AUGUSTA — Dick Gagnon had recently converted his home to propane when he got word, several months ago, that natural gas was not only coming to Augusta, it was going to flow just a few feet from the front door of his Eastern Avenue home.

A week and a half ago, that home became Augusta’s first residence to be heated by natural gas, as the fuel started flowing from a Maine Natural Gas pipeline into Gagnon’s home and running his three direct vent space heaters, a clothes dryer and a gleaming new kitchen stove.

“I’m heating with it, cooking with it, and my clothes dryer runs on it,” said Gagnon, who plows snow for Augusta Public Works. “One good thing about it, I don’t have to worry about running out.”

Gagnon said he was already saving money by burning propane after his oil furnace died about a year ago. He expects to save even more, about $700 a year, by switching from propane to natural gas.

The cost of converting the home he shares with his wife from propane to gas was a little more than $2,500.

“It’s going to take a few years to pay it back, I suppose, but it’s here,” Gagnon said. “And it’s staying.”

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Peter Bottomley, sales and marketing manager for Brunswick-based Maine Natural Gas, a subsidiary of Iberdrola USA, which also owns Central Maine Power Co., said the cost to convert a home heating system to natural gas can range from about $2,000 to $3,000 to replace a burner within a furnace to $7,000 to $12,000 to replace an entire boiler or furnace with a new high-efficiency gas boiler. He said some chimneys may need to be lined to burn natural gas.

Bottomley said the owners of 63 residential buildings in Augusta have signed up to get gas from Maine Natural Gas, many of which, he said, are multiunit apartment complexes.

Michael Duguay, business development director for Augusta-based Summit Natural Gas of Maine, which is competing for customers in Augusta with Maine Natural Gas and building a pipeline from Windsor through Augusta, north to Madison, said the company has a little more than 200 residential customers in Augusta signed up to take gas from Summit, once it starts flowing gas.

Summit, which started installing its pipeline after Maine Natural Gas crews started working on theirs in the area, has not yet started putting gas through its pipes.

Duguay said the pipeline is undergoing testing and progressing well despite colder than expected weather. He said some residential customers could be getting gas from Summit soon.

Duguay said switching to natural gas from oil could save an average homeowner about $1,500 a year.

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“People know natural gas is at a cost advantage and probably will be for a long time,” Duguay said. “Interest has been extremely high.”

OIL DEALER PERSPECTIVE

Marc Lacasse, president of local oil and propane dealer Augusta Fuel Co., which began in Augusta in 1888 as the Augusta Ice Co. then took its current name in 1940, said historically natural gas hasn’t had the current price advantage it holds over oil. He said in New England, in particular, natural gas has generally been more expensive than oil.

“Right now there’s a bit of an economic advantage for someone to be looking at possibly switching over to natural gas,” Lacasse said. “But that hasn’t always been the case. Anything is possible when it comes to the energy markets. The important thing is that individuals get all the available information on their options and choices so they can make the best choice.”

Lacasse noted that when natural gas proponents speak of the potential for savings, they’re often basing the projected savings on the use of the latest, most efficient gas-fueled equipment. And using the latest, most efficient equipment makes any fuel more efficient.

“Whether it’s a propane system or oil heat system, there are things that can be done, upgrades that can be made, that will result in people spending less money no matter what fuel they’re using,” Lacasse said.

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He said oil’s biggest plus, as a heating source, is the local companies that provide it and their people who provide customer service.

“There is a stark difference between the utilities, the way they operate and do business, and locally owned energy companies,” Lacasse said.

Local heating, ventilation and air conditioning firms do the conversion work. Nearly 30 companies in the area provide that type of service, according to a list of certified contractors provided by Maine Natural Gas.

GETTING HOOKED UP

Randy Turcotte, general sales manager of RJ Energy Services Inc. in Augusta, installed the roughly 1-inch pipe running along Gagnon’s basement ceiling, valves and other equipment needed to convert his home to natural gas for heat, cooking and clothes drying. He said it took about two days to do the work. He said a conversion from oil to gas would likely take a bit longer.

Turcotte said in some homes, existing fuel lines can be used for natural gas, but in others new lines will be required to use natural gas. He said Gagnon’s home needed new, upgraded lines.

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“The biggest part of it was installing the new piping because he already had the space heaters,” which were capable of burning natural gas, Turcotte said. “It went smoothly. We’re well-versed and able to do this sort of thing.”

Turcotte said he’s done conversions to natural gas, which is new to the Augusta area, when he worked in Pennsylvania, where gas is common, and said his father was in the gas business for 50 years.

“It’s something nobody around here is used to,” he said. “I think it’s going to be good for some businesses, change the market a bit. We’re getting new conversion requests daily. As soon as more of the gas lines are completed, I’m sure work will increase from there.”

Gagnon said he’s not worried about his new fuel source potentially exploding or leaking. He said that when he heated with propane, he had a 100-pound tank in his yard, and that didn’t worry him either.

“I had no problems with it,” Gagnon said, when asked if he had any safety concerns. “If you’re going to go, you’re going to go.”

In 2012, according to the federal Department of Transportation’s Bureau of Transportation Statistics, nine people were killed in natural gas pipeline incidents, 52 people were injured, and $79 million in property damage occurred.

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Natural gas isn’t the only fuel that has had incidents during its transportation. On July 6, a train carrying 72 tanker cars of oil crashed and exploded in Lac-Megantic, Quebec, a town 10 miles from the Maine border. The accident killed 47 people, displaced 2,000 others and destroyed 40 buildings.

Officials from both Summit and Maine Natural Gas say the fuel is a safe way to heat, and the companies provide safety advice on their websites.

Homeowners planning a project that will involve digging anywhere near a gas pipeline are urged by both companies to call DigSafe before doing any such work to have underground utilities marked out. DigSafe can be reached at 811 or (888) DIG- SAFE (344-7233).

Natural gas is the most commonly used heating fuel in the United States, according to the U.S. Department of Energy, and is used in 57 percent of homes.

To get gas, Gagnon first contacted Maine Natural Gas and filled out an online questionnaire. Pipe was run from the company’s distribution line on Eastern Avenue a few feet across Gagnon’s lawn in a trench to his foundation, where a meter and regulator were mounted onto the side of his house.

Then Turcotte ran the pipes from the meter into and throughout the house.

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After all the pipes were pressure-tested, Maine Natural Gas started the gas flowing.

COSTS SIMILAR

A consultant hired by the city of Augusta to recommend which of the two firms to pick to supply natural gas to city and school buildings estimated the heating costs of an Augusta resident with gas from either company. A Maine Natural Gas user, consultants with Energy Market Decisions said, would spend about $1,524, on average, to heat a home, while a Summit user would spend about $1,725. However, the consultant noted that because the Maine Natural Gas system is smaller, its gas will be available to fewer residents.

The consultant also noted that Summit had more rebate money available to help customers convert their homes to gas, up to $1,500 in rebates versus $400 from Maine Natural Gas.

The gas line from the street to homes is installed about 2 feet underground. The plastic gas lines are installed with a yellow-coated tracer wire alongside it to help workers find the line for service. The lines are also marked, at least initially, above ground with little yellow flags.

Both companies also inject into the gas a chemical that gives off an odor like rotten eggs so that homeowners can detect leaks.

Keith Edwards can be contacted at 621-5647 or at:

kedwards@centralmaine.com


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