Listen to the story HERE By Kathryn Cartey November 20, 2023 Community groups across Maine are helping small towns with fewer resources better prepare for the growing threat of climate change. They are conducting energy audits to help towns save money and implement renewable energy projects, including off-grid emergency shelters. Scott Vlaun, executive director of the Center for an Ecology-Based Economy, […]
Maine’s four-year climate plan aims to decrease the state’s greenhouse gas emissions by 45% by 2030 and 80% by 2050, and achieve carbon neutrality by 2045. (Adobe Stock)
Community groups across Maine are helping small towns with fewer resources better prepare for the growing threat of climate change.
They are conducting energy audits to help towns save money and implement renewable energy projects, including off-grid emergency shelters.
Scott Vlaun, executive director of the Center for an Ecology-Based Economy, said his group is working with the town of Norway to assess infrastructure potentially vulnerable to extreme weather events like the devastating floods last spring.
“This work will help us share what one town learned with other towns,” Vlaun explained. “And help the towns get their own plans in place.”
Vlaun pointed out stream crossings and road culverts are especially vulnerable to flood damage, resulting in costly repairs. He emphasized the goal is to create templates for climate resilience, which can be shared statewide.
Maine, like the rest of New England, is warming faster than the rest of the country while also experiencing a higher rate of extreme downpours.
Vlaun said building the climate resiliency of Maine’s rural towns may seem like a small step but it is part of a growing nationwide movement to prepare for climate change, and the federal government’s efforts to fund it.
“Our goal out here is, we have so many under-resourced communities in western Maine that we want to make sure that our communities get the fair share of these energy dollars and other climate resilience money that’s coming,” Vlaun outlined.
Vlaun added some of the funds should go toward repairing and reinforcing outdated electrical infrastructure in rural areas highly susceptible to power outages. The state is also kicking in funding to address those needs through its Community Resilience Partnership, which is part of the state’s four-year climate plan.
Maine Insights, a 501(c)4, connects our main streets with lawmakers in Augusta, highlighting state policies, technological innovations, agriculture, education, community growth and economics with factual analysis, individual profiles and exclusive in-depth coverage. We also report on areas where justice is not being served in the hope to be a contributing catalyst for change.
Your contribution today, will ensure our reporting continues into the future. Please send your donation to 8 Brook St., Solon, ME 04979.
Visit PEN for in-depth coverage of how America is addressing the climate crises. Systemic racism has held back progress, along with the deep pockets of industry that don’t want to change the status quo.
Protect Earth Newsmagazine highlights what lawmakers from the local level on up to the Federal Government are doing to protect the earth. We also report on community ingenuity and innovations that will help the U.S.A. transition to being powered by 100 percent, clean renewable energy. A 501(c)3 project of the Solon Center for Research and Publishing.
LATEST NEWS
SCIENCE MONDAY
Helpful science tips in playful videos that explain principles we all deal with to understand our climate crisis. The PENseries is the creation of Olivia Baaten.