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Maine’s Future: Energy Power or Vacation Spot?

Maine, USASunday, February 15, 2026
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The idea that Maine could become a cheap source of clean power for the rest of New England is not new. In the past, rail companies and later highways turned the state into a getaway for city folk. That model has worked well for tourism, but it left most of Maine’s natural beauty in private hands and gave only indirect economic help to the state.


The New Frontier: Wind & Solar

As other New England states look for ways to cut carbon without building more nuclear plants, Maine’s wind and solar potential is being eyed as a solution.

  • Massive numbers: Even if every suitable roof in the region were covered with solar panels, New England would still need thousands of wind turbines and large solar farms—most of which could be built in Maine because the land and wind are there.

The Big Question: Who Benefits?

  • Control or Share?
    Will Maine keep control of its resources and let its people benefit, like Quebec or Norway do with their energy?
    Or will it repeat the vacation‑land pattern and let outside developers profit while Mainers get only small indirect gains?

A Troubling Approach

The state’s recent call for wind projects in Aroostook County shows a troubling approach.
By requiring developers to offer identical prices and terms to all New England states, Maine is effectively forcing a “one‑price” policy that other sovereign regions would not accept.
This limits Maine’s ability to negotiate better deals for its own citizens.


A Better Path Forward

Maine should instead focus on using its renewable resources first, to meet its own climate goals and keep costs low for residents. Possible strategies include:

  1. Set up a generation authority – to oversee production and distribution.
  2. Offer community benefit payments – ensuring local residents receive direct financial gains.
  3. Create taxes on energy sales – to fund state programs and keep money circulating locally.

If Maine can secure these policies, it could keep the money and power at home instead of handing them to neighboring states.


The Stakes

  • Billions of dollars over the next decades could lower electric rates and help Maine reach its climate targets.
  • Choosing the vacation‑land route would mean paying more later, while choosing a generation‑focused path could give Mainers lasting economic and environmental benefits.

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