How aggregation works
Municipal electricity aggregation is a kind of group electricity buying program for a city or town:
- Dunstable buys electricity from an electricity supplier that it chooses and locks in long-term pricing.
- You receive a new price for the electricity supply charge on your National Grid electric bill.
- National Grid remains Dunstable’s electric utility and continues to deliver your electricity, address power outages, and handle all billing as it does now.
Aggregation is possible because in Massachusetts we can choose our electricity supplier, which is the company that puts electricity on the grid for us. But we have no choice in our electric delivery utility. If you live in Dunstable, National Grid is your electric delivery utility no matter what.
Municipal electricity aggregation was enabled by the Massachusetts Restructuring Act of 1997 (Chapter 164, Section 134), and it is regulated by the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities.