Any lingering doubt about whether the renewable energy pause was a political decision was “erased” by Narwhal Prairies reporter Drew Anderson’s investigation, a CBC analysis noted. Amber-Bracken.jpg
Photo: Amber Bracken / The Narwhal
Just over a week ago, Prairies reporter Drew Anderson finally got his hands on internal emails that told a different story than the one Alberta Premier Danielle Smith had been telling since August last year — that her government’s decision to pause renewable energy developments for seven months was a response to a request made by the province’s independent electricity grid operator.
“The Alberta Electric System Operator asked for us to do a pause, to make sure that we could address issues of stability of the grid,” Smith said in August 2023.
But the government-appointed board chair told him to bow to the minister’s request for a letter endorsing the pause, telling him to “support the minister without reservation.”
That’s just one tidbit that came from the hundreds of pages of internal records Drew has been able to obtain through freedom of information legislation. The documents directly challenge the government’s record on why the pause on renewables happened to begin with, one expert told Drew.
The scoop has been making waves across Alberta, with Drew making an appearance on Edmonton radio station 630 CHED to explain the details. Premier Smith was even asked about the story at a recent press conference, but she didn’t exactly give an answer.
Any lingering doubt about whether the renewable energy pause was a political decision was “erased” by Drew’s reporting, a CBC analysis noted.
To keep track of everything we know so far about how the pause unfolded, Drew has put together a handy timeline.
Take care and get your story straight,
Karan Saxena
Audience engagement editor
P.S. Our team is out of office and will get back to your emails next week!
‘Treat the land right’: B.C. farmers search for solutions as another year of drought looms By Matt Simmons
Photography by Marty Clemens
Across Western Canada, another year of extreme drought threatens local and regional food security. Regenerative agriculture offers a path forward.
A U.S.-based company wants to offer remote Indigenous communities a greener alternative to diesel by establishing a floating nuclear power plant in Northern Canada, The Globe and Mail’s Matthew McClearn reports. Can it?
The climate is changing, and cities are having a tough time finding trees that will survive, Laura Hautala reports in Grist.
Your access to our journalism is free, always. Sign up for our newsletter for investigative reporting on the natural world in Alberta — and across Canada — you won’t find anywhere else.
Your access to our journalism is free, always. Sign up for our newsletter for investigative reporting on the natural world in Alberta — and across Canada — you won’t find anywhere else.