PERI Greenhouse 100 Polluters State Press Release For Maine
November 6, 2025
With Future Data in Doubt, UMass Amherst Political Economy Research
Institute Names Top U.S. Climate Polluters
Rollback in EPA reporting requirements may end Greenhouse 100 Polluters
Index and access to vital public information
AMHERST, Mass. —
Researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst’s Political Economy Research Institute
(PERI) today published a new Greenhouse
100 Polluters Index, reporting 2023 greenhouse gas emissions using the
latest—and possibly last—data available from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency’s Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program.
On Sept. 12, the
EPA announced
plans to end most of the program and suspend all remaining reporting
requirements until 2034. The decision could leave the public without reliable,
standardized data on corporate climate pollution for nearly a decade.
“The Greenhouse
100 Index informs consumers, shareholders, regulators, lawmakers and
communities about corporate releases of climate-altering pollutants into our
environment,” says Professor Michael Ash, co-director
of PERI's Corporate Toxics Information Project. “The EPA’s decision to
effectively end the Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program removes access
to vital public information and leaves public and private decision-makers
flying in the dark or relying on a patchwork of voluntary and potentially
cherrypicked or greenwashed reports.”
Launched in 2018,
PERI’s free, open-access online tool provides data on every company that
reports to the EPA. The resource includes state-by-state
rankings and detailed reports identifying all companies and facilities
responsible for each state’s greenhouse gas emissions. Archives of earlier editions
remain available to the public.
The following is PERI's analysis for Maine.
Overall
| Summary for Maine | Value |
| Total 2023 CO2 equivalent emissions (millions of metric tons): | 3.4 |
| Percentage of national total: | 0.1 |
| Rank among US states (1=top): | 48 |
Top 5 Polluter Companies in Maine
Top 5 Sectors in Maine
| Sector Name | CO2 equivalent emissions (mmt) | Num. facilities |
| Power Plants | 1.5 | 7 |
| Pulp and Paper | 0.9 | 5 |
| Cement Production | 0.2 | 1 |
| Industrial Landfills | 0.2 | 4 |
| Municipal Landfills | 0.1 | 2 |
Top 10 facilities in Maine
| Facility Name | CO2 (metric tons) | Company |
| Westbrook Energy Center | 871,059 | Energy Capital Partners |
| ND Paper Inc - Rumford Division | 416,874 | Nine Dragons Paper |
| Maine Independence Station | 380,421 | Vistra Energy |
| Sappi North America, Inc. - Somerset Operations | 316,254 | Sappi |
| WOODLAND PULP LLC | 258,839 | Charmwell Holdings |
| DRAGON CEMENT | 236,953 | Heidelberg Materials |
| Rumford Power LLC | 160,818 | Carlyle Group |
| PORTSMOUTH NAVAL SHIPYARD | 72,231 | U.S. Government |
| Texas Instruments Incorporated - Maine Fab | 69,822 | Texas Instruments |
| JUNIPER RIDGE LANDFILL | 69,031 | Casella Waste Systems |
“In making this
information available, we are building on the historic achievements of the
right-to-know movement,” Ash adds. “Our goal is to engender public
participation in environmental decision-making, and to help residents translate
the right to know into the right to clean air, clean water and a livable
planet.”
The EPA’s
rollback of reporting and disclosure requirements also threatens other PERI
indexes that track companies’ release of pollution into the air and water, and
near schools.
Contacts:
Michael Ash, mash@umass.edu
Aaron Kupec, akupec@umass.edu
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