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February 5, 2019

ReVision Energy merger expands its reach in N.H. and Vermont

Courtesy / ReVision Energy A rooftop solar array completed by ReVision Energy at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H.

ReVision Energy announced Monday it plans to merge with Energy Emporium of Enfield, N.H.

The merger positions ReVision Energy, which completed a number of solar projects in the Upper Valley in New Hampshire and Vermont along the Connecticut River last year (including several for Dartmouth College), for further growth in the region. Energy Emporium has been in business for 10 years.

The two companies said in a news release that under the terms of their merger agreement, Energy Emporium will be integrated as part of ReVision Energy, which was named “No. 1 Rooftop Installer in New England” in 2017 and 2018 by Solar Power World magazine.

ReVision Energy will offer customer service to current Energy Emporium customers and bring onboard Energy Emporium's Kimberley Quirk and Anita Gonzalez as ReVision Energy employee-owners. Quirk and Gonzalez will continue to operate out of Enfield.

"ReVision's mission is to transition our region to 100% solar and solar-powered complementary technologies, and the Upper Valley is critical to that effort," said Dan Clapp, ReVision Energy co-founder and general manager of New Hampshire operations. "To that end, Kim and Anita of Energy Emporium are exactly the kinds of people who have been attracted to our mission and have built an impressive, customer-centric business over the last 10 years. It is truly an honor that we get to welcome them and their solar champion customers into the ReVision Energy family."

Energy Emporium was founded in 2009 in Enfield, with a mission to help people reduce or eliminate their fossil fuel use. The company was the chosen installer for the Vital Communities Solarize programs in the New Hampshire communities of Hanover, Lebanon and Enfield.

Energy Emporium is housed in a zero-energy building that was renovated from an 1850s historic shell. Sunshine generates the building’s heat, hot water and electricity. The ground floor of the building is a showroom and resource center for information on alternative and renewable energy sources.

“With this merger, Energy Emporium’s existing customers, as well as future customers, are assured of excellent long-term support for their investments in solar and renewable energy,” said Quirk, founder of Energy Emporium. “We can now offer a more diversified set of products to complement solar — such as batteries, cold climate heat pumps, electric vehicle chargers and more.”

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