Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Honda Canada Planning To Export Vehicles To Europe For The First Time

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Mar, 2015 01:18 PM

    ALLISTON, Ont. — Honda Canada plans to take advantage of the still-to-be ratified free-trade agreement with the European Union to produce vehicles for export to Europe for the first time, the auto company announced Monday.

    Speaking at his flagship manufacturing plant, Honda CEO Jerry Chenkin said the Canada-EU trade deal was the "catalyst" for the plan to export the next generation of the company's CR-V cross-over to Europe.

    "Exporting 40,000 Canadian-made vehicles per year to Europe is good for Honda and it's good for Canada."

    It's not clear when Europeans, who Chenkin called among the most discerning customers in the world, will be able to buy the vehicles but everyone at Honda Canada, he said, was "eagerly awaiting" ratification and implementation of the free-trade deal.

    Honda, the first Japanese auto company to build vehicles in Canada, has previously announced upgrades to its Alliston factory. The CR-V export production will rely on those investments rather than on a new infusion of money.

    Still, Prime Minister Stephen Harper called the announcement a "breakthrough moment."

    "Europe will accept a great many Canadian-built cars — no less than 100,000 — thousands of which are going to be from right here at this plant," Harper said.

    "It's because our government negotiated a free-trade agreement that, in the years to come from this plant, cars built right here in Canada by a Japanese company will then be exported virtually tariff-free to Europe, one of the world's wealthiest, richest markets."

    The free-trade deal calls on Europe to scrap a 10 per cent tariff on passenger vehicles, but it remains unclear when exactly it will take effect.

    Canada now has free-trade agreements with 43 countries compared with five when his government took office, Harper said.

    The prime minister was more reluctant to discuss the situation at the General Motors auto plant in Oshawa, which may not continue production past 2016.

    "Companies make these individual decisions," he said.

    Across the country, Honda Canada employs about 19,000 people. It can make about 390,000 Civics and CR-V models a year and has just built its seven-millionth vehicle.

    The company has invested more than $3.9 billion in Canada and spends about $2.1 billion a year on goods and services from Canadian suppliers.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Light Years Ahead: Tech Turbo-charges Extreme High School Science Fairs

    Light Years Ahead: Tech Turbo-charges Extreme High School Science Fairs
    VANCOUVER — Janice Pang was in Grade 8 when she designed an experiment exposing ravenous immune cells — called macrophages, for the uninitiated — to bacterial components to test their appetite.

    Light Years Ahead: Tech Turbo-charges Extreme High School Science Fairs

    No Winning Ticket For Saturday Night's $20 Million Lotto 649 Jackpot

    No Winning Ticket For Saturday Night's $20 Million Lotto 649 Jackpot
    TORONTO — No one has the winning ticket for the $20.4-million jackpot in Saturday night's Lotto 6-49 draw.

    No Winning Ticket For Saturday Night's $20 Million Lotto 649 Jackpot

    Investigators Seek Witnesses To Police Shooting Of Man Near Anti-racism Rally

    Investigators Seek Witnesses To Police Shooting Of Man Near Anti-racism Rally
    CALGARY — Alberta's police watchdog is looking for witnesses after it says an officer shot and critically injured a 30-year-old man shortly after he appeared to taunt demonstrators at an anti-racism rally.

    Investigators Seek Witnesses To Police Shooting Of Man Near Anti-racism Rally

    Residents Will Return Home After Chemical Leak In Quebec Town Forces Evacuations

    Residents Will Return Home After Chemical Leak In Quebec Town Forces Evacuations
    VARENNES, Que. — The situation in Varennes, Que., is slowly returning to normal today following a chemical leak that caused several home evacuations and two hospitalizations Saturday.

    Residents Will Return Home After Chemical Leak In Quebec Town Forces Evacuations

    PM Harper Expresses Hopes For A 'Tyranny' Free Iran At Canadian Iranian Gala

    PM Harper Expresses Hopes For A 'Tyranny' Free Iran At Canadian Iranian Gala
    Harper delivered opening remarks Saturday night in Vancouver to a large audience at the Canadian Iranian Foundation's 10th Annual Nowruz Gala.

    PM Harper Expresses Hopes For A 'Tyranny' Free Iran At Canadian Iranian Gala

    Montreal's Gay Village Looking For Ways To Reinvent Itself Amidst Change

    Montreal's Gay Village Looking For Ways To Reinvent Itself Amidst Change
    MONTREAL — Technological advances and changing lifestyles are forcing Montreal's gay village to reinvent itself, with local businesses having to adapt to the reality that homosexuals feel increasingly comfortable in different corners of the city.

    Montreal's Gay Village Looking For Ways To Reinvent Itself Amidst Change