I appreciate all the replies. I'm fully conversant with the basic principles of electricity/electronics, I'm looking more for the theory of grounding with respect to a transmission system as it affects the end user.
For instance, I think generators are grounded to earth as is the center-tap (neutral) of the secondary of the final transformer which feeds residences. In Canada, it is a requirement to ground this neutral at the meter base and at the first disconnect/service panel. With a low resistance path already available for fault currents via a copper conductor, why would they also ground the same neutral to a ground electrode or water pipe ground?
It would seem the earth is not a good alternate path unless, as one person said, the ground is wet and conductive. Since the neutral is also grounded at the transformer on the service pole, I am assuming a conductive path is available from the grounding electrode at the residence to the ground at the pole. I don't understand the need for both an electrode ground and a neutral. If the earth presents a high impedance with respect to the neutral, the fault current will take the path of least resistance.
That prompted me to ask if another mechanism might be available to conduct fault currents. I know lightning is an electrostatic discharge and doesn't require a return path. Is it possible the earth can act in a similar capacity, as a sink, or have a large capacitor-like effect? After all, a return path through earth is not constrained to a narrow path as in a copper conductor.
thanks