https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/ev-sales-alberta-falls-behind-1.5230776
Want to buy an EV? Slow down there, we're in Alberta
Aug 01, 2019  Sarah Lawrynuik

[image  
https://i.cbc.ca/1.5231077.1564527248!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_780/tesla-model-x.jpg
A Tesla Model X parked on Lake Minnewanka near Banff, Alta. (Adam
Eustace/Electric Vehicle Association of Alberta)
]

Legislation in other provinces is ensuring electric sales in Alberta aren’t
a priority

If you are one of the few Albertans itching to join the electric vehicle (or
plug-in hybrid) club, you will find an altogether different car buying
experience from what you've been used to before.

At some dealerships you'll find salespeople climbing into the car with you
for a test drive with the car's manual in hand — because they've never been
in one of these cars either. At another, you'll be told you can't test drive
their EV models because the manufacturer isn't sending any to Alberta. You
can still buy it, but it will have to be sight unseen — and the wait for it
to arrive could be well into 2020.

If you're in the market for an EV, you might be inclined to visit a Kia
dealership to check out the Niro EV or the Soul EV, since they are two of
the most moderately priced, mid-sized EVs on the market. But that will only
lead you to learn that Kia is not currently selling any electric models in
Alberta, nor are they offering service for EVs if you actually go through
the effort to buy one of their cars out of province. 

As an explanation for this strategic decision, Kia Canada communications
manager Mark James said that as supply of vehicles grows, the company will
be expanding into new markets, but for now, Alberta isn't a priority.

"Right now we focus the limited availability of product on those markets
that not only offer incentives to consumers but also offer the required
infrastructure to support the vehicles," James said in an email. 

All of this begs the question: How has Alberta fallen so far behind?

Incentives, quotas and petro pride

In the first quarter of 2019, the total number of electric vehicles on the
road in Canada cracked 100,000. The number in this province is just over
2,200. 

[image]  Approx. total Canadian EV ownership by province

Alberta does not have any government incentives in place to encourage the
move to EVs or plug-in hybrids (PHEVs). This stands in contrast to Quebec,
which offers up to $8,000; and B.C., where rebate incentives can hit $3,000. 

Ontario used to offer up to $14,000, but that was scrapped by the Ford
government after it was elected in 2018.

So, despite the federal [.ca] government offering incentives of up to $5,000
from coast to coast, the rebate opportunities are not equal across
provinces. 

[image]  EV sales by province

There are a handful of reasons beyond Alberta's lack of a rebate program
that have caused the lag in sales here. The first thing that might come to
mind is the Alberta pride in the oil and gas industry; the rise of
petro-patriotism, as coined by Maclean's. 

"There's a mentality here that somewhat naturally opposes EV ownership
because they're perceived — whether true or not — as a threat to the oil and
gas industry because oil is used for transportation fuels and the EVs don't
use that," said William York, a director for the Electric Vehicle
Association of Alberta.

York said another hurdle presents itself in the fact that Alberta is truck
and SUV country, and so far what is available in those categories of vehicle
isn't pushing people to buy electric — yet. 

That could change if companies like Ford keep putting out ads like the one
they released earlier this month, bragging about their F-150 all-electric
prototype truck being able to pull over a million pounds. Or companies like
GM keep making commitments to make their entire fleet electric.

Ford unveiled its electric F-150 prototype in a commercial released in July.
(Ford/YouTube)

But the biggest reason for other provinces surging ahead in the EV market is
the implementation of quota regulations. 

    Don Pittis: Zero-emission rules mean fewer electric car choices for most
Canadians

"There's no incentive for car makers to bring vehicles to Alberta,"
explained Matthew Klippenstein, a Burnaby-based engineer and the EV advisor
for the not-for-profit Plug-In B.C. 

To understand what Klippenstein means by that, you first have to know that
most car manufacturers are losing money every time they sell an electric
model. 

"Now that sounds terrible, and it kind of is terrible if you're a car
maker," Klippenstein said. "But it is the norm in that sector where if you
make a big change, your company will generally tolerate  losses in the
belief that over time they can make money on the product."

So while companies are selling this product at a loss, B.C. and Quebec have
introduced policies that have put them ahead of other provinces on
manufacturers' priority lists, called a zero-emission vehicle standard, or
"ZEV mandate."

In B.C. legislation was passed this spring which would require car makers to
hit a 10 per cent electric target by 2025, 30 per cent by 2030 and 100 per
cent by 2040. Similar rules are found in Quebec and manufacturers who don't
meet the targets have to pay penalties.

Klippenstein says because these provinces have introduced this type of
legislation, other provinces will either have to adopt a similar approach, a
federal plan will need to be implemented, or the policy-have-not provinces
will only be getting the leftovers.

    Sold out: Report finds most B.C. dealerships don't have any electric
vehicles

But even then, supply shortages of vehicles is an ongoing problem.
Electric vehicles aren't top of mind to dealership owners, association
president says

Electric sales more than doubled from 2017 to 2018 in Alberta, and in Canada
as a whole too. But those numbers are still tiny when compared to the sale
of gas-powered cars. 

"Still to date this year — till the end of May — there was a little over
92,000 new vehicles that have been sold in Alberta," said president of the
Motor Dealers Association of Alberta, Denis Ducharme. 

So that's 92,000 gas-powered vehicles sold in five months in Alberta, versus
2,200 EVs sold ever in the province.

[image]  Denis Ducharme is the president of the Motor Dealers' Association
of Alberta and has worked in the industry for more than three decades.
(Motor Dealers' Association of Alberta)

So Ducharme says EVs don't make the top of the list of concerns he hears
from dealership owners. Politics and the economy are what he hear about,
especially since vehicle sales have hit a bit of a slump as of late.

Recently, the national association looked at the biggest shakeups coming to
the industry, and again, Ducharme says EVs didn't near the top of the list.

"They predict that over the next decade the world's global automakers will
undergo a structural transformation not seen since the beginning of the 20th
century," he said. But the primary factor in those changes will be where
cars are being made. "It'll probably be a lot of new vehicle models that'll
be entering from places like China, India and Europe."

Ducharme says blame for low EV sales is improperly placed at the feet of
dealerships, the pressure is on manufacturers to supply enough cars and
spread them out across the provinces.

"There is a sizeable investment that goes into selling electric vehicles,"
Ducharme said, from training in sales to service and so on. "But whatever
the manufacturer is going to provide you, you're going to sell.

"We often get criticized for [this idea] that the dealers don't even try to
sell electric vehicles. Well if [dealers are] willing to put in that kind of
investment, those who are saying that are misinformed because as they get
them, they're going to sell."

Those with faith in the electric future

Despite the challenges to buying electric in Alberta, those who believe in
the technology are finding ways around the obstacles. 

"We actually help each other out," said York, with the Electric Vehicle
Association of Alberta. 

A few weeks ago, York had a co-worker who wanted to test drive a particular
vehicle but none of the dealerships she'd asked had one available. York
outsourced the problem on the EV community forums and they managed to find
the single dealership in Edmonton that had one available.

[image]  William York says the EV community in Alberta finds ways for people
who want to test drive models of cars that aren't available from dealerships
including lending out personal vehicles for the cause. (Corrina Walker
Photography)

"And even the community is very generous and willing to offer up their own
vehicles for events for the public to see that on an even private ride,"
York said, including himself in that community as he estimates he's used his
own car for about 100 test rides. 

York has a serious passion for EVs because as an engineer he says he finds
endless joy in seeing the efficiencies in advancing technologies. 

"It is also about the gadgets and technology for me," York said. "I was one
of the first people that I knew to buy an MP3 player. It was a Rio 500 with
96 megabytes of storage and cost me $400. I was 13 years old. I've never
been shy to be on the bleeding edge."

But York and the EV association recognizes climate change and a push to
lower emissions is a big motivator for many looking to buy electric, and in
Alberta there is some confusion over whether it is an effective thing to do
since so much of the province's electricity comes from coal. 

And the good news is, they've made an app to prove it is. 

Their web app takes the real time data from Alberta's energy producers — so
you know the emissions generated by the electricity powering an EV — and
then it compares different models of EVs alongside different gas-powered
vehicles to show the difference in emissions. 

"(It) proves that it is it is actually cleaner to drive an EV on Alberta's
'dirty grid.' And we've shown this tool to a lot of people that have come to
our events or our trade show," York said.

[image]  A screenshot of the app created by the Electric Vehicle Association
of Alberta to compare EV and gas-powered car emissions, using real-time data
from Alberta’s electricity producers. (Electric Vehicle Association of
Alberta)
Resale and servicing

[image]  Jim Steil is an electrical engineer by training and the co-owner of
Go Electric, a company selling used EVs and hybrids in Calgary. He's quite
frank in voicing his opinion that anyone who doesn't believe electric is the
future of driving is delusional.

He too has heard of the problems people have in trying to buy electric in
Alberta. 

"There's almost no electric vehicles available for sale," Steil said.

"And I wouldn't quite say it's a willful ignorance, but ambivalence perhaps
would be a better word toward selling them, promoting them, learning about
them and providing them."

Steil and his business partner sell used electric cars, but with so few EVs
on the road here, the resale market is almost nonexistent. So that means the
company has to import vehicles from California primarily. It offers the
opportunity to go electric for those who can't afford the price of new EVs.
Jim Steil was trained as an electrical engineer before he decided to dive
into the EV market. (Sarah Lawrynuik/CBC)

One of the biggest perks with EVs that people tend not to know about, is how
little maintenance they require, Steil explained. Steils says he thinks
dealerships won't be pushing for more EV sales for this reason — unless
there's a legislated requirement to. 

"If I owned a dealership I would be quite afraid of what is inevitable and
which is the replacement of gas vehicles by electric vehicles on their lots,
because all of those service bays are gonna be empty," Steil said in an
interview with CBC News.

But Ducharme from the Motor Vehicles Association disagrees, saying "there'll
still always be a need for servicing."
The Tesla exception

Tesla has fewer than a dozen brick-and-mortar stores in Canada and
paradoxically it is one of the few EV companies that's prioritized sales in
Alberta, putting the only Tesla location outside of B.C., Quebec and
Ontario, right here in Calgary. 

The Model 3 was the number one selling electric model in Canada in the first
quarter of 2019 and that seems unlikely to change given that it's been
included in the federal incentive program, after originally being excluded. 

To York, the cars are sleek, sure, but where the other brands really need to
catch up to Tesla is in salesmanship. With the new technology and new
experiences, salespeople need to be able to answer more questions on a topic
that remains largely foreign to them. 

"There's all these good resources like PlugShare and independent research
that's been put together by Nissan Leaf owners on battery degradation and
Tesla owners on battery degradation that the dealership employees really
need to be aware of in order to land a sale. And I think that's just lacking
here in Alberta."

The mish-mash of policies regarding EVs across Canada is causing clear
"distortions" in the market, says Brendan Frank, a research associate with
Canada's Ecofiscal Commision. 

"The federal government has rolled out a series of policies, and I don't
think it's for us to say what the right balance is," Frank said. "It would
help if the provinces spoke to each other a little bit more on on this
issue."

Neither EV enthusiasts nor car market experts foresee significant changes in
Alberta any time soon, so without some form of change, it seems likely
Alberta's EV market will be left further in the dust.
[© cbc.ca]


+
https://www.insauga.com/something-new-is-coming-to-pearson-airport-in-mississauga
Something New is Coming to Pearson Airport in
Mississauga
August 1, 2019  Reducing pollution from transportation is essential,” said
McKenna. “Investing in electric vehicles is a practical and effective way
for Canada to reduce pollution ...
https://www.insauga.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/lead-image-full/article/2019/07/pearson_2.jpg




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