Updated March 12, 2025 at 19:32 PM ET
For
more than a century
On Monday, Ontario Premier Doug Ford
announced
Trump, a day later, said
he would double
Ultimately both sides backed down from their threats and
agreed to meet
Here’s what to know about Canada, the U.S., and the electricity that zips across the border.
The U.S. and Canada share a power grid
More than 30 major transmission lines
connect
“You have cities and urban areas that are close neighbors, and you have electric systems that are close neighbors,” said Cy McGeady, a fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “There’s sort of an imaginary line that runs between them called the border.”
Integrated power grids have several benefits, McGeady says. For one, a larger system is more resilient against disruptions and power outages.
Electricity is also cheaper in integrated grids. Power generators with the lowest prices will more easily find buyers in a larger electric system. “There’s a basic economic factor that drives grid integration everywhere,” McGeady said.
Canada
says
Why the U.S. buys electricity from Canada
While electricity shared across the border
represents less than 1%
In 2023, the
U.S. bought
According to Seth Blumsack, an energy professor at Penn State University, U.S. electricity operators likely have enough short-term capacity to replace any Canadian power that is withheld or becomes too expensive to buy, but it may come from a different source.
“It’s not like if the Canadian hydro imports get cut off, you’re going to replace it with wind and solar in New England,” Blumsack said. “You’re going to replace that with power plants in New England that are burning natural gas or fuel oil or some other fuel source that is going to increase carbon emissions and may also increase local air pollution.”
States such as New York and Massachusetts have tried to reduce their carbon emissions in part by buying Canadian electricity, which is
most commonly generated
What happens if the fight over electricity surges
The recent spat over electricity sales has dimmed the once glowing relationship between the U.S. and Canada, which have both been boosted by the free trade of power, said Asa McKercher, a professor of U.S.-Canada relations at St. Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia.
“That’s what makes this sort of tariff war really self-defeating for both countries, is the fact that we’ve benefited from access to cheap energy,” he said.
McKercher said some Canadians have argued in the past that the country should export less of its energy to the U.S. and instead share it within its own borders. Those views had typically been dismissed, but more Canadians are coming around to the idea given Trump’s recent attacks on the country, he added.
“Now those arguments are sort of returning again, and I think increasing numbers of Canadians are seeing some wisdom in those suggestions,” McKercher said. “The situation is kind of a reversal of a lot of past history, in which the trend has been towards integration of continental energy resources.”
In the short term, analysts say further disputes between the U.S. and Canada over electricity shared across the border will mean higher electric bills for consumers.
“It made economic sense to build these transmission lines and to move power back and forth across the border,” McGeady said. “If you disrupt that, the impact has to be upward pressure on prices and reduced reliability. That’s what the fundamental risk is here.”
Copyright 2025 NPR