Canada’s Energy Transition Depends on a Next-Generation Grid
June 24, 2026
By Electro Federation Canada
As electrification accelerates across transportation, buildings, and industry, strengthening Canada’s electrical grid will be essential to supporting the country’s energy future.
Canada’s energy transition is accelerating.
Across the country, governments, businesses, and consumers are increasingly embracing electrification as a pathway to economic growth, energy security, and emissions reduction. Yet while much of the conversation focuses on how electricity is generated, equal attention must be paid to how electricity is delivered, managed, and used.
The reality is that electrification requires more than additional generation capacity. It requires investments in electrical infrastructure, building systems, transportation networks, and the technologies that connect them.
Recognizing this challenge, Electro-Federation Canada launched the Make the Switch campaign in 2025 to highlight three areas where Canada must make the switch to electric: building a next-generation grid, accelerating deep building retrofits and fuel switching, and expanding zero-emission vehicle infrastructure.
Together, these priorities form the foundation of Canada’s electrified future.
Today, one of the most pressing challenges facing Canada’s energy transition is ensuring the electrical grid can support growing demand.
As transportation electrifies, buildings adopt electric technologies, and industries pursue decarbonization strategies, electricity demand is expected to increase significantly. Meeting that demand will require strategic investments in grid infrastructure, modernization, automation, digital technologies, and workforce development.
This is why EFC has launched Unlocking Canada’s Grid, a focused initiative that explores one of the core priorities identified through Make the Switch: building the next-generation grid needed to support Canada’s energy future.
Supported by new industry research, the initiative examines the opportunities and challenges associated with preparing Canada’s electricity system for an increasingly electrified economy.
The technologies needed to support this transition already exist. Smart electrical systems, automation technologies, advanced energy management solutions, digital controls, and modern infrastructure can all help create a more reliable, resilient, and efficient electricity system.
The challenge is ensuring policy, investment, and planning decisions keep pace with growing demand.
Encouragingly, policymakers are increasingly turning to industry for expertise. Since the beginning of 2026, EFC has been invited to participate in five government testimony opportunities, reflecting growing recognition of the role Canada’s electrical and automation industry can play in supporting the country’s energy transition.
Canada’s energy future will depend not only on how electricity is generated, but on how effectively it is delivered to homes, businesses, communities, and industries across the country.
Building that future will require collaboration, investment, innovation, and a clear focus on electrification.
The question is no longer whether Canada will electrify.
The question is whether Canada can move quickly enough to build the infrastructure needed to support its energy future.





