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One Consumer Challenges Energy Fund Spend

Published Tuesday Feb 22, 2022

One Consumer Challenges Energy Fund Spend

Years of inaction on a $5 million Clean Energy Fund culminated in a decision this month to enact half of the plan, an outcome that is being challenged by a consumer group.

Funds have been available since 2018 but were never used. Don Kreis, who calls himself a consumer advocate, called the decision unconscionable in a letter and he requested a hearing before the Public Utilities Council.

The Clean Energy Fund was a concession from a 2016 settlement agreement, when Public Service Company of New Hampshire (PSNH), which became part of Eversource, was allowed to charge ratepayers $400 million of the $425 million it had spent installing a scrubber on the Merrimack Station, the coal-fired power plant in Bow. PSNH was required to sell that power plant as a part of restructuring.

“The commission long ago squandered its opportunity to prevent the wasteful construction of the scrubber at Merrimack Station,” Kreis wrote. “The utilities and the ratepayers subsequently resolved their differences over the scrubber, in part by persuading PSNH to create the $5 million Clean Energy Fund that should have started helping people in the PSNH service territory four years ago.”

Instead, in its February decision, the fate of $2.35 million of the fund was shuttled into another docket, extending the administrative process. 

In its February decision, the utilities commission approved a $1.1 million program to finance clean energy upgrades and a $750,000 battery rebate program for Eversource residential customers, in addition to a $1 million energy storage rebate program for commercial and industrial customers. 

 

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