Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Trudeau touts electric vehicles at B.C. stop

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Apr, 2022 01:37 PM
  • Trudeau touts electric vehicles at B.C. stop

VICTORIA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he wants to make it easier for more Canadians to drive electric vehicles and he isn't ruling out nuclear power as a cleaner source of energy.

Trudeau said electric vehicles fight pollution, but often are too expensive for many Canadians.

"We know we need to cut emissions," he said Monday at an outdoor news conference at Royal Roads University in the suburban Victoria community of Colwood.

"We know we need to reduce pollution and one of the best ways of doing that is to get more clean cars on the road," he said.

Last week's federal budget placed an emphasis on transitioning to the green economy, which included expanding the availability of zero-emission vehicles and charging stations, Trudeau said.

The federal government will extend a current program that offers electric vehicle buyers up to $5,000 to help with purchases and it will introduce mandatory sales targets that require 20 per cent of all vehicles sold by 2026 to be electric, he said.

"We know electric vehicles are more expensive up front even if over the long term they turn out to be cheaper," said Trudeau. "We know people need that help up front."

The sales target program will expand over the coming years, said Trudeau, with 60 per cent of vehicle sales being electric by 2030 and 100 per cent by 2035.

The 2022 budget includes $400 million over five years to expand charging infrastructure.

"The investment in this budget is going to allow for thousands more (charging stations)," Trudeau said. "We know that that is a key path forward in helping families make that final decision to switch to electric."

In order to charge those vehicles, Trudeau said Canada must embark on more electrification initiatives, including the possibility of increased nuclear power.

“It’s very clear, first of all, that we need to reduce our emissions, we need to reduce our dependence on oil and gas," he said. "If we didn’t already know that, the conflict in Ukraine right now with Russia’s illegal invasion is emphasizing just how much we need to be able to find cleaner sources of energy for our communities, for our country."

Trudeau did not expand on the possible expansion of nuclear power in Canada, saying, “Nuclear’s on the table, absolutely.”

A spokeswoman for a Canadian clean energy think tank said five per cent of Canada's vehicle sales are already electric models, with B.C. at 13 per cent.

Merran Smith, Clean Energy Canada executive director, said recent data suggests 80 per cent of Canadians are open to considering an electric vehicle.

"Despite the high sticker price of an EV, the fuel and maintenance savings are so significant that the EV version often comes out tens of thousands of dollars cheaper," she said at the news conference. "That's the future."

Three senior cabinet minister were also in B.C. and Yukon on Monday to discuss the budget.

International Development Minister Harjit Sajjan was scheduled to be in Kelowna, B.C., for a clean economy announcement and Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson was slated to travel to Whitehorse to announce a clean energy partnership with Yukon and the Indigenous-run Tlingit Homeland Energy Limited Partnership.

Federal Fisheries Minister Joyce Murray was scheduled to be in Richmond, B.C., for an infrastructure announcement.

Trudeau's tour also included meetings scheduled with Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps and the City of Victoria Youth Advisory Council.

MORE National ARTICLES

WestJet Group to buy Sunwing Airlines amid turbulent global travel market

WestJet Group to buy Sunwing Airlines  amid turbulent global travel market
Under the agreement, a new tour operating business unit will be created under the WestJet Group, to include both Sunwing Vacations and WestJet Vacations Inc. and will be led by Sunwing CEO Stephen Hunter.

WestJet Group to buy Sunwing Airlines amid turbulent global travel market

Vancouver home sales up 50% from start of year

Vancouver home sales up 50% from start of year
The B.C. board says Metro Vancouver home sales totalled 3,424 last month, down 8.1 per cent from 3,727 in February 2021 and up 49.8 per cent from 2,285 in January 2022. 

Vancouver home sales up 50% from start of year

The mayor of Penticton accused in lawsuit of threatening to kill siblings

The mayor of Penticton accused in lawsuit of threatening to kill siblings
A notice of application filed last week on behalf of his brother, Nicholas Vassilakakis, includes a transcript of a voice mail the mayor allegedly left their sister making the threat.

The mayor of Penticton accused in lawsuit of threatening to kill siblings

Provincial health officials says uncertainty about new variants BA.2

Provincial health officials says uncertainty about new variants BA.2
She says the province will integrate wastewater surveillance testing into its regular surveillance of respiratory illness including influenza, and also include other pathogens to get a periodic snapshot of what else may be circulating in communities.

Provincial health officials says uncertainty about new variants BA.2

Interest rate hike won't cool housing, say experts

Interest rate hike won't cool housing, say experts
While the interest rate’s impact on prices may be limited, the increase Wednesday will affect some mortgage holders immediately. Interest rate hikes typically weigh on homeowners with variable-rate mortgages because many banks use the central bank’s key rate to dictate how they should change their prime interest rate. 

Interest rate hike won't cool housing, say experts

Trudeau says sanction solidarity surprises Putin

Trudeau says sanction solidarity surprises Putin
Trudeau says Putin likely never imagined that Germany would freeze its lucrative Nord Stream 2 pipeline project with Russia or decide to send anti-tank weapons and surface to air missiles to Ukraine.

Trudeau says sanction solidarity surprises Putin