Trade Wars: Episode 2, Canada's Auto Strategy Strikes Back
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Canada's $7.5B Automotive Gambit: Scrapping the EV Mandate, Courting China, and Racing Against CUSMA
Episode Description:
Prime Minister Mark Carney just announced the most significant shift in Canadian automotive policy since the 1965 Auto Pact. On February 5th, 2026, Canada repealed its EV mandate and committed $7.5 billion to a radically different strategy—one that bets on trade diversification over U.S. dependency.
What's Inside This Deep Dive:
Steve and Claire break down Carney's five-pillar strategy that's reshaping Canada's automotive future:
• $7.5B Financial Breakdown: $3B Strategic Response Fund, $2.3B EV rebates, $1.5B charging infrastructure, plus the game-changing Productivity Super-Deduction cutting investment taxes to 13%
• Technology-Neutral Approach: Scrapping rigid EV sales targets for emissions standards—but the government admits their 57% reduction modeling won't be ready until late 2026
• The China Play: Exactly 49,000 Chinese EVs annually at 6.1% tariff, with BYD and Chery in "active conversations" for Canadian joint ventures
• Toyota-Honda Dominance: These two Japanese manufacturers now produce 77% of Canadian vehicles—but Toyota says Trump's tariffs make Ontario "unsustainable"
• CUSMA's Make-or-Break Moment: The July 1st, 2026 review could reshape North American automotive forever
Industry Voices Featured:
- Brian Kingston (Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers Association): "The mandate was disconnected from reality"
- Tim Reuss (Canadian Automobile Dealers Association): Calls it a "strong commitment" responding to "market realities"
- Lana Payne (Unifor): "The free ride must end" for companies taking from Canada's $100B market
- Pierre Poilievre's sharp criticism: "Subsidizing American vehicles and killing Canadian jobs"
The Missing Pieces: What the strategy doesn't address—provincial coordination beyond Ontario, Indigenous community consultation, dealership network impacts, cybersecurity frameworks for Chinese vehicles, and implementation gaps that could determine success or failure.
Why This Matters Now: Canada faces simultaneous crises: U.S. tariff devastation, Detroit Three retreat, and the most compressed automotive transformation timeline in decades. Assembly plant employment dropped from 32,700 (2015) to 23,700 (2024)—before the tariff impact.
This isn't just about Canada. It's about how automot
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