A lot of people think that electric vehicles are only for city use, that they aren't made for life in the suburbs, on the outskirts or in remote areas.
The biggest challenge is not so much regional use, because most charging happens at home. I live a good ways from the city, but usually, it's no trouble for people like me to have a charging station installed out front or in the garage. The real challenge is downtowns, be it in Quebec City, Montreal, Toronto or Calgary. Will people who work in office towers or who live on the eighth, 10th or 12th floor of an apartment building have access to charging stations? Those types of situations are more challenging, so that's why we need a plan to deploy charging stations in downtowns. That remains a tremendous challenge.
A few cornerstones of electric mobility can go a long way towards expediting the electrification of transportation. More charging infrastructure is needed, and so is more education and training, for both consumers and workers. Falsehoods are rife when it comes to electrification, transportation and electric vehicles overall.
In addition, until price parity is achieved, more rebates are obviously needed to make electric vehicles more affordable, and I don't mean just cars. Most of the electric pickup trucks and SUVs coming onto the market probably won't qualify for federal rebates. To me, that's unfair, from a regional standpoint and a use standpoint. Why shouldn't someone who needs a pickup truck for work not be eligible for a rebate?
As far as we are concerned, a federal zero-emission law applicable to light-duty and heavy-duty vehicles is a must, all the more so if Canada wants to achieve its greenhouse gas emission reduction targets and adopt an electric vehicle policy modelled on California's. Last week, in fact, the governors of 12 states in the U.S. called on President Joe Biden to introduce federal zero-emission legislation.