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N.H. House Bill Would Expand Grant Program To Include Farm Energy Efficiency Projects

Steve Richardson via Flickr CC

A proposed bill in the New Hampshire House would expand a grant program from the state's agriculture department to include energy efficiency projects on farms.

The grant program currently supports farmers to better manage their fertilizer and manure to cut down on water pollution.

This bill would expand those grants to support energy efficiency projects such as sugar house equipment upgrades or on-farm electrical generation and storage.

The bill's sponsor, Rep. Craig Thompson of Harrisville, says it's one way to tackle climate change.

"Anything we can do to decrease fossil fuel consumption, anything we can do to increase energy efficiency, anything we can do to pursue electricity right here on the farm, we need to pursue those efforts,” he said.

Thompson, who owns a farm, says farmers are often operating on thin margins, so providing grants for these kinds of projects may help stretch their dollars.

“A lot of sugarhouses burn oil to boil the sap. If you run your sap through reverse osmosis equipment, you burn about a third as much oil,” he said. “So there's a real savings there for the farms that are producing syrup."

I help guide NHPR’s bilingual journalism and our climate/environment journalism in an effort to fill these reporting gaps in New Hampshire. I work with our journalists to tell stories that inform, celebrate and empower Latino/a/x community members in the state through our WhatsApp news service ¿Que Hay de Nuevo, New Hampshire? as well as NHPR’s digital platforms in Spanish and English. For our By Degrees climate coverage, I work with reporters and producers to tell stories that take audience members to the places and people grappling with and responding to climate change, while explaining the forces both driving and limiting New Hampshire’s efforts to respond to this crisis.
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