National Post

Ottawa amenable to electric imports

Waives Quebec’s zero-emission mandate

- Alicja Siekierska Financial Post with files from The Canadian Press

The federal government has created an advisory panel aimed at bringing more zeroemissi­on vehicles to roads across the country, a decision that industry manufactur­ers and electric car advocates say is a positive step forward.

While the details of the strategy have yet to be discussed, Transport Minister Marc Garneau told The Canadian Press Friday that the government will not follow Quebec’s zero- emission vehicle mandate, which requires automakers to sell a minimum number of electric, plug- in hybrid and hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles — a move that is sure to please Canada’s automakers.

Garneau and Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains, in Montreal and Toronto respective­ly, announced the creation of a panel of experts that will focus on developing a national strategy to increase the number of zero- emissions vehicles on Canadian roads by 2018. The advisory panel includes representa­tives from the auto industry, non- government organizati­ons, academia, and both provincial and federal levels of government.

Flavio Volpe, the president of the Automotive Parts Manufactur­ers Associatio­n and member of the panel, said it’s important that industry leaders are in the room for the policy discussion­s that could disrupt the auto sector.

“If you look at the names and the seniority of the people on the table, we have the right people there,” Volpe said.

“The fact that the (Innovation) Minister is running the Canadian panel is a better indication of the sanguine approach we’re going to take to this than the one by the Minister of Climate Change in Ontario.”

At a press conference Friday in Toronto, Bains commended the auto industry for reducing greenhouse gas emissions for vehicles by 25 per cent on average since 2005, but said there is still more work to do.

“Right now, about 48 per cent of emissions from the transporta­tion sector still come from cars and light duty trucks. Putting more zero emission vehicles on the road will make an important contributi­on to reducing our carbon emissions,” he said, adding that just two out of every 100 vehicles purchased in Canada are zero-emission vehicles.

“We want to change that number,” Bains said. In Canada, just 0.56 per cent of vehicles sold in 2016 were electric.

The panel will f ocus on addressing five areas; vehicle supply, cost and benefits of ownership, infrastruc­ture readiness, public awareness, and clean growth and jobs. It will also have to strike a balance between satisfying environmen­talists by meeting greenhouse gas emission reduction targets, and ensuring manufactur­ers can meet any requiremen­ts.

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