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Originally Posted by YOWetal
You can't ignore provincial rebates as in Canada they have always been the main story.
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Provincial and state rebates are not nationally regulated. So as long as they comply with global trade agreements, they aren't relevant to the discussion. No province is going to be able to make specific rules that target Mexican assembled Chinese OEM BEVs. Only the feds can do that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by YOWetal
I am not a Trump suporter.
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I was eluding to your 24/7 whining about and attribution of any high level post by a POC to DEI policies. See recent discussion on OC Transpo Chair. And your EV skepticism.
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Originally Posted by YOWetal
You might be right. They should be blazing mad that they give subsidies to Canadian made cars and we let their competitiors get ours. But don't seem to be. Do we actually have any content is highly sold EVs?
I think any tarrif on Mexican assembled cars even if we matched the US would see a strong Mexican reaction for sure. Ironic it would be protecting Canadian jobs making Camrys etc. slowing our adoption of EVs.
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I really don't understand why people think Mexico is different from Canada with auto manufacturing. It's not. The same rules apply to all three countries in USMCA. It's not possible to specially target vehicles assembled in Mexico. What the US did do is impose tariffs on subcomponents and commodities involved in the construction of those cars. And even those don't have to be sourced in North America. As long as they are from a friendshoring jurisdiction, they will be tariff exempt. Theoretically, Chilean or Australian Lithium can be used be refined and turned into batteries in Mexico and then put in a BEV and the thing will be completely free of tariffs.
This is where discrimination on rebates come in. They exclude all Chinese manufacturers. Even if they manufacture in friendly jurisdictions. But BYD has gotten their battery costs really low (rumours they are at $50/kWh where $100/kWh could be competitive with ICEV). So they may just decide they can compete without the subsidy and tariffs on just a portion of the car. Should be noted that if we're phasing out subsidies, we won't have nearly the leverage that the Americans have.
Ultimately, every legacy automaker knew this was coming. They could and should have prepared. If it wasn't BYD, it was going to be somebody else. And we're just scratching modern battery technology and chemistry. Things like solid state will crush ICEV. And since they didn't even bother building good EVs, better batteries won't save them. They'll just advantage competent BEV makers even more.