Automotive
Carmakers’ shocking EV message to Carney
By Dan McTeague
Earlier this month it was reported that Brian Kingston, the Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers’ Association CEO, had met with the prime minister along with the CEOs of Ford Canada, Stellantis Canada, and GM Canada. His message, and that of the companies he represents, was clear: the Liberal government’s electric vehicle mandate is totally unachievable.
“If we are going to hit the 2026 mandated target of 20 per cent EV sales, you would have to grow Zero-Emission-Vehicle (ZEV) sales by 180,000 units,” Kingston said.
To put that number in perspective, MacLean’s reported earlier this year that despite the roughly $52 billion that our federal and provincial governments (especially the Ford government in Ontario) have poured into the electric vehicle industry, “to date, only 40,000 EVs have been built in Canada.”
So, by the industry’s own calculations, we would need to quadruple our total EV output in the next six months.
That’s just not happening — especially since Canadian automakers have been scaling back their planned EV production.
In May, Honda announced that it would be pushing back its planned electric vehicle and battery production at its facility in Alliston, ON by two years. That should sound ominous to anyone who remembers that Ford Motor Company had similar plans to delay EV production in its plant in Oakville by two years, only to later announce that they were scrapping their EV production plans entirely.
General Motors too, has delayed EV production at their plant in St. Catharines and scaled back production at their plant in Ingersoll. All of these blows to the industry underline how unworkable the Liberals’ EV mandate is.
Said Kingston, “There is simply no way that that can occur on such a short timeline, given all of the current market forces at play.”
Now, as I’ve discussed in the past, those “market forces” include uncertainty around tariffs and U.S. trade, which is true across the economy. But it is a particular challenge for Canada’s EV industry, whose whole business model was built on the assumption of unique and unrestricted access to the American market. Without that, and without Americans being similarly forced to purchase EVs (as they would have had Joe Biden or Kamala Harris won the last election,) the whole scheme falls apart.
There are simply not enough Canadians to support the kind of investment in electric vehicles the Trudeau-and-Carney Liberals had in mind when the mandate was passed.
Moreover — and here’s another one of those “market forces” Kingston referred to — even Canadian car buyers have cooled on EVs. According to Stats Canada, EVs made up only 7.5 per cent of new vehicles purchased in Canada as of this past April, a 28.5 per cent decline from April, 2024. And total EV sales in Canada last year fell to just 13.7 per cent, a number which Tristin Hopper pointed out is itself somewhat misleading: “Of the 81,205 zero-emission vehicles sold in Canada in the last quarter of 2024, 49,357 were sold in Quebec.”
Which is to say, 60 per cent of that already-deflated number can be sourced to a single province. That doesn’t bode well for the future of the EV industry in Canada.
How Carney handles the EV mandate will say a lot about how he plans to govern the country. Is he going to be the businessman PM his X/Twitter shills are constantly saying he is? Or will he govern as the environmentalist activist that he has been for his entire career?
It isn’t like he can sweep this one under the rug, like he did with the Consumer Carbon Tax. While he might be able to keep up this Carbon Tax shell game with Canadian consumers for a while yet, people have a tendency to notice when they’re being forced to buy cars that they don’t want.
That’s especially true when the electric vehicles his government is mandating we purchase are significantly more expensive and inconvenient than the gas-and-diesel driven cars and trucks we do want, the ones we grew up driving, which we learned how to fix from our fathers or our uncles, and which our cousins in the States can buy for a fraction of the cost we will be paying.
For these reasons and more, Carney should scrap the EV mandate.
He can’t ignore this matter for much longer. It isn’t going away on its own.
Dan McTeague is President of Canadians for Affordable Energy.
Automotive
The high price of green virtue
By Jerome Gessaroli for Inside Policy
Reducing transportation emissions is a worthy goal, but policy must be guided by evidence, not ideology.
In the next few years, the average new vehicle in British Columbia could reach $80,000, not because of inflation, but largely because of provincial and federal climate policy. By forcing zero-emission-vehicle (ZEV) targets faster than the market can afford, both governments risk turning climate ambition into an affordability crisis.
EVs are part of the solution, but mandates that outpace market acceptance risk creating real-world challenges, ranging from cold-weather travel to sparse rural charging to the cost and inconvenience for drivers without home charging. As Victoria and Ottawa review their ZEV policies, the goal is to match ambition with evidence.
Introduced in 2019, BC’s mandate was meant to accelerate electrification and cut emissions from light-duty vehicles. In 2023, however, it became far more stringent, setting the most aggressive ZEV targets in North America. What began as a plan to boost ZEV adoption has now become policy orthodoxy. By 2030, automakers must ensure that 90 per cent of new light-duty vehicles sold in BC are zero-emission, regardless of what consumers want or can afford. The evidence suggests this approach is out of step with market realities.
The province isn’t alone in pursuing EV mandates, but its pace is unmatched. British Columbia, Quebec, and the federal government are the only ones in Canada with such rules. BC’s targets rise much faster than California’s, the jurisdiction that usually sets the bar on green-vehicle policy, though all have the same goal of making every new vehicle zero-emission by 2035.
According to Canadian Black Book, 2025 model EVs are about $17,800 more expensive than gas-powered vehicles. However, ever since Ottawa and BC removed EV purchase incentives, sales have fallen and have not yet recovered. Actual demand in BC sits near 16 per cent of new vehicle sales, well below the 26 per cent mandate for 2026. To close that gap, automakers may have to pay steep penalties or cut back on gas-vehicle sales to meet government goals.
The mandate also allows domestic automakers to meet their targets by purchasing credits from companies, such as Tesla, which hold surplus credits, transferring millions of dollars out of the country simply to comply with provincial rules. But even that workaround is not sustainable. As both federal and provincial mandates tighten, credit supplies will shrink and costs will rise, leaving automakers more likely to limit gas-vehicle sales.
It may be climate policy in intent, but in reality, it acts like a luxury tax on mobility. Higher new-vehicle prices are pushing consumers toward used cars, inflating second-hand prices, and keeping older, higher-emitting vehicles on the road longer. Lower-income and rural households are hit hardest, a perverse outcome for a policy meant to reduce emissions.
Infrastructure is another obstacle. Charging-station expansion and grid upgrades remain far behind what is needed to support mass electrification. Estimates suggest powering BC’s future EV fleet alone could require the electricity output of almost two additional Site C dams by 2040. In rural and northern regions, where distances are long and winters are harsh, drivers are understandably reluctant to switch. Beyond infrastructure, changing market and policy conditions now pose additional risks to Canada’s EV goals.
Major automakers have delayed or cancelled new EV models and battery-plant investments. The United States has scaled back or reversed federal and state EV targets and reoriented subsidies toward domestic manufacturing. These shifts are likely to slow EV model availability and investment across North America, pushing both British Columbia and Ottawa to reconsider how realistic their own targets are in more challenging market conditions.
Meanwhile, many Canadians are feeling the strain of record living costs. Recent polling by Abacus Data and Ipsos shows that most Canadians view rising living costs as the country’s most pressing challenge, with many saying the situation is worsening. In that climate, pressing ahead with aggressive mandates despite affordability concerns appears driven more by green ideology than by evidence. Consumers are not rejecting EVs. They are rejecting unrealistic timelines and unaffordable expectations.
Reducing transportation emissions is a worthy goal, but policy must be guided by evidence, not ideology. When targets become detached from real-world conditions, ideology replaces judgment. Pushing too hard risks backlash that can undo the very progress we are trying to achieve.
Neither British Columbia nor the federal government needs to abandon its clean-transportation objectives, but both need to adjust them. That means setting targets that match realistic adoption rates, as EVs become more affordable and capable, and allowing more flexible compliance based on emissions reductions rather than vehicle type. In simple terms, the goal should be cutting emissions, not forcing people to buy a specific type of car. These steps would align ambition with reality and ensure that environmental progress strengthens, rather than undermines, public trust.
With both Ottawa and Victoria reviewing their EV mandates, their next moves will show whether Canadian climate policy is driven by evidence or by ideology. Adjusting targets to reflect real-world affordability and adoption rates would signal pragmatism and strengthen public trust in the country’s clean-energy transition.
Jerome Gessaroli is a senior fellow at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute and leads the Sound Economic Policy Project at the BC Institute of British Columbia
Automotive
Elon Musk Poised To Become World’s First Trillionaire After Shareholder Vote

From the Daily Caller News Foundation
At Tesla’s Austin headquarters, investors backed Musk’s 12-step plan that ties his potential trillion-dollar payout to a series of aggressive financial and operational milestones, including raising the company’s valuation from roughly $1.4 trillion to $8.5 trillion and selling one million humanoid robots within a decade. Musk hailed the outcome as a turning point for Tesla’s future.
“What we’re about to embark upon is not merely a new chapter of the future of Tesla but a whole new book,” Musk said, as The New York Times reported.
Dear Readers:
As a nonprofit, we are dependent on the generosity of our readers.
Please consider making a small donation of any amount here.
Thank you!
The decision cements investor confidence in Musk’s “moonshot” management style and reinforces the belief that Tesla’s success depends heavily on its founder and his leadership.
Tesla Annual meeting starting now
https://t.co/j1KHf3k6ch— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 6, 2025
“Those who claim the plan is ‘too large’ ignore the scale of ambition that has historically defined Tesla’s trajectory,” the Florida State Board of Administration said in a securities filing describing why it voted for Mr. Musk’s pay plan. “A company that went from near bankruptcy to global leadership in E.V.s and clean energy under similar frameworks has earned the right to use incentive models that reward moonshot performance.”
Investors like Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood defended Tesla’s decision, saying the plan aligns shareholder rewards with company performance.
“I do not understand why investors are voting against Elon’s pay package when they and their clients would benefit enormously if he and his incredible team meet such high goals,” Wood wrote on X.
Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, Norges Bank Investment Management — one of Tesla’s largest shareholders — broke ranks, however, and voted against the pay plan, saying that the package was excessive.
“While we appreciate the significant value created under Mr. Musk’s visionary role, we are concerned about the total size of the award, dilution, and lack of mitigation of key person risk,” the firm said.
The vote comes months after Musk wrapped up his short-lived government role under President Donald Trump. In February, Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) team sparked a firestorm when they announced plans to eliminate the U.S. Agency for International Development, drawing backlash from Democrats and prompting protests targeting Musk and his companies, including Tesla.
Back in May, Musk announced that his “scheduled time” leading DOGE had ended.
-
Crime2 days agoCBSA Bust Uncovers Mexican Cartel Network in Montreal High-Rise, Moving Hundreds Across Canada-U.S. Border
-
Environment2 days agoThe Myths We’re Told About Climate Change | Michael Shellenberger
-
armed forces2 days agoWhat A Second World War Aircraft Taught Me About Remembrance Day
-
armed forces2 days agoWhy we keep getting Remembrance Day wrong
-
Alberta2 days agoMark Carney Has Failed to Make Use of the Powerful Tools at His Disposal to Get Oil Pipelines Built
-
Business1 day agoCarney shrugs off debt problem with more borrowing
-
Daily Caller2 days agoEx-Terrorist Leader Goes On Fox News, Gives Wild Answer About 9/11
-
Energy2 days agoFor the sake of Confederation, will we be open-minded about pipelines?





