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New Ontario program could accelerate energy transition while advancing Indigenous reconciliation

With the right program rules, Ontario鈥檚 forthcoming corporate renewable energy purchasing program could lower carbon pollution and accelerate economic development for Indigenous communities.

This blog was originally published in聽.

The Government of Ontario is developing a new program to enable corporations to purchase power from new clean electricity generators. If designed properly, the program can build on a strong foundation of successful similar programs implemented in dozens of states and provinces. And鈥攁gain, if designed properly鈥攊t offers a chance that鈥檚 simply too good to miss to support meaningful opportunities for Indigenous-led economic self-determination.

Learning from others鈥 success

Harnessing businesses鈥 desire for renewable energy has emerged as a key driver of clean electricity across North America. Two key factors have strengthened over recent decades to make the private sector hungry for renewables: the , offering substantial savings against the default grid electricity; and the growing focus of global finance on performance. The invisible hands of efficiency and capital markets have increasingly chosen wind, solar, and battery storage to in recent years.

Private-sector demand for renewables has made Alberta and Texas鈥攚hose liberalized power markets are open to corporate renewable energy purchasing鈥攖he national leaders in wind and solar growth. Both jurisdictions have : new lowest-cost energy supply for consumers; rural economic development (including jobs, land lease payments, and municipal tax revenue); and heightened competitiveness for home-grown businesses.

Onlooking states and provinces, including Ontario, took note. Prodded on by local industries demanding their own opportunity to purchase renewable energy, they introduced enabling programs, collectively called , to satisfy these demands.聽

The promise (and risks) of corporate power-purchase agreements

In November, the Ontario Ministry of Energy from stakeholders around policy changes that would allow industrial and commercial consumers to procure new clean energy underwritten by long-term power purchase agreements. Having received feedback, Ontario plans to roll the program out this spring. Properly designed, the program will allow businesses to access new clean power while still paying their fair share for the grid services they鈥檒l continue to rely on the rest of the time.

This forthcoming program follows on Ontario鈥檚 development, in 2022, of a new 鈥渃lean energy credit鈥 system. The eligibility parameters for the credit system were too loose, , and enabling corporate greenwashing claims of 鈥渂uying clean energy鈥 that failed to actually reduce emissions.

This new, parallel program must be more discerning. Most importantly, to ensure that the purchases are genuinely supporting a cleaner grid, they must be limited to generation that is new and emissions-free. Other stakeholders have advanced additional design parameters . With those in place, the Government of Ontario can help drive the growth of clean power by harnessing businesses鈥 growing demand for it.

An opportunity for Ontario and Indigenous Peoples

The province also has a chance to show leadership by embedding Indigenous participation. 

A key, and too often missing, component of Canada鈥檚 national commitment to reconciliation is the need to accelerate economic development opportunities for Indigenous communities. It鈥檚 an imperative embedded in the Truth and Reconciliation Commissions鈥檚 . Ontario鈥檚 Electrification and Energy Transition Panel 鈥渂uilding meaningful partnerships with Indigenous communities [is] the only way Ontario will be successful in making energy infrastructure investments at the pace and scale necessary to build a clean energy economy.鈥澛

Though not the only measure necessary, facilitating Indigenous equity participation for new energy investments is fundamental to advance economic reconciliation. Moreover, many First Nations and M茅tis organizations are already major asset holders of clean energy generation in Ontario, and they have the capacity to enter into partnerships in a way that can contribute to project success. Their experience with project review, for example, can be an asset to the approval stage of the project.

With the private sector seeking social outcomes鈥攖he S in ESG鈥攖hrough its operations and purchases, embedding an Indigenous equity stake requirement in Ontario鈥檚 new corporate renewable energy purchasing program will only increase the attractiveness of the new program. It amps up a nationwide trend seen in and procurements in Alberta, calls for power in , new projects in Nova Scotia, and for renewable power. It鈥檚 an essential step Ontario can take to accelerate the energy transition and advance reconciliation at the same time.聽

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