Clean Energy Canada | Webinar: Canada's fragmented energy transition and the role of provinces
June 26, 2024
You’re invited to join a webinar co-hosted by Clean Energy Canada and the Pembina Institute exploring Canada’s fragmented energy transition and the role of Canadian provinces.
- Date: Tuesday, July 9, 2024
- Time: 11 am PT / 2 pm ET
- Platform: Zoom
Taking place ahead of July’s premiers’ meeting, this webinar will explore the latest research surrounding provincial climate action and the need for provinces to take more active leadership roles in the energy transition.
Clean Energy Canada’s new provincial scorecard report, Making the Grade, found that Canada is experiencing a heavily fragmented energy transition with consequences for household affordability and economic development. Similarly, Pembina Institute’s forthcoming report, All Together Now: A provincial scorecard on shared responsibility to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Canada, rates the existence and efficacy of the climate plans and measures that are being pursued by Canada’s federal and provincial governments.
Provinces hold the wheel on big energy, investment, and infrastructure decisions, but are they taking the right steps to build more sustainable economies? In this webinar, Clean Energy Canada’s vice president of policy and strategy, Rachel Doran, the Pembina Institute’s senior analyst, Sarah McBain, and the University of Calgary’s Dr. Sara Hastings-Simon will reflect on why provinces are so important in Canada’s energy transition, perhaps now more than ever. The presentation will be followed by a panel discussion among speakers, moderated by Clean Energy Canada’s Keri McNamara.
Join us at 11am PT/2pm ET on July 9 as some of Canada’s leading climate think tanks offer informed insight on provincial climate action.
Speakers
Sarah McBain, Senior Analyst, Pembina Institute
Sarah McBain is a senior analyst with the Pembina Institute’s transportation program and is based in Vancouver. Prior to joining Pembina, she was with the International Energy Agency in the energy technology policy division. Sarah has a master of resource and environmental management (planning) and a bachelor of sustainable business from Simon Fraser University. She also studied at the International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics at Lund University in Sweden.