Jamie Sarkonak: Alberta is right to challenge Ottawa’s clean-electricity overstep

If more provinces stood up for themselves when the feds started encroaching, we’d be a lot better off as a country. That in mind, it was good to see Alberta announce on Thursday that it would be challenging the federal Clean Electricity Regulations, which became law in December.

The new rules aim to net-zeroify the entire Canadian grid by 2050, banning carbon emissions by new units with at least 25 MW of electrical generation capacity over a preset “technology-neutral annual emissions limit” by 2035; the ban will also cover existing units by 2050 at the latest. It’s expected to cost the country $40 billion from now until 2050 — and it’s justified because magic math in Ottawa pegs the benefits to society in that time will be worth $55 billion.

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EV Bus Maker Lion Electric likely to be liquidated, court-appointed monitor says

The court-appointed monitor for Lion Electric says the vehicle maker is very likely to be liquidated after the Quebec government refused to invest more public funds in the company.

Jean-Francois Nadon, a representative of Deloitte, said in a court hearing this morning that government aid would have been a condition of any sale of the struggling company.

Nadon says Deloitte sought offers over the weekend from companies interested in liquidating Lion Electric, and is hoping to finalize a transaction by next Monday.

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Federal report raises doubts over electric bus viability in Canadian winters

Electric transit buses may not be ready for prime time in Canada’s harsh climate, according to new findings from the National Research Council, which reveal that many vehicles need diesel heaters just to maintain performance during winter.

Blacklock’s Reporter says the study, released four years after then-Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna announced a $2.8 billion plan to spend on zero-emission transit, questions whether electric buses can reliably replace diesel ones in daily Canadian operations.

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Blackouts are coming for Britain

Social trust will vanish in the dark

It was around 7pm when we heard that the lights were back on in Porto, 200 miles to the north of the small Portuguese village where I was visiting friends. The blackout would only last a few hours longer. At that moment we were at the checkout of an unlit supermarket in a nearby town, having scoured the shelves by the light of our phones. Our shopping baskets revealed that we were not seasoned preppers. They contained 40 litres of bottled water, along with tins of beans, peas and tuna. We also stocked up on red wine and chocolate; morale had to be maintained, after all.

Earlier that day, a power cut originating in Spain had swept across the Iberian Peninsula and part of France. Traffic lights went down and trains stopped in their tracks, above and below ground. Given that the blackout lasted less than 12 hours, our response in hindsight appears slightly hysterical. But until that update at the supermarket, which we couldn’t verify in any case, we had no way of knowing it would be over so quickly. We had no mobile reception or Internet access of any kind, and so we couldn’t communicate with anyone outside the village.

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Star hopes Carney will destroy economy with Net Zero Lunacy

Mark Carney championed this cause before he ran for office. What will he do now that he’s in power?

The brutal truth about our planet is hard to hear.

“The challenges currently posed by climate change pale in significance compared to what might come. … Climate change will threaten financial resilience and longer term prosperity. While there’s still time to act, the window is finite and it’s closing.”

This quote was not uttered by David Suzuki or put out by Greenpeace or even included in a report by the International Panel on Climate Change.
They’re words spoken by Prime Minister Mark Carney — 10 years ago when he was governor of the Bank of England.

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GREEN: Carney should pull the plug on Canada’s EV revolution

During his election victory speech, Prime Minister Mark Carney repeated one of his favourite campaign slogans and vowed to make Canada a “clean energy superpower.” So, Canadians can expect Ottawa to “invest” more taxpayer money in “clean energy” projects, including electric vehicles (EVs) — the revolutionary transportation technology that’s been ready to replace internal combustion since 1901, yet still requires subsidies.

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House votes to block California banning sales of gas cars by 2035

The House voted Thursday to block California from enforcing a rule that would ban sales of new gasoline-powered cars in the state by 2035.

Lawmakers voted 246-164 to pass a resolution targeting the rule, which ranks as one of the nation’s most ambitious policies aimed at combating climate change and promoting electric vehicles. However, it is unclear whether the Senate will follow suit and send the measure to President Donald Trump’s desk.

In forging ahead with the vote, House Republicans sidestepped legal opinions from two nonpartisan watchdogs. The Senate parliamentarian and the Government Accountability Office have concluded that Congress lacks the legal authority to prevent states from enforcing such climate rules.

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POLCZER: Carney’s Green idealism collides with Western — and Canadian — economic realities

That didn’t take long.

Just 24 hours after Prime Minister Mark Carney’s election victory, the contradiction at the heart of his political and economic agenda came crashing into view.

That’s because Canada’s largest bank, RBC, quietly announced it is abandoning its signature $500 billion sustainable finance commitment — one of the very pledges Carney championed as head of the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ).

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The Spanish Government Is Lying About the Blackout

Renewable energy had nothing to do with Spain’s catastrophic blackouts, its Prime Minister says, insisting instead that the real culprit was a rare technical failure unrelated to the country’s green energy transition. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez went further and reiterated his government’s opposition to nuclear energy, which he called “far from being a solution.”

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Greenism is the road to ruin – and revolt

Tony Blair is running scared of a populist backlash that he himself stoked.

Not for the first time, Tony Blair is making life difficult for his party by saying something vaguely commonsensical. Ahead of the General Election last year, Blair felt moved to announce that only men have penises, forcing Labour leader Keir Starmer to meekly agree. Now, ahead of the local elections tomorrow, Blair has – in effect – declared many of the Labour government’s climate-change policies to be ‘irrational’. That noise you hear in the distance is Ed Miliband smashing up his ukelele.

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Spain’s PM accused of putting net-zero ideology first after blackout chaos

Spain’s Socialist prime minister was accused of putting green ideology ahead of energy security after a massive blackout plunged the country into chaos on Monday.

Alberto Núñez Feijóo, leader of the opposition People’s Party, said Pedro Sánchez was covering up information about the cause of the power cut and that the prime minister was prioritising green ideology in his energy policy.

The prime minister is “saddling our energy system with a massive ideological burden”, Mr Feijóo said on Tuesday.

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Spain and Portugal’s Blackout Reveals the Achilles’ Heel of Electricity Grids Dominated by Wind and Solar

While a comprehensive investigation will take weeks to complete, today’s massive power outages across Spain and Portugal present compelling evidence of the inherent vulnerability in renewable-heavy grids and likely offer a stark lesson in the dangers of sacrificing grid stability on the altar of green energy. While officials scramble to restore power to millions and politicians inevitably deflect blame, the catastrophic failure aligns perfectly with warnings that power grid experts have been sounding for years: systems with high penetrations of solar and wind generation have diminished mechanical inertia and are inherently vulnerable to collapse.

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Blackout: The Net Zero Agenda’s Dystopian Impact

We still do not know the immediate cause of the massive power outage that impacted Spain, Portugal, and parts of southern France on Monday. But this has not impeded wild speculation, dubious explanations, and blame avoidance to deter discussion of the role played by the EU’s ‘Net Zero’ agenda and the cultural mindset that accompanies it.

The cultural mindset that dominates energy policy today reflects a dystopian outlook that views human development—the ‘human footprint’—as the problem rather than the potential solution. We are told that the development of industry and technology must be measured in units of carbon, which should be reduced rather than expanded.

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The scramble to uncover what caused Europe’s biggest power outage

What exactly caused the massive power cuts that swept Spain, Portugal and parts of southern France?

That is the question on the lips of every energy expert in Europe – and theories abound.

Spanish authorities suggested they were investigating the possibility of a cyber attack on grid infrastructure, while some officials in Portugal initially said it was caused by a freak weather phenomenon before backtracking. Both say the exact cause is still unknown.

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America’s electric car crash is over. Europe has finally noticed

American electric vehicle sales have continued to inch up, from 7 per cent of new cars sold last year to 7.5 per cent this year. But no one now expects that they will reach the more than 50 per cent mandated by the Biden administration by 2032. President Donald Trump has upended the EV landscape – sending shockwaves through the industry that are reverberating not just in the United States, but globally.

Canada remains on a collision course with reality however.

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