B.C. abandons EV rebates to the Feds as it scraps sales mandate of 100% by 2035
VICTORIA — British Columbia has abandoned a rebate program for electric vehicles that it paused six months ago and is scrapping a mandate that every new vehicle sold in the province must be zero-emission by 2035, as Energy Minister Adrian Dix shifted goal-setting, cash incentives and blame for high electric-vehicle prices to Ottawa.
Dix said the 100-per-cent sales goal, and a 90-per-cent target for 2030 were no longer “realistic,” and the government saw rebates “as a federal responsibility.”
“The rebate programs were never intended to be permanent,” Dix said of the provincial scheme that offered up to $4,000 for battery-electric-vehicle buyers before it was paused in May.
Dix told reporters in Victoria that the NDP government would introduce legislation next year to revise B.C.’s mandates, bringing them in line with targets the federal government is expected to announce in coming months.


