EDITORIAL: An energy policy for the real world

1 week ago 23

Canada is ideally positioned to become both a conventional and clean energy superpower

Published Jul 04, 2026  •  Last updated 5 hours ago  •  2 minute read

Prime Minister Mark Carney announces the federal government's first five megaprojects under consideration for fast-tracking during a press conference at the Alberta Carpenters Training Centre, in Edmonton Thursday Sept. 11, 2205.Prime Minister Mark Carney announces the federal government's first five megaprojects under consideration for fast-tracking during a press conference at the Alberta Carpenters Training Centre, in Edmonton Thursday Sept. 11, 2205. Photo by David Bloom /Postmedia file

It’s long past time for Canadian governments to orient our energy policies to the world as it is, not the world as we would like it to be.

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In the real world, fossil fuels today supply 86.2% of global energy, compared to 5.9% for modern renewables, 5.2% for nuclear power and 2.7% for the traditional renewable of hydro power.

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As the world’s fourth-largest producer of oil and fifth-largest producer of natural gas, complemented by abundant hydro power, safe CANDU nuclear technology and one of the world’s cleanest electricity grids, Canada is ideally positioned to become both a conventional and clean energy superpower.

But first, we need to stop getting in our own way, as Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has long advocated.

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  1. Prime MInister Mark Carney and B.C. Premier David Eby at a press conference at the B.C. cabinet office in Vancouver on July 2, 2026.

    GOLDSTEIN: New pipeline to be financed by a gusher of taxpayer money

  2. Prime Minister Mark Carney (right) is greeted by former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the National Canada Day ceremony at Lebreton Flats in Ottawa July 1, 2026.

    GOLDSTEIN: Carney's pivot on climate change the right move, but is it real?

  3. Federal Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Tim Hodgson.

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The construction of a new bitumen pipeline from Alberta to B.C. albeit funded with massive amounts of taxpayer money — is a step in the right direction, but only the first step.

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Even moving at “speeds not seen in generations” as advocated by Prime Minister Mark Carney, still means we are years away from getting a second pipeline delivering oil to Asian markets.

Similarly, our ability to deliver natural gas to markets other than the U.S. where, like oil, it has to be sold at huge discounts is in its infancy.

We must abandon the cliches of the past.

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Technology for extracting oil continues to improve

For example, that the age of fossil fuels is over, or that the world is approaching so-called “peak oil” where incorrect predictions go back decades because they overlooked the fact that while oil is finite, the technology for extracting it continues to improve.

There is also no looming “great reset” in the world’s energy mix remember that long-forgotten phrase dating back to the pandemic?

Yes, the percentage of renewables is rapidly increasing, but so is fossil fuel use, albeit at a slower pace. That means that because of their dominant position today, fossil fuels are going to be around for decades.

Indeed, as Carney himself whose views on the issue have changed dramatically from his days prior to entering politics as the UN’s special envoy for climate change noted recently – has said, for as long as the global economy relies on conventional energy, “as much of that energy as possible should come from Canada, produced responsibly.”

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