The Massachusetts Senate yesterday passed a sweeping energy-affordability bill that aims to save residents $14 billion over 10 years in a state that has some of the country’s highest utility costs.
The legislation includes measures that would change the state’s energy procurement process, put guardrails on the activities of third-party electric suppliers, and allow utilities to securitize certain spending, essentially lowering the cost they pay to borrow money. Other provisions aim to cut energy costs by decreasing residents’ reliance on fossil fuels. The bill would authorize the use of plug-in solar systems and phase out a major source of gas infrastructure spending.
“We believe if we can reduce our overdependence on gas … then we’ll be better off,” said Sen. Michael Barrett (D), chair of the Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities, and Energy, and a major voice on climate and energy issues in the legislature, during yesterday’s debate. “These high bills are all fossil fuel–driven.”
Several amendments were approved during the debate. One specifies that data centers will not be eligible for state tax credits unless they meet requirements for clean energy procurement, energy efficiency, and load flexibility. Others call for an investigation into whether utilities’ guaranteed rates of return on investment are excessive, and would close a loophole that might otherwise allow a contentious wood-burning power plant to go forward in western Massachusetts.









