Business

Can Canada survive the hidden costs of the EV boom?

“Reliance on foreign corporate promises makes Canadians weak and economically unstable.”

I’ve seen this story before, and if you’ve lived in a small town in Canada, you probably have too. It starts with a promise of prosperity. A large corporation moves in, creates hundreds of jobs, and sparks an economic boom. Governments cheer. Investors celebrate. Towns feel alive again.

After a few short years, the lights dim. Factories close. Jobs vanish. Families pack up. Communities are left scrambling to survive.

That’s what’s happening right now. And it’s happening under the shiny banner of Canada’s Electric Vehicle (EV) Revolution.

Across the country, international firms are setting up EV plants with billions in government subsidies, tax breaks, and interest-free loans. Sounds great, right? Except there’s a problem; no one outside the government knows what’s in these contracts. The deals between politicians and corporations are sealed tight. No transparency. No accountability.

Canadians deserve to know: What legal guarantees exist to protect our jobs and investments if these firms decide to walk away? None of these contracts are public. In fact, they’ve been designed to stay hidden. That’s corporate control.

The danger isn’t hypothetical. Fraser Lake, British Columbia, just got blindsided when West Fraser Timber Ltd. announced its closure. Overnight, 177 workers lost their livelihoods. In northern Ontario, a pulp and paper mill owned by Indian interests is shutting down too, taking hundreds more jobs with it. The ripple effect hits everyone: small business owners, local governments, and families struggling to make ends meet.

Who pays for retraining, relocation, and recovery? The communities do. Again.

The same cycle could strike our new EV plants. For a few years, they’ll employ thousands, fueling housing growth and new small businesses, but when the corporate board decides production is cheaper elsewhere, what happens next? Towns collapse, and taxpayers eat the loss.

What legal guarantees exist to protect our jobs and investments if these firms decide to walk away?

Even if governments sue, legal battles drag on for decades. Meanwhile, the workers (our neighbours, our friends) are left behind.

We’ve seen it before. These mills and plants often rely on exports to foreign markets like China. When those markets shift, or find cheaper suppliers, Canada’s industries crumble. Instead of chasing global profits, we should be investing in ourselves, building products for our own people and markets.

Foreign investors don’t care about Canadian communities. They care about the bottom line. Every time we hand them public money without safeguards, we weaken our own economic foundation.

Governments keep falling for the same sales pitch promises of prosperity, jobs, and “foreign investment.” What we really need is domestic innovation; to reimagine Canadian industry for Canadian needs. We should use taxpayer dollars strategically, not blindly.

Maybe that’s why populist movements keep rising. Middle America turned to Trump because they felt ignored by global elites. Could the same thing happen here? Will Pierre Poilievre rise by tapping into that same anger; speaking to working Canadians who feel abandoned by corporate globalism?

The question isn’t whether internationalism has failed. It’s whether we’ve learned from its failures.

We need to rebuild from the inside out. Our strength lies in our land, our labour, and our creativity. When we invest in our own industries, we create resilience. When we depend on others, we create risk.

Canada’s future doesn’t belong to faceless corporations, or foreign interests. It belongs to us, the people willing to work, imagine, and build something real. Let’s stop waiting for others to save us. Let’s build a Canada that saves itself.

 

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