VT Taxpayers Spent $500 Million on Climate Policies. The Planet Didn’t Notice.

VT Taxpayers Spent $500 Million on Climate Policies. The Planet Didn’t Notice.

Two bills sit before the Vermont Senate that would undo the state’s unfolding climate policy disaster. S.110 would repeal the Global Warming Solutions Act’s citizen-suit provision and convert its mandates back to goals. S.68 would repeal the Affordable Heat Act.

Neither has advanced. S.68’s motion to relieve it from committee failed 12-18 on the Senate floor in February 2025. S.110 has received a single hearing since its March introduction.

The committee blocking both bills is Senate Natural Resources and Energy. Its chair, Senator Anne Watson, appeared alongside VNRC lobbyist Johanna Miller at the November 2025 VECAN Conferenceโ€”the same VNRC whose lobbyist, Johanna Miller, testified against S.68. Committee member Senator Ruth Hardy voted for the original GWSA in 2020. She now sits on the committee declining to revisit it. The vice chair is Senator Terry Williamsโ€”lead sponsor of S.110. His own bill can’t get a hearing in his own committee.

Meanwhile, the Conservation Law Foundation has already filed suit under the GWSA’s enforcement provisions. CLF lobbied for those very provisions back in 2020.

To understand how Vermont arrived at this impasseโ€”spending half a billion dollars to achieve nothing measurable on a planetary scale while building a legal trap it now refuses to disarmโ€”start with what the Global Warming Solutions Act actually did.

Lasting Effects

In 2020, Vermont’s legislature passed the Global Warming Solutions Act over Governor Phil Scott’s veto. The law set legally binding emissions reduction targets: 26% below 2005 levels by January 1, 2025, 40% below 1990 levels by 2030, and 80% by 2050. It created a Climate Council, mandated state rulemaking, andโ€”criticallyโ€”included a citizen-suit provision allowing anyone to sue the state for failing to meet its targets, with attorney’s fees awarded to prevailing plaintiffs.

Five years later, Vermont has spent upwards of $500 million on climate programs. The 2025 target has been missed. Transport fuel sales are trending upward. And the global temperature impact of Vermont’s sacrifice? Zero. Literally, measurably zero.

They Knew the Math Didn’t Work

The 2025 target required Vermont to reduce annual emissions from approximately 9.81 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent (MMTCO2e) in 2005 to 7.26 MMTCO2eโ€”a reduction of 2.55 million metric tons. When legislators voted in 2020, emissions stood around 8.5 MMTCO2e. They gave themselves four years to close a remaining gap of roughly 0.75 to 1.25 MMTCO2e.

The problem: Vermont’s emissions come primarily from transportation (cars, trucks) and thermal heating (oil furnaces, propane). These sectors depend on physical assetsโ€”vehicles and heating systemsโ€”that turn over on 10-15 year cycles. You cannot replace 80% of a state’s vehicle fleet or rip out 90,000 oil furnaces in four years. The workforce doesn’t exist. The supply chain doesn’t exist. The timeline was physically impossible.

Governor Scott’s veto message warned them. Testimony before the legislature warned them. Basic arithmetic warned them. They passed it anywayโ€”and built in a mechanism to sue the state when the inevitable failure arrived. The Conservation Law Foundation was already lobbying for the bill in early 2020, explicitly touting the enforcement provisions that would later enable them to file suit.

What the Numbers Actually Mean

Climate policy is conducted in abstractionsโ€”MMTCO2e, parts per million, percentage reductions. Here’s what the 2025 gap of 0.75 MMTCO2e looks like in terms ordinary Vermonters can understand:

The Reduction NeededWhat That Means
84 million gallons of gasolineVermont burns ~280M gallons/year. That’s 30% of all gas consumption eliminated.
170,000 cars permanently parkedVermont has ~500,000 registered vehicles. One in three carsโ€”gone.
90,000 oil furnaces replacedVermont has ~140,000 oil-heated homes. That’s 64% converted in four years.

None of this happened. According to the Agency of Natural Resources, gasoline sales are down about 8% from 2019โ€”but that’s largely a COVID hangover. The critical metric: transport fuel sales from 2023 to 2024 actually increased. After half a billion dollars in spending, the trend line is going the wrong direction.

What Did $500 Million Buy?

Tracking exact climate spending is difficultโ€”funds flow through multiple agencies, federal programs, utility incentives, and one-time ARPA allocations. But the ballpark is defensible: the legislature committed $250 million over three years in 2021-2022, Governor Scott noted “nearly a quarter billion dollars of ARPA money” for climate in his FY2024 budget address, and additional federal IRA funds, Efficiency Vermont programs, and ongoing appropriations push the total north of $500 million.

What did Vermonters get for that investment?

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MetricAchievedNeeded
Heat pumps installed~60,000 unitsMostly supplemental, not replacing furnaces
Homes weatherized~40,000 total~120,000 by 2030
EVs registered~18,0002% of fleet
Emissions reduced (from 2005)~1.8 MMTCO2e~2.55 MMTCO2e

At $5,000 per heat pump installation, those 60,000 units alone represent $300 million. Add weatherization at $10,000-15,000 per home, EV incentives, program administration, the Climate Council bureaucracy, consultants, and legal costsโ€”and $500 million is likely conservative.

The Global Impact: A Number That Doesn’t Exist

Vermont’s total annual emissions represent approximately 8 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent. Global annual emissions total 37.4 billion metric tons. Vermont is 0.02% of the problem.

The 1.8 MMTCO2e reduction Vermont achieved over 17 yearsโ€”most of it before the GWSA existed and attributable to federal vehicle standards, economic factors, and COVIDโ€”represents 0.005% of one year’s global emissions. China alone emits 12.6 billion metric tons annually. China’s emissions fluctuate more in a single year than Vermont produces in total.

ComparisonScale
Global annual CO237.4 billion metric tons
China’s annual CO212.6 billion metric tons
One large Chinese coal plant/year10-15 million metric tons
Vermont’s total annual emissions~8 million metric tons
Vermont’s 17-year reduction1.8 million metric tons

The temperature impact of Vermont’s reduction? Approximately 0.000000001ยฐC. That’s not a rounding error. It’s not detectable by any instrument on Earth. It’s a number that exists only in spreadsheets.

Put another way: Vermont’s 17-year effort gets erased by global emissions growth in approximately 25 minutes. China replaces Vermont’s entire sacrifice before second shift starts.

What Comes Next: The Lawsuit Trigger

The Conservation Law Foundation has already filed one lawsuit under the GWSA’s citizen-suit provision. That case was dismissed on procedural grounds, but the mechanism remains. The statute explicitly allows “any person” to sue the Secretary of Natural Resources for failure to meet emissions targets, and awards attorney’s fees to prevailing plaintiffs.

The 2030 targetโ€”40% below 1990 levels, or approximately 5.17 MMTCO2eโ€”requires closing a gap nearly four times larger than the one Vermont just failed to close. With current emissions around 8.0 MMTCO2e, the state needs to eliminate 2.8 million metric tons in five years. That’s the equivalent of removing 80% of all registered vehicles or eliminating every drop of heating oil sold in the state.

Whenโ€”not ifโ€”Vermont misses the 2030 target, courts could order the state to adopt rules achieving compliance. The statute doesn’t require those rules to be economically feasible, physically possible, or politically survivable. It requires hitting the number.

The Bottom Line

Vermont spent north of $500 million over five years to achieve a global temperature reduction of zero. The state failed to meet its first legally binding target. Transport fuel consumption is now trending upward. And the enforcement mechanismโ€”designed by the same advocacy groups now using itโ€”ensures ongoing litigation regardless of physical reality.

The Global Warming Solutions Act was never going to solve climate change. Vermont could go carbon-zero tomorrow and the planet wouldn’t notice. What the GWSA does accomplish is transferring policy authority from elected legislators to courtrooms, creating a permanent revenue stream for environmental litigation groups, and imposing costs on Vermonters for symbolic gestures the climate will never register.

The legislators who passed this law had the numbers. They had the warnings. They voted yes anyway. Now Vermonters will payโ€”againโ€”for the privilege of having accomplished nothing measurable on a planetary scale.

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Dave Soulia | FYIVT

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5 responses to “VT Taxpayers Spent $500 Million on Climate Policies. The Planet Didn’t Notice.”

  1. Paul Bilodeau Avatar
    Paul Bilodeau

    This proves that Libs live in a fantasy world of magical thinking. Now apply this to all the other Lib programs and initiatives, and you have the psychotic world view of the Left.

  2. Jon lang Avatar
    Jon lang

    Hasnโ€™t vt been damaged enough through reckless policies brought by theCLF in previous actions they are responsible for a long list of actions that are harming not helping Vermonters

  3. H. Jay Eshelman Avatar
    H. Jay Eshelman

    Itโ€™s time to take a serious look in the mirror.

    Re: โ€œVermont spent north of $500 million over five years to achieve a global temperature reduction of zero.โ€

    There are two assertions in this statement.

    First: Vermonters didnโ€™t just spend $500 million. They โ€˜investedโ€™ $500 million. Vermonters were solicited by their elected representatives to invest their hard-earned money in an enterprise that claimed it would provide a specific โ€˜returnโ€™ on that investment.

    Second: The โ€˜returnโ€™, global climate improvement and lower energy costs, not only didnโ€™t materialize, the result was just the opposite of the promise. The climate wasnโ€™t affected, at all. And energy prices continue to increase.

    Re: โ€œNow Vermonters will payโ€”againโ€”for the privilege of having accomplished nothing measurableโ€ฆ.โ€.

    This begs the question โ€“ why? Why will Vermonters make further investments in an enterprise that fails to meet its goals?

    Vermontโ€™s elected representatives are saying that they simply need more money to further their enterprise. Theyโ€™re saying that, sooner or later, their efforts will show the promised profit. Even though their efforts have proven fruitless now for decades, voters are still being asked to invest their last remaining money in a failed enterprise.

    Why?

    As for me, the only reason I continue to invest is because Iโ€™m forced to do so. One recourse is to leave my home and move to a place thatโ€™s better managed. Another option is to convince the shareholders in this enterprise (my friends and neighbors) to reconsider who they elect to manage their investments.

    Clearly, our representatives are incompetentโ€ฆ from our Governor to our legislators, to our various municipal boards and appointed bureaucracies. Not only are they not following through on the promised return of the investment we make in them, they havenโ€™t achieved that return in years. And still, we must invest because our friends and neighbors force us to do so. Some call this democratic socialism. Others see it as โ€™empathetic suicideโ€™. With friends like that, who are our real enemies?

    โ€œWe have met the enemy and he is usโ€ โ€“ is a famous phrase from the comic strip Pogo, created by Walt Kelly. It highlights the idea that humans are often their own worst enemies, particularly in the context of environmental issues and societal problems.

    This problem is, ultimately, going to fix itself. Bankruptcy is like that. Gradually, at first, then suddenly. And we have no one but ourselves to blame for the consequences.

  4. KJ Avatar
    KJ

    Beautiful.
    It would be interesting to say the least which politicians have money invested in this farce and positions in government to increase yet once more their finances through these mandates both directly and indirectly.
    Follow the money.

    1. H. Jay Eshelman Avatar
      H. Jay Eshelman

      KJ: Check out Efficiency Vermont, a statewide energy efficiency utility created by the Vermont legislature.

      Efficiency Vermont is a shell corporation, a legal entity with minimal assets or operations. It distributes taxpayer monies through various so-called non-governmental organizations (NGOs), ostensibly to promote energy efficiency. Efficiency Vermont claims to have saved Vermonters $2.8 billion in energy costs and reduced greenhouse gases by 12.6 million tons since 1999. You can read more about it here: https://www.efficiencyvermont.com/

      Is Efficiency Vermontโ€™s money well spent? Not according to FYIVTโ€™s assessment.

      In reality, Efficiency Vermont is managed entirely by Vermont Energy Investment Corp. (VEIC) headquartered in Winooski, VT. VEIC is a privately held Vermont non-profit NGO with annual revenues of $130.9 million.

      VEIC expenses include $75.5 million in operating expenses (salaries, benefits, payroll taxes, etc.) and $ 55.6 million in so-called but mostly unidentified โ€˜incentive paymentsโ€™ and grants. In other words, nearly 60% of VEIC revenues go to pay its staff and related expensesโ€ฆ every year.

      VEICโ€™s CEO, Rebecca Foster, for example, earned $413,194 in salary and benefits in 2024. VEICโ€™s top 12 executives earned, on average, $254,400 each in salary and benefits in 2024.

      Where does VEIC get most of its money?

      Energy Efficiency Utilities (EEU) provides $105.4 million. EEU is a shell corporation of the Vermont Public Utilities Commission (PUC).

      Energy Services: Consulting: including โ€“ Vanasse Hangen Brustlin energy services in MA, specializing in advancing renewable projects (solar, wind, hydro) and supporting utilities in achieving net-zero goals, provided $12.2 million. How much of VEICโ€™s $ 55.6 million in so-called but mostly unidentified โ€˜incentive paymentsโ€™ and grants that may go to Vanasse Hangen Brustlin for services rendered requires more research.

      Performance Incentive Awards provided $2.9 million. These are primarily federal funds provided through Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and Inflation Reduction Act legislation. And, of course, Senator Peter Welch actively supported both the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Actโ€ฆ perhaps because Sen. Welchโ€™s wife, Margaret Cheney, is the longest standing member serving on the PUC.

      Make of this what you will.

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