UTILITY JUSTICE

& COMMUNITY POWER

Overview

Everyone deserves access to clean, affordable electricity.

Investor-owned utility companies are making record profits while our energy bills rise. These companies spend enormous amounts of money lobbying and donating to political candidates to slow down the transition to clean energy and protect their profits. We must hold utility companies, and the politicians who prop them up, accountable to us: the people who pay utility bills. We need a just energy system that is safe for our health and economy. We are advocating for community power programs, policy changes, and clean energy projects that prioritize ratepayers across New Hampshire.

WHY IT MATTERS

  • Electricity can be expensive. When rates spiked in 2022, a record number of households had to apply for electric assistance, and not enough of them received help. The fluctuating costs of fracked gas, and utility companies’ willingness to throw ratepayers under the bus is making our energy more unaffordable. With community power programs and better energy policy we can work to make energy more affordable for everyone.

  • More community power programs and more local renewable energy projects will increase our energy independence as municipalities and as a state. Together we can decrease our reliance on imported fracked gas and prevent future power outages by localizing our energy grid (for example, with microgrid resources).

  • Our investor-owned utility companies are deeply entwined with fossil fuels. Eversource, Enbridge, and other companies in this business make more money when they build things like pipelines - they will continue to do so at the expense of our climate and our wallets. We must change how our utility companies operate to stop this trend from continuing.

  • Many of our politicians are bought out by fossil fuel and investor-owned utility companies, which has led to inaction on climate across the country. We need to kick fossil fuel money out of our politicians pockets in order to get the changes we need to have a safer, cleaner, more democratic energy system.

Our Campaign

350NH fights for energy justice! We passed community power programs across the state, canvassed to educate our neighbors about this issue, and fought for legislation that protects ratepayers from extreme price hikes. We are working alongside a national coalition of 350 organizations to change the narrative about utilities. It’s time that our utility companies work for us. 

Join a working group

to address these issues!

Are you interested in helping us create a more just energy system? Fill out this form and we can plug you into our campaign. We have two working groups:

Community Power: works together to help people pass community power programs in their towns and advocate for more renewable energy.

Utility Justice: works together to plan actions and run our campaigns to hold utility companies accountable to ratepayers.

What is community power?

Community Power is the bulk purchase of electricity, saving ratepayers money.

There are three basic steps in the process for a city or town to launch a Community Power program.

Step 1: Join the Coalition.

The first step is for the Governing Body (Select Board, City/Town  Council) to adopt the CPCNH’s Joint Powers Agreement to join the Coalition. There is no cost to  joining the Coalition. By joining the Coalition, communities join a statewide network of peers and  experts, and gain support towards developing Energy Aggregation Plans and launching programs.

Step 2: Form a Committee and Develop your Energy Aggregation Plan.

The second step is the  Governing Body establishes a Community Power Committee to create an Electric Aggregation Plan  detailing the structure and goals of the program. The Community Power Committee may be a sub committee of an existing committee.

Step 3: Local Legislative Approval of Community Power Plan.

The final step is to get local  legislative authorization through Town Meeting or City/Town Council approval and adoption of the  Community Power Plan. CPCNH works with member cities and towns to customize its template  Community Power Plan to their community’s specific local policy goals and objectives.

 FAQs

  • Energy Justice aims to make energy accessible, affordable, clean, and democratically managed for all communities. It acknowledges that low income communities are hit the hardest with price fluctuations and prioritizes those communities when coming up with energy solutions.

  • No. Renewable energy prices are decreasing while coal, oil and fracked gas get more expensive (source). New Hampshire lacks renewable energy infrastructure, so we could reduce our electricity costs by expanding renewable energy.

  • Our utility companies are deeply entwined with fossil fuels. Eversource, Enbridge, and other companies in this business make more money when they build things like pipelines - so they will continue to do so at the expense of our climate and our wallets. Ratepayer-funded subsidies mostly go to fossil fuels in New England.

  • We will have higher costs to pay as the climate crisis gets worse. Increased natural disasters and bad weather will lead to more costly and catastrophic damage.

  • Electric bills will continue to arrive from Eversource, Liberty Utilities, or NH Electric Co-op. Community Power would not change your town's relationship with Eversource or other utilities. In a Community Power scenario, Eversource (or your other utility company) would continue to maintain the poles and wires that bring our community electricity.

  • The Electric Assistance Program through the Community Action Agencies - Assistance by county/city helps low-income and moderate-income residents with paying electricity bills and weatherizing their residences. NH Saves provides support for weatherization and energy efficiency programs for businesses and middle- and high-income residents and can be another resource to reduce your energy costs.

  • Push for them to sign the No Fossil Fuel Money pledge and refuse campaign contributions from Eversource, Liberty, Unitil, or their lobbyists. Educate them on why this is an important issue to you.