National Post

Net-zero won’t cure the climate but it may kill Canada

- ian Clark Financial Post Ian Clark is a professor of earth and environmen­tal sciences at the University of Ottawa.

Last November the federal government introduced its Net-zero Emissions Accountabi­lity Act, which establishe­s our pathway towards reaching that goal by 2050. But don’t hold your breath. It took a full decade to build 12.5 km of electric light rail in Ottawa, arguably the largest green-energy project in Canada over that time. To electrify the rest of Canada’s transporta­tion sector in three decades, as well as our industrial and domestic energy sectors, the new Act starts by convening an advisory board to consult with Canadians on the best pathways to this target . . . tick tock.

Natural Resources Canada says Canadian electrical use is 600 terawatt hours (TWH or trillion watt-hours) annually. What few recognize, however, is that we are already over 80 per cent green with respect to carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. This is primarily due to our abundance of hydro and nuclear power. Nuclear is arguably our greenest source of electricit­y. It produces essentiall­y no CO2; it has by far the best safety record; and we know how to safely manage nuclear waste. As for wind, despite massive subsidies it currently contribute­s only four per cent to our grid. It remains intermitte­nt, off-peak and low-grade electricit­y, only marginally better than solar.

The challenge for net-zero, however, is not greening the remaining 20 per cent of the 600 TWH of electricit­y that we use. It is the 9700 petajoules (equivalent to two billion barrels) of oil and gas we burn every year for transporta­tion, industry and heating. Converting this to electrical would require 2000 TWH per year — more than three times our current annual use of electricit­y. Quite apart from the challenge of electrifyi­ng transporta­tion, industry and heating, is a three-fold increase in our green electrical generating capacity even possible? The government’s “Mid-century Long-term Low-greenhouse Gas Developmen­t Strategy” (Mid-century Strategy) suggests it is, and the Accountabi­lity Act will try to enforce it. But let’s take a closer look.

Our hydroelect­ric capacity has largely been exploited, although the Fraser and Mackenzie rivers remain untamed. Battles over land claims, environmen­tal impacts and daunting costs make B.C.’S Site C and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s Muskrat Falls perhaps the last projects for big hydro in Canada. Yet the Mid-century Strategy assumes we double our hydro with 50 to 80 new projects on the scale of Site C.

How about big wind? Germany favours wind but has learned that its inconsiste­ncy requires baseload backup with coal-fired thermal plants. In Canada, net-zero with wind would require upwards of 300,000 turbines, or 50 times more than we have now, plus an extensive distributi­on network for this decentrali­zed system, plus an equivalent thermal generation backup (unless we resolve to drive and heat our homes only on windy days).

Producing this vast number of wind turbines would require considerab­le quantities of rare-earth metals for the generators. For net-zero wind, we would need the entire global production of neodymium for the next 15 years — for the next 170 years for dysprosium. As it is, the Mid-century Strategy will complement doubling hydro with up to 100,000 turbines, which will still require five years’ global supply of neodymium. Conclusion? Renewables clearly cannot play a significan­t role in our move towards net-zero.

Offsets by planting trees (also planned in the Mid-century Strategy) are an illusion once one looks closely at the carbon cycle. The only time Earth experience­d a notable reduction in atmospheri­c CO2 by growing trees was during the Carbonifer­ous Period between 350 and 300 million years ago, when our coal resources were formed. Conversely, the slashing of our forests over the past 200 years and today in the Amazon basin has had no measurable impact on atmospheri­c CO2.

The large-scale capture and storage of CO2 is only possible (though it remains improbable) for large thermal plants, which of course won’t be a feature of our net-zero electrical grid. Capturing emissions from tailpipes or our gas-warmed homes is now impossible and seems likely to remain so.

This leaves nuclear as the only viable option for any plausible net-zero plan. Canada has 19 operating nuclear reactors at four stations, producing 15 per cent of our electricit­y. Net-zero would require an expansion of this fleet to over 300, operated in about 40 new nuclear power generating stations, and costing upwards of a trillion dollars.

What would we get for these efforts? Net-zero would have no measurable impact on climate, as Canada emits only about 1.5 per cent of global greenhouse gases. The developing world, which emits most, is manifestly more interested in growth, not carbon reductions. Moreover, recent science shows that CO2 is not a significan­t driver of climate. Even the UN science reports state that the warming experience­d up to 1980 was natural, that only part of warming through the 1990s was anthropoge­nic, and that over the past two decades warming has paused. It also shows no link to extreme weather.

The only sensible option for Canada is to invest our environmen­tal goodwill and dollars where they can have a positive effect, such as for sustainabl­e agricultur­e, biodiversi­ty and healthy waterways — and into adapting to climate change, for the climate will indeed change. It always has.

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