By Michael Shepherd - Aug. 16, 2023 Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Sign up.
📷 An attendee takes a cellphone photo as Vice President Kamala Harris gives remarks ahead of the one-year anniversary of the Inflation Reduction Act on Tuesday in Seattle. (AP photo by Lindsey Wasson)
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A landmark bill did not live up to its name, but it is a key part of Maine's climate push. A year ago, President Joe Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act into law. It was a misnomer, since analyses then and now said it would have little effect on inflation. The bill's influence is going to rise in the next few months, including in Maine, where it is at the center of climate initiatives. Last year's political fight over the law trickled down to Maine after U.S. Rep. Jared Golden, a Democrat from the 2nd District, voted with his party and aligned himself with centrist Sen. Joe Manchin, D-West Virginia, on the package that Manchin co-authored as the key vote to pass it in the Senate. Since then, Gov. Janet Mills has been a key booster of the law. The Democrat did an interview with NPR on it this week in which she called it "a big benefit to us in Maine," citing subsidies for heat pumps and other forms of so-called beneficial electrification in a state that is still the most reliant on heating oil. "We're kind of frugal as a rule, and people hate spending all that money on oil and propane for winter heat," she said. While Mills has put forward the most aggressive climate agenda in Maine history, those remarks showed her focusing mostly on the immediate cost savings from a shift away from fossil fuels. Though that policy goal has been clear in Maine for more than a decade, it is still politically sensitive. Both Mills and her 2022 rival, former Gov. Paul LePage, signed an oil industry pledge on "energy choice" during the heat of their campaign. The Inflation Reduction Act was a broad bill spanning taxes and health care, but the climate initiatives have been the most well-publicized items. At the beginning of the year, the first incentives for electric vehicles, heat pumps and other electric devices were made available. More subsidies will come on line by early 2024, according to Efficiency Maine, which manages state grants. That will add up to $72 million in rebates by the end of the year, the agency said. The state is not planning to stack them atop existing Maine incentives that have also gotten more generous in the past few years, so the only major increase coming later this year could be for low- and middle-income families upgrading to heat pumps. Other incentives under the law could be similar. There will be challenges for states as these incentives roll out. For example, the list of electric vehicles qualifying for them is relatively short due to domestic production requirements. Maine has seen slow adoption of these vehicles as well, adding up to a paltry 4 percent of its 2030 goal as of last year. At a higher level, the state and region are going to need more power in the ensuing years, putting more importance on the success of transmission lines and offshore wind, both of which come with major political hurdles. Homes will need more backup power if they are transitioning toward electricity, and there have been delays for whole-home generator purchases. But the long-term energy direction here has been clear, and the Inflation Reduction Act looks to be speeding us along that track.
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📷 Sen. Mark Lawrence, D-Eliot, reviews papers in the Senate chamber at the State House in Augusta on April 12, 2022. (AP photo by Robert F. Bukaty)
🌬️ Offshore wind champions will mark the Inflation Reduction Act's anniversary. ◉ State Sens. Mark Lawrence, D-Eliot, and Chip Curry, D-Belfast, who negotiated a recent offshore wind start-up compromise with Mills, will attend a 1 p.m. news conference on the Portland Fish Pier alongside environmental and labor groups marking the law's anniversary. ◉ They will focus on the Inflation Reduction Act's effects on the nascent offshore wind industry here. The recent deal with Mills overcame her veto of an earlier bill because of labor standards on port and project construction. Those restrictions were watered down in the final product. ◉ Offshore wind is still a long-term play in Maine. The state plans to generate half its power from it by 2040, but there is deep skepticism from fishermen that the new power source can coexist with its industry. Mills and the congressional delegation are urging the federal government to heed their concerns, while the governor faced criticism from fishing interests during her 2022 run.
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