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Why doesn’t Canada have more electric school buses?

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For anyone who spent their childhood riding┬аstinky, noisy┬аschool buses, it’s a revelation to climb┬аaboard one of the┬аelectric models coming off the assembly line at Lion Electric in Saint-J├йr├┤me, Que., northwest of Montreal.

“The only thing you hear is the wheels on the road,” said founder and CEO Marc B├йdard.

Proponents believe kids who ride e-buses show up calmer and more focused for school. U.S. data linking test scores to diesel fumes┬аbacks them up. But so far, only about two per cent of Canadian school buses offer students this advantage.

B├йdard┬аand his team are motivated to deliver┬аtechnology┬аthat helps kids тАФ not to mention┬аthe planet they’re┬аincreasingly anxious about inheriting. But like┬аmany green entrepreneurs, he’s faced┬аchallenges.

B├йdard┬аlays one of his current problems┬аat the feet of the federal government.

“There’s nothing worse than announcing a program and not deploying it,” he said, adding he’s frustrated┬аby the slow pace of the federal approval process for the┬аZero Emission Transit Fund (ZETF).

This $2.75-billion fund was one of then-infrastructure minister Catherine McKenna’s final announcements before the 2021 election. With $1.67 billion in loan financing from the Canada Infrastructure Bank, bus operators were supposed to be able to┬аoffset the┬аhigh startup costs of transitioning to an┬аelectric fleet.

E-school buses are cheaper to operate and can┬аpay for themselves over the long run. But their initial┬аprice tag is┬аdouble what diesel replacements cost. The short-term contracts of private service providers, which supply most of the bus service across Canada, don’t always provide incentives for longer-term change without government subsidies.

Federal delays contributed to layoffs: CEO

Based on the government’s objectives for this fund,┬аB├йdard┬аbudgeted for Lion┬атАФ the only manufacturer that makes exclusively┬аelectric models┬атАФ to deliver about 500 buses a year for the duration of the five-year program.

In fact, his first order to be approved for federal financing┬аtook about two and a half years. Two hundred┬аe-buses were finally greenlit┬аin June for┬аLangs Bus Lines in southwestern Ontario.

This┬аgap between what Lion had ramped up to deliver and the slower pace of federal approvals hit the company’s┬аfinances hard. B├йdard┬аsaid he was forced to lay off 700 employees┬аearlier this year.

“We’re behind. That’s a shame,” the CEO said, adding his┬аemployees would love to come back and help Canada catch up to school districts in the U.S. that┬аhave received more timely government support.

“We have over 1,000 units in our order book. We have a lot of operators that want to electrify their fleet right now and today they are [still] waiting for an approval.”

Lion founder and CEO Marc B├йdard says he was forced to lay off 700 employees earlier this year because sluggish federal funding approvals delayed orders for electric buses. (Toni Choueiri/CBC News)

Several dozen buses were rolling out┬аwhen┬аCBC News visited the┬аLion Electric facility. Some with white roofs and English lettering were destined for American┬аschool districts. Others with distinctive blue bumpers will soon carry┬аQuebec students.

Both federal and provincial politicians have visited Lion Electric’s facilities┬аseveral times, touting its┬аbatteries, trucks and buses to┬аshowcase government climate initiatives.

Quebec Premier Fran├зois Legault’s government has done more to walk the walk than any other provincial jurisdiction.┬аQuebec now has a mandate to replace┬аschool bus fleets only with┬аlocally-sourced┬аelectric buses from now on, and┬аprovincial rebates cover┬аabout half the cost of each┬аnew bus.

The Canadian Electric School Bus Alliance тАФ┬аa coalition of environmental advocates pushing for an all-electric school fleet by 2040 тАФ estimates that of the roughly 1,200 electric school buses taking Canadian kids to school this fall, about 1,000 are in Quebec.┬а

Canada’s most common bus

There are more school buses on Canadian roads than any other type. At current pricing, you can replace three diesel school buses for the cost of one emissions-free public transit bus┬атАФ so focusing federal funding on school buses would deliver more emissions-cutting bang for the buck.

School buses are also ideal for electrification. They have predictable local routes each day, and return to consistent parking locations off-hours for predictable┬аand affordable re-charging. (Lion’s batteries can also┬аstore and return power to the grid to help meet peak or emergency demand, especially in remote locations.)

Nevertheless, only┬аtwo per cent of the 51,000 vehicles in Canada’s school bus fleet are electric at the moment. To reach the Alliance’s objective┬аof┬аweaning that fleet off diesel by 2040, bus operators would have to procure more than 2,800 green vehicles per year. They’re nowhere near that pace.

And some operators┬аare still buying new diesel buses because that’s all they can afford. Based on current lifespans, those polluters┬аwill still be emitting┬аon Canada’s roads┬а15 years from now.

The slow rollout pace of the federal government's zero-emission transit fund, initially announced in 2021, has affected Lion's finances.
Lion Electric’s buses are used by school districts across North America. At the moment, Canadian jurisdictions are behind the U.S. in replacing diesel fleets. (Toni Choueiri/CBC News)

Prince Edward Island faced that dilemma this summer. That small provincial government administers its own student busing┬аand was an early adopter of e-buses. There were┬аgrowing pains. But P.E.I. applied for federal funding┬аto buy 207 more e-buses to┬аkeep scaling up.

That approval hasn’t┬аcome. In the meantime, older diesel buses break┬аdown. Faced with not having enough vehicles, the province reversed gears and bought┬а30 diesel replacements while awaiting┬аword on┬аfederal assistance.

“I think if you look across Canada, you’ll see all kinds of jurisdictions that are planning to switch to electric buses that are kind of in limbo while they wait for this funding,” said Steven Myers, P.E.I.’s minister of environment, energy and climate action.

Many needs, shrinking fund

The┬аZero Emission Transit Fund wasn’t set up exclusively to electrify┬аschool transportation. From its outset, federal officials said the money┬аwas intended to help purchase 5,000┬аpublic transit or school buses over five years. At the moment, the fund’s swamped┬аwith applications┬аfrom cities that┬аcan’t afford to green┬аtheir transit systems without┬аhelp.

The ZETF┬аalso took a haircut last year тАФ trimmed to $2.4 billion as part of the government’s push to cut spending across departments.

Federal Infrastructure Minister Sean Fraser has said┬аmore school bus announcements are coming. But he’s also hinted that school bus operators are competing with municipalities. So jurisdictional politics may be afoot, with federal and provincial governments passing this potato around.

“Keep in mind we traditionally don’t, in federal politics, develop programs designed for provincial education systems, but more often have developed┬аprograms to respond to applications by municipalities to improve transit more broadly,” the minister told CBC News during┬аa conference in Ottawa for Ontario municipalities.

“If you think about it, school buses are transit. They’re public transit for our kids,” said┬аMiriam Ponette, a public policy researcher with Green Communities Canada, one of the coordinators of the Canadian Electric School Bus Alliance.

Ponette┬аsaid she questions┬аwhether the benefits of electrification┬аare rolling out equitably, particularly given the fact that┬аkids have very long rides on diesel buses тАФ┬аfar longer than many adults sit┬аon public transit.

“Communities that … have suffered already from environmental pollution should be prioritized and getting the cleaner buses,” she said. “We have to be thinking about Indigenous communities and rural communities who may have different challenges in accessing funding.

“Diesel fumes are a known carcinogen. Something that was very surprising to me is that┬аthere┬аare more diesel fumes inside the bus than outside the bus.

“Children have a lot of climate anxiety. By transitioning to electric school buses first, we’re helping with kids mental health.┬аThey can see this important part of their lives as being part of the change.”

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