Hawai‘i
Governor
Josh Green (Democrat)
House Party
Democratic Supermajority
Senate Party
Democratic Supermajority
Key Offices & Links
22
40
West
Progress by Policy Area
- Enacted Enacted policies have been passed or established in a state by a governing body via legislation, executive orders, rules, regulations, and/or other program creation, and remain in effect.
- In-progress In progress policies have been established in a state, but final regulations, rules, or plans are pending final approval. This also includes legislation and executive orders that require regulations to be put into effect.
- Partially Enacted Partially enacted policies have been enacted in the state, but are missing one or more policy components. Dashboard policies cannot be considered partially enacted unless policy components are available.
- Not Enacted Not enacted policies have not been passed or established in the state or are no longer in effect.
Climate Policies in Hawai‘i
Status | Policy | Policy Area | Policy Category | Year Enacted | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Climate Governance | 2022 | ||
Empty column | 50% by 2030 | Carbon negative by 2045 Relative to 2005 levels | Establishing Policies
| |||
Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Climate Governance | 2023 | ||
Empty column | Hawai‘i Pathways to Decarbonization | Establishing Policies
| |||
Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Climate Governance | 2024 | ||
Empty column | The 1990-2021 Greenhouse Gas Inventory was published in May 2024. | ||||
Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Climate Governance | 2017 | ||
Empty column | Hawai‘i Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation Commission | Establishing Policies
| |||
Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Climate Governance | 2024 | ||
Empty column | Climate Advisory Team (CAT) | Establishing Policies
| |||
Not Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Environmental Justice and Equity | |||
Empty column | Environmental justice (EJ) community definitions identify the specific, quantifiable thresholds that designate a geographical area as an EJ community. These definitions account for multiple factors, including both environmental and socioeconomic stressors, that may contribute to persistent environmental health disparities. | ||||
Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Environmental Justice and Equity | 2022 | ||
Empty column | Justice40 Disadvantaged Tracts in Hawai‘i | Establishing Policies
| |||
Not Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Environmental Justice and Equity | |||
Empty column | Environmental justice (EJ) community investment requirements help ensure communities most impacted by environmental burdens are benefitting equitably from public programs by requiring a certain percentage of funds and/or benefits from other policies are allocated to EJ communities. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Environmental Justice and Equity | |||
Empty column | Environmental justice (EJ) bureaucracy consists of dedicated EJ offices and staff, interagency task forces, and other bodies made up of government staff responsible for developing and implementing EJ policy. These entities are often tasked with integrating EJ and equity into climate policy design and implementation. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Environmental Justice and Equity | |||
Empty column | Environmental justice (EJ) advisory bodies are responsible for making recommendations on EJ policy, integrating EJ and equity principles into climate policy, and increasing public engagement. These bodies can consist of all non-government members, or be a mix of government and non-government members. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Environmental Justice and Equity | |||
Empty column | Cumulative impact assessments determine the health and environmental impacts of renewing or granting a permit for certain pollution-generating facilities in environmental justice communities. Increased pollution burdens in communities may result in the permit application being denied. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Just Transition | |||
Empty column | Just transition plans are documents that outline policies and recommendations aimed at supporting communities, workers, and industries affected by the transition away from fossil fuels. The plans often focus on workforce development and retraining, job creation, and economic diversification. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Just Transition | |||
Empty column | Just transition offices and staff assist workers and communities transitioning away from fossil fuel extraction and use, typically through retraining programs and support with relocation and economic diversification. Offices and staff also coordinate with other state agencies to effectively design policy to achieve a just transition. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Just Transition | |||
Empty column | Just transition advisory bodies write or advise on a state's just transition plan or report, and make recommendations on ways to support affected workers, communities, and industries. The bodies can consist of all non-government members, or be a mix of government and non-government members. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Climate Governance and Equity
|
Just Transition | |||
Empty column | Just transition funds support initiatives and investments aimed at facilitating the equitable transition of workers and communities affected by shifts in industries or policies that transition from fossil fuels. | ||||
Enacted |
Cross-Sector
|
Climate Finance | 2013 | ||
Empty column | Hawai‘i Green Infrastructure Authority | Establishing Policies
| |||
Not Enacted |
Cross-Sector
|
Carbon Valuation | |||
Empty column | Carbon pollution pricing establishes a pollution fee or cap-and-trade program on the greenhouse gas emissions associated with each sector/source of emissions within the state. Programs typically cover the electricity, buildings, transportation, and/or industrial sectors. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Cross-Sector
|
Carbon Valuation | |||
Empty column | The social cost of carbon is a monetary estimate of the damage of each ton of greenhouse gases emitted. The social cost of carbon is used to quantify and monetize climate damages, representing the net economic cost of climate pollution to society. | ||||
Enacted |
Electricity
|
Energy Plans and Targets | 2015 | ||
Empty column | 40% renewable energy by 2030 | 70% by 2040 | 100% by 2045 | Establishing Policies
| |||
Not Enacted |
Electricity
|
Energy Plans and Targets | |||
Empty column | Electricity greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction targets are set by a state to limit GHG emissions in the electricity sector. These targets aim to reduce emissions by different amounts over time, often expressed as percentage relative to a baseline year. | ||||
Enacted |
Electricity
|
Energy Plans and Targets | 2023 | ||
Empty column | State of Hawai‘i Report to the 2024 Legislature on Hawaii’s Renewable Portfolio Standards The Public Utilities Commission is required to evaluate Hawaii’s RPS every five years and report its findings to the Legislature. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Electricity
|
Clean Energy Generation | |||
Empty column | The State Policy Opportunity Tracker (SPOT) breaks clean energy policies down into “components”, which are binary questions to evaluate policy quality. Higher quality policies have more of their SPOT components fulfilled. | Establishing Policies
| Policy Components
0/5
| ||
Partially Enacted |
Electricity
|
Clean Energy Generation | |||
Empty column | The State Policy Opportunity Tracker (SPOT) breaks clean energy policies down into “components”, which are binary questions to evaluate policy quality. Higher quality policies have more of their SPOT components fulfilled. | Establishing Policies
| Policy Components
5/11
| ||
Partially Enacted |
Electricity
|
Clean Energy Generation | |||
Empty column | The State Policy Opportunity Tracker (SPOT) breaks clean energy policies down into “components”, which are binary questions to evaluate policy quality. Higher quality policies have more of their SPOT components fulfilled. | Establishing Policies
| Policy Components
4/6
| ||
Not Enacted |
Electricity
|
Clean Energy Generation | |||
Empty column | Community choice aggregation allows local governments to procure power on behalf of their residents, businesses, and municipal accounts from an alternative supplier while still receiving transmission and distribution service from their existing utility provider. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Electricity
|
Transmission, Distribution, and Energy Storage | |||
Empty column | Energy storage targets establish procurement targets for energy storage systems by a certain date, often with interim targets. Targets can vary from broad megawatt (MW) requirements to more specific mandates that focus on the adoption of certain storage technologies. | ||||
Enacted |
Electricity
|
Transmission, Distribution, and Energy Storage | 2023 | ||
Empty column | Hawaii received a C grade from Freeing the Grid. | Establishing Policies
| |||
Enacted |
Electricity
|
Coal Retirement | 2020 | ||
Empty column | The public utilities commission is prohibited from issuing or renewing permits for covered source facilities that burn coal for electricity generation after December 31, 2022. | Establishing Policies
| |||
Not Enacted |
Electricity
|
Coal Retirement | |||
Empty column | Coal securitization is a financing tool that allows utility companies to refinance debt they issued to build coal plants and close the facilities early without taking a financial hit or passing costs on to ratepayers. | ||||
Enacted |
Buildings and Efficiency
|
Building Codes | 2021 | ||
Empty column | The statewide energy code for residential construction is 2018 IECC with amendments. | Establishing Policies
| |||
Enacted |
Buildings and Efficiency
|
Building Codes | 2021 | ||
Empty column | The statewide energy code for commercial building construction is 2018 IECC and ASHRAE 90.1-2016. | Establishing Policies
| |||
Not Enacted |
Buildings and Efficiency
|
Building Codes | |||
Empty column | Stretch building energy codes are an optional, more stringent building code established by the state that local jurisdictions can adopt to require that newly constructed buildings are more efficient than the baseline state codes. | ||||
Enacted |
Buildings and Efficiency
|
Building Standards | 2023 | ||
Empty column | The Hawai‘i Appliance Efficiency Standards apply to 10 products. | Establishing Policies
| |||
In-Progress |
Buildings and Efficiency
|
Building Standards | |||
Empty column | Hawai‘i will receive $18.1M to develop and adopt a building performance standard through the federal Inflation Reduction Act's Support for Building Energy Codes and Innovative Codes. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Buildings and Efficiency
|
Building Standards | |||
Empty column | Clean heat standards establish a performance standard requiring heat providers to deliver a gradually-increasing percentage of low-emission heating services to customers. | ||||
Enacted |
Buildings and Efficiency
|
Building Efficiency | 2020 | ||
Empty column | Electric utilities are required to achieve annual savings equivalent to 1.4% of electricity sales; utilities must achieve a 30% reduction in electricity usage by 2030, relative to a 2008 baseline. Gas utilities are not subject to an EERS. | Establishing Policies
| |||
In-Progress |
Buildings and Efficiency
|
Building Efficiency | 2022 | ||
Empty column | Hawaii has enacted commercial PACE-enabling legislation and is developing programs. | Establishing Policies
| |||
Partially Enacted |
Buildings and Efficiency
|
Building Efficiency | |||
Empty column | The State Policy Opportunity Tracker (SPOT) breaks clean energy policies down into “components”, which are binary questions to evaluate policy quality. Higher quality policies have more of their SPOT components fulfilled. | Establishing Policies
| Policy Components
1/4
| ||
Not Enacted |
Buildings and Efficiency
|
Building Electrification | |||
Empty column | All-electric buildings policies require new buildings to be constructed with all-electric heating, cooling, and cooking systems to transition away from fossil-fuel use in buildings. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Transportation
|
Light-Duty Vehicles | |||
Empty column | Under Section 177 of the Clean Air Act, California has the unique authority to establish vehicle emission standards more stringent than federal standards, and other states may adopt California’s standards. These Low-Emission Vehicle (LEV) standards control tailpipe emissions of criteria pollutants and greenhouse gasses from light-duty vehicles. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Transportation
|
Light-Duty Vehicles | |||
Empty column | Zero-Emission Vehicle (ZEV) mandates, also known as "clean car standards," require automakers to produce and sell a certain percentage of zero-emission light-duty vehicles each model year based on total new vehicle sales. The most stringent ZEV mandates require 100% of new vehicle sales to be electric by 2035 and are known as "Advanced Clean Cars II". | ||||
Not Enacted |
Transportation
|
Light-Duty Vehicles | |||
Empty column | Electric vehicle rebates offer rebates to make light-duty electric vehicles more affordable to increase their adoption in a state. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Transportation
|
Medium- and Heavy-Duty Vehicles | |||
Empty column | Low NOx Omnibus Rules establish stringent tailpipe emission standards for heavy duty vehicles, updated testing procedures, and technology-neutral compliance mechanisms to reduce nitrous oxide (NOx) pollution. The regulation must be adopted first by California, and other states may adopt the regulation under the federal Clean Air Act. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Transportation
|
Medium- and Heavy-Duty Vehicles | |||
Empty column | Medium- and heavy-duty (MHD) zero-emission vehicle mandates, also known as "Advanced Clean Trucks", require automakers to produce and sell a certain number of zero-emission MHD vehicles to fulfill a quota based on a percentage of total sales in states. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Transportation
|
Medium- and Heavy-Duty Vehicles | |||
Empty column | Medium- and heavy-duty (MHD) electric vehicle rebates consist of programs and policies that offer rebates to make MHD electric vehicles more affordable to increase their adoption in a state. | ||||
Enacted |
Transportation
|
Lead by Example | 2021 | ||
Empty column | 30% of the state's light-duty vehicle fleet are ZEVs by 2025 | 60% are ZEVs by 2030 | 100% are ZEVs by 2035 | Establishing Policies
| |||
Not Enacted |
Transportation
|
Lead by Example | |||
Empty column | Electric bus procurement targets require that a certain percentage or number of school buses and/or transit buses purchased or leased by the state, transit authorities, and/or school districts must be electric or zero-emissions. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Transportation
|
EV Charging Infrastructure | |||
Empty column | Electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure requirements establish mandates for the installation of EV charging infrastructure in new construction or developments, such as residential or commercial buildings, and public parking lots. | ||||
Enacted |
Transportation
|
EV Charging Infrastructure | 2019 | ||
Empty column | The EV Charging Stations rebate program offers rebates for the purchase and installation of EV chargers for commercial entities, workplaces, and multifamily dwellings, up to $4,500 for Level 2 and up to $35,000 for direct current (DC) fast chargers. | Establishing Policies
| |||
Not Enacted |
Transportation
|
Transportation Plans and Targets | |||
Empty column | Electric vehicle (EV) and EV charging infrastructure plans are documents that provide a framework to guide the development, coordination, and adoption of EVs and EV charging infrastructure. | ||||
Enacted |
Transportation
|
Transportation Plans and Targets | 2023 | ||
Empty column | Net-zero emissions by 2045 | Establishing Policies
| |||
Not Enacted |
Transportation
|
Transportation Plans and Targets | |||
Empty column | A low carbon fuel standard (LCFS) is a market-based mechanism to reduce the carbon intensity of transportation fuels and account for the fuel's life cycle greenhouse gas emissions. | ||||
Partially Enacted |
Transportation
|
Public and Active Transportation | |||
Empty column | Hawai‘i is ranked 25th out of 50 in the 2024 Bicycle Friendly State rankings by the League of American Bicyclists. | Establishing Policies
| Policy Components
4/5
| ||
Not Enacted |
Industry, Materials, and Waste Management
|
Industrial Decarbonization | |||
Empty column | Buy clean requirements mandate or incentivize the use of low-carbon construction materials, such as concrete and steel, in public projects to address embodied carbon. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Industry, Materials, and Waste Management
|
F-gas Regulations | |||
Empty column | Hydrofluorocarbon (HFC) regulations include phasedown commitments, rulemakings, disclosure requirements, bans, or other measures that reduce HFC usage and emissions. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Industry, Materials, and Waste Management
|
F-gas Regulations | |||
Empty column | Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) regulations include phasedown commitments, reporting requirements, bans, or other measures that reduce SF6 usage and emissions. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Industry, Materials, and Waste Management
|
Oil and Gas Regulations | |||
Empty column | Oil and gas methane regulations include phasedown commitments, reporting requirements, leak detection and repair, or other measures that reduce methane emissions from oil and gas production. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Industry, Materials, and Waste Management
|
Oil and Gas Regulations | |||
Empty column | Fracking bans prohibit the practice of hydraulic fracking for the production of oil and/or natural gas by a certain year. Legislation often requires an environmental agency or department to promulgate regulations. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Industry, Materials, and Waste Management
|
Waste Management | |||
Empty column | Landfill methane regulations include rulemakings, emissions monitoring, emissions control, or other measures that reduce methane emissions from decaying organic waste in landfills. | ||||
Not Enacted |
Industry, Materials, and Waste Management
|
Waste Management | |||
Empty column | Food waste bans and targets include policies that prohibit certain entities that generate specified amounts of food waste (typically commercial businesses and larger institutions) from sending this waste to landfills. Targets aim to reduce total food waste by a certain percentage each target year. | ||||
Enacted |
Natural and Working Lands
|
Agriculture | 2022 | ||
Empty column | The Hawai‘i Carbon Smart Land Management Assistance Pilot Program provides compensation to producers for practices that increase soil health. | Establishing Policies
| |||
Enacted |
Natural and Working Lands
|
Agriculture | 2022 | ||
Empty column | The Farmer Apprenticeship Mentoring Program (FMAP) aims to improve soil health and support a whole farm system approach to sustainable agriculture. | Establishing Policies
|