Representative Ryan Musselman moved Amendment 1 and the House adopted it; the amendment clarifies coordination with private industry as primary information sources for the study. Musselman said the bill directs the Office of Energy Development to lead a comprehensive study of storage capacities, vulnerabilities and financing options to prepare Utah for catastrophic events that could disrupt fuel or electricity supplies.
Members questioned technical scope and funding. Representative Jen Daley raised the fiscal-note issue, noting the bill’s fiscal note read $0; Musselman said OED consolidated existing budgeted funds to cover study costs. Representative Vail Peterson noted that federal funds (about $400,000) would support the study. Representatives asked whether the study would assess fault-line risks to pipelines and rail; Musselman pointed to provisions in the bill that require evaluations of transmission, storage facilities, railroads and pipelines and said the work would include strengths and vulnerabilities across state and regional fuel supply.
The House also discussed salt caverns as one storage option. Representative Briscoe described plans by the Intermountain Power Agency and Intermountain Power Project to use salt domes for compressed-air energy storage; Musselman said the bill would only explore such options, not mandate them. Several members said the study is necessary to prepare for the known risk of infrastructure disruption along fault lines.
Voting opened and first substitute HB317 passed 71–0. The bill will be sent to the Senate for consideration.
Next steps: the bill tasks OED with producing the study and identifies private-industry coordination; the House record does not specify a timetable for completion or a reporting deadline to the Legislature.