If the plan had been implemented, gasoline prices in the participating states would have increased. The estimates ranged from 5 to 24 cents per gallon in 2023.[4] Political leaders were also concerned that the tax would hit the poor hardest.[5]
The proposal disintegrated during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. Massachusetts withdrew from the agreement in November 2021, citing new, alternate sources of funding to "upgrade its roads, bridges and public transportation systems".[6] The final state to withdraw was Rhode Island.[7]
^"The Northeast Climate Pact Implodes". The Wall Street Journal. 19 November 2021. Retrieved 21 November 2021. Their problem is that consumers don't want to pay more for energy, and as the latest proof behold Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont's retreat this week from a Northeast state climate pact
^Amy Sokolow (20 November 2021). "Rhode Island, the final state, pulls out of TCI". The Boston Herald. Retrieved 21 November 2021. After both Massachusetts and Connecticut's governors pulled out of the Transportation and Climate Initiative, citing waning support and higher gas prices, Rhode Island has also has left, putting the nail in the coffin on the multi-state partnership