{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/68f00b3ace402940bcbac06a/6a2264b0ac951431d7a7ff36?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"MBP Intelligence Briefing: Powering Canada Strong — Canada’s National Electricity Strategy","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/68f00b3ace402940bcbac06a/1780638787007-a663a010-deb1-4dc0-aed7-d1236ab21af7.jpeg?height=200","description":"<h3>Episode Summary</h3><p>In this special roundtable edition of the MBP Intelligence Briefing, Ben Woodfinden and Tyler Meredith are joined by leading experts in energy policy, economics, and electricity regulation to unpack the federal government's new National Electricity Strategy, <em>Powering Canada Strong</em>. The discussion explores what it will take to double Canada's electricity system by 2050, the trillion-dollar investment challenge, affordability concerns, electrification, economic competitiveness, and the role of natural gas in Canada's future energy mix. The panel examines whether the strategy is truly a roadmap or simply the beginning of a much larger national conversation.</p><h2>Guests</h2><h3>Merran Smith - President, New Economy Canada</h3><h3><a href=\"https://neweconomycanada.ca/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">https://neweconomycanada.ca/</a></h3><h3>Andrew Leach - Professor of Economics and Law, University of Alberta</h3><h3><a href=\"https://apps.ualberta.ca/directory/person/aleach\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">https://apps.ualberta.ca/directory/person/aleach</a></h3><h3>Michael Powell - Vice President, Government Relations, Electricity Canada</h3><h3> <a href=\"https://electricity.ca/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">https://electricity.ca/</a></h3><p><br></p><p><strong>Segment Highlights</strong></p><h3>Segment 1: What the Strategy Actually Says</h3><ul><li>Why the federal government shifted from a \"Clean Electricity Strategy\" to a broader National Electricity Strategy.</li><li>The goal of doubling Canada's electricity generation, transmission, distribution, and storage by 2050.</li><li>The balance between economic competitiveness, affordability, sovereignty, and emissions reduction.</li><li>The evolving role of the federal government in a sector traditionally led by provinces.</li></ul><h3>Segment 2: Building the Grid</h3><ul><li>What it will take to double Canada's electricity capacity.</li><li>Challenges around transmission infrastructure, permitting, workforce shortages, and utility planning.</li><li>The importance of interprovincial transmission and grid connectivity.</li><li>Whether Canada can build at the pace required to meet future demand.</li></ul><h3>Segment 3: Who Pays?</h3><ul><li>The trillion-dollar investment challenge facing Canada's electricity system.</li><li>The debate between taxpayers, ratepayers, and private capital.</li><li>The role of federal tax credits, infrastructure funding, and public financing.</li><li>How pension funds and institutional investors could help fund grid expansion.</li></ul><h3>Segment 4: The Energy Wallet</h3><ul><li>The strategy's argument that electrification can lower overall household energy costs.</li><li>Why consumers may struggle to see long-term savings when facing higher upfront costs.</li><li>The role of EVs, heat pumps, and home retrofits.</li><li>The political challenge of communicating affordability benefits.</li></ul><h3>Segment 5: The Economic Opportunity</h3><ul><li>Electrification as a foundation for Canada's future economy.</li><li>Opportunities in AI data centres, critical minerals, advanced manufacturing, and industrial growth.</li><li>Canada's ability to compete globally for investment.</li><li>Workforce shortages and the need for skilled labour.</li></ul><h3>Segment 6: The Natural Gas Question</h3><ul><li>The role natural gas will continue to play in Canada's electricity system.</li><li>Reliability, affordability, and emissions tradeoffs.</li><li>Regional differences in generation needs and energy policy.</li><li>How governments balance energy security with climate objectives.</li></ul><h6>YouTube Credits: CBC News, CTV News, Global News, Bloomberg Television, CNBC, Reuters, Motion Array, balcony et-al, Videoscape, Exploring Stunning Landscapes From Above</h6><p><br></p><p><br></p>","author_name":"MBP Intelligence "}