As 440 Megatonnes has written before, building bigger, cleaner, smarter electricity systems will support Canada’s competitive advantage and enable low-cost emissions reductions for industry, buildings, and transportation.
In this Insight, we share what the latest data from Canada’s National Inventory Report (NIR) tells us about progress in Ontario and Alberta to decarbonize their electricity grids. Electricity generation has progressed faster than any other sector in reducing emissions and these two provinces are standouts, largely thanks to the phase out of coal-fired generation. Taken together, these actions have led to one of the biggest reductions in greenhouse gas emissions Canada has seen to date.
What does this success mean for future progress? We’ve unpacked some of the numbers and provided potential next steps on electricity decarbonization as provinces and territories face increased power demand in the near future.
Policy led to the end of coal emissions in both Alberta and Ontario
Both Alberta and Ontario have stopped using coal for electricity generation. Ontario’s last coal plant shut down in 2015 and Alberta zeroed out coal-fired power almost a decade later in 2024.
Figure 1 shows how the sources of electricity—known as the generation mix—in each province have changed since 2005. Both provinces used policy to drive out coal-fired generation, with the provincial policies tailored to the regional situations.
In 2003, Ontario officially committed to a provincial phase out of coal-fired electricity. Initially, the provincial government planned to phase out all coal plants by 2007, but later revised this date to the end of 2014. Between 2005 and 2015, coal dropped from 19 per cent of Ontario’s generation to zero per cent, a remarkable transformation over the span of a decade. In that time, a mix of nuclear and wind generation grew to meet the province’s power demand, with some additional generation from natural gas. Since 2015, nuclear generation has declined due to refurbishments, which have temporarily taken some reactors offline. That power has been replaced by natural gas and hydro generation, in a roughly even mix, alongside solar and wind to a lesser extent.
Alberta committed to eliminating coal-fired electricity in 2015, with an initial phase- out date of 2030. However, in practice coal was phased out much quicker due to Alberta’s Technology Innovation and Emissions Reduction (TIER) regulation—also known as the province’s industrial carbon pricing system—plus the financial contracts with Alberta power companies to move off coal. Coal accounted for 65 per cent of generation in Alberta in 2015, but declined to 15 per cent by 2023, the most recent year reported by the NIR. We expect that coal-fired generation in 2024 will be less than 10 per cent, since the last dedicated coal plant went offline on June 16, 2024. Natural gas accounted for about 70 per cent of the fuel switch from coal, while wind and solar power grew substantially and accounted for the remainder.
Ontario and Alberta used different policies and different technologies in their phase outs. Ontario’s coal plants were old and owned by a public company accountable to the Ministry of Energy. Thus it was feasible to rely on government instruction and regulation to ban the use of coal, without complementary policies. The replacement power took advantage of the province’s extensive investments in nuclear power since the 1970s. Alberta’s coal plants accounted for a much larger share of total generation and were generally newer and privately owned. The government implemented a regulation but ultimately the carrots and sticks of TIER and other supportive policies proved stronger than regulations in moving the province off-coal. While a few coal plants completely shut down, many plants were modified to use natural gas, taking advantage of the coal to gas conversion experience gained in the United States.
Canada’s single-biggest emissions success story includes a cautionary tale
The emissions reductions in Alberta and Ontario are unambiguously good for the climate, and eliminating coal brought additional health savings due to improved air quality. To put it in perspective, Canada’s total emissions dropped by 65 million tonnes (Mt) from 2005 to 2023. Taken together, the two provincial coal phase outs represent more than 80 per cent of that emissions cut. Ontario’s electricity sector emissions decreased by 26 Mt and Alberta’s by 27 Mt during that time. In 2013, the Ontario Power Authority referred to the province’s coal phase out as “the single largest greenhouse gas reduction measure in North America.” Alberta’s emission reductions have been similarly celebrated as a policy success by regulators and academics.
But the emissions intensity of the respective provincial grids, shown in Figure 2, tells a cautionary tale for each province.
While the coal phase out significantly reduced the emissions intensity of Ontario’s grid, the growth of natural gas is now offsetting some of those gains. Zero-emitting nuclear generation has accounted for the majority of electricity generation since 2015 but its contribution has declined from 59 per cent to 52 per cent during this time. It has been replaced by a mix of non-emitting and natural gas generation, which has increased overall emissions intensity since 2017.
Alberta’s emission intensity is much higher than Ontario’s due to limited non-emitting generation such as nuclear and hydro, both historically and currently. Emissions intensity in the province decreased by more than half from 2005 to 2023 due to gas and renewables replacing coal generation. Natural gas increased from 20 per cent of the electricity mix in 2005 to 59 per cent in 2023, while solar and wind generation remarkably grew from a paltry 1 per cent to 22 per cent in those 18 years.
But the future trajectory of Alberta’s emissions intensity is uncertain. In 2023, the intensity of the grid (424 grams of CO2 eq / kWh) was only slightly higher than the intensity of the most energy-efficient natural gas plant. This intensity could continue to fall in the short term if more generation from older plants are replaced by newer natural gas plants—but only if electricity demand does not increase. But most provincial forecasts see electricity demand growing, possibly significantly— and both policy and economic uncertainty are applying headwinds to growth in non-emitting generation, whether from renewables or natural gas with sequestration.
Increased non-emitting electricity will be a game changer in each province
Both Alberta and Ontario are facing increased demand for electricity due to consumer choice (more electric vehicles and heat pumps), policy-driven decarbonization through electrification, and new economic activity. This potential growth is a stark contrast to the last decade of stable electricity demand, but it’s not unprecedented. In Canada, electricity generation almost tripled from 1965 to 1985 due to strong economic growth.
Strategic planning and rapid action are needed now to develop a strong low-emitting electricity system that is reliable, affordable, and flexible, in the timeframe required for provinces and territories to leverage this clean electricity competitive advantage. Provinces and territories are already charging ahead with planning and procuring emissions-free electricity.
The federal government’s Clean Electricity Regulations, which were finalized last December, provide direction for decarbonizing the sector, with flexibility for provinces to apply innovative solutions for their electricity systems. Next steps for provincial governments should include energy road maps, which support clear mandates and integrated planning. Ontario has been advised to prioritize conservation, consistent and long term procurement planning, transmission planning for the net zero grid, and exploring multiple technology solutions in parallel. Our previous research shows that Alberta can match its growing clean electricity needs by investing in transmission and ensuring non-emitting generation dominates future power plant decisions while developing strategies that account for the significant uncertainty of industrial demand. The net zero economy goals require that both provinces start investing now.
Canada can’t rest on emissions-cutting laurels
Even with their different generation mixes and policy choices, Ontario and Alberta have each radically reduced emissions from their electricity sectors. Looking forward, each province is working toward clean energy or net zero emissions economies and non-emitting electricity is the linchpin to that goal. The historical data demonstrates that each province is up to the challenge, but they need to quickly build on those previous successes.
Alison Bailie is a Senior Research Associate at the Canadian Climate Institute.