Access to reliable and affordable clean electricity for transportation, industrial activities, and heating buildings is key to achieving cleaner air and a net-zero emission economy by 2050. A net-zero emission electricity grid by 2035 is foundational for Canada to build clean energy solutions across the economy.
Today, the Minister of Environment and Climate Change, the Honourable Steven Guilbeault, announced the publication of the proposed Frame for the Clean Electricity Regulations. This is the second engagement document that will guide the development of the Clean Electricity Regulations (CER). It follows a discussion paper published in March 2022.
Formerly known as the Clean Electricity Standard, the federal government has collaborated with the provinces and territories, Indigenous partners, utilities, industries, academics, non-governmental organizations, and interested Canadians in the development of the CER. This inclusive approach supports the competitiveness of the economy by providing a clear basis for provinces and territories to plan and operate their electricity grids, while continuing to deliver reliable electricity to Canadians and keeping costs for households and businesses affordable.
Canada's CER is being developed around three core principles:
- Maximizing greenhouse gas reductions to achieve net-zero emissions from the electricity grid by 2035;
- Ensuring electricity grid reliability to support a strong economy and guarantee Canadians' safety by having access to secure energy that supports their cooling needs in the summer and warmth in the winter; and
- Maintaining electricity affordability for homeowners and businesses.
The CER will help in providing long-term regulatory certainty while encouraging the increased deployment of non-emitting electricity options such as wind, solar, and small modular reactors. It will also encourage the use of interties from provinces and territories with an abundance of hydroelectric power; incentivize increased use of hydrogen, battery storage, and carbon capture and storage; and help to set the stage for the increased use of demand-side management and distributed energy in Canada.
The proposed regulatory frame was informed by over 160 written submissions and numerous discussions with key interested parties during open and broad engagement completed by the Government of Canada earlier this year.