STAND.
COM. REP. NO. 110
Honolulu, Hawaii
, 2023
RE: H.B. No. 195
H.D. 1
Honorable Scott K. Saiki
Speaker, House of Representatives
Thirty-Second State Legislature
Regular Session of 2023
State of Hawaii
Sir:
Your Committees on Energy & Environmental Protection and Water & Land, to which was referred H.B. No. 195 entitled:
"A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY,"
beg leave to report as follows:
The purpose of this measure is to:
(1) By January 1, 2024, require government entities in the State that issue building permits to implement SolarAPP+ or a functionally equivalent online automated permitting platform that verifies code compliance and issues permits to licensed contractors for solar distributed energy resource systems in real time;
(2) Require government entities in the State that issue building permits to adopt self-certification for solar distributed energy resource systems that are not SolarAPP+ compatible; and
(3) Make the professional engineers, architects, surveyors, and landscape architects licensure law inapplicable to work with respect to residential distributed energy resource systems and increase the estimated cost of work on certain structures below which that licensure law is inapplicable.
Your Committees
received testimony in support of this measure from the Chamber of Sustainable
Commerce; Hawai‘i
Unified Industries, LLC; Solar Services Hawaii LLP; Green Power Projects LLC;
Grand Solar, Inc.; Hawaii Food Industry Association; Mālama Solar; Sierra
Club of Hawai‘i;
Climate Protectors Hawai‘i;
Makaha Learning Center; Environmental Caucus of the Democratic Party of Hawai‘i; Kauai Climate
Action Coalition; Sunnova Energy; Hawaii Solar Energy Association; ‘Ahahui
o nā Kauka; 350Hawaii.org; Our Revolution Hawaii; Tesla; Alternate Energy
Hawaii; Photonworks Engineering; and numerous individuals. Your Committees received testimony in
opposition to this measure from the American Institute of Architects, Hawaii
State Council; American Council of Engineering Companies of Hawaii; and one
individual. Your Committees received
comments on this measure from the Hawaii State Energy Office; Kaua‘i
Island Utility Cooperative; and Board of Professional Engineers, Architects,
Surveyors, and Landscape Architects.
Your Committees find that electric
utilities in the State are required to achieve a one hundred percent renewable
portfolio standard by December 31, 2045, in order to transition the State away
from imported fossil fuels and toward locally available renewable energy
sources. To encourage the timely
build-out of a diverse, resilient, and reliable portfolio of low-cost renewable
energy generation and storage assets, Hawaii must lower the administrative
barriers that constrain deployment of residential and commercial-scale
distributed energy resources. This
measure lowers administrative barriers to the deployment of energy generation
and storage technology systems, eliminating unnecessary impediments to the
timely installation of residential distributed energy resources and other real
property improvements.
Your Committees have amended this measure
by:
(1) Specifying that the self-certification process shall only apply to solar distributed energy resource systems of 250 kilowatts or less;
(2) Changing the thresholds for the estimated cost of work on certain structures that are exempt from the professional engineers, architects, surveyors, and landscape architects licensure law to unspecified amounts;
(3) Changing the effective date to June 30, 3000, to encourage further discussion; and
(4) Making technical, nonsubstantive amendments for the purposes of clarity, consistency, and style.
Your Committees respectfully request your Committee on Consumer Protection & Commerce, should it deliberate on this measure, to consider a threshold amount of $160,000 for privately owned or privately controlled one-storied buildings, dwellings, or structures; $140,000 for privately controlled two-storied buildings, dwellings, or structures; $200,000 for privately owned or privately controlled one-storied structures used primarily as a residence; and $180,000 for privately owned or privately controlled two-storied structures used primarily as a residence. Your Committees note that these proposed threshold amounts reflect inflationary adjustments to the amounts in the existing statute, which was last amended in 1979.
As affirmed by the records of votes of the members of your Committees on Energy & Environmental Protection and Water & Land that are attached to this report, your Committees are in accord with the intent and purpose of H.B. No. 195, as amended herein, and recommend that it pass Second Reading in the form attached hereto as H.B. No. 195, H.D. 1, and be referred to your Committee on Consumer Protection & Commerce.
Respectfully submitted on behalf of the members of the Committees on Energy & Environmental Protection and Water & Land,
____________________________ LINDA ICHIYAMA, Chair |
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____________________________ NICOLE E. LOWEN, Chair |
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