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What happened to coal is coming for us

The clean tech transition is already started. Canadians should be demanding energy leadership from our politicians — before our fossil fuel-dependent economy goes up in smoke. Photo by the U.S. Department of Agriculture

So Alberta’s once vaunted and feared War Room is dead. Or rather, shuffled into Premier Smith’s inter-governmental affairs department, where it will disappear. Whatever.

In wittily rebranding itself as the Canadian Energy Centre, the War Room lost the “War” before the first skirmish. With that single manoeuvre, the War Room showed it had neither the stomach for a real fight, nor any sense of its own purpose and identity. Or maybe it knew itself better than any of us could have guessed.

In its purest form, the War Room became another Alberta pipeline converting taxpayer capital into new cars and vacation homes for a happy few lucky enough to collect its paycheques. Its obituary should be the easiest dunk in the world.

But what if we looked at this a different way? What Canada really deserves is a first-rate body (we could call it the Canadian Energy Centre) to engage Canadians about, well, energy. Sadly, a mouthpiece funded by an Alberta government openly hostile to climate science and advocacy is the worst platform for this conversation.

Two core truths about energy will dominate this country’s future, and we as a nation seem largely oblivious to both of them.

Oil and gas are Canada's top export, but as the world embraces the so-called #cleantech revolution, our per capita GDP is already shrinking. The loss of our primary export without some plan to replace it would be an unparalleled calamity. #canpoli

The first is that, love it or hate it, Canada is an energy superpower. Alberta is right about the central importance of its oil and gas sector to our economy. If we lost our #1 export, we would be in a very bad place — and very quickly.

Canada Exports, Imports, and Trade Partners. Source: The Observatory of Economic Complexity

That part of Alberta’s message is true, irrespective of anyone’s opinion about climate change.

The second core truth is that the entire world has embarked on a clear path to transition to net zero carbon emissions. Whether or not the world meets our agreed 2030 emission-reduction goals, this downward trajectory has inescapable implications for Canada and our fossil fuel industry. What has happened to coal is coming for us.

The big surprise is that change didn’t come from climate activists shutting down Canadian projects, but from a completely unexpected source.

Almost 20 years ago, the Chinese government projected renewable energy would govern the future, and set about to both accelerate and profit from the transition we’re seeing today. In every sector, from solar and wind energy to ultra-high voltage grid construction, EV and battery production and the critical mineral supply chain, China is the unparalleled global leader.

Source: RMI

The future is renewable electrification and due to spectacular cost savings, it’s coming faster than anyone’s wildest dreams. Ten years ago — even five — no one foresaw that renewable energy would out-compete fossil fuel energy. But that’s happening now, and accelerating.

No matter what policy governments enact, there’s no stopping the clean tech revolution.

That no one is preparing for this is governing malpractice. Our per capita GDP is already shrinking. The loss of our primary export without some plan to replace it would be an unparalleled calamity.

Growing our economy now, today, as a bulwark against this eventuality should be an urgent public priority, but where is our national and provincial leadership? Alberta’s approach has been denial, discrediting of climate science, and disrupting renewable energy projects that could put Alberta on the clean tech map with Texas.

Despite climate action being a cornerstone of the Trudeau government, we’ve heard precious little about preparing for a future where oil and gas have faded. Poilievre’s agenda of axing the carbon tax is but a tantrum in a grownup world.

Everywhere we turn, there’s only political gamesmanship and short-term thinking.

So as the War Room folds its tent, rather than toast its demise, Canadians should take this moment to demand energy leadership and a real plan for our future.

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