End of Quebec electric vehicle rebate will slow shift to cleaner cars: auto dealers
MONTREAL — Automobile dealers and manufacturers say Quebec’s decision to end a rebate for electric vehicle purchases will stop people in the province from buying cleaner cars.
Ian Sam Yue Chi, the president and CEO of the Corporation des concessionnaires d’automobiles, the province’s auto dealers association, said that without the rebate, currently worth up to $7,000, some consumers won’t be able to afford zero-emission electric vehicles.
“It will slow adoption, so we might not meet the targets that had been set by the government. As well, we’re worried about the issue of vehicle affordability, removing these incentives will ultimately make buying vehicles more expensive for Quebecers,” Sam Yue Chi said in an interview Wednesday. “It’s bad news.”
In his budget tabled Tuesday, Quebec Finance Minister Eric Girard said the government will phase out subsidies for electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids beginning next year, before ending them completely in 2027.

