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Canada, Ontario commit millions for Honda plant upgrades to manufacture hybrid cars

Canada's prime minister and Ontario's premier announced millions in funding support for domestic hybrid car production on Tuesday but both leaders dodged questions on the possibility of incentives to help Canadians buy them.
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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (right) stands with Francois Phillipe Champagne (centre right), Federal Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry, Vic Fedeli (centre left) Ontario Minister of Economic Job Development and Trade, and Ontario Premier Doug Ford, as they visit a production line at a Honda plant in Alliston, Ont., on Wednesday, March 16, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

Canada's prime minister and Ontario's premier announced millions in funding support for domestic hybrid car production on Tuesday but both leaders dodged questions on the possibility of incentives to help Canadians buy them. 

Justin Trudeau and Doug Ford were in Alliston, Ont., on Wednesday to formally announce the $131.6 million each government has committed to spend on upgrades at a Honda manufacturing plant that will eventually build the 2023 CR-V and CR-V Hybrid vehicles.

Both leaders said the plan would help ensure good local auto sector jobs into the future.

"These investments will ensure Honda Canada builds its next generation models like hybrids right here in Ontario to be sold right across North America," Ford said. 

"This means the cars of the future will be built right here by Ontario workers using Ontario resources."

Honda said the retooling project would cost $1.4 billion over six years.

Trudeau said projects like Honda's will help Canada make a sustainable economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

"That means understanding where the world is going and celebrating the fact that Honda sees that and sees Canada and Canadians as essential partners in moving forward that way," he said.

Ford has said he wants to ramp up electric and hybrid vehicle manufacturing in Ontario. Last year his government announced a 10-year plan to make more batteries, vehicles and parts in the province, train more auto workers and eventually mine for minerals in northern Ontario. 

But Ford's Progressive Conservatives have not committed to offering incentives like rebates for buyers, after cancelling a rebate of up to $14,000 for electric vehicle buyers brought in by the former Liberal government, which Ford at the time called a support for rich people. 

Electric vehicle sales plummeted when Ford scrapped the rebate in 2018. 

When asked Wednesday if he would bring back the rebate, Ford didn't directly answer though he suggested his policy move had boosted sales.

"Since we've been in office, electric vehicles have tripled in sales, so I guess that was a good decision," he claimed, pointing to his government's plans to support vehicle production in other ways. "We're putting money back into electric vehicles."

The Progressive Conservatives also stopped building electric vehicle charging stations after forming government. On Wednesday Ford said the province is building road infrastructure and would keep adding charging infrastructure "as the market demands it." 

Trudeau also did not directly comment when asked whether Ontario should bring back the rebate, instead saying the federal government was happy to work with the province on the Honda announcement.

"We're going to continue to make sure that automakers invest in the jobs of the future and in the cars of the future across the country," he said.

Provincial opposition politicians, gearing up for an early June election, pledged on Wednesday to bring back buyer rebates. 

The Ontario Liberals promised Wednesday to give families rebates up to $8,000 for buying or leasing a zero emissions vehicle and $1,500 for purchasing charging equipment. The party said an elected Liberal government would make charging stations more widely available in apartment buildings, parking lots, city streets and transit stations through a 30 per cent subsidy for charging infrastructure.

The provincial Greens said they would offer cash incentives up to $10,000 for buyers of electric vehicles, introduce low-cost financing for the cars and promised to expand charging infrastructure.

The party said it was "relieved" to see Ford investing in electric vehicles after past cuts, but leader Mike Schreiner said incentives are needed to help people make the transition. 

"We need to get big oil out of our pocketbooks and make life more affordable by helping people switch to electric and avoid sky high prices at the pumps," Schreiner said in a written statement. 

"Without a real plan to make EVs more affordable and accessible, driving electric will remain out of reach for far too many Ontario families."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 16, 2022.

Holly McKenzie-Sutter, The Canadian Press