Commentary
The federal government has mandated that all new light-duty vehicles be electric by 2035. Achieving that goal would require vastly more electrical generation capacity and an enormous expansion of charging stations.
That leaves the natural gas plants. But powering EVs with natural gas puts the kibosh on zero emissions.
The cost of building and operating 13 new gas plants would be enormous. Who would pay for them? It’s virtually impossible to separate power billing by source, so they need to be rolled into existing electricity rates. That would increase costs for Canadian businesses, many of which are already struggling. And it might even lead inflation-weary citizens to take to the streets with or without their trucks.
The only alternative would be huge nationwide power subsidies in a country already carrying a massive national debt.
Meanwhile, EV drivers pay nothing.
Apart from the obvious unfairness, Ottawa’s EV mandate would gradually remove gasoline and diesel vehicles from the road. When they’re gone, who’s going to pay to maintain the roads for all those EVs to travel on?
Therefore, the answer to the question of whether the shift to electric vehicles will have any net environmental benefit is clearly no. The human cost of trying to meet the EV targets will be profoundly negative.
Those factors alone make it highly unlikely that Ottawa’s ban on gasoline vehicles will actually happen. But the biggest reason it will fail is that people don’t want it.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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