A10493 Summary:

BILL NOA10493
 
SAME ASSAME AS S09422
 
SPONSORRules (Joyner)
 
COSPNSRRosenthal L, Paulin, Simon, Burke, Wallace, McMahon, Stirpe, Abinanti, Clark, Griffin, Conrad, Glick, Otis
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd §§2, 5 & 65, add §66-t, Pub Serv L; amd §§10 & 11, Transp Corps L; amd §224-d, Lab L; add §1020-ll, Pub Auth L
 
Establishes the "utility thermal energy network and jobs act" to promote the development of thermal energy networks throughout the state and to provide jobs to transitioning utility workers who have lost or are at risk of losing their employment.
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A10493 Actions:

BILL NOA10493
 
05/28/2022referred to ways and means
06/02/2022reported referred to rules
06/02/2022reported
06/02/2022rules report cal.662
06/02/2022ordered to third reading rules cal.662
06/03/2022substituted by s9422
 S09422 AMEND= PARKER
 05/25/2022REFERRED TO ENERGY AND TELECOMMUNICATIONS
 06/01/2022COMMITTEE DISCHARGED AND COMMITTED TO RULES
 06/01/2022ORDERED TO THIRD READING CAL.1824
 06/01/2022PASSED SENATE
 06/01/2022DELIVERED TO ASSEMBLY
 06/01/2022referred to ways and means
 06/03/2022substituted for a10493
 06/03/2022ordered to third reading rules cal.662
 06/03/2022passed assembly
 06/03/2022returned to senate
 06/23/2022DELIVERED TO GOVERNOR
 07/05/2022SIGNED CHAP.375
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A10493 Committee Votes:

WAYS AND MEANS Chair:Weinstein DATE:06/02/2022AYE/NAY:34/0 Action: Favorable refer to committee Rules
WeinsteinAyeRaAye
GlickAyeFitzpatrickAye
NolanAyeHawleyAye
PretlowAyeMontesanoAye
ColtonAyeBlankenbushExcused
CookAyeNorrisAye
CahillAyeBrabenecAye
AubryAyePalmesanoAye
CusickAyeByrneAye
BenedettoAyeAshbyAye
WeprinAye
RamosAye
BraunsteinAye
McDonaldAye
RozicAye
DinowitzAye
JoynerAye
MagnarelliAye
ZebrowskiAye
BronsonAye
DilanAye
SeawrightAye
HyndmanAye
WalkerAye
Bichotte HermelAye

RULES Chair:Gottfried DATE:06/02/2022AYE/NAY:27/0 Action: Favorable
HeastieExcusedBarclayAye
GottfriedAyeHawleyAye
NolanAyeGiglioAye
WeinsteinAyeBlankenbushExcused
PretlowAyeNorrisAye
CookAyeMontesanoAye
GlickAyeRaAye
AubryAyeBrabenecAye
EnglebrightAye
DinowitzAye
ColtonAye
MagnarelliAye
PaulinAye
Peoples-StokesAye
BenedettoAye
LavineAye
LupardoAye
ZebrowskiAye
ThieleAye
BraunsteinAye
DickensExcused
DavilaExcused
HyndmanAye

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A10493 Floor Votes:

There are no votes for this bill in this legislative session.
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A10493 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          10493
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                      May 28, 2022
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  COMMITTEE ON RULES -- (at request of M. of A. Joyner) --
          read once and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means
 
        AN ACT to amend the public service law, the transportation  corporations
          law,  the  labor  law  and  the public authorities law, in relation to
          thermal energy networks
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section  1.  Short  title. This act shall be known and may be cited as
     2  the "utility thermal energy network and jobs act".
     3    § 2. Legislative  findings  and  intent.  The  legislature  finds  and
     4  declares that:
     5    1.  New  York  State  has  a strong interest in ensuring that building
     6  emissions goals of the Climate Leadership and Community  Protection  Act
     7  (CLCPA)  are  met. Buildings are New York's largest source of greenhouse
     8  gasses and other climate emissions, due  to  the  combustion  of  fossil
     9  fuels for heating, domestic hot water, cooking, and other end uses;
    10    2.  The  decarbonization of buildings must be pursued in a manner that
    11  is affordable, accessible, preserves and creates living-wage  jobs,  and
    12  retains the knowledge and experience of the existing utility union work-
    13  force;
    14    3. Thermal energy networks have the potential to decarbonize buildings
    15  at  the  community  and  utility scale and help achieve the goals of the
    16  CLCPA;
    17    4. Thermal energy networks consist  of  pipe  loops  between  multiple
    18  buildings  and  energy  sources  carrying  water at ambient temperature;
    19  building owners can connect to the ambient temperature loops with  water
    20  source  heat  pumps installed within the building, which can be used for
    21  heating and cooling and hot water services;
    22    5. Many utilities in New York State have been seeking to develop ther-
    23  mal energy networks, but legal and regulatory barriers and  the  current
    24  and  outdated  public  service  law  framework  have prevented them from
    25  moving these proposals forward;
    26    6. New York State has a strong interest in ensuring an adequate supply
    27  of reliable electrical power and, therefore, needs to promote the devel-

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD15957-02-2

        A. 10493                            2
 
     1  opment of alternative power sources and take steps  to  assure  reliable
     2  deliverability.  Thermal  energy  networks  are highly efficient because
     3  they utilize and exchange thermal energy from many  underground  sources
     4  and  buildings,  including recycled thermal energy, minimizing impact on
     5  the electricity grid;
     6    7. Access to thermal energy networks has the potential to  reduce  the
     7  up front and operating costs of building electrification for customers;
     8    8.  Utilities'  access  to  capital,  their  experience with networked
     9  infrastructure in public rights of way, and the  requirement  that  they
    10  serve  all  customers,  positions them well to develop and scale thermal
    11  energy networks that are accessible to all customers and  to  coordinate
    12  the  development  of  thermal energy networks with any downsizing of the
    13  utility gas system;
    14    9. New York State also has a proprietary interest in the efficient and
    15  reliable delivery of energy and the energy infrastructure of the  state,
    16  which interest is acknowledged throughout the public service law.  Util-
    17  ity  corporations  and  other power suppliers share these interests and,
    18  moreover, have a duty to protect proprietary interests in  the  projects
    19  they  fund  and such investments of ratepayer resources can be protected
    20  by establishing effective contractor qualification and performance stan-
    21  dards, including requirements  for  prevailing  wage  rates,  bona  fide
    22  apprenticeship criteria, and project labor agreements;
    23    10.  The  construction industry is highly skilled and labor intensive,
    24  and the installation of modern thermal energy networks involves  partic-
    25  ularly  complex  work, and, therefore, effective qualification standards
    26  for craft labor personnel employed  on  these  projects  are  critically
    27  needed to promote successful project delivery;
    28    11.  Finally,  the  legislature  finds that these facts are especially
    29  vital now because the construction industry is  experiencing  widespread
    30  skill shortages across the country, which are crippling existing capital
    31  projects   and   threatening   projects  planned  for  the  future.  The
    32  construction of thermal energy networks will utilize many  of  the  same
    33  skills  that  today's  utility  and  building  trades workforces already
    34  possess;
    35    12. Thus, it is the intent of the legislature that passage of this act
    36  is for the following purposes:
    37    a. To remove the legal barriers  to  utility  development  of  thermal
    38  energy  networks  and require the public service commission to authorize
    39  and direct utilities to immediately  commence  piloting  thermal  energy
    40  networks in each and every utility territory;
    41    b.  To direct and authorize the public service commission to develop a
    42  regulatory structure for utility thermal  energy  networks  that  scales
    43  affordable  and accessible building electrification, protects customers,
    44  and balances the role of incumbent monopoly utilities with other  market
    45  and public actors;
    46    c.  To  promote the successful planning and delivery of thermal energy
    47  networks and protect critical investments in such projects by  requiring
    48  the  use  of  appropriate  quality  craft labor policies that ensure the
    49  development of and access to an adequate supply of well trained,  highly
    50  skilled  craft  persons needed to support timely, reliable, high-quality
    51  projects;
    52    d. To promote strong economic development  and  good  jobs  for  local
    53  residents  in the expanding decarbonized sector by requiring application
    54  of progressive state labor and employment policies  that  ensure  public
    55  utility  investments  and  related  state  subsidies create unparalleled
    56  skill training and employment opportunities  for  residents  in  project

        A. 10493                            3
 
     1  areas through the use of local prevailing wage standards and successful,
     2  bona  fide  apprenticeship  programs,  or project labor agreements which
     3  incorporate prevailing wage and training  standards  and  provide  addi-
     4  tional benefits for project owners and workers; and
     5    e. To promote the use of pre-apprenticeship programs that will fortify
     6  and  expand existing apprenticeship programs through systematic outreach
     7  efforts to recruit and assist persons from underrepresented and  low-in-
     8  come  communities  by  providing  such  persons with remedial education,
     9  social services and unique opportunities for  direct  access  into  high
    10  quality  apprenticeship  programs  and gainful employment in the growing
    11  building decarbonization workforce.
    12    § 3. Section 2 of the public service law is amended by adding two  new
    13  subdivisions 28 and 29 to read as follows:
    14    28.  "Thermal  energy,"  when  used  in this chapter, shall mean piped
    15  non-combustible fluids used for transferring heat into and out of build-
    16  ings for the purpose of eliminating any resultant on-site greenhouse gas
    17  emissions of all types of heating and cooling processes, including,  but
    18  not  limited  to,  comfort  heating and cooling, domestic hot water, and
    19  refrigeration.
    20    29. "Thermal energy network," when used in this  chapter,  shall  mean
    21  all real estate, fixtures and personal property operated, owned, used or
    22  to  be  used  for or in connection with or to facilitate a utility-scale
    23  distribution infrastructure project that supplies thermal energy.
    24    § 4. Subdivision 11 of section 2 of the public service law, as amended
    25  by chapter 159 of the laws of 1992, is amended to read as follows:
    26    11. The term "gas corporation," when used in  this  chapter,  includes
    27  every  corporation, company, association, joint-stock association, part-
    28  nership and person, their lessees, trustees or  receivers  appointed  by
    29  any  court  whatsoever,  owning,  operating or managing any gas plant or
    30  thermal energy network (a) except where gas  is  made  or  produced  and
    31  distributed  by  the maker on or through private property solely for its
    32  own use or the use of its tenants and not for sale to others, (b) except
    33  where compressed natural gas is sold, distributed or furnished solely as
    34  a fuel for use in motor vehicles, (c) except where manufactured  gas  is
    35  sold  by  the  producer  only for use or resale by a gas corporation and
    36  such gas of the producer and any affiliated producers does not exceed in
    37  any one year thirty per cent of the total  gas  sold  by  any  purchaser
    38  thereof  in  the area in which such manufactured gas is resold either as
    39  manufactured gas or as a component of mixed gas, and  (d)  except  where
    40  gas  is  made  or  produced  solely  from  one  or more alternate energy
    41  production facilities or distributed solely from one  or  more  of  such
    42  facilities  to users located at or near a project site; provided, howev-
    43  er, that any producer not included within the  meaning  of  "gas  corpo-
    44  ration"  by reason of exception (c) or (d) shall nevertheless be consid-
    45  ered a gas corporation  for  the  purposes  of  commission  jurisdiction
    46  relating to the safety of the construction, operation, or maintenance of
    47  plants manufacturing pipeline quality gas.
    48    § 5. Subdivision 13 of section 2 of the public service law, as amended
    49  by chapter 843 of the laws of 1981, is amended to read as follows:
    50    13.  The  term  "electric  corporation,"  when  used  in this chapter,
    51  includes every corporation, company,  association,  joint-stock  associ-
    52  ation,  partnership  and  person,  their  lessees, trustees or receivers
    53  appointed by any court whatsoever (other than a railroad or street rail-
    54  road corporation generating electricity solely for  railroad  or  street
    55  railroad  purposes  or  for  the  use of its tenants and not for sale to
    56  others) owning, operating or managing  any  electric  plant  or  thermal

        A. 10493                            4
 
     1  energy  network  except where electricity or thermal energy is generated
     2  or distributed by the producer solely on or through private property for
     3  railroad or street railroad purposes or for its own use or  the  use  of
     4  its  tenants  and not for sale to others; or except where electricity is
     5  generated by the producer solely from one or more  co-generation,  small
     6  hydro  or  alternate  energy production facilities or distributed solely
     7  from one or more of such facilities  to  users  located  at  or  near  a
     8  project site.
     9    §  6.  Subdivision 1 of section 5 of the public service law is amended
    10  by adding a new paragraph i to read as follows:
    11    i. To thermal energy provided by  gas  corporations,  electric  corpo-
    12  rations, or combination gas and electric corporations.
    13    §  7.  Paragraphs  (c)  and  (d) of subdivision 6 of section 65 of the
    14  public service law, paragraph (c) as amended by chapter 204 of the  laws
    15  of 2010 and paragraph (d) as amended by chapter 388 of the laws of 2011,
    16  are amended and a new paragraph (e) is added to read as follows:
    17    (c)  for a remote meter reading device upon the request and consent of
    18  the customer; [or]
    19    (d) for installation of capital improvements and fixtures  to  promote
    20  energy  efficiency upon the request and consent of the customer, includ-
    21  ing but not limited to the performance of  qualified  energy  efficiency
    22  services  for  customers  participating  in  green  jobs-green  New York
    23  on-bill recovery pursuant to section sixty-six-m of this article[.]; or
    24    (e) for the provision of thermal energy service.
    25    § 8. Section 10 of the transportation corporations law is  amended  to
    26  read as follows:
    27    §  10.  Definitions.  A  gas corporation is a corporation organized to
    28  manufacture, to produce or otherwise acquire and to  supply  for  public
    29  use  artificial  or  natural  gas [or], a mixture of both artificial and
    30  natural gases or thermal energy for light, heat or power and for  light-
    31  ing the streets and public and private buildings of cities, villages and
    32  towns  in this state. An electric corporation is a corporation organized
    33  to manufacture, to produce or  otherwise  acquire,  and  to  supply  for
    34  public  use  electricity or thermal energy for light, heat or power, and
    35  for lighting streets, avenues, public parks and places  and  public  and
    36  private buildings of cities, villages and towns within this state. A gas
    37  and electric corporation is a corporation organized for purposes of both
    38  a  gas  corporation  and  an  electric corporation. For purposes of this
    39  article, "thermal energy" shall have the  same  meaning  as  defined  by
    40  subdivision twenty-eight of section two of the public service law.
    41    § 9. Subdivisions 1, 2, 3 and the opening paragraph of subdivision 3-b
    42  of  section  11 of the transportation corporations law, subdivision 3 as
    43  amended by chapter 622 of the laws of 1947 and the opening paragraph  of
    44  subdivision  3-b  as  amended  by  chapter  840 of the laws of 1977, are
    45  amended to read as follows:
    46    1.  A gas corporation and a gas and electric  corporation  shall  have
    47  power  to  manufacture  gas, and to acquire thermal energy or natural or
    48  artificial gas and to mix the gases and  to  sell  and  furnish  thermal
    49  energy  for  heating  or cooling or gas for light, heat or power; and to
    50  lay conductors, pipes, conduits, ducts and other  fixtures  for  gas  or
    51  thermal  energy  networks in the streets, highways and public places, in
    52  each city, village and town in the  county  or  counties  named  in  its
    53  certificate of incorporation, with the consent of the municipal authori-
    54  ties  of  such  city,  village  or town, and under such reasonable regu-
    55  lations as they may prescribe.

        A. 10493                            5
 
     1    2. Every corporation having authority under any general or special law
     2  or under any charter or franchise, to lay down, erect or maintain pipes,
     3  conduits, ducts or other fixtures in, over or under the  streets,  high-
     4  ways and public places of any municipality for the purpose of furnishing
     5  or  distributing  natural  gas or thermal energy, may acquire and supply
     6  for public use artificial gas or thermal energy.
     7    Where any gas corporation is serving  natural  gas  under  permits  or
     8  franchises  permitting  the  laying or maintaining of mains or pipes and
     9  conveying natural gas, and the supply of natural gas has  become  inade-
    10  quate  or  insufficient  to  give reasonable service to consumers in the
    11  municipalities served by it, such gas corporation may supply  artificial
    12  gas or a mixture of natural and artificial gases or thermal energy under
    13  such permits or franchises.
    14    3.  An  electric  corporation and a gas and electric corporation shall
    15  have power to generate, acquire and supply electricity or thermal energy
    16  for heat, cooling or power in cities, towns  and  villages  within  this
    17  state, and to light the streets, highways and public places thereof, and
    18  the public and private buildings therein; and to make, sell or lease all
    19  machines,  instruments, apparatus and other equipments therefor, and for
    20  transmitting and distributing electricity or  thermal  energy,  to  lay,
    21  erect  and construct suitable wires or other conductors, with the neces-
    22  sary poles, pipes, thermal energy networks or  other  fixtures  in,  on,
    23  over  and  under  the  streets, avenues, public parks and places in such
    24  cities, towns or villages, with the consent of the municipal authorities
    25  thereof, and in such manner and under such  reasonable  regulations,  as
    26  they may prescribe.
    27    The  construction,  use  and maintenance by an electric corporation of
    28  transmission, distribution and service lines and wires or thermal energy
    29  networks in, over or under any street, highway or public place  and  the
    30  construction,  use and maintenance by a gas corporation of transmission,
    31  distribution and service pipes, conduits, ducts or  other  fixtures  in,
    32  over  or  under  any trees, highway or public place, as may be necessary
    33  for its corporate purposes, are hereby declared to be  public  uses  and
    34  purposes.
    35    §  10.  Subdivision  1  of section 224-d of the labor law, as added by
    36  section 2 of part AA of chapter 56 of the laws of 2021, is amended and a
    37  new subdivision 8 is added to read as follows:
    38    1.  For purposes of this section, a "covered renewable energy  system"
    39  means  (a) a renewable energy system, as such term is defined in section
    40  sixty-six-p of the public service law, with a capacity of  greater  than
    41  five megawatts alternating current and which involves the procurement of
    42  renewable  energy credits by a public entity, or a third party acting on
    43  behalf and for the benefit of a public entity; or (b) any "thermal ener-
    44  gy network" as defined by subdivision twenty-nine of section two of  the
    45  public service law.
    46    8.  Any  thermal  energy network covered by this section shall require
    47  all contractors and subcontractors performing construction work  to  use
    48  apprenticeship  agreements,  as  defined by article twenty-three of this
    49  chapter, with pre-apprenticeship direct entry providers registered  with
    50  the department.
    51    §  11.  The public service law is amended by adding a new section 66-t
    52  to read as follows:
    53    § 66-t. Thermal energy network  development.  1.  The  public  service
    54  commission shall initiate a proceeding within three months of the effec-
    55  tive  date  of this section to support the development of thermal energy
    56  networks for the purpose of meeting the  greenhouse  gas  emissions  and

        A. 10493                            6
 
     1  equity  goals  of  the  climate leadership and community protection act.
     2  The matters the commission  shall  consider  in  such  proceeding  shall
     3  include, but shall not be limited to, the appropriate ownership, market,
     4  and  rate  structures  for  thermal  energy  networks  and  whether  the
     5  provision of thermal energy services by gas and/or electric utilities is
     6  in the public interest. The commission shall promulgate rules and  regu-
     7  lations  within  two  years  to: (a) create fair market access rules for
     8  utility-owned thermal energy networks  to  accept  thermal  energy  that
     9  aligns  with the climate justice and greenhouse gas emissions reductions
    10  requirements of the climate leadership and community protection act  and
    11  that  does  not  increase greenhouse gas emissions or co-pollutants; (b)
    12  exempt small-scale thermal energy networks not owned by  utilities  from
    13  commission regulation; (c) promote the training and transition of utili-
    14  ty  workers  impacted by this act; and (d) encourage third party partic-
    15  ipation and competition where it will maximize benefits to customers.
    16    2.  Within three months of the effective date of this section, each of
    17  the seven largest gas, electric, or combination gas and electric  corpo-
    18  rations  shall submit to the commission for review and approval at least
    19  one and as many as five proposed pilot thermal energy network  projects.
    20  In developing the pilot project proposals, at least one pilot project in
    21  each utility territory shall be proposed in a disadvantaged community as
    22  defined  in  subdivision  five  of  section 75-0101 of the environmental
    23  conservation law, and if a utility proposes four or more pilot projects,
    24  at least two shall be proposed in disadvantaged communities. Each utili-
    25  ty shall coordinate with other utility participants, the New York  state
    26  energy  research  and development authority, and consultants with exper-
    27  tise on successful pilot projects to ensure that the pilot projects  are
    28  diverse  and  designed  to  inform  the  commission's  decisions  in the
    29  proceeding on the various ownership, market,  and  rate  structures  for
    30  thermal  energy  networks.  The  pilot  project  proposals shall include
    31  specific customer protection plans and shall  be made publicly available
    32  on the commission's website and shall be subject  to  a  public  comment
    33  period  of  no less than thirty days. Within six months of the effective
    34  date of this section, the commission shall determine whether  it  is  in
    35  the  public  interest  to  approve  or  modify such pilot thermal energy
    36  network projects and shall issue an order directing each  gas,  electric
    37  or  combination  gas and electric corporation to implement such proposed
    38  or modified pilot thermal energy network projects. In considering wheth-
    39  er pilot thermal energy network projects are in the public interest, the
    40  commission shall consider whether the pilot project will develop  infor-
    41  mation useful for the commission's promulgation of regulations governing
    42  thermal  energy networks, whether the pilot project furthers the climate
    43  justice and/or emissions reduction mandates of  the  climate  leadership
    44  and  community protection act, whether the pilot project advances finan-
    45  cial and technical approaches to equitable and affordable building elec-
    46  trification, and whether the pilot project creates benefits to customers
    47  and society at large, including but not limited to public  health  bene-
    48  fits  in  areas  with  disproportionate  environmental  or public health
    49  burdens, job retention/creation, reliability, and increased affordabili-
    50  ty of renewable thermal energy options.
    51    3. Each gas, electric, or  combination  gas  and  utility  corporation
    52  shall  report  to  the  commission,  on  a  quarterly  basis,  and until
    53  completion of the pilot thermal energy network project as determined  by
    54  the commission, the status of each pilot thermal energy network project.
    55  The  commission  shall  post and make publicly available such reports on
    56  its website. The report shall include, but not be limited to,  the:  (a)

        A. 10493                            7
 
     1  stage of development of each pilot project; (b) barriers to development;
     2  (c)  number  of  customers  served;  (d) costs of the pilot project; (e)
     3  number of jobs retained or created by the pilot  project;  and  (f)  any
     4  other  such  information the commission deems to be in the public inter-
     5  est.
     6    4. Any thermal energy network created under this section shall  demon-
     7  strate  that  the  gas  or electric corporation has entered into a labor
     8  peace agreement with a bona fide labor organization of jurisdiction that
     9  is actively engaged in representing gas and electric corporation employ-
    10  ees. The labor peace agreement shall apply to  the  employees  necessary
    11  for  the  maintenance and operation of such thermal energy network.  The
    12  labor peace agreement shall be an ongoing material condition of authori-
    13  zation to maintain and operate such thermal energy networks. The employ-
    14  ees eligible for these  positions  shall  first  be  selected  from  and
    15  offered to a pool of transitioning utility workers who have lost, or are
    16  at  risk  of  losing, their employment with a utility downsizing its gas
    17  transmission and distribution system. Such list of  potential  employees
    18  shall  be  provided by affected unions and provided to the department of
    19  labor.  The department of labor shall update and provide  such  list  to
    20  the  gas or electric corporation ninety days prior to purchase, acquisi-
    21  tion, and/or construction of any thermal energy  network  created  under
    22  this section.
    23    §  12.  The  public authorities law is amended by adding a new section
    24  1020-ll to read as follows:
    25    § 1020-ll. Pilot thermal energy network projects. Within three  months
    26  of  the  effective  date  of this section, the authority and its service
    27  provider shall submit for review to the department of public service  at
    28  least  one  and  as  many  as five proposed pilot thermal energy network
    29  projects as defined in subdivision twenty-nine of  section  two  of  the
    30  public  service  law.  Within  six  months of the effective date of this
    31  section, and upon recommendation by the department  of  public  service,
    32  the  authority  shall  determine whether it is in the public interest to
    33  approve or modify such pilot thermal energy network projects  and  shall
    34  direct the service provider to implement such proposed or modified pilot
    35  thermal  energy  network  projects. The authority shall promulgate rules
    36  and regulations consistent with the standards set forth in  subdivisions
    37  two and three of section sixty-six-t of the public service law.
    38    § 13. This act shall take effect immediately.
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