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This article discusses the need for a national energy framework in Canada, highlighting the conflation of two systems - the export-oriented energy commodity sector and the domestic consumption system. It proposes using carbon pricing mechanisms to address emissions growth in the energy export sector and promote the development of a low-carbon domestic electricity-based energy system. The benefits include decoupling economic growth from emissions, fostering innovation in emerging markets, and addressing competitiveness issues in energy-intensive sectors.
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A Tale of Two SystemsThe case for a national • energy framework • A ‘Big Idea’ for Sustainable Prosperity • Alexander Wood • Senior Director, Policy and Markets • April 28, 2014
The political economy of energy: • No real national energy policy/strategy in Canada • Market – in terms of consumption – is either provincial (electricity) or North American (oil and gas) • Oil and gas seeking diversity of markets, both to avoid US policy risk but also to gain higher price • Provinces “own” the resource and so have first call on revenues/rents (although federal tax regime does apply) • Creates mixed policy incentives: the Alberta fiscal model is one every province (at least structurally) seeks to emulate, which complicates negotiation of federal/national policy on either energy or on climate change/environment
The political economy of energy in Canada (2) • For Canada, overriding policy objective has gone from ensuring security of supply to seeking security of demand • Role reversal for energy: • Was input into manufacturing-led export model • Now key component of commodity-led export model (for which manufacturing is now an input) • Manufacturing still a major part of the Canadian export earnings, but declining • Policy emphasis on commodities reflects assumptions about booming emerging markets (in which we may not be able to compete on manufacturing) and decline of US market (which has been natural market for manufacturing, as part of NA supply chain dynamic) • Economic interest has shifted from need for low cost energy (for domestic consumption) to high cost energy (for export earnings) • Important to distinguish between electricity and oil and gas
Basic Conclusions: • Canada has an abundance of energy….and emissions • Our approach to climate change is held up by conflation of two systems, and the path dependence they represent • Canada’s energy sectors – the export oriented energy commodity sector and the domestic consumption system – have differing interests • Canada’s domestic energy use has decreasing growth rates and carbon intensity, and energy export sector has increasing growth rates and carbon emissions (despite intensity improvements)
An energy framework for Canada • Canada could - as a matter of national strategy - focus separately on the interests and opportunities of two systems • Based on recognition that what the national economy needs to thrive is not necessarily what energy export sector needs to thrive (and vice-versa) • Use carbon pricing mechanisms to both address emissions growth in energy export sector AND generate wealth to build out low-carbon, electricity-based, domestic energy system with use of carbon pricing mechanisms • Would allow us to take a potential barrier (path dependence of current system) and use it to build out a new system
Benefits for Canada • With a low-carbon domestic electricity economy, our economic growth and emissions would be decoupled • We would renew our historic comparative advantage in electricity systems, and use it to build out innovation in emerging markets for smart grid, energy storage, electric mobility, etc. • We would also address competitiveness issue of energy intensive, trade exposed sectors
Policy Research Needs • How to accomplish this in political economy of energy? What federal-provincial models exist that could help? Would new models be required? • What models/precedents exist for the kind of transition implied here? How can it be facilitated and accelerated? • What are the financial and technological needs of such a transition? • What are the implications for Canada’s international policies on climate change?