Thank you very much.
My name is Daniel Breton. I am the president and chief executive officer of Electric Mobility Canada, the Canadian industry association for the transportation electrification industry. This year, we are celebrating our 20th anniversary.
I'd like to remind everyone that 20 years ago, fewer than 100 people worked in the transportation electrification sector in Canada, and there were fewer than 20 electric vehicles on Canadian roads. There are now more than 130,000 workers in the sector and more than a million electric vehicles on the roads. According to an EY report published in 2025, using an average scenario, there should be 600,000 workers in the transportation electrification sector in 2035.
Many reasons plead for the electrification of the economy as a whole and the electrification of transportation in particular.
According to StatsCan, there are now more workers in electric power generation, transmission and distribution than in oil and gas in Canada, even if oil sands production has increased by almost 50% in the past 10 years. According to the EY report, there will be more jobs in the EV industry than in oil and gas by 2035.
While some people worry that the growing number of EVs will break the grid, as technology keeps evolving, light-, medium- and heavy-duty electric vehicles will actually help the grid through vehicle-to-grid integration. We found, through the utilities working group, that as EV drivers pay for more electricity, mostly consumed overnight when there's spare capacity, it more than covers the cost of necessary upgrades to handle EVs. Put another way, by charging mostly off-peak, EVs improved the utilization of the grid, spreading fixed costs over more customers. This is why utilities increasingly see EVs as a form of beneficial electrification.
According to NRCan's “Energy Fact Book 2024-2025”, in 2023, there were almost 200 projects in clean electricity, representing more than a $70-billion investment. Hydro-Québec alone intends to invest up to $200 billion by 2035, so Canada's plan to electrify transportation and the economy is not far-fetched at all. It's actually pragmatic.
Here are four doses of reality.
The vast majority of jobs in transportation electrification and the economy in general cannot be offshored. Whether it's critical minerals, electric power generation and distribution or charging infrastructure, the U.S. President can do or say what he wants, those jobs will stay here. The James Bay dam, for example, won't be moving to the U.S.
At a time when many are talking about economic nationalism, I would remind everyone that nearly 75% of oil sands projects are owned by foreign interests and most of them are American, contrary to our electricity which is overwhelmingly Canadian-owned and publicly owned. Whether it's B.C. Hydro, Manitoba Hydro, SaskPower, Ontario Power Generation, Hydro-Québec, NB Power or any other electricity provider in Canada, the benefits and jobs stay in local communities.
I'm old enough to remember the Iran-Iraq war, 45 years ago. It led to an oil shock. Forty-five years later, we're facing yet another oil shock. While fuel prices around the world keep going up and down, because they're dictated by an international price, the price of electricity is regional, even local. As a result, while those who drive gas and diesel vehicles suffer from this international price, all electric vehicle owners, like me, have seen virtually no difference in the price of electricity. This means electrifying our transportation and economy makes us much more economically resilient.
According to Health Canada, in 2015, the impact of motor vehicle traffic air pollution was estimated at nearly $10 billion and lead to more than 1,200 premature deaths in Canada. Therefore, electrifying our transportation and our economy means we could save billions of dollars and thousands of lives every year. That's why we support the Canadian government in electrifying transportation and the economy, whether it's cars, trucks, buses, boats and trains, like Alto, all with the goal of creating local jobs and reducing greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution.
Thank you.
