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Canada's uniquely positioned to hit net-zero emissions in 2050 if it makes right moves now

by Sarah Rieger, CBC News
Feb 8, 2021

Independent study finds multiple paths on how Canada can hit its Paris Agreement goal

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Canada will have to enact increasingly strict policies to support proven climate technology, while investing in riskier research proposals to hit its climate goals, a new report suggests. ( Go Ultra Low/Getty Images)

Canada is in an advantageous position to reach its goal of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, a new report suggests, if governments capitalize on the right opportunities today.

"Uncertainty can either paralyze or propel us," said Jason Dion, research director for the Canadian Institute for Climate Choices, the publicly funded, independent institute behind the report.

"On the one hand, there's enough that we know that we can act on based on what we know … On the other hand, we are going to have to make calculated risk decisions … and if we're placing those bets smartly and we're hedging those bets, I think Canada has enough advantages that there's a real win for us here."

Monday's report, titled Canada's Net Zero Future, looks at more than 60 modelling scenarios, as well as consulting with experts and a review of existing research to chart multiple pathways the country could take to hit its goal — looking at different combinations of possibilities to see what drivers are consistent factors in pushing a transition.

Focusing on safe bets, with small gambles​

It separates those solutions into two categories that will both require investment, Dion said: safe bets and wild cards.

Safe bets, like smart grids or electric cars, will need to be scaled up through increasingly strict policies to generate the majority of needed emissions reductions.

Wild cards are described as bets on more high-risk, high-reward technologies like hydrogen fuel cells — technologies that could play a big role, but are significantly more uncertain.

"We find that there are things that we can and should move forward with with confidence starting today, because no matter how the transition plays out, they're always there," Dion said.

"We need to be working on both, to get the wild cards ready for when we need them … so we need to do pilot projects, research and development, even public investment to get these things off the ground. But that can't distract us from the work that we have to do on safe bets."


The federal government has announced its plan to reduce Canada’s net carbon emissions to zero by 2050 in an attempt to meet climate change targets, but there are concerns the plan lacks accountability. 2:02

Canada's goal of hitting net zero follows recommendations from the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change which has stated that 2050 is the year global emissions need to be lowered to limit global temperature increase to 1.5 C.

That number, a target of the Paris agreement, is the lowest temperature increase that would avoid the most catastrophic consequences of climate change, scientists have said.

Dion said it's vital to start thinking about climate change, not just for the serious environmental and health impacts it poses, but for economic risks that could come from market responses — for example rising demand for electric vehicles or lower global demand for oil — which he said can arise on a larger scale independent of any domestic policy choices.

Oil and gas knowledge an asset​

He said Canada could have an edge in delivering green tech, with assets like its landmass, resources and top energy minds at its disposal.

"I think often we assume, Canadians assume, that their oil and gas sector makes a net zero transition a challenge for Canada. And certainly it does come with some challenges. But, also, the same expertise and capacity that exists in that sector also creates a lot of opportunities," he said.

He described how technologies like biofuel, geothermal energy production or carbon capture often rely on the same types of engineering expertise that's used in the oil industry.

"There's certainly some alignment there … and so, there's some advantages. That's not to say that this is sort of a simple slam dunk in terms of a transition. We have to think about the match of skill sets that might exist."

Some major geothermal projects are already in the works in Alberta, while other oil companies say they've reached net-negative emissions by capturing more carbon than their operations produce.

Prioritizing growth​

Sara Hastings-Simon said she sees the report as cutting through the noise of the multiple solutions across multiple sectors that will be needed to hit net zero.

She's a research fellow with the University of Calgary's School of Public Policy and a senior researcher with the Payne Institute for Public Policy at the Colorado School of Mines. While she didn't work on this report, she serves on the institute's clean growth panel.

"I think we have a tendency to look at some of the solutions … through the lens of the way that we do things today," she said. "Any solution is going to have drawbacks, and we tend to focus on the drawbacks without thinking so much about the benefits."

She shared an example of how talk of electric vehicles often centres around challenges, like how drivers will need to stop to charge their vehicles on long trips.

"That, of course, is very different from our experience today," she said.

"But I imagine if we were used to driving electric vehicles and someone proposed that we should start using internal combustion engines, we would come up with a big list of things that seem kind of crazy in comparison … you're going to have to take it to someone to change the oil [or] you won't be able to operate it inside enclosed areas because it would create fumes that kill you."

Hastings-Simon said the time is right for new conversations around opportunities for sectors like transportation or electricity — and that those conversations centre transitions or developments as opportunities in and of themselves.

"We have a limited amount of government funds, and we really need to prioritize those into areas that are going to be growth areas going forward," she said.

The full report can be read on the Canadian Institute for Climate Choices website.
 
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