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Net Zero and Power Problems

Net Zero and Power Problems

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David, Tammy, and I had way too much fun discussing Net Zero and its global impact.1. Canadian Pipeline ProposalsThe hosts discuss two major pipeline initiatives:Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion: A third pipeline is being added to the existing route with government and private partnerships, including undisclosed Indigenous partners. It’s facing environmental litigation over port dredging.Northern Shield Energy Corridor: A proposed all-Canadian energy route through Ontario and Alberta to bypass the Great Lakes and eliminate reliance on Michigan’s Line 5, which has been controversial with the U.S.Canada is considering two new pipelines but is hindered by NGOs fighting for climate rights. Canada’s energy sector is seeing renewed momentum with proposals for two major new oil pipelines aimed at expanding export capacity, enhancing domestic energy security, and reducing reliance on U.S. markets. The projects—the West Coast Oil Pipeline and the Northern Shield Energy Corridor—have secured significant political support from federal and provincial governments.However, they face potential delays and challenges from environmental NGOs, Indigenous groups, and climate advocates who argue that new fossil fuel infrastructure undermines climate goals, environmental protections, and rights-based claims related to a healthy environment and intergenerational equity.The West Coast Oil PipelineAlberta, in partnership with the federal government, is advancing a new crude oil pipeline to Canada’s west coast with a proposed capacity of 1 million barrels per day (bbl/d). The route largely follows the existing Trans Mountain corridor from the Edmonton/Bruderheim area in Alberta through British Columbia to a terminal in the Vancouver area (such as Roberts Bank), while fully respecting the Oil Tanker Moratorium Act.Key details:Proponents and structure: The Government of Alberta is the formal proponent (having invested C$14 million in early planning). Partners include the Government of Canada, Trans Mountain Corporation (leading development), and Pembina Pipeline Corporation (private sector expertise and investment). The project includes equal government stakes and a meaningful equity stake reserved for Indigenous Peoples.Timeline and process: An Implementation Agreement was reached in May 2026. The proposal was referred to the federal Major Projects Office (MPO) in July 2026 for potential listing as a project of national interest (expected by October 2026). Consultations with British Columbia, Indigenous communities, and others are underway. Construction timelines remain aspirational, with past similar projects facing multi-year delays.Broader context: Linked to the Pathways Project, one of the world’s largest carbon capture and storage (CCS) initiatives targeting 16 million tonnes of annual emissions reductions. The goal is to unlock global markets (especially Asia), create tens of thousands of jobs, generate billions in revenues, and support Canada’s energy exports.The second major proposal is the Northern Shield Energy Corridor, a cross-Canada crude oil pipeline from Hardisty, Alberta, to Sarnia, Ontario (with potential extensions to tidewater ports such as Churchill, Manitoba). Announced on July 6, 2026, by Premiers Doug Ford (Ontario), Danielle Smith (Alberta), and Scott Moe (Saskatchewan), it represents a domestic “energy corridor” concept.news.ontario.caKey details:Capacity: Initially ~500,000 bbl/d, expandable to up to 800,000 bbl/d.Route: Approximately 3,300 km east-west through Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Ontario, connecting to existing refining infrastructure in Sarnia and exploring port access for broader exports.Whether these projects reach completion will depend on effective consultation, robust environmental safeguards, and the ability to balance competing priorities. Energy News Beat will continue monitoring developments closely.2. North Sea Oil & Gas DevelopmentDiscussion of the Jackdaw field project by Shell and Equinor, which is ready to produce oil and natural gas by October but faces opposition from environmental groups and the Green Party in the UK, despite providing 5-8% of UK energy needs.3. UK Political Leadership ChangesCommentary on the upcoming UK leadership transition and concerns about new leaders being more extreme than current PM Keir Starmer, with implications for energy policy.4. Energy Policy & the Green New DealExtensive critique of:The $10.4 trillion spent on wind and solar globally for only 3% energy gainsThe proposed Green New Deal’s 90 trillion dollar price tag and impractical goalsHow nuclear power could have been a more efficient alternative5. Grid Reliability & Power OutagesNew York and New Jersey experienced targeted blackouts due to insufficient spare capacity after closing reliable power plantsDiscussion of how net-zero policies have reduced grid margins from 17% to 9%Texas ERCOT’s 180 gigawatts of nameplate capacity vs. actual dispatchable capacity ...
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