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Program

Themes guiding the Summit

The 2026 Electrify Society Summit’s program will be guided by four broad themes that are central topics in the electrification space today. These themes, which aim to include academia, industry, government, finance and community, will guide the Summit’s presentations and activities, although they will also be discussed as a larger whole. The complete Summit program will be posted shortly.

Canada’s leadership in the energy transition: past, present, and future

Canada has long been a pioneer in clean energy, particularly through its historic development of hydropower. While the country has mastered clean energy production, it now faces the challenges of how to manage, store, and optimize it for a sustainable net-zero emissions future. How can Canada reclaim its leadership and close the loop from energy generation to intelligent consumption?

Beyond the grid

The electric grid remains at the heart of electrification, but it also represents a limiting structure. Today, new technologies are empowering decentralized energy systems, where communities and individuals can produce, store, and manage their own power through solar panels, electric vehicles, and local energy storage systems (ESS). As distributed generation expands, we must ask: do we still need a traditional grid, or do we need to reinvent it?

Financing the energy transition: new approaches, new frameworks

The global shift to clean energy requires innovative financial models. Around the world, new mechanisms are emerging that integrate carbon accounting, impact investment, and clean technology financing. These approaches redefine value by linking financial returns to climate performance. How can Canada align its financing frameworks with this global momentum and position clean tech as both an environmental and economic driver?

Breakthroughs, barriers, and next steps in electrification research

Research and innovation are essential to advancing electrification, but key gaps remain. What breakthroughs are shaping the field? Where are the barriers? Initiatives like Volt-Age are exploring co-creation approaches that connect researchers, industries, and policymakers to accelerate progress. Yet the challenge persists: research and industry often depend on each other in a “chicken and egg” dynamic. How can collaborative frameworks turn this interdependence into a strength?