If you survey people who are looking for new vehicles, they will overwhelmingly tell you that they will not buy an electric vehicle unless they see some way to charge it. In practice, most Canadians charge at home or at work most of the time, unless they live in a condo building or an apartment where it can be harder to charge. You find most charging happens at home and in the workplace, and those are really important areas to deploy.
People want to know that when they're going to their kids' baseball games or they have a long driving day after work they can get public charging. It's important to provide charging for people who are doing ride share or people who, as I say, live in condos and apartments.
What we find is that you really do need to build the base infrastructure to get mass adoption. It's actually one of the most important ways to transition the transportation system to clean energy.