Shedding some
light…13 communities seek OK for 'municipal aggregation'
October 28, 2013
A
total of 13 individual cities and towns are seeking to move forward with
a process that would lower electricity rates for local residents and
businesses.
The
process, known as “municipal aggregation,” allows ratepayers in a city, town or
regional entity to pool their purchasing power.
Since
2004, when the Cape Light Compact became the first entity in Massachusetts to
take advantage of the process, only five cities and towns – Marlborough,
Lanesborough, Ashland, Lunenburg and Lancaster – have adopted municipal
aggregation, according to the Department of Energy Resources.
But
interest has recently increased, in part because companies that market
aggregation have been courting municipalities more aggressively, according to
Lancaster Town Administrator Orlando Pacheco.
“Brokers
have been advertising the product more, so they’ve done a better job of selling
cities and towns on what aggregation can do,” Pacheco said.
Because
the rates are locked in for a set period, aggregation contracts give customers
some protection from spikes in energy costs, he added.
Of
the cities and towns seeking approval for municipal aggregation, Lowell is the
closest to receiving a decision, according to Mary-Leah Assad, press secretary
in the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.
Other
communities awaiting word are Ashby, Clarksburg, Dalton, Florida, Lenox,
Natick, New Marlborough, North Adams, Sheffield, Tyringham, West Stockbridge
and Williamstown.
After
receiving Town Meeting approval to pursue an aggregation plan last fall, Natick
chose Peregrine Energy Group to develop the plan and Bay State Consultants to
implement it, according to Bob Bois, the town’s environmental compliance
officer.
Town
Administrator Martha White noted that Natick shaped its plan not only to save
residents and businesses money but also to promote the town’s green energy
goals.
“We
will not award a contract if it ends up costing more money, but we also won’t
do it if it doesn’t result in a greener contract,” White said.
Written
by MMA Associate Editor Mitch Evich
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