Senate debates measure to assess Maine’s climate damages; supporters say it’s a necessary first step

Maine Senate · March 30, 2026

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Summary

Sen. Tepler and Sen. Brenner urged passage of LD 1,870, which directs a statewide assessment of greenhouse-gas-related damages and costs as the first step toward a possible climate superfund. Opponents criticized study costs and timeline.

The Senate debated LD 1,870, a resolve directing the state to assess the total cost to Maine of greenhouse gas emissions as a foundational step toward establishing a climate superfund or other cost-recovery approach.

Sponsor Sen. Tepler said the assessment will quantify infrastructure, agricultural and other damages and provide the factual basis to hold major polluters accountable. “LD 1,870 will allow Maine to assess the true cost to our state of climate pollution,” he said, noting rising repair costs for roads and infrastructure.

Sen. Brenner, also speaking in support, cited recent storm damage estimates and said the state is already paying tens of millions for infrastructure repairs; supporters argued an assessment would clarify the gap between taxpayer burdens and corporate responsibility. Opponents such as Sen. Martin argued the amendment includes approximately $600,000 for a retrospective study spanning 1995–2024 that duplicates existing data and could delay direct action.

The measure received extended floor discussion and committee amendment consideration; senators debated the balance between generating a thorough damage assessment and the urgency of immediate mitigation and resilience measures. The transcript records floor debate and committee amendment activity; the measure is scheduled for further legislative processing.