OAR 330-090-0120
Preliminary Certificate Application Requirements for a BETC
(1)
Eligible facilities(a)
The Department may issue only one BETC for each separate and distinct facility under these rules. The following facilities, as further defined in these rules, are eligible for a BETC: An energy facility, recycling facility, rental dwelling weatherization facility, transportation facility, car sharing facility, sustainable building practices facility, alternative fuel vehicle or facilities necessary to operate alternative fuel vehicles, including but not limited to an alternative fuel vehicle refueling station, a high-efficiency combined heat and power facility, a high-performance home, a homebuilder-installed renewable energy system or a research development & demonstration facility that complies with these rules.(b)
A proposed facility must meet applicable codes and standards, must include a warranty and must be serviceable locally.(2)
Required information(a)
Persons requesting a BETC shall apply on the Department-approved form for a preliminary certificate. In addition to the information required in ORS 469B.145 (Application for preliminary certification), the applicant shall provide the following information:(A)
The name, address, and phone number of the applicant, owners of the facility, and the developers of the project.(B)
The applicant’s federal tax identification number or social security number which may be shared with the Department of Revenue to facilitate the administration of the state tax law.(C)
Proposed facility construction and operational start and finish dates. A facility’s start date is the date that the project applicant financially commits to the project. Financial commitment includes, but is not limited to: making a down-payment or deposit, signing a contract with a vendor, ordering material or equipment, beginning construction or installation.(D)
The proposed facility location within the geographical confines of Oregon or in the case of an alternate fuel vehicle demonstrated intent that the vehicle will be titled in the State of Oregon.(E)
Information demonstrating that the proposed facility will comply with or have a variance from the land use laws of the city or county where the facility will be located;(F)
Information demonstrating that the proposed facility will comply with all other local, federal, and state laws, including but not limited to the following:(i)
A water power energy facility that uses navigable waters or that sells electricity must have a permit, license or exemption from the Oregon Department of Water Resources (DWR) and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). Proof of permits, licenses, or exemptions from DWR and the FERC must be submitted to the Department before a facility is eligible to receive final certification. Also, if the facility uses water from the Columbia River basin, it must comply with the Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s Fish and Wildlife Program.(ii)
A geothermal energy facility must have the proper permit from the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries (DOGAMI) or a permit from DWR.(iii)
A biomass energy facility must have required permits from the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ).(G)
A list of appropriate authorizations for all work performed including but not limited to appropriate licenses, permits, or other authorizations that are required by state or local jurisdiction for the facility.(H)
Information demonstrating the intended operation, maintenance and use of the facility, including but not limited to, where appropriate, the amount and type of jobs potentially created or eliminated in the construction, installation and operation of the facility in Oregon, the benefits of the facility with regard to overall economic activity in this state, the amount of projected energy saved, generated or transmitted and a demonstrated intent that the facility will be maintained and operated for at least five years after the facility is operational. Except that, as a condition of the preliminary and final certificate, the following facilities must remain in operation for one year: Tele-working equipment, transit passes, transportation services, incentive programs, car-share programs and individualized travel behavior change programs, and van-pool programs. If an applicant expects that a facility not listed in this subsection will operate less than five years, the applicant may submit a request for approval of the shorter operating period as part of their application for preliminary certification. This request shall include information describing the proposed facility and supporting the proposed operating period. The Director will determine whether to approve the shorter operating period and may include conditions, reductions or other limits on any potential tax credits.(I)
A declaration from the applicant that all property taxes for the facility have been paid and there are no delinquent property taxes associated with the facility.(J)
Applications for facilities using or producing renewable energy resources, or facilities listed as renewable energy resources as defined under ORS 469B.130 (Definitions for ORS 469B.130 to 469B.169 and 469B.171) shall provide all information required as part of the tiered priority system under OAR 330-090-0350 (Tiered Prioritization System for Renewable Facilities).(b)
The Department may request additional information from the applicant in order to determine whether multiple applications have been made for the same facility. The department will make its determination based on the following:(A)
All applications under consideration will be reviewed against other current applications, facilities that have received preliminary certification and facilities that have received final certification within the past 12 months. Further review shall be given to applications which:(i)
when combined exceed the annual limit for a tax credit found in ORS 469B.142 (Annual limit to cost of facility eligible for tax credits).(ii)
are individually below the threshold for one year tax credit found in ORS 315.354 (Energy conservation facilities), but if combined exceed this threshold; or(iii)
when combined, result in assessment within a different category or tier, or against different criteria or cost allowances.(B)
Applications for facilities using or producing renewable energy resources, or facilities listed as renewable energy resources as defined under ORS 469B.130 (Definitions for ORS 469B.130 to 469B.169 and 469B.171) will be determined to be a single facility, despite the number of applications, owners or construction phases, if three or more of the following apply:(i)
The facility is located on one or more adjacent parcels of land or parcels;(ii)
The facility has been recognized in a license or permit as a single facility by a federal, state, county, city or local authority including, but not limited to siting council, state or local boards or commissions, or the facility has obtained or applied for siting or land use approval and other applicable permits, licenses or site certificates as a single facility or on a single application;(iii)
When the facility is designed to generate energy, the construction of the facility is performed under the same contract with a general contractor licensed under ORS 701 or multiple contracts entered into within one year of each other with one or more general contractors licensed under ORS 701. If facilities will be completed in phases over time, the applicant must demonstrate that each of the phases of the facility would independently qualify as an eligible facility and that each phase of the facility is not interdependent in purpose or the manner in which it will be owned, financed, constructed, operated, or maintained or the facilities or phases of the facility will be determined to be one facility for the purposes of these rules;(iv)
The facility owners have entered into or expect to enter into agreements to share project expenses, personnel, capital investments including generating equipment or other resources related to the facility;(v)
The generating equipment for the facility and the related facility was purchased by the same person or persons who own or operate the facility or have taken action under any of the above factors;(vi)
A facility is connected to the grid through a single connection or multiple connections when there is a shared net metering, power purchase or other applicable transmission agreement; or(vii)
Other factors or considerations which demonstrate that the facility is not a separate and distinct facility based on its construction, operation, maintenance and output.(C)
Applications other than those described in subsections (B) will be considered a single facility if three or more of the following apply:(i)
shared ownership of facilities,(ii)
shared location of facilities,(iii)
project permits are issued to a common entity or at the same time or(iv)
a shared contract to construct the facilities.(c)
Anticipated capital expenditures and other costs as defined in these rules for the erection, construction, installation or acquisition of the proposed facility, its expected operational life, and its simple payback as defined in ORS Chapter 469B (Energy Incentives) and these rules.(d)
Information demonstrating anticipated substantial energy savings or a description of products that will result from the facility and how those products will result in substantial energy savings.(e)
For a proposed renewable energy resource facility, proof the resource level is adequate for a feasible facility. Such proof includes data listed in (A) through (G). Other data may be used if the listed data cannot be obtained at a reasonable cost, such as for RD&D facilities.(A)
For a solar energy facility: A sun chart and solar insolation data for the site. Facilities must have a Total Solar Resource Fraction of at Least 75 percent.(B)
For a wind energy facility:(i)
The average monthly wind speed for 12 consecutive months at the proposed site. Measure wind speed at or as close as practically feasible to the hub height of a horizontal axis wind machine; or, the equator of a vertical axis wind machine; or(ii)
Measure wind speed at two heights for 12 consecutive months, the lowest one at least 10 meters above ground and estimate the wind speed at hub or equator height; or(iii)
In the event of less than one year’s measurements at the proposed site, include the months of on-site measurements and supplement these data with estimated average monthly wind speeds at or near the proposed site to complete the 12 consecutive month data set. Such estimated data should be obtained from a nationally recognized firm that provides estimated wind resource data based on advanced national wind mapping technology; or(iv)
The estimated average monthly wind speed for 12 consecutive months at or near the proposed site obtained from a nationally recognized firm that provides estimated wind resource data based on advanced national wind mapping technology.(v)
In the event that estimated wind resource data are used as described under section (iii) and (iv) above, the project owner shall provide to the Department not later than 14 months after the start-up date, one year of actual monthly energy production data and, if available, actual monthly average wind speed data at wind energy facility’s site.(vi)
Proposed equipment must meet the following:(I)
Each proposed model of the system must demonstrate reliable operation of that model of equipment and show monthly data of average energy produced (kWh) and average wind speed for one consecutive year at a site with average annual wind speeds of at least 12 mph; or(II)
Proof that the proposed wind system model is listed on the official list of Qualified Wind Generators published by the Energy Trust of Oregon, the California Energy Commission, or the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) in effect on April 30, 2010; or(III)
The proposed manufacturer’s power curve, the estimated annual energy production based on the site’s wind speed data, and the manufacturer’s performance guarantees (on-line availability and power curve).(vii)
The Department reserves the right to deny eligibility for any wind system for any reason including, but not limited to: poor generator performance, concerns about wind generation system design or quality of data presented, lack of manufacturing support for maintenance, warranties, etc., and insufficient experience with generation.(C)
For a geothermal energy facility (except a heat pump system): A plot of well temperature versus time at the design flow rate at steady state temperature.(D)
For a water power facility: One year of actual or predicted average monthly stream flows. If flows are predicted, describe the method used to predict flows.(E)
For a biomass energy facility: Data that show the resource is available in an amount that meets the facility’s energy requirements for a period of a minimum of five years.(F)
For a waste heat recovery facility: A table showing how much waste heat is available and from what sources.(G)
For wood-fired boilers or furnaces with heat output capacities of less than 2 million British Thermal Units per Hour: Certification that they produce particle emissions equal to or less than 2.5 grams per hour for catalytic stoves and 4.5 grams per hour for noncatalytic stoves by an independent wood stove laboratory currently certified by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA).(f)
The payment required by OAR 330-090-0150 (Budget Limits and Payments for BETC)(3).(g)
For proposed alternative fuel vehicle facilities: proof that the proposed vehicle or conversion equipment is on DEQ’s approved list in effect on December 1, 2007, the current exhaust emissions, the expected emission reductions, the expected annual energy and/or cost savings (if any).(h)
For proposed alternative fuel vehicle facilities: the proposed number of vehicles to be converted or new vehicles purchased, the expected annual fuel savings, the type of alternative fuel used, and the expected annual amount of alternative fuel used.(i)
For proposed alternative fuel fueling station facilities: a description of proposed fueling systems, the estimated number of alternative fuel vehicles that will use the proposed station, the type of alternative fuel that will be dispensed, and the expected annual amount that will be dispensed.(j)
For proposed transportation facilities: required documentation for each category specified under the definition of “Transportation Facility” in these rules.(k)
For a proposed waste-to-energy renewable energy resource facility that meets the definition of waste stream includes the anticipated percentage of waste stream product to be recovered and a remediation plan for anticipated emissions and byproducts.(3)
Standards When Reconstructing a Facility: If a facility is reconstructed and an application for preliminary certification is filed seeking a tax credit on the reconstructed facility, any tax credit certified for the reconstructed facility will be reduced by the amount of the original tax credit remaining for the original facility.(4)
If the Department determines that the applicant qualifies for a BETC, the Department may issue a preliminary certification. The preliminary certification may contain specific criteria and conditions for the facility to meet in order to obtain a final certification based on the information provided in the application for the BETC and type of facility that is described in the application. In addition, the Department may require the applicant to enter a performance agreement or other similar agreement as a condition of approval.
Source:
Rule 330-090-0120 — Preliminary Certificate Application Requirements for a BETC, https://secure.sos.state.or.us/oard/view.action?ruleNumber=330-090-0120
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