Or. Admin. Code § 860-082-0035 - Cost Responsibility
(1) Study
costs. Whenever a study is required under Tier 4 of the small generator
interconnection rules, the applicant must pay the public utility for the
reasonable costs incurred in performing the study. The public utility must base
study costs on the scope of work determined and documented in the feasibility
study agreement, the system impact study agreement, or the facilities study
agreement, as applicable. The estimated engineering costs used in calculating
study costs must not exceed $100 per hour. A public utility may adjust the $100
hourly rate once in January of each year to account for inflation and deflation
as measured by the Consumer Price Index. Before beginning a study, a public
utility may require an applicant to pay a deposit of up to 50 percent of the
estimated costs to perform the study or $1,000, whichever is less.
(2) Interconnection facilities. For
interconnection review under Tier 4, a public utility must identify the
interconnection facilities necessary to safely interconnect the small generator
facility with the public utility's transmission or distribution system. The
applicant must pay the reasonable costs of the interconnection facilities. The
public utility constructs, owns, operates, and maintains the interconnection
facilities.
(3) Interconnection
equipment. An applicant or interconnection customer must pay all expenses
associated with constructing, owning, operating, maintaining, repairing, and
replacing its interconnection equipment. Interconnection equipment is
constructed, owned, operated, and maintained by the applicant or
interconnection customer.
(4)
System upgrades. A public utility must design, procure, construct, install, and
own any system upgrades to the public utility's transmission or distribution
system necessitated by the interconnection of a small generator facility. A
public utility must identify any adverse system impacts on an affected system
caused by the interconnection of a small generator facility to the public
utility's transmission or distribution system. The public utility must
determine what actions or upgrades are required to mitigate these impacts. Such
mitigation measures are considered system upgrades as defined in these rules.
The applicant must pay the reasonable costs of any system upgrades.
(5) A public utility may not begin work on
interconnection facilities or system upgrades before an applicant receives the
public utility's good-faith, non-binding cost estimate and provides written
notice to the public utility that the applicant accepts the estimate and agrees
to pay the costs. A public utility may require an applicant to pay a deposit
before beginning work on the interconnection facilities or system upgrades.
(a) If an applicant agrees to make progress
payments on a schedule established by the applicant and the interconnecting
public utility, then the public utility may require the applicant to pay a
deposit of up to 25 percent of the estimated costs or $10,000, whichever is
less. The public utility and the applicant must agree on progress billing,
final billing, and payment schedules before the public utility begins
work.
(b) If an applicant does not
agree to make progress payments, then the public utility may require the
applicant to pay a deposit of up to 100 percent of the estimated costs. If the
actual costs are lower than the estimated costs, then the public utility must
refund the unused portion of the deposit to the applicant within 20 business
days after the actual costs are determined.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 183, ORS 756 & ORS 757
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 756.040 & ORS 756.060
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