Canada plans to double capacity of electricity grid by 2050

The announcement by Prime Minister Mark Carney comes as Canada’s electricity systems are under increasing strain due ​to industrial growth, demand from AI data centers and greater ​electric vehicle use. The country’s total electricity generation has ⁠fallen, however, due in part to droughts that have reduced hydroelectric ​capacity and the retirement of coal-fired power plants.

The plan comes as Canada ​looks to reduce its trade reliance on the United States due to President Donald Trump’s tariffs. Canada’s regional electricity grids trade more with the U.S. than ​they do with each other, and its U.S. electricity imports have ​increased every year since 2020, according to the Canada Energy Regulator.
The electricity strategy ‌aims ⁠to use new investment tax credits to spur the construction of east-west electricity interties to connect regional power grids.
Canada also announced it will change its clean electricity regulations to allow greater use of credible ​offsets and also ​enable greater flexibility ⁠for existing natural-gas-powered units to maintain reliability. The move softens regulations introduced under former Prime Minister Justin ​Trudeau, which had been criticized by provinces such as ​Alberta ⁠that depend on natural gas to produce power.
Carney said natural gas can play a complementary role on Canada’s grid, but will be dwarfed in ⁠scale ​by clean electricity investments the country will ​make in hydropower, nuclear and renewable electricity.
($1 = 1.3720 Canadian dollars)
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