In the past 48 hours, the electric vehicles industry shows mixed signals amid policy shifts and trade tensions. Global EV sales hit 1.2 million units in January 2026, a strong start to the year, though specific February data remains limited.[4]
Canada dominates recent headlines with its February 5 automotive strategy, replacing the strict EV Availability Standard with flexible greenhouse gas emissions rules targeting 75 percent EV adoption by 2035.[2] A new five-year affordability program offers up to 5,000 dollars for battery EVs and 2,500 dollars for plug-in hybrids under 50,000 dollars, excluding non-free-trade vehicles except Canadian-made ones.[2][3] Charging infrastructure funding doubles to 1.5 billion dollars.[2] Partnerships with South Korea for battery production and China allowing 49,000 Chinese EVs at 6.1 percent tariffs aim to boost supply chains, drawing U.S. criticism over integrated North American trade.[3][4][8]
In the U.S., Trumps EPA rolled back climate rules on February 12, cutting new vehicle costs by 2,400 dollars and easing EV mandates, contrasting Canadas incentives.[7] Stellantis sold its 49 percent stake in Ontarios NextStar Energy battery plant to LG on February 6, signaling scaled-back investments amid weak demand.[6]
India sees Chinese firms as rising EV contenders, with Volkswagen cutting development costs while seeking partners.[1] Consumer behavior shifts toward affordable models, but U.S. tariffs loom large at the Canadian International AutoShow opening February 13.[3]
Compared to prior months, this marks a pivot from rigid mandates to incentives and trade deals, with leaders like Detroit Three slowing EV rollouts after 50 billion dollars in losses.[10] Supply chains gain resilience via Asia ties, though geopolitical risks persist. Overall, affordability drives adoption, but uncertainty clouds growth.[2][3]
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