Electric retooling at Stellantis plants part of $16-billion auto sector overhaul
OTTAWA — It has been an electric spring for Canada’s automakers with more than $13 billion promised in just eight weeks to build the needed battery supply chains and shift production from combustion-engine to plug-in vehicles.
That is on top of another $3.5 billion promised in the last four years, including investments to make electric school and transit buses, produce and process critical minerals needed to make batteries, for research and development facilities to push electric vehicle innovation and for retooling assembly lines at major car plants including Stellantis, Ford, General Motors, Honda and Toyota.
“Now Canada will lead in the EV supply chain, both from the mines to the car to the recycling,” Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne said in an interview.
The latest announcement came Monday, a $3.6-billion investment to upgrade the assembly lines at Stellantis’s plants in Windsor and Brampton, Ont., so they can make electric cars.

