WeVote

Bill

Bill

LC 2830

Generally revise state energy policy laws

2025 Regular Session

LC 2830 would broadly overhaul state energy policy laws, affecting utilities, consumers, and regulators; it died in process in May 2025 and has no enacted changes.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · LC 2830

Summary of LC 2830 — Generally revise state energy policy laws

LC 2830 is a draft bill titled “Generally revise state energy policy laws,” introduced on December 11, 2024. The bill’s status is listed as (LC) Draft Died in Process, with its latest legislative action dated May 27, 2025. The drafter was assigned on December 11, 2024. The bill falls under the subject of Energy.

Basic bill information

  • Bill number: LC 2830
  • Title: Generally revise state energy policy laws
  • Subject: Energy
  • Introduced: December 11, 2024
  • Status: (LC) Draft Died in Process
  • Legislative actions:
    • 2024-12-11: Drafter Assigned
    • 2025-05-27: Draft Died in Process

Purpose and intent

The bill’s stated purpose, based on its title, is to generally revise the state’s energy policy laws. The exact goals, policy directions, or targeted outcomes (for example, renewable energy targets, efficiency standards, grid reliability measures, or regulatory reforms) are not provided in the available information. As a result, the specific intent and policy shifts the bill would pursue remain unknown from the provided summary.

Key provisions

  • Available information does not include the bill text. Therefore, specific provisions, changes to statutes, funding mechanisms, program authorizations, regulatory reorganizations, or enforcement provisions cannot be detailed here.
  • In typical energy-policy revisions, legislatures may address topics such as planning and procurement, renewable or clean energy standards, energy efficiency programs, utility regulation, grid reliability, consumer protections, and funding for related programs. However, any such topics in LC 2830 would require the actual bill text to confirm.

Potential impact (dependent on final text)

  • Because the final provisions are not available, potential impacts are speculative. Generally, a broad revision of energy policy laws could affect:
    • Utilities and energy producers (costs, investment signals, regulatory obligations)
    • Consumers (rates, protections, access to programs)
    • Government agencies and regulators (policy scope, authority, reporting)
    • Renewable energy development, energy efficiency programs, and grid planning
  • With the current status (died in process), there is no immediate enactment impact in the current session. If reintroduced, impacts would hinge on the finalized provisions.

Affected parties

  • Utilities and energy developers
  • Consumers and ratepayers
  • State energy agencies and regulatory bodies
  • Stakeholders involved in energy policy and planning (advocacy groups, industry associations)

Procedural and timeline notes

  • Introduced: December 11, 2024
  • Drafter Assigned: December 11, 2024
  • Latest action: Draft Died in Process (May 27, 2025)
  • Status implication: The bill did not advance in its current form during the session. It could be reintroduced in a future session or amended and refiled, at which point it would follow the standard legislative process (committee review, floor votes, potential conference, and final passage).

How to track or learn more

  • Check the official legislative website for the jurisdiction to view the bill’s text, amendments, and status updates.
  • Look for committee hearings, fiscal notes, and sponsor statements for insights into intent and potential impacts if reintroduced.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

Sign in to ask a question.