NATIONAL GRID GROUP P L C
U-1/A, 1999-10-08
ELECTRIC SERVICES
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                                                                File No. 70-9473

                                  UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                     --------------------------------------
                                 AMENDMENT NO. 4
                                       TO
                                    FORM U-1
                             APPLICATION-DECLARATION
                                      UNDER
                 THE PUBLIC UTILITY HOLDING COMPANY ACT OF 1935

              ----------------------------------------------------

     The National Grid Group plc        New England Electric System
     National Grid (US) Holdings        25 Research Drive
       Limited                          Westborough, Massachusetts 01582
     National Grid (US)
       Investments
     National Grid (Ireland) 1
       Limited
     National Grid (Ireland) 2
       Limited
     National Grid General
       Partnership
     National Grid House
     Kirby Corner Road
     Coventry CV4 8JY
     United Kingdom

     NGG Holdings, Inc.
     10th Floor
     Oliver Building
     2 Oliver Street
     Boston, MA 02109

                   (Name of company filing this statement and
                     address of principal executive offices)
                 ----------------------------------------------

     The National Grid Group plc        New England Electric System

                     (Name of top registered holding company
                     parent of each applicant or declarant)
                   ------------------------------------------

<PAGE>

Jonathan M. G. Carlton                  Douglas W. Hawes
The National Grid Group plc             Joanne C. Rutkowski
National Grid House                     Sheri E. Bloomberg
Kirby Corner Road                       Markian M.W. Melnyk
Coventry CV4 8JY                        125 West 55th Street
United Kingdom                          LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae, L.L.P.
Telephone: 011-44-1203-537-777          New York, NY  10019
Facsimile: 011-44-1203-423-678          Telephone: 212-424-8000
                                        Facsimile: 212-424-8500
NGG Holdings, Inc.
10th Floor
Oliver Building
2 Oliver Street
Boston, MA  02109
Telephone:  617-946-2104
Facsimile:  617-946-2111

Michael E. Jesanis                      Clifford M. Naeve
Kirk L. Ramsauer                        Judith A. Center
New England Electric System             Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher
25 Research Drive                         & Flom L.L.P.
Westborough, Massachusetts 01582        1440 New York Avenue, N.W.
                                        Washington, D.C.  20005

                      ------------------------------------
                   (Names and addresses of agents for service)

                                       -2-
<PAGE>

                                  Defined Terms

1.   Applicants means the Intermediate Companies, National Grid and NEES.

2.   Intermediate Companies means National Grid (US) Holdings Limited,  National
     Grid (US)  Investments,  National Grid  (Ireland) 1 Limited,  National Grid
     (Ireland) 2 Limited and National Grid General Partnership.

3.   NEES -- Immediately  after the proposed Merger,  NEES will have been merged
     with and into NGG Holdings, LLC, with NEES as the surviving entity and then
     merged  again into  another LLC (which  survives)  which in turn will merge
     into NGG Holdings,  Inc. with NGG Holdings,  Inc. as the surviving  entity.
     The term "NEES" refers to both NEES and NGG Holdings, Inc. as the surviving
     entity.

4.   National Grid means The National Grid Group plc.

5.   National Grid System means National Grid and its subsidiary companies.

6.   NEES Group means NEES and the NEES Subsidiary Companies.

7.   NEES Subsidiary Companies means the subsidiary companies of NEES.

8.   U.S. Subsidiary Companies means NEES, the NEES Subsidiary Companies and the
     Intermediate Companies.

9.   U.S. Utility  Subsidiaries  means New England Power Company,  Massachusetts
     Electric Company, The Narragansett Electric Company, Granite State Electric
     Company,  Nantucket  Electric  Company,  New England Electric  Transmission
     Corporation, New England Hydro-Transmission Corporation, New England Hydro-
     Transmission  Electric  Company,  Inc.  and Vermont  Yankee  Nuclear  Power
     Corporation.

                                       -3-
<PAGE>

                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

Item 1.  Description of Proposed Merger
      A. Introduction
         1. General Request
         2. Overview of Merger
      B. Description of the Parties to the Merger
         1. National Grid
         2. NEES
      C. Description of the Merger
         1. Background
         2. Merger Agreement
         3. Corporate Structure for the Merger
         4. Financing the Merger
      D. Management and Operations of National Grid and NEES Following the
         Merger
      E. Industry Restructuring Initiatives Affecting U.S. Operations

Item 2.  Fees, Commissions and Expenses

Item 3.  Applicable Statutory Provisions
      A. Legal Analysis
         1. Section 10(b)
            a. Section 10(b)(1)
               i.  Interlocking Relationships
               ii. Concentration of Control
            b. Section 10(b)(2) -- Fairness of Consideration
            c. Section 10(b)(2) -- Reasonableness of Fees
            d. Section 10(b)(3)
         2. Section 10(c) a. Section 10(c)(1) b. Section 10(c)(2)
         3. Section 10(f)
      B. Other Statutory Provisions

Item 4.  Regulatory Approvals
      A. Antitrust
      B. Federal Power Act
      C. Atomic Energy Act
      D. Exon-Florio
      E. State Public Utility Regulation

Item 5.  Procedure

Item 6.  Exhibits and Financial Statements
      A. Exhibits
      B. Financial Statements

Item 7.  Information as to Environmental Effects

                                       -4-
<PAGE>

     This  Pre-Effective  Amendment  No.  4  amends  and  restates  the Form U-1
Application/Declaration in this proceeding, originally filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission on March 26, 1999, in its entirety as follows:

ITEM 1.   DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPOSED MERGER

     A.   Introduction

     This  Application/Declaration  seeks  approvals  relating  to the  proposed
acquisition of NEES, a Massachusetts  business trust, by National Grid, a public
limited company  incorporated  under the laws of England and Wales,  pursuant to
which NEES and its subsidiaries  will become  subsidiaries of National Grid (the
"Merger").  Following consummation of the Merger,  National Grid and each of the
Intermediate Companies will register with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(the  "Commission")  as holding  companies under Section 5 of the Public Utility
Holding  Company Act of 1935,  as amended  (the  "Act")./1/  NEES is currently a
holding  company  registered  under Section 5 of the Act and will remain as such
following  consummation of the Merger.  On February 1, 1999, NEES announced that
it had entered into an agreement to acquire all of the outstanding  common stock
of Eastern Utilities  Associates ("EUA"), a holding company registered under the
Act.  Consummation of the merger between NEES and EUA is not conditional on, and
is proceeding independently from, the closing of the Merger. Authorization under
the  Act  for  NEES'  acquisition  of EUA  will  be the  subject  of a  separate
application to the Commission by NEES.

          1.   General Request

     Pursuant  to  Sections  9(a)(2) and 10 of the Act,  the  Applicants  hereby
request authorization and approval of the Commission to acquire, by means of the
Merger,  all of NEES' interest in the issued and outstanding common stock of the
subsidiaries of NEES that

- ----------
/1/  The Intermediate  Companies either have been or will be formed prior to the
     consummation   of   the   Merger.    They   have   been   added   to   this
     Application/Declaration  to enable the  Commission  to issue a notice.  The
     Intermediate Companies will require the approval of their respective boards
     of directors to engage in the activities contemplated by this filing.
- ----------

                                       -1-
<PAGE>

are public utility  companies  within the meaning of the Act, namely New England
Power Company ("NEP"),  Massachusetts Electric Company ("Mass.  Electric"),  The
Narragansett Electric Company  ("Narragansett"),  Granite State Electric Company
("Granite  State"),  Nantucket  Electric  Company  ("Nantucket"),   New  England
Electric  Transmission  Corporation  ("NEET"),  New  England  Hydro-Transmission
Corporation ("N.H.  Hydro"),  New England  Hydro-Transmission  Electric Company,
Inc.  ("Mass.  Hydro")  and  Vermont  Yankee  Nuclear  Power  Corporation.   The
Applicants  also hereby request that the Commission  approve (i) the acquisition
by the Applicants of NEES' interest in the non- utility  activities,  businesses
and   investments  of  NEES  and  the  retention  of  National  Grid's  existing
non-utility    activities,    businesses   and    investments;    (ii)   certain
acquisition-related  financing matters, and (iii) certain amendments to the NEES
standard form of service company agreement.

     The timing of the Commission's action on the merger of NEES and EUA and the
Merger (i.e.,  National  Grid's  acquisition  of NEES) is uncertain.  Should the
Commission  approve the  NEES/EUA  merger  first,  Applicants  propose  that the
authorization requested in this  Application/Declaration be deemed a request for
the acquisition of an indirect  interest in the EUA  subsidiaries and operations
acquired by NEES. Should the Commission approve the Merger first,  National Grid
will join NEES as an applicant in the  NEES/EUA  merger  application/declaration
filed with the Commission.

          2.   Overview of the Merger

     Pursuant to an Agreement and Plan of Merger (the "Merger Agreement"), dated
as of  December  11,  1998 by and among  National  Grid,  NGG  Holdings  LLC,  a
Massachusetts  limited  liability  company  and a  wholly  owned  subsidiary  of
National Grid, and NEES, NEES will become an indirect,  wholly owned  subsidiary
of National  Grid. The proposed  corporate  structure of National Grid after the
Merger is discussed in more detail in Item 1.E below.

     As  consideration  for each common share of NEES outstanding at the time of
the Merger, the NEES shareholders will receive $53.75 per share in cash, plus up
to an additional $0.60 in cash per share if the Merger is not consummated within
six months after

                                       -2-
<PAGE>

the NEES shareholders approve the Merger,  calculated at a rate of $0.003288 for
each  day that the  Merger  closing  is  delayed  past the end of the six  month
period.  The NEES  shareholders  will not  obtain any stock  consideration  from
National Grid in the Merger.

     As  discussed in more detail in Item 3.A.  below,  in addition to providing
substantial  value to NEES  shareholders  as  described  above,  the Merger will
produce  substantial  benefits to the public  interest  and to  consumers in New
England,  as well as the  shareholders  of National Grid, by combining a company
with  demonstrated  expertise in operating in a competitive  environment  with a
company that having divested the bulk of its generation  assets and operating in
states  where  deregulation  initiatives  are  advanced  is well  positioned  to
compete.

     Benefits to customers fall in three  categories.  First,  National Grid has
significant  expertise  in  providing  the  infrastructure,  dispatch  and power
exchange  necessary for an efficient  power supply  market.  Power supply is the
major cost element of electricity  and is crucially  influenced by the efficient
development  of the market  for the  product.  The  efficient  provision  of the
infrastructure  to let the supply market develop will facilitate the increase in
potential suppliers of electricity, with the competition so generated leading to
lower and more stable prices for the  unregulated  supply  component of electric
service.

     Second,  there will be savings and  efficiencies  associated with the NEES-
National Grid Merger  itself.  The two companies are currently in the process of
evaluating  integration  possibilities,  aimed at  eliminating  duplication  and
implementing best practices. National Grid's significantly larger scale, both in
financial  and  operational  terms,  will enhance the ability of NEES to use new
developments in transmission and distribution  technology,  information systems,
and capital markets, where these can be seen to bring economic benefit.

     Third,  the Merger  will allow  further  pursuit  of  consolidation  in the
electric utility business.  The restructuring of the industry in New England and
the divestiture of generation by companies owning  transmission and distribution
interests has left a fragmented  infrastructure with individual companies of too
small a size to fully  exploit  economies of scale.  NEES,  with its already low
distribution prices and profit margins, is not

                                       -3-
<PAGE>

in a position on its own to pursue significant  further regional  consolidation.
This transaction will allow further  consolidations and consolidation savings to
be pursued, while maintaining low rates for customers. The agreement for NEES to
acquire EUA, while not in itself  conditional on the NEES-National  Grid Merger,
is entirely consistent with this strategy.

     The Merger also provides NEES employees with the  opportunity for growth as
they participate in industry restructuring and allows National Grid to apply its
extensive   experience  in  competitive   electricity   supply  markets  to  the
electricity  industry in the U.S.  at a time of  strategic  significance  in the
reform and restructuring of the industry.

     The Merger has been approved by the shareholders of NEES and National Grid,
as well as by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (the "FERC"), the Vermont
Public  Service  Board (the  "VPSB") and the  Connecticut  Department  of Public
Utility Control (the "CDPUC").  While the express approval of the  Massachusetts
Department  of  Telecommunications  and Energy (the "MDTE") and the Rhode Island
Public  Utility  Commission  (the "RIPUC") are not required,  the parties to the
Merger are actively  seeking  support from those agencies in connection with the
1935 Act  authorizations  sought herein.  A letter from the MDTE,  affirming its
authority  and  resources  to protect  ratepayers  served by Mass.  Electric  is
attached hereto as Exhibit D-3.2.  In addition,  Granite State and NEP have made
representations to the New Hampshire Public Utilities  Commission ("NHPUC") that
the Merger will not adversely affect their rates, terms,  service or operations.
Approval has also been requested  from the Nuclear  Regulatory  Commission  (the
"NRC").  Finally,  the  Merger  has been  cleared  by the  Committee  on Foreign
Investments in the United States under the Exon-Florio Provisions of the Omnibus
Trade  and  Competitiveness  Act of 1988 and by the  Antitrust  Division  of the
Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission under the  Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976.

     B.   Description of the Parties to the Merger

          1.   National Grid

     National  Grid  is  a  holding   company  formed  in  1989.  Its  principal
subsidiary,  The National Grid Company plc ("National Grid  Company"),  a public
limited company

                                       -4-
<PAGE>

formed  under the laws of  England  and  Wales,  was  created as a result of the
privatization and restructuring of the British electric system.  National Grid's
ordinary shares are listed on the London Stock Exchange (the "LSE") and National
Grid has an unsponsored  American Depositary Receipt ("ADR") program pursuant to
which a  relatively  small  amount of its shares  trade in the United  States as
ADRs.  National Grid is preparing the necessary  documentation which will enable
it to become  listed on a public  exchange in North  America  through a full ADR
program sometime prior to the closing of this transaction. As of the fiscal year
ended  March 31,  1999,  National  Grid had  revenues,  net income and assets of
$2.49 billion, $1.65 billion and $8.35 billion, respectively./2/

     Except for  National  Grid (US)  Holdings  Limited,  National  Grid has one
direct  subsidiary,  National Grid Holdings Limited  ("National Grid Holdings").
National Grid Holdings was formed under the laws of England and Wales in 1999 to
serve  as a  subholding  company  over  National  Grid  Company  and  the  other
subsidiaries  of  National  Grid not in the NEES  chain of  ownership.  Prior to
consummation of the Merger, National Grid Holdings will file its notification of
foreign utility company  ("FUCO") status to qualify as a FUCO within the meaning
of Section 33 of the Act. The parties  expect that  National  Grid Holdings will
retain this status  following the Merger and that the  activities and operations
of National Grid  Holdings'  direct and indirect  subsidiary  companies  will be
exempt from the Act as  subsidiaries  of National Grid  Holdings,  provided that
each derives no part of its income, directly or indirectly, from the generation,
transmission, or distribution of electric energy for sale or the distribution at
retail of natural or manufactured gas for heat,  light, or power,  within the US
and none are  public  utility  companies  operating  in the US. A chart  showing
National  Grid and all of its  subsidiaries  following the formation of National
Grid Holdings is attached hereto as Exhibit E-2.

- ----------

/2/  All figures are  presented on a U.S.  GAAP basis.  The figures for revenues
     and net income were  translated  into  dollars  using a rate of U.S.  $1.65
     equals one pound (Noon  Buying Rate on the last  business day of each month
     during  the year  ended  March 31,  1999),  and the  figure  for assets was
     translated using a rate of U.S. $1.61 equals one pound (Noon Buying Rate on
     March 31, 1999).  Consistent with U.S. GAAP, National Grid's share of joint
     venture's and  associate's  businesses is included in net income and assets
     but is omitted from revenues.  For the year ended March 31, 1999,  National
     Grid's  investment in Energis  accounted for $36 million of National Grid's
     net income (calculated in same manner as overall revenue).

- ----------

                                       -5-
<PAGE>

     The  following  entities  are the  direct  subsidiaries  of  National  Grid
Holdings and the description of their  operations  provides a description of the
principal lines of business, as well as some administrative  operations,  within
the National Grid holding company system.

     (1) National Grid Company -- As part of the U.K. government's privatization
efforts, the Central Electricity  Generating Board, which owned and operated the
vast majority of electric generation and transmission  facilities in England and
Wales, was split into three competing generation  companies,  and an independent
transmission company,  National Grid Company. As a result, National Grid Company
is the only  transmission  company in England and Wales and now owns 4,300 miles
of  overhead  transmission  lines and 400 miles of  underground  cables,  all in
England and Wales,  as well as  interconnections  with Scotland and France.  The
principal  functions of National Grid Company in the  competitive  British power
supply   market  are  to  provide   transmission   services  on  a   for-profit,
non-discriminatory  basis,  and to maintain and make all needed  improvements to
optimize  access  to  that  system;  to  procure   ancillary   services  on  the
transmission  system;  to match demand and supply; to manage the daily system of
half-hourly  bids for competing  generators;  and to calculate market prices and
make the payments due from each day's energy  trading.  National Grid Company is
subject to regulatory  controls  overseen by the Director General of Electricity
Supply  with  regard to the prices it may charge for  transmission  services  in
England and Wales.  The current  transmission  price  control  arrangements  for
National Grid Company are expected to remain in force until March 31, 2001.

     (2) National Grid Insurance Limited,  is an insurance  subsidiary formed in
connection   with  the   self-insured   retention  of  National  Grid  Company's
transmission  assets.  National Grid owns all of the outstanding ordinary shares
of National Grid  Insurance  Limited,  with  preference  shares held by Barclays
Bank.

     (3) National Grid International Limited, is an intermediate holding company
for certain of the overseas  operations  of National  Grid, in  particular,  its
businesses  in  South  America,   India,  Africa  and  the  U.S.  National  Grid
International Limited is indirectly

                                       -6-
<PAGE>

engaged in the following  businesses:  (a) automated  meter reading and billing;
(b) telecommunications,  and (c) electric transmission and distribution. Teldata
International  Limited and National Grid USA Inc. are  subsidiaries  of National
Grid  International  Limited with  operations in the US.  Teldata Inc. and First
Point  Services  Inc.  are Delaware  corporations  and  subsidiaries  of Teldata
International  Limited that provide  metering and billing  services to electric,
gas and water utilities and energy service providers.  National Grid USA Inc. is
a Delaware corporation that was formed to investigate potential opportunities in
the US market for National Grid.  Except as mentioned  above,  no other National
Grid  companies  maintain  operations  in the US.  National  Grid  International
Limited does not directly or  indirectly  derive any part of its income from the
generation,  transmission  or  distribution  of electric  energy for sale or the
distribution at retail of natural or manufactured  gas for heat,  light or power
within the US. None of National Grid  International  Limited or its subsidiaries
is a public utility company operating in the US.

     (4) The National Grid Group Quest Trustees  Limited is the trustee  company
for National Grid's qualifying employee share ownership trust.

     (5) NGG Telecoms Holdings Limited indirectly holds National Grid's interest
(currently at 48.3%) in Energis plc ("Energis"),  a  telecommunications  company
focusing on the business marketplace in the United Kingdom.

     (6) Natgrid Finance Holdings Limited is an intermediate holding company for
entities that provide financial management services to National Grid.

          2.   NEES

     NEES is organized and exists as a voluntary  association  created under the
laws of the Commonwealth of  Massachusetts on January 2, 1926.  NEES's principal
executive  office is located at 25 Research  Drive,  Westborough,  Massachusetts
01582.

     NEES is a holding company  registered  under Section 5 of the 1935 Act, and
it and its subsidiaries  are subject to the broad  regulatory  provisions of the
Act.  Various NEES  subsidiaries  are also subject to regulation by (i) the FERC
under  the  Federal  Power Act  ("FPA")  with  respect  to  wholesale  sales and
transmission of electric power, accounting

                                       -7-
<PAGE>

and other matters, and (ii) various state regulatory  commissions,  as discussed
below. In addition,  the activities of nuclear  facilities in which NEES and its
subsidiaries have ownership interests are regulated by the NRC.

     The common  stock,  par value of $1.00 per share,  of NEES is listed on the
New York Stock Exchange and the Boston Stock Exchange.  As of December 31, 1998,
there were 59,171,015 shares of NEES common stock outstanding. On a consolidated
basis at the end of 1998,  NEES had total assets of $5.07  billion,  net utility
assets of $2.5  billion,  total  operating  revenues of $2.42  billion,  utility
operating revenues of $2.24 billion, and net income of $190 million.

     NEES owns all of the voting  securities of the following four  distribution
subsidiaries,  Mass. Electric,  Narragansett,  Granite State and Nantucket,  and
99.97 percent of the outstanding voting securities of its principal transmission
subsidiary,  NEP.  The NEES system  covers more than 4,500  square  miles with a
population  of  approximately  3,000,000.  At December  31,  1998,  NEES and its
subsidiaries had approximately 3,540 employees.

     (1) Mass.  Electric is a public utility  company engaged in the delivery of
electric  energy  to  approximately  980,000  customers  in an  area  comprising
approximately  43  percent  of  Massachusetts.  Mass.  Electric's  service  area
consists of 146 cities and towns,  including the highly  diversified  commercial
and  industrial  cities of Worcester,  Lowell and Quincy.  The population of the
service area is approximately  2,160,000,  or 36 percent of the total population
of the state. During 1998, 39 percent of Mass. Electric's revenues from the sale
of  electricity  was  derived  from  residential  customers,   39  percent  from
commercial  customers,  21 percent from industrial  customers and 1 percent from
others. In 1998, the utility's 20 largest customers  accounted for approximately
7 percent of its electric revenues. At the end of 1998, Mass. Electric had total
assets of $1.45 billion,  operating  revenues of $1.49 billion and net income of
$50.4 million.  Mass. Electric is subject to rate regulation by the FERC and the
MDTE.

     (2)  Narragansett  is a public utility  company  engaged in the delivery of
electric energy to approximately  335,000 customers in Rhode Island. Its service
area covers

                                       -8-
<PAGE>

about 839 square miles, or 80 percent of the area of the state,  and encompasses
27 cities  and  towns,  including  Providence,  East  Providence,  Cranston  and
Warwick.  The  population  of the service  area is  approximately  725,000 or 72
percent  of the total  population  of the  state.  During  1998,  44  percent of
Narragansett's   revenues  from  the  sale  of  electricity   was  derived  from
residential  customers,  40 percent from commercial  customers,  14 percent from
industrial  customers,  and 2  percent  from  others.  In 1998,  the 20  largest
customers of Narragansett accounted for approximately 10 percent of its electric
revenues.  At the end of 1998,  Narragansett had total assets of $644.1 million,
operating revenues of $475 million and net income of $32.3 million. Narragansett
is subject to regulation by the FERC, the RIPUC and the Rhode Island Division of
Public Utilities and Carriers ("RIDIV").

     (3) Granite State is a public  utility  company  engaged in the delivery of
electric  energy  to   approximately   37,000  customers  in  21  New  Hampshire
communities.   The  Granite  State   service   territory  has  a  population  of
approximately  73,000 and includes the Salem area of southern New  Hampshire and
several  communities  along the  Connecticut  River.  During 1998, 49 percent of
Granite  State's  revenues  from  the  sale  of  electricity  was  derived  from
commercial  customers,  36 percent from residential  customers,  14 percent from
industrial  customers,  and 1  percent  from  others.  In 1998,  the 10  largest
customers  of  Granite  State  accounted  for  approximately  18  percent of its
electric  revenue.  At the end of 1998,  Granite State had total assets of $61.8
million,  operating  revenues of $65.7 million,  and net income of $3.2 million.
Granite State is subject to regulation by the FERC and the NHPUC.

     (4) Nantucket  provides  electric utility service to  approximately  10,000
customers  on  Nantucket  Island  in   Massachusetts.   Nantucket's   year-round
population is approximately  6,000, with a summer peak of approximately  40,000.
Nantucket's  service area covers the entire  island.  During 1998, 62 percent of
Nantucket's  revenues from the sale of electricity was derived from  residential
customers,  37 percent from commercial  customers and 1 percent from others.  At
the end of 1998,  Nantucket had total assets of $44 million,  operating revenues
of $15.1 million, and net income of $567,000. Nantucket is subject to regulation
by the FERC and the MDTE.

                                       -9-
<PAGE>

     (5) NEP is  principally  engaged in  purchasing,  transmitting  and selling
electric  energy at  wholesale.  In 1998,  98 percent  of NEP's  all-requirement
revenue  from the sale of  electricity  was  derived  from  sales for  resale to
affiliated  companies and 2 percent from sales for resale to municipal and other
utilities.  NEP has  recently  completed  the sale of  substantially  all of its
non-nuclear generating business and currently is attempting to sell its minority
interests  in  three  operating  nuclear  power  plants  and  one  fossil-fueled
generating  station in  Maine./3/  At the end of 1998,  NEP had total  assets of
$2.41  billion,  operating  revenues  of $1.2  billion  and net income of $122.9
million.  NEP is subject,  for certain  purposes,  to regulation by the SEC, the
FERC,  the NRC, the RIDIV,  the MDTE, the NHPUC,  the VPSB,  the CDPUC,  and the
Maine Public Utilities Commission.

     (6) NEET, a wholly  owned  subsidiary  of NEES,  owns and operates a direct
current/alternating  current converter  terminal facility for the first phase of
the Hydro- Quebec and New England  interconnection (the  "Interconnection")  and
six miles of high voltage direct current transmission line in New Hampshire.

     (7) N.H.  Hydro,  in which NEES holds 53.97% of the common stock,  operates
121 miles of high-voltage direct current  transmission line in New Hampshire for
the second phase of the Interconnection,  extending to the Massachusetts border.
At the end of 1998,  N.H.  Hydro had total  assets  of $131  million,  operating
revenues of $31.7 million, and net income of $4.8 million.

     (8)  Mass.  Hydro,  53.97%  of the  voting  stock of which is held by NEES,
operates a direct  current/alternating  current terminal and related  facilities
for the second phase of the  Interconnection and 12 miles of high-voltage direct
current transmission line in

- ----------
/3/  NEP is also a holding company because it owns 20% of the outstanding voting
     securities  of Vermont  Yankee  Nuclear  Power  Corporation,  the  licensed
     operator of the Vermont  Yankee  nuclear  facility.  NEP also has  minority
     interests in Yankee  Atomic  Electric  Company  (30%),  Maine Yankee Atomic
     Power Company (20%) and Connecticut  Yankee Atomic Power Company (15%), all
     of which  have  permanently  ceased  operations.  NEP is an exempt  holding
     company under the Act.  Yankee  Atomic  Electric  Company,  Holding Co. Act
     Release No. 13048 (Nov. 25, 1955); Connecticut Yankee Atomic Power Company,
     Holding Co. Act Release No. 14768 (Nov. 15, 1963).
- ----------

                                      -10-
<PAGE>

Massachusetts. At the end of 1998, Mass. Hydro had total assets of $160 million,
operating revenues of $37 million, and net income of $7.8 million.

     o    New England Hydro Finance Company,  Inc. ("NE Hydro Finance") is owned
          in equal  shares by Mass.  Hydro and N.H.  Hydro and provides the debt
          financing  required by the owners to fund the  capital  costs of their
          participation in the Interconnection.

     (9) NEES  Communication,  Inc.  ("NEESCom")  has been  declared  an  exempt
telecommunications  company by the Federal  Communications  Commission.  NEESCom
presently focuses on dark fiber leasing.  At the end of 1998,  NEESCom had total
assets of $12.6 million and a net loss of $1.2 million.

     o    NEES  Telecommunications  Corp.  is  wholly  owned by  NEESCom  and is
          presently inactive.

     (10)  NEES  Global,  Inc.  ("NEES  Global")  is a  wholly-owned  nonutility
subsidiary of NEES that  provides  principally  consulting  services and product
licenses  to   unaffiliated   utilities   in  the  areas  of  electric   utility
restructuring  and customer choice.  On September 21, 1999, NEES Global sold its
wholly-owned subsidiary, New England Water Heater Company, Inc., which is in the
water heater leasing business.  At the end of 1998, NEES Global had total assets
of  $23.2  million  and a net  loss of $1.1  million  for the  year.  Monitoring
Technologies,  Inc.,  Nexus Energy Software,  Inc. and Separation  Technologies,
Inc. are owned in part by NEES Global and are described below.

     (11)  NEES  Energy,  Inc.  ("NEES  Energy")  is  a  wholly-owned  marketing
subsidiary of NEES.

     o    AllEnergy Marketing Company,  L.L.C.  ("AllEnergy") is a wholly- owned
          subsidiary  of NEES  Energy.  AllEnergy  markets  energy  products and
          provides a wide range of energy-related  services  including,  but not
          limited to,  marketing,  brokering and sales of energy,  audits,  fuel
          supply, repair, maintenance, construction,

                                      -11-
<PAGE>

          operation,  design,  engineering  and  consulting  to customers in the
          competitive power markets of New England and New York.

     o    AllEnergy's  subsidiary Texas Liquids,  L.L.C. (owned 99% by AllEnergy
          and 1% by NEES Energy),  engages principally in marketing and sales of
          propane and energy in the New Jersey area. Texas Liquids,  L.L.C. owns
          50% of the voting  securities of AEDR Fuels L.L.C.,  a company engaged
          in the home heating oil business,  and 10% of the voting securities of
          Weatherwide  USA,  L.L.C.,  a  company  engaged  in  providing  energy
          management, demand side management and technical services, and utility
          hedging services to reduce weather-related financial uncertainties for
          utilities and energy users.

     o    AllEnergy's  wholly-owned  subsidiary,  Texas-Ohio  Gas, Inc.  markets
          natural gas to industrial  and  commercial  end users  throughout  the
          northeast US.

     (12)  Granite  State  Energy,  Inc.  ("Granite  State")  is a  wholly-owned
nonutility  marketing  subsidiary  of NEES.  Granite  State  provides a range of
energy and energy-related services, including: sales of electric energy, audits,
power  quality,  fuel  supply,  repair,   maintenance,   construction,   design,
engineering and consulting.  At the end of 1998,  Granite State had total assets
of $304,000, operating revenues of $718,000 and a net loss of $22,000.

     (13) New  England  Water  Heater  Company,  Inc.  is engaged in the rental,
service, sale and installation of water heaters.4

     (14) New England  Power Service  Company  ("Service  Company"),  provides a
variety of administrative  and consulting  services for the NEES system pursuant
to a  service  agreement  approved  by the  Commission  in  accordance  with the
requirements of

- ----------
/4/  The sale of this company was closed effective September 21, 1999.
- ----------

                                      -12-
<PAGE>

Rule 90. At the end of 1998,  Service Company had total assets of $123.1 million
and net income of $1.8 million.

     (15) Metro West Realty, L.L.C., a wholly-owned  subsidiary of NEES conducts
real estate investment and management activities.

     (16) 25 Research  Drive,  L.L.C.,  a  wholly-owned  subsidiary of NEES, was
formed to facilitate the proposed acquisition of Eastern Utilities Associates.

     (17) New England Energy,  Inc.  ("NEEI"),  is a wholly-owned  subsidiary of
NEES that  owned oil and gas  properties  that were sold  during  1998.  NEEI is
currently inactive.

     (18) Monitoring Technologies,  Inc. ("MTC") designs, develops, manufactures
and markets microprocessor-based products that monitor wear and forecast failure
of components in machinery. NEES Global has a 4% ownership interest in MTC.

     (19) Nexus  Energy  Software,  Inc.  ("Nexus"),  develops  and licenses its
software to utilities and operates a website which targets energy  consumers for
the  purpose  of  helping  them make  energy  choices.  NEES  Global has a 40.3%
ownership interest in Nexus.

     (20) Separation Technologies, Inc. ("STI"), is a provider of ash processing
equipment,  project financing,  operations and marketing services related to its
equipment.  NEES  Global  has a 5.02%  ownership  interest  with a voting  stock
ownership interest of 5.67% in STI.

     (21) UNITIL Company ("Unitil"),  is a registered holding company located in
New England.  NEES holds a 0.8% ownership interest in Unitil.  NEES acquired the
Unitil  interest in exchange for NEES'  interest in  Fitchburg  Gas and Electric
Company when that company was merged with Unitil.

     Narragansett  and NEP (and  AllEnergy) are members of the New England Power
Pool  ("NEPOOL").  Mass.  Electric,  Nantucket and Granite State  participate in
NEPOOL through NEP. The FERC recently has approved a restructuring of NEPOOL

                                      -13-
<PAGE>

involving (i) the formation of an Independent  System Operator that will control
the  transmission  facilities  owned by the NEPOOL  public  utility  members and
administer the NEPOOL open-access  transmission tariff and (ii) the operation of
a power  exchange that will embody a  competitive  wholesale  power market.  New
England Power Pool, 85 FERC P. 61,379 (Dec. 17, 1998).

     A chart of the organization of NEES is attached hereto as Exhibit E-3.

     C.   Description of the Merger

          1.   Background

     National  Grid has been  seeking  opportunities  to develop  earnings  from
outside  the UK  transmission  business  by  applying  its  core  skills  in the
development and management of infrastructure assets and systems. The Merger is a
major step toward realizing those goals. From National Grid's perspective, NEES:

     o    represents  a  significant   investment   in  an  efficient,   focused
          transmission and distribution business with a strong operational track
          record, which will benefit further from National Grid's core skills;

     o    enhances  National Grid's earnings per share,  before the amortization
          of goodwill,  and significantly enhances National Grid's cash flow per
          share immediately following acquisition;

     o    provides  the right point of entry into the U.S.  for  National  Grid,
          given New England's  favorable  economic climate and its more advanced
          state of regulatory evolution towards performance-based regulation;

     o    brings  National  Grid a  high-quality  management  team  with  proven
          distribution  expertise  and a shared  view of the  industry's  future
          development in the Northeast U.S.; and

     o    provides an excellent regional platform for growth in transmission and
          distribution.

                                      -14-
<PAGE>

     The  Applicants  believe  that  National  Grid and NEES have  complementary
skills that can be used to benefit the public interest,  as well as the interest
of investors and consumers,  the "protected  interests" under the Act.  National
Grid has considerable experience:

     o    operating as a facilitator of competition in a regulatory  environment
          that promotes and rewards efficiency; and

     o    improving system performance through investing in and managing complex
          transmission  system networks and the  sophisticated  software systems
          that control the networks in real time.

National Grid believes that this experience  complements  NEES' proven expertise
in  operating  efficient  distribution  businesses  in  an  evolving  regulatory
environment and will provide it with an important  competitive advantage both in
developing  its  U.S.   transmission  and  distribution  business  and  pursuing
opportunities elsewhere.  Both National Grid and NEES are committed to providing
reliable and efficient service and enhancing overall  performance  standards for
the benefit of customers and shareholders.

          2.   Merger Agreement

     Under the terms of the  Merger  Agreement,  each  outstanding  NEES  common
share,  other than shares  held by NEES as  treasury  stock or held by any other
NEES subsidiary and shares held by National Grid or any of its subsidiaries, but
including  all  common  shares  held as  treasury  shares  under  a rabbi  trust
maintained by NEES to satisfy certain benefit  obligations,  will converted into
the right to receive  $53.75 in cash per share.  This cash payment will increase
by $0.003288 over share,  up to a maximum price of $54.35 per share for each day
completion of the Merger is delayed longer than six months after approval of the
Merger  by NEES  shareholders.  The  Merger  is  subject  to  customary  closing
conditions,  including receipt of all necessary regulatory approvals,  including
the approval of the Commission.

          3.   Corporate Structure for the Merger

                                      -15-
<PAGE>

     As stated above,  the Merger is structured as the indirect  acquisition  of
NEES by National Grid.  Promptly after the Merger is consummated,  National Grid
currently  intends to convert NEES from a  Massachusetts  business  trust into a
more  conventional  business  corporation.  This  conversion  may result in NEES
having  a  different   corporate   name.  All   references   contained  in  this
Application/Declaration  to NEES after  consummation of the Merger refer to NEES
and  its  potential  corporate  successor.  The  Intermediate  Companies  in the
corporate  structure  between National Grid and NEES create a structure  typical
for U.K.  cross-border  transactions;  these  entities  exist  primarily for the
purpose of creating  an  economically  efficient  and viable  structure  for the
transaction  and the ongoing  operations  of NEES.  The  proposed  structure  as
currently planned and specific function of each of the Intermediate Companies is
set forth in Exhibit J-2 hereto. The Applicants note that certain adjustments in
the structure may be necessary to reflect tax and accounting  changes as well as
management  decisions  prior to  consummation  of the Merger.  Material  changes
between the date of this  Application/Declaration  and the  consummation  of the
Merger will be reflected in a pre-effective  amendment  hereto.  National Grid's
direct and indirect  interest in each of the  Intermediate  Companies  will flow
through loans and equity interests similar to those indicated on Exhibit J-2. It
should be noted that under this structure there will be no outside,  third party
interests,  including no lenders,  no minority  equity  interest  holders and no
customers, in the Intermediate Companies.

          4.   Financing the Merger

     National  Grid  intends  to  finance  the  acquisition  of NEES  through  a
combination of borrowings under existing bank facilities and other internal cash
sources.  Given the price escalation  provisions of the Merger Agreement and the
nature of the  transaction,  the exact  cash  purchase  price to be paid to NEES
shareholders  in the  aggregate  will depend on the timing of the closing of the
Merger as well as the number of NEES shares  outstanding at that time.  However,
it is expected that the acquisition price will be approximately $3.2 billion. On
March 5, 1999,  National Grid entered into a fully  committed bank facility with
six banks  providing for up to $2.750  billion in  borrowings by National  Grid,
wholly-owned  National  Grid  subsidiaries  incorporated  in the UK (other  than
National Grid  Company),  and other  National Grid  subsidiaries  as approved in
writing by the banks,

                                      -16-
<PAGE>

plus a further 250 million pound  sterling  facility  available to National Grid
Company only.  The facility has a maturity of 3 to 5 years.  Each of these banks
is a sophisticated commercial lender and the facilities were negotiated at arms'
length.  It is expected that additional  banks will be added to the facility and
subsequent  syndication  may bring the number of banks  involved up to 40. These
facilities  were  established  both for funding the  acquisition  and to provide
other working  capital needs for National Grid. In addition,  National Grid will
have  access to other  internal  sources  of funds for the  acquisition,  namely
existing cash balances.  As of February 28, 1999, the National Grid Group had on
hand deposits of $1,538 million.

     D.   Management  and  Operations  of National  Grid and NEES  Following the
          Merger

          1.   National Grid

     Following  consummation  of the  Merger,  National  Grid  will  become  the
indirect  parent company to NEES. All of National  Grid's other  operations will
remain  unchanged  in the  Merger.  The Merger  Agreement  provides  that at the
effective time of the Merger,  National Grid will appoint Richard P. Sergel, the
NEES president and chief  executive  officer and one  additional  NEES director,
Paul Joskow, to National Grid's board of directors.  There will be ten directors
in all after the Merger.  Both Richard Sergel and Paul Joskow are U.S.  citizens
and residents of New England.  Robert Faircloth,  who is also a U.S. citizen and
part-time resident of New England,  currently serves on the National Grid board.
The management of National Grid shall otherwise remain unchanged by the Merger.

     National  Grid's  proposed  board  composition   demonstrates  a  continued
commitment  to  maintaining  a local  presence in the U.S.  that is sensitive to
local concerns. Indeed, National Grid intends to expand its presence in the U.S.
as  opportunities  arise  in the  restructuring  electricity  industry  and,  in
particular, within the fragmented New England market. National Grid's commitment
to the New England region is also  demonstrated by its commitment to continue to
provide  charitable  contributions  and community support within the New England
region at annual levels substantially comparable to the annual level of

                                      -17-
<PAGE>

charitable contributions and community support provided, directly or indirectly,
by NEES and its public utility subsidiaries within the New England region during
1997./5/

     Upon  consummation  of the  Merger,  National  Grid  and  the  Intermediate
Companies will register as holding  companies  under Section 5 of the Act. It is
intended that  National  Grid  Holdings  will be qualified as a foreign  utility
company  within the  meaning of Section 33 of the Act,  and that all  operations
thereunder will claim the benefit of the FUCO exemption.

          2.   NEES

     Following  consummation of the Merger,  NEES will become an indirect wholly
owned  subsidiary of National  Grid and its common  shares will be  deregistered
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and delisted from the New
York Stock  Exchange  and the Boston  Stock  Exchange.  The NEES  Agreement  and
Declaration  of Trust will be replaced  by  corporate  bylaws for the  surviving
entity in the Merger.  The Merger  Agreement  provides that the  headquarters of
NEES as the  surviving  entity will remain in  Massachusetts,  with  offices for
utility  operations  in  Massachusetts,  Rhode  Island  and New  Hampshire.  The
post-Merger  NEES board of  directors  will be  comprised  of up to nine members
designated from among the officers of National Grid and NEES, as mutually agreed
by National Grid and NEES. In addition,  the then-current  outside  directors of
NEES will be appointed to an advisory  board to be  maintained  for at least two
years after the effectiveness of the Merger.  The function of the advisory board
will be to advise the  surviving  entity's  board of  directors  with respect to
general business  opportunities and activities in the surviving  entity's market
area as well as customer relations issues. NEES will remain a registered holding
company under the Act.

     E.   Industry Restructuring Initiatives Affecting U.S. Operations.

     NEES'  public  utility  subsidiaries  operate  in states in which  electric
utility restructuring has advanced  significantly over the past year and a half.
The Applicants

- ----------
/5/  Agreement  and Plan of Merger,  dated as of December 11, 1998, by and among
     NEES, National Grid and NGG Holdings LLC, Section 7.07(c).
- ----------

                                      -18-
<PAGE>

believe that these  restructuring  efforts will continue to lead to  significant
changes in the electric utility industry in New England and will serve as models
for restructuring efforts in other parts of the nation.

     Starting in 1996 and continuing through 1998, restructuring legislation was
passed in Massachusetts,  Rhode Island and New Hampshire relating to competition
and customer choice of power suppliers,  recovery of stranded costs by utilities
and  reductions  in rates.  During this  period,  and in some cases prior to the
enactment  of  legislation,  NEES'  public  utility  subsidiaries  entered  into
settlement agreements with their relevant state regulators relating to corporate
restructuring  and the  introduction  of  retail  access  to  competitive  power
suppliers.  The  settlement  agreements  were also  approved  by the  FERC.  The
overriding  principle  in this  restructuring  was that the  transition  to full
competition at the retail level should be accomplished by separating  generation
from transmission to create a regime of independent  transmission companies with
a competitive market for power suppliers. Accordingly, NEES and its subsidiaries
committed to the divestiture of all generating facilities, including all nuclear
plants, to the extent practicable. As noted above, in 1998, NEP and Narragansett
completed  the sale of  substantially  all  non-nuclear  generation  facilities,
including  obligations  under power purchase and sale  agreements,  to USGen New
England,  Inc.  As a  result  of  this  divestiture,  NEES  is now  primarily  a
transmission   and  distribution   system  operating  in  a  region   undergoing
significant restructuring. National Grid, which is the world's largest privately
owned independent  transmission company, has participated in the transition to a
competitive  electric  market in  England  and Wales and now has had nine  years
experience in operating in a competitive environment. The industry restructuring
that is  occurring  in New  England is a critical  factor in  understanding  the
rationale  and  benefits of the Merger,  which are  discussed  in detail in Item
3.A.2.b below.

     Pursuant to Mass. Electric's settlement with state regulators and the FERC,
and in  accordance  with  legislation  enacted  in  Massachusetts  in late 1997,
starting in March,  1998,  customers of Mass.  Electric have been able to choose
their power supplier.  The legislation  requires  electric  utilities to provide
customers  who do not choose a power  supplier  with  standard  offer service at
prices that produce a 10 percent rate reduction from

                                      -19-
<PAGE>

the prices that were in effect in 1997. The  legislation  also requires the rate
reductions  to  increase  to 15% (in real terms  over 1997  prices) on or before
September of 1999. The settlement and  legislation  also authorized the recovery
of stranded costs resulting from the introduction of customer  choice.  The MDTE
approved the settlement and found it to be consistent  with the  legislation.  A
November 1998 referendum on the ballot in  Massachusetts  calling for the repeal
of the Massachusetts statute was defeated by the voters.

     Under the Massachusetts settlement agreement providing for customer choice,
recovery  of NEP's  stranded  costs is allowed  through a  contract  termination
charge billed to Mass.  Electric and  Nantucket,  which is in turn  collected by
Mass.   Electric  and  Nantucket  from  all  retail  delivery   customers.   The
Massachusetts  settlement agreement also required the relevant NEES companies to
divest  all of  their  generation  and  related  properties,  and the  companies
completed the sale of their  non-nuclear  generating assets to USGen New England
in 1998. The net proceeds of such sale were used to reduce the transition access
charge  from  2.8  cents  per kWh  initially  reflected  in the  settlement.  In
addition,  NEES's oil and gas properties were sold to Sameden Oil Corporation as
of January 1, 1998.  Through power  purchase  contracts  with USGen New England,
Inc.  and  TransCanada  Power  Marketing  Ltd.,  Mass.   Electric  is  providing
transition  services  to  customers  who do not  choose  a power  supplier.  The
Massachusetts settlement agreement and related transactions were approved by the
MDTE and the FERC.

     The  State of  Rhode  Island  enacted  restructuring  legislation  in 1996,
allowing certain customers in the state to choose power suppliers  pursuant to a
phase in schedule  that is now  complete.  NEP and  Narragansett  entered into a
settlement  agreement  with the RIPUC and RIDIV to implement the  legislation on
terms  similar  to  the  Massachusetts  settlement  agreement  with  respect  to
divestiture,  stranded cost recovery and transition  services.  This  settlement
agreement was approved by the FERC.

     While restructuring  efforts in New Hampshire began early, with the passage
of legislation in 1996,  regulatory efforts have largely been halted as a result
of  litigation  by  other  in-state  utilities.  Granite  State  entered  into a
settlement  with the Governor of New Hampshire and several  public  interest and
customer groups in July 1998 that provided all of

                                      -20-
<PAGE>

its customers with the right to choose their electricity  suppler and guaranteed
a rate reduction of 10 percent.  Following the sale of the system's  non-nuclear
generation  facilities,  additional  savings  were passed on to Granite  State's
customers. Under the settlement transition service was to be provided by Granite
State for a two and one-half year period. In January 1999,  following an auction
process,  Granite State selected  Constellation Power Source as the supplier for
its  transition  service  offer,  replacing  USGen  New  England.   Again,  this
settlement  agreement  was  approved  by the  NHPUC  and  FERC.

Item 2.  Fees, Commissions and Expenses

                                                                        Millions

Accountants' fees                                                           $6.9

Legal fees and expenses                                                      9.5

Shareholder communication and proxy solicitation expenses                    2.3

Investment bankers' fees and expenses                                       30.7

Consulting fees                                                               .8

Miscellaneous                                                                4.0

     Total                                                                 $54.2

     The total  fees,  commissions  and  expenses  expected  to be  incurred  in
connection with the Merger are estimated to be approximately $54.2 million.

                                      -21-
<PAGE>

Item 3.  Applicable Statutory Provisions

     The following sections of the Act and the Commission's rules thereunder are
or may be directly or indirectly applicable to the proposed transaction:

Sections of         Transactions to which section or rule is or may be
the Act             applicable:
- -----------
2(a)(7),  2(a)(8)   Request for declaration that Intermediate  Companies and NEP
                    are not holding  companies or subsidiary  companies,  solely
                    for purposes of Section 11(b)(2)

4, 5                Registration of National Grid as a holding company following
                    the consummation of the Merger

9(a)(2), 10         Acquisition  by National Grid of common stock of NEES public
                    utility subsidiary companies

11(b)(2)            Request for declaration that the Intermediate  Companies are
                    not subsidiary  companies or holding companies,  solely with
                    respect  to the  "great-grandfather"  provisions  of Section
                    11(b)(2).

13                  Approval of the Service  Agreement and services  provided to
                    affiliates  thereunder by New England Power Service  Company
                    [if any  National  Grid  affiliates  are  added  to  Service
                    Agreement]

14, 15              Reporting, books and records

33                  Operations  of National  Grid  Holdings  and its  subsidiary
                    companies.

Rules
- -----
45(a), 52           Financing transactions, generally

80-91               Affiliate transactions, generally

93, 94              Accounts, records  and annual reports  by subsidiary service
                    company

To the  extent  that  other  sections  of the  Act  or  the  Commission's  rules
thereunder are deemed  applicable to the merger,  such sections and rules should
be considered to be set forth in this Item 3.

A.   Legal Analysis

                                      -22-
<PAGE>

     Section 9(a)(2) makes it unlawful, without approval of the Commission under
Section  10,  "for any person . . . to  acquire,  directly  or  indirectly,  any
security of any public utility company,  if such person is an affiliate . . . of
such  company and of any other  public  utility or holding  company,  or will by
virtue of such acquisition  become such an affiliate."  Under the definition set
forth in Section  2(a)(11)(A),  an "affiliate" of a specified company means "any
person that directly or indirectly owns, controls,  or holds with power to vote,
5 per centum or more of the  outstanding  voting  securities  of such  specified
company."

     Because  National Grid directly or indirectly,  will acquire more than five
percent of the voting  securities of each of the U.S. Utility  Subsidiaries as a
result of the merger,  and thus will become an "affiliate" as defined in Section
2(a)(11)(A)  of the Act of the U.S.  Utility  Subsidiaries  as a  result  of the
merger,  National Grid must obtain the approval of the Commission for the Merger
under  Sections  9(a)(2)  and 10 of  the  Act.  The  statutory  standards  to be
considered  by the  Commission in evaluating  the proposed  transaction  are set
forth in Sections 10(b), 10(c) and 10(f) of the Act.

     As set  forth  more  fully  below,  the  Merger  complies  with  all of the
applicable  provisions  of Section 10 of the Act and should be  approved  by the
Commission because:

     -    the consideration to be paid in the Merger is fair and reasonable;

     -    the  Merger  will not create  detrimental  interlocking  relations  or
          concentration of control;

     -    the Merger will not result in an unduly complicated  capital structure
          for the National Grid system;

     -    the Merger is in the public  interest  and the  interests of investors
          and consumers;

     -    the Merger is consistent with Sections 8 and 11 of the Act;

     -    the Merger tends towards the economical  and efficient  development of
          an integrated public utility system; and

                                      -23-
<PAGE>

     -    the Merger will comply with all applicable state laws

          1.   Section 10(b)

     Section  10(b)  provides  that,  if the  requirements  of Section 10(f) are
satisfied,  the  Commission  shall  approve an  acquisition  under  Section 9(a)
unless:

     (1)  such  acquisition  will tend  towards  interlocking  relations  or the
          concentration of control of public utility companies,  of a kind or to
          an extent  detrimental  to the public  interest  or the  interests  of
          investors or consumers;

     (2)  in case of the  acquisition  of  securities  or  utility  assets,  the
          consideration,    including   all   fees,   commissions,   and   other
          remuneration, to whomsoever paid, to be given, directly or indirectly,
          in connection with such acquisition is not reasonable or does not bear
          a fair relation to the sums invested in or the earning capacity of the
          utility  assets to be acquired or the utility  assets  underlying  the
          securities to be acquired; or

     (3)  such acquisition will unduly  complicate the capital  structure of the
          holding  company system of the applicant or will be detrimental to the
          public  interest or the  interests  of  investors  or consumers or the
          proper functioning of such holding company system.

               a.   Section 10(b)(1)

                    i.   Interlocking Relationships

     By its  nature,  any  merger  results  in  new  links  between  theretofore
unrelated  companies.  Northeast  Utilities,  Holding Co. Act Release No.  25221
(Dec.  21,  1990),  as  modified,  Holding Co. Act Release No.  25273 (March 15,
1991),  aff'd sub nom.  City of Holyoke v. SEC,  972 F.2d 358 (D.C.  Cir.  1992)
("interlocking  relationships  are  necessary  to  integrate  [the  two  merging
entities]").  The  Merger  Agreement  provides  for the  Board of  Directors  of
National  Grid to be composed of members of the Board of  Directors  of National
Grid and from top management of NEES.  This is necessary to integrate NEES fully
into the National Grid system and will  therefore be in the public  interest and
the

                                      -24-
<PAGE>

interests of investors and  consumers.  Forging such  relations is beneficial to
the  protected  interests  under the Act and thus are not  prohibited by Section
10(b)(1).

                    ii.  Concentration of Control

     Section  10(b)(1)  is  intended  to avoid "an excess of  concentration  and
bigness"  while  preserving  the  "opportunities  for  economies  of scale,  the
elimination of duplicate  facilities and  activities,  the sharing of production
capacity and reserves and generally more efficient  operations"  afforded by the
coordination of local  utilities into an integrated  system.  American  Electric
Power Co., 46 S.E.C.  1299, 1309 (1978). In applying Section 10(b)(1) to utility
acquisitions,  the Commission must determine whether the acquisition will create
"the type of  structures  and  combinations  at which  the Act was  specifically
directed." Vermont Yankee Nuclear Corp., 43 S.E.C. 693, 700 (1968). As discussed
below, the Merger will not create a "huge,  complex, and irrational system," but
rather  will  result  in  a  new  holding  company  over  a  previously-approved
integrated  electric  utility system.  See WPL Holdings,  Inc.,  Holding Co. Act
Release No.  24590 (Feb.  26,  1988),  aff'd in part and rev'd in part sub nom.,
Wisconsin's  Environmental  Decade,  Inc. v. SEC, 882 F.2d 523 (D.C. Cir. 1989),
reaffirmed, Holding Co. Act Release No. 25377 (Sept. 18, 1991).

     Competitive  Effects: In Northeast  Utilities,  Holding Co. Act Release No.
25221 (Dec. 21, 1990), the Commission stated that "antitrust ramifications of an
acquisition  must be considered  in light of the fact that public  utilities are
regulated monopolies and that federal and state administrative agencies regulate
the rates charged consumers." National Grid and NEES have filed Notification and
Report Forms with the DOJ and FTC pursuant to the HSR Act describing the effects
of the Merger on competition and the Merger has been cleared by these agencies.

     In addition, the competitive impact of the Merger has been fully considered
by the FERC  pursuant to Section  203 of the Federal  Power Act in its review of
the Merger.  As explained more fully in the FERC order  approving the Merger,  a
copy of which is attached  hereto as Exhibit D-1.2,  the Merger will not have an
adverse effect on  competition.  NEES and its subsidiary  companies,  on the one
hand, and National Grid and

                                      -25-
<PAGE>

its related companies,  on the other, do not have facilities or sell products in
any common  geographic  markets.  With the exception of NEES Global,  which does
some limited  consulting  work outside of the United States,  the NEES companies
operate exclusively in the United States,  selling electricity and transmission,
distribution  and related  energy  services.  National  Grid and its  subsidiary
companies  operate almost  exclusively in the United Kingdom and other countries
outside the United States.

     For these reasons, the Merger will not "tend toward interlocking  relations
or the  concentration of control" of public utility  companies,  of a kind or to
the extent  detrimental to the public  interest or the interests of investors or
customers within the meaning of Section 10(b)(1).

               b.   Section 10(b)(2) -- Fairness of Consideration

     Section  10(b)(2)   requires  the  Commission  to  determine   whether  the
consideration  to be given by National  Grid to the holders of NEES common stock
in connection with the Merger is reasonable and whether it bears a fair relation
to  investment  in and earning  capacity of the utility  assets  underlying  the
securities  being  acquired.  Market prices at which  securities are traded have
always been strong  indicators  as to values.  As shown in the table below,  the
quarterly  price data,  high and low, for NEES common stock provide  support for
the consideration of $53.75 for each share of NEES common stock.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 NEES

                            High                 Low                Dividends
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1996

First Quarter              40 5/8                36 1/8               $0.59

Second Quarter             36 7/8                32 7/8                0.59

Third Quarter              36 3/8                31 1/8                0.59

Fourth Quarter             35 5/8                31                    0.59
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                      -26-
<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1997

First Quarter              35 5/8                33 3/8                0.59

Second Quarter             37 1/8                33 1/4                0.59

Third Quarter              39 11/16              36 1/4                0.59

Fourth Quarter             43 5/16               37 1/4                0.59
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1998

First Quarter              45 13/16              41                    0.59

Second Quarter             45 9/16               40 5/8                0.59

Third Quarter              45 3/8                38 15/16              0.59

Fourth Quarter             49 1/8                40 5/16               0.59
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     On  December  11,  1998,  the last  full  trading  day  before  the  public
announcement of the execution and delivery of the Merger Agreement,  the closing
price per share as reported  on the  NYSE-Composite  Transaction  of NEES common
stock was $43.

     In addition,  the  consideration  is the product of extensive  and vigorous
arms-length negotiations between National Grid and NEES. These negotiations were
preceded by months of due  diligence,  analysis  and  evaluation  of the assets,
liabilities  and business  prospects of the respective  companies.  See National
Grid Circular (Exhibit C-2 hereto); NEES proxy statement (Exhibit C-1 hereto).

     Finally,  internationally-recognized  investment  bankers for both National
Grid and NEES have reviewed extensive  information  concerning the companies and
analyzed a variety of valuation  methodologies,  and have provided advice to the
companies that the consideration is fair, from a financial point of view, to the
holders of National Grid ordinary  shares and NEES common stock.  The investment
bankers' analyses are attached hereto. See National Grid Circular (Exhibit C-2);
Opinion of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Incorporated (Exhibit G-1).

     In  light  of these  opinions  and an  analysis  of all  relevant  factors,
including the benefits that may be realized as a result of the Merger,  National
Grid believes that the

                                      -27-
<PAGE>

consideration  for the Merger bears a fair relation to the sums invested in, and
the earning capacity of, the utility assets of NEES.

               c.   Section 10(b)(2) -- Reasonableness of Fees

     National  Grid believes  that the overall  fees,  commissions  and expenses
incurred and to be incurred in  connection  with the Merger are  reasonable  and
fair in light  of the  size  and  complexity  of the  Merger  relative  to other
transactions and the anticipated benefits of the Merger to the public, investors
and consumers;  that they are consistent  with recent  precedent;  and that they
meet the standards of Section 10(b)(2).

     As set forth in Item 2 of this  Application/Declaration,  National Grid and
NEES together expect to incur a combined total of approximately $54.2 million in
fees,  commissions  and  expenses in  connection  with the  Merger.  By example,
American  Electric  Power  Company and Central and South West  Corporation  have
represented  that they expect to incur  total  transaction  fees and  regulatory
processing fees of approximately $53 million,  including financial advisory fees
of approximately $31 million, in connection with their proposed Merger.

     The Applicants  believe that the estimated fees and expenses in this matter
bear a fair  relation  to the  value of NEES and the  strategic  benefits  to be
achieved by the  Merger,  and further  that the fees and  expenses  are fair and
reasonable in light of the  complexity of the Merger.  See Northeast  Utilities,
Holding  Co. Act Release No.  25548 (June 3, 1992),  modified on other  grounds,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 25550 (June 4, 1992)  (noting that fees and expenses
must bear a fair  relation to the value of the  company to be  acquired  and the
benefits to be achieved in connection with the acquisition).  Based on the price
of NEES stock on December 11, 1998, the Merger would be valued at  approximately
$3.2 billion.  The total estimated fees and expenses of $54.2 million  represent
approximately  1.69% of the value of the  consideration  to be paid by  National
Grid Company,  and are consistent with  percentages  previously  approved by the
Commission.  See, e.g.,  Entergy Corp.,  Holding Co. Act Release No. 25952 (Dec.
17, 1993) (fees and expenses represented  approximately 1.7% of the value of the
consideration paid to the

                                      -28-
<PAGE>

shareholders of Gulf States  Utilities);  Northeast  Utilities,  Holding Co. Act
Release No. 25548 (June 3, 1992) (approximately 2% of the value of the assets to
be acquired).

               d.   Section 10(b)(3)

     Section  10(b)(3)  requires the Commission to determine  whether a proposed
acquisition will unduly  complicate the acquiror's  capital structure or will be
detrimental to the public  interest or the interest of investors or consumers or
the proper functioning of the resulting system.

     For the reasons that follow,  the capital  structure of National  Grid will
not be unduly complicated nor will it be detrimental to the public interest, the
interest of investors or  consumers  or the proper  functioning  of the combined
system.

     The  Applicants  are  proposing  a  structure  for the Merger  that will be
completely  transparent  between National Grid and NEES and will meet all of the
requirements of the 1935 Act.

     In the Merger,  current common  shareholders  of NEES will receive cash (in
the  aggregate,  the "Cash  Consideration")  in exchange  for their NEES shares.
National  Grid  proposes  to  obtain  the  amount  of cash  comprising  the Cash
Consideration  from existing cash resources and through the Bank Loans. The Bank
Loans will be  straightforward  commercial loans from  sophisticated  commercial
lenders  directly  to  National  Grid.  The  Bank  Loans  will be full  recourse
obligations  of National Grid and will be neither  guaranteed by, nor secured by
any assets of, any subsidiary of National Grid which directly or indirectly owns
equity  securities  of NEES.  In no event will National Grid issue any equity or
debt  securities to NEES  shareholders as  consideration  for the Merger and the
acquisition of NEES.

     Upon  consummation of the Merger,  NEES will become a wholly owned indirect
subsidiary of National Grid. National Grid proposes to hold its interest in NEES
through the Intermediate  Companies.  Each of the Intermediate Companies will be
organized  under the laws of either a member  state of the  European  Union with
which the U.S. has a comprehensive Double Taxation Treaty or a state of the U.S.
All of the

                                      -29-
<PAGE>

Intermediate  Companies will be directly or indirectly  wholly owned by National
Grid and will have no public or private  institutional  equity or debt  holders.
The  Intermediate  Companies will be capitalized  with equity and/or debt all of
which will be held by either National Grid, UK Finance (as a debtholder only) or
another  Intermediate  Company.  The  ultimate  U.S.  parent  of  NEES  will  be
capitalized  with  both  equity  and  debt,  to be  held  by one or  more of the
Intermediate Companies. Absent such additional approval as may be required, none
of the  Intermediate  Companies  will be engaged in any  business or trade other
than the business of owning,  directly or indirectly,  equity securities of NEES
and the financing transactions which are the subject of this memorandum and none
of the  Intermediate  Companies will be regulated by U.K. or other third country
regulatory authorities having jurisdiction over electricity rates and service.

     As a wholly owned indirect  subsidiary of National  Grid,  NEES will retain
its  designation as a registered  holding  company under the 1935 Act as well as
its  current  capital  structure.  Neither  NEES nor any of the NEES  Subsidiary
Companies  will incur any  additional  indebtedness  or issue any  securities to
finance any part of the Cash Consideration. Except with respect to the effect in
corporate  structure  resulting  from the  potential  conversion  of NEES from a
business trust into a business corporation,  the acquisition of NEES by National
Grid and the corporate and financing mechanics summarized above are not designed
or intended to alter or otherwise  affect the current  corporate  structure  and
financing  obligations  of the NEES Group  companies  as members of a registered
holding company system.

                  It is  contemplated  that the companies in the NEES Group will
each  continue  to pay  dividends  (and,  in the  case  of the  NEES  Subsidiary
Companies,  dividends  on  preferred  stock and  interest  on and  principal  of
long-term debt).  Dividends paid by NEES may ultimately be used by National Grid
or UK Finance,  as the case may be, to pay interest on and principal of the Bank
Loans./6/

- ----------
/6/  In a companion filing,  National Grid and the U.S. Subsidiary Companies are
     requesting  authority to pay dividends out of additional paid-in capital up
     to the amount of NEES'  consolidated  retained  earnings  just prior to the
     Merger and out of earnings before amortization of goodwill  thereafter.  In
     no event would  dividends be paid if the equity of NEES as a percentage  of
     total capital was below 30% on a consolidated  basis. File No. 70-9519 (the
     "Financing Application").
- ----------

                                      -30-
<PAGE>

               i.   The  presence of debt at more than one level of the National
                    Grid  system  does  not  "unduly   complicate"  the  capital
                    structure of that company for purposes of Section 10(b)(3).

     Implementation of the Transaction structure requires that a number of steps
be taken in a specified  sequence in order to achieve the  economic  benefits of
the  Transaction  structure  as  an  entirety.  While  many  of  the  individual
transactional steps necessary to implement the Transaction  structure will occur
prior to  consummation  of the Merger at a time when National Grid will continue
to enjoy the benefits of exemption  under Rule 5,  completion of a number of the
steps  necessary to  implement  the  Transaction  structure  will occur  shortly
following  consummation  of the Merger and, thus, will be subject to SEC review.
We  request  that the SEC view  all of the  steps  necessary  to  implement  the
Transaction  structure  in their  entirety  as they  are,  in fact,  constituent
elements comprising a single transaction.

     In addition, we recognize that, in prior matters involving the formation of
a registered  holding  company,  the SEC has  considered  preliminary  financing
transactions  (i.e.,   transactions  occurring  prior  to  the  formation  of  a
registered  holding company) in view of their effect on the capital structure of
the resulting  holding  company.  For example,  in connection with the merger of
Atlantic  Energy,  Inc. and Delmarva Power & Light Co., the SEC took occasion to
comment on the fact that the resulting registered holding company would have two
classes  of common  stock --  notwithstanding  that,  at the time the  letter or
tracking stock was issued, the issuer was not a registered holding company.  The
SEC did not address the specific question of whether it had jurisdiction to pass
on the securities  issuance but instead noted that, under Section  7(c)(2)(A) of
the 1935 Act, a registered  holding company can issue other than "plain vanilla"
securities  "solely . . . for the purpose of effecting a Merger,  consolidation,
or other reorganization."  Conectiv, Inc., Holding Company Act Release No. 26832
(Feb. 25, 1998).  Accordingly,  to the extent that the SEC might choose to treat
any element of the implementation of the Transaction structure, such

                                      -31-
<PAGE>

as the borrowing of the Bank Loans, as a jurisdictional  event, there is express
statutory  provision for such transactions  under Section 7(c)(2)(A) of the 1935
Act. The applicants note further that the Commission has previously approved the
use of  parent-level  debt by a registered  electric  utility holding company in
connection  with  a  cross-border  transaction.   In  General  Public  Utilities
Corporation,  Holding Co. Act Release No. 26559 (Aug. 23, 1996),  the Commission
authorized GPU to issue and sell  debentures with terms of one to up to 40 years
and to use the proceeds of such  financings  to, among other  things,  "fund the
acquisition  of interests,  and to make  investments,  in . . . foreign  utility
companies," and "for other GPU corporate purposes."

     Nor does the presence of parent  level debt to be used for general  working
capital  represent an undue  complication  of the capital  structure of National
Grid for purposes of Section 10(b)(1). In the first instance, to the extent that
the debt is  associated  with  facilities  that have been  entered  into  before
National Grid becomes a registered  holding company,  it should be grandfathered
for  purposes  of the  Act.  Second,  and  more  important,  Section  7(c)(2)(D)
expressly  provides  for the  issuance  of  nontraditional  securities  if "such
security  is to be issued  or sold  solely  for  necessary  or urgent  corporate
purposes of the declarant where the  requirements of the provisions of paragraph
(1) would impose an unreasonable financial burden upon the declarant and are not
necessary  or  appropriate  in the  public  interest  or for the  protection  of
investors or  consumers."  Registered  gas systems have relied on this provision
for years in connection with their routine  financing  transactions.  See, e.g.,
The Columbia Gas System, Inc., Holding Co. Act Release No. 26634 (Dec. 23, 1996)
(authorizing Columbia to issue external,  long-term debt which, in the aggregate
with equity financing issued by Columbia, would not exceed $5 billion at any one
time outstanding  through  December 31, 2001). In addition,  as noted above, the
Commission has also authorized registered electric systems to issue parent-level
debt for general  corporate  purposes.  General  Public  Utilities  Corporation,
Holding Co. Act Release No. 26559 (Aug. 23, 1996).

     Further, the issue for purposes of Section 10(b)(3) is not the existence of
parent-level debt per se. Rather,  the question is whether it is permissible for
a registered  system to have debt at more than one level.  Again, the Commission
has answered that

                                      -32-
<PAGE>

question in the  affirmative.  In the 1992 amendments to Rule 52, the Commission
eliminated the requirement that a public-utility  subsidiary company could issue
debt  to  nonassociates  only  if its  parent  holding  company  had  issued  no
securities  other  than  common  stock and  short-term  debt.  The rule  release
explains:

          Condition (6) provides that a  public-utility  subsidiary  company may
     issue and sell  securities  to  nonassociates  only if its  parent  holding
     company has issued no  securities  other than common  stock and  short-term
     debt. All eight commenters that considered this condition  recommended that
     it be  eliminated.  They  noted  that it may be  appropriate  for a holding
     company to issue and sell  long-term  debt and that such a  transaction  is
     subject to prior  Commission  approval.  They further  observed  that other
     controls,  that  did not  exist  when  the  statute  was  enacted,  provide
     assurance that such  financings  will not lead to abuse.  These include the
     likely adverse reaction of rating agencies to excessive  amounts of debt at
     the parent holding  company level and the disclosure  required of companies
     seeking public capital.  The Commission agrees with these  observations and
     also noted the power of many state utility commissions to limit the ability
     of utility  subsidiaries to service holding company debt by restricting the
     payment of dividends to the parent company.  The Commission  concludes that
     this provision should be eliminated.

Exemption  of  Issuance  and  Sale  of  Certain  Securities  by   Public-Utility
Subsidiary Companies of Registered Public-Utility Holding Companies, Holding Co.
Act Release No. 25573 (July 7, 1992).

     The Applicants have  commissioned a study by Professor Julian Franks of the
London Business School,  working with  independent  consultants from the Brattle
Group,  to address the  financial  strength of the  registered  holding  company
system  post-Merger.  A copy of the study is attached as Exhibit  J-3. The study
examines  National  Grid's  debt  level  after both the  instant  Merger and the
acquisition by NEES of EUA, and concludes that National Grid's  post-acquisition
debt, relative to its projected rate base, will lie within a

                                      -33-
<PAGE>

range for comparable U.S. utilities.  Credit rating agencies have confirmed that
National Grid will retain a strong credit rating. The debt issuances of National
Grid  currently  have a rating  of "AA"  from  Standard  & Poor's  and "A1" from
Moody's. The major rating agencies have indicated that National Grid will retain
at least an "A" rating  post-Merger.  The  financial  strength of the company is
confirmed by the  competitive  terms under which  National Grid has been able to
secure financing for the proposed transaction./7/

               ii.  The Merger will not be detrimental to the public interest or
                    the  interest  of  investors  or  consumers  or  the  proper
                    functioning of the registered holding company system.

     For the reasons set forth previously, and discussed below in the context of
Section 10(c)(2), the Applicants believe that the proposed Merger will, in fact,
benefit the  protected  interests and enhance the  functioning  of the resulting
holding  company  systems.  NEES and National Grid are requesting an affirmation
from  each of the  affected  state  regulators  that it has  the  authority  and
resources to protect  consumers  subject to its jurisdiction and that it intends
to exercise that authority. In addition,  National Grid commits that it will not
seek  recovery in higher rates to NEES  ratepayers  for any losses or inadequate
returns that may be  associated  with its  non-NEES  investments.  Finally,  the
Merger is  expected  to have no  adverse  effect on the rights of holders of the
outstanding   preferred  stock  and  debt  securities  of  the  NEES  Subsidiary
Companies./8/  Accordingly,  the proposed  Merger will not be detrimental to the
public  interest  or the  interest  of  investors  or  consumers  or the  proper
functioning of the registered holding company system.

          2.   Section 10(c)

     Section 10(c) of the Act provides that,  notwithstanding  the provisions of
Section 10(b), the Commission shall not approve:

- ----------
/7/  The  Applicants  are  submitting,  on a  confidential  basis,  a series  of
     financial projections for NEES, EUA and the consolidated National Grid. The
     projections  are intended to  demonstrate  the ability of National  Grid to
     service its indebtedness in a reasonable manner.

/8/  NEES   currently  has  no  public   security   holders  other  than  common
     stockholders.
- ----------

                                      -34-
<PAGE>

     (1)  an  acquisition  of  securities  or  utility  assets,  or of any other
          interest,  which is unlawful  under the  provisions of Section 8 or is
          detrimental to the carrying out of the provisions of Section 11; or

     (2)  the acquisition of securities or utility assets of a public utility or
          holding company unless the Commission finds that such acquisition will
          serve the  public  interest  by tending  towards  the  economical  and
          efficient development of an integrated public utility system.

               a.   Section 10(c)(1)

     Section  10(c)(1),  in  the  first  instance,   precludes  approval  of  an
acquisition  that is unlawful  under the  standards of Section 8. That  section,
which  requires  compliance  with  the  applicable  state  laws  concerning  the
ownership or operation of the utility assets of an electric  utility company and
a gas utility company serving  substantially the same territory,  does not apply
to the instant Merger.

     Section  10(c)(1) also requires that an  acquisition  not be detrimental to
carrying out the provisions of Section 11. Section 11(a) directs the Commission:

          to examine the corporate structure of every registered holding company
     and subsidiary  company thereof,  the relationships  among the companies in
     the  holding-company  system of every such company and the character of the
     interests  thereof  and the  properties  owned  or  controlled  thereby  to
     determine   the   extent  to  which  the   corporate   structure   of  such
     holding-company  system  and  the  companies  therein  may  be  simplified,
     unnecessary  complexities  therein  eliminated,  voting  power  fairly  and
     equitably  distributed  among the holders of  securities  thereof,  and the
     properties and business  thereof confined to those necessary or appropriate
     to the operations of an integrated public-utility system.

Sections  11(b)(1)  and  11(b)(2)  provide  further  directions  concerning  the
specifics of a permissible registered holding company system.

                                      -35-
<PAGE>

               i.   The  Merger  will  satisfy  the   requirements   of  Section
                    11(b)(1), as incorporated by Section 10(c)(1).

          Section 11(b)(1) directs the Commission:

          To  require  . . . that  each  registered  holding  company,  and each
     subsidiary  company  thereof,  shall  take  such  take  such  action as the
     Commission   shall  find   necessary  to  limit  the   operations   of  the
     holding-company  system  of  which  such  company  is a  part  to a  single
     integrated  public-utility  system,  and to such  other  businesses  as are
     reasonably  incidental,  or  economically  necessary or  appropriate to the
     operations of such integrated  public-utility  system. . . . The Commission
     may  permit  as  reasonably   incidental,   or  economically  necessary  or
     appropriate  to the  operations  of one or more  integrated  public-utility
     systems  the  retention  of an  interest  in any  business  (other than the
     business of a  public-utility  company as such) which the Commission  shall
     find necessary or appropriate in the public  interest or for the protection
     of investors or consumers and not detrimental to the proper  functioning of
     such system or systems.

For purposes of the single system requirement,  the Merger would simply impose a
new holding company structure over a fully-integrated electric utility system.

     The question then becomes  whether the "other  businesses" of National Grid
are  retainable  under the standards of Section 11 and the statutory  amendments
thereto.  As previously  noted,  National Grid  Holdings,  National  Grid's only
direct  subsidiary,  will  claim an  exemption  as a FUCO  under the Act.  Thus,
National  Grid  Holdings  and  all of  its  subsidiaries  will  be  exempt  from
regulation, and are retainable,  under the Act in accordance with the provisions
of Section 33(a)(1) of the Act.

     Although not jurisdictional, the parties note that National Grid's indirect
subsidiaries would be retainable in their own right as well. Attached as Exhibit
J-1 is a description of these subsidiaries and an explanation of the independent
bases for retention of each.

                                      -36-
<PAGE>

               ii.  The  Merger  will  satisfy  the   requirements   of  Section
                    11(b)(2), as incorporated by Section 10(c)(1).

     Section 11(b)(2) further directs the Commission:

          To  require  . . . that  each  registered  holding  company,  and each
     subsidiary  company thereof,  shall take such steps as the Commission shall
     find  necessary  to  ensure  that  the  corporate  structure  or  continued
     existence of any company in the holding-  company system does not unduly or
     unnecessarily   complicate  the  structure,   or  unfairly  or  inequitably
     distribute  voting power among security  holders,  of such  holding-company
     system.  In carrying out the  provisions of this  paragraph the  Commission
     shall require each registered  holding company (and any such company in the
     same holding company system with such holding  company) to take such action
     as the Commission  shall find necessary in order that such holding  company
     shall cease to be a holding  company with respect to each of its subsidiary
     companies which itself has a subsidiary company which is a holding company.
     Except for the purpose of fairly and  equitably  distributing  voting power
     among the security holders of such company, nothing in this paragraph shall
     authorize the  Commission to require any change in the corporate  structure
     or  existence  or any  company  which is not a holding  company,  or of any
     company whose principal business is that of a public-utility company.

There are two sets of issues under Section  11(b)(2):  first, will the corporate
structure  or  continued  existence  of  any  company  unduly  or  unnecessarily
complicate the structure of the National Grid holding company system post-Merger
and, second, will the Merger result in an unfair or inequitable  distribution of
voting  power among the security  holders of National  Grid.  As explained  more
fully below, any apparent  complexity in the resulting holding company system is
justified by the economic  efficiencies to be achieved thereby.  Further,  there
will be no inequitable  distribution of voting power as a result of the proposed
Merger.

                                      -37-
<PAGE>

     The  principal  economic  effect of the  Transaction  structure  will be to
permit National Grid to maximize after-tax returns, given that the consideration
for the Merger will be funded by external borrowings in the U.K. and cash in the
U.K. The only  external  parties to the  contemplated  transactions  will be the
sophisticated  commercial lenders that will be advancing moneys to National Grid
under  fully  negotiated  lending  agreements,  none of which will  involve  any
guarantees  by,  or  pledges  of assets  from,  the U.S.  Subsidiary  Companies,
including NEES and the NEES Subsidiary Companies.

     It is common  practice for U.K. based  multinational  corporations  to hold
their  non-U.K.   subsidiaries  through  one  or  more  intermediary   companies
incorporated  under the laws of European  Union  member  states.  These types of
transaction  structures  are  implemented  to minimize  the impact of tax on the
repatriation  of dividends  and interest to the U.K. and are  understood  by the
U.K.  tax  authorities.  National  Grid  has  used  this  type of  structure  in
connection  with its  other  foreign  investments.  Again,  in  considering  the
appropriateness  of the transaction  structure,  the Applicants ask the staff to
recognize  that this type of  corporate  and  financing  structure is normal for
cross-border  transactions.  In that  connection,  it is worth  noting that U.S.
registered  holding  companies  already employ similar  structures in connection
with their, albeit out-bound,  cross-border  transactions.  See, e.g., Exhibit H
from the Form U5S filed by The Southern  Company for the year ended December 31,
1997,  detailing  the  ownership  structure  for the system's  exempt  wholesale
generators ("EWGs") and FUCOs./9/

     o    National   Grid's   Corporate   Structure   Will  Not  Be  "Unduly  or
          Unnecessarily" Complicated.

     As noted above,  National  Grid's  proposed  transaction  structure is more
complicated  than the  traditional  corporate  structure  commonly  used by U.S.
registered  holding  companies  with  respect  to their  U.S.  subsidiaries  and
operations in that there will be more corporate layers between National Grid and
NEES than there are, for example,  between NEES and its operating  subsidiaries.
The Applicants believe that the structure is

- ----------
/9/  We  recognize  that  Section  11(b)(2)  does not,  by its  terms,  apply to
     acquisitions of EWGs and FUCOs because these entities,  by definition,  are
     not "public utility companies" within the meaning of the 1935 Act.
- ----------

                                      -38-
<PAGE>

nonetheless  appropriate  in that the type of  corporate  structure  proposed by
National Grid, with its principal  objective being to maximize after-tax returns
to  shareholders,  is the norm,  rather  than the  exception,  for  cross-border
transactions  generally.  Moreover,  as to  its  future  U.S.  subsidiaries  and
regulated utility  operations;  i.e., the NEES Group,  National Grid proposes to
continue the current NEES corporate and holding company system structure./10/

     Further,  the  Intermediate  Companies  will not be means by which National
Grid seeks to diffuse control of NEES and the NEES Subsidiary Companies. Rather,
these companies will be created as special-purpose entities for the sole purpose
of helping the parties to capture economic  efficiencies that might otherwise be
lost in a cross-border transaction. There will be no third-party investors; each
of the Intermediate Companies will be wholly-owned,  directly or indirectly,  by
National Grid. Nor will the "upper  structure"  affect the operation of the NEES
Group;  indeed,  the  corporate  structure  "downstream"  from NEES will  remain
unaffected as a result of the proposed Merger.  Finally,  at the end of the day,
both  National  Grid  and  NEES  will  be  fully  regulated  registered  holding
companies.  Accordingly,  the  Applicants  submit  that  this is not the type of
situation that concerned the drafters of the Act, and that the Commission should
thus  exercise  its  discretion  to find  that any  apparent  complexity  of the
proposed transaction structure is neither undue nor unnecessary.

     The  Commission  has  in  the  past,   consistent  with  its  role  as  the
administrative agency with the expertise, authority and discretion to administer
the 1935 Act in a  responsive  manner,  giving  due  regard to  relevant  policy
considerations,  recognized the necessity of permitting the continued  existence
of intermediate holding companies in registered holding company systems in order
to achieve economic and tax efficiencies  that would not otherwise be achievable
in the absence of such arrangements. Thus, in specific cases where the issue was
considered,  the Commission exercised reasonable discretion and, on the basis of
other relevant provisions of the 1935 Act, expressly permitted the continued

- ----------
/10/ Although NEP is technically a holding company,  the structure should not be
     a long-term  concern due to  shut-down/probable  sale of Yankee  companies.
     Nonetheless, the Applicants seek a declaratory order with respect to NEP as
     well,  solely  for  purposes  of  complying  with the  "great  grandfather"
     provisions of Section 11(b)(2).
- ----------

                                      -39-
<PAGE>

existence of  intermediate  holding  companies in a registered  holding  company
system,  apparently  on a finding of "no harm, no foul" and giving due regard to
the economic  desirability  of the corporate  structure and other  arrangements.
See, e.g., West Penn Railways Co.,  Holding Company Act Release No. 953 (Jan. 3,
1938) (expressly  authorizing the continued existence of an intermediate holding
company);  and West Texas Utilities Co.,  Holding Co. Act Release No. 4068 (Jan.
25, 1943)  (reserving  jurisdiction  under Section  11(b)(2) in connection  with
acquisition that resulted in the creation of a "great grandfather"  company). In
each of these  matters,  the Commission  apparently  concluded that the economic
benefits associated with the additional  corporate layers in the holding company
system outweighed the potential for harm and the possibility that there could be
a  recurrence  of the  financial  abuses  that  the  1935  Act was  intended  to
eliminate.  See West Penn Railways ("The substantial  traction  interests of the
West Penn Railways Company make it impractical,  from a financial standpoint, to
eliminate it as a separate corporation.");  and West Texas Utilities Co. (noting
likely bankruptcy of acquired company in the event transaction not approved).

     In the specific  cases in which the issue was considered and the Commission
ultimately   determined  to  permit  the  continued  existence  of  intermediate
companies in a registered  holding company system, in an apparent  contradiction
of the  "great-grandfather"  provisions  of  Section  11(b)(2)  (when  viewed in
isolation),  the Commission, in an exercise of reasonable discretion,  relied on
other  provisions of the 1935 Act, such as the definitions of "holding  company"
and  "subsidiary  company," to find that such  intermediate  companies  could be
excluded from  designation as "holding  companies" and  "subsidiary  companies,"
respectively,  and, thus, could be exempted from the "elimination" provisions of
Section  11(b).  Based on that  precedent,  the Applicants ask the Commission to
exercise  its  discretion  to  declare  the  Intermediate  Companies  not  to be
subsidiary  companies or holding  companies,  solely for purposes of  compliance
with the "great-grandfather" provisions of Section 11(b)(2).

     It is again worth emphasizing that none of the economic planning  reflected
in the proposed transaction structure will result in any change in the corporate
organization  of the NEES system (other than the change in  organization of NEES
from business trust to

                                      -40-
<PAGE>

corporation)  or in the  financing  transactions  undertaken  by  NEES  and  its
subsidiaries. NEES will receive cash in the form of equity from National Grid to
pay the Cash Consideration and neither NEES nor any of NEES's  subsidiaries will
borrow or issue any  security  or pledge any  assets to finance  any part of the
Cash  Consideration.  Thus,  there is no  possibility  that  implementation  and
continuance of the proposed  Transaction  structure  could result in an undue or
unnecessary  capital  structure to the  detriment of the public  interest or the
interest of consumers.

     The Applicants thus request that the Commission  exercise its authority and
discretion  (under all  relevant  sections of the 1935 Act and  considering  the
policy of the 1935 Act as a whole) to approve the  transaction  structure in the
instant situation because,  as with "out-bound"  investments by U.S.  registered
holding  companies,  the "layers of  complication"  are in fact the economically
necessary and efficient bridge by which cross-border  transactions are generally
accomplished.

     o    Voting Power Will Be Fairly and Equitably Distributed.

     National Grid is a public corporation  organized under and domiciled in the
U.K..  Its shares are listed on, and trade on, the London  Stock  Exchange.  The
vast  majority of  National  Grid's  800,000  public  shareholders  are not U.S.
residents.  The government of the U.K. also owns what is commonly referred to as
the "golden  share" in National  Grid.  The golden share is a single  non-voting
share that prevents  amendments to National  Grid's  Memorandum  and Articles of
Association  without  the  consent  of the  holder  of  the  golden  share.  The
Memorandum and Articles of Association  contain  restrictions on certain classes
of persons holding more than a prescribed  shareholding in National Grid (as the
indirect  holder of the  England  and Wales  Transmission  License  through  The
National  Grid  Company).   In  particular,   the  Memorandum  and  Articles  of
Association  restrict companies that trade electricity in England and Wales from
owning more than 1% of the shares of  National  Grid and also  requires  that no
party may own more than 15% of National  Grid's  shares.  The golden  share is a
means to preserve  the status of  National  Grid as an  independent  provider of
transmission services and as such does not restrict shareholder voting rights.

                                      -41-
<PAGE>

     National Grid has a small number of American  Depositary Shares in the U.S.
which  trade as ADRs and are  principally  held by U.S.  institutions.  American
Depositary Shares, in the aggregate, account for less than 1% of National Grid's
publicly  issued  shares.  National  Grid's  shareholders  and ADR holders  have
approved the Merger under applicable  requirements of the London Stock Exchange.
The moneys necessary to pay the Cash  Consideration will be borrowed by National
Grid from sophisticated commercial lenders and the financing has been documented
in fully negotiated loan agreements.  None of the Intermediate Companies or NEES
will have any  public or private  institutional  equity or debt  holders.  While
NEES's operating  subsidiaries have, and will continue to have,  publicly issued
preferred  stock and long-term  debt, the terms of these  securities will not be
altered  or  modified  or  otherwise  affected  by virtue  of the  Merger or the
proposed  Transaction  structure.  Thus,  as there  are no  direct  or  indirect
security holders of NEES with whom National Grid must share voting power,  there
is no possibility  that voting power among security holders of the National Grid
holding company system could be unfairly or inequitably distributed.

     o    Policy Considerations.

     The  Commission  has publicly  confirmed that the 1935 Act does not bar the
acquisition of a U.S. utility by a non-U.S. person. See Gaz Metropolitain, Inc.,
Holding Company Act Release No. 35-26170  (1994).  The question now presented is
whether  the  Commission  will  permit  such   transactions  to  proceed  in  an
economically desirable and efficient manner. Following the Merger, National Grid
will  register as a holding  company under Section 5 of the 1935 Act and will be
fully subject to Commission  regulation  and oversight  with respect to its U.S.
operations.  Moreover,  no component of the transaction structure implicates the
abuses  identified  in  Section  1(b) of the 1935 Act  associated  with  holding
companies  prior to 1935.  In this  regard,  the  absence of public and  private
institutional  investors  in the  National  Grid-NEES  ownership  chain  and the
commitment  on the part of National  Grid to retain the  corporate and financing
structure  of the NEES  Group are  critical  to the  analysis.  No aspect of the
proposed transaction structure will work to the detriment of the public interest
or the  interests  of  investors  or  consumers.  National  Grid's  intention in
implementing  the  proposed  transaction  structure  is to bridge the  differing
legal,

                                      -42-
<PAGE>

regulatory and tax regimes in the U.K. and the U.S. while  maximizing  after-tax
returns  from the  National  Grid-NEES  combination.  In other  situations,  the
Commission  has recognized  that efforts to achieve  economic  efficiencies  and
synergies  through tax savings are "in the  ordinary  course of  business"  of a
registered  holding  company.  See Central and South West  Corporation,  Holding
Company  Act  Release  No.  23578  (1985)  ("It can hardly be argued  that for a
business to attempt to reduce its tax liability is anything but an indication of
prudent management and is not uncommon in the non-regulated business sector. For
such businesses to attempt such reductions can fairly be  characterized as being
in the ordinary course of business . . . The Commission can think of no argument
which suggests that attempting to reduce one's tax liability  should not also be
considered  to be in the  ordinary  course of business  for a regulated  utility
holding company.").

     Section  11(b)(2)  of the 1935 Act directs  the  Commission  to require the
elimination of any "undue or unnecessary" complication in the capital structures
of  registered  holding  company  systems.  As  an  administrative  agency,  the
Commission  has an  obligation  to use its  expertise  and  authority to achieve
statutory  objectives  of the 1935 Act. No provision  of the 1935 Act,  however,
requires the Commission to ignore the realities of commercial  practice that are
commonplace in  cross-border  transactions  or the benefits that may be obtained
through the use of  sophisticated  corporate and financial  planning  techniques
when such  techniques do not result in any detriment to the protected  interests
under the 1935 Act. Rather,  the Applicants  submit that the attempt to maximize
after-tax  returns  in  connection  with a Merger is an  indication  of  prudent
management and typical in the non-regulated  business sector.  Accordingly,  the
policy  and  practice  under the 1935 Act  provide a  compelling  rationale  for
approving  the  proposed  transaction   structure  for  the  National  Grid-NEES
combination.

     The  Applicants  note  that   maintaining  an  efficient   post-acquisition
structure will require them to respond quickly to changes in matters such as tax
and  accounting  rules,   including  by  making   appropriate   revisions  after
consummation  of the Merger to the "upper  structure"  between NGG and NEES that
will not have any material  impact on the  financial  condition or operations of
NEES and its subsidiaries or of NGG. For the reasons noted above, and especially
the lack of any third party interests in the upper structure, the

                                      -43-
<PAGE>

Applicants request authorization to make these non-material  corporate structure
changes  without having to seek specific  authority from the Commission for each
change,  subject  to the  condition  that  no  change  (i)  will  result  in the
introduction  of any third party  interests  in the upper  structure,  (ii) will
introduce a non-European  Union or non-U.S.  entity into the upper  structure or
(iii) will have any material impact on the financial  condition or operations of
NEES and its subsidiaries or of NGG.

               b.   Section 10(c)(2)

     The  standards of Section  10(c)(2) are  satisfied  because the Merger will
tend toward the  economical and efficient  development  of an integrated  public
utility system, thereby serving the public interest, as required by that section
of the Act.  Integration is not an issue in that the Merger will simply impose a
new holding  company  structure  over an existing  integrated  electric  utility
system.  The analysis  under  Section  10(c)(2)  focuses then on the  associated
benefits, the so-called "economies and efficiencies" as a result of the proposed
transaction.

     The first part of the  discussion  will focus on the perceived  benefits to
customers, employees and shareholders,  arising from the transaction. The second
part will then consider the more strategic  benefits which the transaction  will
bring to New England.

     o    Benefits to customers, employees and shareholders

     NEES shareholders  will benefit from the  consideration  received for their
shares on closure of the transaction. The base consideration of $53.75 per share
is equal to 125% of the $43 market  value of the shares on the last  trading day
before  the  Merger  was  announced.  The  purchase  price  will be  subject  to
adjustment, dependent on the time of closing, and will be paid in cash. The NEES
Board has received an opinion from Merrill  Lynch,  Pierce,  Fenner & Smith,  an
investment banking firm with extensive  experience in utility Mergers,  that the
consideration for the Merger is fair to shareholders and in line with comparable
utility Mergers.

     For NEES employees the transaction  represents an opportunity for growth as
the  company  becomes  the U. S. base of  operations  for a large  international
group. National

                                      -44-
<PAGE>

Grid has expressed  intentions to expand and  consolidate its operations in this
country, which will bring expanded opportunities for employees.  The transaction
will  ensure  that NEES and its  employees  remain  active in the  restructuring
debate in the United States,  while National Grid's expanding foreign operations
will provide opportunities for NEES employees abroad.

     Benefits to customers fall in three  categories.  First,  National Grid has
significant  expertise  in  providing  the  infrastructure,  dispatch  and power
exchange  necessary for an efficient  power supply  market.  Power supply is the
major cost element of electricity  and is crucially  influenced by the efficient
development  of the market  for the  product.  The  efficient  provision  of the
infrastructure  to let the supply market develop will facilitate the increase in
potential suppliers of electricity, with the competition so generated leading to
lower and more stable prices for the  unregulated  supply  component of electric
service.

     Second,  there will be savings and  efficiencies  associated with the NEES-
National Grid Merger  itself.  The two companies are currently in the process of
evaluating  integration  possibilities,  aimed at  eliminating  duplication  and
implementing best practices. National Grid's significantly larger scale, both in
financial and operational terms, will enhance the ability of NEES to utilize new
developments in transmission and distribution  technology,  information systems,
and capital markets, where these can be seen to bring economic benefit.

     Third,  the Merger  will allow  further  pursuit  of  consolidation  in the
electric utility business.  The restructuring of the industry in New England and
the divestiture of generation by companies owning  transmission and distribution
interests has left a fragmented  infrastructure with individual companies of too
small a size to fully  exploit  economies of scale.  NEES,  with its already low
distribution  prices and  profit  margins,  is not in a  position  on its own to
pursue significant further regional  consolidation.  This transaction will allow
further   consolidations  and  consolidation   savings  to  be  pursued,   while
maintaining  low rates for  customers.  The  agreement  for NEES to acquire EUA,
while not in itself  conditional on the  NEES-National  Grid Merger, is entirely
consistent with this strategy.

     o    Strategic benefits

                                      -45-
<PAGE>

     National  Grid owns,  operates and  maintains  the high voltage  network in
England and Wales,  which connects power  stations with  distribution  networks.
This  transmission  network  consists  of  approximately  4,300  route  miles of
overhead lines and 400 miles of underground cables,  both operating  principally
at  voltages  of  400kV  and  275kV.   National  Grid  also  owns  and  operates
interconnectors  which enable electricity to be transferred  between the England
and Wales market and Scotland and France.  National Grid also has investments in
transmission  businesses  in  Argentina  and  Zambia and  direct  experience  of
operating and maintaining systems in those countries.

     A key factor in the  efficient  development  of a  competitive  electricity
supply market is the provision of open access on non-discriminatory terms to the
electric transmission system.  National Grid, as holder of the only transmission
licence  for  England  and  Wales,  is  obliged  facilitate  competition  in the
generation  and supply of  electricity  and to offer terms for connection to and
use of its  transmission  system to those who request it.  Since 1990,  National
Grid has  received  over 70  applications  from  generators  seeking  to use the
transmission  system and is obliged  to  provide a formal  offer of  connection,
including all technical and commercial terms, within 90 days.

     In addition,  National  Grid is the system  operator for England and Wales,
with an  obligation to schedule and dispatch  generation  to meet demand,  while
maintaining  security of the  transmission  system and supply  quality.  Through
wholly-owned  subsidiaries,  National  Grid also provides  data  collection  and
settlement services to facilitate the competitive electricity supply market. The
development of new generation  sources and of new competing  electricity  supply
companies,  since the restructuring of the electric industry, has seen the price
of electricity fall by 15-25% in real terms, depending on customer class.

     Another  relevant  feature of National  Grid's  experience is its financial
incentivization.  In  England  and Wales  both its wires  ownership  and  system
operation activities are subject to incentive forms of regulation. These provide
a direct  stimulus for National  Grid to improve the  efficiency of its licensed
activities  and this has led to  significant  benefits  for both  customers  and
shareholders.  Supply quality is assured  through the  requirement  for National
Grid to work to prescribed standards and to report annually on

                                      -46-
<PAGE>

system performance to the industry regulator. National Grid's experience of this
sort  is  not  limited  to  England  and  Wales,  since  its  operation  of  the
transmission system in Argentina is also subject to financial incentivization.

     The  Merger  comes at a time of  substantial  change in the  United  States
electricity industry, with reform and restructuring proceeding nationwide and in
particular  in New England.  The  intentions of National Grid and NEES to pursue
consolidation and rationalization of transmission and distribution in the region
are seen as being fully consistent with the views of the FERC on the development
of  strong  Regional  Transmission  Organizations.  NEPOOL  and the New  England
Independent   System   Operator  are  grappling  with  many  complex  issues  on
transmission  pricing,  congestion  management and market price determination as
they attempt to advance the  development of the electric  market in New England.
National Grid does not claim that its  experience  or the  solutions  which have
been  reached  for  similar  issues in England  and Wales can be  simplistically
transplanted  to the United  States.  However,  its experience in addressing and
finding appropriate solutions to similar problems, both in the U.K. and in other
countries,  will be important in  facilitating  the  development  of electricity
markets in the United States and in the timely achievement of the benefits which
such markets can bring.

     Although some of the anticipated  economies and efficiencies  will be fully
realizable only in the longer term, they are properly  considered in determining
whether the standards of Section  10(c)(2) have been met. See American  Electric
Power Co.,  46 S.E.C.  1299,  1320-1321  (1978).  Further,  the  Commission  has
recognized  that while some potential  benefits  cannot be precisely  estimated,
nevertheless  they  too  are  entitled  to  be  considered:  "[S]pecific  dollar
forecasts  of  future  savings  are not  necessarily  required;  a  demonstrated
potential  for  economies  will  suffice  even  when  these  are  not  precisely
quantifiable."  Centerior Energy Corp., Holding Co. Act Release No. 24073 (April
29,  1986)  (citation  omitted).  See Energy East  Corporation,  Holding Co. Act
Release No. 26976 (Feb. 12, 1999)  (authorizing  acquisition  based on strategic
benefits and potential, but presently unquantifiable, savings).

          3.   Section 10(f)

                                      -47-
<PAGE>

     Section 10(f) provides that:

     The Commission shall not approve any acquisition as to which an application
     is made under this  section  unless it appears to the  satisfaction  of the
     Commission that such State laws as may apply in respect to such acquisition
     have been complied with,  except where the Commission finds that compliance
     with such  State  laws  would be  detrimental  to the  carrying  out of the
     provisions of section 11.

As described in Item 4 of this Application/Declaration,  and as evidenced by the
applications  and the requested  certification  from each of the affected  state
regulators,  the  Applicants  intend to comply  with all  applicable  state laws
related to the proposed transaction.

     B.   Other Statutory Provisions

          1.   Sections 6 and 7, and Rule 53

     The  Applicants  seek  confirmation  that  its  preexisting  investment  in
National Grid Holdings and its direct and indirect  subsidiary  companies (i.e.,
the FUCO holdings) will not be counted toward the cap on "aggregate  investment"
for purposes of Rule 53. The basis for this request is  two-fold:  First,  in an
analogous situation,  the Commission has traditionally  grandfathered nonutility
investments made before an entity became part of a registered system. See, e.g.,
New Century  Energies,  Holding Co. Act Release No. 26748 (Aug. 1, 1997).  Thus,
investments  in  "energy-related  companies"  that predate  registration  of the
investor are not counted toward "aggregate  investment" for purposes of Rule 58.
Although  there  is no case on  point,  the  Applicants  believe  that  the same
accommodation  should be made for preexisting  FUCO  investments for purposes of
Rule 53, simply as a matter of comity.

     Second,  and  perhaps  more  important,  there is no  equitable  basis  for
including  National  Grid's  preexisting  FUCO  holdings in the  calculation  of
"aggregate  investment"  because,  unlike the FUCO  investments of U.S.  holding
companies,  no part of the capital  currently  invested in National  Grid's FUCO
operations can be deemed to be derived,  directly or directly, from captive U.S.
ratepayers.

                                      -48-
<PAGE>

     The Applicant also seeks  confirmation that National Grid's borrowing under
Credit Facility for purposes of financing the Merger are  permissible  under the
Act and may be repaid in accordance with the terms of the Credit Facility, which
is attached hereto as Exhibit B-3. Although National Grid will technically incur
this  indebtedness  just  prior  to  its  acquisition  of  NEES  and  consequent
registration  as  a  holding  company,  as  previously  discussed,  the  parties
recognize that the Commission will take this financing into account in approving
the  transaction.  These borrowings will be made from  sophisticated  commercial
lenders on terms negotiated at arms-length.

          2.   Section 13 -- Intrasystem Provision of Services

     All services  provided by National Grid system  companies to other National
Grid system  companies will be in accordance with the requirements of Section 13
of the Act and the rules  promulgated  thereunder.  National  Grid is aware that
questions  concerning  the  FERC's  policy in this area are likely to arise with
respect to affiliate transactions  involving NEP, Mass. Electric,  Narragansett,
NEET, Mass. Hydro and AllEnergy  Marketing Company,  L.L.C.,  companies that are
public  utilities  under the Federal Power Act. In connection with the requested
FERC authorization, the applicants in that matter have represented, and the FERC
approved  the merger  subject  to their  commitment,  that "with  respect to any
transaction  between any member company of the NEES system and National Grid and
any of its subsidiary or affiliated companies,  the NEES Companies will abide by
[FERC] policy regarding  intra-affiliate  transactions."  See FERC  Application,
attached  hereto as Exhibit  D-1.1,  and FERC Order,  Exhibit  D-1.2..  The FERC
intra-corporate  transactions  policy,  with  respect  to  non-power  goods  and
services,  generally  requires that affiliates or associates of a public utility
not sell  non-power  goods and  services to the public  utility at a price above
market;  and sales of non-power  goods and  services by a public  utility to its
affiliates  or  associates  be at the public  utility's  cost for such goods and
services or market value for such goods and services, whichever is higher.

     The  Applicants  recognize  that  affiliate  transactions  among the member
companies of National Grid will be subject of the jurisdiction of the Commission
under Section 13(b) of the Act and the rules and  regulations  thereunder.  That
section generally

                                      -49-
<PAGE>

requires that affiliate  transactions  involving  system  utilities be "at cost,
fairly  or  equitably  allocated  among  such  companies."  See  also  Rule  90.
Nonetheless,  National Grid believes that, as a practical  matter,  there should
not  be  any  irreconcilable   inconsistency  between  the  application  of  the
Commission's  "at  cost"  standard  and the  FERC's  policies  with  respect  to
intra-system transactions as applied to National Grid.

     On this basis,  the  applicants  believe that National Grid will be able to
comply  with the  requirements  of both the FERC and the "at  cost" and fair and
equitable  allocation of cost requirements of Section 13, including Rules 87, 90
and 91 thereunder,  for all services,  sale and construction  contracts  between
associate  companies  and with  the  holding  company  parent  unless  otherwise
permitted by the Commission by rule or order.

     The Service Company,  which has been previously approved by the Commission,
will  continue to provide the NEES  companies,  pursuant to the Standard Form of
Service Contract ("Standard Form"), with a variety of administrative, management
and support  services,  including  services relating to electric power planning,
electric system operations,  materials  management,  facilities and real estate,
accounting, budgeting and financial forecasting, finance and treasury, rates and
regulation, legal, internal audit, corporate communications, environmental, fuel
procurement,   corporate  planning,  human  resources,  marketing  and  customer
services,   information   systems  and  general   administrative  and  executive
management  services.  It is contemplated that the Standard Form will be amended
to provide for services to entities that will become associate companies of NEES
and its  subsidiaries,  by virtue of the proposed Merger. In accordance with the
Standard Form,  Exhibit B-2,  services  provided by the Service  Company will be
directly assigned,  distributed or allocated by activity, project, program, work
order or other appropriate  basis. To accomplish this,  employees of the Service
Company  will  record  transactions  utilizing  the  existing  data  capture and
accounting systems of each client company. Costs will be accumulated in accounts
of the Service Company and directly  assigned,  distributed and allocated to the
appropriate  client  company  in  accordance  with the  guidelines  set forth in
Schedule II of the Standard Form.

                                      -50-
<PAGE>

     The Service Company's accounting and cost allocation methods and procedures
are  structured  so as to comply  with the  Commission's  standards  for service
companies in registered  holding-company  systems. The Service Company's billing
system will use the "Uniform System of Accounts for Mutual Service Companies and
Subsidiary  Service  Companies"   established  by  the  Commission  for  service
companies of registered  holding-company  systems, as may be adjusted to use the
FERC uniform system of accounts.

     As  compensation  for  services,  the  Standard  Form states that  Services
provided by the Service Company will be rendered "at cost,  fairly and equitably
allocated."  Where more than one company is involved in or has received benefits
from a  service  performed,  the  Standard  Form  provides  that  costs  will be
allocated,  between or among such companies on an equitable basis by means of an
allocation  formula,  in accordance with the methods set forth in Schedule II to
the Standard  Form.  Thus,  for financial  reporting  purposes,  charges for all
services  provided by the Service  Company to affiliates will be on an "at cost"
basis as determined under Rules 90 and 91 of the Act.

     No  change  in the  organization  of the  Service  Company,  the  type  and
character of the companies to be serviced  (other than the  amendment  discussed
above to include  services  for the  National  Grid  associate  companies),  the
methods of allocating costs to associate companies, or in the scope or character
of the  services to be  rendered  subject to Section 13 of the Act, or any rule,
regulation  or order  thereunder,  shall be made  unless  and until the  Service
Company  shall first have given the  Commission  written  notice of the proposed
change not less than 60 days  prior to the  proposed  effectiveness  of any such
change. If, upon the receipt of any such notice, the Commission shall notify the
Service  Company  within the 60-day period that a question  exists as to whether
the proposed  change is consistent with the provisions of Section 13 of the Act,
or of any rule,  regulation or order thereunder,  then the proposed change shall
not become  effective unless and until the Service Company shall have filed with
the Commission an appropriate declaration regarding such proposed change and the
Commission shall have permitted such declaration to become effective.

                                      -51-
<PAGE>

          3.   Sections 14 and 15 -- Jurisdiction

     Pursuant to these  sections,  the Commission has broad  authority over, and
access to, the books and records and  reporting  of  companies  in a  registered
holding  company  system.  As noted  previously,  National Grid is preparing the
necessary  documentation  which will enable it to become  listed on the New York
Stock Exchange  through a full ADR program sometime prior to the closing of this
transaction.  For that purpose,  National Grid will provide financial statements
for the fiscal year ended March 31, 1999 that  include a  reconciliation  of net
income  and  shareholders'  equity  in  accordance  with US  Generally  Accepted
Accounting Principles ("US GAAP").

     It should be further noted that the utility assets of National Grid Company
are accounted for on the basis required by the U.K. regulator,  rather than that
used for purposes of U.S. ratemaking  proceedings,  and rates for U.K. regulated
utilities  are  also  determined  in a  different  manner  than  those  for U.S.
regulated companies.  These issues are discussed at length in the attached paper
by Professor Franks. See Exhibit J-3.

     In addition,  National Grid  undertakes  and agrees to file, and will cause
each of its present and future directors and officers,  who is not a resident of
the United States,  to file with the Commission  irrevocable  designation of the
party's  custodian as an agent in the United States to accept service of process
in any suit, action or proceeding before the Commission or any appropriate court
to enforce the provisions of the acts administered by the Commission.

Item 4.  Regulatory Approvals

     Set forth below is a summary of the regulatory approvals that National Grid
and NEES expect to obtain in connection with the Merger.

          (1)  Antitrust

     The Merger is subject to the  requirements of the HSR Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder,  which provide that certain acquisition transactions may
not be consummated until certain information has been furnished to the Antitrust
Division of the

                                      -52-
<PAGE>

Department  of  Justice  (the  "Antitrust   Division")  and  the  Federal  Trade
Commission (the "FTC") and until certain waiting periods have been terminated or
have expired.  NEES and National Grid Group filed their premerger  notifications
on March  31,  1999 and on April 9,  1999  the  waiting  period  thereunder  was
terminated.  If the  Merger  is not  consummated  within  12  months  after  the
expiration or earlier  termination of the initial HSR Act waiting  period,  NEES
and  National  Grid Group  would be required  to submit new  information  to the
Antitrust  Division and the FTC, and a new HSR Act waiting  period would have to
expire or be earlier terminated before the Merger could be consummated.

          (2)  Federal Power Act

     Section 203 of the Federal  Power Act (the "FPA")  provides  that no public
utility  may  sell  or  otherwise  dispose  of  its  facilities  subject  to the
jurisdiction of the FERC or, directly or indirectly,  merge or consolidate  such
facilities  with those of any other  person or acquire any security of any other
public  utility  without  first  having  obtained  authorization  from the FERC.
Because this  transaction  involves a change in ownership  and control of NEES's
public  utility  subsidiaries,  the prior approval of the FERC under FPA Section
203 is required in order to consummate the Merger.

     Under  Section 203 of the FPA,  the FERC is directed to approve a Merger if
it finds such  Merger  "consistent  with the public  interest."  In  reviewing a
Merger,  the FERC  generally  evaluates:  (1) whether the Merger will  adversely
affect competition;  (2) whether the Merger will adversely affect rates; and (3)
whether  the  Merger  will  impair the  effectiveness  of  regulation.  NEES and
National Grid Group believe the proposed Merger satisfies these standards.

     By order dated June 16, 1999, the FERC unconditionally approved the Merger.
New England Power Co., 87 FERC P. 61,287.

          (3)  Atomic Energy Act

     Since  NEP  holds  licenses  issued by the  Nuclear  Regulatory  Commission
("NRC") in connection with that subsidiary's  interests in various nuclear power
plants and also holds minority common stock interest in  corporations  that hold
such licenses, the

                                      -53-
<PAGE>

Merger  (which  would  constitute  an  indirect  transfer  of NEP's  licenses to
National Grid Group)  requires NRC approval under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954.
The Atomic Energy Act effectively  prohibits  foreign  ownership or control of a
nuclear license (as distinct from the physical plant).  National Grid Group is a
foreign  entity  within the meaning of the Atomic  Energy Act. NEES and National
Grid Group  believe they can satisfy NRC concerns  about  foreign  ownership and
control.  NEP's minority interests in the common stock of corporations that hold
nuclear licenses does not give NEES control over such facilities or the licensee
for the  facilities,  and  therefore the indirect  acquisition  by National Grid
Group of NEP's interest will not be inconsistent  with the Atomic Energy Act. In
addition,  although NEP owns a minority  interest in two nuclear  facilities and
therefore has minority,  non-operating  ownership licenses with respect to those
facilities,  NEP has no control over the facilities  themselves,  and a recently
issued NRC review procedure regarding foreign ownership or control provides that
foreign  ownership  of such  minority  non-operating  licenses  is  permissible,
provided that the licensee agrees to conditions that prevent foreign  domination
or  control  of the  facility.  NEES  and  National  Grid  Group  have  filed an
application  with the NRC agreeing to such  conditions  on March 15,  1999.  The
application  was noticed on June 30, 1999 and  comments  must be submitted on or
before July 30,  1999.  The NRC  recently  adopted a similar  framework  to that
proposed  by NEES and  National  Grid Group in its Order  Approving  Transfer of
License for the Three Mile Island  Nuclear  Station,  Unit 1, from GPU  Nuclear,
Inc. et al., to Amergen Energy company LLC and Approving  Conforming  Amendment,
issued April 12, 1999.  NEES and National Grid Group have been informed that the
NRC intends to review the transfer of all licenses in which NEP has an interest,
including through minority positions in common stock,  within the context of the
application filed by the parties.

          (4)  Exon-Florio

     The  Committee on Foreign  Investment  in the United  States  ("CFIUS") may
review and  investigate the Merger under  Exon-Florio,  and the President of the
United  States or his designee is empowered to take certain  actions in relation
to Mergers,  acquisitions and takeovers by foreign persons which could result in
foreign control of persons  engaged in interstate  commerce in the United States
pursuant to Exon-Florio. In particular, Exon-

                                      -54-
<PAGE>

Florio  enables the  President to block or reverse any  acquisitions  by foreign
persons  which  threaten to impair the national  security of the United  States.
Before the Merger may be consummated,  any CFIUS review and investigation of the
Merger under  Exon-Florio must have terminated,  and the President must not have
taken  any  of  his  authorized  actions  under  Exon-Florio.   The  Exon-Florio
application  in connection  with the Merger was filed on March 30, 1999,  and on
April 29, 1999 the parties were informed by the  Department of the Treasury that
action under Exon-Florio had concluded with respect to the Merger.

          (5)  State Regulatory Approval

     The Merger  does not require  the  approval  of the MDTE or the RIPUC.  The
merger  does  require  the  approval of the VPSB and the CDPUC and is subject to
review by the NHPUC.

     While  the MDTE  does  not have  jurisdiction  over  the  merger,  NEES and
National  Grid  made an  informational  filing  on March 8,  1999 with the MDTE,
describing the merger and the benefits of the merger to  ratepayers.  As part of
the  filing,  the  companies  advised  the MDTE that the SEC would be  seeking a
certification  from the MDTE,  the  RIPUC  and the NHPUC  that each of the state
commissions has the authority and resources to protect ratepayers in matter such
as rates, financings,  affiliate transactions and the financial integrity of the
operating utility within its state and additionally that the commission  intends
to  continue  to exercise  its  authority.  The MDTE has issued a letter to this
Commission, a copy of which is attached as Exhibit D-3.2.

     On March 18, 1999, the companies made a similar  informational  filing with
the NHPUC and requested  certification from the NHPUC to the SEC that it has the
authority  and  resources  to  protect  ratepayers.  The  companies  also  filed
affidavits attesting to the fact that the transaction would not adversely affect
ratepayers  and that there would be no change in the NHPUC's  jurisdiction  over
Granite  State and NEP as a result of the merger.  On April 21, 1999,  the NHPUC
issued an order  finding  that the merger did not satisfy the  requirements  for
exemption from the NHPUC's formal review process.  A hearing was held before the
NHPUC on June 24-25,  1999 and an order from that agency is expected to issue in
late summer.

                                      -55-
<PAGE>

     While the RIPUC has indicated that no filing with it is required, a copy of
the informational filing made with the MDTE was given to the RIPUC and a written
request for a letter to the Securities and Exchange  Commission was made on June
25, 1999.  Additionally,  the companies will be meeting with the RIPUC and staff
to answer any questions they may have and to request that a certification to the
SEC  from  the  RIPUC  that  it has  the  authority  and  resources  to  protect
ratepayers.

     NEP has a small amount of  transmission  assets in Vermont and therefore is
deemed  to be a  Vermont  public  utility.  While  the  VPSB  has no  regulatory
jurisdiction over NEP's operations,  under Vermont law it does have authority to
approve the merger.  The  application for approval of the Merger by the VPSB was
filed on March 29, 1999.  An order  approving  the Merger was issued on June 15,
1999. A copy is attached as Exhibit D-6.2.

     The CDPUC has jurisdiction  over the transaction  because of NEP's minority
ownership  interest in the Millstone III Nuclear Power Plant. On March 31, 1999,
the  parties  filed a letter  with the CDPUC  seeking  confirmation  that  CDPUC
approval is not required for the Merger.  The CDPUC  determined that it did have
jurisdiction.  An order  from the  CDPUC  issued  on June  30,  1999.  A copy is
attached as Exhibit D-7.2.

                                    * * * * *

Finally,  pursuant to Rule 24 under the Act, the  Applicants  represent that the
transactions proposed in this filing shall be carried out in accordance with the
terms   and   conditions   of,   and   for   the   purposes   stated   in,   the
declaration-application no later than December 31, 2004.

Item 5.  Procedure

     The  Commission  is  respectfully  requested to issue and publish not later
than July 15, 1999 the requisite notice under Rule 23 with respect to the filing
of this  Application,  such  notice to specify a date not later than  August 10,
1999 by which  comments may be entered and a date not later than August 30, 1999
as the date after which an order of the Commission  granting and permitting this
Application to become effective may be entered by the Commission.

                                      -56-
<PAGE>

     It  is  submitted  that  a  recommended  decision  by a  hearing  or  other
responsible officer of the Commission is not needed for approval of the proposed
Merger.  The Division of Investment  Management may assist in the preparation of
the  Commission's  decision.  There  should be no  waiting  period  between  the
issuance  of the  Commission's  order  and the  date on  which  it is to  become
effective.

Item 6.   Exhibits and Financial Statements

          1.   Exhibits

               A-1  Memorandum  and Articles of Association of The National Grid
                    Group plc (previously filed).

               A-2  Agreement and  Declaration of Trust of New England  Electric
                    System  (filed as Exhibit 3 to the 1994 NEES Form 10-K (File
                    No. 1-3446), and incorporated herein by reference).

             A-2.2  Proposed  amendment to the NEES Agreement and Declaration of
                    Trust (included in Exhibit C-1 hereto).

               B-1  Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of December 11, 1998,
                    by and among NEES,  National Grid Group and NGG Holdings LLC
                    (included in Exhibit C-1 hereto).

               B-2  NEES   Standard  Form  of  Service   Contract,   as  amended
                    (previously filed).

               B-3  National Grid Group Credit Agreement.

               C-1  Proxy Statement of NEES for the  shareholders  meeting to be
                    held  in   connection   with  the  Merger  (filed  with  the
                    Commission on March 26, 1999 and  incorporated  by reference
                    herein).

               C-2  Circular  of  National  Grid  Group  for  the  extraordinary
                    general  meeting of  shareholders  to be held in  connection
                    with the Merger.

             D-1.1  Joint    Application   of   New   England   Power   Company,
                    Massachusetts  Electric Company,  The Narragansett  Electric
                    Company, New England Electric Transmission Corporation,  New
                    England  Hydro-   Transmission   Corporation,   New  England
                    Hydro-Transmission    Electric   Company   Inc.,   AllEnergy
                    Marketing  Company,  L.L.C.  and NGG Holdings LLC before the
                    FERC (previously filed).

             D-1.2  Order of the FERC.

             D-2.1  Application  of New  England  Power  Company  before the NRC
                    (previously filed).

             D-2.2  Order of the NRC (to be filed by amendment).

                                      -57-
<PAGE>

             D-3.1  Submission to the MDTE (previously filed).

             D-3.2  Response from the MDTE.

             D-4.1  Omitted.

             D-4.2  Omitted.

             D-5.1  Submission to the NHPUC (previously filed).

             D-5.2  Order of the NHPUC.

             D-6.1  Submission to the VPSB.

             D-6.2  Order of the VPSB.

             D-7.1  Submission to the CDPUC.

             D-7.2  Order of the CDPUC.

               D-8  Rhode Island Public  Utilities  Commission  Certification to
                    the SEC.

               E-1  Map of service territory of NEES (previously filed).

               E-2  NGG Corporate  Chart,  as revised  (filed in paper format on
                    Form SE).

               E-3  NEES Corporate Chart (previously filed).

             F-1.1  Opinion  of  Counsel -  National  Grid Group (to be filed by
                    amendment).

             F-1.2  Opinion of Counsel - NEES (to be filed by amendment).

               F-2  Past tense opinion of counsel (to be filed by amendment).

               G-1  Opinion   of   Merrill   Lynch,   Pierce,   Fenner  &  Smith
                    Incorporated (included in Exhibit C-1).

               H-1  Annual  Report of  National  Grid Group dated March 31, 1998
                    (previously filed).

               H-2  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K of NEES  for the  year  ended
                    December  31, 1998 (filed with the  Commission  on March 31,
                    1999 and incorporated by reference herein).

               H-3  Form U5S of NEES for the year ended December 31, 1998 (to be
                    filed by amendment).

               H-4  Annual  Report of  National  Grid Group dated March 31, 1999
                    (Filed under cover of Form SE).

               I-1  Proposed Form of Notice (previously filed).

               J-1  Description of Nonutility  Subsidiaries of National Grid, as
                    revised.

               J-2  Merger Structure and Description of Intermediate  Companies,
                    as revised.

                                      -58-
<PAGE>

               J-3  "The  Financial  Strength of the National Grid Group and the
                    Proposed  Acquisitions  of NEES and EUA," Julian  Franks and
                    the Brattle Group (March, 1999) (previously filed).

          2.   Financial Statements

               FS-1 National   Grid   Group   Unaudited   Pro  Forma   Condensed
                    Consolidated Balance Sheet (to be filed by amendment).

               FS-2 National   Grid   Group   Unaudited   Pro  Forma   Condensed
                    Consolidated Statement of Income (to be filed by amendment).

               FS-3 Notes  to  Unaudited   Pro  Forma   Condensed   Consolidated
                    Financial Statements (to be filed by amendment).

               FS-4 National Grid Group Consolidated Balance Sheet.

               FS-5 National  Grid Group  Consolidated  Profit and Loss Account,
                    Cash Flow Statement and Statement of Total  Recognized Gains
                    and Losses.

             FS-5.1 Notes  to  National  Grid  Group  Consolidated  Financial
                    Statements.

               FS-6 NEES  Consolidated  Balance  Sheet as of  December  31, 1998
                    (included in Exhibit H-2).

               FS-7 NEES Consolidated  Statement of Income for the twelve months
                    ended December 31, 1998 (included in Exhibit H-2).

Item 7.  Information as to Environmental Effects

     The Merger  neither  involves a "major federal  action" nor  "significantly
affects the quality of the human environment" as those terms are used in Section
102(2)(C) of the National  Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 4321 et seq.
Consummation  of the Merger will not result in changes in the operations of NEES
and its subsidiaries  that would have any impact on the environment.  No federal
agency is  preparing  an  environmental  impact  statement  with respect to this
matter.

                                      -59-
<PAGE>

                                    SIGNATURE

     Pursuant to the  requirements  of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of
1935, the Applicants have duly caused this Pre-Effective  Amendment No. 4 to the
Application/Declaration  on  Form  U-1  to be  signed  on  their  behalf  by the
undersigned thereunto duly authorized.

     The  signature  of the  Applicants  and of the persons on their  behalf are
restricted to the information  contained in this application  which is pertinent
to the application of the respective companies.

Date:  October 8, 1999

                                      /s/ Jonathan M. G. Carlton
                                      --------------------------
                                      Jonathan M. G. Carlton

                                      Business Development Manager -- Regulation
                                      The National Grid Group plc

                                      /s/ Kirk Ramsauer
                                      --------------------------
                                      Kirk L. Ramsauer

                                      Deputy General Counsel
                                      New England Electric System*

* The name "New England  Electric  System" means the trustee or trustees for the
time being (as trustee or trustees but not  personally)  under an agreement  and
declaration of trust dated January 2, 1926, as amended, which is hereby referred
to, and a copy of which as amended  has been  filed  with the  Secretary  of the
Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts.  Any agreement,  obligation or liability  made,
entered  into or incurred by or on behalf of New England  Electric  System binds
only its trust estate, and no shareholder,  director,  trustee, officer or agent
thereof assumes or shall be held to any liability therefor.

<PAGE>

                                 EXHIBIT INDEX

Exhibit

J-1  Description of Nonutility Subsidiaries of National Grid, as revised.

                                   Exhibit J-1
                             The National Grid Group
                            Description of Companies

     The following is a description of the active  subsidiaries  of The National
Grid Group plc. National Grid Group has a number of dormant  subsidiaries (often
formed for purposes of potential  projects that are not  realized)  that are not
included herein.  Except as other noted, all entities listed below are organized
under the laws of England and Wales./1/

1.   The National Grid Company plc. ("NGC") As the electric transmission company
     in England and Wales,  NGC provides  transmission  service on a for-profit,
     non-  discriminatory  basis and  maintains  and makes all  improvements  to
     optimize  access  to  the  system,   procures  ancillary  services  on  the
     transmission  system of England  and  Wales,  matches  supply  and  demand,
     manages the daily system of half-hourly  bids for competing  generators and
     makes payments due from each day's energy  trading.  NGC is organized under
     the laws of  England  and  Wales  and is  subject  to  regulatory  controls
     overseen  by the  Director  General of  Electricity  Supply.  NGC has seven
     active subsidiaries, as follows:

     a.   NGC Nominees  Limited serves as a shareholder for a number of National
          Grid Group  entities,  as it is  customary in the UK to have more than
          one  shareholder  in most  corporate  entities.  This  company  is not
          otherwise an operating entity.

     b.   Datum Solutions  Limited is engaged in providing  metering services in
          the United  Kingdom at entry and exit points of the U.K.  transmission
          system, and more widely to customers in the competitive market.

     c.   ESIS Limited  operates the computer systems needed to calculate prices
          and  payments  due as a result of the daily  trading  of power  across
          England and Wales.

     d.   Energy Pool Funds Administration Limited manages the transfer of funds
          in payments for the energy traded.

     e.   NGC Employee  Shares  Trustee  Limited serves as trustee in respect of
          the National Grid Profit  Sharing  Scheme and Employee  Benefit Trust,
          which are trusts set up for  employees  of National  Grid Group.  This
          company does not have any independent operations.

- ----------
/1/  As noted in the  Application/Declaration  on Form U-1,  the  National  Grid
     Group has  interposed  National  Grid  Holdings  Limited  as a new  holding
     company between the National Grid Group and its existing subsidiaries other
     than National Grid (US) Holdings Limited.
- ----------

<PAGE>

     f.   NGC Leasing  Limited is engaged in the leasing of motor  vehicles  for
          use by employees of the National Grid Group system.

     g.   NGC Properties Limited owns and develops property that is not used for
          the operation of the transmission  system,  usually with a view toward
          eventual sale.

     h.   EnMo Limited was recently  formed to operate the final day (balancing)
          gas market.

     NGC does not directly or indirectly  derive any part of its income from the
     generation, transmission or distribution of electric energy for sale or the
     distribution  at retail of natural or manufactured  gas for heat,  light or
     power within the U.S. None of NGC or its  subsidiaries  is a public utility
     company operating in the U.S.

2.   National  Grid  Insurance  Limited was  organized in Guernsey in connection
     with the self-insured retention of NGC's transmission assets. National Grid
     Holdings  Limited holds all of the outstanding  ordinary shares of National
     Grid Insurance and an unaffiliated  bank holds its  outstanding  preference
     shares.  As  noted  in  the  Application,  the  Commission  has  previously
     authorized other registered  holding  companies to engage in self-insurance
     activities (see The Columbia Gas System,  Inc., Holding Co. Act Release No.
     26596  (Oct.  25,  1996)),   thereby  clarifying  that  such  insurance  is
     functionally related to core utility operations and therefore retainable by
     National Grid Group.

3.   National Grid International Limited is the intermediate holding company for
     a number of the group's current or planned non-U.K. investments,  including
     operations  in South  America,  India,  Africa and the U.S.  National  Grid
     International  has four  direct and a number of indirect  subsidiaries,  as
     follows:

     a.   National  Grid Overseas  Limited is an  intermediate  holding  company
          above all of the South American,  Indian and African interests held by
          the National Grid Group, through a Dutch holding company.

          i.   National Grid Holdings BV is organized in the  Netherlands and is
               a holding company for operations in Brazil, Argentina, Zambia and
               India.

               (1)  National  Grid  India  BV,  another  Netherlands   organized
               company, was formed to hold the National Grid Group's electricity
               transmission investments in India.

               (2) NGC do Brasil  Participacoes  Ltda, a Brazilian company,  was
               formed  to  provide  project  development  services  in Brazil to
               National Grid International Limited. National Grid Brazil BV, a

<PAGE>

               Netherlands company, owns, directly or indirectly, all or part of
               three entities formed under the laws of Brazil as follows: 50% of
               JVCO  Participacoes  Ltda  (a  telecommunications  joint  venture
               vehicle for National  Grid Group and Sprint),  and 100% of Holdco
               Participacoes Ltda (a joint venture vehicle for Brazilian telecom
               operations) ("Holdco").  Holdco owns 100% of Bonari Holding Ltda,
               an operating company engaged in telecommunications  operations in
               Brazil).

          ii.  National  Zambia  Limited is a holding  company for operations in
               Zambia.

               (1)  National Grid Zambia BV, a company  formed under the laws of
                    the  Netherlands,  owns  National  Grid  Group's  Copperbelt
                    Energy Corporation plc investment in Zambia.

                    (a) Copperbelt Energy Corporation plc, a Zambian corporation
                    that is some 40% owned by  National  Grid and is  engaged in
                    buying,  selling and  transmitting  electricity  to meet the
                    needs  of the  copper  mining  regions  of  Zambia.  Another
                    registered holding company, CINergy, also owns a significant
                    interest in Copperbelt.

          iii. National  Grid  Finance BV is a company  formed under the laws of
               the  Netherlands  that serves as a holding company for operations
               in Argentina.

               (1) Citelec SA (41.25% interest held by National Grid Group),  is
               a holding company for the Transener business.

                    (a) Transener,  in which Citelec holds an approximately  65%
                    interest,   is  the   owner  of  the   primary   electricity
                    transmission  system  that  services  Argentina  and acts as
                    operator   thereof.   Transener   itself   owns  a  regional
                    transmission  system  owner in  Argentina  (Transba)  and is
                    engaged in the construction of a cross-country  transmission
                    line.

     b.   Teldata  International Limited is a holding company for US billing and
          energy service operations.

          i.   Teldata Inc. is a Delaware  corporation  that provides  complete,
               end-  to-end,   automated  metering  and  billing  solutions  for
               electric, gas and water utilities and energy service providers.

<PAGE>

               (1) FirstPoint Services Inc. is a Delaware corporation engaged in
               providing billing software solutions for electric,  gas and water
               utilities and energy service providers.

     c.   National Grid USA Inc. is a Delaware corporation formed to investigate
          potential opportunities in the U.S. market for National Grid.

     d.   National  Grid  (Isle  of  Man)  Limited  is  a  holding  company  for
          electricity transmission operations on the Isle and is organized under
          the laws of the Isle of Man.

          i.   Manx Cable Company  (Isle of Man) is organized  under the laws of
               the  Isle  of Man for  the  purpose  of  developing  an  undersea
               electrical connector between England and the Isle of Man.

     National Grid International does not directly or indirectly derive any part
     of its income from the generation, transmission or distribution of electric
     energy for sale or the  distribution  at retail of natural or  manufactured
     gas for  heat,  light  or  power  within  the U.S.  None of  National  Grid
     International or its subsidiaries is a public utility company  operating in
     the U.S.

4.   The National Grid Group Quest  Trustee  Company  Limited  serves as trustee
     with respect to the National Grid Group Qualifying Share Trust,  which is a
     trust  established for employees of National Grid Group.  This company does
     not have any  independent  operations.  Applicants  note  that a number  of
     registered  holding  companies  have formed or been  permitted to retain or
     invest in separate  entities in connection with employee benefit  programs.
     See New Century  Energies,  Inc.,  --- Holding Co. Act Release No.  26748 )
     (Aug. 1, 1997) (retention of subsidiary  holding life insurance policies of
     executives);  Northeast Utilities, Holding Co. Act Release No. 24372 (April
     15, 1987) (authorizing acquisition of common stock of insurer to facilitate
     obtaining  directors  and  officers  insurance);  In the  Matter of General
     Public  Utilities  Corporation,  Holding Co. Act Release No. 7092 (Dec. 23,
     1996) (authorizing  acquisition of shares of non-utility subsidiary engaged
     in administering  employee insurance plans). Thus, retention of this entity
     is consistent with the provisions of the Act.

5.   NGG Telecoms  Holdings  Limited and NGG Telecoms  Limited are  intermediate
     holding  companies  for the  National  Grid  Group's  interest  in  certain
     telecommunications operations.

     a.   Energis  plc  is  the   publicly-traded   parent  company  of  Energis
          Communications.  National Grid Group holds a 48.3% interest in Energis
          plc.

          i.   Energis  Communications  Limited  owns and  operates  an advanced
               telecommunications network that is astride the NGC transmission

<PAGE>

               network. The Energis network transfers data, by voice, picture or
               data-base, throughout England and Wales.

     5.2  NGG Telecoms  Investment  Limited is an internal  holding  company for
          part of National Grid Group's interest in Energis plc.

     NGG  Telecoms  is  indirectly  engaged  exclusively  in  telecommunications
     services,  information services and services related or incidental thereto.
     On or prior to consummation of the Merger,  NGG Telecoms  Holdings  Limited
     and its subsidiaries  will qualify as an exempt  telecommunications  entity
     within the meaning of Section 34 of the Act and, as a result,  retention of
     NGG  Telecoms  Holdings  Limited  and its  subsidiaries  will be  expressly
     authorized under Section 34(d) of the Act.

6.   NatGrid  Finance  Limited,  NG  Investments  Limited,  a  Jersey  organized
     company,  and NatGrid  Investments  Limited  provide  financial  management
     services to National  Grid Group.  For example,  this group of companies is
     currently  involved in investing  and managing the proceeds from the recent
     public  offering  by  National  Grid Group of some of its  interest  in the
     ordinary  shares  of  Energis  plc.  A number of other  registered  holding
     companies hold  subsidiaries  that perform  financing  transactions for the
     system. See Central and Southwest Corporation,  Holding Co. Act Release No.
     23767  (July 19,  1985)  (authorizing  formation  of  subsidiary  to factor
     intrasystem receivables);  Ameren Corporation,  Holding Co. Act Release No.
     26809 (Dec.  30,  1997)  (permitting  retention  of  subsidiary  engaged in
     investing in securities for systems companies).


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