RCW 19.27A.250
State energy management and benchmarking requirement.
(1)(a) By December 1, 2023, the department must adopt by rule a state energy management and benchmarking requirement for tier 2 covered buildings. The department shall include a small business economic impact statement pursuant to chapter 19.85 RCW as part of the rule making.
(b) In establishing the requirements under (a) of this subsection, the department must adopt requirements for building owner implementation consistent with the standard established pursuant to RCW 19.27A.210(1) and limited to energy management planning, operations and maintenance planning, and energy use analysis through benchmarking and associated reporting and administrative procedures. Administrative procedures must include exemptions for financial hardship and an appeals process for administrative determinations, including penalties imposed by the department.
(c) The department must provide a customer support program to building owners including, but not limited to, outreach and informational materials that connect tier 2 covered building owners to utility resources, periodic training, phone and email support, and other technical assistance. The customer support program must include enhanced technical support, such as benchmarking assistance and assistance in developing energy management and operations and maintenance plans, for tier 2 covered buildings whose owners typically do not employ dedicated building managers including, but not limited to, multifamily housing, child care facilities, and houses of worship. The department shall prioritize underresourced buildings with a high energy use per square foot, buildings in rural communities, buildings whose tenants are primarily small businesses, and buildings located in high-risk communities according to the department of health's environmental health disparities map.
(d)(i) The department may adopt rules related to the imposition of an administrative penalty not to exceed 30 cents per square foot upon a tier 2 covered building owner for failing to submit documentation demonstrating compliance with the requirements of this subsection.
(ii) Administrative penalties collected under this section must be deposited into the low-income weatherization and structural rehabilitation assistance account created in RCW 70A.35.030 and reinvested into the program, where feasible, to support compliance with the standard.
(2) By July 1, 2025, the department must provide the owners of tier 2 covered buildings with notification of the requirements the department has adopted pursuant to this section that apply to tier 2 covered buildings.
(3) The owner of a tier 2 covered building must report the building owner's compliance with the requirements adopted by the department to the department in accordance with the schedule established under subsection (4) of this section and every five years thereafter. For each reporting date, the building owner must submit documentation to demonstrate that the building owner has developed and implemented the procedures adopted by the department by rule, limited to energy management planning, operations and maintenance planning, and energy use analysis through benchmarking.
(4) By July 1, 2027, tier 2 covered building owners must submit reports to the department as required by the rules adopted in subsection (1) of this section.
(5)(a) By July 1, 2029, the department must evaluate benchmarking data to determine energy use and greenhouse gas emissions averages by tier 2 covered building type.
(b) The department must submit a report to the legislature and the governor by October 1, 2029, with recommendations for cost-effective building performance standards for tier 2 covered buildings. The report must contain information on estimated costs to building owners to implement the performance standards and anticipated implementation challenges.
(c)(i) By December 31, 2030, the department must adopt rules for performance standards for tier 2 covered buildings.
(ii) In adopting these performance standards, the department must consider the age of the building in setting energy use intensity targets.
(iii) The department may adopt performance standards for multifamily residential buildings on a longer timeline schedule than for other tier 2 covered buildings.
(iv) The rules may not take effect before the end of the 2031 regular legislative session.
(v) The department must include a small business economic impact statement pursuant to chapter 19.85 RCW as part of the rule making.
[ 2022 c 177 § 3.]
NOTES:
Findings—Intent—2022 c 177: See note following RCW 19.27A.200.
Structure Revised Code of Washington
Title 19 - Business Regulations—Miscellaneous
Chapter 19.27A - Energy-Related Building Standards.
19.27A.015 - State energy code—Minimum and maximum energy code.
19.27A.025 - Nonresidential buildings—Minimum standards—Amendments.
19.27A.045 - Maintaining energy code for residential structures.
19.27A.050 - State building code council—Construction—Inclusion of successor agency.
19.27A.060 - Hot water heaters—Temperature regulation.
19.27A.090 - Portable oil-fueled heaters—Sales and use—Approval required.
19.27A.100 - Portable oil-fueled heaters—Requirements for approval.
19.27A.120 - Violations—Penalty.
19.27A.130 - Finding—2009 c 423.
19.27A.150 - Strategic plan—Development and implementation.
19.27A.170 - Utilities—Maintenance of records of energy consumption data—Disclosure.
19.27A.180 - Energy performance score—Implementation strategy—Development and recommendations.
19.27A.190 - Qualifying public agency duties—Energy benchmark—Performance rating—Reports.
19.27A.200 - State energy performance standard—Definitions.
19.27A.210 - State energy performance standard.
19.27A.230 - State energy performance standard—Limit on early adoption incentive payments.
19.27A.240 - State energy performance standard—Early adoption incentive payment administration.
19.27A.250 - State energy management and benchmarking requirement.