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I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 98 of the House and Commons Standing Committee on Natural Resources.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Tuesday, November 29, 2022, the committee is commencing its study of Canada's electricity grid and network.
Since today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, I would like to make a few comments for the benefit of all.
Before we begin, I would like to remind all members and other meeting participants in the room of the following important preventive measures. To prevent disruptive and potentially harmful audio feedback incidents that can cause injuries, all in-person participants are reminded to keep their earpieces away from all microphones at all times.
As indicated in the communiqué from the Speaker to all members on Monday, April 29, the following measures have been taken to help prevent audio feedback incidents.
All earpieces have been replaced by a model that greatly reduces the probability of audio feedback. The new earpieces are black in colour, whereas the former earpieces were grey. Please only use an approved black earpiece. By default, all unused earpieces will be unplugged at the start of the meeting. When you are not using your earpiece, please place it face down on the middle of the sticker that you will find on the table, as indicated. Please consult the cards on the table for guidelines to prevent audio feedback incidents.
The room layout has been adjusted to increase the distance between microphones and reduce the chance of feedback from an ambient earpiece. These measures are in place so that we can conduct our business without interruption and protect the health and safety of all participants, including the interpreters.
Thank you all for your co-operation.
Here are some Zoom reminders. Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. All comments should be addressed through the chair. Additionally, screenshots or taking photos of your screen is not permitted.
I would now like to welcome our witnesses who are with us today.
From the Department of the Environment, we have Mark Cauchi, director general, energy and transportation; and Karishma Boroowa, director.
From the Department of Natural Resources, we have Drew Leyburne, assistant deputy minister; Debbie Scharf, assistant deputy minister, energy systems sector; Cynthia Handler, senior director of science and technology; and Michael Paunescu, director.
I will be using these cards. Yellow is a 30-second warning, and red means time is up.
Members, we will do three full rounds for today's meeting. We'll start with Ms. Scharf.
The floor is yours for five minutes.
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Ms. Scharf, can I ask you to hold for one second?
It seems there is a potential interpretation issue, or is it just audio not coming through the earpiece?
It's not coming through. Nothing's coming through on the English.
Is the translation coming through, Mr. Simard?
What I'm being told is that the English audio is not coming through, but the French translation is coming through.
Mr. Patzer, is it okay if we continue with the opening remarks while...?
Thank you.
My apologies, Ms. Scharf. Please start from the top.
Thank you for inviting us here to talk about one of Canada's most important assets.
Like the railway or the St. Lawrence Seaway, our electricity sector is a significant Canadian accomplishment. It not only powers our way of life, but also connects us as a country and to our friends down south with enough transmission lines to circle the globe four times.
Our grid and electricity sector are a competitive advantage for the 21st century, which makes your study timely and important.
As other countries now race to decarbonize their grids and dramatically expand the role of electricity in their economies for a net-zero future, Canada already has one of the cleanest electricity mixes in the world. More than 80% of our electricity comes from clean and non-emitting sources, which puts us among the top in the G20.
Hydroelectricity is a central part to our success. It accounts for 61% of the electricity Canada generated in 2022, followed by nuclear and natural gas at roughly 13% each, wind next at 6%, and coal still accounting for 4%. Other sources, like biomass, petroleum and solar rounded out the electricity mix.
The big story, however, has been the rapid decarbonization of Canada's electricity sector, even as its generating capacity has been growing. Between 2005 and 2021, for example, Canada's emissions from electricity generation were slashed in half, from 125 megatonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent to about 60 megatonnes.
Over the last four years alone, annual capital expenditures in the industry have averaged more than $26 billion—and that's each year—on everything from power generation to transmission and distribution investment, as well as new machinery and equipment.
While electricity rates do vary across the country, on average Canadian industries and households continue to benefit from some of the most affordable electricity rates among advanced economies.
That's the good news. The challenge for Canada is that to achieve a net-zero emissions economy by 2050, we still need to build out more electricity infrastructure in the next 25 years than we constructed over the country in the last century. That includes the significant investments that we need in transmission and distribution upgrades, new interties and energy storage, even greater energy efficiency, and changes on the demand side in areas like transportation and heating.
Adding to these challenges are the overlapping roles and responsibilities for electricity in Canada. Provinces and territories are responsible for defining their electricity policy, market and regulatory structures, including electricity prices, as well as managing their electricity systems. The federal government has regulatory powers over interprovincial and international power lines, nuclear power, electricity exports, as well as a shared jurisdiction over environmental regulations. The federal government also plays an important convening role on many of the issues facing the industry and an important role in innovation.
All of these moving parts were laid out in the “Powering Canada Forward” paper released jointly by and last August. It makes the central point that moving to net zero is not just a challenge but a tremendous opportunity to strengthen Canada's competitiveness, because jurisdictions with clean grids have an advantage in attracting good projects and foreign direct investment.
We've seen that this is the case with Canada's electric vehicle manufacturing and supply chains. In the last four years, over $30 billion of foreign direct investment has been announced by Volkswagen, Ford, Northvolt, Molicel, Honda and others for battery and vehicle plants in Quebec, Ontario and British Columbia.
Natural Resources Canada has been part of a whole-of-government approach to Canada's electricity sector. We've been leading on targeted programming and policy, while Environment and Climate Change leads on regulations, Finance Canada on tax incentives and the Canada Infrastructure Bank and Canada growth fund on financing.
The federal commitment is to transition off unabated coal-fired generation by 2030, get on the path to net-zero electricity by 2035, and use this as a foundation for a prosperous net-zero emissions economy by 2050. However, we recognize that this is easier said than done. The pace and scale of action required will be difficult, particularly for those provinces that rely heavily on fossil fuels. That is why the federal government is committed to sharing in the heavy lifting and why we have found the constructive dialogue and discussions we've been having through the regional energy and resource tables so valuable.
There is significant variation in Canada's electricity sector. We understand this and we know that federal efforts must be sensitive to this. A key tool for NRCan is the smart renewables and electrification pathways program, or SREPs as it's called, which aims to help accelerate the deployment of renewable power, modernize the grid and incentivize private sector investment and indigenous ownership.
The program has been oversubscribed since its launch in 2021; budget 2023 provided almost $3 billion to recapitalize it and support critical regional priorities.
Examples of successful grid modernization projects include funding for advanced control systems, such as $25 million for a local Alberta distribution company and $17 million to the Alberta energy system operator. We also recapitalized NRCan's energy innovation program in last year's budget to expand our work on smart grid innovation, including non-wire alternatives, and we will continue to partner with provinces and territories to maximize the impact of public funding and private investments.
As I bring my remarks to a close, I would just like to note a few important milestones that are looming in the months ahead.
As NRCan relaunches the SREP program, other major federal investments related to the sector, such as the proposed clean electricity regulations and the clean electricity investment tax credits, will fall into place.
We are looking forward to the final report and recommendations from the Canada electricity advisory council that was launched last year as an independent body of experts to provide the Government of Canada with advice to help accelerate sustainable, affordable and reliable electricity systems. You may find that particularly useful to your work here. I know that we expect to draw heavily from it to inform the upcoming electricity strategy that was promised in “Powering Canada Forward”.
This concludes my remarks, Mr. Chair. My colleagues and I are happy to take any questions from the committee.
Thank you.
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I'm happy to take that question.
We are aware, obviously, of the importance of cogeneration electricity in Canada's grid, in particular in Alberta and Saskatchewan, which have high amounts of cogeneration supplying electricity to consumers. It is certainly something that we have heard during our consultations on the clean electricity regulations, and we are working with provinces at this time to look at and explore ways to bring more flexibility into the regulation for cogeneration in particular, recognizing that in a province like Alberta, you'd have roughly 40% cogeneration as part of the broader generation mix.
That's an important amount of electricity for Albertans. We recognize that. I think it's a lesser amount in Saskatchewan, but nonetheless, it's an important amount, and we are working to provide some additional flexibility in that regard.
released an update recently, in February, on the clean electricity regulations, and in it he signalled his intent to explore more flexibility for cogeneration.
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Yes, and those are definitely located in Saskatchewan and Alberta.
It is those coal units that literally saved lives this past winter. Those lives would not have been saved if these regulations had come into effect, because the provinces aren't going to export power to the grid. They're generated by cogeneration or even probably by coal as well. There would have been no extra power to ship over to Alberta when they're sending out warnings when it's -45°. Since it's the federal government that regulates interprovincial ties, I would think that would be very concerning to you guys.
Part of this, too, is the whole notion around phasing out natural gas, any new natural gas plants, by 2035. Has there been any thought or consideration on the safety factor that goes into that and the fact that the reliability of our grid is so heavily dependent on having baseload power? When it is -45°, wind turbines shut down, not because there's no wind, but because it's literally too cold for them to operate. That isn't a one-off thing. It's regularly that cold in the Prairies. It's not a new thing.
I get quite nervous and worried when I see the path we're headed on here with these regulations and whatnot. Again, at what level is safety a part of the conversation to make sure that people have safe, reliable, affordable power when it's minus 40° or plus 40°?
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We do have regional energy and resource tables established in nine jurisdictions across the country. I will say that electricity has been identified as a critical priority in just about every one of those table discussions.
The inflection points, of course, are a little bit different because, as I mentioned earlier, the challenges and opportunities are different when it comes to electricity, depending on where you live. In some tables, such as in Newfoundland, where they have excess power from their existing hydro facilities, they are trying to electrify more end use in ports, mines, heating, etc. In a province such as British Columbia, which is trying to open up new parts of the province to critical minerals and further electrification of LNG, they're looking at transmission assets within the province.
Specifically to your question about interties, that is a primary priority in our discussions with both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick for the first phase of what we previously called the Atlantic Loop, which is the reliability intertie between the two provinces that will enable the trade of power and access to broader markets. That will be critical, in particular for Nova Scotia, in being able to get off coal by 2030, and it figures as a prominent priority in those table discussions.
I want to thank the witnesses for being with us today.
You probably know that Hydro‑Québec plans to invest $100 billion by 2035 in new facilities and clean electricity generation. I saw the much-touted tax credit announced in the budget, as I'm sure you did, as well as the conditions attached to it.
Given the way Hydro‑Québec is set up, the idea of giving consumers back the money from the tax credit doesn't seem workable to me. Hydro‑Québec is not a facility. It's a pool of electricity. I can't say whether the electricity I consumed this week came from the La Romaine dam or the La Grande‑1 dam. It comes from a pool of electricity.
I don't see how the government can apply its proposed tax credit in the case of Quebec. In my opinion, it would not be feasible, particularly since electricity pricing in Quebec is the responsibility of the Régie de l'énergie. In Quebec, it is based on the heritage pool, meaning the electricity produced for regular people, not businesses. Even members of the National Assembly cannot touch the heritage pool. That is the responsibility of the energy regulator. It sets the fee structure.
I see that as a fairly significant stumbling block. I don't see how the federal government can intervene in hydroelectricity pricing in Quebec. It's impossible to do the math. I spoke to people at Hydro‑Québec who've worked there for more than 20 years, and they told me that they wouldn't be able to make the calculation.
I don't know if you've thought about this at the Department of the Environment or the Department of Natural Resources. As you know, Hydro‑Québec is one of the largest producers of hydroelectricity, and it has an investment plan of $100 billion, which is a huge amount of money. It's interested in the tax credit, but it doesn't seem applicable, at the very least.
I fully understand that this falls under the Department of Finance, but I hope that Natural Resources Canada will be consulted on the implementation of the tax credit. I think you will find that, in the specific context of Quebec, what you are asking for is practically unworkable. I will spare you all the explanations about the fact that Quebec has different rates for businesses and individuals.
I want to bring something else to your attention. According to the budget, for a project to be eligible for the tax credit, at least 10% of the workers have to be from the red seal program. I don't see how Hydro‑Québec, which already has expertise, could separate its projects to identify the ones where red seal apprentices make up at least 10% of the workforce. I'm sure you know where I stand, but this intervention in an area of provincial jurisdiction makes no sense. It's micromanaging.
If the goal of the clean electricity investment tax credits is to generate more electricity, that becomes a barrier. Could you comment on that?
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Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the officials.
I look at what's happening in the rest of the world and how fast they are moving, and it seems that in Canada we have regulatory...and we have all the various provinces going in whatever direction, and I wonder how we're going to keep up.
Texas, in a single month, installed 50% of the solar that Canada has ever brought in. California, with a population as big as ours and a bigger industrial economy, is now able, for good parts of the day, to have 100% of its power from renewables. The battery capacity storage in the United States doubled in 2024, and yet, for example, provincially in Ontario, the Kathleen Wynne government partially privatized hydro, jacking up our prices. We got stuck with the debt. Then they signed their FIT contracts for their green economy. It sounded great, but we couldn't get any of the energy onto the grid. The grid couldn't take the capacity, so we were paying for solar and wind projects that went nowhere.
What is the role of the federal government in dealing with provinces that may not want to be part of the solution? How do we step in and say that we need to be looking at this in the light of what's happening globally and the dramatic shift in energy?
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Thank you for the question.
My general feeling, from our conversations with the provinces and territories, is that there's a general recognition across the board that moving to a clean electricity system is critical.
I was just looking at some of the stats, and I think that over three-quarters of the country is committed to net zero by 2050, including provinces like Saskatchewan and Alberta. There's also a growing recognition that to have a comparative advantage to attract foreign direct investment, you need to have a clean grid. That's how Ontario did it, that's how B.C. did it, and that's how Quebec is doing it.
I think those market trends are helping all jurisdictions understand the criticality of a clean grid.
Getting there has all sorts of challenges attached to it. At the federal level, we're taking advantage of the strength in our convening power, whether through the regional energy and resource tables or the Canada electricity advisory council, to be able to have those conversations around how we could help provinces and territories get to where they need to go and how to get the best advice we can from the experts to move us in that direction.
At the federal level, we're also able to provide tools and levers that could help motivate markets in the right direction, whether it's the $4.5 billion that has been put into the SREPs program, the $100 million in the renewed smart grid program, or the ITCs that help create the investment conditions that motivate investment in the grid. Those are some things the federal government is doing.
Without a doubt, the provinces do control their electricity systems and make those decisions, but the convening power in those conversations is absolutely moving in the right direction.
It is a 250-megawatt energy storage project. It's actually one of the largest in Ontario, and I think it's the largest that we have deployed to date, although I expect that we will probably beat that in the years to come.
It is a partnership that includes the Six Nations of the Grand River Development Corporation, Northland Power, NRStor and Aecon. It is a partnership between indigenous communities and other developers.
SREPs actually did put $50 million into that particular project, as well as the Canada Infrastructure Bank.
The Canada Infrastructure Bank plays a really important role in offering strategic and low-cost financing, either in projects that operate with a higher degree of risk, which makes it harder to raise private sector money, or it offers more favourable terms to the projects to make them more economical. It plays a very complementary role.
Oftentimes, programs like SREPs give grants. Then when you need that higher-risk financing, the CIB can come in and complement that. Together, it gets the projects over the finish line. That's exactly what happened with Oneida.
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There's one program we haven't talked about that I think is quite important, because we're talking about on-grid communities. That's been the conversation to date, but there are actually quite a number of rural and remote communities in this country that don't have access to the grid. They are actually quite energy insecure and pay a disproportionate amount for their energy.
We do have programs that target those rural and remote communities, which by and large are indigenous communities—not exclusively, but by and large. We call it the CERRC program. It's a bit of a mouthful.
This is funding that is provided to those communities that are reliant on fossil fuels. It's to help them find renewable alternatives to be able to supply secure, more affordable and more reliable power to those communities.
It is through a process of self-determination. Those communities have the decision about what avenue they would like to take. Then the CERRC program can come in and help with funding.
We have funded 159 renewable energy and capacity-building projects to date under that program. It's worth just shy of half a billion dollars. It's been running for a number of years and will continue to run.
I certainly have lots of examples I could share around that.
That's what I asked Normand Mousseau, the scientific director of the Trottier Energy Institute. I wanted to get information about small modular reactors. He told me that the number of small modular reactors currently in operation is zero. I am telling you this because, in terms of all the energy modelling, all the new technologies that are being implemented, we need independent scientific committees.
I get the impression that this is sorely lacking at Natural Resources Canada, as it is for many people in the government, since they're quick to make promises around technology that are difficult to implement. I'm thinking of carbon capture and storage strategies.
Like me, you may have seen today that Capital Power, in Edmonton, is going to pull the plug on an investment that was supposed to be worth $2.4 billion because it's too costly.
My question is very simple. Does Natural Resources Canada have a scientific committee capable of analyzing these technologies as well as their potential?
It's not dead. It's just pining for the fjords.
Part of what was supposed to make the whole connection work was going to be, I think, a 50-year loan from the Canada Infrastructure Bank. I think the feds were going to put up about $4.5 billion.
What I'm hearing now, now that we have Bill coming through, is that the province is looking to meet its net-zero goal by moving to 1,000 megawatts of onshore wind by 2030, which would give it 50% of the province's capacity. Those would be big projects that would have to get under way. We know the Americans are easily doing it, but this is Canada.
Are the feds talking about loan guarantees to help get these offshore wind projects up and have that as an alternative to the original Atlantic Loop?
Thank you, colleagues.
Thanks for the interesting testimony today. I do have some questions, but first of all, let's acknowledge that energy consumption in Canada is rising, as it is everywhere in the world, and technology consumption is a large part of that. If we're going to have a technological economy going forward, we're going to have to produce more energy, because technology consumes more energy as we continue to deploy more of it.
Really, there are three sources of energy in Canada. There's electricity, which is about 40% of the consumption of energy. There's industrial power, which is mostly natural gas. It's about 30% of the energy consumed in Canada. Then there are motive fuels, which represent the other about 30%. I'm challenged to see how we're going to get, in 11 years, to a grid that does away with natural gas and does away with motive fuels. It effectively loads up the 40% of power with an additional 2.5 times or 1.5 times additional electricity, when we have barely grown electricity at all in the last handful of years. Can you please explain how this equation squares at the end of the day?
With respect, the grid grew that much, but the consumption of every other source of energy also grew at the same rate. Now we're talking about displacing those energy sources while the power consumption continues to grow in Canada.
You have a bit of a riddle here about how you're going to meet that equation of growing energy demand while supposedly cutting down on the energy sources.
I think those are words in the air. I don't think they actually land for people who are actually looking at putting this equation together, with all due respect. We're talking about a lot of money.
To follow up on what my colleague Mr. Angus said, yes, about 35% of Alberta's capacity is supplied by wind and solar. That has meant a doubling in the cost of consumers' electricity rates in Alberta over the last decade. In addition, those provide only 7% of the energy in Alberta. The other 93% of power comes from hydrocarbons.
Here's a riddle for you. If we're going to have carbon capture, utilization and storage at a place like the Shepard plant in Calgary, it's going to require 30% of the plant's power in order to put the carbon underground. Therefore, we're going to have to expand that plant by 30%. Can you tell me how that's going to work as far as filling the grid goes?
Thank you to the officials for being here today.
Madam Scharf, you talk about a one and a half to three times growth of the electricity that we need. You talk about the timeline of 25 years. We are nearly at 2025. Our target is 2050, and you said that we are well on our path of decarbonization. There are still some challenges, but we'll see a light at the end.
However, when it comes to growth challenges and capacity building, I would like to get an understanding: As a federal government, do we have a 25-year road map showing threefold growth that is going to come from these sources of energy by jurisdiction?
I commend the government for rolling out a lot of programs, which, to me, are a lot of project-based programs. However, I think the fundamental foreign investments needed are only secured when we have a solid road map so that we can clearly demonstrate that regardless of this new program that's rolled out, whether it's over two years or three years, Canada has a solid road map for doubling or tripling its energy sources, from generation to transmission to distribution, and is really focusing on building that infrastructure, whether it's on storage or distribution.
Do we have something like that?
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At the federal level, there was modelling done, for example, with the Canada Energy Regulator's energy futures report, which was released in 2023—there will be another one coming next year—and which provided insights into how much an electricity system may grow by 2050, given the decarbonization of the economy and what some of those sources might be.
Ultimately, though, it is the decision of the provinces to decide what generation they are going to build and what the inflection points will be. As a federal official, I would be very happy if every province were engaged in that type of energy planning and the development of those types of energy road maps. We've seen them starting to emerge, and I'm going to refer back to Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia, which have now done that.
To the previous member's comment, the Province of Ontario, for example, noted the need for 18,000 megawatts of new nuclear required by 2050, and then turned around very shortly afterwards and announced 4,800 new megawatts at the Bruce Power site, which was in direct reflection of the fact that they understood they were going to need that power.
However, you need to do the road maps and the planning, and the provinces are starting to move in that direction. We'd be very happy, at the federal level, to see each and every one of them do that.
All I need is for somebody to give me a large project that's going to take 15 years to build, including the planning, and yet we're nowhere near even having the blueprints for one right now.
Let me move on, if I can, please.
We talk about the building out of the intertie here between provinces. The intertie build is going up significantly. The interties in the U.S. take eight years to plan and three years to build, on average, so it takes 11 years just for the interties, and they cost about $1.6 billion per thousand megawatts. We're going to have to spend a lot of money here on any interties.
Can anybody tell me about the line losses that happen over 1,000 kilometres of electricity distribution?
You just answered my second question, and I appreciate that very much.
As my next question, can you share with the committee what economic opportunities come with a net-zero electricity grid, and on the flip side to that, could you also share what the consequences are if we don't move to a net-zero electricity grid?
We know that, for example, the European Union has put a price on pollution, and they've stated that they will no longer trade, at a certain point, with countries that don't have a price on pollution. What are the consequences to us of not moving to a net-zero grid, and what are the advantages?
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I don't mean to cut you off, but my time is very short.
If possible, I would like you to provide us with an organization chart so that we can see how the process works when an independent scientific committee, or people with the expertise to understand the technical ins and outs, assess a project.
I am saying this because I saw what was announced by Capital Power. Let me tell you about a meeting I attended with the himself in Berlin.
When we spoke to the representatives of the large German corporation Siemens, they made it clear to the minister that, in their opinion, hydrogen made from gas using carbon capture and storage technology was not viable. First, it costs a lot more. Perhaps the government could agree to reduce the cost by paying a portion, but they said they felt the technological risk was much too high.
Personally, I think the people at Siemens have the expertise. They have the technological expertise to produce hydrogen. If a private company considers it to be inefficient and doomed to fail, I don't understand why the government is investing massive amounts of public money in it.
I would like to understand the basics, and I will end on that note. I would like to understand how NRCan analyzes the feasibility of these projects and I would like to know who these people are who have the technical knowledge needed to give you advice and opinions.
If you could get back to the committee with that information, I would really appreciate it.
Thank you.
I want to thank the witnesses. You know your files well. This is impressive.
I want to help my good friend Mr. McLean, because I'm so glad he's back. He was asking where these projects are. Well, Vineyard Wind 1 in the United States will power 400,000 homes, and the projects are happening. Another one will power 250,000 homes. The one on Rhode Island will power 100,000 homes.
However, we're seeing in Canada, in Alberta, that our good friend Danielle Smith chased out billions in investment. Calgary Economic Development said that there were 170,000 jobs in clean tech that could happen in Alberta, and that got chased out.
He mentioned reliability. The problem is that renewables did not cause the blackouts in the winter; it was a lack of investments in the natural gas power plants by privatized operators. I mean, God, what province has blackouts in April? I thought they were an energy superpower.
Then I was looking at what the Alberta advantage was. Do you know what the price per kilowatt hour is in Manitoba? It's 10¢. In New Brunswick, it's 13.9¢. In Ontario, it's 14¢, and we're mad as hell about paying our hydro bills at 14¢. In Alberta, it's 25.8¢ per kilowatt hour. That's with privatized operators. They can't even run the power. It's the third highest. The only places higher are Nunavut and Northwest Territories. You're paying through the nose for power in Alberta.
I just have to end with what it is in Quebec. It's 7.8¢ a kilowatt hour. That's what happens when you have a plan.
I want to end on a simple question. Do you believe that if we invest in renewable energy, we will have long-term power, based on what you're seeing in the rest of the world?
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I don't have any direct figures around megawatts of offshore potential. My colleagues might know.
There is a great amount of potential in the offshore. One of the interesting, unique features of offshore wind is that the wind blows more in the winter and in the cold, which is not what you expect from the onshore wind farms, so there are some unique considerations around offshore wind. It could provide that kind of balance with what's happening onshore with renewables in the wintertime. There's tremendous potential in the offshore in the Atlantic region, which is why, of course, you had the bill in front of you not that long ago.
We're doing quite a number of other pieces of work to try to accelerate that development. The provinces are very keen on it. Nova Scotia has already set a target—I think it's by 2025—for a call for bids and is wanting to advance that.
The legislation is only one piece of the framework, though, that needs to be put together. We have two regional assessments under way so that we can get a clear picture of where the impacts might be, where the best places are for these wind farms, so that when these projects do come to fruition, we can move much faster through the regulatory process to get these projects built.
We have $50 million that we're spending on studies to collect baseline data that we're going to need to feed into those project assessments to look at wind integration into grids that are going to be onshore, to talk about how those projects will integrate with existing systems.
All of those are happening as the corollary around the legislative pieces that are moving forward so that we can get those wind resources built as quickly as we can.