Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Carmakers, Canadian Governments Tackling Electric Car Range Anxiety

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jun, 2016 12:49 PM
    MONTREAL — Automakers are hoping to overcome the biggest roadblock to electric vehicles sales — range anxiety among consumers — with a little help from government.
     
    A spokesman for Ford Canada said Monday that government efforts to extend the network of recharging stations along highways and elsewhere is a big psychological boost in helping consumers overcome range anxiety, even though the typical Canadian urban commute is far shorter than the travelling range of many of today's plug-in vehicles.
     
    "(With) both the federal government and provincial governments working together to develop the infrastructure you'll see range anxiety eventually disappear," Marc Vejgman, Ford's product marketing manager, said in an interview at a global electric vehicle conference in Montreal.
     
    Meanwhile, new products from the automakers themselves are starting to bring more consumers around.
     
    Nissan says sales of its popular Leaf plug-in surged 50 per cent when it introduced a more powerful battery last November that boosted the car's range by 27 per cent to 172 kilometres.
     
    Ford is planning to introduce a new battery this fall that will increase the range of its all-electric Focus by 31 per cent to 160 km.
     
    Nissan said it believes new technology can double the Leaf's range in three years and add hundreds of kilometres over time.
     
    But Kazuo Yajima, alliance global director of the company's electric vehicle engineering division, said efforts to add more range needs to be tempered with reducing vehicle costs.
     
    "We cannot rely on the (government) subsidies or incentives forever," he said.
     
    Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard said Quebec's $8,000 subsidy for the purchase of electric vehicles will only be phased out when sales hit a critical mass and prices fall.
     
    B.C. offers a $5,000 subsidy and Ontario provides up to $14,000 in incentives as it aims for electric cars to make up five per cent of new vehicle sales by 2020.
     
    "It's hard for me to tell you at what moment we will be able to decrease the incentives," Couillard told reporters, adding that the sale of electric and hybrid cars generates returns for the provincial economy.
     
    "When you fill up you car with gasoline you basically encourage oil exporters — also of course Canadian oil producers — but if you charge your electric car you send money directly through Hydro-Quebec and recycle it in Quebec's economy," he said
     
    Electric cars are a niche market with less than one per cent of global auto sales. More than 21,000 plug-in electric vehicles have been sold in Canada since 2011. The plug-in hybrid Chevy Volt leads, followed by the all-electric Tesla Model S and Nissan Leaf. Together they account for almost 70 per cent of sales.
     
    Meanwhile, Quebec announced Monday that it will greatly increase the number of fast-charge stations for electric vehicles along one of the province's busiest highways. Quick-charging stations will be added in two phases in six communities along the 580-kilometre stretch of Highway 20 between Montreal and Mont-Joli.
     
    Couillard said the announcement demonstrates the province's drive to encourage the use of such vehicles and reduce greenhouse gases. The province aims to increase the number of electric and hybrid vehicles on Quebec roads tenfold to 100,000 by 2020.
     
    Couillard said interest in electric cars is growing exponentially, but infrastructure needs to be deployed at a speed that accommodates growing demand.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Semi-Automatic Rifle Used In Florida Mass Shooting Is Restricted In Canada

    Semi-Automatic Rifle Used In Florida Mass Shooting Is Restricted In Canada
    The semi-automatic rifle used in Sunday's deadly mass shooting in Florida is classified as a restricted weapon in Canada and most people can only use it at a gun range.

    Semi-Automatic Rifle Used In Florida Mass Shooting Is Restricted In Canada

    Tighter Security But Toronto Pride Festivities To Go On, Organizers Say

    Tighter Security But Toronto Pride Festivities To Go On, Organizers Say
    The horrific events in Orlando will certainly be in the back of people's minds, said Mathieu Chantelois, executive director of Pride Toronto, but that won't change what's already been planned.

    Tighter Security But Toronto Pride Festivities To Go On, Organizers Say

    After Omar Mateen's Orlando Shooting G4S Says Company's Guards Now Unarmed In Canada

    After Omar Mateen's Orlando Shooting G4S Says Company's Guards Now Unarmed In Canada
    A spokesman for the security company that employed both the Florida nightclub gunman and a Canadian who killed three co-workers in Edmonton in 2012 says there's a key difference between its operations in Canada and the United States.

    After Omar Mateen's Orlando Shooting G4S Says Company's Guards Now Unarmed In Canada

    WorkSafe Says Film Company At Fault For Injury To 'Maze Runner' Star

    WorkSafe Says Film Company At Fault For Injury To 'Maze Runner' Star
    VANCOUVER — An inspector with British Columbia's work safety agency has found a film production company failed to ensure the safety of workers on the set of "Maze Runner: The Death Cure" when actor Dylan O'Brien was injured in March.

    WorkSafe Says Film Company At Fault For Injury To 'Maze Runner' Star

    Undercover Terrorism Sting Was Only Means To Investigate B.C. Couple: Lawyer

    VANCOUVER — A Crown lawyer says a controversial undercover police sting was the only way for officers to investigate a couple later found guilty of plotting to murder people at Canada Day festivities in Victoria.

    Undercover Terrorism Sting Was Only Means To Investigate B.C. Couple: Lawyer

    Don't Even Think About Stealing A Bike In North Vancouver!

    Don't Even Think About Stealing A Bike In North Vancouver!
    A number of tenants responded enthusiastically to the program and registered their bikes with the North Vancouver RCMP.

    Don't Even Think About Stealing A Bike In North Vancouver!