In fact, when we look at the calculations done by electricity providers in Quebec and Canada, we see that, by 2050, the increase in electricity demand will come mainly from GDP, meaning population growth, not from electric vehicles. Not only won't it come from EVs, but EVs will help mitigate the increase in demand for electric vehicles, because EVs are the more flexible when it comes to charging.
At Electric Mobility Canada, we are currently working on a report with the electricity supplier working group, people from Dunsky, and electricity suppliers. This report focuses on integrating vehicles into the electricity grid precisely to optimize the use of electricity at peak and off-peak hours, as we see elsewhere in the world.
This means not only EVs won't be a problem, they'll be an asset, because the investment made by electricity providers will be optimized at off-peak periods, particularly at night. That will help in terms of funding and investments. Therefore, we'll need to invest less per person thanks to electric vehicles.