Automakers ask government for more detailed EV chargers plan to meet sales targets
OTTAWA — A new analysis of Canada’s electric vehicle charging demands suggests we’ll need to more than double the number of public chargers within the next three years and then quadruple it by the end of the decade.
But some of the country’s biggest automakers aren’t convinced the federal government is being ambitious or co-ordinated enough in its approach to electric vehicle charging to hit its sales targets for battery-powered cars, trucks and SUVs.
Those targets — which were increased in March — intend to require 20 per cent of all passenger vehicle sales to be electric by 2026, 60 per cent by 2030 and 100 per cent by 2035.
Dunsky Energy and Climate Advisers was commissioned by Natural Resources Canada to do an analysis of the charging needs to meet those goals. The full report is not yet public, but Jeff Turner, a senior researcher at Dunsky, said in an interview estimates suggest Canada will need 50,000 public chargers by 2025, between 195,000 and 201,000 by 2030 and between 1.8 million and 5.6 million by 2050.


