service districts in
communities with 50,000 or more people are not eligible if they receive other
federal or state funding for the purposes of offsetting the costs. Applicants
must subtract any farebox contributions from eligible costs.
(j) Individualized Travel Behavior Change is defined as
a facility that is a program approved by the Oregon Department of Energy that
reduces vehicle miles traveled through one-on-one contact with the participants
in a specific geographical area or in a targeted group. Pre and post-facility
surveys must be conducted. The applicant must submit a report with the results
of these surveys to measure travel reduction. Eligible costs include capital
expenditures, administrative and communication costs. Facilities are subject to
the VMR cost-effectiveness formula.
(k) Vanpool Program is defined as a facility that is an
employer-sponsored or organization sponsored program that provides
transportation to registered members to commute on a regular basis. Eligible
costs include vehicle operation costs, but do not include the cost of the
vehicle. The applicant must conduct pre and post-facility surveys and submit a
report with the results of these surveys to measure reduction in vehicle miles.
The program must provide service for a minimum of 150 work days per 12
consecutive months. Facilities are subject to the VMR cost-effectiveness
formula.
(L) Transportation Services for K-12 Students is
defined as a facility that is a program that provides transportation services
for K-12 students during the school year. All entities, including
transportation districts, mass transit districts, or metropolitan service districts
within communities of greater than 50,000 people, are eligible.
(A)The tax credit amount shall be based on the cost per
student and a reasonable estimate of the actual number of students served.
(B) Eligible agencies shall develop a monthly cost per
student service, based on but not limited to lost revenues, added costs, and
VMR cost-effectiveness to be approved by the Department.
(C) The applicant must conduct pre and post-facility
surveys and submit a report with the results of these surveys to measure
reduction in vehicle miles.
(m) The purchase of efficient truck technology for
trucks and related truck trailers, as defined in ORS 801.580, for commercial
motor vehicles, as defined in ORS 801.208, that are registered under ORS
803.420, or for commercial motor vehicles that are proportionally registered
under ORS 826.009 or 826.011. Eligible efficient truck technology, such as an auxiliary
power unit (APU), must be recognized as a verified technology by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) SmartWay Transport Partnership to
potentially qualify.
(A) Eligible projects must meet the following
requirements:
(i) Retrofit a truck or add to a newly manufactured
truck one or more USEPA SmartWay efficiency measures. With a newly manufactured
truck, a new trailer with one or more SmartWay efficiency measures may also be
included with this project. The new trailer and newly manufactured truck must
independently qualify for tax credits; and
(ii) Eligible vehicles must demonstrate Oregon
registration with a current Cab Card as part of the Application for Preliminary
Certification by:
(I) Commercial (Oregon-only registration operated solely
in Oregon) with a red Oregon-only commercial “YC” plate from the Oregon Motor
Carrier Transportation Division (MCTD); or
(II) International Registration Plan (IRP), also
referred to as Apportioned registration, with a red Apportioned “YA” plate from
the Oregon MCTD. For IRP vehicles, eligible facilities must meet the following
requirements as part of the application for preliminary certification:
(II-a) Provide the two most recent calendar year IRP
billing notices that document the percentage of a vehicle’s annual mileage that
was driven in Oregon.
(II-b) For proposed eligible facilities that have no
recent calendar year IRP billing notice documentation, provide a signed project
owner statement indicating the anticipated percentage of miles that will be
driven in Oregon over the next two years.
(B) Applicants that can document that 15 to 50 percent
of the annual mileage of a vehicle that meets the requirement in (A) of this
subsection occurs in Oregon are eligible to receive a tax credit equal to 35 percent
of 71.5 percent of the facility’s otherwise eligible certified costs.
(C) Applicants that can document that more than 50
percent of the annual mileage of a vehicle that meets the requirement in (A) of
this subsection occurs in Oregon are eligible to receive a tax credit of 35
percent of the facility’s eligible certified costs.
(D) Proof that the applicant has a sufficient nexus
with the state of Oregon. This includes a dedicated location in Oregon for
maintenance, dispatch, and monitoring of facilities.
(E) The facility’s simple payback period must be
between more than one and fifteen years.
(73) “Transportation Provider”: is defined in ORS
469.185(16).
(74) “Transportation Services Contract”: is defined in
ORS 469.185(17).
(75) “Utility”: Gas or electric utilities as defined
below.
(a) An Investor Owned Utility (IOU) as defined in ORS
757.005, or its subsidiaries and affiliated interests as defined in ORS
757.015; or
(b) A Publicly Owned Utility (POU) and people’s utility
district as defined in ORS 261.010, or a municipal or cooperative utility.
(76) “Vanpool Program”: means a program that provides
opportunities for a designated group of riders to share the usage of a vehicle
to commute between different communities/neighborhoods on a regular basis.
(77) “Vehicle Miles Reduced (VMR)”: Reduction in miles
achieved by a facility when compared to single occupant vehicles.
(78) “Waste-to-Energy Facility”: means an energy
resource facility that recovers materials and energy from a waste stream under
conditions listed below. The BETC program intends to encourage the responsible
use of all resources including waste streams. Generally, recovery of a material
will be preferred in comparison to recovery of energy. In order to respect the
embedded energy of a material stream the following criteria have been
established to define facilities that do not meet the definition of a recycling
facility, but provide environmentally responsible recovery from a waste stream.
Therefore, equipment used to recover materials and energy from a waste stream
is an eligible facility when all of the following conditions are met:
(a) The value of the marketable materials and energy
resources recovered from the waste stream, less the value of the external
energy resources consumed in the recovery process is greater than the magnitude
of the costs incurred or revenues derived in disposal of the waste stream in
standard industry practice.
(b) Recovered material/end product, exclusive of fuel
or lubricant, exceeds 50 percent or higher on a dry mass basis.
(c) The facility does not increase the release of
toxins, fossil-derived greenhouse gas emissions, or other emissions.
(d) The facility does not divert materials from a
higher value use.
(e) The facility has an acceptable energy balance as
determined by the Director.
(79) “Wind Facility”: means a facility that converts
wind power into another energy resource.
(80) “Year”: Calendar year.
[ED. NOTE: Tables &
publications referenced are available from the agency.]
Stat. Auth.: ORS 469.040 &
469.165
Stats. Implemented: ORS 469.185 -
469.225
Hist.: DOE 7-1985, f. 12-31-85,
ef. 1-1-86; DOE 3-1986, f. & ef. 8-29-86; DOE 2-1988, f. & cert. ef.
3-17-88; DOE 3-1989, f. 12-28-89, cert. ef. 1-1-90; DOE 3-1990, f. & cert.
ef. 9-20-90; DOE 4-1991, f. & cert. ef. 12-31-91; DOE 2-1992(Temp), f.
12-14-92, cert. ef. 12-15-92; DOE 2-1993, f. & cert. ef. 1-28-93; DOE
5-1993, f. & cert. ef. 12-14-93; DOE 2-1995, f. 12-12-95, cert. ef.
12-15-95; DOE 3-1996, f. & cert. ef. 11-27-96; DOE 2-1997, f. 12-15-97,
cert. ef. 1-1-98; DOE 4-1998, f. 12-14-98, cert. ef. 12-15-98; DOE 2-1999, f.
12-22-99, cert. ef. 1-1-00; DOE 1-2001, f. 10-5-01, cert. ef. 10-8-01; DOE
2-2004, f. & cert. ef. 1-21-04; DOE 3-2004, f. & cert. ef. 7-1-04; DOE 1-2005,
f. 12-30-05, cert. ef. 1-1-06; DOE 2-2006, f. 9-29-06, cert. ef. 10-1-06; DOE
3-2006, f. 11-27-06, cert. ef. 12-1-06; DOE 3-2008, f. & cert. ef. 3-21-08;
DOE 4-2008, f. 6-19-08, cert. ef. 6-20-08; DOE 2-2009(Temp), f. & cert. ef.
11-3-09 thru 5-1-10; DOE 3-2010, f. & cert. ef. 4-30-10; DOE 4-2010(Temp),
f. 5-21-10, cert. ef. 5-27-10 thru 11-2-10; Administrative correction 11-23-10;
DOE 14-2010, f. & cert. ef. 11-23-10
330-090-0120
Preliminary Certificate
Application Requirements for a BETC
(1) Eligible facilities
(a) The Department may issue only one BETC for each
separate and distinct facility under these rules. The following facilities, as
further defined in these rules, are eligible for a BETC: An energy facility,
recycling facility, rental dwelling weatherization facility, transportation
facility, car sharing facility, sustainable building practices facility,
alternative fuel vehicle or facilities necessary to operate alternative fuel
vehicles, including but not limited to an alternative fuel vehicle refueling
station, a high-efficiency combined heat and power facility, a high-performance
home, a homebuilder-installed renewable energy system, a renewable energy
resource equipment manufacturing facility or a research development and
demonstration facility that complies with these rules.
(b) A
proposed facility must meet applicable codes and standards, must include a
warranty and must be serviceable locally.
(2) Required information
(a) Persons requesting a BETC shall apply on the
Department-approved form for a preliminary certificate. In addition to the
information required in ORS 469.205, the applicant shall provide the following
information:
(A) The name, address, and phone number of the
applicant, owners of the facility, and the developers of the project.
(B) The applicant’s federal tax identification number
or social security number which may be shared with the Department of Revenue to
facilitate the administration of the state tax law.
(C) Proposed facility construction and operational
start and finish dates. A facility’s start date is the date that the project
applicant financially commits to the project. Financial commitment includes,
but is not limited to: making a down-payment or deposit, signing a contract
with a vendor, ordering material or equipment, beginning construction or
installation.
(D) The proposed facility location within the
geographical confines of Oregon or in the case of an alternate fuel vehicle
demonstrated intent that the vehicle will be titled in the State of Oregon.
(E) Information demonstrating that the proposed
facility will comply with or have a variance from the land use laws of the city
or county where the facility will be located;
(F) Information demonstrating that the proposed
facility will comply with all other local, federal, and state laws, including
but not limited to the following:
(i) A water power energy facility that uses navigable
waters or that sells electricity must have a permit, license or exemption from
the Oregon Department of Water Resources (DWR) and the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (FERC). Proof of permits, licenses, or exemptions from
DWR and the FERC must be submitted to the Department before a facility is
eligible to receive final certification. Also, if the facility uses water from
the Columbia River basin, it must comply with the Northwest Power and
Conservation Council’s Fish and Wildlife Program.
(ii) A geothermal energy facility must have the proper
permit from the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries (DOGAMI) or
a permit from DWR.
(iii) A biomass energy facility must have required
permits from the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ).
(G) A list of appropriate authorizations for all work
performed including but not limited to appropriate licenses, permits, or other
authorizations that are required by state or local jurisdiction for the
facility.
(H) Information demonstrating the intended operation,
maintenance and use of the facility, including but not limited to, where
appropriate, the amount and type of jobs potentially created or eliminated in
the construction, installation and operation of the facility in Oregon, the
benefits of the facility with regard to overall economic activity in this
state, the amount of projected energy saved, generated or transmitted and a demonstrated
intent that the facility will be maintained and operated for at least five
years after the facility is operational. Except that, as a condition of the
preliminary and final certificate, the following facilities must remain in
operation for one year: Tele-working equipment, transit passes, transportation
services, incentive programs, car-share programs and individualized travel
behavior change programs, and van-pool programs. If an applicant expects that a
facility not listed in this subsection will operate less than five years, the
applicant may submit a request for approval of the shorter operating period as
part of their application for preliminary certification. This request shall
include information describing the proposed facility and supporting the
proposed operating period. The Director will determine whether to approve the
shorter operating period and may include conditions, reductions or other limits
on any potential tax credits.
(I) A
declaration from the applicant that all property taxes for the facility have
been paid and there are no delinquent property taxes associated with the
facility.
(J) If the application is for a Renewable Energy
Resource Equipment Manufacturing Facility, information that demonstrates that
the facility will be used solely to manufacture equipment, machinery or other
products that will be used exclusively for renewable energy resource
facilities. An applicant shall provide sufficient information relating to the
specific characteristics of the equipment, machinery or other products that
demonstrate how such equipment, machinery or other products will be used
exclusively for renewable energy resource facilities and not for other
commercial purposes. In the case of a facility manufacturing Electric Vehicles
under the all-terrain-vehicles standards, an applicant shall provide
information that demonstrates that the vehicles will be used for agricultural,
commercial, industrial or governmental purposes.
(K) Applications for facilities using or producing
renewable energy resources, or facilities listed as renewable energy resources
as defined under ORS 469.185 shall provide all information required as part of
the tiered priority system under OAR 330-090-0350.
(b) The Department may request additional information
from the applicant in order to determine whether multiple applications have
been made for the same facility. The department will make its determination
based on the following:
(A) All applications under consideration will be
reviewed against other current applications, facilities that have received
preliminary certification and facilities that have received final certification
within the past 12 months. Further review shall be given to applications which:
(i) when combined exceed the annual limit for a tax
credit found in ORS 469.200.
(ii) are individually below the threshold for one year
tax credit found in ORS 315.354, but if combined exceed this threshold; or
(iii) when combined, result in assessment within a
different category or tier, or against different criteria or cost allowances.
(B) Applications for facilities using or producing
renewable energy resources, or facilities listed as renewable energy resources
as defined under ORS 469.185 will be determined to be a single facility,
despite the number of applications, owners or construction phases, if three or
more of the following apply:
(i) The facility is located on one or more adjacent
parcels of land or parcels;
(ii) The facility has been recognized in a license or
permit as a single facility by a federal, state, county, city or local
authority including, but not limited to siting council, state or local boards
or commissions, or the facility has obtained or applied for siting or land use
approval and other applicable permits, licenses or site certificates as a
single facility or on a single application;
(iii) When the facility is designed to generate energy,
the construction of the facility is performed under the same contract with a
general contractor licensed under ORS 701 or multiple contracts entered into
within one year of each other with one or more general contractors licensed
under ORS 701. If facilities will be completed in phases over time, the applicant
must demonstrate that each of the phases of the facility would independently
qualify as an eligible facility and that each phase of the facility is not
interdependent in purpose or the manner in which it will be owned, financed,
constructed, operated, or maintained or the facilities or phases of the
facility will be determined to be one facility for the purposes of these rules;
(iv) The facility owners have entered into or expect to
enter into agreements to share project expenses, personnel, capital investments
including generating equipment or other resources related to the facility;
(v) The generating equipment for the facility and the
related facility was purchased by the same person or persons who own or operate
the facility or have taken action under any of the above factors;
(vi) A facility is connected to the grid through a
single connection or multiple connections when there is a shared net metering,
power purchase or other applicable transmission agreement; or
(vii) Other factors or considerations which demonstrate
that the facility is not a separate and distinct facility based on its
construction, operation, maintenance and output.
(C)
Applications for renewable energy resource equipment manufacturing facilities
will be considered a single facility unless each phase of development or each
expansion of or addition to existing facilities or production lines can be
demonstrated to meet, through increased production and number of jobs created,
the requirements of ORS 469.197 (4) and these rules.
(D) Applications other than those described in
subsections (B) and (C) will be considered a single facility if three or more
of the following apply:
(i) shared ownership of facilities,
(ii) shared location of facilities,
(iii) project permits are issued to a common entity or
at the same time or
(iv) a shared contract to construct the facilities.
(c) Anticipated capital expenditures and other costs as
defined in these rules for the erection, construction, installation or
acquisition of the proposed facility, its expected operational life, and its
simple payback as defined in ORS Chapter 469 and these rules.
(d) Information demonstrating anticipated substantial
energy savings or a description of products that will result from the facility
and how those products will result in substantial energy savings.
(e) For a proposed renewable energy resource facility,
proof the resource level is adequate for a feasible facility. Such proof
includes data listed in (A) through (G). Other data may be used if the listed
data cannot be obtained at a reasonable cost, such as for RD&D facilities.
(A) For a solar energy facility: A sun chart and solar
insolation data for the site. Facilities must have a Total Solar Resource
Fraction of at Least 75 percent.
(B) For a wind energy facility:
(i) The average monthly wind speed for 12 consecutive
months at the proposed site. Measure wind speed at or as close as practically
feasible to the hub height of a horizontal axis wind machine; or, the equator
of a vertical axis wind machine; or
(ii) Measure wind speed at two heights for 12
consecutive months, the lowest one at least 10 meters above ground and estimate
the wind speed at hub or equator height; or
(iii) In the event of less than one year’s measurements
at the proposed site, include the months of on-site measurements and supplement
these data with estimated average monthly wind speeds at or near the proposed
site to complete the 12 consecutive month data set. Such estimated data should
be obtained from a nationally recognized firm that provides estimated wind
resource data based on advanced national wind mapping technology; or
(iv) The estimated average monthly wind speed for 12
consecutive months at or near the proposed site obtained from a nationally
recognized firm that provides estimated wind resource data based on advanced
national wind mapping technology.
(v) In the event that estimated wind resource data are
used as described under section (iii) and (iv) above, the project owner shall
provide to the Department not later than 14 months after the start-up date, one
year of actual monthly energy production data and, if available, actual monthly
average wind speed data at wind energy facility’s site.
(vi) Proposed equipment must meet the following:
(1) Each proposed model of the system must demonstrate
reliable operation of that model of equipment and show monthly data of average
energy produced (kWh) and average wind speed for one consecutive year at a site
with average annual wind speeds of at least 12 mph; or
(2) Proof that the proposed wind system model is listed
on the official list of Qualified Wind Generators published by the Energy Trust
of Oregon, the California Energy Commission, or the New York State Energy
Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) in effect on April 30, 2010; or
(3) The proposed manufacturer’s power curve, the
estimated annual energy production based on the site’s wind speed data, and the
manufacturer’s performance guarantees (on-line availability and power curve).
(vii) The Department reserves the right to deny
eligibility for any wind system for any reason including, but not limited to:
poor generator performance, concerns about wind generation system design or
quality of data presented, lack of manufacturing support for maintenance,
warranties, etc., and insufficient experience with generation.
(C) For a geothermal energy facility (except a heat
pump system): A plot of well temperature versus time at the design flow rate at
steady state temperature.
(D) For a water power facility: One year of actual or
predicted average monthly stream flows. If flows are predicted, describe the
method used to predict flows.
(E) For a biomass energy facility: Data that show the
resource is available in an amount that meets the facility’s energy
requirements for a period of a minimum of five years.
(F) For a waste heat recovery facility: A table showing
how much waste heat is available and from what sources.
(G) For wood-fired boilers or furnaces with heat output
capacities of less than 2 million British Thermal Units per Hour: Certification
that they produce particle emissions equal to or less than 2.5 grams per hour
for catalytic stoves and 4.5 grams per hour for noncatalytic stoves by an
independent wood stove laboratory currently certified by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA).
(f) The payment required by OAR 330-090-0150(3).
(g) For proposed alternative fuel vehicle facilities:
proof that the proposed vehicle or conversion equipment is on DEQ’s approved
list in effect on December 1, 2007, the current exhaust emissions, the expected
emission reductions, the expected annual energy and/or cost savings (if any).
(h) For proposed alternative fuel vehicle facilities:
the proposed number of vehicles to be converted or new vehicles purchased, the
expected annual fuel savings, the type of alternative fuel used, and the
expected annual amount of alternative fuel used.
(i) For proposed alternative fuel fueling station
facilities: a description of proposed fueling systems, the estimated number of
alternative fuel vehicles that will use the proposed station, the type of
alternative fuel that will be dispensed, and the expected annual amount that
will be dispensed.
(j) For proposed transportation facilities: required
documentation for each category specified under the definition of
“Transportation Facility” in these rules.
(k) For a proposed waste-to-energy renewable energy
resource facility that meets the definition of waste stream includes the
anticipated percentage of waste stream product to be recovered and a
remediation plan for anticipated emissions and byproducts.
(L) For a proposed renewable energy resource equipment
manufacturing facility:
(A) The applicant shall demonstrate that they can meet
ORS 469.197(4)(c) through (f) by:
(i) Describing the minimum level of direct employment
that will be provided by the facility during each of the tax years in which the
tax credit will be claimed and by describing the anticipated average annual
direct employment during each of those years, including the number of average
hourly and annual wages of employees by employment classifications by
geographic location. The applicant must also describe actions it will take to
achieve cultural diversity in its work force.
(ii) Demonstrating its financial ability to construct
and operate the proposed facility through documentation such as independent
credit ratings; credit references, including letters from banks or other
financial institutions attesting to the applicant’s credit worthiness; and
other documentation demonstrating the applicant’s financial viability.
(iii) Demonstrating that the facility will achieve
long-term operation and success by documenting the qualifications, capabilities
and experience of the applicant in the construction and operation of such
facilities, the long-term commercial and technical viability of the renewable
energy resources manufacturing equipment and the renewable energy resource
facilities for which the equipment is produced.
(iv) Certifying that allowance of the tax credit is
integral to the decision to expand or locate the facility in Oregon.
(v) Before the Director will approve a final
certification for a renewable energy resource equipment manufacturing facility,
the Department may require the applicant to enter into a performance agreement
or other similar agreement for the facility. Failure to comply with the terms
of the performance agreement or other similar agreement may be the basis for
denial or revocation of the final certification pursuant to OAR 330-090-0133.
(B) Any other information necessary to find that a
proposed facility complies with ORS 469.185 to 469.225 and these rules.
(C) In considering such applications, the Director may
consult with other state agencies.
(D) The Director must find that:
(i) The applicant has demonstrated that it has a
reasonable likelihood of achieving the minimum level of employment proposed and
that such employment will contribute to public benefit, based on the number of
average hourly and annual wages of employees including benefits by employment
classifications by geographic location, and actions to achieve cultural
diversity in its workforce.
(ii) The applicant has a reasonable likelihood of being
financially viable based on its credit ratings and references from banks and
financial institutions attesting to its credit worthiness.
(iii) The applicant has the organizational expertise as
demonstrated by qualifications and experience to construct and operate the
proposed facility.
(iv) The renewable energy resource equipment and the
renewable energy resource facilities for which the equipment is produced have
the commercial and technical viability to have a reasonable likelihood to
achieve long-term success.
(v) The facility will contribute to a diversified
portfolio of renewable energy resource equipment manufacturing facilities.
(vi) The applicant has certified that allowance of the
tax credit is integral to the decision to expand or locate in Oregon.
(3) Standards When Reconstructing a Facility: If a
facility is reconstructed and an application for preliminary certification is
filed seeking a tax credit on the reconstructed facility, any tax credit
certified for the reconstructed facility will be reduced by the amount of the
original tax credit remaining for the original facility.
(4) Eligible Costs of a Renewable Energy Resource
Equipment Manufacturing Facility:
(a) A BETC may be granted based on the eligible costs
of a facility that is used to manufacture equipment, machinery or other
products that will be used exclusively for renewable energy resource
facilities.
(b) Subject to the facility cost limitations of OAR
330-090-0150(1)(a) and the provisions of OAR 330-090-0120(4), eligible costs
for a renewable energy resource equipment manufacturing facility include any
land purchase costs, structures, buildings, installations, excavations,
machinery, equipment or devices, or any addition, reconstruction or
improvements to land or existing structures, buildings, installations,
excavations, machinery, equipment or devices, necessarily acquired, constructed
or installed by a person in connection with the conduct of a trade or business,
that is used to manufacture the equipment, machinery or other products that
will be used exclusively for renewable energy resource facilities.
(A) Eligible costs do not include any costs of any land
purchase costs, structures, buildings, installations, excavations, machinery,
equipment or devices, or any addition, reconstruction or improvements to land
or existing structures, buildings, installations, excavations, machinery,
equipment or devices that have been subject in whole or in part to the facility
cost limitation of OAR 330-090-0150 (1)(a) if such costs would exceed that cost
limitation.
(B) Eligible costs do not include costs of a facility
that is used to manufacture equipment, machinery or other products not used
exclusively for renewable energy resource facilities.
(C) An application for a renewable energy resource
equipment manufacturing facility must demonstrate compliance with these
provisions to be accepted, including clearly describing the specific
characteristics of the equipment, machinery or other products that demonstrate
why such equipment, machinery or other products will be used exclusively for
renewable energy resource facilities and not for other commercial purposes and
therefore why the costs of such of such equipment, machinery or other products
are eligible costs.
(5) If the Department determines that the applicant
qualifies for a BETC, the Department may issue a preliminary certification. The
preliminary certification may contain specific criteria and conditions for the
facility to meet in order to obtain a final certification based on the
information provided in the application for the BETC and type of facility that
is described in the application. In addition, the Department may require the
applicant to enter a performance agreement or other similar agreement as a
condition of approval.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 469.040 &
469.165
Stats. Implemented: ORS 469.185 -
469.225
Hist.: DOE 7-1985, f. 12-31-85,
ef. 1-1-86; DOE 4-1991, f. & cert. ef. 12-3-91; DOE 2-1993, f. & cert.
ef. 1-28-93; DOE 5-1993, f. & cert. ef. 12-14-93; DOE 2-1995, f. 12-12-95,
cert. ef. 12-15-95; DOE 3-1996, f. & cert. ef. 11-27-96; DOE 2-1997, f.
12-15-97, cert. ef. 1-1-98; DOE 4-1998, f. 12-14-98, cert. ef. 12-15-98; DOE
2-1999, f.12-22-99, cert. ef. 1-1-00; DOE 1-2001, f. 10-5-01, cert. ef.
10-8-01; DOE 2-2004, f. & cert. ef. 1-21-04; DOE 3-2004, f. & cert. ef.
7-1-04; DOE 1-2005, f. 12-30-05, cert. ef. 1-1-06; DOE 3-2007, f. 11-30-07,
cert. ef. 12-1-07; DOE 3-2008, f. & cert. ef. 3-21-08; DOE 4-2008, f. 6-19-08,
cert. ef. 6-20-08; DOE 2-2009(Temp), f. & cert. ef. 11-3-09 thru 5-1-10;
DOE 3-2010, f. & cert. ef. 4-30-10; DOE 4-2010(Temp), f. 5-21-10, cert. ef.
5-27-10 thru 11-2-10; Administrative correction 11-23-10; DOE 14-2010, f. &
cert. ef. 11-23-10
330-090-0130
How the Oregon Department of
Energy Processes a BETC Application
(1) General:
(a) The Director reviews a BETC application in two
stages. The first stage is called preliminary certification. The second stage
is called final certification. The final certification consists of the
determination of eligible costs for purposes of the tax credit and the issuance
of the BETC final certificate.
(b) To begin the review process for each stage, or to
change the facility during the review process, an applicant must submit an
application on the form approved by the Department. Applications for facilities
that use or produce renewable energy resources, or are listed as renewable
energy resources as defined under ORS 469.185, must be submitted under the
tiered priority system described in OAR 330-090-0350 and include any additional
requirements under this section.
(c) A facility owner planning to use a Pass-through
Partner will select the pass-through option on the Application for Preliminary
Certification.
(d) The Director may impose conditions in approving a
preliminary or final certification that the facility must operate in accordance
with the representations made by the applicant, and is in accordance with the
provisions of ORS 469.185 to 469.225 and any applicable rules or standards
adopted by the Director.
(e) If the Department determines that the applicant
qualifies for a BETC, the Department may issue a preliminary certification. The
preliminary certification may contain specific criteria and conditions for the
facility to meet in order to obtain a final certification based on the
information provided in the application for the BETC and type of facility that
is described in the application. In addition, the Department may require the
applicant to enter a performance agreement or other similar agreement as a
condition of approval.
(2) Pre-Approval of Preliminary Certifications: The
Director has pre-approved preliminary certifications for the following
facilities that the Department has reviewed and determined to be otherwise
qualified under these rules:
(a) Alternate energy devices qualifying for a tax
credit under the Residential Energy Tax Credit Program, OAR 330-070-0010
through 330-070-0097, for which the Department has determined qualified costs,
energy savings, and eligible tax credits. A facility owner may file for a
preliminary certification to present documentation supporting different
determinations for review and approval.
(b) Pre-qualified hybrid-electric vehicles.
(3) Preliminary Certification Review Process: Except as
provided in OAR 330-090-0130(1) and (2), a completed application for
preliminary certification shall be received by the Department on or prior to
the erection, construction, installation or acquisition of a facility.
(a) Within 60 days after an application for preliminary
certification is filed, the Director will decide if it is complete. An
application is incomplete if it does not include information needed to
demonstrate substantive compliance with the provisions of ORS 469.185 to 469.225
and any applicable rules or standards adopted by the Director. The Director
will provide the applicant a written notice relating to the incomplete
application and the information needed to make the application complete. If no
action is taken within 30 days by the applicant, the application will expire.
(b) Within 120 days after a completed application is
submitted the Director will notify the applicant of the status of the
application, except as otherwise provided in subsection (5), if the applicant
has not been notified otherwise the application has been denied.
(A) If it complies, the Director will approve the
preliminary certification. The preliminary certification will state the amount
of the costs that are eligible (eligible costs) for a BETC up to the maximum
amount of certifiable costs under ORS 496.200. It may differ from the amount
requested for reasons explained in the preliminary certification and based on
these rules. Also, it will state any conditions that must be met before
development, final certification, or some other event can occur. The Director
will explain why each condition is needed to comply with these rules.
(B) If it does not comply, the Director will deny the
application. No later than 60 days after the Director issues an order denying
the application, the applicant may request reconsideration as provided in OAR
330-090-0133(4).
(C) An applicant can re-submit an application that is
denied if features of the facility change, the applicant provides data the
absence of which resulted in the denial, or other changes warrant. An
application for preliminary certification can be amended or withdrawn by the
applicant before the Director issues a preliminary certification. If an
application is amended, the time within which review occurs starts over. An
applicant may request reconsideration of an application denial under this rule.
(4) Renewable Energy Resource Equipment Manufacturing
Facility: If under the provisions of ORS 469.200(2), the Director intends to
certify less than the total or no amount of eligible costs of a renewable
energy resource equipment manufacturing facility, the Director will notify the
applicant in writing of that intent before approving the preliminary
certification. The applicant will have 30 calendar days from the date
notification was issued to inform the Director in writing whether it wishes to
withdraw the application or suspend further consideration of the application
until a future date specified or submit additional information in support of
the application. If the Director has not received notification or additional
information in support of the application within that period of time, the
Director may certify less than the total or no amount of eligible costs of the
renewable energy resource equipment manufacturing facility. Once eligible costs
are certified and a preliminary certification is issued under this section, the
certified eligible costs may be revised if conditions under ORS 469.200(2)
change or upon notification from the applicant or other information indicating
that the scope of the project or the energy facility has changed in such a way
to impact the preliminary certificate.
(5) Preliminary Certification After Start of a
Facility:
(a) If a facility has been started an applicant may
file a written request with the Director for approval of a preliminary
certification after facility start. Such a request must contain information in
accord with OAR 330-090-0120 and 330-090-0130(5)(b).
(b) The Director may approve preliminary certification
after facility start if:
(A) The request is in accord with OAR 330-090-0120;
(B) Special circumstances make application for
preliminary certification before facility start up impracticable. Such circumstances
include process delays beyond the applicant’s control, facility funding and
energy supplies or markets; and
(C) The Director receives the waiver request within 90
days of facility start date. Under extraordinary circumstances the Director may
extend the waiver period provided the facility serves the aims of the program.
(D) Failing to submit an application for preliminary
certification before signing contracts for the facility does not constitute
special circumstances supporting a waiver.
(6) How Preliminary Certification Can be Revoked: The
Director may alter, condition, suspend, deny or revoke a preliminary
certification for a reason listed in this section
(a) A facility, other than a renewable energy resource
equipment manufacturing facility, is not completed and a complete final
certification application received before 1,095 days (3 years) after the
preliminary certification was issued or a further 730 days (2 years) if an
extension has been approved. A renewable energy equipment manufacturing facility
is not completed and a complete final certification application received before
1,825 days (5 years) after the preliminary certification was issued.
(b) Permits, waivers, and licenses required by OAR
330-090-0120 are not filed with the Department before facility development
starts.
(c) The facility undergoes changes without the changes
being approved under OAR 330-090-0130(7).
(d) Any other reason allowed by the amendments to ORS
469.210 (3) in Oregon Laws, 2010, Chapter 76, Section 11.
(7) Amendments to Preliminary Certifications: To change
a facility that has a preliminary certification and amend the preliminary
certification, the applicant must file a written request with the Director
prior to the project completion date.
(a) The request must describe the change to the
facility and reasons for the change. It may include changes in cost, tax credit
amount, facility design, and materials. The request may also include changes in
the amount of energy saved or produced, jobs created, project financing, the
applicant, the location, or other matters that demonstrate substantial change
in the project’s scope. The request must be accompanied by the appropriate fee.
(b) If a request does not include information needed to
demonstrate substantive compliance with the provisions of ORS 469.185 to
469.225 and any applicable rules or standards adopted by the Director, the
department will provide the applicant a written notice relating to the
information needed to make the request complete. If the applicant does not
provide all of the requested information to the Department within 30 days, the
request will expire and no changes will be made to the preliminary
certification.
(c) Preliminary certifications issued for facilities
using or producing renewable energy resources, or facilities listed as
renewable energy resources as defined under ORS 469.185, shall not be eligible
for consideration of amendments other than those listed below in (A) through
(C). An eligible amendment cannot change the tier within which the application
was reviewed.
(A) Equipment capacity within 10 percent of the
approved specification;
(B) Amendments to the facility that do not result in an
increased potential tax credit amount, but increase output or otherwise improve
the facility; or
(C) Changes in ownership.
(d) Within 60 days after the applicant files the change
request, the Director will decide if the facility as modified complies with
these rules.
(A) If it complies, the Director may issue an amended
preliminary certification which may contain new or amended criteria, conditions
and requirements.
(B) If it does not comply, the Director will issue an
order that denies the change and provide written reasons for the denial.
(8) If the facility does not proceed: The applicant
must inform the Director in writing if it does not proceed with the facility or
proceeds without the tax credit. In that case, the Director will cancel the
preliminary certification.
(9) Pass-through Option Process and Application:
(a) In addition to the application for preliminary
certification, an applicant who plans to transfer the tax credit certificate to
a Pass-through Partner must complete and file the Pass-though Option
Application form supplied by the Department.
(b) If the Pass-through Partner is not yet secured at
the time of the Application for Preliminary Certification, the facility owner
will complete that section of the application by inserting “Partner to be
identified” and will submit an updated application when the Pass-through
Partner is secured.
(c) The Department will not transfer and issue a final
certificate to a pass-through partner until the facility owner provides
evidence to the Department that the owner has received the pass-through payment
in full.
(10) Extension of Preliminary Certification: Applicants,
other than for renewable resource manufacturing facilities, who have not
previously extended their certification and whose preliminary certification is
anticipated to expire prior to completion of the facility may apply for an
extension of an additional two years from the current expiry of the preliminary
certification.
(a) Applicants must submit a written request to the
department, accompanied by the appropriate fee, describing the progress made in
developing the facility since the department issued the preliminary
certification and verifying that the project will be developed in accordance
with the initial approval, within two years from the current end of the
preliminary certification and prior to the sunset date of the program. The
request shall include the new proposed facility completion date. Requests may
be made no earlier than 6 months prior to the expiration of the existing
preliminary certification.
(b) If an applicant wishes to make changes other than
to the completion date, the applicant must submit a request for amendment as
described in ORS 330-090-0130(7).
(c) If a request or original application does not
include information needed to demonstrate substantive compliance with the
provisions of ORS 469.185 to 469.225 and any applicable rules or standards
adopted by the Director the department will provide the applicant a written
notice specifying the information needed to make the request complete. If the
applicant does not provide all of the requested information to the Department
within 30 days, the request will expire and no extension will be made to the
preliminary certification expiration date.
(d) The department will review the previously approved
application against current statute and rules. Within 60 days after the
department receives the extension request, the Director will decide if the
request complies with these rules.
(A) If it complies, the Director may issue an amended
preliminary certification which may contain new or amended criteria, conditions
and requirements.
(B) If it does not comply, the Director will issue an
order that denies the extension and provide written reasons for the denial.
(11) Final Certification Review Process and
Application: An application for final certification must be filed after the
facility is completed as defined in these rules.
(a) An application for final certification must
include:
(A) Evidence to demonstrate that:
(i) The facility complies with all conditions and
criteria of the preliminary certification and with the provisions of ORS
Chapter 469 and the rules adopted thereunder;
(ii) The facility remains in compliance with local,
state, and federal laws, including local land use laws and with any conditions
imposed by the local government as a condition of land use approval; and
(iii) The facility will be maintained and operated for
at least five years after the facility is placed into operation, or a lesser
period if approved and specified on the preliminary certification.
(B) An account of the facility costs, including
prorated costs.
(i) If facility costs are less than $50,000, the
account may be records of facility costs paid or incurred based on canceled
checks, invoices, receipts, a binding contract or agreement, or other documentation
as may be required under these rules unless required by the Director to supply
verification from a certified public accountant, who is not otherwise
permanently employed by the facility owner or pass-through partner. If an
applicant has an outstanding binding contract or loan agreement, the account
shall demonstrate that payments on contract or loan are not in default; or
(ii) If the facility costs are $50,000 or more, a
certified public accountant, who is not otherwise permanently employed by the facility
owner or pass-through partner, must complete a written review and summary of
costs paid or incurred based on canceled checks, invoices, or receipts, a
binding contract or agreement, or other documentation as may be required under
these rules. If an applicant has an outstanding binding contract or loan
agreement, the certified public accountant shall include sufficient information
to demonstrate that accounts directly related to the facility are not in
default.
(C) For a Sustainable Building Practices Facility, a
copy of the facility U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) Rating Certificate,
USGBC Final LEED™ Review, Energy Performance Documentation, Narrative for
Energy and Atmosphere Credit 1, Annual Solar Income as described in the rules
and method of calculation will be accepted in lieu of facility cost receipts.
(D) Proof the facility is completed and operating.
(E) If the facility is leased or rented, a copy of the
lease or rental agreement.
(F) For Alternative Fuel Vehicle facilities, proof of
conversion must include a copy of vehicle emission test performance results
from DEQ or a conversion shop.
(G) Documentation that the applicant and facility owner
or owners are current on their property taxes where the facility is located if
appropriate; and
(H) Other data the Director finds are needed to assure
a facility complies with these rules and conditions imposed in the preliminary
certificate
(I) The names of the person or persons who are to be
issued the final certificate. If the final certificate is to be issued to a
pass-through partner, the Department will not issue the certificate until the
appropriate criteria, conditions and requirements of the preliminary and final
certification and these rules are satisfied.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 469.040 &
469.165
Stats. Implemented: ORS 469.185 -
469.225
Hist.: DOE 7-1985, f. 12-31-85,
ef. 1-1-86; DOE 3-1989, f. 12-28-89, cert. ef. 1-1-90; DOE 4-1991, f. &
cert. ef. 12-31-91; DOE 2-1992(Temp), f. 12-14-92, cert. ef. 12-15-92; DOE
2-1993, f. & cert. ef. 1-28-93; DOE 5-1993, f. & cert. ef. 12-14-93;
DOE 2-1995, f. 12-12-95, cert. ef. 12-15-95; DOE 3-1996, f. & cert. ef.
11-27-96; DOE 2-1997, f. 12-15-97, cert. ef. 1-1-98; DOE 4-1998, f. 12-14-98,
cert. ef. 12-15-98; DOE 2-1999, f. 12-22-99, cert. ef. 1-1-00; DOE 1-2001, f.
10-5-01, cert. ef. 10-8-01; DOE 2-2004, f. & cert. ef. 1-21-04; DOE 3-2004,
f. & cert. ef. 7-1-04; DOE 1-2005, f. 12-30-05, cert. ef. 1-1-06; DOE
2-2006, f. 9-29-06, cert. ef. 10-1-06; DOE 3-2007, f. 11-30-07, cert. ef.
12-1-07; DOE 3-2008, f. & cert. ef. 3-21-08; DOE 4-2008, f. 6-19-08, cert.
ef. 6-20-08; DOE 2-2009(Temp), f. & cert. ef. 11-3-09 thru 5-1-10; DOE
3-2010, f. & cert. ef. 4-30-10; DOE 4-2010(Temp), f. 5-21-10, cert. ef.
5-27-10 thru 11-2-10; Administrative correction 11-23-10; DOE 14-2010, f. &
cert. ef. 11-23-10
330-090-0133
How ODOE Processes a Final
Application
(1) Processing the Final Certification: To qualify for
a Final Certification, the facility must be completed as described in the
Application for Preliminary Certification and the Preliminary Certificate. Any
changes to the Preliminary Certificate and/or Application for Preliminary
Certification must complete the amendment process outlined in these rules prior
to the project completion date. Failure to obtain approval through the
amendment process may result in denial of the Final Certification Application.
(a) Applications shall be considered received for the
purposes of ORS 469.220 on the date marked received by the department, unless
the application is incomplete. If the application for final certification is
not complete, the date marked received by the department on the complete
application containing all of the required information shall be considered the
received date.
(A) When a facility owner chooses to transfer the tax
credit under ORS 469.206, the Department may hold the application for final
certification until pass-through partner(s) information is received by the
Department. Any application in which the facility owner has indicated a choice
to transfer the tax credit under ORS 469.206 is not a “completed application”
until the Department receives both the completed final certification
application form from the facility owner and the completed pass-through partner
agreement form for the tax credit, or portion of the tax credit, being
transferred to that pass-through partner. The receipt of the completed
application by the Department begins the certification period, as provided in
ORS 469.220.
(B) If more than one pass-through partner is being
transferred the credit, facility owners may have up to 18 months from the date
the first pass-through partner agreement form is received by the Department to
begin each certification period of the tax credit. For pass-through partner(s)
agreement forms received by the Department after the 18-month period, the
certification period begins 18 months from the date the first pass-through
partner agreement form was received by the Department.
(C) For purposes of administering the sunset of the
program, the Department may issue a Final Certificate to a facility owner who
previously indicated a choice to transfer a tax credit to a pass-through
partner under ORS 469.206, if the Department has not received a completed
application that includes the signed pass-through partner agreement form at
least sixty days prior to the sunset date for the BETC program provided under
ORS 315.357. The Final Certificate will be issued to a facility owner if the
only piece causing the application for final certification to be incomplete is
the pass-through partner(s) agreement form.
(b) Within
30 days after a final certification application is received, the Director will
determine whether the application is complete. An application is incomplete if
it does not include information needed to demonstrate substantive compliance
with the provisions of ORS 469.185 to 469.225 and any applicable rules or
standards and preliminary certification conditions adopted by the Director. If
it is not complete, the applicant will be provided a written explanation
describing deficiencies. If it is complete, the Director will process the
application. Within 60 days after a completed final certification application
is received the director will either approve or deny the final certification.
Prior to the program sunset, the Director will process a complete final
certification application received by April 30, 2012. The Director does not
guarantee that a complete final certification application received after April
30, 2012 will be processed prior to the program sunset.
(c) If the Director approves the application, the
Director will issue final certification, which will state the amount of
eligible certified costs and the amount of the tax credit approved. The final
certification may contain additional criteria and conditions that must be met
in order to retain tax credit benefits or the tax credit certificate may be
subject to revocation. If the facility fails to meet any of the criteria,
conditions and requirements established in the final certification, the
facility owner must notify the Department within 30 days.
(d) For efficient truck technology facilities the
department may, upon the request of the applicant, issue no more than two final
certificates for each preliminary certification, up to the amount of the
preliminary certification.
(2) Basis for Denying Tax Credit Benefits
(a) If the Director does not approve the application,
the Director will provide written notice of the action, including a statement
of the findings and reasons for the denial by regular and certified mail.
(b) A final certification application that is denied
can be submitted again. A final certification application can be amended or
withdrawn by the applicant. If an application is submitted again or amended,
the time within which final certification review occurs starts over.
(c) If the Director does not issue a final
certification within 60 days after an application is filed, the application is
denied pursuant to ORS 469.215(4).
(d) The Director may deny a final certificate if:
(A) The applicant does not provide information about
the facility in a reasonable time after the Director requests it;
(B) The facility is significantly different than the
proposed facility for which the preliminary certification was issued;
(C) The applicant misrepresents or fails to construct
or operate the facility;
(D) The applicant fails to demonstrate that the
facility described in the application is separate and distinct from previous or
current applications reviewed by the Department;
(E) The facility does not meet all of the conditions
and requirements contained in the preliminary certificate; or
(F) The applicant is unable to demonstrate that the
facility complies with all applicable provisions of ORS Chapter 469 and the
rules adopted thereunder.
(3) Basis for Revoking Tax Credit Benefits
(a) The Director may revoke certificates as provided in
ORS 469.225 and 315.354(5). For the purposes of this section, “fraud or
misrepresentation” means any misrepresentation made by an applicant for a
preliminary or final certification, including but not limited to,
misrepresentations as to the applicant’s financial viability, facility
construction and operation, or any other information provided as part of an
application for a preliminary or final certification.
(b) After the Director issues a final certificate, an
applicant must notify the director in writing of any of the following
conditions:
(A) The facility has been moved;
(B) Title to the facility has been conveyed;
(C) The facility is subject to or part of a bankruptcy
proceeding;
(D) The facility is not operating; or
(E) The term of a leased facility has ended.
(c) Pursuant to ORS 469.225, upon receiving information
that a BETC certification was obtained by fraud or misrepresentation, or that
the facility has not been constructed or operated in compliance with the
requirements in the certificate, the Director shall revoke the certificate for
the facility.
(d) A revocation of the final certification or portion
of a certification due to fraud or misrepresentation results in the loss of all
prior and future tax credits in connection with that facility. If all or a part
of the tax credit certificate has been transferred to a Pass-through partner
under ORS 469.206, the certificate is not considered revoked as to the
Pass-through partner, but the facility owner is liable for the amount of tax
credits claimed or that could be claimed.
(e) For a facility other than a renewable energy
resource equipment manufacturing facility, the revocation of a certificate due
to failure to construct or operate the facility in compliance with the
certificate results in the loss of any tax credits not yet claimed by the
facility owner. If all or a part of the tax credit certificate has been
transferred to a Pass-through partner under ORS 469.206, the certificate is not
considered revoked as to the Pass-through partner, but the facility owner is
liable for the amount of tax credits claimed or that could be claimed.
(f) For a renewable energy resource equipment manufacturing
facility, revocation of the certificate due to misrepresentation, fraud or
failure to construct or operate the facility in compliance with the certificate
results in the loss of all prior and future tax credits. If all or a part of
the tax credit certificate has been transferred to a Pass-through partner under
ORS 469.206, the certificate is not considered revoked as to the Pass-through
partner, but the facility owner is liable for the amount of tax credits claimed
or that could be claimed.
(4) Sale or Disposition of the Facility after Final
Certification:
(a) Pursuant to ORS 315.354(5), upon receiving notice
that the facility has been sold or otherwise transferred, the Director will
revoke the final certificate, as of the date of the disposition of the
facility, unless the BETC for the facility has already been transferred under
ORS 468.206.
(b) The new owner or new or renewed lessee of a
facility may apply for a final certificate. The request must comply with OAR
330-090-0130(10) and include information to allow the Director to determine the
amount of tax credit not claimed by the former owner or former lessee. If the
facility continues to comply with the requirements set out in these rules and
any applicable conditions imposed by the Director, the Director will issue a
new final certification consistent with the provisions of ORS 315.354(5).
(5) Request for Reconsideration: No later than 60 days
after the Director issues an order on a preliminary certification, amendment to
a preliminary certification, final certification, or canceling or revoking a
final certificate under these rules, the applicant or certificate holder may
request reconsideration in writing.
(6) Inspections: After an application is filed under
ORS 469.205 or 469.215 or a tax credit is claimed under these rules, the
Department may inspect the facility. The Department will schedule the
inspection during normal working hours, following reasonable notice to the
facility operator.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 469.040 &
469.165
Stats. Implemented: ORS 469.185 -
469.225
Hist.: DOE 2-2009(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 11-3-09 thru 5-1-10; DOE 3-2010, f. & cert. ef. 4-30-10; DOE
4-2010(Temp), f. 5-21-10, cert. ef. 5-27-10 thru 11-2-10; Administrative
correction 11-23-10; DOE 14-2010, f. & cert. ef. 11-23-10
330-090-0140
Pass-through Option Facilities
(1) A pass-through Partner may purchase a BETC
certificate from an applicant with a facility that is otherwise eligible for
the tax credit in return for a cash lump-sum pass through payment equivalent to
the net present value of the transferable tax credit. For the purposes of these
rules, the net present value of the credit for purposes of the pass through
payment is calculated based on the formulas below:
(a) For original preliminary certifications issued on
or after January 1, 2010:
(A) For a five year tax credit the net present value is
determined by taking the total tax credit amount divided by 1.3579. Tax
Credit/1.3579
(B) For a one year tax credit the net present value is
determined by taking the tax credit amount divided by 1.0309. Tax Credit/1.0309
(b) For original preliminary certifications issued on
or before December 31, 2009:
(A) 50percent BETC more than $20,000 in eligible costs
— 33.5 percent pass-through rate.
(B) 50percent BETC $20,000 or less in eligible costs
— 43.5 percent pass-through rate.
(C) 35percent BETC more than $20,000 in eligible costs
— 25.5 percent pass-through rate.
(D) 35percent BETC $20,000 or less in eligible costs
— 30.5 percent pass-through rate.
(E) Homebuilder Installed Renewable Energy Facility or
High Performance Home tax credits — 87 percent of tax credit amount.
(c) If an applicant elects to use the pass through
option, the net present value of the credit (the pass through payment) for a
facility is determined by the date the department issues the initial
preliminary certification for the project.
(2) An Investor-Owned Utility may choose to become a
utility Pass-through Partner under the provisions of this section or
participate as a Pass-through Partner under other Provisions of these rules
that would apply to any other Pass-through Partner.
(a) An investor-owned utility (IOU) that complies with
this section may choose to become a Utility Pass-through Partner.
(b) Preliminary certification standards and process:
(A) The application for preliminary certification must
include an estimate of the total installation cost of the qualifying measures
for which the applicant expects to make payments under OAR 330-090-0140(2) for
that year.
(B) Within 60 days after an application for preliminary
certification of the pass-through is filed, the Director shall decide if it is
complete. If it is not complete, the application will be rejected and returned
to the applicant. The applicant may resubmit a complete application.
(C) Within 120 days after a completed application is
filed, the Director shall notify the applicant of the status of the
application, if the applicant has not been notified otherwise the application
has been denied.
(D) The application for preliminary certification of
the pass-through must include a detailed work plan. The applicant and ODOE must
mutually agree upon the work plan and program. The detailed work plan must
include:
(i) A copy or reference to any proposed or required
OPUC tariff and all evaluations of the program through which the pass-through
will be delivered,
(ii) A not to exceed estimate of the total eligible
costs that will be incurred for that calendar year with an estimate of the
number of rental dwellings that will be affected, and
(iii) An agreement that upon submitting the complete
final certification application the applicant will provide a detailed
description of each facility owner, site address, facility description or type,
number of dwelling units for multifamily facilities, total facility cost,
energy savings, energy type saved and tax credit amount passed through.
(c) Final certification standards and process: Final
application for a pass-through tax credit must include a summary and total of
each facility’s owner, site address, facility description or type, number of
dwelling units for multifamily facilities, total facility cost, energy savings,
energy type saved and tax credit amount passed through. The applicant must
retain records for each facility including all of the information required in
110-090-0130(11) of these rules.
(A) An application must contain:
(i) An itemized list of costs for each rental dwelling
unit weatherized, premium efficient appliance, each alternative fuel vehicle,
alternative fuel vehicle for company use, and alternative fuel fueling station,
and the total facility costs made that period for which the applicant is
applying for credit.
(ii) The nominal value of credits for which the
applicant applies, not to exceed the total eligible costs multiplied by the
existing net present value of the tax credit for the pass-through payment as
defined in OAR 330-090-0140(1).
(iii) The name, address, and phone number of the owner
of each rental unit, alternative fuel vehicle, or alternative fuel fueling
station listed in OAR 330-090-0140(2)(c)(A)(i). A sample selected by the
Department of individual weatherization location audit reports will be
submitted for at least 15 percent of the facility sites.
(iv) Certification that each rental dwelling unit
energy conservation measure (ECM) is a measure that would qualify under or is a
measure recommended in an energy audit completed under ORS 469.633(2).
(v) Certification that the ECMs paid for were installed
and inspected in accordance with the IOU’s appropriate allowed tariff(s),
(vi) Certification that the ECMs paid for were
installed and inspected in accordance with the IOUs’ Model Conservation
Standards tariff or equivalent program as approved by ODOE.
(vii) If costs associated with an individual rental
dwelling are $50,000 or more or if required by the Director, a written review
and summary completed by a certified public accountant, who is not otherwise
employed by the facility owner or pass-through partner, of costs paid based on
canceled checks, invoices, receipts, a binding contract or agreement, or other
documentation as may be required by OAR 330-090-0110(19).
(viii) If a contractor installed fueling station: the
name, address, and phone number of the contractor as defined under OAR
330-090-0130(4) of this rule and the site at which the fueling station is
installed.
(B) Within 60 days after a complete final certification
application is filed, the Director will approve or deny final certification,
with reasons for the action. The Director will deny the final certification if
the applicant has not complied with the requirements of this rule. No later
than 60 days after the Director issues an order denying the final
certification, the applicant may request reconsideration as provided in OAR
330-090-0133(5). The Director will approve final certification if:
(i) The applicant provides the owners of existing
rental dwelling units listed in OAR 330-090-0140(2)(c)(A)(i) with:
(I) A low-interest loan, as defined by these rules, up
to $5,000 per dwelling unit for ECMs included in OAR 330-090-0140(2)(c)(A)(iv);
(II) A cash payment for ECMs included in OAR
330-090-0140(2)(c)(A)(iv). The payment must be a percentage of the
cost-effective portion of the energy conservation measures as approved by the
Oregon Public Utility Commission, including installation (but not including the
dwelling owner’s own labor), not to exceed the cost of those measures;
including the net present value of the tax credit for the pass through payment
as defined in OAR 330-090-0170(1) for the EMCs at that specific site address
the IOU may claim; or
(III) Such other payments approved by the Director to
pay for ECMs in rental dwellings. This includes a payment for the net present
value of the tax credit that exceeds the amount of the low-interest loan. This
payment will apply first to reduce the amount of the loan with the balance paid
to the owner of the rental dwelling unit.
(ii) The amount of the credit is the sum of payments
and loans listed in OAR 330-090-0140(2)(c)(A)(i) for ECMs that were installed
and inspected.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 469.040 &
469.165
Stats. Implemented: ORS 469.185 -
469.225
Hist.: DOE 7-1985, f. 12-31-85,
ef. 1-1-86; DOE 3-1989, f. 12-28-89, cert. ef. 1-1-90; DOE 3-1990, f. &
cert. ef. 9-20-90; DOE 4-1991, f. & cert. ef. 12-31-91; DOE 2-1993, f.
& cert. ef. 1-28-93; DOE 5-1993, f. & cert. ef. 12-14-93; DOE 2-1995,
f. 12-12-95, cert. ef. 12-15-95; DOE 3-1996, f. & cert. ef. 11-27-96; DOE
2-1997, f. 12-15-97, cert. ef. 1-1-98; DOE 4-1998, f. 12-14-98, cert. ef.
12-15-98; DOE 2-1999, f. 12-22-99, cert. ef. 1-1-00; DOE 1-2001, f. 10-5-01,
cert. ef. 10-8-01; DOE 2-2004, f. & cert. ef. 1-21-04; DOE 3-2004, f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-04; DOE 3-2007, f. 11-30-07, cert. ef. 12-1-07; DOE 3-2008, f.
& cert. ef. 3-21-08; DOE 2-2009(Temp), f. & cert. ef. 11-3-09 thru
5-1-10; DOE 1-2010, f. & cert. ef. 1-8-10; DOE 4-2010(Temp), f. 5-21-10,
cert. ef. 5-27-10 thru 11-2-10; Administrative correction 11-23-10; DOE
14-2010, f. & cert. ef. 11-23-10
330-090-0150
Budget Limits and Payments for
BETC
(1) Amount of Credits Allowed for a Facility:
(a) During any calendar year, a BETC preliminary
certification will not be issued for more than:
(A) $20 million in maximum eligible facility costs for
a renewable energy resource facility or high efficiency combined heat and power
facility, not including wind facilities with an installed capacity of more than
10 megawatts;
(B) $7 million in maximum eligible facility costs for a
wind facility with an installed capacity of more than 10 megawatts issued a
preliminary certification during 2010.
(C) $5 million in maximum eligible facility costs for a
wind facility with an installed capacity of more than 10 megawatts issued a
preliminary certification during 2011.
(D) $3 million in maximum eligible facility costs for a
wind facility with an installed capacity of more than 10 megawatts issued a
preliminary certification on or after January 1, 2012.
(E) $40 million in maximum eligible facility costs for
a renewable energy resource equipment manufacturing facility, not including
those used to manufacture electric vehicles;
(F) $2.5 million in maximum eligible facility costs for
a renewable energy resource equipment manufacturing facility used to
manufacture electric vehicles;
(G) $10 million in maximum eligible facility costs for
any other facility, not including homebuilder-installed renewable energy
facility and high performance home BETC subject to subsection (b).
(b) A final certification for a BETC will not be issued
for more than 50 percent of the cost not to exceed $9,000 for a
homebuilder-installed renewable energy facility or $12,000 if the facility also
constitutes a high performance home.
(2) Return of Review Charge for Returned Incomplete
Applications: This section does not apply to applications subject to the tiered
priority system under OAR 330-090-0350. If under OAR 330-090-0130, the
Department does not accept and returns an incomplete application for
preliminary certification, the Department will also return the review charge
submitted by the applicant.
(3) Cost of Reviews: ORS 469.217 requires applicants to
pay all costs for the review of their applications. In order to meet this
statutory requirement the Department has established the following schedule for
payments to accompany an application.
(a) Included with each application for preliminary
certification must be a payment payable to the Department, except for
facilities qualifying under OAR 330-090-0130(2), for which a charge must be
paid with the application for final certification.
(A) Applicants within tier two or three of the tiered
priority system under OAR 330-090-0350 shall include with their initial
application a payment to the department of $500 for the costs of step one.
Applicants who are notified that their application is approved for step two
will be required to submit an additional fee as calculated under (B) prior to
review.
(B) For all facilities except Sustainable Building
Facilities, renewable energy resource equipment manufacturing facilities, or
facilities qualifying under OAR 330-090-0130(2), the payment will be 0.0060
multiplied by the facility eligible cost, or $30 whichever is greater. The
maximum payment amount is $35,000.
(C) For renewable energy resource equipment
manufacturing facility applications the payment will be 0.0060 multiplied by
the facility eligible cost not to exceed a payment amount of $75,000.
(D) For Sustainable Building Facilities, the payment
will be 0.0035 multiplied by the eligible cost calculated as required under
these rules.
(E) For facilities that qualify under OAR
330-090-0130(2), the payment will be 0.0035 multiplied by the eligible cost as
requested in the final certification application.
(b) A refund of up to 75 percent of this payment may be
granted up to 730 days (2 years) from the date the preliminary certification
application was received by the Department. Under no circumstances will an
amount over 75 percent be refunded. Conditions for which a refund may be
granted are:
(A) Denial of a application for preliminary
certification or for facilities that qualify under OAR 330-090-0130(2) of final
certification; or
(B) Denial of a portion of costs requested in an
application for preliminary certification or for facilities that qualify under
OAR 330-090-0130(2) of final certification; or,
(C) A request to amend a preliminary certification
resulting in decreased eligible costs. A refund will not be granted for any
costs that are included in a pending certification.
(c) Requests for amendments or changes to a preliminary
certification must be accompanied by a payment. The payment is the lesser of
$300 or the preliminary certification application fee for the project. If a
request to amend a preliminary certification results in facility
re-certification with increased eligible cost then additional application
payments will be paid for the additional cost as specified in (3)(a) of this
rule.
(d) Requests for extension of a preliminary
certification under ORS 469.205 must be accompanied by a payment. The payment
is the lesser of $300 or the preliminary certification application fee for the
project.
(e) No facilities will be exempt from these
requirements including applications for BETC pass-through under OAR
330-090-0140.
(f) The payment is a required part of a completed
preliminary certification application per OAR 330-090-0130, except for
facilities that qualify under OAR 330-090-0130(2). Preliminary certifications
will only be issued if the application is complete. In addition, the applicant
may be required to pay for costs incurred in connection with the application
that exceed these payments and which the Director of the Department determines
are incurred solely in connection with processing the application. The
applicant will be advised of any additional costs the applicant must pay before
the costs are incurred.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 469.040 &
469.165
Stats. Implemented: ORS 469.185 -
469.225
Hist.: DOE 7-1985, f. 12-31-85,
ef. 1-1-86; DOE 3-1986, f. & ef. 8-29-86; DOE 3-1989, f. 12-28-89, cert.
ef. 1-1-90; DOE 4-1991, f. & cert. ef. 12-31-91; DOE 2-1992(Temp), f.
12-14-92, cert. ef. 12-15-92; DOE 2-1993, f. & cert. ef. 1-28-93; DOE
5-1993, f. & cert. ef. 12-14-93; DOE 2-1995, f. 12-12-95, cert. ef.
12-15-95; DOE 3-1996, f. & cert. ef. 11-27-96; DOE 2-1997, f. 12-15-97,
cert. ef. 1-1-98; DOE 4-1998, f. 12-14-98, cert. ef. 12-15-98; DOE 2-1999,
f.12-22-99, cert. ef. 1-1-00; DOE 1-2001, f. 10-5-01, cert. ef. 10-8-01; DOE
2-2004, f. & cert. ef. 1-21-04; DOE 3-2004, f. & cert. ef. 7-1-04; DOE
3-2007, f. 11-30-07, cert. ef. 12-1-07; DOE 3-2008, f. & cert. ef. 3-21-08;
DOE 4-2008, f. 6-19-08, cert. ef. 6-20-08; DOE 2-2009(Temp), f. & cert. ef.
11-3-09 thru 5-1-10; DOE 3-2010, f. & cert. ef. 4-30-10; DOE 4-2010(Temp),
f. 5-21-10, cert. ef. 5-27-10 thru 11-2-10; Administrative correction 11-23-10;
DOE 14-2010, f. & cert. ef. 11-23-10
330-090-0350
Tiered Prioritization System for
Renewable Facilities
(1) Applicability: The tiered priority system applies
to applications for facilities that use or produce renewable energy resources,
or are listed as renewable energy resources, as defined under ORS 469.185.
(2) Process: The department will issue a BETC Opportunity
Announcement (OA) detailing the availability of potential tax credits for
renewable facilities, the criteria to be applied in selecting facilities for
allocation of available potential credits, and soliciting applications within a
set time period. Applications will be reviewed within tiers, differentiated by
facility cost. The process and level of review differ between tiers as
specified in these rules and the OA. The requirements for issuance of
preliminary and final certifications within these rules will apply to all
applications allocated potential tax credits through the tiered priority
system.
(a) Tier one application acceptance and review will be
completed on an ongoing basis subject to the tax credit limitations published
by the department. Complete applications will be processed in the order they
were received and may be rejected once the department has received applications
totaling all available credits for this tier.
(b) Tier two application review will consist of an OA
and three review steps:
(A) OA: The department will issue an OA and collect
applications.
(B) Step one: Applications will be reviewed against
initial standards, which will include criteria that will ensure those that
advance are complete and that the facility can be completed prior to the
program sunset. The fee for step one is non-refundable. Applications that do
not proceed to step two or three may reapply during a future OA.
(C) Step two: Applications will be reviewed for
priority against standards and criteria detailed in the OA and initial
allocations of available potential tax credit will be made. Applications that
proceed to step three will be required to submit an additional non-refundable
fee.
(D) Step three: Technical review of proposed facilities
will be completed, allocations of potential tax credits confirmed and
announced, and preliminary certifications issued.
(c) Tier three application review will consist of an OA
and three review steps:
(A) OA: The department will issue an OA and collect
applications.
(B) Step one: Applications will be reviewed against
initial standards specified within the OA to include ensuring those that
advance are complete, and that the facility can be completed prior to the
program sunset. The fee for step one is non-refundable. Applications that do
not proceed to step two or three may reapply during a future OA.
(C) Step two: Applications will be reviewed for
priority against standards and criteria detailed in the OA and initial
allocations of available potential tax credit will be made. Applications that
proceed to step three will be required to submit an additional fee.
(D) Step three: Technical review of proposed facilities
will be completed and allocations of potential tax credits confirmed prior to
the issuance of a preliminary certification. If the department determines that
it does not have the appropriate resources available to conduct the review, the
department may notify the applicant that the department intends to use a third
party to conduct the technical review. If a third party is used, the applicant
will be required to submit payment to the department approved third party for
the review.
(3) Tier
Boundaries:
(a) Tier one shall consist of applications with
projected facility cost less than $500,000.
(b) Tier two shall consist of applications with
projected facility cost equal to or greater than $500,000 but less than
$6,000,000.
(c) Tier three shall consist of applications with
projected facility cost equal to or greater than $6,000,000.
(d) For the purposes of determining tier assignment,
facility cost shall not be limited as defined in ORS 469.200.
(e) Applicants
may apply for less than the maximum eligible potential tax credit for their
project, this shall not change the tier within which the application is
reviewed.
(4) Allocation of tax credits between tiers and
application periods
(a) The department shall announce the allocation of
potential tax credits. The OA will specify the distribution of funding for the
appropriate tiers and the amount allocated to the current application period.
The department will continually monitor the rate of allocation of potential tax
credits to ensure the total amount of potential tax credits does not exceed the
limits provided in Oregon Laws, 2010, Chapter 76, Section 2.
(b) If no applications are received within an
application period for any tier, the allocated potential tax credits for that
period and tier will be reallocated by the department. If the total request
from all complete applications received for a period and tier is less than the
allocated potential tax credits, the department will review all applications to
determine that they meet any applicable standards prior to allocating potential
tax credits, and reallocating remaining potential tax credits. If allocated
potential tax credits remain but are insufficient to satisfy the request of the
next applicant, the Director may offer a reduced tax credit amount or
reallocate the remaining potential tax credits.
(c) Potential tax credit amounts that are not allocated
to a facility at the end of a limitation period specified in Oregon Laws, 2010,
Chapter 76, Section 5 will expire.
(5) Application acceptance periods
(a) Tier one applications will be accepted at any time
prior to the sunset, while allocated funds are available.
(b) Tier two and three applications will only be
accepted during an application acceptance period specified in an OA.
Applications for tier two and three received outside of an application
acceptance period will not be accepted.
(6) Criteria. The department will announce specific
standards and criteria that will be considered in determining eligibility in
the OA. In addition to the criteria listed in Oregon Laws, 2010, Chapter 76,
Section 6, criteria for tiered two and three potential tax credits may include:
(a) The completeness of the application and whether it
was received within the time period specified in the OA;
(b) The appropriate application payment;
(c) The time frame in which actual construction will be
started and completed and the ability to meet all regulatory requirements
including program deadlines;
(d) Criteria established in statute or rules that apply
to the BETC program;
(e) The simple payback period;
(f) The number of jobs created;
(g) Whether the renewable activities were aligned with
conservation activities;
(h) The financing structure of the facility;
(i) The reliability of power created;
(j) Whether the facility is combined heat and power or
co-gen system;
(k) If the applicant is a public body, whether a
competitive bidding process was utilized;
(L) Nationally recognized standards or practices for
the specified technology; and
(m) Any other factors listed in the OA.
(7) Incomplete applications
(a) The department will determine if an application is
complete. An application is incomplete if it does not include information
needed to demonstrate substantive compliance with the provisions of ORS 469.185
to 469.225 and any applicable rules, standards and criteria in the OA, rules or
otherwise adopted by the Director.
(b) For tier one the department will provide a written
notice to applicants that the application is incomplete, specifying the
information needed to make the application complete. Applicants will be allowed
30 days from the time of notification by the department to provide specified
information. The application expires if the applicant does not supply the
information within 30 days.
(c) Incomplete applications for tier two or three will
not be accepted for the current OA. Applicants may reapply and resubmit their
application during the next OA.
(8) Prioritization within tiers
(a) Applications within tier one are not be subject to
prioritization, but will be required to meet listed standards and other
requirements of the BETC program. If the Director receives applications for
preliminary certification with a total amount of potential tax credits in
excess of the allocation for tier one, the Director will allocate potential tax
credits in the order in which complete applications are received.
(b) Applications within tiers two and three will be
ranked within each tier against required criteria specified within the OA in
effect at the time of application acceptance, and must meet the requirements of
the OA and the BETC program.
(9) Allocation of potential tax credits within tiers:
(a) Potential tax credits available within an
application period will be allocated to applications in order of the priority
established under section (8) and as determined by the procedure in the OA.
Applicants may be offered less potential tax credit than requested in their
application.
(b) For tiers two and three, applicants will have 10
business days to respond in writing to the department’s written notification of
the offer of preliminary certification. Applicants who do not respond during
this period will be considered to have rejected the offer of the preliminary
certification. If an applicant does not accept an allocation, the potential tax
credits may be issued to other applications within the period or to future
periods or tiers. Upon written acceptance from the applicant, the department
will issue a preliminary certification under ORS 469.205.
(10) Applications allocated potential tax credits:
Applicants who are issued a preliminary certification under this section must
follow all department procedures and obtain final certification prior to
issuance of tax credits. Allocation of potential tax credits through the
issuance of a preliminary certification does not guarantee issuance of final
certification.
(11) Applications not issued preliminary certification:
Applications reviewed under this section and not allocated potential tax
credits will be notified by the department. Applicants may make application for
the same facility within a future application period but will not be eligible
to carry-forward applications or fees.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 469.040 &
469.165
Stats. Implemented: ORS 469.185 -
469.225, 315.354, 315.356, HB 3680 2010.
Hist.: DOE 14-2010, f. & cert.
ef. 11-23-10
330-090-0450
Prioritization System for
Renewable Resource Equipment Manufacturing Facilities
Applications in excess of Biennial limits: In the event
that the Director receives applications for preliminary certification with a
total amount of potential tax credits in excess of the limitations in Oregon
Laws, 2010, Chapter 76, the Director shall allocate the potential tax credits
according to the order in which the applications are received.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 469.040 &
469.165
Stats. Implemented: ORS 469.185 -
469.225, 315.354, 315.356, HB 3680 2010.
Hist.: DOE 14-2010, f. & cert.
ef. 11-23-10
Rule
Caption: Establishes procedures, criteria
and fees for the implementation of the EEAST Loan Program Pilots.
Adm.
Order No.: DOE 15-2010
Filed with Sec. of
State: 12-15-2010
Certified to be
Effective: 12-15-10
Notice Publication
Date: 11-1-2010
Rules Adopted: 330-112-0000, 330-112-0010, 330-112-0020, 330-112-0030,
330-112-0040, 330-112-0050, 330-112-0060, 330-112-0070, 330-112-0080, 330-112-0090,
330-112-0100
Rules Repealed: 330-112-0000(T), 330-112-0010(T), 330-112-0020(T),
330-112-0030(T), 330-112-0040(T), 330-112-0050(T), 330-112-0060(T),
330-112-0070(T), 330-112-0080(T), 330-112-0090(T), 330-112-0100(T)
Subject: These rules carry out provisions of ORS Chapter 470 as
they pertain to the administration by the Oregon Department of Energy of the
Energy Efficiency and Sustainable technology Act of 2009. Oregon Administrative
Rules, chapter 330, division 112 sets out the rules governing the department’s
energy efficiency and sustainable loan program. The purpose of the program is
to provide financing for energy efficiency upgrades of residential and
commercial buildings in the State of Oregon.
Rules Coordinator: Kathy Stuttaford—(503) 373-2127
330-112-0000
Purpose and Objectives
These rules carry out provisions of ORS Chapter 470 as
they pertain to the administration by the Oregon Department of Energy of the
Energy Efficiency and Sustainable Technology Act of 2009. Oregon Administrative
Rule, chapter 330, division 112 sets out the rules governing the department’s
energy efficiency and sustainable technology loan program. The purpose of the
program is to provide financing for energy efficiency upgrades of residential
and commercial buildings in the State of Oregon.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
330-112-0010
Definitions
As used in ORS Chapter 470 and in Oregon Administrative
Rule, Chapter 330, Division 112, the following terms have the definitions set
forth below unless the context requires otherwise:
(1) “Act” means ORS 470.500 through 470.715.
(2) “Base efficiency package” has the meaning given
that term in ORS 470.050(3).
(3) “Contractor” is defined in ORS 701.119.4.
(4) “Department” means the Oregon Department of Energy.
(5) “Director” means the director of the Oregon
Department of Energy.
(6) “Eligible entities” means those parties that meet
with the general provisions of ORS 470.060.
(7) “Energy
savings projection” is defined in ORS470.050 (13).
(8) “Estimated economic benefit” means the amount by
which the average estimated monthly energy savings of a project exceed the
project repayment costs.
(9) “Financial Manager” is a financial manager as
described in ORS 470.590
(10) “Measure” means the building shell and energy
efficiency equipment improvements via materials and products that reduce energy
use by an existing building.
(11) “Nontraditional technology” means technology
applicable to renewable energy sources (such as, biomass, geothermal, solar,
wave, and wind), smart grid, and alternative fuels.
(12) “Optional package” has the meaning given that term
in ORS 470.050(21).
(13) “PPFA” means the Public Purpose Fund Administrator
as defined in ORS 470.050(23).
(14) “Program”, “EEAST” or “EEAST program” means the
energy efficiency and sustainable technology loan program.
(15) “Project” means a small scale local energy
project, as defined by ORS 470.050(27), being funded by the EEAST program.
(16) “Sustainable energy project manager” means a
sustainable energy project manager as defined in ORS 470.050 (30).
(17) “Property” means the property benefited by a
project.
(18) “Territory” or “sustainable energy territory”
means the geographic service area that a sustainable energy project manager
serves.
(19) “Useful life” means the number of years that a
project or project component will likely function without major repair or
replacement.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
330-112-0020
Sustainable Energy Project
Managers
(1) The PPFA shall be the sustainable energy project
manager for the investor-owned electric utility service territory, and shall be
the acting sustainable energy project manager in any other territory that is
not served by an existing sustainable energy project manager. The PPFA and
consumer-owned utilities are not subject to the requirements of this section.
(2) Entities may apply to be the sustainable energy
project manager for a territory: where the 5-year term of the sustainable
energy project manager for that territory is within 1 year of expiry; or where
the PPFA is the acting sustainable energy project manager.
(3) Each entity applying to be a sustainable energy
project manager shall submit to the director the following:
(a) Completed application on a form approved by the
director,
(b) Proof of its status as a city, county, metropolitan
service district, local government, nonprofit, for-profit, tribal or state
entity;
(c) Boundaries that are consistent with the parameters
established in ORS 330-112-0030 for the sustainable energy territory of the
proposed sustainable energy project manager;
(d) A proposed business plan that demonstrates how the
entity will provide the following services for the program within the proposed
sustainable energy territory:
(A) Promotion and outreach;
(B) Technical support;
(C) Financial support including loan applicant support;
(D) Project installation verification;
(E) Monitoring of program effectiveness of energy
efficiency and sustainable technology loans;
(F) Cooperation and coordination of outreach and
promotional efforts with local utilities and other stakeholders;
(G) Coordination with gas utilities regarding any
changes to a gas pipeline or the installation of appliances used for space
heating, water heating and compressed natural gas refueling;
(H) Coordination with electric utilities regarding electric
charging or any changes to electrical connections that are external to a
structure;
(I) Referral of applicants with household incomes that
may qualify them for a weatherization program to the Housing and Community
Services Department;
(J) Reporting of information on a monthly basis
regarding:
(i) The total amount of energy efficiency and
sustainable technology loans issued;
(ii) The types of projects being funded by the loans;
(iii) The characteristics of the loan recipients; and
(iv) The number of applications denied, and the reasons
for denial;
(K)Maintenance of records that document the receipt and
disbursement of funds provided through the program;
(L) Maintenance of records that document both approved
and denied applications for loans; and
(M) Development of the underwriting criteria used to
determine loan eligibility.
(e) A detailed breakdown of the cost of implementation
of its business plan, in particular the elements of its business plan listed in
OAR 330-112-0020(3) (d) (A) through (D); and
(f) Background information about the applicant
including, but not limited to, the qualifications, relevant experience,
financial status and staff of the applicant.
(4) When reviewing an applicant, the director may
consider:
(a) The organizational experience of the applicant and
the capacity of the applicant to successfully implement the energy efficiency
and sustainable technology loan program goals and requirements; (b) The
strength of the applicant’s proposed plan for implementing the goals and requirements
of the energy efficiency and sustainable technology loan program;
(c) The cost at which the applicant can conduct
outreach, promotion, loan applicant support and project verification services
necessary to implement the energy efficiency and sustainable technology loan
program;
(d) Any fiduciary or other obligation of the applicant
that creates an actual or apparent conflict of interest that may interfere with
achieving the goals of the energy efficiency and sustainable technology loan
program; and
(e) The approval of the utility or utilities within
whose service territory the applicant is requesting certification.
(5) The director may negotiate any feature of the
applicant’s proposed plan, or place such conditions on the certification, as
necessary to ensure that the applicant will meet the goals and requirements of
the energy efficiency and sustainable technology loan program.
(6) The director will notify an applicant in writing
within no more than 90 days from the day the completed application was received
as to whether or not the applicant is awarded the sustainable energy project
manager position.
(7) The Department may request verification that a
sustainable energy project manager continues to meet the required
qualifications and provide the required services at any time.
(8) The director may terminate the certification of a
sustainable energy project manager for:
(a) Failure to adequately implement an applicable
energy efficiency and sustainable technology loan program plan;
(b) Noncompliance with the regulatory requirements
established in OAR 330-112 or the statutory requirements of the energy
efficiency and sustainable technology loan program established in the Act;
(c) Failure to meet any sustainable energy project
manager criteria established by the director; or
(d) Failure to perform other certification conditions.
If the director terminates the certification of a sustainable energy project
manager, the PPFA shall become acting sustainable energy project manager.
(9) The Department shall monitor reports to determine
compliance with program requirements, monitor fiscal patterns and chart program
progress. The Department may conduct a review of a sustainable energy project
manager, and this may include, but not be limited to, a review of:
(a) Financial records of the sustainable energy project
manager;
(b) Loan files;
(c) Work completed by the sustainable energy project
manager, including training and technical assistance provided;
(d) Post-installation inspections conducted by the
sustainable energy project manager.
(10) Pilot program sustainable energy project managers
in consumer-owned utility service areas shall provide information to the
director, in a form approved by the director, to meet the requirements of the Energy
Efficiency and Sustainable Technology Act of 2009.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
330-112-0030
Sustainable EnergyTerritories
(1) The boundaries for sustainable energy territories
shall comply with ORS 470.530(3) (a), (b), and (c) and ORS 470.555
(2) Territory boundaries may be set by the director as
necessary to accomplish the goals of the program.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
330-112-0040
Form of Loan Assistance
(1) The Department may make loans to eligible entities
under the terms of written commitments.
(2) Loans shall be made with proceeds from bonds issued
pursuant to ORS 470.610 or other available funds obtained by the Department.
The Department may establish such fees, charges, premiums, interest rates, and
repayment terms, as the Department considers appropriate or necessary to
provide sufficient funds to:
(a) Pay for the cost of borrowing through bond
issuance; and
(b) Carry out the EEAST program; Further, the
Department may include in the loan documentation such covenants, performance
criteria and reporting requirements as the Department considers appropriate or
necessary for the type, use and amount of loan provided, and such other
provisions as the Department considers appropriate or necessary, to provide
sufficient safeguards to protect the financial interest of the state.
(3) If the Department receives loan applications in an
amount greater than the amount of funds available, the Department shall select
those applications which, in the judgment of the Department, best achieve the
program’s goals as defined in ORS 470.500.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
330-112-0050
Loan Evaluation, Processing and
Collection
(1) Projects and EEAST loans may be processed through a
sustainable energy project manager. The PPFA and consumer-owned utilities that
participate in the EEAST program will be the initial sustainable energy project
managers within their territories.
(2) The Department may make loans to entities that will
use the funds to provide EEAST loans.
(3) The Department or sustainable energy project
manager will review all applications of eligible entities. An applicant shall
submit such documentation as the Department or sustainable energy project
manager may require to determine whether a loan should be approved. If any
items requested by the Department or sustainable energy project manager are not
received within fourteen days from the date of the request, the loan
application may be denied. If a loan application is denied and an applicant
chooses to re-apply, the applicant must submit a new application and again pay
any applicable fees and charges.
(4) The Director or sustainable energy project manager
may deny a loan to any applicant that restricts membership, sales, or services
on the basis of any of the protected classes listed in ORS 659A.003.
(5) The final maturity of a loan shall not exceed the
lesser of (a) 20 years from the date of its making, and (b) the dollar-weighted
average of the useful life of the project components.
(6) The director may limit the term and amount of any
loan. The director may deny any loan request or set such terms and conditions
as needed to assure a sound loan or to protect the program funds and the
Department.
(7) All EEAST loans made by the Department or
sustainable energy project managers shall comply with the requirements of ORS
470.060; 470.065; 470.070; 470.080; 470.090; 470.100; 470.120; 470.150;
470.155; 470.170; 470.190; 470.200; and 470.210, to the extent not contrary to
the requirements of the Act.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
330-112-0060
Certification Standards for
Contractors
These standards apply to contractors participating in
the construction of projects financed through the program, but not including home
energy savings projections. Contractors must obtain certification under ORS
701.119 from the Construction Contractors Board to participate. To obtain
certification the contractor must:
(1) Prove that the contractor has sufficient skill to
ensure that the contractor can successfully install energy efficiency,
renewable energy or weatherization projects with a high degree of quality and
customer satisfaction, such skills to be demonstrated by one of the following:
(a) Oregon Home Performance certified through the
ENERGY STAR Building Performance Institute (BPI);
(b) Residential Energy Analyst Program (REAP) certified
through the Oregon Energy Coordinators Association; or
(c) Completion by its employees of training based on
the curriculum developed by an accredited organization to meet the United
States Department of Energy standards and any additional specifications and
standards designated by the Department and PPFA.
(2) Not be a contractor listed by the Commissioner of
the Bureau of Labor and Industries under ORS 279C.860 as ineligible to receive
a contract or subcontract for public works.
(3) Be an equal opportunity employer or small business
or be a minority or women business enterprise or disadvantaged business
enterprise as those terms are defined in ORS 200.005.
(4) Demonstrate a history of compliance with the rules
and other requirements of the Construction Contractors Board and of the
Workers’ Compensation Division and the Occupational Safety and Health Division
of the Department of Consumer and Business Services.
(5) Employ at least 80 percent of employees used for
energy efficiency and sustainable technology loan program projects from the
local work force, if a sufficient supply of skilled workers is available
locally.
(6) Demonstrate a history of compliance with federal
and state wage and hour laws.
(7) Pay wages to employees used for projects at a rate
equal to at least 180 percent of the state minimum wage.
(8) Pay wages to employees used for commercial
structures at the prevailing wage rate for each trade or occupation employed.
Certified contractors that provide the Department proof that they provide
employees with health insurance benefits shall be identified as preferred
service providers by the Department. This information must be provided annually
on the anniversary of certification by the Construction Contractors Board.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
330-112-0070
Standards for Contractors during
Pilot Programs
Contractors without certification may work on projects
under pilot programs if no certified contractor is available, and the PPFA or
sustainable energy project manager has approved the contractor. The contractor
must pay wages to employees used for pilot projects at a rate equal to at least
180 percent of the state minimum wage or, if the project is for a commercial
structure or is subject to prevailing wage laws, the prevailing wage for each
trade or occupation employed.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
330-112-0080
Energy Savings Projections
Proposed measures shall be ranked in order of energy
cost savings per dollar of measure cost before incentives, with less effective
measures including in their energy savings calculations any reductions in
energy use available from more effective measures. The estimated costs and
energy savings calculations for each measure in the energy savings projections
shall clearly and separately note all eligible rebates, tax credits or other
incentives for the measure.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
330-112-0090
Base Efficiency Package and
Optional Packages Content
(1) The base efficiency package and any recommended
optional packages for a property shall be compiled from the results of an
energy savings projection as defined in ORS 470.050 (3); 470.050 (13)].
(2) All energy savings projection evaluations shall
meet with the provisions of ORS 470.635
(3) A package that does not during its useful life
produce anticipated energy savings of at least 25 percent of the cost of the
package is not eligible for a loan under this program; but this restriction
does not apply to nontraditional technologies approved by the Department.
(4) The base efficiency package for a residential
dwelling served by a single meter shall include an insulation package in
accordance with installation standards to at least the following, as applicable:
(a) Building Envelope
(A) Attic/Ceiling: insulate to R-38;
(B) Floor: if currently R-11 or less, insulate to R-30
or full cavity thickness;
(C) Wall: if currently R-4 or less, insulate to R-11 or
fill wall cavity; and
(D) Air Leakage: whole-house air sealing measures in
accordance with installation standards.
(5) Any measure identified in an energy savings
projection that produces energy savings equal to 95 percent or more of the loan
payment amount for that measure may also be included in the base efficiency
package if there are sufficient loan offset grant funds available to offset
measure costs to the point where energy savings and loan costs for the base
efficiency package are equal.
(6) All base efficiency package measures, if any, shall
be included in the project before a project may include any optional packages.
(7) Optional package measures may be added to a project
in order of energy savings per dollar of measure cost. More efficient measures
must be included in a project before less efficient measures can be considered.
(8) If determined necessary by the Department, the
Department may conduct a review of a project completed and financed under these
rules to ensure the installation meets all of the requirements under these
rules and the project manager.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
330-112-0100
Fees
Project Initiation Fee The department hereby establishes
the project initiation fee for all EEAST loans at three percent of the
application loan amount.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 470.500 -
47.0715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 470.500 -
470.715, 2009 OL Ch. 753 & HB 3675 (2010)
Hist.: DOE 8-2010(Temp), f. &
cert. ef. 7-1-10 thru 12-28-10; DOE 15-2010, f. & cert. ef. 12-15-10
Notes
1.) This online version of the OREGON BULLETIN is provided for convenience of reference and enhanced access. The official, record copy of this publication is contained in the original Administrative Orders and Rulemaking Notices filed with the Secretary of State, Archives Division. Discrepancies, if any, are satisfied in favor of the original versions. Use the OAR Revision Cumulative Index found in the Oregon Bulletin to access a numerical list of rulemaking actions after November 15, 2010.
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