BCBusiness

October 2025 – Generation Shift

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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14 | BC B U S I N E SS OCTOB ER 2025 Marko Aliaksandr/Shutterstock | BUSINESS CLIMATE T H E B R I E F W hen Werner Antweiler bought his first electric vehicle, he hedged his bets. Rather than taking the leap into an all-electric car, the UBC Sauder School of Business associate professor—who is studying electric vehicle charging infrastructure in urban areas—opted for a plug-in hybrid that could run on battery or, when needed, gasoline. Antweiler lives in a townhouse, but without any dedicated EV charging in his complex, he ran a household extension cord from his basement door into the parkade below to top up his car's battery overnight. "At the time we said, 'We're not sure if this equipment is going to work out, so at least we can still use gasoline.' But it worked," says Antweiler with a laugh. "It actually was sufficient power." His complex has since adopted Level 2 chargers, which charge an EV in roughly four to 10 hours. But many EV drivers—as well as those thinking of making the leap to electric—don't have the same reliable access to charging. According to Antweiler, that roadblock is among the key reasons EV sales are showing signs of sputtering. Single-family homes with off-street parking can install EV chargers with relative ease. It's more problematic, however, for car buyers who live in multi-unit condos or townhouses, rental apartments or single-family homes that only have street parking. B.C. is one of the only provinces to introduce legislation streamlining the approval process for EV chargers in stratas—which included lowering the thresh- old for votes about EV infrastructure from 75 to 50 percent. It also requires stratas to obtain an Electrical Planning Report, which helps them plan for future demands on electrical systems. Antweiler applauds these moves but says far more needs to be done in rental buildings where there is little incentive for landlords to shoulder the added expense and for homeowners who only have access to street parking. Meanwhile, he adds, private operators of electric vehicle charging networks are struggling, with some teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. "It's a weak business model. It's expensive to put in infrastructure, and then the chargers get used very little. They also break down and they're expensive to repair," says Antweiler. "So networks like ChargePoint and FLO aren't doing well unless they're owned by big companies like Shell, which is now running its own system and trying to diversify into that domain." Canada's Electric Vehicle Availability Standard, which requires manufacturers and importers to meet strict sales targets for zero-emission cars, SUVs and light LEADING THE CHARGE The road to mass EV adoption is blocked by charging gaps. — By Jennifer Van Evra

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