The strategy represents the largest build-out of the national grid in
Canadian history, promising to double electrical capacity by 2050 while significantly lowering utility bills for the average household.
The Core Promise: Lowering Costs for 70% of Canadians
The headline of
Carney’s address was a targeted relief plan. The government’s modelling suggests that by modernizing the grid and unifying fragmented provincial systems, the strategy could deliver $15 billion in total energy savings by 2050.
Carney pledged that the plan would lower total energy costs for 7 in 10
Canadian households. He framed this not just as a climate policy, but as an affordability mandate, aimed at protecting middle-class families from the volatility of global fossil fuel prices.
The Four Pillars of the Strategy
Prime Minister Carney outlined a roadmap focused on four “generational” shifts in how Canada produces and moves power.
1. The Generational Build-Out
To meet soaring demand,
Canada must double its electricity generation within 25 years. This involves massive investments in:
Infrastructure: New generation facilities across hydro, wind, solar, and nuclear sectors.
Storage: Large-scale grid battery systems to manage intermittent renewables.
Finance: Carney, leveraging his background in central banking, emphasized “spreading the costs over time” to ensure that the $1 trillion infrastructure price tag doesn’t cause immediate rate spikes.
2. Connecting the Fragments (East-West-North)
In a major shift from
Canada’s historically North-South energy flow (trading primarily with the US), the strategy prioritizes interprovincial interties.
The Goal: Connect fragmented provincial grids to share surplus power across orders.
The Benefit: Reducing outages and eliminating the need for duplicative infrastructure in neighbouring provinces.

3. Talent and Job Creation
The Prime Minister forecasted a massive labour demand, requiring 130,000 high-skilled workers by 2050.
Immediate Action: A pledge to create 30,000 new jobs by 2028 through federal training partnerships with labour and industry.
4. Domestic Manufacturing
Carney emphasized “energy sovereignty,” announcing plans to expand domestic manufacturing capacity for the technologies that power the grid—such as transformers, turbines, and modular reactors—ensuring that the green transition supports
Canadian industry.
Strategic Flexibility: The LNG Pivot
In a notable departure from previous environmental stances, Carney announced “increased flexibility” for
Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) power plants. By allowing LNG to serve as a bridge fuel, the government aims to maintain grid reliability and keep short-term prices low while coal and older fossil-fuel plants are phased out.
Summary of Economic Impact
| Key Metric | 2028 Target | 2050 Target |
| Grid Capacity | Incremental expansion | Double 2025 levels |
| Household Savings | Early rebate/retrofits | 70% of homes see lower bills |
| Job Creation | 30,000 new roles | 130,000 total new roles |
| Energy Savings | N/A | $15 Billion (Total) |
Immediate Relief: The Retrofit Return
Beyond the long-term grid strategy,
Carney reintroduced a popular federal program: energy-saving retrofits for one million households. This includes grants and low-interest financing for heat pumps and insulation, providing an immediate path for
Canadians to lower their monthly heating and cooling expenses.
This speech marks a defining moment for the
Carney premiership, attempting to bridge the gap between aggressive climate targets and the urgent need for domestic affordability. This strategy should also ensure that Canada maintains its environmental and sustainability goals.