Notice of Committee Passage for House Bill 1091
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HB 1091, titled AN ACT Relating to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by reducing the carbon intensity of transportation fuel, has been passed by the House Committee on Transportation. The Office of Financial Management has identified this bill
as requiring a ten-year projection of increased cost to the taxpayers or affected fee payers.
Ten-year projection:
Fiscal |
Clean Fuels Program Fee |
|
|
||
2022 |
$ |
|
2023 |
373,731 |
|
2024 |
858,796 |
|
2025 |
930,837 |
|
2026 |
858,796 |
|
2027 |
930,837 |
|
2028 |
858,796 |
|
2029 |
930,837 |
|
2030 |
858,796 |
|
2031 |
930,837 |
|
|
||
Total: |
$ 7,532,263 |
Department of Ecology:
Section 12 would authorize Ecology to require a fee from persons that register or report under the provisions of this chapter. Ecology would adopt rules following an opportunity for public comment that would determine the payment schedule and fee amount. The fee amount would be required to be set so that receipts equal but do not exceed the projected direct and indirect costs for Ecology’s and Commerce’s development and implementation of the program.
Ecology would be required to establish rules by January 1, 2023, under section 3. Ecology assumes the fee authorized in section 12 would start on this date. Based on the start date for fee implementation, Ecology estimates that the latter 6 months of FY 2023 expenditures for the Clean Fuels program would be fee-recoverable, and all future expenditures would be funded through fee revenue in the Clean Fuels Program Account.
Per section 12, the fee amount would be set so that receipts equal but do not exceed projected direct and indirect costs for Ecology's and Commerce’s development and implementation of the program. Cash receipts are estimated to equal expenditure estimates in the new Clean Fuels Program Account beginning January 1, 2023.
Individual fee levels and the number of fee payers is indeterminate at this time. Rulemaking and stakeholder feedback will determine which entities will be required to pay a fee and what portion of the program should be supported by each class of participant.
All fee receipts would be deposited in the Clean Fuels Program Account created in section 12.
Department of Revenue:
Note: This fiscal note reflects language in HB 1091, 2021 Legislative Session.
This fiscal note only addresses those sections of the bill that impact the Department of Revenue (Department).
This fiscal note reflects a revision to the revenue discussion and supersedes fiscal note number 1091-2.
OVERVIEW
The bill creates a low-carbon fuel standard to reduce levels of air pollutants and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
The Department of Ecology (Ecology) must establish standards (the Clean Fuels Program) to reduce the carbon intensity of transportation fuels in Washington, as measured by the life-cycle GHG emissions per unit of fuel energy. The Clean Fuels Program must take effect by January 1, 2023, and must reduce GHG emissions per unit of fuel to 10% below 2017 levels by 2028 and 20% below 2017 levels by 2035. By December 31, 2031, Ecology must adopt standards that are consistent with the state achieving the emissions reductions established in RCW 70A.45.020.
The Clean Fuels Program developed by Ecology must include:
- GHG emission standards to be met by participants;
- Provisions for achieving the emissions reductions established in RCW 70A.45.020, including the allowance of credits for the production or import of fuels with carbon intensity below Ecology standards or for GHG-reducing activities;
- Methods for assigning compliance obligations and tracking and verifying tradable credits;
- Mechanisms for certain persons involved in transportation fuel supply chain activities that are not directly subject to the fuel standards to elect to participate in the program;
- Cost containment mechanisms, such as the development of a credit clearance market whereby emitters that would not otherwise meet the Clean Fuels Program's emissions standards may purchase credits to meet compliance obligations.
Credit Generating Activities
Participants in the Clean Fuels Program may generate credits from GHG emissions-limiting activities, including:
- Producing or importing transportation fuels with emissions below program standards,
- Carbon capture and sequestration,
- Fueling electric vehicles with electricity certified as zero-carbon, or
- Use of smart vehicle charging technology in fueling vehicles when the carbon intensity of the electric grid is low.
Entities Registering for the Clean Fuels Program
Producers and importers of transportation fuels that do not qualify to generate credits are required to register for the Clean Fuels Program. In addition, other entities must register in order to participate in the Clean Fuels Program and to generate or trade credits.
Exemptions
The Clean Fuels Program generally does not apply to the following, except in certain instances where producers and importers of such transportation fuels elect to register for the program:
- Transportation fuels exported from Washington;
- Electricity;
- Fuels used in volumes below thresholds set by Ecology;
- Fuels used in aircraft, marine vessels, railroad locomotives, and the operation of military tactical vehicles; or
- Until January 1, 2028, special fuel and dyed special fuels used off-road to transport logs, in construction work, mining and timber harvest operations, and for agricultural purposes.
Reports
Ecology must post annual reports beginning May 1, 2025, on the program-wide number of credits and deficits generated and volumes and average price per credit for each transportation fuel in the program.
EFFECTIVE DATE
The bill takes effect 90 days after final adjournment of the session in which it was enacted.
ASSUMPTIONS
- Ecology will administer the Clean Fuels Program and associated cost containment mechanisms such as the credit clearance market described in Section 4(6).
- Under the Clean Fuels Program, producers and importers of low-carbon fuels will generate tradable credits.
- Producers and importers of fuels that do not meet Ecology's clean fuel standards will generate deficits that can be offset by acquiring credits.
- A carbon credit clearance market allows participants in the Clean Fuels Program to buy and sell credits at prices established by Ecology.
Background
- The Department currently administers the business and occupation (B&O) tax, which is a tax on the gross proceeds of sales and the gross income of a business.
- The B&O tax applies to most types of business receipts.
- The B&O tax rate for "services and other activities" is 1.5% or 1.75%, with the latter rate applying to entities with more than $1 million of taxable gross receipts in the services and other category.
Applicability of B&O Tax
- Since no specific B&O exemption is created for sales of credits to other entities, it is assumed such sales will qualify as taxable events under the B&O tax and will be taxed at the services and other activities tax rate, as described in RCW 82.04.290.
- It is assumed that all entities selling credits will meet the taxable receipts threshold to be required to pay the higher 1.75% services and other B&O tax rate.
B&O Tax Collections (Example)
- For example, if in FY 20XX:
- The Department of Ecology sets prices at $150 per credit, with each credit representing 1 MT of CO2-equivalent emissions;
- 1 million credits are earned by Clean Fuels Program participants for credit-generating activities; and
- One-third of credits generated are banked for future use and two-thirds are sold to other program participants;
- Then the B&O tax collected on such credit sales in FY 20XX would be:
$150 x 1 million x 66.67% x 1.75% = $1.75 million.
The example above is provided to illustrate the calculation of the B&O tax on Clean Fuels Program credits and is not intended as a revenue estimate.
TOTAL REVENUE IMPACT:
Indeterminate
Ten-year projection prepared in consultation with the following agencies:
Department of Revenue
Department of Ecology
The following legislators voted do pass:
Representative John Lovick
Democrat
(253) 275-1405
john.lovick@leg.wa.gov
Representative Debra Entenman
Democrat
(253) 330-5504
ENTENMAN_DE@leg.wa.gov
Representative Marcus Riccelli
Democrat
(509) 866-4954
marcus.riccelli@leg.wa.gov
Representative Sharon Wylie
Democrat
(360) 786-7924
Sharon.Wylie@leg.wa.gov
Representative Jake Fey
Democrat
(206) 653-9974
jake.fey@leg.wa.gov
Representative Emily Wicks
Democrat
(425) 903-8186
WICKS_EM@leg.wa.gov
Representative Mike Chapman
Democrat
(564) 888-2321
mike.chapman@leg.wa.gov
Representative Vandana Slatter
Democrat
(425) 458-7240
vandana.slatter@leg.wa.gov
Representative Javier Valdez
Democrat
(206) 905-8739
javier.valdez@leg.wa.gov
Representative Bill Ramos
Democrat
(425) 654-4402
RAMOS_BI@leg.wa.gov
Representative Dave Paul
Democrat
(360) 553-4226
PAUL_DA@leg.wa.gov
Representative Davina Duerr
Democrat
(425) 318-1303
DUERR_DA@leg.wa.gov
Representative Alex Ramel
Democrat
(360) 786-7970
alex.ramel@leg.wa.gov
Representative David Hackney
Democrat
(206) 490-0914
David.Hackney@leg.wa.gov
Representative Dan Bronoske
Democrat
(360) 786-7958
Dan.Bronoske@leg.wa.gov
Representative Jamila Taylor
Democrat
(360) 868-6290
Jamila.Taylor@leg.wa.gov
Representative Liz Berry
Democrat
(206) 709-5260
Liz.Berry@leg.wa.gov
The following legislators voted to refer the bill without recommendation:
Representative Jim Walsh
Republican
(360) 485-0547
jim.walsh@leg.wa.gov
The following legislators voted do not pass:
Representative Eric Robertson
Republican
(360) 786-7866
Eric.Robertson@leg.wa.gov
Representative Ed Orcutt
Republican
(360) 786-7990
Ed.Orcutt@leg.wa.gov
Representative Bob McCaslin
Republican
(360) 786-7820
Bob.McCaslin@leg.wa.gov
Representative Dan Griffey
Republican
(360) 786-7966
Dan.Griffey@leg.wa.gov
Representative Tom Dent
Republican
(509) 941-2346
tom.dent@leg.wa.gov
Representative Andrew Barkis
Republican
(360) 584-9846
andrew.barkis@leg.wa.gov
Representative Mike Volz
Republican
(509) 456-2750
mike.volz@leg.wa.gov
Representative Carolyn Eslick
Republican
(360) 786-7816
ESLICK_CA@leg.wa.gov
Representative Keith Goehner
Republican
(360) 786-7954
GOEHNER_KE@leg.wa.gov
Representative Robert Sutherland
Republican
(425) 341-4816
SUTHERLA_RO@leg.wa.gov
Representative Mark Klicker
Republican
(360) 786-7836
Mark.Klicker@leg.wa.gov
Legislative Bill Information Website:
http://apps.leg.wa.gov/billinfo/
Initiative 960 Website: http://www.ofm.wa.gov/tax/default.asp