Politique énergétique 2030 du Québec : l’étonnante absence d'une stratégie de transport soutenable

Following a text published in « Le Soleil » on April 7th entitled "The Forced Future of Wind Energy in Québec" (Saucier et al., 2016), a collective of eight researchers, members of the Collectif scientifique sur la question du gaz de schiste, question the ambition and the strategic orienta...

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Main Authors: Évariste Feurtey, Louis-Étienne Boudreault, Gilles Bourque, Simon-Philippe Breton, Réal Reid, Carol Saucier, Bernard Saulnier, Lucie Sauvé
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Éditions en environnement VertigO 2017-03-01
Series:VertigO
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/18283
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spelling doaj-f960409be9ba4404a3b8eb6fd559227c2021-10-05T12:31:34ZfraÉditions en environnement VertigOVertigO1492-84422017-03-0110.4000/vertigo.18283Politique énergétique 2030 du Québec : l’étonnante absence d'une stratégie de transport soutenableÉvariste FeurteyLouis-Étienne BoudreaultGilles BourqueSimon-Philippe BretonRéal ReidCarol SaucierBernard SaulnierLucie SauvéFollowing a text published in « Le Soleil » on April 7th entitled "The Forced Future of Wind Energy in Québec" (Saucier et al., 2016), a collective of eight researchers, members of the Collectif scientifique sur la question du gaz de schiste, question the ambition and the strategic orientations of Québec's energy policy (QEP) 2030 for the transportation sector. Current forecasts show major annual electricity surpluses until 2023 in Québec (8,3 TWh/yr), a volume that represents more than what is needed to fully substitute the annual fossil fuel consumed by car transportation today. Yet, despite the ambitious objectives of QEP 2030, there appears to be no documented action plan describing the structured deployment required to get there. Why is it that Québec has not yet been able to develop a responsible, ambitious and imaginative electricity substitution roadmap for the transportation sector like the one adopted 50 years ago when the deployment of the hydroelectricity infrastructure became the main strategic focus of a modern Quebec economy ? This is the fundamental question raised in this article.http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/182832030 Energy policyQuebectransportationrenewable energyenergy surplusesenergy transition
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Évariste Feurtey
Louis-Étienne Boudreault
Gilles Bourque
Simon-Philippe Breton
Réal Reid
Carol Saucier
Bernard Saulnier
Lucie Sauvé
spellingShingle Évariste Feurtey
Louis-Étienne Boudreault
Gilles Bourque
Simon-Philippe Breton
Réal Reid
Carol Saucier
Bernard Saulnier
Lucie Sauvé
Politique énergétique 2030 du Québec : l’étonnante absence d'une stratégie de transport soutenable
VertigO
2030 Energy policy
Quebec
transportation
renewable energy
energy surpluses
energy transition
author_facet Évariste Feurtey
Louis-Étienne Boudreault
Gilles Bourque
Simon-Philippe Breton
Réal Reid
Carol Saucier
Bernard Saulnier
Lucie Sauvé
author_sort Évariste Feurtey
title Politique énergétique 2030 du Québec : l’étonnante absence d'une stratégie de transport soutenable
title_short Politique énergétique 2030 du Québec : l’étonnante absence d'une stratégie de transport soutenable
title_full Politique énergétique 2030 du Québec : l’étonnante absence d'une stratégie de transport soutenable
title_fullStr Politique énergétique 2030 du Québec : l’étonnante absence d'une stratégie de transport soutenable
title_full_unstemmed Politique énergétique 2030 du Québec : l’étonnante absence d'une stratégie de transport soutenable
title_sort politique énergétique 2030 du québec : l’étonnante absence d'une stratégie de transport soutenable
publisher Éditions en environnement VertigO
series VertigO
issn 1492-8442
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Following a text published in « Le Soleil » on April 7th entitled "The Forced Future of Wind Energy in Québec" (Saucier et al., 2016), a collective of eight researchers, members of the Collectif scientifique sur la question du gaz de schiste, question the ambition and the strategic orientations of Québec's energy policy (QEP) 2030 for the transportation sector. Current forecasts show major annual electricity surpluses until 2023 in Québec (8,3 TWh/yr), a volume that represents more than what is needed to fully substitute the annual fossil fuel consumed by car transportation today. Yet, despite the ambitious objectives of QEP 2030, there appears to be no documented action plan describing the structured deployment required to get there. Why is it that Québec has not yet been able to develop a responsible, ambitious and imaginative electricity substitution roadmap for the transportation sector like the one adopted 50 years ago when the deployment of the hydroelectricity infrastructure became the main strategic focus of a modern Quebec economy ? This is the fundamental question raised in this article.
topic 2030 Energy policy
Quebec
transportation
renewable energy
energy surpluses
energy transition
url http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/18283
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