新泽西州议员通过法案,旨在建立大型数据中心电价费率
New Jersey Lawmakers Pass Bill To Establish Large Load Data Center Tariff

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/new-jersey-lawmakers-pass-bill-establish-large-load-data-center-tariff

新泽西州立法者已通过 S731 法案,要求公共事业委员会为容量在 50 兆瓦及以上的数据中心制定专门的电价标准。该法案规定这些大型设施必须承担其自身的基建和服务成本,旨在保护居民和小型企业用户免受潜在电价上涨的影响。 该法案适用于新建和现有设施,并包含多项严格要求:运营商必须签署为期十年、覆盖 85% 计划用电量的“照付不议”合同;在紧急情况下优先配合电网限电;并证明项目可行性以防止投机性开发。此外,法案还通过为现场清洁能源和储能项目提供优先并网权,以激励相关技术的使用。 预计州长米基·谢里尔(Mikie Sherrill)将签署该法案。此举使新泽西州与全美日益增长的趋势保持一致。俄勒冈州、俄克拉荷马州、佛罗里达州、弗吉尼亚州和俄亥俄州等州近期也已颁布或提议了类似政策,旨在将基建成本从公共用户转移至大型用户身上。

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原文

By Zachary Skidmore of DataCenterDynamics

New Jersey lawmakers have passed a bill that will direct the state's Board of Public Utilities (PUC) to establish a dedicated data center tariff for facilities with a capacity of 50MW or more, in an attempt to shield other ratepayers from cost increases tied to new builds.

A similar bill was originally proposed in June of last year by Democratic assemblymen Dave Bailey and Joe Danielsen. However, that initial bill was pocket-vetoed by then-governor Phil Murphy, who did not sign it before his term ended.

CoreSite’s NY3 data center is located in Secaucus and offers more than 138,000 square feet of capacity.CoreSite

Following the veto, the bill was replaced with S731, which proposed broader protections than the previous bill. It will now head to Democratic governor Mikie Sherrill for final approval. Assemblyman David Bailey Jr. said Sherrill's office was involved in drafting the latest version and expressed optimism she would sign it.

The new bill is broader than the previously vetoed bill, applying to both existing and new facilities, and lowering the threshold from 100MW. It also aggregates facilities that are under common ownership or on contiguous sites, treating them as a single large data center for purposes of the threshold.

Other provisions in the bill include requiring data centers to demonstrate their project is not proposed elsewhere to avoid speculative applications, providing financial guarantees to take or pay for at least 85 percent of the requested service for ten years, and committing to demand response and flexibility programs. In addition, the bill mandates that large data center customers be curtailed before residential customers during grid emergencies.

It will also require the PUC to prioritize interconnection for data centers that make binding commitments to bring their own clean generation or storage.

The bill is the latest to be passed within a state legislature, with several already enshrined in law, and many others currently making their way through the approval process.

Last month, regulators in Oregon approved a new rate class for data centers and other large loads, which is now in effect.

Before this, Oklahoma’s governor, Kevin Stitt, signed into law a new bill aimed at protecting ratepayers in the state from rising utility and infrastructure costs associated with data centers. This closely followed Florida, whose governor signed into law a similar bill that prohibited utilities from passing data center infrastructure costs on to residential and small-business ratepayers and required large-scale users to bear their full cost of service.

Other states to see similar rules proposed and passed include Ohio, North Carolina, and Virginia, to name a few.

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