Prime Minister Mark Carney has won deserved praise for standing firm against the Trump administration’s threats and imposition of tariffs. But political credit is only as good as the strategy that follows, and Canada now faces a genuine opportunity to do something more ambitious than weather the storm.
Carney’s approach has sparked a broader conversation among the world’s ‘middle powers’ – countries with significant economies like Japan, South Korea, Australia, and the U.K. that share a commitment to rules-based trade but sit outside the U.S.-China superpower axis. These are countries that are actively looking for a different economic path forward, one that doesn’t simply mirror the nationalism coming out of Washington and Beijing…
Source: Clean Energy Canada
Clean Energy Canada | Press Releases
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- Response: New BC Hydro plan maintains key programs, but the province and utility are leaving larger household savings on the table
- A Canada-led clean trade pact would show that middle powers mean business
- Response: Lopsided MOU undermines yesterday’s clean electricity strategy
- 75% EV sales spike in March a strong signal that 2026 will be Canada’s EV comeback year
- Federal electricity strategy recognizes electrification is the name of the game—but misses the bullseye
- New joint letter: We can’t ‘build Canada strong’ without robust Alberta MOU outcomes, warn Canadian clean energy experts
- Poll: 1 in 5 Canadians more likely to buy an EV because of new rebate and gas prices
- Spring Economic Update highlights economic resilience and affordability. A long-term lens favours clean energy for both
- A gas tax holiday may give drivers temporary relief, but an EV eliminates the root problem
