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this edition was produced by stephanie mcfeeters

Photo collage by Stephanie McFeeters. Photos by: Garrick Hoffman, Fred J. Field, Nate Hathaway, Derrick Z. Jackson.

Our biggest environment stories in 2025


There was plenty of big environmental news this year: new clean energy legislation, an extreme drought that led to Maine’s worst August for wildfires in 20 years, federal funding cuts and more. 


Here’s a look back at some of our coverage: 


Federal policy shifts, funding cuts


One big focus of our reporting this year — in the environmental sphere and elsewhere — was on abrupt pauses and cuts to federal grants for ongoing work in Maine. The scaling back interrupted climate data collection, dealt blows to renewable energy projects and  halted climate resilience and emergency preparedness efforts. 


Researchers told us how they rewrote grants to try and align with the administration’s new priorities and searched for new revenue sources. 


We also looked at how Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill would restrict local clean energy projects, and what Superfund cuts and PFAS cleanup delays could mean for Maine.


New clean energy goals and rising electricity prices


A Maine Monitor analysis by contributor Tux Turkel found that Maine’s electricity prices grew at the third fastest rate in the country between 2014 and 2024, a rate that was more than twice the national average. Energy experts said this was because of three major factors: natural gas availability and price, a generous solar incentive program and recovery costs from violent storms.


In another piece, Turkel explained how Mainers can expect to see electricity prices keep rising next year, in part because more natural gas is being sold overseas.


We also looked at how the political climate has dimmed Maine’s offshore wind development plans; described the debate over scaling back the state’s community solar incentives program; examined how Maine’s updated energy code for new construction could increase both energy efficiency and costs; and wrote about how homeowners may see heat pump costs go up as federal tax credits expire. 


Maine’s changing forests, challenges for loggers and paper mills


In a three-part series, Monitor contributor Jan DeBlieu explored how Maine’s forests will fare as the climate changes. She wrote stories examining the spruce budworm outbreak, ecological forest management and the ways landowners are shaping forests for maximum carbon storage.


Our environment reporter, Emmett Gartner, took us inside Maine’s logging industry, and described the challenges it is facing as tariffs change timber values and loggers’ access to machinery. 


We also published several stories on Maine’s paper mills, including a look at their emissions, and the pause and reopening at Woodland Pulp in Baileyville.


Dam safety reforms and fish passage changes


After decades of understaffing in Maine’s dam safety agency, and following a three-part series published by The Monitor that explored the dangers posed by the state’s deteriorating infrastructure, lawmakers put forward legislation to revamp the office that oversees Maine’s dams. Both bipartisan bills passed but were carried over to the upcoming legislative session to see if they garner funding. 


We also reported on a debate over dams being forfeited by their owner in Hancock County, and the ensuing legislation aimed at allowing towns to come together and take over abandoned dams, which was enacted in June.


In September, Gartner broke the news of a historic sale of four dams on the lower Kennebec River to The Nature Conservancy that will allow endangered Atlantic salmon and other seagoing fish from the Gulf of Maine to return to their historic spawning grounds for the first time in more than a century.


There’s plenty more to look at in 2026. We’ll start next week, on Jan. 2, when Gartner will bring us a preview of the environmental bills on deck for the Maine Legislature. Let us know if there are particular issues you’d like us to dig into. We’re always open to your questions and ideas.

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This piece by Ryan Krugman in The Boston Globe, published in partnership with Inside Climate News, profiles the Maine folk band GoldenOak, whose members have made it a priority to sing about climate change, drawing on a Christmas flood in Farmington and the loss of ash trees, among other things, in their lyrics.

Know of a story The Maine Monitor should look into? Click the banner to contact the newsroom.
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While The Maine Monitor does not place its content behind paywalls, some newsrooms we link to in this newsletter may. 

Lessons learned as Maine began pushing for heat pumps in mobile homes | The Maine Monitor


Environmental groups challenge CMP power line conservation plan | Maine Public


How Maine farmers are fighting a drought that will stretch into 2026 | Bangor Daily News


Federal court blocks another Trump admin attempt to tie FEMA aid to immigration priorities | Maine Public


Can attendance at Acadia National Park keep growing? | Bangor Daily News


Maine revives Aroostook County wind power project | Maine Public


What the data show about Poland Spring's water withdrawals in Maine | Maine Public


A Mainer’s guide to a greener holiday cleanup | Portland Press Herald


Maine Christmas tree farmers reported sales were up this year, and so was the demand for real trees | Maine Public


Gov. Mills signs emergency fuel order relaxing driving time limits for fuel carriers | WGME

Have feedback, a correction or know of something we should look into? Send it to our newsroom. You can also email The Monitor's editors: editors@themainemonitor.org.  


The Maine Monitor is a publication of the Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting, an independent and nonpartisan nonprofit news organization that produces investigative journalism. We believe news is a public good and keep our news free to access. We have no paywall and do not charge for our newsletters. If you value the reporting we do for Maine, please consider making a donation! We cannot do this reporting without your support.

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