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Goldman Sachs 11 th Annual Power & Utility Conference

Goldman Sachs 11 th Annual Power & Utility Conference. AUGUST 14, 2012. NU Safe Harbor Provisions.

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Goldman Sachs 11 th Annual Power & Utility Conference

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  1. Goldman Sachs 11th Annual Power & Utility Conference AUGUST 14, 2012

  2. NU Safe Harbor Provisions This presentation contains statements concerning NU’s expectations, beliefs, plans, objectives, goals, strategies, assumptions of future events, future financial performance or growth and other statements that are not historical facts. These statements are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. In some cases, a listener or reader can identify these forward-looking statements through the use of words or phrases such as “estimate”, “expect”, “anticipate”, “intend”, “plan”, “project”, “believe”, “forecast”, “should”, “could”, and other similar expressions. Forward-looking statements are based on the current expectations, estimates, assumptions or projections of management and are not guarantees of future performance. These expectations, estimates, assumptions or projections may vary materially from actual results. Accordingly, any such statements are qualified in their entirety by reference to, and are accompanied by, the following important factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from those contained in our forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, actions or inaction of local, state and federal regulatory and taxing bodies; changes in business and economic conditions, including their impact on interest rates, bad debt expense and demand for our products and services; changes in weather patterns; changes in laws, regulations or regulatory policy; changes in levels and timing of capital expenditures; disruptions in the capital markets or other events that make our access to necessary capital more difficult or costly; developments in legal or public policy doctrines; technological developments; changes in accounting standards and financial reporting regulations; actions of rating agencies; the outcome of our merger; and other presently unknown or unforeseen factors. Other risk factors are detailed in our reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date on which such statement is made, and we undertake no obligation to update the information contained in any forward-looking statements to reflect developments or circumstances occurring after the statement is made or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events. All per share amounts in this presentation are reported on a diluted basis. The only common equity securities that are publicly traded are common shares of NU parent. The earnings and EPS of each business do not represent a direct legal interest in the assets and liabilities allocated to such business, but rather represent a direct interest in NU's assets and liabilities as a whole. EPS by business is a non-GAAP (not determined using generally accepted accounting principles) measure that is calculated by dividing the net income or loss attributable to controlling interests of each business by the weighted average diluted NU parent common shares outstanding for the period. In addition, the second quarter and first half 2012 earnings and EPS excluding certain charges related to the April 10, 2012 closing of the merger between NU and NSTAR are non-GAAP financial measures. Management uses these non-GAAP financial measures to evaluate earnings results and to provide details of earnings results and guidance by business and to more fully compare and explain our second quarter and first half 2012 and 2011 results without including the impact of the non-recurring merger-related costs. Management believes that this measurement is useful to investors to evaluate the actual and projected financial performance and contribution of NU’s businesses. Non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered as alternatives to NU consolidated net income attributable to controlling interests or EPS determined in accordance with GAAP as indicators of NU’s operating performance.

  3. NU-NSTAR Merger Closed April 10, Creating the Largest Utility Company in New England NSTAR Gas Service Area Northeast Utilities Electric Service Area Northeast Utilities Gas Service Area Combined Service Territory • Significant infrastructure investment opportunities combined with balance sheet strength provide for substantial growth potential • Larger, diverse and better positioned to support economic growth and state public policy initiatives in New England • Provides an enhanced total shareholder return proposition • Enhances service quality capabilities for the largest customer base in New England • Highly experienced and complementary leadership team with proven track record • NU dividend increase of 17 percent paid June 29, 2012 • 3 million electric customers • 500,000 natural gas customers • 4,500 miles electric transmission • 72,000 miles electric distribution • 6,300 miles gas distribution NSTAR Electric Service Area

  4. Merged Company Now One of the Industry’s Largest Market Capitalization ($ in billions) Total Enterprise Value ($ in billions) #1 #1 #15 #16 US Electric Customers (mm) US Gas Customers (mm) (1) #1 #1 #11 #17 ___________________________ Source: Barclays Capital Note: Stock prices and market capitalization as of 7/13/12. Peer set based on utility companies with electric and gas utilities and does not include gas utility-only companies.

  5. The Merger Has Created a More Diverse Business Rate Base By State / Federal Rate Base By Business Combined 2011 Rate Base: $12.4 billion

  6. Merged Company Results For Q2 2012

  7. NU Dividend Raised to Exchange-Adjusted NSTAR Level Annualized Dividend 2011 Q1 2012 Q2/Q3 2012 2009 2010

  8. Strong Credit Ratings NU’s corporate credit ratings now in the top quartile of electric utility ratings Utilities Credit Ratings Distribution(1) Number of Issuers 1. Source: Standard & Poor’s, “Industry Report Card: U.S. Regulated Electric Utilities’ Credit Quality Remains Stable” (3/28/12). Long-Term Rating of U.S. Investor-Owned Regulated Electric Utilities, excluding subsidiaries. NU Ratings as of April 5, 2012.

  9. NU Business Segments Have a High Level of Rate Certainty

  10. Massachusetts Settlement Agreements – Key Provisions • Settlement Agreement – MA Attorney General and MA Department of Energy Resources (DOER) • One-time $21M rate credit allocated among NSTAR Electric, NSTAR Gas and WMECO • Distribution rate freezes for all three companies until 2016 • Excludes current reconciling tariffs, and exogenous costs provision included • Recovery of lost base revenues (NSTAR Electric) • Storm cost recovery following prudence review • NSTAR Electric – To be recovered over 5 years commencing 1/1/14 • WMECO – Follow storm recovery process approval in January 2011 rate decision • Safety and infrastructure improvement program to continue, up to $15M (NSTAR Electric) • Amortization of merger-related costs (for rate-making) over 10 years • Executive retention and change of control costs excluded • Settlement Agreement – DOER • NSTAR Electric 15-year contract for energy related to 129MW (27.5%) of Cape Wind Project • Recoverable through reconciling tariff • NSTAR Electric and WMECO target 2.5% energy efficiency savings in 2013 – 2015 • NSTAR Electric pursues 10-year solar contracts for up to 10MW (Maximum: 5MW/contract) • NSTAR Electric will have electric vehicle pilot program collaboration with DOER • Enhanced cost reporting requirements and rate base audit

  11. Connecticut Settlement Agreement – Key Provisions • Key parties: CT Attorney General, CT Office of Consumer Counsel, NU, NSTAR • One-time $25M rate credit for CL&P customers • CL&P base distribution rate freeze until December 1, 2014 • Exogenous events provision included • Reconciling provisions continue • $15M non-recoverable payment to fund state energy initiatives • $40M reduction in maximum level of recoverable storm costs at CL&P (approximately $283M was deferred prior to the $40M reduction) • $300M total additional investment in CL&P “system resiliency” over multiple years • Recovery at weighted average cost of capital through rate mechanism • Recovery associated with first $100M (to be invested 2013-2014) capped at $25M during fixed rate period • Five-year proposal filed on July 9, 2012 • Multiple conditions concerning NU’s presence and employment levels in CT and extension of open space land MOU

  12. Net Benefit Analysis Used as the Basis of Regulatory Reviews $137.3 $125.1 $118.6 $112.1 $105.6 $99.0 $90.5 In Millions $74.3 $52.9 $32.8 Note: Savings reflected above exclude $164.3 million merger integration costs.

  13. Major Transmission Projects AdvanceCurrent Status Report - NEEWS Greater Springfield Reliability Project SPRINGFIELD Interstate Reliability Project HARTFORD Central Connecticut Reliability Project 345-kV Substation Generation Station 345-kV ROW 115-kV ROW • Greater Springfield Reliability Project • Substation construction commenced in MA in December 2010; in CT in summer 2011 • Projected in-service: late 2013 • Total projected NU cost: $718 million • Project approximately 75% complete as of 6/30/12 Under Construction • Interstate Reliability Project • Joint project with National Grid (NU in CT; NGrid in MA & RI) • ISO-NE confirmed need: August 2010 • Siting application filed in CT in December 2011; evidentiary hearings in June 2012 • Siting application filed in MA in June 2012 • Siting application filed in RI in July 2012 • Siting decisions: CT in 2013; MA, RI in late 2013 • Commence construction: late 2013/early 2014 • Projected in-service: late 2015 • Total projected NU cost: $218 million • Central Connecticut Reliability Project • ISO NE expected to issue preliminary need results in August 2012 and transmission solutions in 2013 • Projected in-service: 2017 • Total projected NU cost: $301 million

  14. Current Status Report – Cape Cod Canal Transmission Line • New 345kV, 18 mile overhead transmission line • ISO-NE approved the line for reliability • January 2012: Cape Cod Commission approval • April 2012: EFSB approval • Cost estimated at $110M • Construction 2012-2013 • In-service mid-2013 • FERC ROE of 11.64% New 345kV Transmission Line Cape Cod Canal Existing Transmission Line

  15. Current Status Report - Northern Pass • To be owned by Northern Pass Transmission LLC • 1,200 MW transfer capability • Significant environmental and economic benefits for New England • Northern terminus of DC line at Des Cantons (Québec), southern terminus in Franklin (New Hampshire) • 345kV AC leg from Franklin to Deerfield, NH • TSA accepted by FERC • Permitting process continues with U.S. DOE, U.S. Forest Service • Continued progress in securing alternate route in northern New Hampshire • Community outreach ongoing • Eminent domain legislation signed • Capital cost estimate for US segment - $1.1 billion • Completion projected for fourth quarter 2016 Des Cantons Franklin Deerfield HVDC Line HVDC Converter Station 345-kV Line Existing Deerfield Substation

  16. Transmission Capital Expenditures Reflect Significant Infrastructure Investment $836 $718 $621 $494 In Millions *Updated to reflect July 31, 2012 investor call information

  17. Transmission Year-End Rate Base Forecast $4,747 $4,416 $4,120 $3,823 In Millions

  18. Review of FERC-Approved Transmission ROEs 13.10% 12.89% 12.64% 12.56% 11.64% 11.14% NU’s Local Network Service Tariff ROE (subject of states’ 9/30/11 Section 206 complaint to FERC) NE RTO Incentive adder of 50 basis points on PTF assets ISO-NE Planned Regional PTF projects in-service before 1/1/09 (D.C. Circuit Court rejected appeal on 1/29/10) Middletown-Norwalk advanced technical underground cable system 125 basis point NEEWS incentive (request for reconsideration denied by FERC on 6/28/11) 142 basis point Northern Pass incentive (request for reconsideration denied by FERC on 8/5/11)

  19. Natural Gas: A Compelling Infrastructure Growth Opportunity Natural gas penetration MA, CT vs. other states • CT, MA have relatively low penetration of natural gas in home heating market • Economics have swung meaningfully in favor of natural gas • Environmental factors also favor natural gas NJ NY RI MA CT CT Home Heating Market Penetration #2 Heating Oil Natural Gas Electric Heating Propane

  20. Despite Obstacles, NSTAR Gas, Yankee Gas are Experiencing Growth • Growth has begun, but significant opportunities remain for NSTAR Gas, Yankee Gas • 90,000 non-gas homes and businesses within 150 feet of existing mains • More than 4,000 converted in 2011 alone • 38,000 existing customers are low-use – do not use natural gas for space heating • 2,350 conversions in first 6 months of 2012; 6,500 projected for full year NSTAR Gas New Services Yankee Gas Sales (firm) Weather-Normalized % change year-over-year 2008 2007 2009 2010 2011

  21. Summary: Two Companies With Proven Records of Delivering Superior Shareholder Value Now Merged Source: Bloomberg.Returns for the respective periods calculated up to the merger closing date of 4/10/2012 Total returns assume reinvestment of dividends. Total returns calculated based on S&P 500 market index, which is weighted by market capitalization. Total returns calculated based on UTY market index, which is weighted by market capitalization.

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