It's across the country:
Keep in mind that 80% to 90% of charging happens at home. That's why we don't need that many public chargers. I drive an electric car on a daily basis. I've been driving it for more than 20 years.
By 2030, according to the report released by NRCan, we're talking about 200,000 public chargers by 2030, 440,000 by 2035, 640,000 by 2040, 736,000 by 2045, and by 2050, about 727,000.
Keep in mind that the technology evolves really quickly. What happens is that we'll need fewer chargers, but more powerful ones, and the chemistry of batteries is going to change and make them more efficient. At one point, it's going to get more like having gas stations. That's why the whole picture is going to change, and to say that we need four million public chargers between now and 2050 just doesn't make sense. I'm sorry.
We look at all the data from the scientists. I really don't know where they're getting that number from.