Energy Solutions
From weatherization and energy efficiency projects to solar arrays for resident-owned communities (ROCs), we work with partner organizations to help people, businesses, and nonprofits keep their energy costs in check.
Low- and moderate-income New Hampshire residents spend a higher than average percentage of their income on energy than others. Energy efficiency and other innovative energy solutions help rein in costs and can be good for the environment too.
Why We’re Involved
It may seem counterintuitive that an organization known for housing, nonprofit, and small business loans is involved in energy. Our larger goal is to make sure that every person in the state can fully participate in the economy and society. And our mission is to provide systematically excluded people and communities with the financial, human, and civic resources they need to be economically secure.
Helping people, businesses, and nonprofits reduce their energy costs, in the homes, buildings, and communities we’ve helped them buy, develop, and preserve, is a natural fit for us. Our presence in the energy space means that more people have the opportunity to take advantage of these modern solutions.
This work has powerful ripple effects including:
- Improving quality of life through drier, more comfortable homes and businesses – leading to healthier homes, workplaces, and people
- Contributing to the mitigation of climate-related severe weather events or hazards that disproportionately impacts low- and moderate-income people
- Working towards greater energy choice and independence
Energy Solutions
By our nature, we are problem solvers. Rising energy costs disproportionately affect systematically excluded people with low and moderate incomes. Our work connecting borrowers with a range of innovative energy solutions is designed to address these challenges.
Weatherization and Energy Efficiency
It’s expensive to heat and cool a leaky home. Old appliances cost more to run. Through our partnerships, we can steer people, business owners, and nonprofit organizations toward resources that can save them money and make them more comfortable at the same time.
Fuel Switching
These days, there are more economical ways to heat and cool your home or business in addition to just using other sources of energy. For example, heat pumps run on electricity and are significantly more efficient than that old gas heater you’ve been running for years.
Renewable Energy
What’s the best reason to switch to solar? Modern solar systems augment the power coming from the electric company, resulting in more control over your sources of electricity, stabilizing or even lowering your energy costs over time.
Our lending, coaching, and partnerships — along with other incentives — make solar power within reach for ROCs, multi-family housing buildings, businesses, and nonprofits. For example, our ROC solar projects have been grant-funded — so they’ve been saving money from day-1. And projects using a PPA model also save money from the moment they turn on the system.
Contact Us
Contact Jeannie Oliver the Vice President of ROC-NH and Energy Solutions to discuss your energy needs.
Call Jeannie: (603) 856-0743
Email JeanniePRICE Act Application
Full application, hearing, and public comment documents that support our PRICE Act application are available here.
For any questions regarding our PRICE Act application can be directed to or by clicking Email Us below.
Energetic Thoughts
Explore our thinking on the current state of energy efficiency, solar power, and more.
Community Loan Fund a finalist for NHBSR 2024 Sustainability Award
For the second straight year, the New Hampshire Community Loan Fund has been named a finalist in the Business Sustainability Awards hosted by New Hampshire Businesses for Social Responsibility (NHBSR).
Steve Varnum 2/14/2024Read MoreGovernment Funded Energy Savings
Federal, state, and local governments offer many grant programs that fund ideas and projects that provide public services and stimulate the economy. They are used to directly fund energy projects and low-interest loans to borrowers and other people we serve.
We apply, or help our borrowers apply, for grants that provide a direct benefit to the people we serve. Example projects include installing community solar arrays to reduce their energy bills, weatherization for manufactured homes in ROCs, clean technology, and funds that go towards distributed energy, net-zero buildings, and zero-emissions transportation projects.
These grants and loans don’t fund our operations or programs. Instead, the majority of these funds come to us because we have the expertise, network, and experience to distribute them. In essence, they pass through us and are dispersed into the community. We are permitted to use a small amount of the funds to cover (some, but not all) our administrative costs.
When you hear that we’ve received a large federal grant for energy efficiency projects, it doesn’t mean that we no longer need donations and investments from our traditional supporters. It usually means we are taking on a new government project or program that will require far more funding than the grant covers. It means your support is needed more than ever to help your N.H. Neighbors.
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