Energy Committee Agenda 05.20.25

5:00 pm Bradford Town Hall

Review and approval of April Minutes.

  1. Community Power Update – Kathleen Bigford will present the offer to purchase discounted solar electricity from a solar facility being developed in Warner to the Selectboard on May 19, 2025.
  2. Municipal Weatherization Status. Still waiting on response. Margaret Dillion, of S.E.E.D.S, who was contracted by NHSaves to conduct the energy audits of Braford’s municipal buildings, has agreed to assist the BEC to quantify the energy savings from implementation of energy saving measures at the Highway and Fire Department buildings.
  3. Solar Energy – update on SolSmart. The non-profits Clean Energy NH and SolSmart are partnering to help municipalities establish smart solar zoning and permitting at the local level. This program is free to municipalities. Sandra has solicited feedback from the Selectboard, Planning Board, Zoning Board, Building Inspector and Fire Chief to determine whether Bradford should create a solar ordinance and start working on a draft.
  4. Electrification
    a. Geothermal opportunities. Sandra and Steve Hall (and Crew) met with representatives of Ultra Geothermal on May 13 at the Highway building. Ultra Geothermal has been in the heating and cooling industry for more than 20 years. They have become the leading New Hampshire geothermal installer and will provide Bradford with an estimate for geothermal heating/cooling at the Highway Building.
    b. Air Source Heat Pump installation opportunities?
    c. Other?
  5. New Hampshire Network Update
  6. Legislative Updates
    a. A good place to stay on top of NH legislative updates is through https://www.newhampshirenetwork.org/NH-bills
    b. HB504 Relative to the state energy policy. The Senate passed an amended version of HB504, significantly improving on the deeply flawed House proposal. While CENH’s overall perspective is still that this bill is unnecessary, the Senate version restores key language affirming the state’s commitment to cost-effective energy efficiency, distributed energy resources, and the protection of public health, safety, and the environment. Thanks to strategic advocacy and stakeholder engagement, the amended bill avoids the most harmful provisions of the House version—such as the complete removal of emissions and environmental considerations—and acknowledges the continued need for both regulatory and market-based mechanisms to achieve the state’s energy goals.
    c. ISO Withdrawal Study Bill Moves Forward – The Senate passed HB690, which directs the Department of Energy (DOE) to investigate the possibility of New Hampshire withdrawing from the Independent System Operator of New England of New England (ISO-NE). While the final version stops short of endorsing this radical idea, the bill still requires a taxpayer-funded analysis of a scenario that is legally dubious, logistically unworkable, and economically reckless. The ISO coordinates regional electricity markets and ensures grid reliability across six states, and—at a minimum—New Hampshire would need to replicate these functions before withdrawing.
    d. HB284 – requiring tax impact statements on municipal warrant articles was voted down. This bill would have had a chilling effect on clean energy adoption at the local level by forcing towns to highlight the upfront costs of renewable energy or efficiency projects without including long-term savings or avoided costs. It would have also required multi-year breakdowns for lease or financing agreements—common for solar or energy performance contracts—further distorting public understanding of such projects. Even more troubling, the bill gave final authority over these estimates to governing bodies, opening the door to politicized or inaccurate figures that could skew public opinion.
    e. The Senate prepares to consider budget amendments in the coming weeks and Senator Innis needs to hear that you oppose reallocation of Renewable Energy Funds (REF) that support popular, high-impact programs that help Granite Staters lower energy costs, invest in local clean energy and grow our economy. Daniel.innis@gc.nh.gov
  7. BEC Public Outreach in May
    a. A notice about Bradford Community Power was published.
    b. The NHSaves Button Up workshop was held April 24, 2025 at the Warner Town Hall from 7:00 – 8:30. Sandra and Susan attended. Most of the attendees were members of local Energy or Conservation Commissions. There was little or no attendance from the public.
  8. BEC Public Outreach in June?
  9. Other Items
    a. Inflation Reduction Funds availability. NHSaves and EV rebates are functional.
  10. Conclude