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       Manitoba EV incentives finally ready to roll
        
 (HTM) Source
        
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       Manitobans who buy or lease electric vehicles may now apply for the
       rebates NDP Leader Wab Kinew promised during the 2023 provincial
       election campaign.
        
       As of July 2, any Manitoba resident who buys or leases an electric
       vehicle with a manufacturer's suggested list price below $70,000 may
       now apply for a rebate of up to $4,000, provided the purchase or lease
       is made within the province, Environment Minister Tracy Schmidt
       announced.
        
       Anyone who buys or leases a used electric vehicle from a Manitoba
       dealer is eligible for a rebate of up to $2,500.
        
       Retroactive rebates are available for electric vehicle purchases or
       leases made within the province from Aug. 1 to July 2.
        
       The new rebates make Manitoba the seventh Canadian province to offer
       incentives for EV purchases that may be applied on top of federal
       rebates of up to $5,000 for long-range electric vehicles.
        
       "We've seen jurisdictions like British Columbia and Quebec introduced
       these rebate programs early on and we've seen great uptake in in them
       hitting their targets," Schmidt said Tuesday in Winnipeg's South St.
       Vital neighbourhood, accompanied by the owners of two electric
       vehicles.
        
       The environment minister blamed the former PC government for dragging
       its heels on electric rebates.
        
       As of June 1, 2023, only 1.8 per cent of the personal vehicles in
       Manitoba — 16,345 out of 905,763 cars and light trucks overall — were
       hybrid or fully electric, according to Manitoba Public Insurance
       registration data.
        
       That ratio improved to 2.4 per cent this June, or 21,942 out of
       929,236 vehicles, according to MPI.
        
       The institution of EV rebates in Manitoba is thus a "no-brainer" in a
       province with low electricity prices, said Jim Stanford, an economist
       with the Centre for Future Work in Vancouver.
        
       "We've seen vehicle penetration reaching up to 20 per cent of new
       vehicle sales in B.C. and Quebec, compared to only about three per
       cent in Manitoba, according to the latest data," he said in a
       telephone interview from Victoria, B.C.
        
       "So that scale of subsidy makes a lot of sense and having it layered
       on top of the federal subsidy, at least for a few more months, will
       really get the ball going going on EV sales in Manitoba."
        
       While the federal government has extended its electric vehicle subsidy
       to 2026, the rebates are only guaranteed to remain in place until the
       next federal election, slated for 2025.
        
       The NDP government held their announcement in the River Park South
       home of Shelley Kowalchuk, who owns two electric vehicles and plans to
       replace one of them. (Bartley Kives/CBC)
        
       The Manitoba government has set aside $6.25 million a year over the
       next four years for its electric vehicle rebates. Fort Whyte PC MLA
       Obby Khan said if the goal is to reduce carbon emissions, that money
       could be better spent on public transit.
        
       The potential PC leadership candidate — Khan is among several MLAs
       mulling a run — claimed interest in EVs is waning.
        
       "Not everyone in Manitoba is looking to buy a $70,000 vehicle.
       Actually, only a select few people are probably looking to buy a
       vehicle for $70,000," Khan said at the Manitoba Legislative Building.
        
       Khan also said the province has not addressed a looming hydro-electric
       generating capacity crunch that could be exacerbated when more
       consumers replace personal vehicles with internal combustion engines
       with electric vehicles.
        
       Schmidt said the former PC government is to blame for the capacity
       crunch because it did not build any new hydro-electric dams or wind
       farms.
        
       She said her government is still working on a new energy framework but
       would not say when that would be made public.
        
       ### Manitoba rolls out EV rebates
        
       The Manitoba government has unveiled rebates for residents who buy or
       lease electric vehicles, making the province the seventh to offer
       incentives for EV purchases that may be applied on top of federal
       rebates of up to $5,000 for long-range electric vehicles.
        
        
        
        
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