Thursday, June 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

What to know about Canada's electricity overhaul

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Mar, 2023 04:19 PM
  • What to know about Canada's electricity overhaul

OTTAWA - Clean electricity was one of the stars of Tuesday's federal budget, with almost $1 in every $8 of new spending the budget anticipates in the next five years targeting Canada's electricity dreams.

That includes a new tax credit worth 15 per cent of investments made to build new renewable energy infrastructure, including wind and solar plants, nuclear reactors, emissions-trapping natural gas plants, new transmission lines between provinces and territories and stationary electricity storage, such as batteries.

The tax credit is set to kick in a year from now, be available for 10 years and cost an estimated $25.7 billion by the time it winds down in 2035.

And another $3 billion is being added by 2035 to a program that gives grants to companies and provincial and territorial governments that are looking to modernize existing power grids or install new renewable power.

Why is all this money necessary?

Here's a snapshot of Canada's power situation and Ottawa's aspirations of what it could be.

1. Clean power, all the time

Canada's target is to make the entire power grid entirely emissions-free by 2035. By 2050, the entire economy is to produce no emissions it cannot capture with nature or technology. At the same time, power needs are being driven by the electrification of the economy, including transportation. All those electric vehicles have to get their charge from somewhere.

The only way to do all of that is to make a lot more power, and make more of it come from renewables. The country is already getting off coal, the most emissions-intensive source of electricity. Ontario eliminated coal in 2014, and by 2030, Canada's regulations require all coal power plants to be closed or abated with carbon capture and storage technology.

The United Nations recently said that wealthy countries like Canada need to get off natural gas, too, but Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault has been clear that eliminating it as a power source isn't realistic for Canada, and the emissions it produces can be captured.

Coal now accounts for seven per cent of our electricity, and natural gas 11 per cent. Hydroelectricity is about 61 per cent, nuclear about 12 per cent and wind about six per cent.

The Canadian Climate Institute said last year that to power its net-zero economy in 2050, Canada will need two to three times as much power as it generates now. And 75 per cent of the additional power will have to come from renewables like wind and solar to ensure that Canada doesn't exceed its emissions goal.

Renewables are already growing quickly. In 2010, wind made up less than one per cent of the total power that was generated. The Canada Energy Regulator predicts that by 2050, wind will make up almost one-fifth of the country's total electricity production.

2. The dream of an east-west power grid

In the 19th century, it was a national railroad. In the 20th, it was a national highway.

Now, in the 21st, the coast-to-coast connectivity dream is an east-west power grid, one that connects provinces with power to sell to those who need to buy it. Largely due to geography, there are many power lines between Canada and Northern U.S. states. But there are very few connecting one province to another.

It has been a dream, particularly in power-rich provinces such as British Columbia, Manitoba and Quebec, to build transmission lines to sell their clean hydroelectricity to places like Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario and the Maritimes, which have been more dependent on coal and natural gas. That dream has been dashed many times, with repeated failures to build a transmission line from Northern Manitoba to Ontario and from British Columbia to Alberta.

The latest interprovincial proposal, the Atlantic Loop, has been in negotiation for more than three years already. The project would connect hydroelectric power from Quebec and Labrador to displace coal-fired power in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Ottawa has expressed keen interest, and the premiers are all pretty gung ho. But even in Tuesday's clean-electricity heavy budget, the project is still just listed as being negotiated. The timeline for its completion extends to 2030.

3. Red tape everywhere

Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson points out, any time he is asked about a national grid, that connecting power between provinces is a complicated effort. There is provincial jurisdiction over resources and federal environmental jurisdiction over interprovincial projects. There is the need for Indigenous consultation and buy-in. Not to mention the 10 different provincial electricity regulatory systems and the federal government's myriad of electrical rules and policies.

Electricity Canada's recent report on the "state of the Canadian electricity industry" in 2023, says the federal government alone has more than 90 different regulations affecting electricity, from greenhouse gas policies and fisheries and migratory birds.

Politics and regulatory reviews meant it took Manitoba more than 10 years to build a single, 1,400-km transmission line from its northern dams to its southern power customers. The Bipole III line was an election issue during at least three provincial campaigns in Manitoba.

Canada is in now the midst of developing regulations to enforce its 2035 clean power grid goal. The regulations were initially expected in December, but they have been delayed.

4. Big money

The Conference Board of Canada has estimated it could cost more than $1.7 trillion to get Canada's power grid to produce as much power as is needed, without emissions, by 2050.

Connecting provinces by power lines will also carry a heft price tag. In 2016, B.C. estimated a new transmission line to Alberta would cost $1 billion. Bipole III, completed in 2018 after four years of construction, cost more than $5 billion. And the Atlantic Loop estimate is also $5 billion.

But it is getting cheaper to build renewable power. Unlike a coal, gas or nuclear plant, which all have to buy input fuels to make electricity, solar and wind farms source their power for free, so the costs have more to do with construction and maintenance.

As demand grows and technology improves, the cost of solar and wind power has plummeted. Globally, the cost of solar power fell 90 per cent between 2009 and 2019 to an average of US$40 per megawatt hour of power. Wind power costs fell from US$135 to US$41 per megawatt hour.

A natural gas plant can cost about US$56 per megawatt hour, but that's not including the technology Canada will insist on to trap its greenhouse gas emissions. Coal power was about US$109 in 2019, but Canada is phasing out coal, and no new coal plants will be built. The average Canadian home uses about 25 megawatt hours of electricity in a year.

5. The copper conundrum

Building all this new power is going to require materials, and lots of them. Steel, fibreglass, plastics, and aluminum for wind turbines. Silicon, glass, aluminum and other materials for solar panels. Transmission lines and towers will also require steel and millions of kilometres of wires, which in turn will require millions of tonnes of copper.

Jerome Fournier, director of innovation at Nexans Canada, which makes electrical transmission lines, said a clean power grid by 2035 is a big ask to get all the wire made, and all the copper needed. "It is a challenge," he said.

He said that last year, the global supply of copper was about 23 million tonnes, mainly sourced from Canada, the United States and South America. Demand was just under that at 22 million tonnes, with more than half of that consumption coming from China. By 2030, the expectation is that supply may grow to 27 million tonnes, but demand will grow to 35 million tonnes.

Fournier said there are ways to get more copper, largely through recycling programs that seek to remove copper from transmission wires that are being replaced, and from the scraps of the new ones being installed. Getting copper from scrap wire alone could add four million tonnes of copper back into the supply chain, he said.

But the capacity to turn that copper into usable wires and transmission lines is also not big enough. Fournier said the challenge is not insurmountable, but is one that must be addressed.

MORE National ARTICLES

Heat warnings for much of B.C. with temperatures up to 40 C through to Saturday

Heat warnings for much of B.C. with temperatures up to 40 C through to Saturday
The warnings cover an area from the inner south coast, including Victoria and Metro Vancouver, to the Okanagan, and as far north as the Bulkley Valley and Terrace and Kitimat on the northern coast.

Heat warnings for much of B.C. with temperatures up to 40 C through to Saturday

Male suspect in custody after multiple morning shootings in Langley, road closures in effect

Male suspect in custody after multiple morning shootings in Langley, road closures in effect
Police say in a news release they responded this morning to reports of shots fired with several victims in several different locations. The RCMP has asked people to stay away from those location 200 street and Langley Bypass; Parking lot of Cascades Casino located at Fraser Highway and 204 Street, Langley Bus Loop located a Logan Avenue and Glover.     

Male suspect in custody after multiple morning shootings in Langley, road closures in effect

Double homicide victims in Whistler identified as Meninder Dhaliwal and Satindera Gill, IHIT says shooting targeted

Double homicide victims in Whistler identified as Meninder Dhaliwal and Satindera Gill, IHIT says shooting targeted
The victims are identified as Satindera Gill and Meninder Dhaliwal. Both were known to police. IHIT said the shooting is believed to have been targeted, and in relation to the ongoing Lower Mainland gang conflict.

Double homicide victims in Whistler identified as Meninder Dhaliwal and Satindera Gill, IHIT says shooting targeted

Nexus backlog tops 341K amid U.S. border dispute

Nexus backlog tops 341K amid U.S. border dispute
The standoff has led to a massive backlog in applications for the program, which allows pre-approved travellers to cross the border more quickly. The Canada Border Services Agency says the number of Nexus applications has ballooned to 341,688 from about 270,000 in April at a time when delays are wreaking havoc on travellers' summer plans.

Nexus backlog tops 341K amid U.S. border dispute

In Conversation With Stewart Prest - A Political Science Expert On The Stepping Down Of BC Premier, Mr John Horgan

In Conversation With Stewart Prest - A Political Science Expert On The Stepping Down Of BC Premier, Mr John Horgan
With a PhD in political science, Stewart Prest researches, writes and teaches about various areas of political science, including provincial and federal Canadian politics and institutions. In an exclusive interview with DARPAN Magazine, he talks about the BC Premier - John Horgan stepping down and the future of BC politics. 

In Conversation With Stewart Prest - A Political Science Expert On The Stepping Down Of BC Premier, Mr John Horgan

Immigration Canada updates anti-racism strategy

Immigration Canada updates anti-racism strategy
The Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada document released this week says the department needs to be more open-minded and self-critical in response to criticisms like those it received about the government's handling of Ukrainian refugees this year compared to Afghans fleeing the Taliban in 2021.    

Immigration Canada updates anti-racism strategy