Anonymous writes: OTTAWA (CBC) - The founder of a Canadian-made, 100 per cent electric car says the federal government is blocking him from selling his cars in Canada.
The ZENN (zero emissions, no noise) electric car is already being sold in the United States, Mexico, and Europe, where it has won awards.
The two-seater is built in St. Jerome, Que., by Toronto-based ZENN Motor Company. It is roughly the same size as the Mini-Cooper, and would sell for approximately $14,000.
Company founder Ian Clifford says Canadians haven't heard much about the car because Ottawa won't let him sell it here.
"We're
getting road blocks thrown up in front of us every attempt down the
road, and it's getting to the point now where we're almost giving up on
Canada," said Clifford.
The car is considered a
low-speed urban vehicle with a regulated maximum speed of 40 km/h. It's
designed for areas where speed limits are 50 km/h or less, such as city
core or neighbourhood-type driving, said Clifford.
British Columbia is the only Canadian province to legislate this type of vehicle, he said.
The
ZENN car has met all the regulatory requirements in the United States,
the same regulations adopted by Transport Canada in 2000.
Transport Canada response
When
asked why the cars won't be licensed in Canada, Harry Baergen, a senior
regulatory enforcement engineer with Transport Canada provided the
following responses to CBC News:
CBC: "[Has the ZENN car] met the regulatory requirement?" Baergen: "They haven't met our requirements yet, no."
Baergen then says ZENN has met the requirements:
Baergen:
"They've showed us that it meets requirements as an LSV (low-speed
vehicle)." CBC: "They have shown that to you?" Baergen: "Yes."
Baergen then says the licensing regulations are under review.
"Our definition is presently being clarified because there is a little bit of a broadness in it," he said.
Founder frustrated
Clifford says he's frustrated by the federal government's position.
"Every
time you have a conversation with Transport Canada it's a different
story. The reality is, we meet the regulation," he said.
He says low-speed vehicles such as scooters or bicycles are already on the roads in Canada.
"Last
week the prime minister said we can't meet our Kyoto protocols and
every electric vehicle that's on the road, you offset six tonnes of CO2
emissions, per vehicle," said Clifford.
With the dollar on the rise and no Canadian market, Clifford says he's not sure how long his company can hold on.