First of all, on the question of unintended consequences, that's true in many parts of the country. There was quite a push here too for social housing and many forms of housing to be heated with electricity back in the seventies, for example, when it was perceived that electricity was a very cheap form of power. Again, access to natural gas is very differential. In Ontario, a lot of rural and remote communities do not have access to other fuels and do heat with electricity, so we have seen the same thing here where I live.
As a result, the Low-Income Energy Network has argued for a multi-tiered approach to that. One thing we did argue for here was a specific low-income program dealing with a range of issues like conservation, building retrofits, building envelope retrofits, better access to emergency funds, no charges for disconnection and reconnection for low-income families who get into trouble with their bills, and importantly, quite recently, the Ontario electricity support program. Part of the way that program helps support those families is to take into account whether the family heats with electricity.
In addition, there are some programs dealing with rural and remote because of differential transmission and distribution costs here. I'm not sure if that's true in British Columbia or not, whereas I know that Manitoba, for example, doesn't have differential distribution costs. Those need to be considered as well.
In terms of what we then do, we definitely advocate for renewables as the way forward. If we can have an electricity system that's highly governed by renewable energy, that's one piece of the puzzle, but the price is also an important piece of that puzzle. We have to be looking at how we're pricing electricity and allowing new generation into the mix while keeping an eye on price.
I know, for example, in the work that some of my colleagues here have done, the price of solar is criss-crossing on the curve the price of nuclear this year. We're excited about the fact that the price of some of the renewable technologies is actually decreasing.
We also advocate for a more distributed, less centralized energy system so that we're not paying and losing so much in great big transmission grids and that kind of thing.
In addition, modular systems that allow quicker on and off as generation needs change in the particular province or region of the country are an important piece of keeping that price down. It's a multi-faceted approach, but as we're pursuing these big-picture solutions, we definitely need to be looking at the impact on low-income consumers, and if we need special programs, then we need special programs to help offset that while we fix the bigger picture.