Commentary

Soulia: Five years in, VT’s Climate Council is still narrowing its focus

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by Dave Soulia, for FYIVT.com

More than five years after Vermont lawmakers adopted legally binding climate targets, the state’s Climate Council is still refining how it plans to meet them.

At two public meetings (1/6/20261/12/2025) held a week apart, council members and staff from the Climate Action Office walked through Vermont’s updated Climate Action Plan, introduced a list of “Top 10 Priority Actions,” and discussed next steps — even as the state has already missed its first statutory emissions benchmark and faces mounting costs to reach the next.

The meetings, including one held this week, were framed as an opportunity for the public to “meet” the 2025 Climate Action Plan. But the discussion itself suggested a process still in transition from planning to execution, years after the Global Warming Solutions Act (GWSA) took effect.

Adopted in 2020, the GWSA committed Vermont to reducing greenhouse gas emissions 26 percent below 2005 levels by 2025, and 40 percent by 2030. Those targets were made legally binding, enforceable through citizen lawsuits if the state failed to meet them.

According to state reporting, Vermont has “almost certainly” missed the 2025 target. Officials have also acknowledged the state is increasingly likely to miss the 2030 target without significant changes.

A Plan Still Being Prioritized

Council members described the updated Climate Action Plan as a framework containing more than 200 recommended actions across sectors such as transportation, buildings, agriculture, and land use. They said feedback from the public and lawmakers made clear the plan was too broad, prompting the council to narrow its focus.

That process resulted in a newly identified list of 10 priority actions, which council members said represent what needs to be accomplished “now.”

Among those priorities are expanded weatherization programs, flood resilience funding, support for compact development, investments in farms and forests, and workforce development for electrification and construction trades.

The prioritization effort, council members said, is meant to provide clarity after years of expansive planning. But the timing stood out. Five years after the law’s passage — and after hundreds of millions of dollars have already been spent on climate-related programs — the council is still determining which actions matter most.

“Not a State Climate Action Plan”

During the meetings, officials repeatedly emphasized that the Climate Action Plan is not a traditional state implementation plan.

“It’s not a state climate action plan,” one official explained, noting that it was written by the Vermont Climate Council as an independent body, even though it incorporates input from state agencies.

Instead, the plan was described as a set of recommendations required by statute — a “starter” meant to guide future work by legislators, agencies, municipalities, businesses, and residents.

The Climate Action Office, which operates within the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) and costs roughly $1 million per year, characterized its role as supportive. Staff described their responsibilities as coordinating across agencies, tracking progress, maintaining emissions inventories, and helping “keep the ship moving forward.”

What they did not describe was a centralized authority responsible for delivering emissions reductions on a fixed schedule.

Funding Questions Loom

Council members also acknowledged that federal funding — which has helped underwrite many climate and resilience programs — is shrinking. Several speakers warned of a looming funding cliff as temporary federal dollars expire.

To address that gap, the council discussed future revenue mechanisms, including a potential cap-and-invest program that would require fossil fuel suppliers to purchase emissions allowances. Proceeds would be used to fund climate programs.

However, officials were clear that such a system would take years to design and implement. In the near term, they said, the state is focused on preliminary steps such as greenhouse gas reporting requirements for fuel importers.

No estimates were presented during the meetings for how much revenue a cap-and-invest system might generate, or how much of its cost would be passed on to consumers.

Deadlines vs. Timelines

Throughout the meetings, council members spoke frequently about urgency — but almost always paired that language with reminders that progress takes time.

They described climate action as a long-term effort requiring patience, coordination, and sustained investment. Major initiatives, including workforce development, grid upgrades, and new regulatory programs, were framed as multi-year or even multi-decade projects.

The statutory deadlines, however, remain fixed.

The 2025 target has passed. The 2030 target is less than four years away.

Yet no presenter outlined a back-scheduled execution plan showing how Vermont would close the emissions gap within that timeframe. Nor did officials describe consequences within state government if targets continue to be missed.

A Gap Between Law and Execution

The meetings highlighted a growing disconnect between Vermont’s legally binding climate commitments and the state’s implementation posture.

The legislature adopted emissions targets before a prioritized, costed, and accountable delivery plan was in place. Since then, hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent across agencies and programs, while emissions reductions have lagged behind statutory requirements.

Now, five years later, the Climate Council is still narrowing its focus, emphasizing coordination and future planning as the next deadline approaches.

For Vermonters, the question raised by the meetings was not whether climate change is real or whether action is needed. It was whether the structure created to meet the state’s climate obligations is capable of delivering results on the timeline the law requires.

As council members closed the sessions, they expressed hope that the updated plan and priority actions would help Vermont make progress in the coming years.

Whether that progress will be enough — or fast enough — remains unresolved.


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8 replies »

  1. Now it is time to fire all of these cave monkeys and force them to get a real job.

  2. I won’t shoot you – Dave, you are just the messenger, but I’d sure like to get rid of the fools who put us in this position. These were the sponsors of Act 153 in 2020.

    Rep. Timothy Briglin
    Rep. Selene Colburn
    Rep. Sarah Copeland Hanzas
    Rep. Mary Hooper
    Rep. Martin LaLonde
    Rep. Laura Sibilia

    Additional Sponsors
    Rep. Janet Ancel
    Rep. Peter Anthony
    Rep. Sarah “Sarita” Austin
    Rep. John Bartholomew
    Rep. Matthew Birong Jr.
    Rep. Thomas Bock
    Rep. Nelson Brownell
    Rep. Jessica Brumsted
    Rep. Mollie Burke
    Rep. R. Scott Campbell
    Rep. James Carroll
    Rep. Seth Chase
    Rep. Robin Chesnut-Tangerman
    Rep. Annmarie Christensen
    Rep. Kevin Christie
    Rep. Brian Cina
    Rep. Sara Coffey
    Rep. Harold “Hal” Colston
    Rep. Mari Cordes
    Rep. Carl Demrow
    Rep. Katherine “Kari” Dolan
    Rep. Johannah Donovan
    Rep. David Durfee
    Rep. Caleb Elder
    Rep. John Gannon
    Rep. Marcia Gardner
    Rep. Diana Gonzalez
    Rep. Maxine Grad
    Rep. Sandy Haas
    Rep. Nader Hashim
    Rep. Matthew Hill
    Rep. Philip “Jay” Hooper
    Rep. Robert Hooper
    Rep. Lori Houghton
    Rep. Mary Howard
    Rep. Kathleen James
    Rep. Stephanie Jerome
    Rep. Kimberly Jessup
    Rep. John Killacky
    Rep. Warren Kitzmiller
    Rep. Emilie Kornheiser
    Rep. Jill Krowinski
    Rep. Diane Lanpher
    Rep. William Lippert Jr.
    Rep. Emily Long
    Rep. Terence Macaig
    Rep. James Masland
    Rep. Michael McCarthy
    Rep. Curtis McCormack
    Rep. James McCullough
    Rep. Michael Mrowicki
    Rep. Logan Nicoll
    Rep. Daniel Noyes
    Rep. John O’Brien
    Rep. Jean O’Sullivan
    Rep. Carol Ode
    Rep. Kelly Pajala
    Rep. Avram Patt
    Rep. David Potter
    Rep. Ann Pugh
    Rep. Barbara Rachelson
    Rep. Zachariah Ralph Watson
    Rep. Marybeth Redmond
    Rep. Peter Reed
    Rep. Robin Scheu
    Rep. Amy Sheldon
    Rep. Trevor Squirrell
    Rep. Thomas Stevens
    Rep. Mary Sullivan
    Rep. Randall Szott
    Rep. George Till
    Rep. Tristan Toleno
    Rep. Maida Townsend
    Rep. Matthew Trieber
    Rep. Joseph “Chip” Troiano
    Rep. Tommy Walz
    Rep. Kathryn Webb
    Rep. Rebecca White
    Rep. Theresa Wood
    Rep. David Yacovone
    Rep. Michael Yantachka

    • Good information hhilltop!

      Do you also have a list of the VT Climate Council Members?

      Why is it surprising that these “council appointees” are perpetuating their “work?” They are getting paid with our VT Tax Monies. It’s another example of the Dems/Progs/Leftists Grift!!

      Does anyone have the total amount of Tax Monies that have been paid out to this “Council” since its onset?

      Like U.S. Immigration Laws, this is another example of Vermont Elected Officials ignoring the US Constitution’s Supremacy Clause. They think they can magically control the air and climate in the small State of Vermont.

      How many other wasteful and ridiculous Taxpayer funded “councils and/or advisor groups” do we have that exist in Vermont?

      And …… we wonder why Vermont’s State Budget is over 9 Billion Dollars??

  3. This whole council needs to be abolished, New Hampshire does not have one and they seem to be doing just fine.

  4. Repeal the “Global Warming Solutions Act” and disband the unelected “Climate Council”.

  5. “What if global warming was just a trojan horse used by big government, central planner types that was adopted primarily because it was effective at scaring people into submission to massive increases in government control over the economy and our freedom of movement, a sort of free market-libertarian kryptonite?”

  6. I’m curious if anyone heard a few months back that the King of the Mass-Vaccine-Global Agenda narcopath Bill Gates changed his mind about his concerns regarding Global Warming. Too many real Scientists are calling his bluff. Our planet Earth actually NEEDS Carbon Dioxide and cows farts are not a threat to any of us. Not that Bill Gates deserves any attention no matter what he thinks, but his BILLIONS do effect Public Policy. I was expecting to see a pull-back on Electric Cars & the threats to remove gas stoves.

    https://nypost.com/2025/10/28/us-news/bill-gates-makes-major-climate-change-reversal-after-years-of-doomerism/

  7. I’m starting to think the reason the council is dragging its feet is because when the Conservation Law Foundation sues the state there will be kick backs for the council members and all the Reps listed above that co-sponsored Act 153 in 2020. The whole thing needs to be repealed. And, if the legislature isn’t willing to remove the part of the law that allows citizens (CLF) to sue the state, I think that just proves my point.