Our Report
Maine Climate Jobs Report
This report, written in consultation with researchers at Cornell University’s Worker Institute, examines the interrelated crises of climate breakdown and inequality, and lays out an ambitious roadmap for how Maine can build a renewable energy economy, create good union jobs, and tackle racial and economic inequality.
The report’s science-based recommendations will broadly help our state achieve four goals: quickly decarbonizing Maine’s economy; ensuring that the tens of thousands of new jobs that get created as part of Maine’s energy transition adhere to high labor standards in terms of pay, benefits, training, and job security; bringing underrepresented workers into the clean-energy workforce through well-run apprentice and pre-apprentice programs; and ensuring a just transition for workers and communities most affected by these changes.
The report sets bold objectives for building out Maine’s renewable energy economy, including:
Electrifying all state and local vehicles, including school and city buses, by 2040;
Building a high speed rail corridor from Bangor to Boston while connecting to Lewiston/Auburn;
Doing deep energy-efficiency retrofits and installing solar on all K-12 public schools and publicly owned buildings by 2035; and
Installing 3GW of renewable energy by 2030 and upgrading Maine’s energy transmission and storage capacity