North Carolina Administrative Code
Title 04 - COMMERCE
Chapter 11 - UTILITIES COMMISSION
Chapter 8
Article 11 - RESOURCE PLANNING AND CERTIFICATION
Section 11 R08-67 - RENEWABLE ENERGY AND ENERGY EFFICIENCY PORTFOLIO STANDARD (REPS)
Universal Citation: 11 NC Admin Code 11 R 08-67
Current through Register Vol. 39, No. 6, September 16, 2024
(a) Definitions.
(1) The following terms shall be defined as
provided in
G.S.
62-133.8: "Combined heat and power system";
"demand-side management"; "electric power supplier"; "new renewable energy
facility"; "renewable energy certificate"; "renewable energy facility";
"renewable energy resource"; and "incremental costs."
(2) For purposes of determining an electric
power supplier's avoided costs, "avoided cost rates" mean an electric power
supplier's most recently approved or established avoided cost rates in this
state, as of the date the contract is executed, for purchases of electricity
from qualifying facilities pursuant to Section 210 of the Public Utility
Regulatory Policies Act of 1978. If the Commission has approved an avoided cost
rate for the electric power supplier for the year when the contract is
executed, applicable to contracts of the same nature and duration as the
contract between the electric power supplier and the seller, that rate shall be
used as the avoided cost. Therefore, for example, for a contract by an electric
public utility with a term of 15 years, the avoided cost rate applicable to
that contract would be the comparable, Commission-approved, 15-year, long-term,
levelized rate in effect at the time the contract was executed. In all other
cases, the avoided cost shall be a good faith estimate of the electric power
supplier's avoided cost, levelized over the duration of the contract,
determined as of the date the contract is executed, taking into consideration
the avoided cost rates then in effect as established by the Commission. In any
event, when found by the Commission to be appropriate and in the public
interest, a good faith estimate of an electric public utility's avoided cost,
levelized over the duration of the contract, determined as of the date the
contract is executed, may be used in a particular REPS cost recovery
proceeding. Determinations of avoided costs, including estimates thereof, shall
be subject to continuing Commission oversight and, if necessary, modification
should circumstances so require.
(3) "Energy efficiency measure" means an
equipment, physical, or program change that when implemented results in less
use of energy to perform the same function or provide the same level of
service. "Energy efficiency measure" does not include demand-side management.
It includes energy produced from a combined heat and power system that uses
nonrenewable resources to the extent the system:
(i) Uses waste heat to produce electricity or
useful, measurable thermal or mechanical energy at a retail electric customer's
facility; and
(ii) Results in less
energy used to perform the same function or provide the same level of service
at a retail electric customer's facility.
(4) "Year-end number of customer accounts"
means the number of accounts within each customer class as of December 31 for a
given calendar year determined in a manner approved by the Commission pursuant
to subsection (c)(4) or determined in the same manner as that information is
reported to the Energy Information Administration, United States Department of
Energy, for annual electric sales and revenue reporting.
(5) "Utility compliance aggregator" is an
organization that assists an electric power supplier in demonstrating its
compliance with REPS. Such demonstration may include, among other things,
filing REPS compliance plans or reports and participating in NC-RETS on behalf
of the electric power supplier or a group of electric power
suppliers.
(b) REPS compliance plan.
(1) Each year, beginning in
2008, each electric power supplier or its designated utility compliance
aggregator shall file with the Commission the electric power supplier's plan
for complying with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f). The plan shall cover the calendar year
in which the plan is filed and the immediately subsequent two calendar years.
At a minimum, the plan shall include the following information:
(i) a specific description of the electric
power supplier's planned actions to comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f) for each year;
(ii) a list of executed contracts to purchase
renewable energy certificates (whether or not bundled with electric power),
including type of renewable energy resource, expected MWh, and contract
duration;
(iii) a list of those
planned or implemented energy efficiency and demand side management measures
that the electric power supplier plans to use toward REPS compliance, including
a brief description of each measure, its projected impacts, and a measurement
and verification plan if such plan has not otherwise been filed with the
Commission;
(iv) the projected
North Carolina retail sales and year-end number of customer accounts by
customer class for each year;
(v)
the current and projected avoided cost rates for each year;
(vi) the projected total and incremental
costs anticipated to implement the compliance plan for each year;
(vii) a comparison of projected costs to the
annual cost caps for each year;
(viii) for electric public utilities, an
estimate of the amount of the REPS rider and the impact on the cost of fuel and
fuel-related costs rider necessary to fully recover the projected costs;
and
(ix) to the extent not already
filed with the Commission, the electric power supplier shall, on or before
September 1 of each year, file a renewable energy facility registration
statement pursuant to Rule R8-66 for any facility it owns and upon which it is
relying as a source of power or RECs in its REPS compliance plan.
(2) Each electric power supplier
shall file its REPS compliance plan with the Commission on or before September
1 of each year.
(3) Any electric
power supplier subject to Rule R8-60 shall file its REPS compliance plan as
part of its integrated resource plan filing, and the REPS compliance plan will
be reviewed and approved pursuant to Rule R8-60. Approval of the REPS
compliance plan as part of the integrated resource plan shall not constitute an
approval of the recovery of costs associated with REPS compliance or a
determination that the electric power supplier has complied with G.S. 62
133.8(b), (c), (d), (e), and (f).
(4) An REPS compliance plan filed by an
electric power supplier not subject to Rule R8-60 shall be for information
only.
(c) REPS compliance report.
(1) Each year, beginning in
2009, each electric power supplier or its designated utility compliance
aggregator shall file with the Commission a report describing the electric
power supplier's compliance with the requirements of
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f) during the previous calendar year. The
report shall include all of the following information, including supporting
documentation:
(i) the sources, amounts, and
costs of renewable energy certificates, by source, used to comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f). Renewable energy certificates for energy
efficiency may be based on estimates of reduced energy consumption through the
implementation of energy efficiency measures, to the extent approved by the
Commission;
(ii) the actual North
Carolina retail sales and year-end number of customer accounts by customer
class;
(iii) the current avoided
cost rates and the avoided cost rates applicable to energy received pursuant to
long-term power purchase agreements;
(iv) the actual total and incremental costs
incurred during the calendar year to comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f);
(v) a comparison of the actual incremental
costs incurred during the calendar year to the per-account annual charges (in
G.S.
62-133.8(g)(4)) applied to
its total number of customer accounts as of December 31 of the previous
calendar year;
(vi) the status of
compliance with the requirements of
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f);
(vii) the identification of any renewable
energy certificates or energy savings to be carried forward pursuant to
G.S.
62-133.8(b)(2)f or
(c)(2)f;
(viii) the dates and amounts of all payments
made for renewable energy certificates; and
(ix) for electric membership corporations and
municipal electric suppliers, reduced energy consumption achieved in each year
after January 1, 2008, through the implementation of energy efficiency or
demand-side management programs, along with the results of each program's
measurement and verification plan, or other documentation supporting an
estimate of the program's energy reductions achieved in the previous year
pending implementation of a measurement and verification plan. Supporting
documentation shall be retained and made available for audit.
(2) Each electric public utility
shall file its annual REPS compliance report , together with direct testimony
and exhibits of expert witnesses, on the same date that it files (1) its cost
recovery request under Rule R8-67(e), and (2) the information required by Rule
R8-55. The Commission shall consider each electric public utility's REPS
compliance report at the hearing provided for in subsection (e) of this rule
and shall determine whether the electric public utility has complied with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (d), (e) and
(f). Public notice and deadlines for
intervention and filing of additional direct and rebuttal testimony and
exhibits shall be as provided for in subsection (e) of this rule.
(3) Each electric membership corporation and
municipal electric supplier or their designated utility compliance aggregator
shall file a verified REPS compliance report on or before September 1 of each
year. The Commission may issue an order scheduling a hearing to consider the
REPS compliance report filed by each electric membership corporation or
municipal electric supplier, requiring public notice, and establishing
deadlines for intervention and the filing of direct and rebuttal testimony and
exhibits.
(4) In each electric
power supplier's initial REPS compliance report, the electric power supplier
shall propose a methodology for determining its cap on incremental costs
incurred to comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f) and fund research as provided in
G.S.
62-133.8(h)(1), including a
determination of year-end number of customer accounts. The proposed methodology
may be specific to each electric power supplier, shall be based upon a fair and
reasonable allocation of costs, and shall be consistent with
G.S.
62-133.8(h). The electric
power supplier may propose a different methodology that meets the above
requirements in a subsequent REPS compliance report filing. For electric public
utilities, this methodology shall also be used for assessing the per-account
charges pursuant to
G.S.
62-133.8(h)(5).
(5) In any year, an electric power supplier
or other interested party may petition the Commission to modify or delay the
provisions of
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f), in whole or in part. The Commission may
grant such petition upon a finding that it is in the public interest to do so.
If an electric power supplier is the petitioner, it shall demonstrate that it
has made a reasonable effort to meet the requirements of such provisions.
Retroactive modification or delay of the provisions of
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) or
(f) shall not be permitted. The Commission
shall allow a modification or delay only with respect to the electric power
supplier or group of electric power suppliers for which a need for a
modification or delay has been demonstrated.
(6) A group of electric power suppliers may
aggregate their REPS obligations and compliance efforts provided that all
suppliers in the group are subject to the same REPS obligations and compliance
methods as stated in either G.S. 133.8(b) or (c). If such a group of electric
power suppliers fails to meet its REPS obligations, the Commission shall find
and conclude that each supplier in the group, individually, has failed to meet
its REPS obligations.
(d) Renewable energy certificates.
(1) Renewable energy certificates (whether or
not bundled with electric power) claimed by an electric power supplier to
comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f) must have been earned after January 1,
2008; must have been purchased by the electric power supplier within three
years of the date they were earned; shall be retired when used for compliance;
and shall not be used for any other purpose. A renewable energy certificate may
be used to comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f) in the year in which it is acquired or
obtained by an electric power supplier or in any subsequent year; provided,
however, that an electric public utility must use a renewable energy
certificate to comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (d), (e) and
(f) within seven years of cost recovery
pursuant to subsection (e)(10) of this Rule.
(2) For any facility that uses both renewable
energy resources and nonrenewable energy resources to produce energy, the
facility shall earn renewable energy certificates based only upon the energy
derived from renewable energy resources in proportion to the relative energy
content of the fuels used.
(3)
Renewable energy certificates earned by a renewable energy facility after the
date the facility's registration is revoked by the Commission shall not be used
to comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f).
(4) Renewable energy certificates must be
issued by, or imported into, the renewable energy certificate tracking system
established in Rule R8-67(h) in order to be eligible RECs under
G.S.
62-133.8.
(e) Cost recovery.
(1) For each electric public utility, the
Commission shall schedule an annual public hearing pursuant to
G.S.
62-133.8(h) to review the
costs incurred by the electric public utility to comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (d), (e) and
(f). The annual rider hearing for each
electric public utility will be scheduled as soon as practicable after the
hearing held by the Commission for the electric public utility under Rule
R8-55.
(2) The Commission shall
permit each electric public utility to charge an increment or decrement as a
rider to its rates to recover in a timely manner the reasonable incremental
costs prudently incurred to comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (d), (e) and
(f). The cost of an unbundled renewable
energy certificate, to the extent that it is reasonable and prudently incurred,
is an incremental cost and has no avoided cost component.
(3) Unless otherwise ordered by the
Commission, the test period for each electric public utility shall be the same
as its test period for purposes of Rule R8-55.
(4) Rates set pursuant to this section shall
be recovered during a fixed cost recovery period that shall coincide, to the
extent practical, with the recovery period for the cost of fuel and
fuel-related cost rider established pursuant to Rule R8-55.
(5) The incremental costs will be further
modified through the use of an REPS experience modification factor (REPS EMF)
rider. The REPS EMF rider will reflect the difference between reasonable and
prudently incurred incremental costs and the revenues that were actually
realized during the test period under the REPS rider then in effect. Upon
request of the electric public utility, the Commission shall also incorporate
in this determination the experienced over-recovery or under-recovery of the
incremental costs up to thirty (30) days prior to the date of the hearing,
provided that the reasonableness and prudence of these costs shall be subject
to review in the utility's next annual REPS cost recovery hearing.
(6) The REPS EMF rider will remain in effect
for a fixed 12-month period following establishment and will carry through as a
rider to rates established in any intervening general rate case
proceedings.
(7) Pursuant to
G.S.
62-130(e), any
over-collection of reasonable and prudently incurred incremental costs to be
refunded to a utility's customers through operation of the REPS EMF rider shall
include an amount of interest, at such rate as the Commission determines to be
just and reasonable, not to exceed the maximum statutory rate.
(8) Each electric public utility shall follow
deferred accounting with respect to the difference between actual reasonable
and prudently-incurred incremental costs and related revenues realized under
rates in effect.
(9) The
incremental costs to be recovered by an electric public utility in any cost
recovery period from its North Carolina retail customers to comply with
G.S.
62-133.8(b), (d), (e), and
(f) shall not exceed the per-account charges
set forth in
G.S.
62-133.8(h)(4) applied to
the electric public utility's year-end number of customer accounts determined
as of December 31 of the previous calendar year. These annual charges shall be
collected through fixed monthly charges. Each electric public utility shall
ensure that the incremental costs recovered under the REPS rider and REPS EMF
rider during the cost recovery period, inclusive of gross receipts tax and the
regulatory fee, from any given customer account do not exceed the applicable
per-account charges set forth in
G.S.
62-133.8(h)(4).
(10) Incremental costs incurred during a
calendar year toward a current or future year's REPS obligation may be
recovered by an electric public utility in any 12-month recovery period up to
and including the 12-month recovery period in which the RECs associated with
any incremental costs are retired toward the prior year's REPS obligation, as
long as the electric public utility's charges to customers do not exceed, in
any 12-month period, the per-account annual charges provided in
G.S.
62-133.8(h)(4). A renewable
energy certificate must be used for compliance and retired within seven years
of the year in which the electric public utility recovers the related costs
from customers. An electric public utility shall refund to customers with
interest the costs for renewable energy certificates that are not used for
compliance within seven years.
(11)
Each electric public utility, at a minimum, shall submit to the Commission for
purposes of investigation and hearing the information required for the REPS
compliance report for the 12-month test period established in subsection (3)
normalized, as appropriate, consistent with Rule R8-55, accompanied by
supporting workpapers and direct testimony and exhibits of expert witnesses,
and any change in rates proposed by the electric public utility at the same
time that it files the information required by Rule R8-55.
(12) The electric public utility shall
publish a notice of the annual hearing for two (2) successive weeks in a
newspaper or newspapers having general circulation in its service area,
normally beginning at least 30 days prior to the hearing, notifying the public
of the hearing before the Commission pursuant to
G.S.
62-133.8(h) and setting
forth the time and place of the hearing.
(13) Persons having an interest in said
hearing may file a petition to intervene setting forth such interest at least
15 days prior to the date of the hearing. Petitions to intervene filed less
than 15 days prior to the date of the hearing may be allowed in the discretion
of the Commission for good cause shown.
(14) The Public Staff and other intervenors
shall file direct testimony and exhibits of expert witnesses at least 15 days
prior to the hearing date. If a petition to intervene is filed less than 15
days prior to the hearing date, it shall be accompanied by any direct testimony
and exhibits of expert witnesses the intervenor intends to offer at the
hearing.
(15) The electric public
utility may file rebuttal testimony and exhibits of expert witnesses no later
than 5 days prior to the hearing date.
(16) The burden of proof as to whether the
costs were reasonable and prudently incurred shall be on the electric public
utility.
(f) Contracts with owners of renewable energy facilities.
(1) The terms of any contract entered into
between an electric power supplier and a new solar electric facility or new
metered solar thermal energy facility shall be of sufficient length to
stimulate development of solar energy.
(2) Each electric power supplier shall
include appropriate language in all agreements for the purchase of renewable
energy certificates (whether or not bundled with electric power) prohibiting
the seller from remarketing the renewable energy certificates being purchased
by the electric power supplier.
(g) Metering of renewable energy facilities.
(1) Except as provided below, for the purpose
of receiving renewable energy certificate issuance in NC-RETS, the electric
power generated by a renewable energy facility shall be measured by an electric
meter supplied by and read by an electric power supplier. Facilities whose
renewable energy certificates are issued in a tracking system other than
NC-RETS shall be subject to the requirements of the applicable state commission
and/or tracking system.
(2) The
electric power generated by an inverter-based solar photovoltaic (PV) system
with a nameplate capacity of 10 kW or less may be estimated using generally
accepted analytical tools.
(3) The
electric power generated by a renewable energy facility interconnected on the
customer's side of the utility meter at a customer's location may be measured
by (1) an ANSI-certified electric meter not provided by an electric power
supplier provided that the owner of the meter complies with the meter testing
requirements of Rule R8-13, or (2) another industry-accepted, auditable and
accurate metering, controls, and verification system. The data provided by such
meter or system may be read and self-reported by the owner of the renewable
energy facility, subject to audit by the Public Staff. The owner of the meter
shall retain for audit for 10 years the energy output data.
(4) Thermal energy produced by a combined
heat and power system or solar thermal energy facility shall be the thermal
energy recovered and used for useful purposes other than electric power
production. The useful thermal energy may be measured by meter, or if that is
not practicable, by other industry-accepted means that show what measurable
amount of useful thermal energy the system or facility is designed and operated
to produce and use. Renewable energy certificates shall be earned based on one
certificate for every 3,412,000 British thermal units (Btu) of useful thermal
energy produced. Meter devices, if used, shall be located so as to measure the
actual thermal energy consumed by the load served by the facility. Thermal
energy output that is used as station power or to process the facility's fuel
is not eligible for RECs. Thermal energy production data, whether metered or
estimated, shall be retained for audit for 10 years.
(h) North Carolina Renewable Energy Certificate Tracking System (NC-RETS)
(1)
Definitions
(i) "Balancing area operator"
means an electric power supplier that has the responsibility to act as the
balancing authority for a portion of the regional transmission grid, including
maintaining the load-to-generation balance, accounting for energy delivered
into and exported out of the area, and supporting interconnection frequency in
real time.
(ii) "Multi-fuel
facility" means a renewable energy facility that produces energy using more
than one fuel type, potentially relying on a fuel that does not qualify for REC
issuance in North Carolina.
(iii)
"Participant" means a person or organization that opens an account in
NC-RETS.
(iv) "Qualifying thermal
energy output" is the useful thermal energy:
(1) that is made available to an industrial
or commercial process (net of any heat contained in condensate return and/or
makeup water);
(2) that is used in a
heating application (e.g., space heating, domestic hot water heating);
or
(3) that is used in a space
cooling application (i.e., thermal energy used by an absorption
chiller).
(2)
A renewable energy certificate (REC) tracking system, to be known as NC-RETS,
is established by the Commission. NC-RETS shall issue, track, transfer and
retire RECs. It shall calculate each electric power supplier's REPS obligation
and report each electric power supplier's REPS accomplishments, consistent with
the compliance report filed under Rule R8-67(c). NC-RETS shall be administered
by a third-party vendor selected by the Commission. Only RECs issued by or
imported into NC-RETS are qualifying RECs under
G.S.
62-133.8.
(3) Each electric power supplier shall be a
participant in NC-RETS and shall provide data to NC-RETS to calculate its REPS
obligation and to demonstrate its compliance with
G.S.
62-133.8. An electric power supplier may
select a utility compliance aggregator to participate in NC-RETS on its behalf
and file REPS compliance plans and compliance reports, but the supplier shall
nonetheless remain responsible for its own compliance. For reporting purposes,
an electric power supplier or its utility compliance aggregator may aggregate
the supplier's compliance obligations and accomplishments with those of other
suppliers that are subject to the same obligations under
G.S.
62-133.8.
(4) Each renewable energy facility or new
renewable energy facility registered by the Commission under Rule R8-66 shall
participate in NC-RETS in order to have RECs issued, or in another REC tracking
system in order to have RECs issued and transferred into NC-RETS, but no
facility's meter data for the same time period shall be used for simultaneous
REC issuance in two such systems. Beginning June 1, 2011, renewable energy
facilities registered in NC-RETS may only enter historic energy production data
for REC issuance that goes back up to two years from the current date.
Facilities that produce energy using one or more renewable energy resource(s)
and another resource that does not qualify toward REPS compliance under
G.S.
62-133.8 shall calculate on a monthly basis
and provide to NC-RETS the percentage of energy output attributable to each
fuel source. NC-RETS will issue RECs only for energy emanating from sources
that qualify under
G.S.
62-133.8.
(5) Each balancing area operator shall
provide monthly electric generation production data to NC-RETS for renewable
and new renewable energy facilities that are interconnected to the operator's
electric transmission system. Such balancing area operator shall retain
documentation verifying the production data for audit by the Public
Staff.
(6) Each electric power
supplier that has registered renewable energy facilities or new renewable
energy facilities interconnected with its electric distribution system and that
reads the electric generation production meters for those facilities shall
provide monthly the facilities' energy output to NC-RETS, and shall retain for
audit for 10 years that energy output data. Municipalities and electric
membership corporations may elect to have the facilities' production data
reported to NC-RETS and retained for audit by a utility compliance
aggregator.
(7) A renewable energy
facility or new renewable energy facility that produces thermal energy that
qualifies for RECs shall report the facility's qualifying thermal energy output
to NC-RETS at least every 12 months. A renewable energy facility or new
renewable energy facility that reports its data pursuant to Rule R8-67(g)(3)
shall report its energy output to NC-RETS at least every 12 months.
(8) The owner of an inverter-based solar
photovoltaic system with a nameplate capacity of 10 kW or less may estimate its
energy output using generally accepted analytical tools pursuant to Rule
R8-67(g)(2). Such an owner, or its agent, of this kind of facility shall report
the facility's energy output to NC-RETS at least every 12 months.
(9) All energy output and fuel data for
multi-fuel facilities, including underlying documentation, calculations, and
estimates, shall be retained for audit for at least ten years immediately
following the provision of the output data to NC-RETS or another tracking
system, as appropriate.
(10) Each
electric power supplier that complies with
G.S.
62-133.8 by implementing energy efficiency or
demand-side management programs shall use NC-RETS to report the energy savings
of those programs. Municipal power suppliers and electric membership
corporations may elect to have their energy savings from their energy
efficiency and demand-side management programs reported to NC-RETS by a utility
compliance aggregator, and to have their reported savings consolidated with the
reported savings from other municipal power suppliers or electric membership
corporations if and as necessary to permit aggregate reporting through their
utility compliance aggregator. Records regarding which electric power supplier
achieved the energy efficiency and demand-side management, the programs that
were used, and the year in which it was achieved, shall be retained for
audit.
(11) All Commission-approved
costs of developing and operating NC-RETS shall be allocated among all electric
power suppliers based upon their respective share of the total megawatt-hours
of retail electricity sales in North Carolina in the previous calendar year.
Each electric power supplier, or its utility compliance aggregator, shall,
within 60 days of NC-RETS beginning operations, and by June 1 of each
subsequent year, enter its previous year's retail electricity sales into
NC-RETS, which sales will be used by NC-RETS to calculate each electric power
supplier's REPS obligations and NC-RETS charges. NC-RETS shall update its
billings beginning each July based on retail sales data for the previous
calendar year. Such NC-RETS charges shall be deemed to be costs that are
reasonable, prudent, incremental, and eligible for recovery through each
electric public utility's annual rider established pursuant to
G.S.
62-133.8(h).
(12) Each account holder in NC-RETS shall pay
the NC-RETS administrator for service according to the following fee schedule:
(i) $0.01 for each REC export to an account
residing in a different REC tracking system.
(ii) $0.01 for each REC retired for reasons
other than compliance with
G.S.
62-133.8.
(13) The Commission shall adopt NC-RETS
Operating Procedures. The Commission shall establish an NC-RETS Stakeholder
Group that shall meet from time to time and which may recommend changes to the
NC-RETS Operating Procedures and NC-RETS.
(14) All data retention requirements of this
Rule R8-67(h) may be accomplished via retention of electronic
documents.
NCUC Docket No. E-100, Sub 113, 2/29/08; NCUC Docket No. E-100, Sub 113, 3/13/08; NCUC Docket No. E-100, Subs 113 & 121, 1/31/11; NCUC Docket No. E-43, Sub 6, E-100, Sub 113, EC-33, Sub 58, EC-83, Sub 1, 5/14/2012.
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