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But NStar has so far pursued cheaper power, filling about half its state requirement with three contracts from land wind farms at less than half the price National Grid would pay Cape Wind. NStar chose from dozens of bidders, indicating it could bypass Cape Wind and still fill its entire renewable energy requirement. But that won't be as easy as it would have been nine months ago. In January, the state Department of Energy Resources made an ultimately successful filing arguing mergers shouldn't be judged just on the historical standard of whether consumers aren't harmed, but also if they benefit
-- such as by the advance of the state's clean energy goals, which include developing offshore wind. Then in July, the department asked regulators to delay merger proceedings until NStar met various conditions, including the rate review. NStar said that could take more than a year, past the merger's April 2012 "termination date," when either party can back out. Rate cases are normally the attorney general's purview, but Sylvia said his department got involved because "it's our responsibility to be aware of what the (merger's) impacts are to consumers." He added the standard for reviewing utility mergers had to be changed after Massachusetts passed the 2008 law that set the new renewable energy goals. The NStar-Northeast Utilities deal just happened to be the first merger since, he said. Rep. Jones said he's concerned Cape Wind deals will sock ratepayers in a state already dealing with high-cost energy. He's filed a bill which would amend the 2008 law to require utilities to sign the lowest priced power deals after competitive bidding. Jones noted the state's recent record backing renewable energy companies has blemishes, including a solar company that went bankrupt after receiving tens of millions in grants and incentives. "I have a bit of a concern when we're picking winners and losers in terms of business," he said. If NStar does sign on with Cape Wind, there's little risk to shareholders, since any added costs would be passed directly to ratepayers, said Travis Miller, associate director at Morningstar Inc. equity research. Signing on "would be any easy way to appease regulators," Miller said. "However, it does nothing to benefit customers, which is supposed to be the regulators' key criteria." Andrew Tarsy, president of the pro-Cape Wind Progressive Business Leaders Network, said it's debatable just how much governments should push private projects, but it's done at different levels all the time, and the public can benefit. "One person's interference is another person's public policy," Tarsy said.
[Associated
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