It’s great that Carney wants to invigorate Canada’s reputation on the world stage, but that task will take years. In the immediate term, he should be looking at establishing Canada as an economic force rather than a diplomatic or military one.
Canada’s current military force is low on hardware, numbers, and morale. Any contributions Canada may add to international alliances right now will be token at best. Even with new investment into the Armed Forces, Canada will never be a significant military power in the world due to its low population and massive geography to spread forces throughout. The nation should aspire to build a specialized force that can contribute to alliances and be respected, but it’s unrealistic to expect to be considered a large player on that front.
Diplomatically, Canada can play a significant role in global affairs. Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson played a key role on the global stage as the world rebuilt after World War II. It takes years to develop the relationships and build the respect before coming to the table with the world superpowers, however.
Canada’s strength is its natural resources—if only the federal government would uncuff the ability to extract and export them. The world is tired of energy price shocks and being beholden to bad actors. The Iranian revolution of 1979 sent energy prices spiralling, just as the war there today is doing the same thing. The war between Russia and Ukraine has exposed vulnerabilities in the European natural gas supply, but European nations can’t wean themselves from it because there are few other cost-effective alternatives available to them. Canada can reduce the world’s dependence on oil and gas supplied by dictatorships.
One trait Mark Carney shares with former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is an ideological attachment to the concept of a world with net-zero emissions, and it has given him an aversion to conventional energy sources such as oil and gas. It’s time to set aside ideology and embrace reality. Peak oil and gas predictions have come and gone for decades. While alternative energy sources are improving, the world is still at least a generation away from shedding the use of oil and gas. Nobody is being served inside or outside of Canada by shutting in resources.
If Carney wants world leaders to sit up and pay attention, the fastest way to do so would be to turn Canada into the energy superpower it could be. Carney has the authority with a stroke of a pen to cut regulations and fast-track approvals for pipelines to all coasts. In providing ethically sourced energy to the world, he would undercut the strength of regimes such as Iran’s without dropping a single bomb, and he would guarantee himself a seat at the table with the top world leaders.
The war in Iran has taken away the option of trying to play all sides. Now is the time for decisive leadership.







