The Path to Economic And Social Prosperity in Canada

Last week, members of the expert panel on Sustainable Finance released their recommendations on mobilizing Canada’s financial sector, hoping to secure both economic prosperity and better environmental practices. The main takeaway from the panel is that Canada stands poised to become “a decision-maker rather than a decision-taker in a world where sound environmental stewardship is intersecting with market access and becoming critical to competitiveness.” Currently the fourth-largest exporter of oil and the fifth-largest exporter of natural gas, Canada has the potential to become the world’s safest and cleanest producer. Yet for this feat to be accomplished, the energy sector must focus on accelerating innovation, transparency, and market access. 
 
To further innovation, the panel recommends that the federal government “fund an oil and gas clean innovation cluster to pool capital and expertise,” helping to expand the next generation of innovative ventures, and consequently encourage the development and commercialization of cleaner energy-saving solutions.
 
Global perceptions of Canada’s environmental record and the carbon-intensity of oil sands extraction have caused investors in the energy sector to avoid Canada, or demand better data and evidence about the risk to their firms. “If we want to attract global capital back to Canadian resources, it will take an industry-wide commitment to report more comparable and complete data on climate-related financial risks.” Providing this type of transparency is exactly the kind of leadership that investors are seeking from Canada’s industry. 
 
In regards to market access, it is vital that Canada's market more responsibly produce oil and gas. Yet Canadian producers can only invest in cleaner technology if they are able to sell their products. “Though counter-intuitive to some, solving Canada’s market-access stalemate is fundamental to Canada’s ability to contribute to lowering emissions in the world’s global energy supply by displacing higher emissions and less transparent sources.”
 
Our founder, Mac Van Wielingen, strongly argues that this is an opportunity for Canada to be a leader in energy. Having used his decades of experience in the investment management business in capital projects all over the world, Mac’s own recommendations for the future of the energy sector align with those of the expert panel on sustainable finance. In his recent speaking event at the Calgary Petroleum Club, he states: 
 
“The industry must remain passionately committed to innovate and further improve its environmental performance, in the context of a global transition to a low carbon environment...There are two competing visions. One involves a dismantling and diminishment of our leading global industry with enormous financial and social costs. The other is to support the development of a “Clean, Canadian Energy Brand” and strategy to bring more of ourselves into the world, not less. This is Canada’s global leadership opportunity in energy and environmental stewardship.”
 
In addition, Bill Gates, chairman of the board for Breakthrough Energy Ventures (BEV), an investor-led, $1 billion fund committed to funding clean energy innovation, emphasizes the complexity of the issue of climate change. In a recent sit-down with David Rubenstein, president of The Economic Club of Washington, D.C., Gates stated that creative solutions are the key to combating climate changes; projects that utilize “the lens of innovation” are what investors should be focusing on. 


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Viewpoint Research Team