Cornerstone Energy Services' 4th Annual Energy Transition Forum tackles reliability, decarbonization, and New England's grid future
Utility leaders, engineers, and regulators gathered in New England for the 4th Annual Energy Transition Forum organized by Cornerstone Energy Services. Discussions focused on the reliability of energy sources, decarbonization strategies, and the future of New England's energy grid. The forum also explored planning for gas networks and the potential roles of geothermal and hydrogen in the region's energy mix.
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Key facts, context, and what it means, in one minute.
Key takeaways
Utility leaders in New England are actively exploring gas network planning and energy reliability strategies.
Geothermal and hydrogen are being considered as viable options for enhancing New England's energy grid.
The forum addressed important issues related to decarbonization and winter reliability in energy supply.
New England's energy operators have a packed agenda: aging gas infrastructure, winter supply constraints, mounting decarbonization mandates, and an electric grid being asked to do far more than it was built for. Cornerstone Energy Services convened its 4th Annual Energy Transition Forum to put those pressures in the same room, gathering utility executives, regulators, engineers, and consultants from across the region for a day of structured technical sessions.
According to Cornerstone's published executive summary, five panels ran through the day's sharpest operational questions. The breadth of speakers, ranging from grid planners to regulatory strategists to infrastructure engineers, reflected just how cross-functional the energy transition has become for anyone running a utility or managing energy assets in the Northeast.
Gas network and winter reliability take center stage
Two sessions addressed the near-term operational reality that still defines New England winters: natural gas supply adequacy. The opening panel, "Planning the Natural Gas Network of the Future," featured Miguel Rodriguez, Brandon Flynn, and Michelle Roche, moderated by Julie Porcaro. Their discussion framed the core tension: how do utilities invest in gas infrastructure responsibly when regulatory and policy trajectories point toward eventual phase-down?
The second gas-focused session, "Winter Reliability, Resiliency & Peak Shaving," brought together Jeff Tounge, Jonathan Lauck, Aaron Govoni, and Kasey Elkin, with Sam Zakrzewski moderating. Peak shaving, the practice of storing gas locally to meet demand spikes when pipeline capacity tightens, remains one of the most concrete risk-management levers available to New England operators. The panel examined how utilities are refining those strategies as demand patterns shift.
For New England operators, the question is not whether to transition, but how to keep the lights and heat on while doing it.
Regulatory pressure and the electric grid buildout
A dedicated panel on "Regulatory Pressures & Decarbonization Mandates" featured Angela Monroe, Rob Furino, Liam Needham, and Faye Brown, moderated by Helen Ayotte. The session examined how evolving state and regional mandates are reshaping investment decisions, procurement timelines, and compliance obligations for utilities operating in one of the country's most aggressive decarbonization policy environments.
The electric grid panel, "Planning the Electric Grid of the Future," featured Eli Shakun and Dan Dolan, moderated by Liz Parsons. Electrification of heating and transportation is adding load to a grid that was not sized for it, and the session addressed what long-range planning looks like when load forecasts carry significant uncertainty. For infrastructure and procurement teams, that uncertainty is a practical problem: you are making capital commitments today against projections that may shift.
Geothermal, hydrogen, and RNG: viable now or not yet?
The forum's most forward-looking session asked a pointed question directly in its title: "Geothermal, Hydrogen & RNG: Real Pathways or Distractions?" Eric Bosworth and Lizzy Reinholt, moderated by Ryan Garcia, led what the executive summary describes as a discussion about whether these technologies represent credible near-term infrastructure investments or capital that is better deployed elsewhere.
This framing matters for procurement and operations teams. Renewable natural gas and hydrogen in particular are showing up in utility long-term plans and state decarbonization filings, which means capital allocation decisions are being made now. The session pushed participants to distinguish between technologies with near-term project pipelines and those still working through cost and scale barriers.
Cornerstone's summary noted that across all five sessions, speakers consistently returned to the importance of collaboration between utilities, consultants, regulators, and industry stakeholders. That is not a platitude in New England's context: the region's interconnected grid and gas infrastructure means decisions made at one utility have downstream consequences for others.
Community impact alongside industry dialogue
Beyond the technical agenda, the forum raised $6,000 for the Worcester County Food Bank, according to Cornerstone's event recap. Worcester County Food Bank CEO Jean McMurray addressed attendees directly, describing the organization's reach across the region and how the donated funds support families facing food insecurity. It is the fourth year the forum has paired its industry programming with a charitable component.
Cornerstone Energy Services has positioned the forum as an annual convening point for New England's energy community. With the region managing simultaneous pressures from aging infrastructure, electrification load growth, and state-level decarbonization targets, the 5th annual edition will face an even more complex set of operational questions to work through.
Sources
- Cornerstone Energy Services — Energy Transition Forum 2025 Executive Summary ↗ · Cornerstone Energy Services
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