Article ID: | iaor20121852 |
Volume: | 42 |
Issue: | 4 |
Start Page Number: | 710 |
End Page Number: | 714 |
Publication Date: | Mar 2012 |
Journal: | Energy Policy |
Authors: | Krupa Joel |
Keywords: | economics, social |
As one of the largest and wealthiest countries in the world, Canada stands well‐positioned to take advantage of ongoing growth in North American demand for primary energy supply by expanding domestic delivery of renewable energy generation to internationally interconnected electric grids across the country. There are myriad benefits of adopting the renewable energy approach to development–as the province of Ontario has acknowledged through the implementation of their 2009 Green Energy Act–including drastic reductions in carbon emissions, the decommissioning of existing fossil fuel power generation that cause serious public health problems, and opportunities for sustainable development at the community level. One group in particular stands poised to shape these debates. In Canada, historically marginalized Aboriginal peoples remain one of the groups with the greatest potential for meeting these enormous renewable energy deployment needs. Aboriginal involvement in renewable energy generation in Canada has been as diverse as Canada's Aboriginal peoples and groups have already adopted a range of different solutions to meet energy supply needs. However, many significant barriers exist that prevent this diverse cultural group from reaching its full potential. The article identifies some of these shortcomings and analyzes their roots.