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June 4, 2024 by Adam Malik
Consumer interest in electric vehicles jumped in 2023. In fact, zero-emission vehicles overall saw a greater market share of new vehicle registrations last year.
Data from S&P Global Mobility’s fourth quarter and year-end Canadian Automotive Insights reported ZEVs accounted for 11.7 per cent of new vehicle registrations last year, up from 8.9 per cent in 2022. BEVs accounted for 8.8 per cent while plug-ins made up the remaining 2.8 per cent. Both sets increased form the year before. Hybrids were 10.7 per cent of the market last year, compared to 7 per cent in 2022.
That means internal combustion engines saw its share drop from 84.1 per cent in 2022 to 77.6 per cent last year.
So EVs and alternatives to ICE vehicles are continuing to resonate with buyers in Canada. But that doesn’t mean the path to becoming a fully electrified society is without its bumps.
Education gap
There is still a large knowledge gap between fact and fiction when it comes to electric vehicles in Canada.
“We still get questions about electric vehicles and battery degradation, range, cold weather operation,” said Brian Kingston, president and CEO of the Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers’ Association. He was speaking at TalkAuto, a gathering of automotive professionals representing the dealer, OE and new vehicle supply segments of the industry.
“There’s still a lot of questions that people have legitimate questions,” he added. “So there’s more to be done on education to explain the technology and help many people make the switch.”
Representatives from several automakers agreed with this sentiment this recently. They acknowledged that consumer education is something they need to work on as electrification moves forward. At the Canadian International AutoShow this year, EV World spoke to representatives from Chevrolet, Stellantis, Ford and Volvo about electrifying the Canadian car parc.
Holly Broome, national marketing manager of Chevrolet cars and crossovers, emphasized the important role of education in overcoming range anxiety and other consumer concerns holding Canadians back from making the switch to electric.
“We have to do a lot more education to help customers understand what owning an EV is really like,” she said.
For example, most charging is done at home, reducing pressure on public infrastructure.
“Once folks realize that, it puts less pressure on needing to understand the infrastructure when they’re out and about on the road.”
Stellantis has put out its first fully electric vehicle, the Fiat 500e.
“Part of introducing that vehicle is definitely educating consumers on what it’s like to live with a battery electric vehicle,” explained Brad Horn, product communications manager at Stellantis Canada. “It’s even started with things like educating people on how the federal EV incentives or the provincial ones because that vehicle is going to be introduced in B.C. and in Quebec first.”
The company now plans to have half of its vehicle sales be electric by 2030.
“So while we will build the EVs and market them — we have six of them coming this year — there will still definitely be internal combustion, or PHEV vehicles in our lineup. It’s going to be sort of a mix, and it will have something that will address everybody’s wants.”
And there’s Volvo, which will fully electrify its fleet by 2030.
“Our purpose as a company [is to] provide freedom to move in a personal, sustainable and safe way,” observed Matt Girgis, managing director of Volvo Car Canada. “And we just see the natural evolution of our safety DNA, transitioning into sustainability, which, of course, a big part of that is to reduce tailpipe emissions. So this is our ‘Ambition 2030.’ And we’re committed to that.”
As for the education concept, he noted that the early adopters have bought their EVs and now it’s time to attract the next group of buyers.
“We do see that there is a bit of anxiety still around range, around accessibility,” he said about the next group of buyers.
Over at Ford, they say they understand what the issues are and they’re working to address those concerns.
“So if we take range, for example, so we’re always working on our product to improve range,” said Alexa Desjardins, vehicle line manager for BEV and commercial vehicles, at Ford Motor Company of Canada. “So our engineers are so focused on driving every single kilometre of range that we can get in our vehicles, and we give it to our owners. It’s not just in the new products. We give it through over-the-air updates as soon as there are updates.”
She pointed to range concerns and consumers being so focused on how far a vehicle can go on a single charge rather than assessing daily use case where people will generally travel far less than the occasional road trip. Nevertheless, options are expanding for longer road trips,
“And now we just made a deal with Tesla, where we’re going to unlock 15,000 Superchargers in the spring for our customers,” Desjardins said. “And so we’re always looking at improving our customer experience from a charging perspective.”
CONT'D
EV World: Bridging the knowledge gap
Automakers explore the challenges in getting more Canadians behind the wheel of an electric vehicleConsumer interest in electric vehicles jumped in 2023. In fact, zero-emission vehicles overall saw a greater market share of new vehicle registrations last year.
Data from S&P Global Mobility’s fourth quarter and year-end Canadian Automotive Insights reported ZEVs accounted for 11.7 per cent of new vehicle registrations last year, up from 8.9 per cent in 2022. BEVs accounted for 8.8 per cent while plug-ins made up the remaining 2.8 per cent. Both sets increased form the year before. Hybrids were 10.7 per cent of the market last year, compared to 7 per cent in 2022.
That means internal combustion engines saw its share drop from 84.1 per cent in 2022 to 77.6 per cent last year.
So EVs and alternatives to ICE vehicles are continuing to resonate with buyers in Canada. But that doesn’t mean the path to becoming a fully electrified society is without its bumps.
Education gap
There is still a large knowledge gap between fact and fiction when it comes to electric vehicles in Canada.
“We still get questions about electric vehicles and battery degradation, range, cold weather operation,” said Brian Kingston, president and CEO of the Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers’ Association. He was speaking at TalkAuto, a gathering of automotive professionals representing the dealer, OE and new vehicle supply segments of the industry.
“There’s still a lot of questions that people have legitimate questions,” he added. “So there’s more to be done on education to explain the technology and help many people make the switch.”
Representatives from several automakers agreed with this sentiment this recently. They acknowledged that consumer education is something they need to work on as electrification moves forward. At the Canadian International AutoShow this year, EV World spoke to representatives from Chevrolet, Stellantis, Ford and Volvo about electrifying the Canadian car parc.
Holly Broome, national marketing manager of Chevrolet cars and crossovers, emphasized the important role of education in overcoming range anxiety and other consumer concerns holding Canadians back from making the switch to electric.
“We have to do a lot more education to help customers understand what owning an EV is really like,” she said.
For example, most charging is done at home, reducing pressure on public infrastructure.
“Once folks realize that, it puts less pressure on needing to understand the infrastructure when they’re out and about on the road.”
Stellantis has put out its first fully electric vehicle, the Fiat 500e.
“Part of introducing that vehicle is definitely educating consumers on what it’s like to live with a battery electric vehicle,” explained Brad Horn, product communications manager at Stellantis Canada. “It’s even started with things like educating people on how the federal EV incentives or the provincial ones because that vehicle is going to be introduced in B.C. and in Quebec first.”
The company now plans to have half of its vehicle sales be electric by 2030.
“So while we will build the EVs and market them — we have six of them coming this year — there will still definitely be internal combustion, or PHEV vehicles in our lineup. It’s going to be sort of a mix, and it will have something that will address everybody’s wants.”
And there’s Volvo, which will fully electrify its fleet by 2030.
“Our purpose as a company [is to] provide freedom to move in a personal, sustainable and safe way,” observed Matt Girgis, managing director of Volvo Car Canada. “And we just see the natural evolution of our safety DNA, transitioning into sustainability, which, of course, a big part of that is to reduce tailpipe emissions. So this is our ‘Ambition 2030.’ And we’re committed to that.”
As for the education concept, he noted that the early adopters have bought their EVs and now it’s time to attract the next group of buyers.
“We do see that there is a bit of anxiety still around range, around accessibility,” he said about the next group of buyers.
Over at Ford, they say they understand what the issues are and they’re working to address those concerns.
“So if we take range, for example, so we’re always working on our product to improve range,” said Alexa Desjardins, vehicle line manager for BEV and commercial vehicles, at Ford Motor Company of Canada. “So our engineers are so focused on driving every single kilometre of range that we can get in our vehicles, and we give it to our owners. It’s not just in the new products. We give it through over-the-air updates as soon as there are updates.”
She pointed to range concerns and consumers being so focused on how far a vehicle can go on a single charge rather than assessing daily use case where people will generally travel far less than the occasional road trip. Nevertheless, options are expanding for longer road trips,
“And now we just made a deal with Tesla, where we’re going to unlock 15,000 Superchargers in the spring for our customers,” Desjardins said. “And so we’re always looking at improving our customer experience from a charging perspective.”
CONT'D