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Committee hears bill to expand ANR authority for greenhouse-gas reporting, including $800,000 appropriation

February 05, 2026 | Environment & Energy, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Committees, Legislative , Vermont


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Committee hears bill to expand ANR authority for greenhouse-gas reporting, including $800,000 appropriation
Representative Kathleen James introduced H 740, saying improved state-level data is central to climate policymaking and describing the bill as a top priority for the session. She told the committee the measure responds to a Climate Council recommendation that Vermont needs a better reporting framework to design effective, equitable climate policies.

Office of State Counsel walked members through the bill's statutory changes to the existing greenhouse-gas inventory provision (10 VSA §582) and the new rulemaking directive. Counsel summarized the requirements: the secretary of the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) would be authorized to adopt rules creating a comprehensive greenhouse-gas emissions reporting program covering all sources, including suppliers of transportation and heating fuel; suppliers "shall comply with requests from the secretary for information." The counsel read the bill's timeline requirement that ANR submit proposed final rules to the Legislative Committee on Administrative Rules on or before 03/01/2027.

The bill includes a funding provision. As the counsel stated, "Dollars 800,000 is appropriated from the general fund to the secretary of natural resources to be used to draft the greenhouse gas emission reporting rules, develop a greenhouse gas emission source database, and fund staff time on emission source data collection." The appropriation is intended to support rule drafting, a new emissions source database and staff time to collect and compile supplier data.

Members questioned how the proposal differs from ANR's existing greenhouse-gas inventory and the previously proposed (and now suspended) fuel-dealer registry tied to the clean heat standard. Counsel and Rep. James said the inventory is a long-standing ANR product that draws on federal and other data sources and can lag 18 months to three years; the bill would give ANR clearer authority to require supplier-level data to fill gaps in timeliness and detail. Rep. James said she did not intend the measure to force collection of private household wood-fire data, calling household-level wood-stove tracking impractical to enforce.

Committee members raised scope questions — whether the reporting should explicitly include biomass electric generation and large point sources such as the McNeil facility — and discussed the minimum county-level reporting standard in the draft versus the potential value of town-level granularity for local planning. ANR witnesses were slated to appear later to address technical implementation, compliance and costs.

Next steps: the sponsor said the committee will hear agency and other witnesses later in the week to probe data sources, enforcement mechanisms and the appropriation before any vote or recommendation.

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