Sunday, June 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

New EV registrations hit Canadian record in 2021

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2022 03:14 PM
  • New EV registrations hit Canadian record in 2021

OTTAWA - More new electric vehicles hit the road in Canada last year than ever before but the growth is nowhere near what is happening in Europe.

Statistics Canada says 65,253 new battery-only and plug-in hybrid electric cars were registered in the first nine months of 2021, more than the number registered across 12 months in any previous year.

In all of 2020, Canadians registered 54,353 electric vehicles, often referred to as EVs. In 2019, there were 56,165.

Data for the final three months of 2021 is not yet available but for the first nine months, EVs represented five per cent of new cars registered, up from three per cent in both 2020 and 2019.

Joanna Kyriazis, a program manager at Clean Energy Canada, said it is good news to see growth in Canada's EV market, but it's not keeping pace with Europe.

In 2019, France, Germany and the United Kingdom were on par with Canada with electric cars making up between 2.5 and three per cent of all new registrations. By last year, electric vehicles made up almost 18 per cent of new registrations in the U.K., 19 per cent in France and 26 per cent in Germany.

"So they started at the same place as Canada in 2019 and in two years they've seen sales really skyrocket," Kyriazis said. "So I'm hoping that Canada is about to see that same sort of exponential growth in EV sales if we can get around these supply issues."

Kyriazis said demand in Canada is strong, pointing to a recent survey Clean Energy Canada did that found 80 per cent of Canadians were open to buying an electric car before the recent spike in gas prices.

She said the issue is availability.

"Record-low inventory levels are making it so dealerships can't keep up and Canadian drivers are waiting not just months, but in some cases years, to get their hands on a new EV," she said.

Canada has set targets that by 2030, half of new cars registered will be zero-emission vehicles, and by 2035, all of them. That includes battery-only, plug-in hybrid and hydrogen-fuel cell vehicles.

Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault is currently consulting on how best to hit those targets, including a mandatory sales quota system similar to those that already exist provincially in Quebec and British Columbia.

Dealerships that don't sell a big enough proportion of zero-emission vehicles face financial penalties.

Kyriazis said sales mandates are a critical part of the solution because they compel automakers to adjust their production and distribution of vehicles and she said Guilbeault has to follow through with one nationally.

In a written statement Monday, Guilbeault said the government remains committed to doing it.

Three in every four electric vehicles registered in Canada last year were sold in B.C. and Quebec. Kyriazis said the mandates are the main reason because they compel automakers to ship most of the available electric vehicles to dealers in those provinces.

Quebec and B.C. also have provincial rebates layered on top of the $2,500 to $5,000 rebate offered by the federal government for many new electric car purchases.

Brian Kingston, president of the Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers' Association, said automakers believe the rebates, not the sales quotas, are what makes the difference.

"We don't see evidence of ZEV mandates or quotas having any impact on demand," he said. "In both B.C. and Quebec, we saw an uptick the moment the (cash) incentive came in place."

In Ontario, when the newly elected Progressive Conservative government did away with a provincial rebate in 2018, sales plummeted. Last spring, when Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick introduced provincial ZEV rebates, electric car sales began to climb.

Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador also started rebate programs last year but their EV sales statistics aren't reported individually by Statistics Canada.

Kingston's group represents Ford, General Motors and Stellantis, which account for almost two-thirds of the passenger vehicles produced in Canada. The association last week launched a campaign to push the federal government to do more for EV adoption, including investing in public education, investing more in public charging networks, increasing the size of the rebate as much as another $10,000, and expanding which cars qualify for it.

The next federal budget is widely expected to expand the program to used vehicles and more expensive ones, though it's not clear how much bigger the rebate would get.

The automakers do not want the government to proceed with a sales mandate.

MORE National ARTICLES

New COVID-19 restrictions in north B.C.

New COVID-19 restrictions in north B.C.
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says indoor gatherings are now restricted to only one other family or five guests, while outdoor gatherings are limited to 50 people.

New COVID-19 restrictions in north B.C.

801 COVID19 cases for Thursday

801 COVID19 cases for Thursday
84.6% (3,922,233) of eligible people 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine and 76.9% (3,565,148) received their second dose.    

801 COVID19 cases for Thursday

Woman assaulted at Pacific Centre Mall: VPD

Woman assaulted at Pacific Centre Mall: VPD
An employee working at the mall witnessed a man approach a woman from behind and grope her buttocks on August 27 around 5 p.m. The suspect then fled and mall security followed him while calling 911. Police were able to locate the suspect on a bus near Hastings and Abbott streets.    

Woman assaulted at Pacific Centre Mall: VPD

16 new, improved schools to start school year

16 new, improved schools to start school year
Right in time for the new school year, more than 8,600 students will be returning to safer and modernized classrooms at 16 new or improved schools throughout the province. The Government of B.C. has invested almost $353 million in these schools.

16 new, improved schools to start school year

Teenage boy arrested for assaulting 3 women in random attacks

Teenage boy arrested for assaulting 3 women in random attacks
On Wednesday, at around 4:00 p.m., Burnaby RCMP located and arrested a 15-year-old boy who police believe to have committed these attacks. He was taken into custody as he departed a SkyTrain station.    

Teenage boy arrested for assaulting 3 women in random attacks

Surrey RCMP need the public's help in locating missing man Robinder Sidhu

Surrey RCMP need the public's help in locating missing man Robinder Sidhu
Surrey RCMP is updating the public that the 40-year old man reported missing August 31, 2021, was located deceased. On September 5, 2021, the missing male was located deceased. Criminality does not appear to be a factor in his death and the investigation has been turned over to BC Coroners Service.

Surrey RCMP need the public's help in locating missing man Robinder Sidhu