Electricity Fundamentals on Canada (EFiC) - Student Manual

Page 125

9.1 INTRODUCTION The electricity industry continues to innovate and adapt to support the emergence of a cleaner and greener global village. Introduction to the Future of the Electricity Industry In this module, we will explore the Canadian government’s net-zero emissions target and the proactive initiatives already underway within the Canadian electricity industry that align with it.

Reference Documents To facilitate your understanding of terminology used in this course, please download the glossary of electrical terms. If you are not using a mouse or touchscreen to navigate the course, please download the keyboard navigation instructions.

Reducing Emissions Reduction of fossil fuel-generated electricity, digitization of system operations, and enabling more players in the electricity market can help the industry progress to net-zero emissions. Decentralization through using multipath grids, as opposed to one-way delivery, can also allow for the incorporation of new forms of renewable generation from many sources.

What is Net Zero? Achieving net-zero emissions means we reduce our greenhouse gas emissions as much as is feasible, and then use technologies that can capture carbon before it is released into the air or offset remaining emissions through actions such as tree planting. This is essential to keeping the world safe and livable for our children and grandchildren.

Net Zero 2050—The Federal Government Goal Canada has joined over 120 countries in committing to be at net-zero emissions by 2050, including all other G7 nations (the United Kingdom, the United States, Germany, Italy, France, and Japan). Canada’s strengthened climate plan has put the country on track to not only meet, but exceed its 2030 Paris Agreement emissions-reduction goal—but we can’t stop there. That is why the Government of Canada is committed to moving to net-zero emissions by 2050. The government, however, cannot achieve net-zero emissions on its own. This goal will require support and engagement from all parts of society, including provinces, territories, Indigenous Peoples, youth, and businesses.

Electricity Canada | Electricity Fundamental in Canada: Student Handbook

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9.2 Leading a Net-Zero Economy

6min
pages 127-130

9.1 Introduction

2min
pages 125-126

8.3 The Integrated North American Grid

4min
pages 113-117

Key Takeaways

1min
pages 123-124

8.1 Introduction

1min
pages 103-104

7.3 Health and Safety

1min
pages 97-98

7.4 Physical and Cybersecurity

3min
pages 99-100

7.2 Serving Indigenous Communities

1min
pages 95-96

7.1 Introduction

1min
pages 93-94

Key Takeaways

1min
pages 91-92

5.2 Rates and Billing

5min
pages 75-78

6.1 Introduction

2min
pages 87-88

4.4 Power Outages

4min
pages 67-69

5.3 Behind the Meter

7min
pages 79-84

6.2 Emerging Customer Tools

2min
pages 89-90

4.3 The Control Room

2min
pages 65-66

Key Takeaways

1min
pages 85-86

4.2 DistributionInfrastructure and Assets

9min
pages 58-64

2.3 Non-renewable Generation

10min
pages 35-43

Key Takeaways

1min
pages 53-54

2.2 Renewable Generation

9min
pages 27-34

3.1 Introduction

2min
pages 47-48

4.1 Introduction

4min
pages 55-57

Key Takeaways

1min
pages 22-24

3.2 Transmission Infrastructure

6min
pages 49-52

Distribution

1min
pages 20-21
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