The Three Pillars: Hydro, Renewables, and Nuclear
The strategy is being framed around three generation pillars — hydroelectricity, wind and solar, and nuclear — bound together by a substantially expanded interprovincial transmission network. According to BayToday's wire coverage of the announcement, Carney has been signalling for months that the bulk of new capacity will come from non-emitting sources, with hydro expansion, renewables build-out, and an enlarged nuclear fleet doing the heavy lifting.
Rooftop and community solar do not appear as headline pillars in the federal framing, but they sit inside the renewables stack — the same stack that determines how much of the doubling burden is absorbed by central generation versus distributed assets on Canadian homes. For homeowners who have looked at panels but never pulled the trigger, our Canadian homeowner's guide to going solar maps the household side of that same renewables build.
The transmission piece is where the homeowner story gets more interesting. Today, the bulk of Canada's high-voltage connections run north-south into the United States rather than east-west between provinces. That structure made commercial sense when each province built its own generation mix in isolation. It does not make sense in a world where Alberta wind and Quebec hydro could, in principle, smooth each other's seasonal swings. The Carney government's Liberal platform pledged an "historic east-west electricity grid" framed explicitly as a way to strengthen energy security and create "one economy," and Carney himself said in a May 1 interview that the government is exploring how to "knit together the provincial grids much more effectively" while Canada moves to roughly double its electricity over the next 20 to 25 years.
Why "Doubling" Is the Number Everyone Lands On
The 2050 doubling figure is not a Liberal talking point. It is the rough consensus from independent modelling: a study commissioned by the Canadian Nuclear Association concludes that Canadian electricity demand will double or even triple by 2050, driven by population growth, electric vehicles, data centres, and industrial electrification. The Canadian Renewable Energy Association, drawing on net-zero modelling from the Trottier Institute and the Transition Accelerator, arrived at the same range. So did the Canada Electricity Advisory Council's 2023 interim report, the expert body convened by Natural Resources Canada, which committed to advise Ottawa on how to "rapidly" expand the clean grid to net-zero scale while keeping the system affordable and reliable.
What matters here is the framework: federal institutions, industry associations, and independent modellers have converged on a number that is large, structural, and unavoidable.