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Climate Monitor


A weekly roundup of Maine's most urgent environmental and energy-related news from The Maine Monitor.

March 31, 2023

Part of the 22-turbine Weaver Wind project in Hancock County, as seen from Route 9 near the towns of Osborn and Aurora. Photo by Annie Ropeik

Your neighbors are more worried about climate change than you might think

By Annie Ropeik


Multiple studies have shown that Americans tend to misjudge how others in this country feel about climate change. People chronically underestimate how worried others are about the threat, how much they accept the science, and whether they support all manner of policy solutions.


Take a quick guess: What percentage of people on your street or in your town do you think feel "alarmed" about climate change? And how would your answer to this question affect how you talk to others about your own views?


"Pluralistic ignorance—a shared misperception of how others think or behave—poses a challenge to collective action on problems like climate change," wrote researchers from Boston College, Indiana University and Princeton University in a 2022 paper. "Collective solutions ... are hampered if people fail to accurately perceive that others are concerned and support taking action."


They write that this is a classic example of "conservative bias," where perceptions of public opinion tend to lag decades behind the real thing. This is "particularly likely when public opinion has recently changed on a topic but policy and structural change has not yet resulted from this shift, leaving little concrete indication of a shift in norms," the study says -- a circular problem.


This study served to see if people would guess right about data from one of the preeminent trackers of public opinion on climate change, the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication. Their surveys with George Mason University are an invaluable and detailed source of trends, in some cases dating to the mid-2000s, on how American climate thinking is evolving. Just this week, they put out a new analysis of views on the Inflation Reduction Act.


The findings from the 2022 paper on "pluralistic ignorance" of Yale's results were striking: "While most Americans believe that less than half of the country is worried about climate change, in actuality [per Yale's data] it is two-thirds. Americans’ estimates for major climate policy support is the same or even lower, when in fact two-thirds of the country or more support each of these policies."


They had asked respondents about a range of policies from the Yale surveys -- ideas like a carbon tax rebated to the public, or renewables development on public lands. And the study found people tended to misjudge views on these issues within their home states just as much as nationwide.


So let's try to get our perceptions up to date by digging into the topline Yale data for Maine. We'll pull from this interactive map of data updated through fall 2021, which can be broken down by state, county, congressional district and metropolitan areas.


Maine counties vary in their level of basic acceptance that global warming is happening -- Cumberland and Knox top the list at around 75%, while Piscataquis County ranks lowest at 65%. The national average is 72%. 


Around 60% of people in most coastal Maine counties accept that global warming is caused by human activities, slightly higher than the national average. Out of all of New England, Piscataquis County has the fewest people who said yes to this question, at 50%. The proportions are similar for Mainers who think, for example, that Congress should do more to address climate change. 


No more than 44% of people in any Maine county think climate change will harm them personally. The national average, and the proportion for much of the rest of New England, is only slightly higher. It tops 50% only in certain coastal areas of the mid-Atlantic and Florida, southwestern Texas, interior Alaska and fire-prone parts of the Southwest and California. 


People in coastal Maine counties are generally more worried about global warming, not just in the left-leaning First Congressional District but Down East as well. These residents are more likely to say they've experienced the effects of global warming personally, for example. Hancock and Cumberland were the counties where the most Mainers (around 40%) said they talked about global warming at least occasionally and heard about it at least weekly in the news. 


Feelings about climate-related policies are a more mixed bag that doesn't always match these rates of climate awareness. Seventy to 80% of Mainers support climate education in schools, but the statewide average is lower than anywhere else in the Northeast. 


About three-quarters of people in all states, including Maine, support tax rebates for energy-efficient vehicles and solar panels. About half of people in most of Maine and nationwide also support expanding offshore oil and gas drilling in U.S. waters. Piscataquis and Aroostook County are closer to 60% in support of this idea, more than anywhere else in New England. 


Yale's data breaks down into what they call "global warming's six Americas." People who are "concerned" or "alarmed" are now in the majority, with the "alarmed" group more than doubling in size since 2012. Take a simple quiz to find out where you fall on this spectrum — and next time you're talking to a neighbor about changes in the weather or ways to lower home energy costs, remember, your assumptions about their beliefs may be behind the times.

Courtesy Clean Ocean Access.

Kate Cough's story on Sunday about what to do with shrink wrap from Maine boats drew a lot of attention from our readers. It highlighted how something we see virtually every day contributes to our landfills and global warming -- plastics are made with fossil fuels, after all, and methane emissions from excess landfilling are helping to warm the planet.


Each spring, Kate reported, Maine boats shed more than 1.5 million pounds of this low-density polyethylene plastic, prized for its flexibility and ability to keep vessels safe from the sleet, snow and rain of Maine winters. The vast majority is bound for landfills or incinerators.


While boat owners and officials would like to see shrink wrap recycled, like other plastic goods, there are “no real good solutions (for doing so) at this point,” one state official said. Read more of the story here.

In other Maine news:

 

PFAS:

Maine joined a host of other states in suing the companies that pioneered PFAS chemicals, alleging they contaminated the state "in pursuit of profit." The state is joining an ongoing legal fight that will be long and complex.


Electric rates:

Maine regulators are holding public hearings across the state, including in Aroostook County, on steep rate hikes proposed by Versant and CMP.


Pollution:

New federal data sheds light on the biggest emitters of toxic chemicals in Maine, which include paper mills and a food processor. (We looked at satellite data on the biggest greenhouse gas emitters in this newsletter last fall.)


CMP Corridor:

A trial beginning April 10 will determine if the planned power line has "vested rights" to continue construction in Western Maine. The Portland Press Herald's Tux Turkel also reports on sources of funding in the corridor fight.


Pine Tree Power:

The Law Court heard argument on whether a ballot question should use the phrase "quasi-governmental" to describe a plan to replace Maine's investor-owned utilities with a nonprofit run by a publicly elected board.


Tidal energy:

A Maine-based company will resume testing tidal turbine generators in Cobscook Bay this spring after a decade of dormancy.


Acadia:

Entrance fees will increase at the national park for the first time since 2018 -- $5 more for one-day entry or $15 more for an annual pass -- to help fund the free Island Explorer bus service. Also, it's mud season at the park.


Cruise ships:

A trial is planned for July in Bar Harbor businesses' suit over a new ordinance barring large cruise ships from town with an eye toward carbon emissions.


Moose:

This season's moose calves have been surprisingly healthy, bucking rising mortality rates tied to winter ticks and warming temperatures.


Tourism:

Maine's tourism industry wants to focus on its sustainability efforts and the protection of Maine's environment as selling points this season.


Inflation Reduction Act:

Small rural towns face obstacles in accessing major new sources of federal funds for clean energy, transportation and other climate adaptations.


Biofuels:

The city of Lincoln approved a lease for a wood-based biofuels refinery on the site of a former pulp mill.


Bottle bill:

State lawmakers want to curb the spread of "redemption center deserts" as existing facilities for returning cans and bottles face economic struggles.


Dams:

Brookfield Renewables got federal approval for its plans to protect Atlantic salmon runs that can be threatened by hydropower facilities in Maine.


Public Utilities Commission:

An energy consultant from Cape Elizabeth is Gov. Janet Mills' new nominee to join the PUC.


Local food:

A nonprofit got a major federal grant to help schools lunchrooms serve up Maine-grown produce.


Coastal adaptation:

The Gulf of Maine Research Institute offers free workshops to help residents prepare for the effects of climate change.


Lawn equipment:

South Portland will revisit the controversial idea of a ban on gas-powered lawn equipment in June.


Agriculture:

Maine Rep. Chellie Pingree reintroduced a bill in Congress that seeks to help cut carbon emissions from farming.


Lake Auburn:

A complaint with state regulators alleges Auburn isn't doing its part to protect the lake, which supplies drinking water to Lewiston and Auburn.


Freeport:

The community's climate action group pitched residents on myriad ways to lower emissions at a recent forum.

Thanks for reading. See you next week.


Kate Cough covers energy and the environment for The Maine Monitor. She's a graduate of Columbia University and an 8th generation Mainer born in Portland who's now decamped Downeast. You can reach her at kate@themainemonitor.org or @kaitlincough.


Annie Ropeik is a freelance environmental reporter based in Portland and a board member with the Society of Environmental Journalists. You can reach her at aropeik@gmail.com or @aropeik, or at her website.

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