California quietly guts ambitious virtual power plant bill
Bills boosting solar, batteries, EVs, and smart thermostats to rein in California’s utility costs moved ahead — but the most innovative approaches were cut.
Three bills have advanced through the California Legislature that are meant to increase the use of virtual power plants as a way to rein in energy costs. While good news for utility customers, that welcomed progress comes with its own dose of bad news: The most ambitious proposals were stripped out of one of the bills in a secretive process inaccessible even to the bill’s author.
Two of the bills, AB 44 and AB 740, cleared a key legislative hurdle with only minor alterations that will not significantly reduce their impact, according to Edson Perez, who leads California legislative and political engagement for clean-energy trade group Advanced Energy United.
But SB 541, the most pioneering of the three bills in question, was “gutted” last week via an opaque legislative maneuver, Perez said. Those amendments stripped the bill of important provisions that would have required the state’s biggest utilities to provide data to enable them to build virtual power plants into their grid investment plans.