Authors
On May 14, Canada released its National Electricity Strategy, Powering Canada Strong: A National Strategy for an Electrified Canadian Economy (the Strategy). The Strategy outlines a national plan and series of reforms intended to double Canada’s electricity supply by 2050 through new infrastructure and accelerate economy-wide electrification to support competitiveness and decarbonize. Investors and sector participants should consider the Strategy’s initial proposed reforms and actions, and assess how they could affect future project development, financing, and regulatory approaches.
The Strategy emphasizes electricity’s role in Canadians’ energy security, affordability, competitiveness, and economic sovereignty. It frames grid expansion as necessary to respond to industrial growth, building and transport electrification, new housing builds, and demand from emerging sectors such as critical minerals development and AI data centres.
The Strategy’s two goals are to double Canada’s electricity supply by 2050 and accelerate economy-wide electrification to support competitiveness and address climate change. In responding to these demand pressures, the Strategy and its related intergovernmental consultation are grounded on four pillars:
The Strategy outlines ongoing initiatives and federal investments to address these objectives, including project referrals to the Major Projects Office (MPO), strategic financing provided by the Canadian Infrastructure Bank (CIB), the launch of the $25 billion Canada Strong Fund, and proposed reforms to streamline the federal approvals regime and support trade and transportation projects. In addition to these plans, the Strategy also outlines preliminary actions for enhancing investment and supporting Canada’s electricity grid.
Affirming the need to provide a predictable and durable regulatory landscape for electricity sector participants, Canada intends to amend its Regulations, which were enacted under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999. Finalized in December 2024, the Regulations are intended to limit carbon dioxide pollution from fossil fuel-fired electricity generation starting in 2035 and move Canada’s electricity system toward net-zero emissions. While Canada remains committed to this net-zero target, it notes that “an evolved approach” is required to address urgent pressures and threats. Canada intends to amend the Regulations to allow sectoral participants greater use and flexibility of carbon offsets and to “offset residual emissions elsewhere”. Changes to the Regulations will also aim to avoid “stranded assets by enabling greater flexibility for existing units to maintain reliability and avoid costly premature replacement”.
The Strategy also emphasizes the MPO’s role in accelerating nation-building infrastructure by noting the electricity projects referred to the MPO thus far, including the Darlington New Nuclear Project, the North Coast Transmission Line, the Iqaluit Nukkiksautiit Hydro Project, the Taltson Hydro Expansion Project, and the Atlantic Energy Strategy. Canada will also refer the development of a new comprehensive Transmission InterConnect Investment Strategy to the MPO.
The Strategy highlights the “generational investments” required to support builds across generation, transmission, distribution, and storage. It reaffirms Canada’s commitment to identifying investment barriers and attracting foreign direct investment to support electricity system growth.
The Strategy also highlights the role of institutional investors such as pension funds and their importance in “filling a critical capital gap” and providing lower-cost capital for the infrastructure build-out. Additionally, Canada notes the significance of its investment tax credits (ITCs) in offering billions in funding support for projects and proponents. As such, the Strategy proposes expanding the Clean Electricity ITC to support certain major high-voltage interprovincial transmission projects.
On affordability, Canada intends to expand energy-saving retrofits for up to one million households through a combination of grants, financing, and complementary measures. The Strategy notes this could support homes in transitioning their electricity heating/cooling from propane, oil or electric baseboard heating to heat pumps. Additionally, Canada plans to introduce Bill S-4, which would modernize the Energy Efficiency Act by strengthening its enforcement framework, accounting for modern technologies and new market actors, and allowing ministerial exemptions from the Act and its regulations to support economic growth, competitiveness, and innovation2.
The Strategy supports provincial and territorial intertie development, noting that more integrated grids could take advantage of geographic and time zone differences, improve load balancing, and reduce duplicative capacity infrastructure. A 2025 C.D. Howe Institute Report highlighted that doubling the capacity between Alberta and B.C. could yield $1.7 billion in net benefits by 20503.
Canada intends to work with provinces and territories to address barriers to greater regional integration, and the Strategy outlines several ideas to encourage its development. Initial actions to address barriers include:
The Strategy highlights Canada’s position as a “Tier One nuclear nation”—a country with robust fuel cycle capability, domestic reactor technology, a skilled workforce, and a strong nuclear regulator. Powering 15 percent of Canada’s electricity, nuclear energy is positioned as a competitive advantage and an opportunity for economic growth, international partnerships, trade diversification, and energy sovereignty. The Strategy reaffirms Canada’s plan to develop a new Nuclear Energy Strategy to position nuclear energy “as an essential part of a modern, clean, and better-connected grid”, as was announced in the recent Spring Economic Update.
To support the Strategy’s ambition of realizing $15 billion in energy savings by 2050, Canada will have to embrace a wide range of energy sources, including natural gas. The Strategy highlights natural gas-fired generation as a source of reliable, affordable, and secure electricity that can respond in real time to changes in demand and complement intermittent renewable generation. The Strategy aligns with Ontario’s Integrated Energy Plan, which affirms natural gas as an important part of the province’s energy mix.
Over the next few months, Canada will consult provinces, territories, Indigenous Peoples, utilities, and unions on the proposed action areas. Interested parties are invited to provide input on the Strategy by contacting electricity-electricite@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca.
To discuss these issues, please contact the author(s).
This publication is a general discussion of certain legal and related developments and should not be relied upon as legal advice. If you require legal advice, we would be pleased to discuss the issues in this publication with you, in the context of your particular circumstances.
For permission to republish this or any other publication, contact Richard Coombs.
© 2026 by Torys LLP.
All rights reserved.