News

The latest updates and information about the work of the Green Fee Advisory Council.

For journalist inquiries, please contact: christine@paakaicommunications.com

Column: Green fee must be conservation catalyst
Olivia Cropper Olivia Cropper

Column: Green fee must be conservation catalyst

By Kevin Chang for Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Is care of ‘aina a major priority of Hawaii and its people?

To determine this, we could look at our Legislature’s budgets for malama ‘aina efforts. Historically, our government has barely ever designated over 1% of the state budget of $20.5 billion toward conservation. Our Legislature does not prioritize aloha ‘aina. Like it or not, this pattern is our current political landscape and inheritance.

But look at when the state’s Division of Conservation and Enforcement (DOCARE), under the Department of Land and Natural Resources, opened its inaugural officer academy application portal. It was inundated with applications within hours. A few classes have successfully graduated and expanded the capacity and effectiveness of DOCARE to protect our ‘aina.

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Escalating climate disasters could make homes uninsurable, new report warns
Olivia Cropper Olivia Cropper

Escalating climate disasters could make homes uninsurable, new report warns

By Victoria Budiono for Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Hawaii is facing a rapidly escalating insurance crisis driven by climate change, aging housing, and a sharp retreat by private insurers, according to a new report released by the Hawaii Appleseed Center for Law & Economic Justice.

The analysis, “Who Pays for Climate Disasters? Case Studies on Regulatory Responses to Climate Change-Related Disasters,” concluded that Hawaii’s property insurance market — particularly for condominiums — is becoming increasingly unstable. Nonrenewals across the state jumped 216% between 2018 and 2023, while premiums for homeowners rose an average of 12% from 2021–2024. Condominium associations saw even sharper increases, averaging 16%, with some buildings reporting fee hikes of more than $2,000 per unit.

Appleseed Executive Director Will White called the situation a “flashing red light.”

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Editorial: Ships cruising for a bruising on TAT
Olivia Cropper Olivia Cropper

Editorial: Ships cruising for a bruising on TAT

By Honolulu Star-Advertiser Editorial Board

The transient accommodations tax (TAT), including a portion newly assessed as the state’s climate impact fee, or “green fee,” stands to be an important source of revenue for the state as federal help for environmental protections and a clean-energy transition dwindles. Beginning Jan. 1, the green fee’s 0.75% add-on to the TAT will bring the total daily accommodations tax to 11%, assessed against all transient accommodations — including, for the first time, cruise ships, based on the days spent at state ports.

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Hawaiʻi’s Green Fee Is Latest Climate Change Effort Challenged By Trump
Trinity Asing Trinity Asing

Hawaiʻi’s Green Fee Is Latest Climate Change Effort Challenged By Trump

By Marcel Honoré for Honolulu Civil Beat

Hawaiʻi’s new green fee aimed at offsetting tourism’s impact on the environment has caught the eye of the Trump administration, which has grown increasingly hostile to efforts to fight climate change. 

A U.S. Department of Justice motion to intervene in Cruise Lines International’s lawsuit against the state and county landed earlier this month, just one day before federal Judge Jill Otake held the first court hearing on the case. 

The tax was heralded as historic when it passed the Legislature last April. As of Jan. 1 it will apply to hotel guests and other short-term visitors and, in a concession intended to gain the support of the hotel industry, it was expanded during the session to include cruise ships as well.

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Understanding the Green Fee Advisory Council’s Evaluation Criteria
Trinity Asing Trinity Asing

Understanding the Green Fee Advisory Council’s Evaluation Criteria

Evaluation Criteria: How Green Fee Proposals Are Scored

The Council walked through the five criteria used to evaluate all Green Fee project proposals:

Results 

The project achieves tangible outcomes that reduce harm, build resilience, and contribute to the protection and restoration of ecosystems and communities

Readiness 

The project will be able to be completed on time, with necessary access, permits, and compliance requirements in place or planned for. Existing infrastructure and systems are ready to support timely project implementation.

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Webinar Recap: Updates on the Green Fee Evaluation Criteria & Recommendations Process
Trinity Asing Trinity Asing

Webinar Recap: Updates on the Green Fee Evaluation Criteria & Recommendations Process

On November 20, 2025, the Green Fee Advisory Council hosted its second public webinar to share updates on how project ideas for Green Fee funding are evaluated, along with insights into the timeline and next steps for the Advisory Council’s recommendations. Mahalo to the hundreds of community members, agencies and departments, and organizations who joined us to learn more about the process.

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Green Fee Advisory Council to give update about project evaluation, recommendations
Trinity Asing Trinity Asing

Green Fee Advisory Council to give update about project evaluation, recommendations

By Kauaʻi Now

The Green Fee Advisory Council will host a webinar next week via Zoom to update the public about its ongoing evaluation criteria along with timelines and next steps in its recommendation process for possible Green Fee projects.

Participants in the Nov. 20 webinar also will have the opportunity to submit questions. The meeting is scheduled for 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.

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Hawaii’s Green Tax for Tourists: A New Strategy to Mitigate Climate Impacts?
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

Hawaii’s Green Tax for Tourists: A New Strategy to Mitigate Climate Impacts?

By Yuxi Lim for Impakter

Home to hundreds of beautiful islands and endangered wildlife species, Hawaii is lovingly known as the Aloha State. It is a globally popular tourist destination, attracting millions of tourists each year.

According to the Department of Business, Economic Development, and Tourism’s (DBEDT) annual visitor research report, more than 9.7 million people visited the Hawaiian Islands in 2024. 

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The Case for a Climate Impact Fee
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

The Case for a Climate Impact Fee

By Governor Josh Green for TIME

Dr. Josh Green is the governor of Hawaii, named as one of the Time100 Climate for 2025

On a sweltering summer morning in 2023, eight months after I was sworn in as governor of Hawaii, disaster struck Maui. In the early hours of August 8, a downed utility pole sparked a fire that quickly spread into the town of Lahaina. Hurricane-force winds fanned the flames, igniting grasses and brush left bone‑dry by years of drought. By afternoon, fires tore through homes and businesses—trapping residents, overwhelming emergency crews and burning so hot that they melted metal and warped granite.

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Green Fee Advisory Council to open public portal for community input on October 15, 2025
Olivia Cropper Olivia Cropper

Green Fee Advisory Council to open public portal for community input on October 15, 2025

By Green Fee Advisory Council

Beginning October 15, 2025, the Green Fee Advisory Council (GFAC) will be accepting ideas from the public for projects that could receive Green Fee funding to implement. Ideas and suggestions may be submitted through a digital portal available via GFAC’s website, greenfeehawaii.org.

For each idea, members of the public are requested to provide information about the potential project including but not limited to impact area(s), cost, geography and potential partnerships with local government agencies. A preview of the full list of questions is available now for download.

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Community presses Hawaii’s new Green Fee Advisory Council
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

Community presses Hawaii’s new Green Fee Advisory Council

By Dan Nakaso for Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Representatives of Hawaii’s new Green Fee Advisory Council who will make recommendations on how increased lodging fees should be spent to combat climate change said Wednesday that they understand the scrutiny they’re under and pledged transparency.

“There are a lot of eyeballs on this,” Jeff Mikulina, the council’s chair, said during the first public discussion of what’s expected to happen in the months ahead. “This is really first in the nation. We owe it to the visitor industry, the folks who are paying into this, and communities and future generations to be very clear and explicit about where the funding is going and hold folks accountable to execute those projects.”

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Hawaii conference showcases nexus between green fees, tourism
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

Hawaii conference showcases nexus between green fees, tourism

By Allison Schaefers for Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Members of the Green Fee Advisory Council updated Hawaii’s visitor industry Monday on the process that they are using to ensure that the nation’s first-ever climate impact fee strengthens Hawaii’s environment, builds resilience and enhances the visitor experience.

Jeff Mikulina, the chair of the new, volunteer climate fee advisory group, provided an update during a luncheon panel, “Green Fee in Focus,” on opening day of the Hawaii Tourism Conference, which concludes today. He was joined by advisory group member Jeff Wagoner and Dawn Chang, chair of the state Department of Land and Natural Resources.

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Hawaii weighs use of ‘green fees’ for nature, tourism
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

Hawaii weighs use of ‘green fees’ for nature, tourism

By Carey L. Biron, Thomson Reuters Foundation for Honolulu Star-Advertiser

WASHINGTON >> When Kawika Riley surveys the beaches and forested hills of the Hawaiian islands, his eyes are drawn to a dangerous interloper: flammable invasive grasses.

Two years ago, such grasses fed devastating wildfires that tore through the island of Maui, killing more than 100 people and causing $5.5 billion in damage.

“What you’re seeing when you see those grasses grow is literally your risk and vulnerability increase,” said Riley, a coalition leader with environmental group Care for ‘Aina Now.

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Protecting Paradise: Hawaii’s Green Tax Now, Promotes Sustainable Tourism and Ecosystem Preservation
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

Protecting Paradise: Hawaii’s Green Tax Now, Promotes Sustainable Tourism and Ecosystem Preservation

By Travel And Tour World

Hawaii has unveiled a strategically conceived green tax designed to foster environmentally responsible tourism while simultaneously alleviating the ecological pressures engendered by high-volume visitation. Surpassing 10 million arrivals each year, the sector represents the second largest economic pillar of the state, producing approximately one-quarter of gross state product. Nevertheless, such a scale has subjected native systems to pronounced decline, manifested through intensified coastal erosion, the dispersal of non-indigenous flora and fauna, and heightened susceptibility to cyclonic and other extreme temporal hazards. In light of these realities, state authorities will augment the transient accommodations tax, levying the rate to 11 per cent on all lodgings and short-term rentals.

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To Weather the Growing Costs of Climate Disasters, Some States Are Getting Creative
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

To Weather the Growing Costs of Climate Disasters, Some States Are Getting Creative

By Maddie Burakoff for Audubon Magazine

In 2023, a deadly wildfire fueled by powerful winds and drought swept Maui, leaving vibrant communities and coastal habitat in ruin. As Hawaiʻi rebuilds at a cost of more than $12 billion, officials are preparing for a future of more extreme events. In May, the state enacted a first-in-the-nation “green fee”: a tax on tourists to fund climate preparedness efforts like uprooting invasive plants to reduce fire risk, hardening homes against hurricanes, and restoring reefs to buffer storm surges. “Hawaiʻi cannot wait for the next disaster to hit before taking action,” said Governor Josh Green. “We must build resiliency now.”

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Hawaii Joins Bali, New Zealand, Venice, Barcelona, Amsterdam in Introducing New Taxes and How it Affects Tourism Industry, New Update
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

Hawaii Joins Bali, New Zealand, Venice, Barcelona, Amsterdam in Introducing New Taxes and How it Affects Tourism Industry, New Update

By Tuhin Sarkar for Travel And Tour World

Hawaii joins Bali, New Zealand, Venice, Barcelona, and Amsterdam in introducing new taxes, and how it affects the tourism industry is now at the centre of global debate. Around the world, destinations are searching for ways to balance booming visitor demand with the rising costs of protecting culture, nature, and local life. Hawaii joins Bali by preparing its first ever statewide green fee, while New Zealand has already raised its international visitor levy to record levels. At the same time, Venice is expanding its day-tripper entry tax, Barcelona is delaying but still increasing its hotel surcharges, and Amsterdam is keeping its position as Europe’s highest-taxed tourist city.

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Gov. Green appoints Green Fee Advisory Council ahead of tourism tax taking effect
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

Gov. Green appoints Green Fee Advisory Council ahead of tourism tax taking effect

By Hawaii News Now Staff

Hawaii Gov. Josh Green announced the creation of a Green Fee Advisory Council, who will be responsible for giving guidance on how to spend the newly enacted Green Fee funds.

Green signed into law the country’s first-ever lodging tax that tourists pay to offset the impacts of climate change back in May.

The money collected from the fees is intended be spent on projects that strengthen Hawaii’s environmental resilience and sustainable tourism.

The Green Fee goes into effect Jan. 1, 2026, and is expected to bring in an estimated $100 million annually.

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What projects should receive funds from the new 'Green Fee'? This group wants your input
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

What projects should receive funds from the new 'Green Fee'? This group wants your input

By Ashley Mizuo for Hawaiʻi Public Radio

Hawaiʻi is expecting to collect $100 million a year from the new "Green Fee" tax on hotels and cruise ships that starts next year. The 0.75 percentage point increase to the state’s visitor tax — bringing it to 11% — will be spent on climate resilience.

But what types of projects need the funding most? Care for ʻĀina Now, a group that advocated for the Green Fee, wants community input.

One of its leaders, Jack Kittinger, is encouraging people to fill out the coalition’s survey.

"Community groups are on the front lines all across the islands. So if we want to make progress fast on our climate resiliency efforts, we need to ensure those initiatives and efforts are being considered for the Green Fee funding so that we can put that public money to work in responsible, but also fast and effective ways to bolster our climate resilience,” he said.

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Hawaii decides how to spend ‘green fees’ to protect nature, tourism
Lisa Huynh Eller Lisa Huynh Eller

Hawaii decides how to spend ‘green fees’ to protect nature, tourism

By Carey L. Biron for Context

[WASHINGTON] When Kawika Riley surveys the beaches and forested hills of the Hawaiian islands, his eyes are drawn to a dangerous interloper: flammable invasive grasses.

Two years ago, such grasses fed devastating wildfires that tore through the island of Maui, killing more than 100 people and causing US$5.5 billion in damage.

“What you’re seeing when you see those grasses grow is literally your risk and vulnerability increase,” said Riley, a coalition leader with environmental group Care for ‘Aina Now.

Read More