At his height of power, so goes the story, King Canute ordered his throne to be set on the seashore. With royal authority, he ordered the tide to “not rise on my land, nor dare to splash either limb or robe of your lord.” Of course, the tide continued unabated (what’s often misunderstood is that Canute was actually trying to teach people about the limits of royal power).
The Trudeau government and Biden administration have mandated transitions to electric vehicles (EVs) over a relatively short period of time. The regulations, subsidies, and other government interventions are meant to transform both what is produced in North America and what is sold. There are legitimate reasons to be skeptical—reasons both governments are ignoring and which will likely impose hundreds of billions in costs on Canadian and American consumers because, unlike Canute, neither Trudeau nor Biden seem to recognize the limits of state power.
To meet the Trudeau government’s 2026 target, that EV number must increase to more than 300,000 in just three years, and more than 900,000 by 2030, assuming no increase in the total amount of vehicles sold. In other words, the growth in EVs must be exponential over the next seven years to come anywhere close to the government’s mandate.
These relatively small shares of total vehicle sales exist within a context of substantial subsidies for EVs.
The basic problem is that both Trudeau and Biden are fighting the laws of economics. They both believe in the efficacy of the heavy hand of government intervention and their ability to pick winners and losers in consumer markets, instead of relying on individual consumers to make economic decisions. The fact that consumers are not overwhelmingly choosing EVs—despite mandates and subsidies—should inform policymakers in both countries.
Like Canute’s demands on water tides, Trudeau and Biden’s top-down commands, countering the laws of economics, are doomed to fail. But unlike the Canute story, average citizens will bear the costs of such failures, which could be substantial.