Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Merran Smith

GET UPDATES FROM Merran Smith
 

The Six Most Overlooked Energy Stories of 2012

Posted: 12/31/2012 8:15 am

This past year, the story of energy in Canada was a story of Alberta oil -- who owns it, who wants it, and how we're going to get it to them. From Iqaluit, to Charlottetown, to Tofino, battles over bitumen, pipelines, and tankers bound for China dominated front pages, talk shows, and #cdnpoli.

But there was more going on out there. Here are a few stories that we argue matter just as much to our energy future, but that didn't necessarily trend on Twitter:

1. We Could Make a Killing in EVs
The final report of the recently shuttered National Round Table for the Environment and the Economy pegs the current value of Canada's clean technology and clean energy economy at about $8 billion, and notes it could grow to between $36 billion and $60 billion by 2050. Much of that boom could come from plug-in hybrids, pure electric vehicles, and highly efficient cars. With supportive policy, EV investment could increase almost 15 times between now and 2050 -- from about $1.6 billion currently to over $24.2 billion in 2050. At the moment, we build muscle cars out in Windsor. Perhaps it's time to kick the tires on the new models?

2. The Grid Goes Digital
A quiet revolution is underway behind the poles, wires, and substations that blend into the background and that make possible services such as heat and light that we take for granted. Across Canada, utility companies are investing in fleets of digital sensors to complement the smart metres that, in many regions, now support two-way communication between power companies and customers. Soon, citizens will be able to sell the excess of clean electricity they generate themselves back to the utility, while power companies will be able to more accurately balance generation with demand. Result? Fewer flickering lights, reduced costs, and lower emissions.

3. Canada's Hidden Opportunity
The American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy identified a colossal opportunity for efficiency improvements across the country, when it ranked Canada second to last in energy efficiency out of a dozen major economies -- lower than both Brazil and China, and just ahead of Russia. Again, look at the opportunity: investments in efficient buildings could climb from current levels of about $1.5 billion to over $9.7 billion in 2050. Some near-term progress on efficiency did emerge this year: The federal government announced new standards for post-2016 vehicles that will compel automakers to dramatically improve fuel efficiency.

4. Canadians Support a Carbon Price
Credit Superstorm Sandy, or this summer's vanishing ice cap, or the spike in food prices from the collapse of U.S. crops, but this year more of us began connecting the climate dots. According to Environics Institute polling, a clear majority of Canadians now believe global warming is real, that government must take the lead in addressing it with new regulations and standards, and that citizens must help pay for the necessary actions through taxes and higher prices. According to the research, some 59 per cent of Canadians would support a carbon tax. Even the president of Royal Dutch Shell's Canadian division said she was down with the idea.

5. First Nations Unplugging From Diesel
By embracing community-owned renewable energy, a growing number of remote aboriginal communities are now meeting their energy needs without expensive, noisy, and polluting diesel generators -- saving money that could be used for economic development. British Columbia has invested $3.26 million to help 61 Aboriginal communities participate in the clean energy sector, including wind energy, biomass and run-of-river hydroelectric power. Next year, watch for a few deals in which First Nations will, for the first time, take a majority ownership stake in major clean power projects located in their territories.

6. Welcome to the United States of Arabia!
A bombshell report by the conservative International Energy Agency concludes that, due to lowered demand and new drilling techniques that will unlock shale oil and offshore reserves, our southern neighbour could become the world's largest oil producer before 2017. Uncle Sam could stop importing petroleum altogether by 2035. As the U.S. is currently the largest buyer of Canadian oil, this redrawing of the energy map presents staggering implications for our economy. As former international trade minister David Emerson wrote in 2011's Shaping Alberta's Future report, "We may have heavy oil to sell, but few or no profitable markets wishing to buy." Now might be a good time to place a few of our eggs in a few more baskets.

What will be the big story of 2013? Driven by multi-billion dollar deficits linked to the falling price of petroleum, several provinces may take serious steps to insulate their economies against commodity price swing by investing in clean technology and innovation. Also, Ottawa has repeatedly stated it will align its pollution policies with those of Washington. Well, guess who just named climate change and energy one of his top three priorities for the coming four years?

Loading Slideshow...
  • TheHarperGovernment

    The good news is that Alberta does not have to impose a one-child policy until 2020. #cnooc #nexen #cdnpoli

  • Anita Sharma

    @ammoe1993 These deals with CNOOC and Petronas have certainly had our newsrooms engaged in heated debate for months...

  • robert lavigne

    Jack Mintz cheerleads the CNOOC deal .. umm how about a good read first Jack ..?? or were you in on the discussion ..?

  • Brett R. Harvie

    Looks like the #CPC & @pmharper struck an appropriate balance on the Nexen/Progress decision. #cdnpoli

  • *CaptainRon*

    Looks like #Harper will secure himself a 'lifetime job' in the oil fields of #China in #Canada #Nexen

  • Bryan Borzykowski

    I want to talk to that person or persons who sold all that Nexen stock an hour and a half ago. #callme

  • Nathan Rotman

    Why future restrictions on foreign takeovers. Protect Canadian jobs and environment now. #nexen #cdnpoli

  • Danno

    Hey Harper! You seem to have forgotten you are Prime Minister of Canada. Not Israel. Not China. C-A-N-A-D-A #PnPCBC #cdnpoli #Nexen #Cnooc

  • TheHarperGovernment

    We have been concerned for sometime abt SOEs but were utterly unprepared and just winged this one. #cnooc #nexen #cdnpoli

  • Vassy Kapelos

    When we say that Canada is open for business, we do not mean that Canada is for sale to foreign governments - Harper #cdnpoli #cnooc #nexen

  • Nancy Leblanc

    Harper not commenting on details of Nexen takeover, i.e., the undertakings. How can we be assured it's a good deal then?

  • Chris McLeod

    Harper's decision on Nexen and Petronas prove that our country and our economy is in sound hands with the Conservative Party. #CdnPoli

  • Carrick Irwin

    I think all #Canadians should divest in #Nexen as of this moment. #cdnpoli

  • Andrew Coyne

    It's just embarrassing to see someone who knows better spool out this gibberish. #nexen

  • Joe Fantauzzi

    That time the Tories, after slamming the opposition as "socialists", sold off parts of the tar sands to a communist regime...#cdnpoli #nexen





 

Follow Merran Smith on Twitter: www.twitter.com/cleanenergycan

FOLLOW CANADA BUSINESS
This past year, the story of energy in Canada was a story of Alberta oil -- who owns it, who wants it, and how we're going to get it to them. From Iqaluit, to Charlottetown, to Tofino, battles over bi...
This past year, the story of energy in Canada was a story of Alberta oil -- who owns it, who wants it, and how we're going to get it to them. From Iqaluit, to Charlottetown, to Tofino, battles over bi...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 6
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
10:48 AM on 12/31/2012
How few and far between are the stories about clean energy technology. Read about Dawson Creek, which was named the first Solar City in Canada. Inspiring. Harper government is so outdated.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:36 AM on 12/31/2012
1 - Those billions are not a "value", those billions are a "cost" to society to implement EV across Canada. The billions are additional costs regulation would saddle Canadian's with via regulation to force EV onto Canadian's. It's basically a wasteful act of duplication, as we would be duplicating what already exists in the name of efficiency.

2 - Rooftop solar generation on homes does not balance energy grids. The electricity generated by your rooftop solar panel travels only to your neighbours homes where it's consumed. Your rooftop solar power provides barely enough energy to power a couple lightbulds at the best of times. At the same time your neighbours consume all your solar generation, those neighbour are still drawing 99.9% of their electricity needs directly from the grids reliable base load energy sources such as nuclear, natural gas & coal generation.

I shall leave the other 4 points for others to disseminate.
04:53 AM on 12/31/2012
Oh YES!! Six wonderfull stories from 2012, well done - and your #1 is MY #1 - I have wanted an EV for many years, they make so much sense. And, I could put a few solar panels on my garage roof and be getting around for free!! [well, after the initial investment, which will pay for itself in a couple years].

And if carbon price means "polluter pay", I am all for it - it simply has to happen - if your product damages my house, like water damage from a leaky water heater, you have to compensate me. Make 'em pay for the damage pollution does, and make ME pay for the damage my car's exhaust does too [ha ha, I have an EV], Gasoline should be costing us at least $5 per liter - its true price is even higher than that!!

A Smart Grid is also obviously needed - if our PM had an ounce of "forward looking" brain, Canada would be building a smart grid. But alas, by definition, "conservative" means "never change anything".. all he wants is to keep building oil and gas pipelines and couldn't care less if the electric grid rots away.
PS - "energy storage" is the key to a balanced grid, and funding energy storage projects is a perfect role for governments to play.

All in all, this is the most inspiring column I have read all year. Really. Thank you.
yer
Stop the Alberta Taliban
02:28 AM on 12/31/2012
yeah efficient buildings.... I think it's Sweden that has a law that any new building has to have a geothermal install. Imagine if every stupid condo in Toronto had that during it's giant foundation pit, it wouldn't require nuclear power and natural gas just to exist. These buildings are very expensive plug-ins. I hope to chop them down for parts later.

We got land. More land than most countries. If we use it well we need not burden ourselves nor others with pollution.

I like geothermal. It's not sexy but it does handle your base load needs, (air conditioning at low depth, higher heating at deeper depths, scale-able, existing tech), then the other methods can deal with spikes. Even if buildings just dealt with half, say the air conditioning requirements, that works with low depth geothermal. Then no one need to invest in more power lines so a double savings. So much so you'd think governments would like to save the money in generation as well as distribution?
12:08 PM on 12/31/2012
There are problems with geothermal, namely the huge amount of electricity it needs to operate the pumps and fans. The average single family household system would use 11000 killowatt hours of electricity per year. Which makes it the highest user of electricity in the average house.

If the house is an a province that produces electricity by burning coal (coal is used to produce about 74 per cent of the electricity used in Alberta, 63 per cent in Saskatchewan, 60 per cent in Nova Scotia, and 18 per cent in Ontario) that would be a huge problem, as burning coal releases twice as much C02 as burning natural gas.

I agree that geothermal systems can improve our world, but it comes with many drawbacks.
yer
Stop the Alberta Taliban
02:27 AM on 01/01/2013
on a house scale the geothermal that works seems to be air conditioning rather than heating as it's easier to pump at lower depths, say 5 to 7 meters than much more than that.  Thus a solar panel in the summer can cycle the exchanger.  It might not scale to an individual home for heating, but it might for a group of 3-4 homes to combine heat and power together.  I don't know though and I think it would be fun and interesting to give it a try.