104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
SB0041

 

Introduced 1/13/2025, by Sen. David Koehler

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Clean Transportation Standard Act. Establishes a clean transportation standard to reduce lifecycle carbon intensity of fuels for the ground transportation sector by specified amounts. Provides for related rulemaking and calculations. Provides that the clean transportation standard shall take the form of a credit marketplace monitored by the Environmental Protection Agency. Provides for verification and data privacy requirements for the Agency. Provides for penalties for failing to offset deficits in certain situations, and for penalties for submitting false information. Exempts airline, rail, ocean-going, and military fuel. Provides that the Agency must develop a periodic fuel supply forecast. Establishes findings. Defines terms. Contains other provisions. Effective immediately.


LRB104 06940 BDA 16977 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB0041LRB104 06940 BDA 16977 b

1    AN ACT concerning transportation.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Clean
5Transportation Standard Act.
 
6    Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that:
7        (1) The transportation sector in this State is a
8    leading source of criteria air pollutants and greenhouse
9    gas emissions, which collectively endanger public health
10    and welfare by causing and contributing to increased air
11    pollution and climate change.
12        (2) Shifting from petroleum-based transportation fuels
13    to alternative fuels has the potential to significantly
14    reduce transportation emissions of air pollutants and
15    greenhouse gases and is recommended by the
16    Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change as an important
17    pathway for holding global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius.
18    A clean transportation standard would promote innovation
19    in, and production and use of, nonpetroleum fuels that
20    reduce vehicle-related and fuel-related air pollution that
21    endangers public health and welfare and disproportionately
22    impacts disadvantaged communities.
23        (3) Credits generated through the use of clean fuel

 

 

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1    under this Act will promote innovation and investment in
2    clean fuels.
 
3    Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
4    "Agency" means the Environmental Protection Agency.
5    "Aggregator" or "credit aggregator" means a person who
6registers to participate in the clean transportation standard
7program on behalf of one or more credit generators to
8facilitate credit generation and to trade credits.
9    "Aviation fuel" means a fuel suitably blended to be used
10in aviation engines.
11    "Backstop aggregator" means a qualified nonprofit entity
12approved by the Agency to aggregate credits for electricity
13used as a transportation fuel when those credits would not
14otherwise be generated.
15    "Board" means the Pollution Control Board.
16    "Carbon intensity" means the amount of lifecycle
17greenhouse gas emissions per unit of fuel energy expressed in
18grams of carbon dioxide equivalent per megajoule.
19    "Clean fuel" means a transportation fuel that is
20domestically produced and has a carbon intensity below the
21clean transportation standard carbon intensity standard in a
22given year.
23    "Clean transportation standard" means the standard adopted
24by the Board under Section 15 for the reduction, on average, of
25lifecycle carbon intensity of fuels used for on-road

 

 

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1transportation. If there is an industry-accepted standard for
2calculating the carbon intensity of different modes of
3transportation, such as off-road, light rail, and other forms
4of mass transportation, the Board shall adopt that standard
5for those modes of transportation.
6    "Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers" or "CPI-U"
7means the index published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of
8the United States Department of Labor that measures the
9average change in prices of goods and services, United States
10city average, all items.
11    "Credit" means a unit of measure generated when clean fuel
12is provided for use in this State, such that one credit is
13equal to one metric ton of carbon dioxide equivalent.
14    "Credit generator" means a regulated entity that generates
15a credit in the clean transportation standard.
16    "Deficit" means a unit of measure generated when a fuel
17provided in this State has a carbon intensity that exceeds the
18clean transportation standard for the applicable year,
19expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent.
20    "Deficit generator" means a regulated entity that
21generates a deficit in the clean transportation standard.
22    "Fuel" means any one or more of the following that is used
23to power vehicles or equipment for the purpose of
24transportation: electricity or a liquid, gaseous, or blended
25fuel, including gasoline, diesel, liquefied petroleum gas,
26natural gas, or hydrogen.

 

 

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1    "Fuel pathway" means a detailed description of all stages
2of a transportation fuel's production and use, including
3feedstock growth, extraction, processing, transportation,
4distribution, and combustion or use by an end user.
5    "Lifecycle carbon intensity" means the quantity of
6greenhouse gas emissions per unit of energy, expressed in
7carbon dioxide equivalent per megajoule, emitted by the fuel,
8including both direct and indirect sources, as calculated by
9the Agency under subsection (2) of Section 20 using the
10methods described under Section 30.
11    "Military tactical vehicle" means a motor vehicle owned by
12the U.S. Department of Defense or the U.S. military services
13and used in combat, combat support, combat service support,
14tactical or relief operations, or training for such
15operations.
16    "Petroleum-only portion" means the component of gasoline
17or diesel fuel before blending with ethanol, biodiesel,
18biofuel, or other clean fuel.
19    "Provider" means:
20        (1) with respect to any liquid fuel, hydrogen fuel,
21    and renewable propane used as a fuel source for
22    transportation, the person who refines, produces, or
23    imports the fuel;
24        (2) with respect to any biomethane, the person who
25    imports or produces, refines, treats, or otherwise
26    processes biogas into biomethane used as a fuel source for

 

 

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1    transportation;
2        (3) with respect to electricity used as a fuel source
3    for transportation, the person who is the direct provider
4    of electricity, the electric vehicle charging service
5    provider, the electric utility, the electric vehicle fleet
6    operator, the electric vehicle manufacturer, and the
7    owners or operators of charging stations located on
8    commercial property; or
9        (4) with respect to other types of fuel, a person
10    determined to be the provider by the Agency.
11    "Provider" does not include the owner or operator of a
12residential charging station.
13    "Regulated entity" means any entity, whether a credit
14generator or deficit generator, that has registered, on a
15mandatory or permissive basis, to participate in the clean
16transportation standard.
17    "Sustainable aviation fuel" means an aviation fuel with a
18carbon intensity sufficient to generate credits under the
19clean transportation standard upon its production or supply.
20    "Tactical support equipment" means equipment using a
21portable engine, including turbines, that meets military
22specifications, is owned by the U.S. Department of Defense or
23the U.S. military services or its allies, and is used in
24combat, combat support, combat service support, tactical or
25relief operations, or training for such operations. "Tactical
26support equipment" includes, but is not limited to, engines

 

 

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1associated with portable generators, aircraft start carts,
2heaters and lighting carts.
 
3    Section 15. Rulemaking and baseline calculations for clean
4transportation standard.
5    (a) To the extent allowed by federal law, within 24 months
6after the effective date of this Act, the Agency shall propose
7and the Board shall adopt rules establishing a clean
8transportation standard in order to reduce, within 10 years of
9the adoption of the Agency's rules by the Board, the lifecycle
10carbon intensity of fuels for the ground transportation sector
11by 25% below the 2019 baseline level as calculated under this
12Section. After the 25% reduction described in this Section is
13attained, the Agency shall prepare a report that proposes
14further reductions in the lifecycle carbon intensity of fuels
15for the ground transportation sector for the following 10
16years. The report prepared by the Agency shall include
17proposed changes to this Act that are required to implement
18those reductions. The rules proposed and adopted shall be
19subject to public notice and comment under the Illinois
20Administrative Procedure Act. The Board may recommend to the
21General Assembly reductions to the clean transportation
22standard below those adopted in accordance with this Act,
23using factors, including, but not limited to, advances in
24clean fuel technology. The rules adopted by the Board under
25this Section shall include fees for the registration of

 

 

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1regulated entities to offset the costs incurred by the Board
2and the Agency that are associated with implementing the clean
3transportation standard. These fees shall be used only in
4connection with the administration of the program and may be
5levied differently based on whether a regulated entity is a
6credit generator or deficit generator. Except where otherwise
7provided in this Act, the Agency shall consider rules that are
8harmonized, to the extent practicable, with the regulatory
9standards, exemptions, reporting obligations, and other clean
10transportation standard compliance requirements and methods
11for credit generation of other states that have adopted
12low-carbon fuel standards or similar greenhouse gas emissions
13requirements applicable specifically to transportation fuels.
14    (b) The Agency shall calculate the baseline carbon
15intensities of the petroleum-only portion of all
16transportation fuels produced or imported in 2019 for use in
17this State by:
18        (1) reviewing and considering the best available
19    applicable scientific data and calculations; and
20        (2) using a lifecycle emissions, performance-based
21    approach that is technology-and-feedstock neutral.
 
22    Section 20. Contents of clean transportation standard. The
23clean transportation standard adopted by the Board, by rule,
24shall:
25        (1) apply to all providers in the State;

 

 

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1        (2) be measured based on a lifecycle carbon intensity
2    that shall be calculated by the Agency in accordance with
3    Section 30;
4        (3) recognize voluntary farm emissions reductions that
5    contribute to the reduced carbon intensity of fuels by
6    allowing credit generators to use individualized
7    farm-level carbon intensity scoring for approved
8    sustainable agricultural practices and by requiring the
9    Agency to use the GREET model's Feedstock Carbon Intercity
10    Calculator (FD-CIC) to determine individualized farm-level
11    carbon intensity scoring;
12        (4) take into consideration the low-carbon clean
13    transportation fuel standards that are pending or have
14    been adopted in other states, including their provisions
15    related to the inclusion of additional credit
16    opportunities from activities and projects that support
17    the reduction or removal of greenhouse gas emissions
18    associated with transportation in the State, and that
19    allow regulated entities to generate credits under any
20    overlapping current and future federal transportation fuel
21    statutes and regulations;
22        (5) include a credit price cap (i) that is to be
23    determined by the Agency and confirmed by the Board to
24    contain costs if the fuel supply forecasts determine that
25    not enough credits will be available and (ii) that shall
26    be adjusted annually by the rate of inflation as measured

 

 

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1    by the most recently available 12 months of the Consumer
2    Price Index for All Urban Consumers;
3        (6) contain a structure for compliance that conforms
4    with the marketplace system described in Section 25,
5    including, but not limited to, details, such as:
6            (A) methods for assigning compliance obligations
7        and methods for tracking tradable credits;
8            (B) mechanisms that allow credits to be traded,
9        transferred, sold, and banked for future compliance
10        periods;
11            (C) mechanisms that provide for the creation of a
12        list of accepted credit transactions and a list of
13        prohibited forms of credit transactions, which may
14        include trades involving, related to, or associated
15        with any of the following:
16                (i) any manipulative or deceptive device;
17                (ii) a corner or an attempt to corner the
18            market for credits;
19                (iii) fraud or an attempt to defraud any other
20            entity;
21                (iv) false, misleading, or inaccurate reports
22            concerning information or conditions that affect
23            or tend to affect the price of a credit; and
24                (v) applications, reports, statements, or
25            documents required to be filed under this Act that
26            are false or misleading with respect to a material

 

 

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1            fact or that omit a material fact necessary to
2            make the contents therein not misleading;
3            (C) procedures for verifying the validity of
4        credits and deficits generated under the clean
5        transportation standard;
6            (D) mechanisms by which persons associated with
7        the supply chains of transportation fuels that are
8        used for purposes that are exempt from the clean
9        transportation standard described in Section 40 and
10        persons that are associated with the supply chains of
11        transportation fuels and will generate credits may
12        register with the Agency to participate in the clean
13        transportation standard program; and
14            (E) an administrative procedure by which a
15        regulated entity may contest the Board's or Agency's
16        calculation prior to the levying of a penalty for
17        failure to remedy a given deficit;
18            (F) procedures that will allow the Agency to
19        cancel or reverse (i) a credit transfer that is
20        determined to be a prohibited transaction under items
21        (i) through (v) of subparagraph (B) or (ii) any other
22        prohibited transaction as determined by the Board in
23        rulemaking;
24        (7) contain a program review procedure whereby the
25    Board or Agency shall, every 3 years after the
26    implementation of the clean transportation standard,

 

 

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1    solicit feedback from and consult with representatives
2    from stakeholder groups, including representatives from
3    the fuel production industry, the transportation industry,
4    the agricultural industry, environmental advocacy
5    organizations, labor organizations, representatives from
6    impacted environmental justice communities, as defined in
7    Section 801-10 of the Illinois Finance Authority Act, and
8    representatives from related State agencies; the substance
9    of the consultations shall include, but may not be limited
10    to, a review of the economic impact of the clean
11    transportation standard, whether the clean transportation
12    standard is adhering to the established carbon intensity
13    reduction goals, the health impact of the emissions
14    reductions on disadvantaged environmental justice
15    communities, as defined in Section 801-10 of the Illinois
16    Finance Authority Act, and whether access to
17    transportation has been affected as a result of the
18    implementation of the clean transportation standard;
19        (8) include annual carbon intensity reduction
20    standards that are to be met by regulated entities and
21    that result in the attainment of carbon intensity
22    reduction targets set by the Board;
23        (9) maximize benefits to the environment and natural
24    resources and develop safeguards and incentives to protect
25    natural lands and enhance environmental integrity,
26    including biodiversity;

 

 

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1        (10) aim to support, through credit generation or
2    other financial means, voluntary farmer-led efforts to
3    adopt agricultural practices that benefit soil health and
4    water quality;
5        (11) support equitable transportation electrification
6    that benefits all communities and is powered primarily
7    with low-carbon and carbon-free electricity;
8        (12) seek to improve air quality and public health,
9    targeting communities that bear a disproportionate health
10    burden from transportation pollution;
11        (13) establish, in consultation with the Department of
12    Agriculture and the Department of Transportation, a
13    procedure for determining fuel pathways that:
14            (A) is consistent for all fuel types;
15            (B) is based on science and engineering; and
16            (C) accounts for any on-site additional energy use
17        by a carbon capture technology employed in the fuel
18        production process, including, but not limited to,
19        generation, distillation, and compression;
20        (14) recognize that farmers who can demonstrate use of
21    production methods that lower the carbon intensity of
22    their commodities shall be compensated a fair market value
23    that is, at minimum, commensurate with costs associated
24    with those low-carbon production methods or shall be
25    provided a fair share of the increased market value of the
26    end-use product that their commodity is used to produce.

 

 

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1    Compensation may come in a variety of forms, including,
2    but not limited to, practice-based incentive payments,
3    outcome-based incentive payments, price premiums, or other
4    forms of payment. The Agency shall also protect farm data
5    by ensuring farmer ownership of data for a specific amount
6    of time or negotiated on an annual basis;
7        (15) contain mechanisms to excuse noncompliance from
8    enforcement action if compliance is impossible, including
9    rules that shall specify the criteria and procedures for
10    the Agency to determine whether a period of noncompliance
11    is excusable in accordance with Sections 50 and 55;
12        (16) include mechanisms by which providers who would
13    be eligible to generate credits from electricity used as
14    transportation fuel may assign their right to generate
15    credits to an aggregator, and include mechanisms by which
16    a backstop aggregator may register with the program to
17    generate credits if an electric utility opts out of the
18    program; and
19        (17) provide indirect accounting mechanisms, such as
20    book-and-claim or mass-balancing for clean fuels entering
21    fungible supply systems that can access this State.
 
22    Section 25. Credit market; verification and data privacy;
23compliance and penalties.
24    (a) The clean transportation standard adopted by the Board
25shall take the form of a credit marketplace with the following

 

 

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1structure. The marketplace shall consist of a system of
2credits and deficits monitored by the Agency. The Agency shall
3compile a list of fuel pathways that providers may use to
4generate credits. Providers seeking to be credit generators
5must register with the Agency and attest to the transportation
6fuels they provide in the State in order to qualify to generate
7credits. Each deficit generator must register and comply with
8the program. Fuels that are registered with the program must
9have a dedicated, verifiable fuel pathway with a carbon
10intensity score measurable by software described in Section 30
11and assigned a unique identifier by the Agency. Providers
12reaching or exceeding the required reduction of lifecycle
13carbon intensity under the clean transportation standard shall
14receive credits from the Agency upon verification described in
15subsection (b) at the end of a reoccurring reporting period as
16determined by the Agency. Fuel providers that are deficit
17generators during a year shall eliminate the deficit by either
18providing transportation fuels whose carbon intensity is at or
19below the level of that year's annual clean transportation
20standard or by purchasing credits to offset the deficit. The
21system of credits created under this subsection shall provide
22credits based on a lifecycle emissions performance-based
23approach that is technology neutral, feedstock neutral, and
24has the purpose of achieving transportation fuel
25decarbonization.
26    (b) The Agency must, in collaboration with the Department

 

 

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1of Agriculture and the Department of Transportation, establish
2acceptable methods to verify that the transportation fuel used
3by regulated entities has been provided following the pathway
4bearing the unique identifier as attested by the regulated
5entity. The Agency is authorized to contract with third party
6verifiers to accomplish this requirement. Upon registering
7with the program, regulated entities must agree to provide
8data related to the registered fuel pathway used to generate
9credits or deficits with the Agency as required to administer
10the program. Upon registering with the program, regulated
11entities must agree to be subject to periodic audits as
12determined by the Agency.
13    All information gathered by or provided to the Agency or
14contractors of the Agency, either by regulated entities,
15agents of regulated entities, or growers of feedstock used in
16a registered fuel pathway by regulated entities, through
17either voluntary disclosure or audit, must not be shared by
18the Agency with any party except in relation to the
19administration of the clean transportation standard absent
20written consent by the regulated entity and the entity from
21which the data was gathered. This data must not be used for any
22purpose outside of the administration and enforcement of the
23clean transportation standard except by written consent from
24the original data holder. Ownership of all data shared or
25collected by the Agency for the administration and enforcement
26of the clean transportation standard is retained with the

 

 

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1entity from which the data originates. Data protected under
2this subparagraph does not include a regulated entity's credit
3or deficit balance, which may be publicly disclosed by the
4Agency.
5    (c) Deficit generators who fail to offset their deficits
6at the conclusion of any compliance period administered by the
7Agency shall be subject to a civil penalty established by the
8Agency subject to the following limitations:
9        (1) the value of the penalty shall correspond to the
10    amount of deficits attributed to a given regulated entity
11    at the time the transaction has completed; and
12        (2) for every one deficit the regulated entity fails
13    to offset, the penalty for failure to offset that deficit
14    shall not exceed 10 times the value of the credit needed to
15    offset the deficit.
16    (d) Regulated entities that submit false information in
17support of an application to register for the clean
18transportation standard, that share false information during
19an audit or in support of an attestation, or that otherwise
20share false or inaccurate information to the Agency or a
21contractor working under the direction of the Agency shall be
22subject to penalties to be determined by the Agency by rule.
23Penalties under this paragraph may include monetary penalties,
24forfeiture of credits, and reversals of prohibited
25transactions as described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (6)
26of Section 20. The Agency may waive penalties under this

 

 

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1subparagraph. If the violator under this subsection is a
2credit generator, following 3 violations, the Agency may
3remove the violating credit generator from the clean
4transportation standard. In determining whether penalties
5should be applied and, if a penalty is to be applied, the
6amount of penalties to be levied for violations under this
7subparagraph, the Agency shall consider:
8        (1) evidence of willfulness by the regulated entity to
9    submit false information;
10        (2) the scope of the false information;
11        (3) evidence of past submissions of false information;
12    and
13        (4) efforts undertaken by the regulated entity to
14    remedy the false submission.
15    (e) The penalties provided for in this Section may be
16recovered in a civil action brought in the name of the people
17of the State of Illinois by the State's Attorney of the county
18in which the violation occurred or by the Attorney General.
19Any penalties collected under this Section in an action in
20which the Attorney General has prevailed shall be used to
21offset registration fees in support of the administration of
22the clean transportation standard program. Any amount of
23penalties collected in addition to the amount needed to
24administer the clean transportation standard program shall be
25deposited into the Environmental Protection Trust Fund, to be
26used in accordance with the provisions of the Environmental

 

 

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1Protection Trust Fund Act.
2    (f) The Attorney General or the State's Attorney of a
3county in which a violation occurs may institute a civil
4action for an injunction, prohibitory or mandatory, to
5restrain violations of this Act or to require such actions as
6may be necessary to address violations of this Act.
7    (g) The penalties and injunctions provided in this Act are
8in addition to any penalties, injunctions, or other relief
9provided under any other law. Nothing in this Act bars an
10action by the State for any other penalty, injunction, or
11other relief provided by any other law.
 
12    Section 30. Lifecycle carbon intensity calculations;
13software. The lifecycle carbon intensity calculation conducted
14by the Agency under paragraph (2) of Section 20 shall use the
15Argonne National Laboratory's GREET model and shall include
16all stages of fuel and feedstock production and distribution,
17from feedstock generation or extraction through the
18distribution, delivery, and use of the finished fuel by the
19ultimate consumer. The Agency shall, as needed and
20periodically as established by rule, use as up-to-date a model
21as possible, taking into account staffing and hiring needs.
22Carbon intensity values calculated for clean fuel pathways
23under construction or in operation using the current version
24of the GREET model shall be allowed if the GREET model is
25revised during the compliance year. In calculating the

 

 

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1lifecycle carbon intensity, the mass values for all greenhouse
2gases that are not carbon dioxide must be adjusted to account
3for each of their relative global warming potentials. This
4adjustment shall be performed using the global warming
5potential deemed most accurate by the Agency for each
6greenhouse gas for the period during which reductions in
7greenhouse gas emissions are to be attained under the clean
8transportation standard. When measuring the carbon intensity
9of clean fuels, the Agency shall use the GREET model's
10Feedstock Carbon Intensity Calculator (FD-CIC) for the
11purposes of accounting for variations in farming practices
12across different fuel pathways.
 
13    Section 35. Investments by backstop aggregators and
14utilities. In implementing this Act, the Agency and Board
15shall establish rules directing participating utilities and
16backstop aggregators under the standard to invest all revenue
17earned from trading credits toward investments into
18distribution, grid modernization, infrastructure and other
19projects that support transportation decarbonization, with at
20least 50% of such revenues supporting environmental justice
21communities as defined in Section 801-10 of the Illinois
22Finance Authority Act. All labor paid for with money from
23required investments under this Section shall be subject to
24the prevailing wage. The Agency and Board shall determine
25projects and goals under this Act in consultation with

 

 

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1relevant stakeholders, including, but not limited to, credit
2generators, affected communities, and environmental justice
3advocacy organizations.
 
4    Section 40. Exemptions. The following fuels are exempt
5from the clean transportation standard established in Section
615:
7        (1) aviation fuels;
8        (2) transportation fuel used in locomotives;
9        (3) transportation fuel used in ocean-going vessels;
10    and
11        (4) fuel used in military tactical vehicles and
12    tactical support equipment owned by the U.S. Department of
13    Defense or the U.S. military services.
14However, providers of these fuels, if deemed to be clean
15fuels, shall be eligible under the rules adopted pursuant to
16this Act to receive credits on an opt-in basis that may be
17applied to future obligations or sold to deficit generators.
 
18    Section 45. Agency reporting obligation. Within 12 months
19after the implementation of the clean transportation standard,
20the Agency shall submit a report to the General Assembly
21detailing the implementation of the clean transportation
22standard, the reductions in greenhouse gas emissions that have
23been achieved through the clean transportation standard, and
24targets for future reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.

 

 

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1These reports shall include feedback solicited from
2stakeholders under paragraph (7) of Section 20.
 
3    Section 50. Fuel supply forecasting. In consultation with
4the Department of Transportation and the Department of
5Agriculture, the Agency must develop a periodic fuel supply
6forecast to project the availability of fuels to the State
7necessary for compliance with clean transportation standard
8requirements. The fuel supply forecast for each upcoming
9compliance period must include, but is not limited to, the
10following:
11        (1) an estimate of the potential volumes of gasoline,
12    gasoline substitutes, and gasoline alternatives, and
13    diesel, diesel substitutes, and diesel alternatives
14    available to the State. In developing this estimate, the
15    Agency must consider, but is not limited to, considering:
16            (A) the existing and future vehicle fleet in this
17        State; and
18            (B) any constraints that might be preventing
19        access to available and cost-effective clean fuels by
20        the State, such as geographic and logistical factors,
21        and alleviating factors to the constraints;
22        (2) an estimate of the total banked credits and
23    carried over deficits held by regulated entities, credit
24    generators, and credit aggregators at the beginning of the
25    compliance period, and an estimate of the total credits

 

 

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1    attributable to fuels described in paragraph (1);
2        (3) an estimate of the number of credits needed to
3    meet the applicable clean transportation standard
4    requirements during the forecasted compliance period; and
5        (4) a comparison in the estimates of paragraphs (1)
6    and (2) with the estimate in paragraph (3), for the
7    purpose of indicating the availability of fuels and banked
8    credits needed for compliance with the requirements of
9    this chapter.
10    The Agency may appoint a forecast review team of relevant
11experts to participate in the fuel supply forecast or
12examination of data required by this Section. The Agency must
13finalize a fuel supply forecast for an upcoming compliance
14period by no later than 90 days prior to the start of the
15compliance period.
 
16    Section 55. Forecast deferral.
17    (a) No later than 30 calendar days before the commencement
18of a compliance period, the Agency shall issue an order
19declaring a forecast deferral if the fuel supply forecast
20under Section 50 projects that the amount of credits that will
21be available during the forecast compliance period will be
22less than 100% of the credits projected to be necessary for
23regulated parties to comply with the scheduled applicable
24clean transportation standard adopted by the Agency for the
25forecast compliance period.

 

 

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1    (b) An order declaring a forecast deferral under this
2Section must set forth:
3        (1) the duration of the forecast deferral;
4        (2) the types of fuel to which the forecast deferral
5    applies; and
6        (3) which of the following methods the Agency has
7    selected for deferring compliance with the scheduled
8    applicable clean transportation standard during the
9    forecast deferral:
10            (A) temporarily adjusting the scheduled applicable
11        clean transportation program standard to a standard
12        identified in the order that better reflects the
13        forecast availability of credits during the forecast
14        compliance period and requiring regulated entities to
15        comply with the temporary standard;
16            (B) requiring regulated entities to comply only
17        with the clean transportation standard applicable
18        during the compliance period prior to the forecast
19        compliance period; or
20            (C) suspending deficit accrual for part or all of
21        the forecast deferral period.
22    (c) In implementing a forecast deferral, the Agency may
23take an action for deferring compliance with the clean
24transportation standard other than, or in addition to,
25selecting a method under paragraph (3) of subsection (b) only
26if the Agency determines that none of the methods under

 

 

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1paragraph (3) of subsection (b) will provide a sufficient
2mechanism for containing the costs of compliance with the
3clean transportation standard during the forecast deferral.
4    (d) If the Agency makes the determination specified in
5subsection (c), the Agency shall:
6        (1) include in the order declaring a forecast deferral
7    the determination and the action to be taken; and
8        (2) provide written notification and justification of
9    the determination and the action to:
10            (A) the Governor;
11            (B) the President of the Senate;
12            (C) the Speaker of the House of Representatives;
13            (D) the Majority and Minority Leaders of the
14        Senate; and
15            (E) the Majority and Minority Leaders of the House
16        of Representatives.
17    (e) The duration of a forecast deferral may not be less
18than one calendar quarter or longer than one compliance
19period. Only the Agency may terminate, by order, a forecast
20deferral before the expiration date of the forecast deferral.
21Termination of a forecast deferral is effective on the first
22day of the next calendar quarter after the date that the order
23declaring the termination is adopted.
 
24    Section 60. Conflicts with other State programs. Nothing
25in this Act precludes the Agency or Board from adopting or

 

 

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1maintaining other programs as permitted or required by
2existing or future legislation to reduce greenhouse gas
3emissions from the transportation sector.
 
4    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
5becoming law.