Thank you for the terrific work in getting me here to the committee.
But seriously for a second, Canada is really supportive of the global efforts for a more sustainable future. Our budgets have the investments for this. The commitment this government has taken to fight climate change is demonstrable and real. We're committed to 100% of new automobile sales to be zero-emissions vehicles by 2035.
You rightfully pointed out the supply chain—that is the automotive supply chain. There's a lot of integration and there are a lot of interconnected supply chains between Canada and the United States, but nothing says it more than automobiles. Deliberately, we've put policies in place for the last 50 years to make sure we are encouraging this Canada-U.S. competitiveness, and now a North American competitiveness, in the supply chain around autos.
We all want to create opportunities where we can help this transition to a cleaner and greener future. Indeed, we also have incentives here in Canada to encourage the purchasing of EVs. In fact, those incentives support Canadians who buy U.S.-made EVs and support U.S. manufacturing jobs.
You're absolutely right. This is the point we're making to the Americans. Canadian-assembled vehicles are U.S. cars. They contain approximately 50% of U.S. content. Canada is also the biggest exporter to the U.S. of vehicles. We are requiring 100% of our cars and our passenger trucks in Canada to be zero-emissions vehicles.
Much of what you have just said and much of what I have just said is essentially the advocacy to the Americans. The road map between Canada and the U.S. to tackle climate change, but also to recover from COVID-19 and to support trade between our two countries, will include this very important sector, automotive trade, which, by the way, is remarkably balanced. Fifty per cent of this trade flows from the U.S. to Canada, and the other 50% flows the other way. The other thing I would say is that Canadian intermediate exports also keep U.S. production open.
There are a lot of wins here, and there's a lot of alignment. This is the advocacy we are making to the United States. It has been productive, i would say, across the board, but we've made it clear that what is there at present is not in keeping with CUSMA or the WTO, and it's not actually in their interest economically either.
This work will continue. We'll do it as team Canada. It will be government to government, but it will also be the provinces and territories. It will also be industry. It will also be unions, binational unions. We're all going to do this.