REN. ZONE: RENEWABLE ENERGY FACILITY H.B. 5555 (S-3): FLOOR SUMMARY
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House Bill 5555 (Substitute S-3 as reported)
Sponsor: Representative Ed Clemente
House Committee: New Economy and Quality of Life
Senate Committee: Commerce and Tourism

CONTENT
The bill would amend the Michigan Renaissance Zone Act to include in the definition of "renewable energy facility" a facility that creates chemicals from the wind, sun, biomass, or other specified renewable sources, and a facility that focuses on research, development, or manufacturing of systems that involve the conversion of chemical energy for advanced battery technology.


The Act provides for the establishment of up to 15 renaissance zones for renewable energy facilities. "Renewable energy facility" means a facility that creates energy directly or fuel from the wind, the sun, trees, grasses, biosolids, algae, agricultural commodities, processed products from agricultural commodities, or residues from agricultural processes, wood or forest processes, food production and processing, or the paper products industry. The bill would refer to a facility that creates energy, fuels, or chemicals from those sources.


The term also includes a facility that creates energy or fuels from solid biomass, animal wastes, or landfill gases, including a facility that focuses on research, development, or manufacturing of systems or components of systems used to create energy or fuel from those items. The bill would include a facility that creates chemicals or systems used to create chemicals from those sources. The bill also would include a facility focused on research, development or manufacturing of systems or components of systems that involve the conversion of chemical energy for advanced battery technology.


MCL 125.2683 Legislative Analyst: Patrick Affholter

FISCAL IMPACT
The bill would likely have a minimal impact on State and local revenue. By expanding the types of activities that qualify a firm as a renewable energy facility, the bill could increase the level of activity within affected zones. The impact would depend on a number of factors, including where the additional activity would be located and the economic and tax characteristics of the facilities that would be developed.


The bill could reduce revenue to the State General Fund and local units and could increase State expenditures from the General Fund. State taxes could be reduced and the State would be liable through the School Aid Fund to reimburse school districts for lost revenue. Most other local property taxes abated in renaissance zones are not reimbursed by the State, reducing local unit revenue.


Date Completed: 3-16-10 Fiscal Analyst: Eric Scorsone

Analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent. hb5555/0910