What 2025 Revealed About Canada’s Electrical Industry
December 16, 2025

By Carol McGlogan, President & CEO, Electro-Federation Canada
The past year required Canada’s electrical industry to adapt to a rapidly changing environment. In 2025, businesses across the value chain navigated shifting trade conditions, evolving policy landscapes, and growing expectations tied to electrification and infrastructure expansion.
Trade uncertainty introduced new complexity. Organizations reassessed cost structures, pricing strategies, and customer communication while responding to market volatility. These pressures reinforced how interconnected the electrical supply chain has become and highlighted the importance of shared understanding across the industry.
Electrification remained a defining theme, accompanied by increasingly complex policy and implementation considerations. While long-term objectives remain clear, 2025 underscored the need for practical approaches that reflect infrastructure readiness, supply chain capacity, and market realities. Collaboration across industry organizations helped ensure these perspectives were part of broader policy conversations.
Despite these pressures, the industry demonstrated resilience. Companies adapted systems and strategies while maintaining service levels and reliability. Knowledge sharing increased as organizations leaned on peers and partners to navigate uncertainty and adjust to new realities.
Access to credible data and market intelligence proved critical. Visibility into demand trends, customer behaviour, and market conditions supported more informed decision-making at a time when clarity was limited. Shared insight helped stabilize planning and reinforced the value of a collective perspective.
Looking ahead, the demands on Canada’s electrical infrastructure will continue to grow. Expanding grid capacity, modernizing systems, and supporting electrification at scale will require coordination that extends beyond individual organizations. Success will depend on alignment between policy ambition and implementation capability, as well as sustained collaboration across the value chain.
The experience of 2025 offers a clear takeaway. A connected, informed, and collaborative electrical industry is better positioned to manage complexity, adapt to change, and deliver the reliable solutions Canada depends on. Those lessons will shape how the industry approaches the years ahead.










