Ottawa Citizen

Quebec EV firm wants to make greener watercraft, snowmobile­s

- SANDRINE RASTELLO

A Quebec startup is pursuing one of the last vehicle categories to go electric, betting it can outpace industry giants in making greener jet skis and snowmobile­s in the same way that Tesla Inc. beat major automakers to high-end electric cars.

Taiga Motors Corp. plans to deliver its first orders later this year, open a bigger factory in 2022, and expand its product line. Like Tesla, the company sells directly to customers on its website and plans to install charging stations.

For now, investors are circumspec­t, especially after electric vehicle startups like Lordstown Motors Corp. and Nikola Corp. melted down.

Taiga has fallen 28 per cent from its closing price on its first day of trading in April after completing a merger with a special purpose acquisitio­n corp.

Taiga's founders, three engineers who met at McGill University, say that their focus on making only battery-powered products is an advantage over the incumbents, including Sea-Doo maker BRP Inc. and Polaris Inc., which are preparing to roll out their EV models over the next few years.

“We are 100 per cent focused on electric, whereas the other manufactur­ers are still splitting between electric and combustion,” Taiga chief executive Samuel Bruneau said in an interview.

“We've seen that a lot with automotive, and that's why Tesla has been able to have so much success.”

The company is flush with $200 million from a private placement, government funding and the SPAC deal.

But its biggest challenge is to start and ramp up production after delays to its original timeline.

Taiga's long-term ambitions also rely on monetizing its technology by supplying powertrain­s to other companies, a market it says is worth $400 billion.

Investors' approach to companies in the electric and autonomous driving field has started to shift, from a craze akin to the late 1990s dot-com bubble to “let's see what you have, rather than what you say you have,” said Kevin Tynan, a senior analyst who covers the car industry for Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

Off-road vehicles are popular and “a good space to be in,” he said.

“Then it just comes down to the execution plan.”

Demand for gasoline-propelled outdoor toys boomed during the pandemic.

In electric, Taiga has a two- to three-year lead in developmen­t over large competitor­s and recently added seasoned financial and commercial executives to help it grow, National Bank Financial analyst Cameron Doerksen said in a May report.

But it's going against establishe­d brands with deep pockets and their own electric plans.

BRP, also based in Quebec, said in March it will spend $300 million to introduce its first EV products within two years and offer options across its entire fleet by the end of 2026.

Medina, Minn.-based Polaris, which partnered with an electric motorcycle developer, will ship its first electric side-by-side vehicles to dealers early next year.

Other startups are also starting to emerge, though there appears to be little competitio­n yet for Taiga's first products.

The company developed three models each for snowmobile­s and personal watercraft, with price tags ranging from US$15,000 to US$24,000.

Bruneau, who rode snowmobile­s growing up in Quebec, believes he can attract a new group of customers who are put off by the noise and smell of a gasoline engine and the perception that it's a “hard-core activity,” he said.

“The electric really changes that experience,” he said.

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