Vows made in storms are forgotten in calm.
- Thomas Fuller
Can Carney transform Canada from climate laggard to leader? | Zero: The Climate Race
Let’s get one thing straight: Mark Carney just inherited a climate policy mess—wrapped in virtue signals, bound in bureaucracy, and steeped in political cowardice.
The Trudeau era will be remembered by historians not for “climate leadership,” but for its emissions theater—where grandstanding beat grounded action and policy confusion stifled private investment.
Now Carney's Liberals have the audacity to claim they can decarbonize and defend Canada's fossil-fueled economy. Can they really have it both ways?
Maybe. But only if they abandon slogans, ditch the double-speak, and get brutally honest about the sacrifices and systemic changes required to green the economy without detonating it.
The Fossil Fuel Reality Canada Won’t Admit
Canada is a petrostate in denial. Oil, gas, and petrochemicals aren’t just part of the economy—they are the backbone of entire provinces.
Alberta’s oil sands alone pump billions into federal coffers and bankroll infrastructure in provinces that loathe them. And let’s not forget: over 75% of Canada’s energy still comes from fossil fuels.
So what’s the Liberal plan?
Tax fuels, kill consumer demand, regulate industry into submission—and somehow keep exports flowing. It’s a self-contradictory tightrope act, and the wire is fraying.
The only way to decarbonize without economic suicide is by embracing what no one in Ottawa dares say out loud:
Canada needs a strategic fossil fuel phase-down, not a shotgun execution.
That means maintaining fossil production in the short term with emissions controls, while investing those profits into renewable build-out, grid modernization, and carbon tech.
Carney’s Carbon Dilemma: Build Markets or Kill Them?
Let’s talk carbon pricing, the sacred cow of Canadian climate policy.
Right now, it’s a joke. The federal price might be $80/tonne, but thanks to Alberta’s oversupply of credits, actual market prices in the province have collapsed to under $30. That’s not a signal to invest in decarbonization—that’s a clearance sale for pollution.
And it gets worse. By axing the federal fuel charge to dodge political blowback, Carney nuked the incentive for small oil and gas players to stay in the TIER system. That means even fewer emissions are covered, while the TIER credit glut grows larger. Translation: carbon pricing is losing credibility fast.
If Carney wants to salvage it, here’s what needs to happen—immediately:
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Cap and drain the TIER credit bank. Flooded markets don’t work.
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Establish a rising national carbon price floor, with hard minimums province-wide.
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Guarantee price stability to encourage long-term industrial investment.
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Force transparency—every company, every trade, every offset must be traceable.
Markets can work. But only if they are trusted, coherent, and ruthless about integrity.
CBAM: The Nuclear Option for Green Trade
The Liberals want a Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM). Sounds smart—charge imports based on their embedded emissions, reward domestic producers who clean up their act.
But there’s a catch: You can’t level the playing field if your field is already a mess.
Canada doesn’t have a unified carbon price. Alberta does one thing, Quebec another, and Ottawa tries to patchwork the rest. A CBAM that works under WTO law requires a single, national carbon price—and that means killing provincial regimes. Tell Alberta and Saskatchewan their homegrown systems are dead, and see how long your government lasts.
If Carney wants to make CBAM work, he has two choices:
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Pick a carbon price and impose it federally, with or without provincial consent.
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Create an interprovincial carbon treaty that standardizes prices and rules.
Both options will provoke fury. But the alternative—CBAM failure—means Canada’s clean producers stay punished, and our markets get flooded with dirty imports.
And just wait until Donald Trump 2.0 gets wind of Canada taxing U.S. imports. You thought NAFTA talks were bad? CBAM could start a full-blown trade war.
The Only Path Forward: Strategic Decarbonization, Not Magical Thinking
It’s time to stop lying to ourselves. Canada cannot hit net-zero without transforming how we produce and use energy. That means:
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Phasing down oil and gas gradually, not overnight.
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Reinvesting fossil profits into real transition infrastructure—not PR stunts.
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Building a grid that can actually handle 100% electrification.
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Doubling down on carbon capture, direct air capture, and storage tech to decarbonize remaining fossil sectors.
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Partnering with Indigenous Nations to lead and benefit from renewable development, especially in remote communities.
This is not a green utopia. It’s a hard-edged, pragmatic climate plan that doesn’t ignore Canada’s resource reality.
Conclusion: Carney’s Legacy Starts Now
Mark Carney made his name by managing financial risk. Climate change is the biggest systemic risk Canada faces—and how he handles the carbon policy puzzle will define not just his political career, but Canada’s economic future.
There is no path to prosperity that ignores climate. But there’s also no climate solution that ignores economics.
Get the details right. Stop chasing headlines. Start building systems that last. The world is watching—and history is less forgiving than voters.
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