National Post (National Edition)

Price of EVs will eventually match gas models

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DECADE AWAY

MIA RABSON OTTAWA • A Canadian energy think tank says the world is less than a decade away from the tipping point at which electric cars will cost the same as convention­al gas-powered vehicles.

But in a report released Thursday, Clean Energy Canada says this country is lagging on the government polices that elsewhere are helping spur consumers to adopt the new technology despite reservatio­ns about everything from price to reliabilit­y to the distance they can travel on a single charge.

“The only way we will get to a point where an electric car is an equivalent or cheaper price than a gas car is if we can achieve a certain scale of production and to achieve that production we need to do more to make it easier for consumers to choose electric vehicles,” said Dan Woynillowi­cz, policy director at the think tank.

Canada also doesn’t produce any mass-market electric vehicles, fewer than half of Canadian dealership­s of car makers that have electric vehicle models even sell them and supply is so limited here it can take months for a Canadian who wants an electric vehicle to actually drive it off the lot.

The waiting list to get a Chevy Bolt, the most popular electric vehicle sold in Canada, is about eight months. While there are 97 electric vehicle models available worldwide, only 27 of them are sold in Canada, and most dealers don’t even have a single model on site so people can test drive it, said Woynillowi­cz.

Cutting emissions from cars is a big part of Canada’s plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to meet its internatio­nal commitment­s. Road transporta­tion is currently responsibl­e for about one-fifth of all of Canada’s emissions.

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