Energy Efficiency Resource Standard

Last updated: February 14, 2020

Program Overview

Implementing Sector:State
Category:Regulatory Policy
State:California
Incentive Type:Energy Efficiency Resource Standard
Web Site:http://cpuc.ca.gov/energyefficiency/
Eligible Efficiency Technologies:Custom/Others pending approval
Electric Sales Reduction:Varies by utility (see below)
Electric Peak Demand Reduction:Varies by utility (see below)
Natural Gas Sales Reduction:Varies by utility (see below)

Authorities

Name:CA Public Utilities Code § 9615
Name:CA Public Resources Code § 25310
Name:CPUC Decision No. 08-07-047
Date Enacted:7/31/2008
Name:CPUC Decision No. 09-09-047
Date Enacted:10/01/2009
Name:CA Public Utilities Code Section § 739.10
Name:CPUC Decision No. 07-09-043
Date Enacted:9/20/2007
Name:CPUC Decision 13-09-023
Name:CPUC Decision 12-11-015
Name:CPUC Decision 14-10-046
Name:CPUC Decision 15-10-028

Summary

Energy Efficiency Resource Standard

Origin

The California Legislature emphasized the importance of energy efficiency and established broad goals with the enactment of Assembly Bill 2021 of 2006. The bill calls for a 10% reduction in forecasted electricity consumption within 10 years. The bill also requires the California Energy Commission (CEC), the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) and other interested parties to develop a statewide estimate of all cost-effective electricity and natural gas savings and to develop efficiency savings and demand reduction targets for the next 10 years. This study must be updated every three years.

The CPUC has revised the energy savings targets over time, most recently in October 2015 with Decision 15-10-028. While previous Decisions established targets from 2004 – 2020, Decision 15-10-028 revised the targets for 2016 – 2020, and established new targets for 2021 – 2024. The goals consist of separate electricity savings and demand reduction requirements for each of the three investor-owned electrical utilities and energy savings requirements for the state's three gas utilities.

Electric Energy Reduction Standard (in Gigawatt-Hours (GWh)

  2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024
PG&E

1,114

853 832 980.5 1,236 1,144 916 

912

900 850 836 812 821
SCE 1,093 922 924 983.0 1,304 1,216 949 955 946 879 863 835 840
SDGE 158 221 212 239.7 324 304 236 238 236 223 220 214 214
Total 2,365 1,997 1,968 2,203.2  2.864 2,664 1,185 2,105 2,082 1,952 1,919 1,861 1,875

Annual Electric Demand Reduction Standard (in Megawatts (MW))

  2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2020 2020 2020 2020
PG&E 251 145 132 241 226 193 172 173 173 169 170 171 173
SCE 239 181 177 193 267 231 206 210 211 201 201 200 203
SDGE 31 43 41 38 57 50 44 44 45 43 43 43 44
Total 521 370 350 472 550 474 422 427 429 413 414 414 420

Annual Natural Gas Energy Reduction Standard (in Millions of Therms (MMTh))

  2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2020 2020 2020 2020
PG&E 17.1  21.0 20.9 15.4  18.4 18.6 20.9 21.1 21.7 21.8 22.4 23.2 23.9
SoCal Gas 32 24.1 23.2 25.3 29.1 30.3 29.4 30.6 30.6 28.6 28.5 28.2 28.1
SDGE 4.1 2.2 2.2 2.5 3.2 3.3 3.9 3.9 4 3.7 3.7 3.8 3.8
Total 53.2 47.4
46.3
40.9 50.7 52.2 54.2 55.6 56.3 54.1 54.6 55.2 55.8

The required energy savings can be met through:

- Incentive programs for utility customers

- State building code

- Federal and state appliance standards

- Statewide market transformation efforts

Publicly-owned utilities in California are not regulated by the CPUC. Still, Assembly Bill 2021 requires them to pursue energy efficiency as well. The law required them by June 1, 2007, to identify all cost-effective energy efficiency and demand reduction possibilities, and to establish energy reduction goals for the next 10 years. Public utilities are required to update these studies every three years and to submit them to the CEC.

Program Administrator Type

California's investor-owned utilities directly administer the energy efficiency and demand-side management programs intended to meet the standard.

Cost-Effectiveness and Program Evaluation

To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of its efficiency and demand reduction activities, California utilizes the Total Resource Cost test (TRC) (one of the five "California tests" from the California Standard Practice Manual) as its primary test for measuring the cost-effectiveness of energy efficiency programs. California also uses all four of its other namesake tests on a secondary basis in evaluating energy efficiency and DSM programs. 

Utility Cost Recovery Provisions (for Investor-Owned Utilities)

Under Section 739.10 of California Public Utilities Code, California's investor-owned electric and gas utilities (Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison, San Diego Gas & Electric and the Southern California Gas Company) are required to have the revenues they earn from customers fully decoupled from their sales.

Also, California's investor-owned utilities are eligible to receive incentive compensation for their programmatic spending on energy efficiency and DSM goals through a mechanism known as the Efficiency Savings Performance Incentive (ESPI). The ESPI mechanism is based on four areas of savings achievement performance categories, which are 1) programs producing verified or "life-cycle" energy efficiency resource savings, 2) programs producing "ex-ante review" (EAR) savings, which reward utilities for setting higher (but unverified initial goals, 3) programs by utilities influencing more aggressive statewide energy codes and standards-related savings and 4) "non-resource" programs that do not result indirectly attributable and cost-effective energy and demand savings, but tend to support the goals of other forms of cost-effective energy conservation.

Program Performance Category

The basis for Incentive Payment (Less Administrative Costs) Incentive Amount
Resource Programs Annual Resource Program Budget  9%
Ex Ante Review (EAR) Annual Resource Program Expenditures 3%
Codes & Standards (C&S) Advocacy Annual Approved C&S Program Budgets "Management Fee" of 12%
Non-Resource Programs

Annual Approved Non-Resource Program Budgets

"Management Fee" of 3%

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