A major pivot is shaking up Canada’s climate and auto industry policy. According to multiple sources including CBC and Reuters, Ottawa is pushing to discard its electric vehicle sales mandate and replace it with a new regulatory approach centered on fuel efficiency and emissions performance.
The decision marks a fundamental shift in how Canada intends to drive decarbonization in one of its most stubbornly emissions-intensive sectors.
The policy that is being shelved would have required a steep increase in zero-emission vehicle (ZEV) sales, including 60 per cent of all new vehicles being electric by 2030 and 100 per cent by 2035.
Under the new framework, that approach gives way to annually tightening fleet-average emissions standards supported by a system of compliance credits that can be traded or carried over by automakers.
EVs still count as zero emissions under the new regime and thus help companies meet these average standards.
On the surface, the pivot strikes the impression of a cut and paste of old rules. The core change reflects a regulatory philosophy found in Europe and other markets where manufacturers are held to average emissions outcomes across their entire new vehicle line-ups, with flexibility on how they achieve those outcomes.
While direct EV quotas are gone, the new rules could still drive electrification in practice because manufacturers face rising costs if they fall short and must buy credits or produce more efficient vehicles.
Behind the scenes in Ottawa, this has been one of the most high-stakes balancing acts of recent years. Prime Minister Mark Carney, who has made climate policy a central piece of his agenda, has been pulled in multiple directions.
Automakers and several provincial leaders feel the old mandate was too rigid and unrealistic, especially as EV sales in Canada have lagged global averages and supply issues remain persistent hurdles.
Critics in the environmental community say the pivot undermines Canada’s credibility in international climate ranks, though Ottawa insists the new approach still commits to deep emissions reductions.
On the industry front, the Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers’ Association and major automakers welcomed the shift toward fuel efficiency standards.
They posit that the new framework provides greater flexibility and market-based incentives to align product strategies without overloading production pipelines already constrained by chip shortages and global supply chain reconfigurations.
This contrasts sharply with earlier criticism of the mandate as an unfair duplication of existing emissions rules, a position voiced in industry filings before Ottawa.
Still, environmental advocates are sounding alarms. Groups like Environmental Defence argue that ditching a binding sales mandate could slow the pace of electrification, particularly if the emissions standards are not stringent enough to compel rapid change.
They worry that without clear yearly sales milestones, EV adoption will continue at a pace that leaves Canada out of sync with broader global markets where ZEV penetration is accelerating.
Consumer groups and EV buyers are also watching closely, with many worried that the new framework could lead to price volatility and uneven availability of affordable EV models.
To offset some of these concerns, Ottawa is planning to reintroduce popular federal incentives for EV purchases, with rebates up to C$5,000 for battery electric and hydrogen vehicles and C$2,500 for plug-in hybrids, albeit with a cap tied to vehicle price and country of origin.
This signal of continued support suggests the government is keen to avoid alienating a public increasingly conscious of transportation emissions.
Those rebates will also be tied to a broader plan to expand charging infrastructure across the country with a C$1.5 billion investment, and new programs are being crafted to help the domestic industry diversify into global markets beyond the United States.
This broader national automotive strategy is meant to position Canada as a competitive hub for cleaner vehicles rather than just a passive consumer market.
But even as Ottawa insists the shift is forward-looking, critics say the political winds have played a large role. Canada has scaled back other climate regulations in recent months, including proposed caps on oil and gas sector emissions.
These policy retreats come alongside similar moves in major markets like the United States, where fuel economy standards have also been relaxed in recent years, influencing cross-border regulatory dynamics.
This story is still unfolding as Ottawa prepares to unveil the full details of its national automotive strategy and emissions standards in the coming weeks. What is clear already is that Canada’s approach to electrification and climate policy will look very different than it did just a year ago.
The implications for automakers, consumers, climate targets and global competitiveness promise to reverberate well beyond Ottawa’s corridors.
Sources: Reuters
2026-02-09T15:05:43Z