Baffled by long wait times for some EVs in Canada? I looked for answers - The Globe and Mail When I ordered my Hyundai Ioniq 5, in late 2021, I was warned it would take about eight months to get my electric vehicle, given the high demand and disrupted supply-chain networks. I was delighted when it took a mere four months. Turns out, I was lucky. Today, my local Hyundai dealership in Toronto isn’t even taking orders for EVs, because wait times have stretched beyond two years. Models have disappeared from the showroom. No wonder I instinctively acknowledge every other Ioniq 5 owner I encounter with a nod or wave – sometimes subtle, sometimes not – as though we belong to an elite club of Model T owners. But wait a minute: I’m also reading about unsold EVs piling up on the lots of car dealerships in the United States. According to Cox Automotive, U.S. dealers have more than 100 days of unsold EVs – almost 91,000 vehicles at the end of June, excluding Teslas – which is about double the days’ supply of new vehicles overall. The startling figure has pushed some EV skeptics to conclude that the market for EVs has stalled. Can there really be a shortage of EVs in Canada and a glut to the south? The answer, it turns out, is yes – but for reasons that are unlikely to persist. In Canada, a Hyundai salesman blamed the dearth of new electric vehicles here on lithium shortages. It sounds plausible, since the element is a key component in the large batteries that power the vehicles and observers are warning that shortages could emerge. But not now. Albemarle Corp the world’s largest lithium producer, expects demand will outstrip supply in 2030. Boston Consulting Group is using a similar timeline and warns that the supply gap could grow acute by 2035. What’s more, a lithium shortage doesn’t explain why the U.S. has loads of unsold vehicles. More likely, EVs are simply more popular in Canada – perhaps because of our cleaner electricity sources, including vast hydroelectric capacity – which may have taken some automakers by surprise. “With its smaller market than the United States, it was believed that the EV market in Canada would be proportionately smaller as well. In many cases, EV sales are proportionately stronger in Canada,” Sam Fiorani, vice-president of global vehicle forecasting at AutoForecast Solutions LLC, told me via e-mail. He mentioned several examples. The Canadian car market is one-ninth the size of its U.S. counterpart, due largely to population differences, yet Canadian sales of the Chevrolet Bolt are about double that ratio. Sales of the new Toyota bZ4X are almost four times higher. And Mazda MX-30 sales this year are almost five times the total volume sold in the U.S., where sales were recently halted. Conversely, some automakers may have been too optimistic about EV demand in the United States. They increased production of some models to the point where they have overwhelmed dealer inventories – at a time when some consumers remain sidelined by concerns about battery range and hopped-up horror stories about charging, in addition to higher borrowing costs. According to a July report from Juniper Research, a lack of public charging infrastructure is severely limiting EV adoption in urban environments, particularly among consumers living in apartments where home charging is not an option. Despite these wrinkles, Ford Motor Co.has sharply increased output of its Mustang Mach-E, but sales haven’t followed suit. That led to higher U.S. inventories that may be skewing the overall number of unsold vehicles this year, according to Mr. Fiorani. “This current situation is temporary as the industry struggles with growing pains in the electric vehicle market,” he said, adding that the industry is “balancing production, sales and pricing, all of which are unknown quantities.” There is also the issue of vehicle profitability to consider. Tesla Inc. has figured out how to make money on EV sales. It reported a profit of US$2.7-billion in the second quarter, up 20 per cent year-over-year, despite slashing prices on some of its models. Other automakers, though, are losing money on their EV sales, offering little incentive to boost output to satisfy consumer demand in Canada. After Ford released its latest quarterly financial numbers, on July 27, it raised its full-year outlook for overall earnings before interest and taxes to between US$11-billion and US$12-billion in 2023. But its EV division is now expected to lose US$4.5-billion this year – much deeper than the US$3-billion loss the automaker had projected. Given these hiccups, Ford is now scaling back plans to expand its EV output. Previously, it said it would produce 600,000 EVs annually by the end of 2023, but the company has now pushed that production threshold back by a year. The takeaway? Consumers buying EVs today may feel like early adopters. But automakers are also facing uncertainty, leading to the current challenge of feeding the right number of cars into the right markets. For some consumers, though, there may be an opportunity here. After visiting the Toronto Hyundai dealership, I popped into the Ford dealership next door, where I kicked the tires on a fine-looking Mustang Mach-E in the showroom. The wait time? None.
only tesla, bolt and id4 get $7,500. fed tax credit here, whereas, i think i read many places in canada offer $5,000. on any ev? regardless, the problem here is that the only ev's collecting dust start at 50k and go up. sure you can get a leaf for 28k, but who wants one?
To get the Canadian rebates, the cars have to be BEV or PHEV with a minimum all electric range- think it's changed.... maybe 50km? There's a $5k federal rebate for 50km or more, $2500 if it's less, and some of the provinces offer additional rebates. But it's literally years to get a Rav4Prime, and only BC and Quebec offer the bz4x... though I hear the (more expensive) Subaru variant is available nation wide.
Rav 4 primes are finally available here, one to a dealer or less. Bz4x are another sitting on lots. Overpriced and nobody wants them
The Rav4 Prime had limited supply since its introduction. Toyota planned to ship only 5000 to the US for its first year. Demand was, and remains, higher than what Toyota planned for. It's mainly a lack of batteries. Toyota didn't expect to need so many, and now have more models that require them. They could get more, but at higher cost. BC and Quebec have the more generous incentives? Toyota ships plug ins to states where they need ZEV credits, then those with good incentives first. They will also block sales into other states. At least until production volume increases.
Ignoring the effects of some EVs getting the rebate while others don't leads to a faulty conclusion. When you compare a Tesla Model Y that gets a $7500 rebate with an Ioniq 5 that gets no rebate, it isn't difficult to understand why one is sitting on lots.
Interesting discussion, but I was kept wondering when I would get to the reason "Gen 5 Prius Main Forum" sent me notice of a new thread
to many bean counters for Hunday,Toyota GM for the EV market in Canada . Tesla is thinking outside the box and it shows in sales , several years in a row,of EV my province ! you don't have to wait to long to get one
because you signed up for notices? Figured the original post could be of interest to anyone planning to buy a Gen 5. Here in Ontario Canada I’ve been accosted by a # of Toyota dealers inviting me to join a year long wait list for a Prius Prime. Never mind the 2 year + list (if they’ll put you on one) for a Rav4Prime.
Shortage is across the board, not just Electric Vehicles? Checked our nearby Toyota dealership, for a laugh; current their new car inventory is ONE Tacoma. About the same as last time I checked, 3~4 months back.
a friend in Montreal, PQ (home of generous provincial rebates) says he could have a Solterra or bz4z pretty quicky, but a phev Rav4Prime is years away... as is a Lexus Phev.
Oh yes, by the way the only Prius Prime 2023 I saw was on a Billboard Highway sign .(home of generous provincial rebates impossible to get a PHEV quickly
Your right my dealer has new looking (clean)used cars on new show floor with fake new car stickers! a lot of big Tacoma Trucks mostly, salesman said they are still selling all allocations Hybrid or not off the transport truck! now Gas prices going up $.40 cents a gallon at a crack last week!
My nextdoor neighbor has 2020 Corolla Le , he went to the dealer for an oil change ,they asked him if he was interrested for a 2023 ....same model (ICE only) they also told him a 6 months wait for it ...so maybe a 2024 ! incredible ! the showroom is almost filled with used models