A year after the $15-billion electric vehicle project in Ontario was announced, Honda Canada is pushing the project back.
The company said Tuesday it would put the plan to build an EV supply chain — which included a proposed EV battery plant and retooled vehicle assembly facility — in Alliston, Ont., on hold for about two years.
“Due to the recent slowdown of the EV market, Honda Motor has announced an approximate two-year postponement of the comprehensive value chain investment project in Canada. The company will continue to evaluate the timing and project progression as market conditions change,” Honda Canada spokesperson Ken Chiu told CBC News in an email statement on Tuesday.
Honda also said the decision “has no impact” on current employment or production at the Alliston manufacturing facility.
Honda’s EV project in Canada includes a retooled assembly plant and an electric vehicle battery plant in close proximity, as well as two key battery parts facilities located elsewhere in Ontario.
The project was expected to see the two main plants create 1,000 jobs on top of retaining the existing 4,200 jobs at the assembly plant.
Under the original plan, the plant was set to produce up to 240,000 vehicles per year when fully operational in 2028.
The project was first announced in April 2024 at an event that included then-prime minister Justin Trudeau and Ontario Premier Doug Ford and was to receive support from the federal and Ontario governments.
The deal includes the construction of Honda’s first electric vehicle assembly plant, as well as a new stand-alone EV battery plant at Honda’s facility in Alliston, Ont. CBC’s Chris Glover has the details.
Ottawa was set to give the Japanese automaker around $2.5 billion through tax credits, while Ontario committed to provide up to $2.5 billion in support directly and indirectly. However, Jennifer Cunliffe, a spokesperson for Ontario’s minister of economic development, job creation and trade, said the province hasn’t doled out any of that money to Honda yet.
Ford told reporters at a news conference that he was confident Honda would continue making cars in the province.
“When I talked to Honda, they promised us they’re going to continue on with that expansion,” Ford said of the pause. “So we’ll just see how that moves forward. But we’re very confident that we’ll continue producing Honda vehicles here in Ontario.”
The premier also said he would hold automakers that pull out of Ontario “accountable,” should that happen.
Richard Norcross, the mayor of New Tecumseth, which Alliston is part of, said he was still optimistic the project will come online, even though that day is further in the future now.
“Obviously a two-year delay, that’s not desirable, but understandable [given] what’s going on in the world today,” Norcross said. “I think the process is slowing down, but I don’t think…
Read More: Honda to postpone plans for EV plant in Canada for at least 2 years