Mercedes-Benz is pushing back the Canadian launch of its first full EV

2020 Mercedes-Benz EQCHandout / Mercedes-Benz Mercedes-Benz is delaying the Canadian release of its EQC, its first full battery-electric vehicle, by more than a year as it focuses on the vehicles launch in Europe.The SUV was originally intended to enter our market in spring 2020, but according to reports from American news outlets, its now being delayed to 2021.The EQC launch in Europe and other markets earlier in 2019 generated high interest worldwide for the EQC. In a recent direction from Daimler AG, it is a strategic decision to first support the growing customer demand for the EQC in Europe, Mercedes-Benz Canada told Driving.As a result of this decision, the Canadian and U.S. market launch dates of the Mercedes-Benz EQC will be rescheduled to 2021 (originally Q1 2020).So yes, the Great White North will be the Wait White North for a little while, while Mercedes readies its first true EV for the masses. While it may very well be Europeans buy more EVs than North Americans do, causing Benzs shift in focus as it says, it could also be because it gives the company a chance to update the EQC for the North American market.As it sits now, the SUV only gets about 200 miles (320 km) of range per charge. Thats just not enough for most people, especially considering the vastness of Canada. Mercedes-Benz has promised to announce 10 all-electric models by 2022, to meet stricter European emissions regulations. By 2030, European automakers will be required to reduce their fleet emissions by 37.5
Origin: Mercedes-Benz is pushing back the Canadian launch of its first full EV

Canadian gov’t will charge VW with violating environment law via emissions tests

A staff member cleans the logo of a SUV VW Touareg on display ahead of the annual general meeting of German carmaker Volkswagen, in Berlin on May 3, 2018.Tobias Schwarz / Getty Images The federal government is charging Volkswagen for allegedly importing cars into Canada that company executives knew violated emissions standards.The German automaker faces 58 charges for violating the Canadian Environmental Protection Act for bringing 128,000 cars into Canada with illegal emissions between 2008 and 2015.The company faces another two charges for providing misleading information.Canadas case against Volkswagen comes more than four years after the company admitted to installing software on 11 million cars worldwide to trick emissions-testing equipment into concluding the cars ran more cleanly than they actually did.Volkswagen pleaded guilty to charges in the case in the United States in March 2017 and was fined more than $4.3 billion.The companys first court appearance on the Canadian charges is to take place
Origin: Canadian gov’t will charge VW with violating environment law via emissions tests

20$ million are dropped in the Canadian city where our first electric cars rolled

Last Friday, Quebecs Minister of Economy and Innovation, Pierre Fitzgibbon, fought Highway 15s busy traffic heading north to St. Jerome, bringing with him $20 million in much needed funding and subsidies.He stopped off first at a conglomerate of seven Quebec companies specializing in heavy electric vehicles, namely the commercial EV platform developed by Compagnie Électrique Lion and underlying its St.-Jerome-built electric school buses (sold mostly to California).The $7.9-million provincial contribution should help materialize projects like electric ambulances, dump trucks and firetrucks, which together could reduce greenhouse gas emissions totaling nearly 3 million tons of CO2 over a horizon of ten years, reads the press release.While that news garnered the most headlines, the real deal, was the non-profit connecting those companies, the beneficiary of the largest portion $12.7 million of governmental aid: L’Institut du Véhicule Innovant (The Innovative Vehicle Institute, or IVI). St. Jerome: Where “modern” EVs were first testedThanks to IVI, Ville de Saint-Jérome has been a hot-bed of EV development for more than 20 years. In the beginning, it was all about electric cars remember in 1996, Tesla wasnt even a gleam in Elons eye and the garage-laboratoire, then named CEVEQ (Centre d’expertise du véhicule électrique du Québec), was something of a global pioneer.It made Laurentians capital the first Canadian city inundated with zero-emission cars. An electric Citron Berlingo was used by municipal administration; local police drove an electrified Peugeot 106. And the corporation helped develop and commercialize the St. Jerome-assembled ZENN, a Zero Emission No Noise low-speed two-seater. (If you dont remember the ZENN, its because it barely sold 500 units from 2006 to 2010, mainly Stateside.)At that time, we were a voice in the wilderness, says IVIs executive director, Franois Adam. Then, around 2010, electric passenger cars took off with the likes of Nissan Leaf and Chevrolet Volt. Since 2015, the Institute has focused on electrifying heavy-duty vehicles, industrial equipment and even autonomous machinerie.More square feet — for crazier ideasSo, yes, Quebec has a specialized think tank bringing to life all kinds of strange vehicles for clients who want to reduce their carbon footprint. Theres the MadVac, from Longueuils Exprolink, an electric garbage collector currently cleaning up New Yorks Central Park; the Manufacture Adria, from Rouyn-Noranda, a piece of specialized electric mining equipment. IVI helped with the Lion electric school bus mentioned above, as well as electric motorcycles and boats.In the last five years, IVI worked with 120 companies from all over La Belle Province, generating more than $12 million of retombées, says its executive director. While initiating those commercial and industrial energy efficiency solutions, its also been training future technicians IVIs a collegiate center of technology transfer, affiliated with Cégep de Saint-Jérôme.But until now, IVIs 30 employees were spread out between the downtown college and a business park, its current garage-laboratoire so small only one project can be tackled at a time. Theres no room in this 100-square-meter laboratory to welcome any other innovation en devenir.Thats about to change, with the $12.7 million issued by Quebecs Infrastructures for Research and Innovation. The money, plus some land granted by the city of St. Jerome and another $1.3 million from IVIs own pockets, will help erect a new 2,712-square-meter building uniting the firms employees under one roof, while adding a much-needed bigger prototyping room.The new pavilion should be ready early 2022. We have so many interesting projects but with our current limited space, were always on the brake, says Adam. With this new facility, not only will we add 10 haute technologie jobs, but well quadruple our laboratory
Origin: 20$ million are dropped in the Canadian city where our first electric cars rolled

Canadian university working on radar to detect kids forgotten in back seats

In the U.S., 751 children have died of heatstroke in cars since 1998.Getty Researchers at the University of Waterloo in Ontario have developed an inexpensive sensor that triggers an alarm when children or pets are left behind in vehicles.Some vehicles currently warn drivers to check the rear seat when they exit the vehicle the system is triggered when the rear doors are opened before driving, suggesting a child might be buckled into a seat but dont actually detect if anyones there.In the U.S., its estimated an average of 38 children die each year of heatstroke after they’ve been forgotten and left behind in a hot car. In 2018 the number was 51, the highest on record.The Waterloo project was partly funded by a major automotive parts manufacturer and could be on the market by the end of 2020. It uses radar technology combined with artificial intelligence, and its inventors say it can detect unattended children or animals with 100-per-cent accuracy.The tiny sensor is designed to mount in the ceiling or on the rearview mirror. It sends out radar signals that are reflected back by both live and inanimate objects in the vehicle, and can penetrate the seats to look for rear-facing child seats. The AI then analyzes the signals and looks for breathing movements. If a child or pet is detected, the system sounds an alarm and prevents the doors from locking. Graduate students Mostafa Alizadeh, left, and Hajar Abedi position a doll, modified to simulate breathing, in a minivan during testing of a new sensor. University of Waterloo It addresses a serious, worldwide problem, said George Shaker, an engineering professor at the university, who said the system is so affordable it could become standard equipment in all vehicles.Because the device determines how many people are in the vehicle and where they are sitting, the information could also potentially be used to qualify for carpool lanes or toll rates. The researchers are also exploring the ability to monitor the drivers vital signs to look for distraction, impairment, fatigue or
Origin: Canadian university working on radar to detect kids forgotten in back seats

Halifax police taking delivery of Canadian armored truck in 2020

The Halifax Regional Police will take delivery of a new armored vehicle come spring of 2020, a decision thats stirred up some controversy, Global News reports.The Terradyne Gurkha MPV will cost the municipality $368,000; that sounds like a lot of money, but its a lot less than the $500,000 the city had budgeted for.The contract was awarded to southern-Ontario-based Terradyne Armored Vehicles Inc. on September 23, according to Brendan Elliott, a spokesperson for the municipality. According to HRP, the vehicle will provide a level of safety for the officers and the public, while helping them address the climbing number of issues they encounter. It has also stated the vehicle would not be equipped with weaponry or aggressive equipment.Critics of the vehicle say it makes local law enforcement too militaristic, particularly in the context of being used to police marginalized and minority groups around the city.This isnt the first time armored vehicles have been used by smaller police departments, and the results have been mixed.Fredericton Police Force unveil their armored vehicle in April 2018, and Frederictons Emergency Response Team have used it a few times. The vehicle was also deployed in August of 2018 during the fatal shooting of two Fredericton police officers.The New Glasgow, N.S. police force decided they didnt need their armored vehicle after owning it four years. The 10-ton vehicle with rotating turret was provided to the town free of charge as surplus from the Canadian military, but the police chief said We really have not had any use for that since weve had
Origin: Halifax police taking delivery of Canadian armored truck in 2020

Lawsuit against Kia alleges Canadian owners being misled about maintenance

2020 Kia TellurideNick Tragianis / Driving A group of Canadian Kia owners are filing a class-action lawsuit against the automaker, claiming theyre being misled about how often their vehicles need to be serviced.According to the owners manual in most Kia vehicles, routine service should be performed every 12,000 km. Thats what Thrse Martel read in the booklet when she purchased her new Rio in 2012, hoping for a vehicle thatd require less maintenance due to her long commute.However, when she brought her car in for its first service, reports the CBC, she was told the 12,000-kilometre interval indicated in the owners manual didnt apply to vehicles sold in Quebec.Kia says most of Canada falls under what is considered a severe usage schedule for maintenance, which means vehicles must in fact be serviced every 6,000 km, twice as often as the manual states, if owners want to maintain their warranty coverage.Martel is seeking $985 in damages, the amount she claims she lost due to the extra service shes had to book. If the lawsuit is successful, it could apply to other owners as well.In a statement to the CBC, parent company Hyundai Canada remarked all of Canada is considered a severe usage area due to the harsh weather.Across the automotive industry, harsh weather/temperature is one of the most important considerations for vehicle maintenance, the automaker wrote. Canadas weather is largely considered to be severe due to our harsh winters and vehicle maintenance should reflect
Origin: Lawsuit against Kia alleges Canadian owners being misled about maintenance

A Fredericton Tim Hortons is creating a most Canadian traffic problem

Customers line up at a Tim Hortons on Sunday, Sept. 8, 2019. The City of Fredericton will spend $40,000 to direct motorists around a busy Tim Hortons, in the latest move by a Canadian municipality to curb traffic headaches and other concerns caused by restaurant drive-thrus.Andrew Vaughan / The Canadian Press Exhibited now by logjams at the corner of Wallace and Main in Fredericton, New Brunswicks north side, the biggest traffic issue now facing the city council intersection-blocking lineups into a Tim Hortons has its origins in a 2003 solution.There may be no traffic problem more Canadian than a thoroughfare snarled by a Tim Hortons drive-thru, aside from a drive-thru that backs up in part because a municipality attempted to provide easier access to a snow dump 16 years prior.Thats the situation in Fredericton, where city staff pitched the idea of a turnabout in late September only to see the issue tabled, CBC reports. Councillor John MacDermid questions which party bears responsibility for fixing the gridlock. Whose responsibility is it to deal with those unintended consequences? MacDermid asks. Is it the taxpayer or is it the users and the business owners? Drive-thru customers at the 290 Main Street Tim Hortons location pass through the traffic lights at a busy four-way intersection before quickly entering the Tims off Wallace Avenue. Not surprisingly, the lineup disrupts the intersection and creates headaches on Main Street and the opposing end of Wallace Avenue, as well.The recommendation brought to council by staff would require double-double drinkers to drive farther up Wallace Avenue, pass Tim Hortons on their way through a legal U-turn, and then venture back toward Tim Hortons for a right turn into the drive-thru. Expected to cost $40,000, the project was expected to begin before winter.Winter, of course, is partly to blame for all of the trouble. Wallace Avenue was constructed as a way for heavy truck traffic to make their way to, you guessed it, a snow dump.Tim Hortons and snow dumps: throw in a few apologies and youd have a Canadiana trifecta.Fredericton city council will revisit the issue on October
Origin: A Fredericton Tim Hortons is creating a most Canadian traffic problem

Canadian Toyota owners are waiting weeks for parts and no one knows why

With many car-maintenance issues, the best solution is to get to a mechanic rather than trying to figure it out yourselfGetty Toyota owners across the country are commiserating over a shared headache caused by a major delay in parts.Halifax driver Catrina Brown told the CBC, for example, that she’s been waiting for over 60 days for parts to arrive for her RAV4, which was damaged in a collision and brought to a repair center. “It’s seemingly incomprehensible to me that a massive corporation like that can’t get it together to find parts for their cars,” the CBC quotes Brown. “There’s been a total lack of communication or effort to be transparent. I’ve had to do all the work of calling and trying to contact people to find out what’s going on.”The issue at hand is what Toyota spokespersons refer to as a “planned systems transformation to provide an improved overall customer experience.” When CBC’s reporters followed up for clarification on what they “systems transformation” entailed, they were told simply that the issue would be “short-term.”But not short-term enough for some. The story cites other sources who say they’ve been waiting far too long for parts. One Cambridge, Ontario woman was told there was “nothing they can do to reimburse (her),” and that she would basically have to keep waiting for the weeks-delayed parts for her 2016 Scion FR-S. Meanwhile, her insurance stopped covering rental costs two weeks ago. In Mississauga, Ontario, a 2018 RAV4 driver, Bogdan Dakonovic, waited six weeks for a fix his shop told him should’ve taken three days, and the car is still missing its grille and other pieces.“This has been a really stressful experience for me and my family and it’s changed the way I look at the brand,” he told the CBC.The Toyota parts issue appears to be limited to
Origin: Canadian Toyota owners are waiting weeks for parts and no one knows why

U.S. car thieves target Hellcats, luxury cars versus Canadian truck-stealers

2019 Dodge Challenger Hellcat RedeyeNick Tragianis / Driving The Dodge Charger Hemi and Challenger SRT Hellcat top a list of the U.S. most stolen vehicles, according to a study released early August by the Highway Loss Data Institute.The two Dodges were stolen at a rate five times the average for most 2016 through 2018 model year vehicles, as was the third-place Infiniti Q50. The U.S. data only includes vehicles as old as model year 2016.The models most likely to be stolen tend to be powerful, pricey or pickups, but vehicle theft is also a crime of opportunity, said Matt Moore, the institutes senior vice-president, in a statement.Its not all that surprising that Americans love to steal hot muscle cars its practically ingrained in their social consciousness from birth. (Gone in 60 Seconds, anyone?) Other oft-stolen vehicles included the Infiniti QX80 at number four, followed by the GMC Sierra 1500, Dodge Challenger (non-Hellcat), Nissan Maxima, Chevrolet Silverado 1500, Chrysler 300 and Mercedes-Benz S-Class.In Canada, the preference seems instead to be to steal the absolute largest vehicles possible. According to the Insurance Bureau of Canada, the number one most-stolen spot in Canada goes to the 2015 Lexus GX460, and the number eight spot on the list is another Toyota SUV, the 2016 4Runner. The rest of the list is filled with various model years of the Ford F-350, with the F-250 taking the final spot at number 10. Even when broken down by model instead of model year, trucks seem to be more regularly swiped than cars, here. It is also worth noting the Canadian data does not stop at model year 2016.The four main reasons a vehicle gets stolen in North America is so it can: be sold overseas; be resold with a fake VIN; be taken for a joyride; and be used for committing other crimes, only to be abandoned. In Canada, the older pickup trucks are easier to steal, and theyre useful for smash-and-grab crimes its unlikely theyre being sold
Origin: U.S. car thieves target Hellcats, luxury cars versus Canadian truck-stealers

10 curious storylines to watch from 2019’s first half of Canadian auto sales

This weeks hot Unhaggle deal includes the Ford F-150, GMC Sierra and Ram 1500.Handout / Ford / GMC / Ram Canadian auto sales are down. In fact, Canadian auto sales have been in decline since the early spring of last year, failing to match the prior-year totals in 16 consecutive months.The story is becoming all too familiar; the headlines too easy to write. Automobile manufacturers cant seem to quit the passenger car business fast enough and cant open new SUV assembly plants with any more haste. Premium marques, via products such as the Mercedes-Benz A-Class and Lexus UX, are diving downmarket in the hopes of sustaining the last decades conspicuous march into the mainstream. Last years top sellers are this years top sellers. And then theres the unpredictable Tesla, with meaningful volume and a future always in question.Those are the main themes. But in a market thats lost more than 5 percent of its volume through the first half of the year, weve sorted through the numbers to find 10 stories that fill in the blanks. In search of a measure of nuance, these 10 tales are the details well want to look back on in six months time to see how 2019 really turned out.Top Trucks TumbleIn the highly competitive full-size pickup truck arena, the fact that the Ford F-150 hasnt been fully redesigned since the 2015 model year should, theoretically, bode well for freshly redesigned rivals. The Ram 1500, GMC Sierra, and Chevrolet Silverado were all new for the 2019 model year. Yet in a gradually shrinking pickup truck market, Fords full-size pickup truck sales are up 4 percent this year, while the second, third, and fourth-ranked trucks from Ram, GMC, and Chevrolet are sliding. And theyre sliding quite noticeably. The F-Series top challengers are collectively down by more than 7,000 sales so far this year.The Detroit RiverOnce known as The Big Three and now more clearly as The Detroit Three (irrespective of brand origin), General Motors, Ford Motor Company, and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles produced only 41 percent of all auto sales in Canada during 2019s first six months. Thats down from 43 percent at this stage of 2018, its worse than the market share produced by the trio during the last major recession of a decade ago, and its a far cry from the 53 percent share attributed to the Detroit Three as recently as 2007.Car QuintetThe fact that cars traditional passenger cars the likes of which more than half of all buyers opted for a decade ago are struggling is not news. Barely more than one-quarter of all automobile purchases ends up as a car acquisition. But what amplifies the degree to which cars are now so wholly rejected is the decline of Canadas most popular cars. Through the first half of 2019, Canadas five best-selling cars (Honda Civic, Toyota Corolla, Hyundai Elantra, Mazda3, Volkswagen Golf) are all selling less often than they did a year ago. In fact, the quintet has combined to lose nearly 10,000 sales compared with a year ago.Homegrown SUVsBoth of Canadas two best-selling cars are built right here in Canada. The same can be said in the SUV/crossover sector. The difference, however, is the level of success encountered by Canadian-made SUVs; not just the number one Toyota RAV4 and number two Honda CR-V but by other Canadian-assembled utility vehicles, as well. The RAV4, CR-V, and Ford Edge all rank inside the top 10. Together with the Chevrolet Equinox, Lexus RX, Ford Flex, Lincoln Nautilus, and Lincoln MKT, Canadian-made SUVs account for nearly one-fifth of the SUV market.Monotonous Minivan MinimizingShoppers that in times past were automatically destined to drive away from a new car dealer in a minivan are, just like passenger car buyers, increasingly destined to buy a new three-row crossover. This isnt a new phenomenon, but the rate at which Canadas five-strong minivan lineup is collapsing is now solidly in nosedive mode. Minivan volume plunged 19 percent in calendar year 2018; minivans are down 18 percent this year. That takes these monobox people carriers down to just 3.5 percent of the market. Aside from an uptick in sales of the Kia Sedona (which accounts for less than one-tenth of the segment), each nameplate in the segment is in decline. The Chrysler Pacifica, Dodge Grand Caravan, and Honda Odyssey are all down by double-digit percentage losses compared with 2018.Vorsprung Durch OffspringIn Audis showrooms, the student has become the teacher. Audis A4 lineup goes back generations, all the way to the mid-90s B5 generation of which nearly 1.7 million were built. In 2007, the A4 made possible an Audi coupe/convertible range called the A5. As time wore on, it became clear that the two-door market was evolving. Thus, the launch of the second-generation A5 spawned a direct A4 rival called the A5 Sportback, a liftback four-door A5 that, as it turns out, helps to make the A5 far more popular than ever. In fact, the car that Audi spun off from the A4 to incrementally add premium passenger car sales is now
Origin: 10 curious storylines to watch from 2019’s first half of Canadian auto sales