System Under Stress: Energy Decision-Making in Canada and the Need for Informed Reform

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Canada’s energy decision systems are under stress, stress that appears to be growing and is reaching the point of dysfunction. This is costing and will cost Canada in many ways: in environmental performance; in our capacity to attract investment and foster innovation; in the energy system’s ability to cost-effectively deliver reliable energy; and ultimately, in Canada’s ability to manage the transformation to a much lower carbon energy economy. This paper aims to increase the light and reduce the heat on this problem and does so in four steps: framing the problématique; better understanding the system and its component parts; identifying the core stress points in the system; and outlining a broad approach to ‘informed reform.’

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Canada, Energy Policy, Regulation, Polarization, Public Confidence, Public Trust, Climate Change

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Michael Cleland and Monica Gattinger, 2017, System Under Stress: Energy Decision-Making in Canada and the Need for Informed Reform, University of Ottawa.

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