[#18] Energy 360 Podcast

[#18] Energy 360 Podcast

First of two lively discussions moderated by David Arkell and Lysandra Naom of 360 Energy. A few points from this episode.

(Podcast can be found here)

Canada is at a cross roads. On the one hand we need to recognize we're a petro-state: our national discussions about energy, economic strategy and climate are dominated by an incumbent industry with a highly concentrated economic profile. Because the existing fossil fuel industry's jobs and capital are focussed within a few companies, they're better able to dominate our business pages and political and economic discussions. From that vantage point, they have (and will continue) to defend to the very last minute their ability to sell as much high-carbon energy stuff as possible. This is entirely rational (if unwise) from their perspective, and so we should expect them to to continue to push against any constraints on production or profit.

But that conversation hides the fact that the cleantech sector has, for years, employed more people than oil & gas. And more to the point, it collectively spends far more on R&D. The economic upside over the long term of the technology that underpins a low-carbon economy is much larger than that of selling oil & gas. One reason China massively dominates clean energy supply chains (solar, wind, batteries, now heat pumps) is they've not been distracted by a large internal oil lobby.

Tomorrow's energy pie will not look like today's. The challenge for our national discussion on long-term economic and energy strategy is to amplify the relatively small slices of that pie to reflect their relative importance to Canada over the long term. Canada is very late to the game relative to China and Europe, and we were recently passed by the US. Playing catchup looks like paying $15B for a highly-foreign-owned automated battery factory in the hopes it seeds some kind of ecosystem.

We can, and should, play to our strengths.

Lowering the barriers to mining the materials we need, while maintaining our historical commitment to (relatively) clean operations, can open up much more of the value stack of those battery plants. The Ring of Fire in Northern Ontario, for example, is plagued by opposition and layers of regulatory oversight. Yet the value we might add to that mineral extraction is substantial, prior to the final production of batteries by global brands in Canada. The opportunity to demonstrate the the world that Canada remains a leader in transparency and corporate governance might unlock even more of those profits, as ESG standards percolate to end consumers and suppliers.

Our energy incumbents might be laggards, but we've got leaders in other industries. Capreit's aggressive de-carbonization plans for their real estate portfolio puts them in the leading ranks globally, alongside EPC partner Krome/Kolostat. Our tech startups are growing stronger every month: Hydrostor is well-positioned for huge scale and growth in the emerging utility-scale, long-duration storage market; Woodland Biofuels are getting ready to build a series of deeply carbon-negative fuels (hydrogen, rNG, methanol, ethanol) plants by combining cellulosic inputs with carbon sequestration; Morgan Solar has managed - uniquely - to bring deep IP back to the solar industry with their building-integrated solar blinds and optics.

We don't have time to waste. Let's not wait for our incumbents to be the champions here, rather, let's find and support those emerging industrial champions capable of leading the way to value creation in a low-carbon economy.


Episode Two of this conversation is forthcoming.

Stefano Passarello

Accountant and Tax expert | Crypto Tax Specialist | Board Member | Co-founder of The Kapuhala Longevity Retreats

9 个月

Very informative ? Driving real change requires an understanding of Canada's emissions policies as well as the financial benefits of clean technology Tom Rand ????

回复
Doug Eatwell

Industry Analyst | Insights Specialist | Proponent of a Planet-First Approach to Business | Entrepreneur, Innovator and Amateur Cartoonist

9 个月

Politics plays a big role in determining the speed with which Canada transitions to a low-carbon economy. As long as the fossil fuel industry, with its deep pockets, is able to influence like-minded politicians to block climate action and maintain the status quo, the transition will continue to be met with resistance and foot-dragging.

David Arkell

North American Leader in Energy and Carbon Strategies | Clear Results, Cost Savings and Carbon Footprint Reduction

9 个月

Tom it was great discussion. Really appreciate discussing a critical topic that has and will continue to impact businesses and society wellbeing.

Adriana Dossena

Environmental & Cultural sustainable development professional

9 个月

inclusive, youth responsive value(s) creation in a low carbon economy leadership tbd

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Tom Rand的更多文章

  • [#22] Putting "Save the Planet" into your job description

    [#22] Putting "Save the Planet" into your job description

    Most people understand the catastrophic implications of climate risk. Many want to do something about it.

    1 条评论
  • [#20] Net-Zero 2050: Skeptics, Scoffers and the Silent

    [#20] Net-Zero 2050: Skeptics, Scoffers and the Silent

    Stated ambitions of ‘net-zero 2050’ — the elimination[1] of climate warning emissions by that year — feel ubiquitous…

    12 条评论
  • A letter to my young son.

    A letter to my young son.

    Dear Rupert, When I started writing this book, you didn’t exist. Now you do, and you bring me unimagined joy.

    27 条评论
  • [#17] Damages in the Dark

    [#17] Damages in the Dark

    Putting numbers to climate damage in the latter half of this century is a mug’s game. I’ve argued extensively against…

    2 条评论
  • [#16] Building a deeply carbon-negative cidery at Domaine Heritage

    [#16] Building a deeply carbon-negative cidery at Domaine Heritage

    When we bought our apple farm in southern Quebec a few years ago, my thoughts were of resilience: a place my new family…

    9 条评论
  • #15 - The Forever Ponds

    #15 - The Forever Ponds

    Generations often bequeath liabilities to those who follow. Fiscal conservatives worry about the debt burden we leave…

    12 条评论
  • [#14] Economic growth in a warming world: The Club(s) of Rome (and Davos)

    [#14] Economic growth in a warming world: The Club(s) of Rome (and Davos)

    Technology is necessary, but not nearly sufficient, to mitigate climate risk and adapt to what’s coming. Absent…

    45 条评论
  • [#13] 2024. Fear and hope.

    [#13] 2024. Fear and hope.

    [Back to original pieces shortly, for now a few thoughts and links to start the year] Anyone working in climate…

    5 条评论
  • [#12] My Head Hurts! - or - dealing with it.

    [#12] My Head Hurts! - or - dealing with it.

    I once spoke to a therapist about climate anxiety. He stared blankly, and like the joke goes, asked me to talk about my…

    7 条评论
  • [#11] Web Bulbs, Bodies and Heat

    [#11] Web Bulbs, Bodies and Heat

    [Excerpt from upcoming book — It’s Getting Hot in Here: Reflections of a climate hawk grappling with the inevitable]…

    1 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了