Windsor embraces U.S. changing course on EV incentive that excluded Canadian vehicles - Action News
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Windsor embraces U.S. changing course on EV incentive that excluded Canadian vehicles

Word that the U.S. is steering awayfrom anelectric vehicle tax incentive planthat excluded Canadian-built vehiclesis driving optimism in Canada's automotive capital.

Proposed legislation would mean $7,500 US rebate on Canadian, U.S.-made vehicles

A sign reads
A sign at Stellantis' planned Windsor EV battery manufacturing facility, pictured in a March 2023 file photo. (CBC News)

Word that the U.S. is steering awayfrom a tax incentivethat excludedCanadian-built electric vehicles is driving optimism in Canada's automotive capital.

"This is great news for Canadian workers, and our industry," said Dave Cassidy, president of Unifor Local 444. The union represents workers at the Stellantisplant in Windsor, Ont., where a hybridEV, the Chrysler Pacificaminivan, is built.

Cassidyis among many in the auto industry and the Windsor-Essex region who are welcoming news that, under proposed legislation, U.S. consumers could buy Canadian-made vehicles and still avail of rebates.

The original plan, which only included U.S.-made vehicles,was the subject of anxietyand lobbying effortsfrom the industry on the Canadian side of the border.

The Stellantis Windsor Assembly Plant in Windsor, Ont., is shown in a file photo. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

The $7,500 US creditfor "clean vehicles" which includesbattery-electric,plug-in hybrid and hydrogen fuel cell is part of$369 billion in new spending on energy- and climate-related projects included in the proposed Inflation Reduction Act announced late Wednesday.

U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer and Sen. Joe Manchin, both Democrats,reached a deal to include the credit and a series of othertax and investmentinitiatives aimed at expanding the clean energy sector and spurringadoption of EVs in the bill.

But, as Cassidypointed out, the billisnota done deal. Schumer said the U.S. Senate isexpected to vote on the proposed legislation next week, and it would next go to the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives.

'Existential threat' to Canadian sector

One of the people involved in efforts to get the U.S. government to reconsiderthe "Buy American" policy element isFlavio Volpe,presidentof Canada's Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association.

He said the Canadian auto sector makes about twomillion vehicles per year about 85 per cent of which are destined for the U.S. market.

The moveaway from thepolicy means that billions in recent auto investments, in Canada and specifically in Windsor-Essex, can"hit the runway and start to take flight," he said.

Stellantis has big plans forEV production in Windsor and Brampton, announcing a $3.6-billion plan to retool and modernize the plants.

Marco Veliz Castro is a Ph.D student at the University of Windsor who studies electric vehicles. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

It's also partnering with LG Energy Solution on a $4.9-billion electric vehicle battery plant expected to be operational by 2024.

"If that U.S. tax credit came as originally proposed, I think it threatened ...the build up and the existence of those investments," Volpe said.

"I think Stellantis and LG took an educated guess, and bet on Windsor."

Change could drive innovation

Marco Veliz Castro, a second-year Ph.Dstudent in electrical engineering at the University of Windsor, studieselectric vehicles and is doing work on power trains.

"I see a lot of future in this industry and so I wanted to specialize in this to further expand Canada's automotive industry," he said.

Under Canada's zero-emission vehicle incentive program, the maximum rebate is $5,000. (Darrin Di Carlo/CBC)

He saidthat whilethe formerpolicy would have undermined Canada's efforts in EV manufacturing, the inclusion of Canadian-produced vehicles in the incentive could help driveinnovation.

"We do a lot of work with industry partners and so, these incentives would further drive the EV industry, so [we] would probably likely see further strengthening of our partnerships with our existing partners, and also potentially fostering new opportunities," he said.

It's not just the scrapping of the "Buy American" part of the billthat isgenerating a positive reaction.

Rakesh Naidu, president and CEO of Windsor-Essex Regional Chamber of Commerce,pointed out that thepolicy also includes billions in incentives forU.S. companies to retooland setup EV manufacturing facilities.

That could be good news for Windsor-Essex, too.

"We are in atightly integratedindustry where products cross the border several timesand Ontario and Canada [are a]very important, very vital part of that supply chain," he said.

"So as long as[United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement] rules apply and the Canadian industry is offered a fair chance to offer its products and offer its components, we would receive any news of incentives very positively, because what it does is it really propels the industry forward."

With files from the Jacob Barker, Canadian Press, Kazi Stastna and Katie Simpson