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  #1  
Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 2:08 PM
OldDartmouthMark OldDartmouthMark is online now
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The Canadian Electric Vehicle thread

There has been a long EV discussion on the "Lamenting the decline of the car" thread, which became a large tangent that drove the thread somewhat off-topic. So I thought I'd start a new thread in the Canada section specifically for EVs, so the other thread could continue as it was meant, and perhaps the bulk of EV-specific posts could be placed in this thread.

I'll start off the thread with this article:
https://globalnews.ca/news/8443068/e...-suvs-pickups/

Quote:
The federal government wants to overhaul the rebate program for electric vehicles so that it more closely aligns with the kinds of cars Canadians want to buy, says Transport Minister Omar Alghabra.

The Liberals promised in their election platform to spend another $1.5 billion over the next four years on the Incentives for Zero-Emission Vehicles (iZEV) program, which is one part of a big push to get more electric vehicles on the roads as Canada strives to reach net zero by 2050.

The current program has been immensely popular, but Alghabra is looking at improvements.

Right now, the program restricts the rebates to new vehicles with a maximum base price of $45,000, and a maximum price for models with upgraded features of $55,000.

That will leave out many of the new SUVs and pickup trucks that will start flooding the market next year, including the F-150 Lightning electric pickup that Ford says will start around $58,000.

“The vast majority of vehicles purchased today are SUVs and pickup trucks, and while (zero-emission vehicle) options are becoming available for these segments, many of these will be priced out of the current iZEV program,” Alghabra said in a written statement issued by his office.
While I understand the benefit to the environment of giving the EV market a boost, I have to say that it makes me a little uneasy that the government wants to use tax money to basically help wealthy people buy big SUVs and pickups, even if they are electric-powered, while many people of lesser means are struggling to find a place to live or to keep an old junker of a car running so they can get to work and move their families around.

What do you think?
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  #2  
Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 2:25 PM
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I think the Liberal government is just being realistic here. If you limit the rebates to vehicles with a base price of less than $45,000, then you are excluding many vehicle options for the consumer. There are many people who are driven to chose a certain size or type of vehicle to purchase. If they can get this vehicle in an EV format, we'll. then that's a bonus.

Some people just want a pick-up, SUV or luxury vehicle. You won't convince these people to choose a Prius just because it's an electric. If however you can get your Ford F150 as an electric, I think many people would do so.

If the governments intent is to get as many people to purchase EVs as possible, then broadening the rebate program is the proper way to go.........
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 3:39 PM
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Originally Posted by MonctonRad View Post
I think the Liberal government is just being realistic here. If you limit the rebates to vehicles with a base price of less than $45,000, then you are excluding many vehicle options for the consumer. There are many people who are driven to chose a certain size or type of vehicle to purchase. If they can get this vehicle in an EV format, we'll. then that's a bonus.

Some people just want a pick-up, SUV or luxury vehicle. You won't convince these people to choose a Prius just because it's an electric. If however you can get your Ford F150 as an electric, I think many people would do so.

If the governments intent is to get as many people to purchase EVs as possible, then broadening the rebate program is the proper way to go.........
That $45 000 cap is because of the backlash that the Ontario Liberals faced when most of the provincial EV rebates went to $100k Model S buyers a decade ago. It was spun as subsidizing the rich by the Conservatives. The Ford Conservatives went on to not just scrap the rebate, but to rip out chargers installed at GO stations. Culture wars are stupid like that....

The subsidy policies are currently badly designed. They don't scale with purchase price, with a base price requirement that is now at or below the average new car price in Canada. They don't have a phase out deadline, giving an industry a target to stand on its own.

Personally, I think a better policy instead of rebate is just a sales tax exemption for all plug ins for a given time period. With most mainstream analysts predicting purchase price parity in different segments and markets between 2024-2028, they could simply put in a GST/HST exemption through to 2030. Provinces can jump in on their bit of the HST if they want. This is a rebate that scales with purchase price. It doesn't require a list from the government of which models and trims qualify. And it gives industry a deadline.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 3:55 PM
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Originally Posted by MonctonRad View Post
I think the Liberal government is just being realistic here. If you limit the rebates to vehicles with a base price of less than $45,000, then you are excluding many vehicle options for the consumer. There are many people who are driven to chose a certain size or type of vehicle to purchase. If they can get this vehicle in an EV format, we'll. then that's a bonus.

Some people just want a pick-up, SUV or luxury vehicle. You won't convince these people to choose a Prius just because it's an electric. If however you can get your Ford F150 as an electric, I think many people would do so.

If the governments intent is to get as many people to purchase EVs as possible, then broadening the rebate program is the proper way to go.........
I think the issue is that the rebates tend to be a smaller percentage of the costlier vehicles' overall price ($5k off $50k only 10% while it's 20% off $25k) so a flat rate rebate becomes less and less persuasive the costlier the car. People who can afford those higher prices aren't as likely to be sensitive to those smaller price differences. Yes, electrifying the most gas guzzling vehicles makes sense, but the biggest gas consumers are already going to save so much by going electric, the "stick" option of nudging up the carbon tax is probably more effective for them.

Another issue is the political optics of giving government subsidies to the affluent. These people already stand to benefit disproportionately from advances in technology since they have the upfront cash for things that are more expensive to buy but have lower long-term costs.

The final issue is that it isn't just about getting people to "go electric" but rather encouraging greater sustainability more broadly. An EV is always going to be more efficient than a similar ICE vehicle, but if we're comparing a large luxury EV with a huge battery (and therefore huge embedded carbon footprint) to a small, fairly efficient ICE vehicle - especially a hybrid - then it isn't so clear cut. Even buying and driving smaller EVs is worse for the environment than just driving less, so it isn't clear that actually giving government subsidies to these large vehicles in the name of the environment in the best use of the money. Many of our electronics and appliances have had "energy star" labels on them for years showing the efforts put into reducing power consumption, yet EVs can absorb days worth of a household's typical power consumption in a single charge so their power efficiency is still important.

Sure, some people will always insist on having a large vehicle, but money talks. There will inevitably be some who would buy something smaller with the right incentives, and making the credit simultaneously a "smaller vehicle" incentive along with being an EV incentive might reduce carbon more than a general EVs credit.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 4:06 PM
Truenorth00 Truenorth00 is offline
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Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse View Post
The final issue is that it isn't just about getting people to "go electric" but rather encouraging greater sustainability more broadly. An EV is always going to be more efficient than a similar ICE vehicle, but if we're comparing a large luxury EV with a huge battery (and therefore huge embedded carbon footprint) to a small, fairly efficient ICE vehicle - especially a hybrid - then it isn't so clear cut. Even buying and driving smaller EVs is worse for the environment than just driving less, so it isn't clear that actually giving government subsidies to these large vehicles in the name of the environment in the best use of the money.
This myth needs to die. Canada's grid is so clean (and getting cleaner) that the emissions payback period is a fraction of the vehicle's lease. Even on a very large vehicle, the payback period is not going to be more than half the vehicles life.

Moreover, what are the chances somebody is moving from a Prius to a Hummer EV? Anybody willing to buy a Hummer EV would probably see an Escalade as the alternative.

I agree that people should drive less. But we know how hard it is getting people to do that. And we don't have decades to convince them to change behaviour and rebuild most of our cities to be more walkable and transit friendly. If they are going to drive, we should do our best to make sure it's in an EV.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 4:26 PM
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Originally Posted by Truenorth00 View Post
I agree that people should drive less. But we know how hard it is getting people to do that. And we don't have decades to convince them to change behaviour and rebuild most of our cities to be more walkable and transit friendly. If they are going to drive, we should do our best to make sure it's in an EV.
I agree with all this.

Also, we are delving into wars between childless downtown condo dwellers and suburban households of five. A larger suburban family will usually always choose a larger vehicle like an SUV for reasons such as Costco runs, hockey practices and family vacations. They just need the extra space. There are reasons why a larger vehicle might be necessary beyond simple personal preference. Suburban families should not be penalized by misguided priorities in the rebate programs.

The goal should be to encourage EV adoption across the board - period.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 4:39 PM
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Originally Posted by MonctonRad View Post
The goal should be to encourage EV adoption across the board - period.
If that's the case, there are still a variety of options in the policy toolkit to achieve that. Subsidies are a valuable option, but not every goal has to be served by throwing subsidies at everything. And I already mentioned a few reasons why other options might work better in some instances. If a subsidy really is just a utilitarian tool to accomplish a goal, then not directing it at a particular subset of the population isn't a "penalty". And if these large suburban families can already afford to drive a large SUV, they already stand to achieve a huge fuel cost savings by going EV. Much bigger than a condo couple switching from a civic to an model 3 for instance.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 4:31 PM
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Originally Posted by Truenorth00 View Post
This myth needs to die. Canada's grid is so clean (and getting cleaner) that the emissions payback period is a fraction of the vehicle's lease. Even on a very large vehicle, the payback period is not going to be more than half the vehicles life.

Moreover, what are the chances somebody is moving from a Prius to a Hummer EV? Anybody willing to buy a Hummer EV would probably see an Escalade as the alternative.

I agree that people should drive less. But we know how hard it is getting people to do that. And we don't have decades to convince them to change behaviour and rebuild most of our cities to be more walkable and transit friendly. If they are going to drive, we should do our best to make sure it's in an EV.
You sound like you're responding to a point I didn't make. I agree that there has been a long circulating myth that EVs aren't better for the environment because of their embedded carbon footprint and that the myth has been dispelled. But part of how the myth got started is that people compared different classes of vehicles such as large, luxury EVs like the model S with small efficient ICE vehicles in order to support the efficiency of ice vehicles. While the takeaway that they were pushing - that EVs aren't really better in general - was wrong, what I think it correctly points out is that vehicle size does matter and is something to be considered when forming policies related to the environment.

If we're pressed for time, we need to use the limited funds as efficiently as possible. My whole argument is to question whether subsidizing large, environmentally damaging vehicles is the best way to do it. For example, for many years the US has something called a "gas guzzler" tax which discouraged people from buying vehicles with poor fuel economy. There's a variety of policy options available so there's no reason not to think carefully and tailor our approach in the way that's most effective.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 4:36 PM
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Scrap rebates. EVs don’t need them. Spend money on charging infrastructure instead so non home owners can realistically buy them.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 4:51 PM
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Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse View Post
You sound like you're responding to a point I didn't make. I agree that there has been a long circulating myth that EVs aren't better for the environment because of their embedded carbon footprint and that the myth has been dispelled. But part of how the myth got started is that people compared different classes of vehicles such as large, luxury EVs like the model S with small efficient ICE vehicles in order to support the efficiency of ice vehicles. While the takeaway that they were pushing - that EVs aren't really better in general - was wrong, what I think it correctly points out is that vehicle size does matter and is something to be considered when forming policies related to the environment.
This is still pushing the same argument though. A Hummer EV running on 100% clean power in Quebec will still have better lifecycle emissions than a Prius. It won't even be close.

Moreover, worrying about vehicle size largely seems like a pointless distraction when the public is already massively upsizing with gas vehicles. A gas F150 is a much bigger threat than an electric F150. If anything, the public seems to tolerate smaller vehicles on the EV side far more. There's more sedans and compacts sold (proportionally) in the EV world than than ICEV world. Putting the burden for reducing vehicle sizes on EVs, will simply see more large gas vehicles sold.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse View Post
If we're pressed for time, we need to use the limited funds as efficiently as possible. My whole argument is to question whether subsidizing large, environmentally damaging vehicles is the best way to do it. For example, for many years the US has something called a "gas guzzler" tax which discouraged people from buying vehicles with poor fuel economy. There's a variety of policy options available so there's no reason not to think carefully and tailor our approach in the way that's most effective.
The gas guzzler tax was about emissions. Not about vehicle size per se. This isn't a problem with EVs. Especially in a country where most of the power generated has little to no emissions. Also, we have a gas guzzler tax: the carbon tax. Doesn't seem to have stopped people buying Silverados to get groceries from Walmart.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 4:48 PM
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I'm wondering why we're doing the subsidy thing at all, rather than just requiring the carmakers to sell a minimum "X" % of each segment as EVs.

Pros:
- A tangible target percentage of new vehicle sales could be set that must be reached by the automakers without tossing out $ incentives and hoping that customers bite. (i.e. Canada could guarantee a certain percentage of new EVs replacing ICVs.)

- Penalties could be put in place in the form of a tax that is based on how much the target has been missed. This tax could (should) be put towards other 'green' projects (i.e. charging infrastructure, etc.).

- Making it an automaker requirement would switch the cost of incentivizing to the automakers - i.e. they might have to eat some profit on each EV unit sold in order to achieve price parity, but it would not cost the taxpayers a dime. This might further incentivize the companies to step up their EV programs so they could practically reach price parity with ICVs sooner (though I think they are doing this anyway).

Cons:
- Switching the responsibility of incentivizing to the automakers would create a situation where their goal is to only reach the government-mandated target, to minimize their profit loss.

- Governments tend to not want to piss off large industries, for political reasons... so this could be a deal breaker.

- Companies that only sell EVs aren't in the position to take a loss in order to achieve parity with ICV prices, and thus could sustain some damage from a playing field that's not level (although with govt subsidies they would benefit, but at a cost to taxpayers).
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 5:05 PM
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I'm wondering why we're doing the subsidy thing at all, rather than just requiring the carmakers to sell a minimum "X" % of each segment as EVs.
Not quite each segment, but Guilbeault is suggesting industry wide targets will be legislated. IE. Penalties for any OEM, under the sales target requirement in a given year. Industry wants some consumer support too though. Otherwise, total sales fall. Hence the subsidies.

There's also the EU method of strict fleet wide fuel economy standards measured in gCO2/km:



Personally, I like the European approach. It lets carmakers tailor strategy to strengths. They can electrify higher polluting models. Or they can turn every model into a hybrid to cut emissions. Toyota, for example, can meet requirements, by just selling hybrids exclusively till mid-decade.

For reference, where Canada is:

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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 2:40 PM
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Maybe expanding it to include used electric vehicles would help? If the main focus is reducing emissions then it would make sense to target pickup trucks and SUVs since they tend to be higher-emission than small cars, and tend to get more use as "work" vehicles. I think there's some value to including some of the larger vehicles in these rebates while also pushing the price points of cheaper electric vehicles down to the point that they're no more expensive for the consumer (or cheaper) than their ICE counterparts. Right now vehicles like the Tesla 3, Nissan Leaf and Chevy Volt cost about 1.5-2x as much as a (new) Civic before rebates, so we're not really that far off at this point.

Something that's not really clear to me is how the logistics of owning an electric vehicle would work for residents of buildings that don't have chargers or people who don't have driveways and park on the street. Is it important to be able to charge "at home" or is it practical to fill up occasionally at an off-site charger as one would with fuel?
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 3:14 PM
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Maybe expanding it to include used electric vehicles would help?
The biggest problem with the used market is the lack of supply. Monetary incentives aren't going to help expand supply at all, in the used market.

What would help the used market is mandates on new cars forcing OEMs to sell more EVs in Canada, which will eventually filter down to the used car market. Mandates might help even more than monetary incentives. OEMs, short on supply, are directing EV supplies to jurisdictions with mandates. This is why Europe gets more EVs than North America. And why BC and Quebec get most of the EVs shipped to Canada.

Guilbeault does seem to understand a lot of the issues, better than previous ministers, from what I've seen. He also understands the massive threat to the auto manufacturing sector, being behind on electrification.

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Originally Posted by Hali87 View Post
Something that's not really clear to me is how the logistics of owning an electric vehicle would work for residents of buildings that don't have chargers or people who don't have driveways and park on the street. Is it important to be able to charge "at home" or is it practical to fill up occasionally at an off-site charger as one would with fuel?
Adoption isn't going to happen uniformly everywhere. House owners, particularly those in suburbs, will have distinct advantages and can electrify sooner. It's going to take some time to figure it out for apartment and condo dwellers. This is why infrastructure subsidies might be more important than subsidizing vehicles, which are seeing prices come down anyway.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 4:53 PM
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I would guess it is because the carmakers have a loud and powerful political voice should producing x number of electric vehicles not be to their benefit.
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Old Posted Dec 12, 2021, 9:22 PM
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While I don't have a problem for subsidies/rebates for cheaper EVs {ie under $50}, what really pisses me off is that it is so damn elitist.

If the gov't REALLY wants to get us off our ICE addiction then they would offer a similar amount of subsidy/rebate on non-new vehicles for an upgrade to an EV. Depending on the model/battery strength etc, an EV conversion can be done for about $10 to $12k in Canada. That would result in a massive switch over to EVs.

Not only is it fairer to the average person but also vastly superior for the environment. It is far better to reuse than recycle. New cars {including EVs} still produce a lot of GHG emissions in their production. From the coal needed for the steel, to mining, to getting the vehicles to market.........a new EV is just as polluting as an ICE.

Not only would providing assistance for EV conversion have environmental benefits but also huge economic ones. Such conversions would provide LOCAL jobs in every area of the country as opposed to now where all EVs do is provide jobs to Californians at the Tesla plant. Such a plan should also be in place for trucks for smaller and larger trucks with smaller ones probably being battery while long haul being hydrogen.

Until Ottawa/provinces bring in such a plan, rebates will continue to be viewed {and rightly so} as nothing more than a subsidy to the wealthy.
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Old Posted Dec 13, 2021, 1:09 AM
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If the gov't REALLY wants to get us off our ICE addiction then they would offer a similar amount of subsidy/rebate on non-new vehicles for an upgrade to an EV. Depending on the model/battery strength etc, an EV conversion can be done for about $10 to $12k in Canada. That would result in a massive switch over to EVs.
Other than a handful of custom builds and the commercial sector, there is no industrial capacity for mass conversion. And in a battery constrained environment, manufacturers won't support such either.
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Old Posted Dec 13, 2021, 4:14 PM
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While I don't generally like corporate subsidies, I would like to see our governments encourage EV and EV parts manufacturing. I think this has been missing in our national discussion about EVs. With only a few exceptions like the announcement to convert the former CAMI plant in Ingersoll to build electric delivery vehicles and some discussion but no firm commitments to do something with EVs at Oshawa, I feel like we're being left in the dust and most of Ford and GM's investments in EV manufacturing are in the US.

This is a bit of an oversimplification, but in the last 25 years, the Canadian economy kind of toggled between high oil prices, a high dollar and robust employment in AB with a sluggish Ontario, or low oil prices, a low dollar and robust employment in auto and auto parts manufacturing in Ontario with a sluggish Alberta. For the first time since the early 90s, I fear that we're heading towards bad times for both provinces.

EVs also require far fewer parts, which is not a good thing for our major auto parts companies, like Linamar and Magna.
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Old Posted Dec 13, 2021, 5:31 PM
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While I don't generally like corporate subsidies, I would like to see our governments encourage EV and EV parts manufacturing. I think this has been missing in our national discussion about EVs. With only a few exceptions like the announcement to convert the former CAMI plant in Ingersoll to build electric delivery vehicles and some discussion but no firm commitments to do something with EVs at Oshawa, I feel like we're being left in the dust and most of Ford and GM's investments in EV manufacturing are in the US.
We are indeed falling behind and now both the provincial and federal government are panicking watching developments south of the border. It's not just the Biden tax credit. Both, Ford and GM have announced massive capital plans to build huge battery manufacturing complexes and new or retrofitted EV assembly lines. Ontario is increasingly being left out.

The federal Liberals have all but ignored industrial policy and thought that relying on general friendliness to EVs would help. They have done a little bit, with providing grants and loans to Lion Electric to build the first battery plant in Canada, in Quebec. And Lion is emerging as a major contender in manufacturing electric school buses. But this really isn't enough. And any federal strategy is virtually useless, if it's not coordinated with Queen's Park and industry.

The Ford Tories have been outright hostile to EVs. From cancelling rebates to actually ripping out installed chargers at GO stations. They are now flat out panicking and pushing rhetoric hard, talking about how Ontario will be a major EV manufacturing centre because of minerals from the North and the auto sector. But they have no strategy. They refuse to spend a penny. They sent three ministers to an announcement on installing chargers at the OnRoutes that is being funded by OPG and Hydro One. Couldn't even cut a token cheque of a few million for chargers. Rhetoric is no substitute for an ideologically driven lack of policy. And if they don't change direction soon, it's over for Ontario. The next 12 months is basically going to determine the next 30-40 years of auto manufacturing. And it's not yet clear that the Ford Tories are capable of fighting for the sector.

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This is a bit of an oversimplification, but in the last 25 years, the Canadian economy kind of toggled between high oil prices, a high dollar and robust employment in AB with a sluggish Ontario, or low oil prices, a low dollar and robust employment in auto and auto parts manufacturing in Ontario with a sluggish Alberta. For the first time since the early 90s, I fear that we're heading towards bad times for both provinces.
Indeed we are. And most of government and society is sleepwalking right into it. Very few people understand and accept how quickly this sector is moving and how quickly the knock on effects on industry will be seen. And even fewer of those people, are in government or finance in Canada.

I'm not sure politicians at either level care. Most of the real hits will come late in the decade. And all these folks will be collecting fat paycheques on talk circuit and at think tanks by then. They will not risk upsetting their base while in office. Even if they know industry faces what is being described as an "existential threat".

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EVs also require far fewer parts, which is not a good thing for our major auto parts companies, like Linamar and Magna.
Not sure about Linamar, but Magna is pivoting towards contract assembly of EVs. They're even developing an EV parts supply chain. But batteries are ultimately going to determine where the volume EVs are assembled. If there's no battery plants in Ontario, it's game over.

Last edited by Truenorth00; Dec 13, 2021 at 10:30 PM.
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Old Posted Dec 13, 2021, 10:13 PM
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Originally Posted by Truenorth00 View Post
We are indeed falling behind and now both the provincial and federal government are panicking watching developments south of the border. It's not just the Biden tax credit. Both, Ford and GM have announced massive capital plans to build huge battery manufacturing complexes and new or retrofitted EV assembly lines. Ontario is increasingly being left out.

The federal Liberals have all but ignored industrial policy and thought that relying on general friendliness to EVs would help. They have done a little bit, with providing grants and loans to Lion Electric to build the first battery plant in Canada, in Quebec. And Lion is emerging as a major contender in manufacturing electric school buses. But this really isn't enough. And any federal strategy is virtually useless, if it's not coordinated with Queen's Park and industry.

The Ford Tories have been outright hostile to EVs. From cancelling rebates to actually ripping out installed chargers at GO stations. They are now flat out panicking and pushing rhetoric hard, talking about how Ontario will be a major EV manufacturing centre because of minerals from the North and the auto sector. But they have no strategy. They refuse to spend a penny. They sent three ministers to an announcement on installing chargers at the OnRoutes that is being funded by OPG and Hydro One. Couldn't even cut a token cheque of a few million for chargers. Rhetoric is no substitute for an ideologically driven lack of policy. And if they don't change direction soon, it's over for Ontario. The next 12 months is basically going to determine the next 30-40 years of auto manufacturing. And it's not yet clear that the Ford Tories are capable of fighting for the sector.


Indeed we are. And most of government and society is sleepwalking right into it. Very few people understand and accept how quickly this sector is moving and how quickly the knock on effects on industry will be seen. And even fewer of those people, are in government or finance in Canada.

I'm not sure politicians at either level care. Most of the real hits will come late in the decade. And all these folks will be collecting fat paycheques on talk circuit and at think tanks by then. They will not risk upsetting their base while in office. Even if they know industry faces what is being described as an "existential threat".



Not sure about Linamar, but Magna is pivoting towards contract assembly of EVs. They're even developing an EV parts supply chain. But batteries are ultimately going to determine where the volume EVs are assembled. If there's no battery plants in Ontario, it's game over.
All three of the quotes you referenced were by HipsterDuck. Looks like you accidentally attributed the last two to me.
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"The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." - George Bernard Shaw
Don't ask people not to debate a topic. Just stop making debatable assertions. Problem solved.
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